Highlights
- Dreamworks films have a history of creating truly terrifying and evil villains, regardless of whether they are human or animal.
- Characters like Mrs. Tweedy, Lord Farquaad, and Hal are examples of truly detestable and despicable villains who are willing to carry out terrible acts.
- From wanting to cook and eat the film’s protagonists to seeking personal gain and power, these villains evoke fear and make audiences question their true intentions.
Throughout their history as beloved children’s film creators, Dreamworks has managed to create some truly terrifying villains. While the best Dreamworks films have to be family-friendly, and appealing to all ages, that doesn’t stop Dreamworks from pitting their protagonists against some despicable characters, who are completely willing to carry out terrible acts.
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Regardless of whether these villains are human or animal, what their tragic backstories are, or the scale of the crimes they commit, none can argue that these villains are anything but evil. Of all the characters that could give adults nightmares, let alone children, these dastardly villains are definitely up there.
10 Mrs Tweedy (Chicken Run)
On the surface, it could be argued that Mrs Tweedy is just a hungry farm owner, trying to keep her farm afloat via the egg trade or, if that’s not possible, enjoy some tasty chicken pies. Of course, since the protagonists of Chicken Run are the chickens in question, Mrs Tweedy’s actions start to seem vastly more horrific.
Coupled with Mrs Tweedy’s desire to cook and eat the film’s leading characters, she is downright detestable to her poor husband, Mr Tweedy. Her mean character makes her feel like a very real villain, who easily makes a vegetarian diet seem tempting.
Chicken Run
- Release Date
- June 23, 2000
- Director
- Peter Lord, Nick Park
- Runtime
- 84 Minutes
- Genres
- Animation, Comedy, Action
9 Lord Farquaad (Shrek)
The infamous Shrek villain, Lord Farquaad, is another villain who feels scarily real, perhaps surprising for Shrek’s fantasy setting. Lord Farquaad is a pompous man who believes he is entitled to a place within royalty. In order to achieve this, he needs a princess to marry.
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It doesn’t seem to matter a jot to Farquaad whether the princess in question wants this or not. On top of his blatant disregard for the feelings of any potential love and his quest for personal gain, Farquaad is a tyrannical ruler with a severe mean streak. A truly evil character, it makes jokes at the expense of his height seem plenty deserved.
Shrek
- Release Date
- May 18, 2001
- Director
- Andrew Adamson, Vicky Jenson
- Runtime
- 90 Minutes
- Genres
- Fantasy, Comedy, Animation
8 Hal (Megamind)
What happens if you take a character like Lord Farquaad and give them superpowers? You get someone like Hal, of course, or Titan, to give him his superhero name. Megamind is a wonderful film that subverts an audience’s expectations of good and evil. The strange blue alien who seems to relish being a villain turns out to have a heart of gold and a desire to do good.
On the flip side, Hal, the timid and slightly socially awkward camera operator with an innocent crush, turns out to be truly despicable when he gains an ounce of supernatural power. Hal is a terrifyingly real depiction of people who believe that nice intentions leave them entitled to power and romantic reciprocation.
Megamind
- Release Date
- November 5, 2010
- Director
- Tom McGrath
- Runtime
- 96 Minutes
- Genres
- Superhero, Comedy, Animation
7 Pitch (Rise Of The Guardians)
It goes without saying that Pitch is an evil character, given that he is a literal embodiment of nightmares. Rise Of The Guardians depicts beloved mythical figures, from Santa to the Easter Bunny, to the Tooth Fairy, whose existences are fueled by the belief of children. Pitch’s evil goal is to destroy these Guardians by preventing children’s belief in them, leaving the world with nothing but nightmares.
Naturally, this all makes Pitch a very evil villain. Despite this, it could be argued that, as the embodiment of nightmares, he is simply doing his job. Still, it can be rare to see a villain in a children’s film kill a character, and Pitch does cross that line.
Rise of the Guardians
- Release Date
- November 21, 2012
- Director
- Peter Ramsey
- Runtime
- 97 Minutes
- Genres
- Fantasy, Action, Adventure, Animation
6 Chantel DuBois (Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted)
The Madagascar series is a children’s film franchise featuring beloved animal characters, who escaped from Central Park Zoo. In the third installment, they travel across Europe alongside an animal circus. Surprisingly, it isn’t the circus that is depicted as cruel to the animals. Instead, as the title suggests, the group is being closely pursued by law enforcement.
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As animals, this means the animal control unit. Unfortunately for them, the lead officer, DuBois, has far darker intentions than restoring the peace. DuBois is an animal hunter and collector, willing to go to any length to see the beloved characters’ heads mounted on her wall. Her dark drive to kill these beloved animals makes her rank very highly as an evil character.
Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted
- Release Date
- June 8, 2012
- Director
- Eric Darnell, Conrad Vernon, Tom McGrath
- Runtime
- 93 Minutes
- Genres
- Animation, Comedy
5 Le Frog (Flushed Away)
For a character with a name as hilarious as Le Frog, he is a truly evil villain. Flushed Away primarily takes place within Ratropolis, a rat-inhabited city in the sewers. Le Frog is as evil as he is because he intends to release the city’s floodgates during half-time at the World Cup, at which point all the humans will theoretically be taking toilet breaks, in order to flood and destroy Ratropolis, allowing him to take over.
Le Frog’s tragic backstory and a primary motivation for wiping out the entire rat population is that he was once a pet who got flushed down the toilet when his owner replaced him with a rat. Poor Le Frog. It doesn’t remotely excuse his actions or stop him from, hilariously, being one of Dreamworks’s most evil villains.
Flushed Away
- Release Date
- November 3, 2006
- Director
- Sam Fell, David Bowers
- Runtime
- 85 Minutes
- Genres
- Adventure, Comedy, Animation
4 Lord Shen (Kung Fu Panda 2)
The brilliant Kung Fu Panda series has a multitude of brilliant villains. None seem to top the evil of the peacock, Lord Shen. Shen saw the beauty of fireworks and realized their potential as weaponry. When he overheard a prophecy that he would be killed by a black and white warrior, he took it upon himself to preemptively destroy a village of pandas.
To make it more personal, this turns out to be the home of the panda protagonist, Po, and includes his parents. Shen’s evil goes so far as to mean that he won’t accept mercy, instead taking the opportunity to finish Po for good. Filling a similar intensity of evil to Le Frog, Shen’s is even worse as his slaughter is successful and comes before any wrong is ever committed to Shen.
Kung Fu Panda 2
- Release Date
- May 26, 2011
- Director
- Jennifer Yuh
- Runtime
- 90 Minutes
- Genres
- Martial Arts, Comedy, Animation
3 Jack Horner (Puss In Boots: The Last Wish)
Puss In Boots: The Last Wish has quite a few characters who oppose the protagonists at some point, notably including the lupine personification of death itself. Despite this, the most evil character of them all has to be Jack Horner.
Jack Horner is an entirely self-centered character, who is willing to sacrifice anyone and anything to achieve ultimate control over magic. He causes the deaths of all who begrudgingly support him, is fully willing to kill a cute puppy dog, and is in fact so downright evil that his own personal conscience gives up on trying to help the man be anything other than a tyrannical and spoiled man-child.
Puss in Boots: The Last Wish
- Release Date
- December 21, 2022
- Director
- Joel Crawford
- Runtime
- 102 Minutes
- Genres
- Adventure, Comedy, Animation
2 Drago (How To Train Your Dragon 2)
Things get very personal regarding Drago, the villain in How To Train Your Dragon 2. Drago captures and enslaves dragons into a personal army, an evil mentality to the island of Burk, who live in harmony with dragons after the events of the first film. Already, this ranks Drago highly on the evil scale. During the climax, however, Drago reveals his control over a dragon called a Bewilderbeast, who can mind-control other dragons.
Using this dragon’s power, Drago forces the protagonist’s beloved dragon, Toothless, to kill the hero. He would have succeeded too, if not for the heroic sacrifice of the protagonist’s father, resulting in his tragic death. With horrific aims and such a personal and murderous blow at the end of their encounter, Drago leaves his mark as a truly evil villain.
How to Train Your Dragon 2
- Release Date
- June 13, 2014
- Director
- Dean DeBlois
- Runtime
- 102 Minutes
- Genres
- Fantasy, Action, Animation
1 Seti (The Prince Of Egypt)
Given that it is an animated retelling of The Book Of Exodus, this early and iconic Dreamworks film was always bound to be more gritty than much of its later works. This applies to its villains, too. While it would be easy to see the prophet Moses’s adoptive brother, Rameses, as the primary villain of the film and Biblical story, specifically his refusal to free the Hebrews throughout the plagues that his people face, this mindset is established by their father, Pharaoh Seti.
Pharaoh Seti, after all, taught the boys that the Hebrews were merely slaves and ordered and enacted the infanticide of newborn Hebrew boys. Regardless of who is the real source of evil, both Seti and Rameses after him enact some of the vilest evils in all the Dreamworks films.
The Prince of Egypt
- Release Date
- December 19, 1998
- Director
- Brenda Chapman, Steve Hickner, Simon Wells
- Runtime
- 99 Minutes
- Genres
- Musical, Drama, Animation
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