These Evil Women Are The Greatest Female Villains In Cinematic History
We all love a movie with a strong female character, but what about when that same character is the villain of the story? From beloved Disney movies to cult classic films, we've seen the most despicable female antagonists. These fictional - and some real - women have become so iconic that we love to hate them! Would you agree with this list of the greatest female movie villains? #6 makes every dog lover's blood boil!
Nurse Ratched
Nurse Ratched from the 1975 film One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest is as sinister as they come. Behind her plain exterior is an evil tyrant who intimidates and abuses patients at a mental hospital. Of course, her position as the head nurse assures she never gets caught and everything is pretty much under her control, that is until one patient tries to escape.
There's a reason that One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest was the second in history to win all five major Oscars, including Best Picture, Director, Screenplay, Lead Actor, and Lead Actress, which went to Louise Fletcher for the role.
O-Ren Ishii
O-Ren Ishii is as deadly as the swords she wields. A trained assassin since age 11, O-Ren has murdered her way to the top ranks of the male-dominated Yakuza, the Japanese crime syndicate. In Kill Bill: Volume 1, she straight up beheads a guy for insulting her in the middle of a meeting.
O-Ren Ishii is a cold-blooded killer who does it all to avenge the brutal murder of her parents. If there were any female villain we'd have total respect for it'd be her, but of course, we're saying that because we'd hate to be at the wrong end of her sword.
Joan Crawford
Joan Crawford may have played the innocent one in Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? But in real life, she was apparently the evil foster mom we're all glad we wish we didn't have. In 1981's Mommie Dearest, we got an idea of how evil she may have been.
Crawford's adopted daughter Christina wrote a 1978 memoir of the same name that detailed salacious accounts of how terrorizing Crawford was to her children. Though the movie may not have been 100% true, actress Faye Dunaway brought a menacing instability to the role that made our jaws drop.
Regina George
Damien said it best: "She's fabulous but evil." Regina George in Mean Girls is wealthy and incredibly popular, but she's also self-centered and vindictive. Regina's wicked ways are psychological at most, as she uses other people's insecurities as a tool to will them into giving her her way.
What's even more mischevious is the fact that a lot of the pain she causes comes from boredom. Regina Geroge is one of those movie characters we all love to hate but we also admittedly love... just don't be fooled by her backhanded compliments.
Amy Dunne
There are few movies that can throw you for a loop like Gone Girl. Amy Dunne is the missing wife at the center of the movie until — spoiler alert — you realize that she is the manipulative woman stringing everyone along the whole time.
In this twisted film based on the novel of the same name, Rosamund Pike plays the woman in question who not only goes to great lengths to frame her husband in her fake death, but she inflicts injuries on herself to help further her agenda.
Cruella De Vil
Cruella De Vil is perhaps the creme de la creme of Disney villainesses. After all, her name is a play on words for "cruel devil." Cruella is as selfish as they come and lacks sympathy for anyone, though, she's admittedly stylish because of her extensive fur coat collection and her distinctive car.
After being denied the opportunity to buy her old schoolmate's dalmatian puppies, de Vil stops at nothing to steal them. De Vil is another icon in Disney's collection of villains and what makes her so great is that her reign of terror doesn't need the help of magic powers.
Bellatrix Lestrange
Bellatrix Lestrange is the self-proclaimed most faithful follower of He Who Shall Not Be Named in the Harry Potter film series. The female Death Eater's obsession with Voldemort is so strong, she would put her life on the line for him.
Sent to Azkaban for torturing Neville Longbottom's parents to insanity, Bellatrix manages to escape prison to wreak havoc and perform Lord Voldemort's ill will. Bellatrix is one of the craziest female villains around as her evil ways know no bounds. Goth Queen Helena Bonham Carter was the perfect casting choice for this evil sorceress.
Kathryn Merteuil
Kathryn Merteuil is an actual evil stepsister in Cruel Intentions. Kathryn was Regina George before Regina George was a thing, except Kathryn's heinousness was a bit more intense. Kathryn uses her sexuality and wealth to her advantage and manipulates people for her own amusement.
The story only gets more sick and twisted when she enters an interesting wager with her step-brother, in which she offers herself to him if she loses. Kathryn is played by Sarah Michelle Gellar, and the role solidified Gellar's status as a '90s teen icon.
Dolores Umbridge
Don't let all the cutesy pink fool you, Dolores Umbridge could give Bellatrix a run for her money on the evil scale. After her work in the Ministry of Magic, Umbridge enters Hogwarts as a Defence Against Dark Arts professor and soon does whatever it takes to become headmistress.
She abusively punishes students she dislikes, while using those she favors as spies and employing them as bullies. Professor Umbridge abuses her power to gain more control, using people as pawns in the process. This selfish form of evil is worse because it's very close to how evil manifests in real life.
Catwoman
Catwoman from Batman Returns is the ultimate woman scorned. Starting out as secretary Selina Kyle, she miraculously survives her boss's attempt to kill her. Frustrated with her life and betrayed by her boss, Kyle is driven mad and becomes Catwoman.
She returns with a vengeance and is a cold-hearted killer who will stop at nothing to achieve her primary goal: to murder her boss. The fact that she succeeds, in the end, is what makes everything more satisfying for this character. Michelle Pfeiffer became an icon for portraying the level of insanity and poise that this sexy vigilante has.
Harley Quinn
Harley Quinn is the Joker's accomplice and lover in the DC Universe. Initially a psychiatrist, Harleen Quinn was assigned to help the Joker at Arkham Asylum. She ends up falling in love with him and is adamant to set him free. Through electrocution and an acid bath, she emerges as Harley Quinn.
She was imprisoned after helping the Joker kill Robin, but soon gets blackmailed into joining the Suicide Squad. Harley Quinn is a supervillain who is undoubtedly on the psychotic side. Margot Robbie is the alluring actress who brings her to life in the 2016 film Suicide Squad.
Annie Wilkes
There is no superfan crazier than Annie Wilkes from the 1990 flick, Misery. Based on Stephen King's 1987 novel of the same name, Misery follows Paul Sheldon, a famed author whose romance novels revolve around a character named Misery.
After getting into an accident, Sheldon is saved by a nurse named Annie Wilkes who happens to be his number one fan. But when Wilkes discovers that Sheldon has planned to kill off Misery in his next book, she tortures him until he rewrites it. Annie Wilkes was a villain played to perfection by Kathy Bates, who won an Oscar for Best Actress for the role.
The Evil Queen
Mirror, Mirror on the wall, who is the most malicious of them all? The Evil Queen from the Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs might be your answer. Unlike Maleficent and Ursula, The Evil Queen's reign of terror is an effort to kill her stepdaughter, Snow White, by poisoning her.
We must also mention that The Evil Queen is way too into herself, proven by the fact that she always has to ask her mirror to tell her that she's pretty. She might very well be the evilest female in the Disney universe if you ask us.
Wicked Witch Of The West
No movie villainess may be more iconic than the Wicked Witch of the West from The Wizard of Oz. She does everything she can to thwart Dorothy's efforts to visit the Wizard because not only did Dorothy's house accidentally land on her sister, but Dorothy managed to cop her sister's ruby red slippers before she did.
The Wicked Witch's shrill voice, pointy hat, and broom-flying capabilities have become essential to all witches that have come after her. Of course, we're only referring to the Wicked Witch from the original 1939 film, because Wicked the musical is a whole different story.
"Baby Jane" Hudson
1962's Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? is a classic Hollywood thriller starring Bette Davis and Joan Crawford. Davis plays Jane, a former child star whose faded stardom leads her to insanity. It doesn't help when her older sister Blanche, played by Crawford, is suddenly getting more attention.
After a mysterious accident that paralyzes Blanche, Jane holds her sister hostage while trying in vain to regain her star status. Jane's efforts to conceal her sister's whereabouts from the public only drive her crazier and make the story more convoluted. It's incredible what jealousy can do to a gal.
Mystique
Despite being on the evil side of things in the X-Men movies, Mystique is pretty impressive. Mystique's mutant powers include shape-shifting into anyone she desires to impersonate. We saw how ideal this quality was in the first X-Men movie when she impersonated Wolverine during the battle in the Statue of Liberty.
Even though she gave herself away since she obviously didn't have Wolverine's fighting abilities, she bought herself more time and bounced back by impersonating Storm. But her abilities really come in handy when she impersonates a dead Senator to further the Brotherhood's agenda.
Agatha Trunchbull
Miss Trunchbull in Matilda is as frightening as they come, as far as evil school administrators are concerned. As the headmistress Chrunchem Hall Elementary, Miss Trunchbull hates children so much that she vehemently denies having been one herself.
Things didn't get much better past her frightening looks either. She caused physical harm to students with her riding crop and literally threw students around, having been a former Olympic shot putter. And don't even think of having a piece of her chocolate cake! Trunchbull definitely wouldn't get away with her method's in the modern American school system.
Aileen Wuornos
Aileen Wuornos was a real-life serial killer whose story hit the big screen with 2003's Monster. Wuornos could be the most terrifying female villain on this list solely for the fact that she was a real person. The former prostitute went on a murder spree in the late '80s and early '90s, causing the death of seven men. It ultimately led to her 2002 execution in Florida.
Charlize Theron's portrayal earned her the Oscar for Best Actress. What's even scarier than the fact that Wuornos was a real person is how they made someone as beautiful as Theron look like her!
Maleficent
Maleficent is the evil fairy from Disney's Sleeping Beauty. Remember when Maleficent crashes Aurora's christening and bestows a gift to the newborn princess in the form of a curse? Maleficent declares that before sunset on her sixteenth birthday, Aurora will prick her finger on the spindle of a spinning wheel and die. Much of Aurora's life is spent trying to avoid the curse coming true.
It's crazy to think that someone would do all this to an infant just because they weren't invited to a party, but that's precisely the petty move you should expect a villainess to pull.
Ursula
Maleficent's actions are child's play compared to Ursula's in The Little Mermaid. Ursula cons Ariel into giving up her voice for a life on land after she falls for Prince Eric. As per Ursula's spell, Ariel is to regain her voice if she kisses Eric within three days.
But Ursula is a villain and does everything she can to keep Ariel from succeeding. She even transformed into a beautiful woman using Ariel's voice to trick Prince Eric into marrying her instead. She would have gotten away with it, too, if Ariel hadn't stopped the wedding. Ursula went through all this effort, just to gain King Triton's soul and his trident.
Elle Driver
Elle Driver made her villainous debut in Kill Bill. A member of the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad, she looks plain sinister. Wearing an eye-patch and wielding a samurai sword, she goes by the code name California Mountain Snake. She was apart of the wedding day massacre and put the final bullet in Beatrix.
Devoted to Bill, Elle is assigned to kill Beatrix for good when it's discovered she didn't die during her wedding rehearsal. Unfortunately for this villain, she doesn't win and ends up tied in a room with black mamba snake. Her final fate is unknown as the camera cuts away.
Regina Mills
Regina Mills is the television reimagining of the Evil Queen and one of the main characters of Once Upon a Time. In the quaint town of Storybroke, she is one of the only fairy tale characters who still have their memory. At the start of the series, she becomes mayor, using fear to get the town citizens to vote for her.
Throughout the series, Regina Mills is the epitome of evil. The reason she remembers the past is because she cast the curse the took got rid of magic. She may look normal enough on the outside, but inside she is pure evil!
Queen Ravenna
Another devilish interpretation of the Evil Queen, Queen Ravenna strikes fear into the hearts of her enemies in Snow White and the Hunstman. Dressed in a black, Ravenna is the tyrannical ruler of Tabor. She is also the stepmother of Snow White, regarded by the magic mirror as "the fairest of them all."
Ravenna makes it her mission to kill Snow White and consume her heart. If she can accomplish this, she will have eternal beauty and power. Of course, the bad guy never wins and the Huntsman defeats her at the end of the story.
Esther
Kids are scary, and Esther might be the scariest of them all. The bad guy of the horror film Orphan, Esther is the nine-year-old foster child of the Colemans. Except Esther isn't nine-years-old, she's actually a 33-year-old psychopath named Leena Klammer.
Leena suffers from pituitary disorder, causing her to look so young. She hates being stuck in between a child and woman and takes out her anger by killing and trying to seduce men. When her failure to seduce her foster father fails, she kills him but is stopped before she can kill her foster mom.
Yzma
Yzma is the dastardly villain in The Emperor's New Groove. She is evil and power hungry, using her high position with ruler Kuzco to get what she wants. When Kuzco fires her, she plots her revenge and turns him into a llama. Initially, she plans to turn Kuzco into a flea and smash him but settles for the llama tactic instead.
Yzma, convinced she has killed Kuzco, assumes the role if Empress. However, when she learns her plan fails, she becomes obsessed with finishing the job. Before she wins, Yzma is turned into a cat and Kuzco becomes human again.
Alien Queen
This is one villainous you do not want to run into! The leader of the xenomorphs from the Alien franchise, the queen makes her debut in Aliens. The queen is the mother of the hive and will kill any perceived threat to the continued survival of her species. In Aliens the queen must face Ripley, who is determined to protect Newt, the sole survivor of a human colony.
The queen attacks Ripley after she burns a number of xenomorph eggs. Multiple times the size of a drone xenomorph, the two face off in the kind of fight any person would avoid. The terrifying is defeated by Ripley who successfully rescues Newt.
Regan MacNeil
The possessed daughter in The Exorcist, Regan is possibly the scariest child to ever terrorize the silver screen. Of course, Regan isn't really the bad guy in the film, but the demon that takes over her body. Pazuzu uses Regan to terrorize her family and attack a Father Karras, who is brought in by Regan's mom to save her.
Regan gets increasingly violent as the movie progresses, at one point spinning her head around entirely. In a deleted scene from the original take, she spider walks downstairs, an image that is just as terrifying now as when it was originally released.
Drusilla
Deranged beyond belief, Drusilla is the girlfriend of vampire Spike from Buffy the Vampire Slayer. The fear Spike instills in his victims is nothing compared to Drusilla, the vampire who sired the punk rock rebel. Spending her time in California tormenting Buffy and Angel, Drusilla never seemed to have a real plan. Like the Joker, that might just be why she was so scary.
One of her most heinous acts was killing a room full of lawyers. He plan was to take over their company to turn Los Angeles into a playground for demons.
Borg Queen
The Borg Queen redefined what a Star Trek villain could be in Star Trek: First Contact. Although the Borg are known as a collective, the Queen saw herself in higher regard, "I am the beginning, the end, the one who is many. I am the Borg." Like the Alien Queen, there is nothing the Borg Queen wouldn't do to ensure the existence of her kind.
In First Contact, she traveled back in time to destroy the earth. Following her into the past, the Enterprise and Jean Luc Picard barely stopped her. For Picard the mission was personal, having previously encountered the Borg Queen (unknowingly), when he was nearly assimilated years prior.
Tiffany
An ex-girlfriend of Chucky before his should was trapped in a good guy doll, Tiffany uses voodoo to resurrect her lover for one more killing spree. When she's successful, Chucky dumps her again and traps her inside a wedding doll so she can feel the torture he does.
Together again, although not happy about it, the pair set off to find a magical amulet that will return them both to human bodies. The character of Tiffany like by fans so much she ended up in multiple sequels killing over 10 people.
Hela
The former executioner of Asgard and sister of Thor, Hela returned to wreak havoc on the universe in Thor Ragnorak. Desperate for power, Hela sends Thor to far off planet and conquers Asgard, planning to recreate the Asgardian empire she remembers. When the people refuse to follow her she begins executing them.
When Thor finally makes it back home it's too late to save Asgard. Hela has successfully taken over the planet. To beat her, Thor destroys her home. That's right, Hela is so evil, the only way to stop her is to destroy the planet she's taken over!
Poison Ivy
Next to Catwoman, Poison Ivy is the greatest female villain Batman has ever had. Played onscreen by Uma Thurman in Batman and Robin, Ivy is about the only thing keeping the movie afloat. Using toxins from her special, Poison Ivy makes men fall in love with her with a kiss and has them do whatever she desires.
Poison Ivy made he DC debut in 1966 and was inspired by a Nathaniel Hawthorne short story about a woman who becomes poisonous to other when she develops immunity to the plants in her garden.
Emma Frost
Portrayed by January Jones in X-Men: First Class, Emma Frost is an evil telepath with diamond skin. As the right-hand woman of Sebastian Shaw, she seeks to start a nuclear war between the United States and the Soviet Union. With anyone left alive mutated, the world would be run by mutants.
In the film she is impervious to psychic attacks, making Charles Xavier's attempts to stop her useless. She is only stopped when Magneto strangles her with a metal pipe, cracking her diamond exterior.
Elektra
Elektra is so bad that she was turned into a good guy so the movie studio could keep her alive. An assassin in the world of Daredevil, the character was so popular in the Ben Affleck movie she was given a movie of her own. She was also the main antagonist in season two of Netflix's Daredevil series.
During her early years, she lost her father when cops accidentally shot him. She then learned martial arts in Japan and learned to focus her anger and make a living as a bounty hunter and killer for hire.
Ursa
Zod's right-hand woman in Superman II, Ursa is Kryptonian who discovers that while on Earth, she shares the same powers as Superman. Using her newfound strength for evil, Ursa helps Zod take over the office of the President. Determined to kill the man of steel, Ursa and Zod follow track him down to the Fortress of Solitude where Ursa threatens the only weakness Superman has; his love for Louis Lane.
Forty years after portraying Ursa in Superman II, Sarah Douglas returned to the role for an episode of Supergirl. One of her everlasting traits is absolute hatred of men. In one version of her early films she says expresses her desire to kill as many men as possible.
Amanda Waller
Most recently seen in Suicide Squad, Amanda Waller doesn't have superpowers, and that's exactly what makes her so scary. In a world where the most powerful villains have superpowers, Waller is human. She is a high ranking government official though. In the new DC cinematic universe, she creates the Suicide Squad, a pretty crazy idea for a supposed good guy!
Waller clashes with Batman's ideals, doing whatever she deems necessary to save the day. When the two share screen time together (which is rare), they have a rocky relationship that Waller is more than happy to try and break.
Norma Bates
The mother of Norman Bates, Norma is more than the skeleton in the chair at the end of Psycho. A loving mother, Norma cares too much for son, ultimately causing his psychosis and inability to maintain stable relationships with women.
Throughout his life, Norma sabotaged Norman's attempts at relationships with women. It is implied the two long for more than a mother and son relationship, but they never push boundaries. When Norman kills Norma after she gets married, he assumes the role of both himself and his mother.
Amanda Young
Amanda Young is Jigsaw's apprentice in the Saw franchise. In the second film, she successfully survived Jigsaw's trap and beat her addiction to heroin. When offered the opportunity to join Jigsaw she accepts and begins to set up her own tests. As her mental state deteriorated she became more and more dangerous.
Amanda ended up failing her final test. Jigsaw wanted to teach her how to save a life. Instead, she wanted to take life. As she laid on the floor dying of a gunshot wound, Jigsaw let her know she failed, saying "game over."
Claire Underwood
The wife of Frank Underwood on House of Cards, Claire Underwood is the real villain on the show. The Wall Street Journal described Claire as, "a short-blonde who manages to be masculine and demasculinizing at the same time." During her run on the show, she has gone from lobbyist and activist to acting President of the United States.
For her portrayal of the sneak and conniving Claire Underwood, Robin Wright won a Golden Globe. For seasons six, Underwood will be the main character after Kevin Spacey was fired.
Mom
Mom pretends to be loving and caring, but once she has he sons take off her fat suit, she becomes the Scrooge of the Futurama universe. Running Momcorp, Carol Miller only cares about one thing: money. Anyone who stands in her way is going to get taken down!
Except for her sons, that is. Mom always has the evilest plans, but her dimwitted sons always find some way to ruin them. Mom became such a popular character in Futurama that she was featured in 12 episodes, two specials, and three movies!