Politicians against gay marriage now, are the future villains of our American History books.
Nikolaj [Coster-Waldau] plays one of the ugliest villains. We had to create such a horrible guy, because he is the bad guy in the [The Other Woman] movie. We took him as far pathologically as possible.
You don’t return people’s smiles—it’s perfectly clear to you that people can smile and smile and still be villains.
I don't play the role of a villain, really, but I like playing anti-hero kind of roles. I like characters where there's conflict, drama, and more personal investment than just being heroes.
I don't like movies that are too manipulative. A lot of movies thrive on really pushing your buttons and making you hate the villain.
When you choose a villain, you need something visually exciting. And when you have someone like Jamie Foxx. . . you want to make sure the guy with the mask and the guy without the mask are delivering two different performances.
I became a villain for doing the right thing.
A villain is just a victim whose story hasn’t been told.
That's how it works in Westerns: the hero is minding his own business and trying to make a living, but he does something, the villain finds out about it and they have to have a showdown. So it's kind of a Western set to hip hop music.
As a writer I'm more drawn to villains who are just slightly mad.
History is moving pretty quickly these days, and the heroes and villains keep on changing parts.
It's been a lifetime ambition of mine to play an 007 villain.
I am aware that no man is a villain in his own eyes.
The man who pauses in his honesty wants little of a villain.
For me it's the same thing if the fans boo or not, because my role is the villain. I'm happy when you clap me though.
He who assists a poor or needy villain does evil to his neighbor. . . for through the assistance which he renders he. . . supplies him with the means of doing evil to others.
I like playing the villain.
You have to love the guy that you play, even if you play the villain, you've got to love him.
Natural villains are hard to come by, what with all the shrinks and social-scientist types threatening to understand everybody into the ground.
Finally someone takes me seriously enough to ask for my word of honor, and it’s a villain.