Greetings and Salutations ....

I am happy to put forth this beautiful item for sale.

You are bidding on one BRAND NEW aluminum embossed metal license plate .....
It is a brand new metal tin sign that would be very much
enjoyed indeed by any home .

The sign is unopened and still in the original shrink-wrap.
I image this license plate on your car , ... or  hanging in the den of a fan,
or outside in his/her favorite parking place
or better yet in your GARAGE.


It is a hoot.   I was made here in the USA , and it measures
6 inches by 12 inches in size.
It in an
Embossed Aluminum Sign .

I hope this finds a nice home.   Thank you , Harry

The Wizard of Oz film (1939)[edit]

In the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz, the Monkeys are intelligent enough to obey commands, but do not speak as they do in the book. They abduct Dorothy and her dog Toto and dismantle the Scarecrow, but do nothing to the Tin Man or the Cowardly Lion, leaving them free to put the Scarecrow back together and rescue Dorothy. There is no mention of any three wishes in the film, suggesting that the Monkeys serve the witch out of fear, although the Golden Cap is seen briefly. The analogue to the Monkey King, one Nikko, whose wings have been clipped, is played by midget performer Pat Walshe. He is seen in several sequences, including when he is ordered by the Witch to throw Toto in a river; an order that Dorothy prevents him from carrying out. Nikko is also shown with the Witch as she angrily throws down the hour glass after the Scarecrow, Tin Woodman, and Cowardly Lion rescue Dorothy, and once more after the Witch has melted. His name is shown only in the credits, as "Nikko" is never spoken on screen.

There is only a glimpse of the Golden Cap in the film: after Dorothy and the Lion awake after Glinda breaks the spell on the poppies conjured by the Witch, she is seen watching them in anger in her crystal ball. Nikko hands her the Golden Cap and she utters the "somebody always helps that girl" line, before throwing the cap across the room angrily. The reason for this brief appearance comes from a scene deleted from the final film. In the script, after the Witch conjures up the poppies that put Dorothy, Toto, and the Lion to sleep, she orders Nikko to fetch the Golden Cap so she can summon the winged monkeys and they can take the Ruby Slippers from the sleeping girl. However, she never gets a chance as the spell is broken before she can. Why the Witch doesn't use the Golden Cap to summon the monkeys when she sends them off into the Winkie Forest to capture Dorothy and Toto is unknown. In the film, the cap looks almost identical to the original artwork by W. W. Denslow in the book.

The musical number "The Jitterbug" dealt with a magic insect sent by the Witch to weaken the invaders before the Monkeys arrived catch them. The visual footage is lost, but the soundtrack survives, and the song is often incorporated into stage productions based on the movie, with extra activity for the Monkeys to perform.

  • A particularly clumsy and incompetent band of Winged Monkeys serves a resuscitated Wicked Witch of the West in the 1966 animated television special Return to Oz.
  • In the Jumanji film, a pack of monkeys that were released from the board game come across an electronics store where the TVs are playing the 1939 film scene featuring the Winged Monkeys. They begin hopping like in the movie and steal television sets from the store.
  • In the film version of The Wiz, the African-American rock adaptation of The Wizard of Oz, the Flying Monkeys are a motorcycle gang, whose leader is named Cheetah, after the Tarzan character. Not actually winged in this adaptation, they are however bonded, centaur-style, to their motorcycles, which bear metal wings; these dissolve with the Wicked Witch's other magic, as the Monkeys' legs are restored to them. In gratitude, they carry Dorothy and her friends back to the Emerald City.
  • The Winged Monkeys subsequently appear in the early 1990s cartoon version of The Wizard of Oz, with one of them named Truckle (voiced by Pat Fraley) serving as the Wicked Witch of the West's chief sidekick. He is shown as capable of speech and even gets to wear the Ruby Slippers for a brief time. Truckle led the winged monkeys that were loyal to the Wicked Witch of the West into performing a ritual that would resurrect her.
  • In Gregory Maguire's revisionist novels Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West and Son of a Witch, the flying monkeys were created by Elphaba (the Witch) as part of her experiments on the nature of the soul and what distinguishes non-speaking animals from Animals. In these novels, most of the flying monkeys cannot speak, but Elphaba's favorite (named Chistery), has a distinctive speech pattern characterized by the repetition of similar-sounding words. This speech pattern becomes less pronounced in A Lion Among Men and Out of Oz, the third and fourth volumes in Maguire's "Wicked Years" cycle.
  • In The Muppets' Wizard of Oz, the Winged Monkeys had been a rather peaceful group of "motorcycle enthusiasts" and are played by Sal MinellaSweetumsCrazy Harry, Black Dog, Calico, Old Tom, Spotted Dick, and Aretha from Fraggle Rock. The winged monkeys were placed under the Wicked Witch of the West's control when she took possession of their Magic Biker Cap. Forced to do her bidding, the winged monkeys rode their motorcycles through the skies of Oz, performing the Wicked Witch of the West's dirty work. Once the Witch was defeated upon melting in a bathtub filled with tap water, Dorothy returned the Magic Biker Cap to Sal Minella, thereby restoring the Winged Monkeys' independence.
  • The 2007 Sci Fi television miniseries Tin Man depicts a re-imagining of Baum's world of Oz, including bat-winged monkeys called "mobats" that are the familiars of the sorceress Azkadellia which come from tattoos on her chest.[1]
  • In Bill Willingham's Vertigo comic book series Fables, a winged monkey named Bufkin is a clerk and librarian in the Business Office belonging to the government of Fabletown, a community of refugee fairy-tale characters ("Fables") living in modern-day New York City.
  • Winged monkeys or flying monkeys have been mentioned in television series such as The SimpsonsBuffy the Vampire Slayer and Two and a Half Men, and have appeared or been referenced in films such as HunterWayne's WorldJumanji and Inkheart.
  • The winged monkeys appear in Dorothy and the Witches of Oz in the Ozian invasion of Manhattan.
  • Winged apes called "clakars"[clarification needed] appear in While the Gods Laugh by Michael Moorcock, the second published novelette featuring his character Elric of Melniboné; the novelette was later republished in different collections.[2]
  • The winged monkeys were referred to by the Master Creator, Michael Blaine.
  • The winged monkeys appear in Oz the Great and Powerful. Oscar Diggs befriended a winged monkey named Finley (voiced by Zach Braff) after using an illusion to save him from a lion. The film also included Winged Baboons which make up the armies of Theodora and Evanora. Unlike Finley who can speak and behave like a human, the Winged Baboons are feral, vicious and cannot speak. The Baboons have leathery bat-like wings, whereas Finley has elegant wings like a swan.
  • In the music video "Heretics and Killers" by Canadian band Protest The Hero, the band is seen performing in winged monkey suits. A newspaper at the beginning also indicates the monkeys are out of work, so they try finding ways to make money.
  • The winged monkeys appear in the third season of Once Upon a Time. This culminates in a plotline revolving around the winged monkeys taking Storybrooke's s inhabitants one by one to convert into winged monkeys. After the Wicked Witch's defeat, everyone who was turned into a flying monkey return to their human forms.
  • The winged monkeys appeared in the 2013 animated film Legends of Oz: Dorothy's Return (based on Dorothy of Oz) with their vocal effects provided by Scott Menville, Alan Shearman, Randi Soyland, and Flip Waterman. The winged monkeys are servants of the Jester where the flying monkey named "You" (voiced by Randi Soyland) is his main servant.
  • A winged monkey skin exists for Brightwing in Heroes of the Storm. More of the creatures are said to inhabit its Luxorian setting.
  • The flying monkeys appear in the Lego Dimensions video game. The flying monkeys are only affected by their master the Wicked Witch of the West, witnessed the disappearing of Dorothy via the vortex and battle GandalfBatman, and Wyldstyle.
  • In a Danny Shanahan cartoon from the New Yorker (September 26, 2016), a surgeon tells a flying monkey that the witch is dead by touching him on the shoulder and saying, "Ding-dong."
  • The flying monkeys also make a cameo appearance in The Lego Batman Movie. They appear alongside the Wicked Witch of the West and various other villains in the Phantom Zone. One of the Monkeys spoke during the film where he told Joker to get on with his plan to get out of the Phantom Zone. The flying monkeys are later seen alongside the other villains attacking Gotham City.
  • In the ITV (and PBS) sitcom Vicious, Freddie (Ian McKellen), who incessantly insults Mildred (Hazel Stewart), the mother of his partner Stuart (Derek Jacobi), observes that one can be sure that Stuart's mother has indeed arrived if one looks out the window and sees flying monkeys.
  • The Flying Monkeys appear in Dorothy and the Wizard of Oz. Some of them are on the side of the Wicked Witch of the West's niece Wilhemina and are often led by Wilhelmina's Flying Monkey minions Frank and Lyman (voiced by Steve Blum and Jess Harnell).
  • In the third volume of Shazam!, the winged monkeys are shown as inhabitants of the Magiclands location called the Wozenderlands. Working for the Wicked Witches of the North, South, East, and West, they pursue the White Rabbit in order to take him prisoner. The White Rabbit runs from the winged monkeys and is saved from them by Mamaragan, Eugene Choi, and Pedro Peña.[3]
  • In The Super Hero Squad Show episode "Night in the Sanctorum!", Enchantress uses her magic to create an illusion of "winged primates of peril" (with real exploding fruit) to bombard Super Hero City so the Lethal Legion can seek the wreckage for Infinity Fractals.
  • In the 2017 series Emerald City, the Flying Monkeys are mechanical creatures that the Wizard uses to spy on his subjects that can record and play what they have seen.
  • In the Amazon Video series Lost in Oz, the Flying Monkeys are just regular monkeys with jetpack robotic wings who serve Fitz, the apprentice of Langwidere.
  • Although not a direct adaptation to the literature itself, the 2013 Super Sentai series, Zyuden Sentai Kyoryuger features the Deboth Army's members being themed after the characters in The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Resentful Knight Endolf is designed with the motif of winged monkeys, whose possession of Dogold's shock restrains parallels his source of inspiration's fate of being enslaved to the Golden Cap.


Scooby-Doo (character)

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Scooby-Doo
Scooby-Doo character
Scooby-Doo.png
First appearance"What a Night for a Knight" (Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! episode)
Created byJoe Ruby
Ken Spears
Iwao Takamoto
Voiced by
Information
SpeciesDog
GenderMale
BreedGreat Dane

Scooby-Doo[1] is the eponymous character and protagonist of the animated television franchise of the same name created in 1969 by the American animation company Hanna-Barbera. He is a male Great Dane and lifelong companion of amateur detective Shaggy Rogers, with whom he shares many personality traits. He features a mix of both canine and human behaviors (reminiscent of other funny animals in the Golden age of American animation); treated by his friends more or less as an equal while speaking in a famous (and much parodied) dog-like voice. His catchphrase is "Scooby-Dooby-Doo!"


Scooby-Doo, Where Are You!

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Scooby-Doo, Where Are You!
Scooby-1969-title.jpg
Genre
Created byJoe Ruby
Ken Spears
Developed by
Directed by
Voices of
Theme music composerDavid Mook
Ben Raleigh
Opening theme"Scooby-Doo, Where Are You!" performed by
Composer(s)Ted Nichols (1969–1970)
Country of originUnited States
Original language(s)English
No. of seasons3
No. of episodes41 (list of episodes)
Production
Producer(s)
Running time21 minutes approx
Production company(s)Hanna-Barbera Productions
DistributorTurner Program Services (1992–98)[4]
Warner Bros. Television Distribution (1999–present)
Release
Original networkCBS (1969–70)
ABC (1978)
Picture formatFilm
4:3
480i
Audio formatMonaural
Original releaseOriginal series:
  • September 13, 1969 – October 31, 1970
Revival series:
September 9, 1978 –
November 4, 1978
Chronology
Followed byThe New Scooby-Doo Movies (1972–73)

Scooby-Doo, Where Are You![5] is an American animated mystery comedy television series produced by Hanna-Barbera. Produced for CBS, the series premiered as part of the network's Saturday morning schedule on September 13, 1969, and aired for two seasons until October 31, 1970. In 1978, a selection of episodes from the later series Scooby's All-Stars and The Scooby-Doo Show were aired on ABC under the Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! name and they were released in a DVD set marketed as its third season.[6]

The series centers on a group of characters consisting of four teenagers—Fred Jones, Daphne Blake, Velma Dinkley, and Shaggy Rogers—and the title character, a semi-anthropomorphic Great Dane named Scooby-Doo. The group travels in the Mystery Machine, a blue and green van with two orange flowers, solving mysteries involving local legends; in doing so, they discover that the perpetrator is almost invariably a disguised person who seeks to exploit the legend for personal gain.

Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! is the first incarnation of what would eventually become a long-running media franchise, which primarily consists of subsequent animated series, several films, and related merchandise.



The Sopranos

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The Sopranos
Sopranos titlescreen.png
GenreCrime drama
Created byDavid Chase
Written by
Starring
Opening theme"Woke Up This Morning (Chosen One Mix)" by Alabama 3
Ending themeVarious
Country of originUnited States
Original language(s)English
No. of seasons6
No. of episodes86 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s)
  • David Chase
  • Brad Grey
  • Robin Green
  • Mitchell Burgess
  • Ilene S. Landress
  • Terence Winter
  • Matthew Weiner
Production location(s)New Jersey
Silvercup Studios, New York City
Cinematography
Editor(s)
  • Sidney Wolinsky (33 episodes)
  • William B. Stich (28 episodes)
  • Conrad M. Gonzalez (20 episodes)
Camera setupSingle camera[1]
Running timeApproximately 50 minutes
Production company(s)
  • Chase Films
  • Brad Grey Television
  • HBO Entertainment
Release
Original networkHBO
Picture format480i (16:9 SDTV) (original broadcast)
1080p 16:9 (Blu-ray)
Audio format
Original releaseJanuary 10, 1999 –
June 10, 2007
External links
Website

The Sopranos is an American crime drama television series created by David Chase. The story revolves around Tony Soprano (James Gandolfini), a New Jersey-based Italian-American mobster, portraying the difficulties that he faces as he tries to balance his family life with his role as the leader of a criminal organization. These are explored during his therapy sessions with psychiatrist Jennifer Melfi (Lorraine Bracco). The series features Tony's family members, mafia colleagues, and rivals in prominent roles—most notably his wife Carmela (Edie Falco) and his protégé/distant cousin Christopher Moltisanti (Michael Imperioli).

The pilot was ordered in 1997, and the show premiered on HBO on January 10, 1999. It ran for six seasons totaling 86 episodes until June 10, 2007. Broadcast syndication followed in the U.S. and internationally.[2] The Sopranos was produced by HBO, Chase Films, and Brad Grey Television. It was primarily filmed at Silvercup Studios in New York City and on location in New Jersey. The executive producers throughout the show's run were David Chase, Brad Grey, Robin Green, Mitchell Burgess, Ilene S. Landress, Terence Winter, and Matthew Weiner.

The Sopranos is widely regarded as one of the greatest television series of all time.[3][4][5][6][7] The series won a multitude of awards, including Peabody Awards for its first two seasons, 21 Primetime Emmy Awards, and five Golden Globe Awards. It has been the subject of critical analysis, controversy, and parody, and has spawned books,[8] a video game,[9] soundtrack albums, and assorted merchandise.[10] Several members of the show's cast and crew were largely unknown to the public but have since had successful careers.[11][12][13][14] In 2013, the Writers Guild of America named The Sopranos the best-written TV series of all time,[15] while TV Guide ranked it the best television series of all time.[16] In 2016, the series ranked first in the Rolling Stone list of the 100 greatest TV shows of all time.[7]



Bada Bing

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The Bada Bing's logo

Bada Bing! is a fictional strip club from the HBO drama television series The Sopranos. It was a key location for events in the series, named for the catchphrase "bada bing", a phrase popularized by James Caan's character Sonny Corleone in The Godfather.[1] The popularization of the fictional club benefited the real-life go-go bar where scenes were filmed. The Bada Bing is loosely based on Wiggles, a strip club owned by New Jersey mobster Vincent Palermo before it was shut down.[2]

Strippers at the Bada Bing were portrayed by extras including Elektra, Justine Noelle, Kelly Madison Kole, Luiza Liccini, Marie Athanasiou, Nadine Marcelletti, Rosie Ciavolino and Sonia Ortega. The "Bada Bing Girls" appeared in a photo spread in the August 2001 issue of Playboy magazine.[3][4] Michelle Eileen, another frequently portrayed Bada Bing extra, also appeared in Playboy Fall 2002 with photo spreads over 3 separate Playboy Special Edition magazines.



Abbey Road

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  (Redirected from Abbey road)


Abbey Road
The cover of Abbey Road has no printed words. It is a photo of the Beatles, in side view, crossing the street in single file.
Studio album by
Released26 September 1969 (UK)
1 October 1969 (US)
Recorded22 February – 20 August 1969
StudioEMI, Olympic and Trident Studios, London
Genre
Length47:03
LabelApple
ProducerGeorge Martin

The Beatles chronology
Yellow Submarine
(1969)
Abbey Road
(1969)
Let It Be
(1970)
The Beatles North American chronology
Yellow Submarine
(1969)
Abbey Road
(1969)
Hey Jude
(1970)
Singles from Abbey Road
  1. "Something" / "Come Together"
    Released: 6 October 1969

Abbey Road is the eleventh studio album by English rock band the Beatles, released on 26 September 1969 by Apple Records. The recording sessions were the last in which all four Beatles participated. Let It Be was the final album that the Beatles completed and released before the band's dissolution in April 1970, but most of the album had been recorded before the Abbey Road sessions began.[1] The two-sided hit single from the album, "Something" backed with "Come Together", was released in October and topped the Billboard Hot 100 chart in the United States.

Abbey Road incorporates genres such as blues, pop and progressive rock,[2] and makes prominent use of the Moog synthesizer and the Leslie speaker. Side two contains a medley of song fragments edited together to form a single piece. The album was recorded amid a more enjoyable atmosphere than the Get Back/Let It Be sessions earlier in the year, but there were still frequent disagreements within the band. John Lennon had privately left the group by the time that the album was released, and Paul McCartney publicly quit the following year.

Abbey Road was an immediate commercial success and reached number one in the UK and US, although it initially received mixed reviews, with some critics describing its music as inauthentic and bemoaning the production's artificial effects. Over time, the album became viewed as among the Beatles' best and many critics have ranked it as one of the greatest albums of all time. In particular, George Harrison's contributions in "Something" and "Here Comes the Sun" are considered to be among the best songs that he wrote for the group. The album's cover features the four band members walking across a zebra crossing outside Abbey Road Studios and has become one of the most famous and imitated images in popular music.



fun facts from wikipedia....


























Budget$2 million










StarringAnnette Bening
Julianne Moore
Mark Ruffalo
Mia Wasikowska
Josh Hutcherson
Yaya DaCosta
Music byCarter Burwell
Nathan Larson
Craig Wedren




















Cast[edit]

  • Annette Bening as Dr. Nicole 'Nic' Allgood, an OB/GYN specialist and the principal breadwinner of the family.[4] She is threatened when the children decide to bring Paul into their lives, and worried that he will disrupt the family dynamic, especially when he begins an affair with her wife, Jules Allgood; she is Joni's biological mother. She also shows signs of potential alcoholism due to her daily consumption of wine.
  • Julianne Moore as Jules Allgood, who has never had a formal career (She was mainly a stay at home mother to Joni and Laser.) but is starting a landscape design business;[4] she is Laser's biological mother and Nic's wife.
  • Mark Ruffalo as Paul Hatfield, the owner of an organic foods restaurant who likes women, but also his freedom. He was the anonymous sperm donor for both children.
  • Mia Wasikowska as Joni Allgood, who has recently turned 18 and is set to leave for college. She is Laser's older sister.
  • Josh Hutcherson as Laser Allgood, the 15-year-old son who asks Joni to help him meet their biological father.
  • Yaya DaCosta as Tanya, an employee and occasional lover of Paul's.
  • Eddie Hassell as Clay, a friend of Laser; Nic and Jules think he's unstable.
  • Zosia Mamet as Sasha, a close friend of Joni.
  • Kunal Sharma as Jai, a close friend of Joni.



The list
Heroes
Rank     Hero     Actor     Film     Year     Notes
1.     Atticus Finch     Gregory Peck     To Kill a Mockingbird     1962     Loosely based upon the father of Harper Lee
2.     Indiana Jones     Harrison Ford     Raiders of the Lost Ark     1981    
3.     James Bond     Sean Connery     Dr. No     1962    
4.     Rick Blaine     Humphrey Bogart     Casablanca     1942    
5.     Will Kane     Gary Cooper     High Noon     1952    
6.     Clarice Starling     Jodie Foster     The Silence of the Lambs     1991    
7.     Rocky Balboa     Sylvester Stallone     Rocky     1976    
8.     Ellen Ripley     Sigourney Weaver     Aliens     1986    
9.     George Bailey     James Stewart     It's a Wonderful Life     1946    
10.     T. E. Lawrence     Peter O'Toole     Lawrence of Arabia     1962     Historical figure
11.     Jefferson Smith     James Stewart     Mr. Smith Goes to Washington     1939    
12.     Tom Joad     Henry Fonda     The Grapes of Wrath     1940    
13.     Oskar Schindler     Liam Neeson     Schindler's List     1993     Historical figure
14.     Han Solo     Harrison Ford     Star Wars     1977    
15.     Norma Rae Webster     Sally Field     Norma Rae     1979     Based upon southern mill worker Crystal Lee Sutton
16.     Shane     Alan Ladd     Shane     1953    
17.     Harry Callahan     Clint Eastwood     Dirty Harry     1971    
18.     Robin Hood     Errol Flynn     The Adventures of Robin Hood     1938    
19.     Virgil Tibbs     Sidney Poitier     In the Heat of the Night     1967    
20.     Butch Cassidy
and the Sundance Kid     Paul Newman
and Robert Redford     Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid     1969     Historical figures
21.     Mahatma Gandhi     Ben Kingsley     Gandhi     1982     Historical figure
22.     Spartacus     Kirk Douglas     Spartacus     1960     Historical figure
23.     Terry Malloy     Marlon Brando     On the Waterfront     1954    
24.     Thelma Dickinson and Louise Sawyer     Geena Davis and Susan Sarandon     Thelma & Louise     1991    
25.     Lou Gehrig     Gary Cooper     The Pride of the Yankees     1942     Historical figure
26.     Superman     Christopher Reeve     Superman     1978    
27.     Bob Woodward
and Carl Bernstein     Robert Redford
and Dustin Hoffman     All the President's Men     1976     Historical figures
28.     Juror #8     Henry Fonda     12 Angry Men     1957    
29.     General George Patton     George C. Scott     Patton     1970     Historical figure
30.     Lucas (Luke) Jackson     Paul Newman     Cool Hand Luke     1967    
31.     Erin Brockovich     Julia Roberts     Erin Brockovich     2000     Historical figure
32.     Philip Marlowe     Humphrey Bogart     The Big Sleep     1946    
33.     Marge Gunderson     Frances McDormand     Fargo     1996    
34.     Tarzan     Johnny Weissmuller     Tarzan the Ape Man     1932    
35.     Alvin York     Gary Cooper     Sergeant York     1941     Historical figure
36.     Rooster Cogburn     John Wayne     True Grit     1969    
37.     Obi-Wan Kenobi     Alec Guinness     Star Wars     1977    
38.     The Tramp     Charlie Chaplin     City Lights     1931    
39.     Lassie     Pal     Lassie Come Home     1943    
40.     Frank Serpico     Al Pacino     Serpico     1973     Historical figure
41.     Arthur Chipping     Robert Donat     Goodbye, Mr. Chips     1939    
42.     Father Edward     Spencer Tracy     Boys Town     1938     Historical figure
43.     Moses     Charlton Heston     The Ten Commandments     1956     Biblical figure
44.     Jimmy "Popeye" Doyle     Gene Hackman     The French Connection     1971     Based upon New York City Police Detective Eddie Egan
45.     Zorro     Tyrone Power     The Mark of Zorro     1940    
46.     Batman     Michael Keaton     Batman     1989    
47.     Karen Silkwood     Meryl Streep     Silkwood     1983     Historical figure
48.     The T-800     Arnold Schwarzenegger     Terminator 2: Judgment Day     1991    
49.     Andrew Beckett     Tom Hanks     Philadelphia     1993    
50.     General Maximus Decimus Meridius     Russell Crowe     Gladiator     2000    
Villains
Rank     Villain     Actor     Film     Year     Notes
1.     Dr. Hannibal Lecter     Anthony Hopkins     The Silence of the Lambs     1991    
2.     Norman Bates     Anthony Perkins     Psycho     1960     Loosely based upon killer Ed Gein
3.     Darth Vader     David Prowse (voiced by James Earl Jones)     The Empire Strikes Back     1980    
4.     The Wicked Witch of the West     Margaret Hamilton     The Wizard of Oz     1939    
5.     Nurse Ratched     Louise Fletcher     One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest     1975    
6.     Mr. Potter     Lionel Barrymore     It's a Wonderful Life     1946    
7.     Alex Forrest     Glenn Close     Fatal Attraction     1987    
8.     Phyllis Dietrichson     Barbara Stanwyck     Double Indemnity     1944    
9.     Regan MacNeil (as possessed by "Satan")     Linda Blair (voiced by Mercedes McCambridge)     The Exorcist     1973    
10.     The Evil Queen     Voice of Lucille La Verne     Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs     1937    
11.     Michael Corleone     Al Pacino     The Godfather Part II     1974    
12.     Alex DeLarge     Malcolm McDowell     A Clockwork Orange     1971    
13.     HAL 9000     Voice of Douglas Rain     2001: A Space Odyssey     1968    
14.     The Alien     Bolaji Badejo     Alien     1979    
15.     Amon Goeth     Ralph Fiennes     Schindler's List     1993     Historical figure
16.     Noah Cross     John Huston     Chinatown     1974    
17.     Annie Wilkes     Kathy Bates     Misery     1990    
18.     The Shark     "Bruce"[2]     Jaws     1975    
19.     Captain Bligh     Charles Laughton     Mutiny on the Bounty     1935     Historical figure
20.     Man     Voiced by Paul Starrs     Bambi     1942    
21.     Mrs. Eleanor Iselin     Angela Lansbury     The Manchurian Candidate     1962    
22.     Terminator     Arnold Schwarzenegger     The Terminator     1984    
23.     Eve Harrington     Anne Baxter     All About Eve     1950    
24.     Gordon Gekko     Michael Douglas     Wall Street     1987    
25.     Jack Torrance     Jack Nicholson     The Shining     1980    
26.     Cody Jarrett     James Cagney     White Heat     1949    
27.     Martians     Various     The War of the Worlds     1953    
28.     Max Cady     Robert Mitchum     Cape Fear     1962    
29.     Reverend Harry Powell     Robert Mitchum     The Night of the Hunter     1955    
30.     Travis Bickle     Robert De Niro     Taxi Driver     1976    
31.     Mrs. Danvers     Judith Anderson     Rebecca     1940    
32.     Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker     Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway     Bonnie and Clyde     1967     Historical figures
33.     Count Dracula     Bela Lugosi     Dracula     1931    
34.     Dr. Szell     Laurence Olivier     Marathon Man     1976    
35.     J.J. Hunsecker     Burt Lancaster     Sweet Smell of Success     1957     Based upon columnist Walter Winchell
36.     Frank Booth     Dennis Hopper     Blue Velvet     1986    
37.     Harry Lime     Orson Welles     The Third Man     1949    
38.     Caesar Enrico Bandello     Edward G. Robinson     Little Caesar     1931    
39.     Cruella De Vil     Voice by Betty Lou Gerson     One Hundred and One Dalmatians     1961    
40.     Freddy Krueger     Robert Englund     A Nightmare on Elm Street     1984    
41.     Joan Crawford     Faye Dunaway     Mommie Dearest     1981     Historical figure
42.     Tom Powers     James Cagney     The Public Enemy     1931    
43.     Regina Giddens     Bette Davis     The Little Foxes     1941    
44.     Baby Jane Hudson     Bette Davis     What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?     1962    
45.     The Joker     Jack Nicholson     Batman     1989    
46.     Hans Gruber     Alan Rickman     Die Hard     1988    
47.     Tony Camonte     Paul Muni     Scarface     1932    
48.     Verbal Kint     Kevin Spacey     The Usual Suspects     1995    
49.     Auric Goldfinger     Gert Fröbe (voiced by Michael Collins)     Goldfinger     1964    
50.     Detective Alonzo Harris     Denzel Washington     Training Day     2001