#1
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Works Of Narrative Fiction Named For The Villain
The idea for this thread popped into my brain while I was listening to Pavarotti sing "La Donna e Mobile" from Rigoletto. This can encompass novels, opera, movies, tv shows, short stories...any work of narrative fiction (so no Rise and Fall of the Third Reich (sorry, Mr. Shirer)) the title of which is a direct reference to the villain of the piece. We begin thus...
Lord of the Rings Rigoletto The Merchant of Venice |
#3
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oh geeze. Just before I opened the thread I thought "Why, Blahblah, of course!" . . . and now I can't remember.
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#4
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Dracula
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#5
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The Island of Doctor Moreau
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#7
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The Strange Case Of Doctor Jekyll And Mister Hyde.
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#9
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Dr No?
The Last Man on Earth? Godzilla? Kill Bill? The Phantom of the Opera? This is harder than I thought it'd be. |
#11
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That reminds me: The Terminator.
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#14
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The Mystery of Dr. Fu-Manchu, and the rest of the series.
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#15
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The Alien movies.
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#16
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Dr. Mabuse the Gambler
Fantômas Zodiac |
#17
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I guess the Phantom of the Opera would be in this category, too.
Hollow Man |
#18
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Quote:
**racks brains** The Puppet Masters, by Heinlein, perhaps? |
#19
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Quote:
And "Moby Dick." |
#21
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Eight Legged Freaks
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#23
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I don't think so. I think Moby Dick is more of a force of nature, a la The Perfect Storm.
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#24
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Certainly the antagonist. Of course, the hero, Captain Ahab, is more than a little evil himself, but Moby Dick is a malevolent, willful antagonist, and not simply a force of nature. He's unknowable, but in a God-like way.
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#25
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Revenge of the Sith
How about works where the character who inspires the title doesn't start out as a villain, but later becomes one, even if its after the period covered by the work? If we allow those, then I'd like to submit Young George Lucas in Love. |
#26
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The giraffe boards
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#28
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Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back!
Star Trek: The Wrath of Kahn Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy "Yours Truly, Jack the Ripper" by Robert Bloch |
#31
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Actually, I withdraw that one by virtue of the fact that it's NOT Shylock that's referenced in the title, but Antonio. I let the prevalent pop culture view of the play convince me that I didn't know what I knew.
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#32
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Come on man, The Big Lebowski.
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#33
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Day of the Jackal
Them! |
#35
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Santa Claus vs the Martians
2 for 1 ! |
#36
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Attack of the Killer Tomatoes.
Killer Klowns from Outer Space. Redneck Zombies. (yes, I'm a fan of Z-grade movies) |
#37
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wait, what? I thought the dude was the big Lebowski, because of his dudelyness. Your saying it's the Other Lebowski?
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#39
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All the President's men.
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#40
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Gremlins
The Devil Wears Prada Blow (if you sort of squint) The Adjustment Bureau Contagion I struggle with the ones where the protagonists are criminals. Ocean's Eleven is clear on who the "good guys" and "bad guys" are: the bad guy is running a legitimate casino operation and the good ones are trying to rob him. wait. Are the Usual Suspects the bad guys? I had a few more but now my mind is stuck in an endless loop... |
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Giraffiti |
Giraffe Boards |
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