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“
Vader: Obi-Wan never told you what happened to your father. Luke: He told me enough. He told me you killed him. Vader: No. I am your father.
„
~ Darth Vader reveals his identity to Luke, and one of the most famous movie quotes of all time
Darth Vader, born as Anakin Skywalker, is a fictional character in the Star Wars universe. The character was created by George Lucas and has been portrayed by numerous actors. His appearances span all six Star Wars films, and he is an important character in the expanded universe of television series, video games, novels, literature, and comic books. Originally a Jedi prophesied to bring balance to the Force, he falls to the dark side of the Force and serves the evil Galactic Empire at the right hand of his Sith master, Palpatine (also known as Darth Sidious). He is also the father of Luke Skywalker and Leia Organa.
The American Film Institute listed him as the third greatest movie villain in cinema history on 100 Years... 100 Heroes and Villains, behind Hannibal Lecter and Norman Bates..
Anakin Skywalker started out life as a slave. Raised on the planet Tatooine by his mother Shmi, Anakin had no father, implying miraculous birth. He is a gifted pilot and engineer and has the ability to "see things before they happen". He even creates his own protocol droid, C-3PO. When he is 9 years old, Jedi Master Qui-Gon Jinn meets him after an emergency landing on Tatooine. After discovering that Anakin's blood has an unusually high number of midi-chlorians (a measure of Force potential), Qui-Gon becomes convinced the boy is the "Chosen One" of Jedi prophecy who will bring balance to the Force. Anakin wins his freedom in a podrace, but is forced to part with his mother. Qui-Gon takes Anakin to the Jedi Council and asks permission to train him, but they are concerned by the fear Anakin exhibits and decline the request. During the film, Anakin forms a close bond with Padmé Amidala, the young queen of Naboo. During the invasion of Naboo, Anakin helps defeat the corrupt Trade Federation by destroying their command ship. After Qui-Gon is killed in a duel with Sith Lord Darth Maul, his apprentice Obi-Wan Kenobi promises to train Anakin, a proposal the Jedi Council reluctantly accepts. Palpatine, the Galactic Republic's newly-elected Chancellor, befriends the boy, promising to "watch your career with great interest".
Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones[]
Ten years later, Anakin is the apprentice of Obi-Wan. Chancellor Palpatine assigns Anakin and Obi-Wan to investigate an assassination attempt made on Senator Padmé Amidala. Anakin travels with Padme to Naboo, where they fall in love. Anakin has a vision of his mother in pain and goes to Tatooine, where he learns that she had been kidnapped by Tusken Raiders. He goes to the Tusken camp, where he finds his mother, tortured beyond saving; she dies in his arms. Overcome with rage, Anakin kills the entire tribe. After he returns with his mother's body, he confesses his crime to Padmé, who comforts him. Soon after, Anakin and Padmé travel to Geonosis to rescue Obi-Wan from the Sith Lord Darth Tyranus and his Separatist army, but they are instead captured and sentenced to death. Anakin and Padmé profess their love for each other moments before being rescued by an army of clone troopers and Jedi. During a lightsaber duel with Dooku, Anakin loses his right arm and later has it replaced with a prosthetic. At the end of the film, Anakin and Padmé marry in a secret ceremony.
Star Wars: The Clone Wars[]
In the 2008 animated film Star Wars: The Clone Wars and the subsequent television series, Jedi Knight Anakin Skywalker takes on a Padawan, Ahsoka Tano. The two of them have many adventures, such as saving Jabba the Hutt's son from the Separatists. The responsibility of a Padawan helps Anakin become a better leader and a wiser man. This series also includes a scene in which Anakin sees a cryptic vision of his future as Darth Vader. This series also notes how Anakin doesn't trust the Jedi Council.
Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith[]
Three years after the beginning of the Clone Wars, Anakin is a Jedi Knight and hero of the Clone Wars. He and Obi-Wan lead an attempt to rescue Supreme Chancellor Palpatine after he is kidnapped by Separtist leader General Grievous. During the rescue, Anakin defeats Count Dooku in a lightsaber duel and decapitates him in cold blood on Palpatine's urging. When he returns to Coruscant, he meets with Padme, who reveals that she is pregnant with his child. That night, he has a vision of Padmé dying in childbirth; he fears it will come true, as it is similar to visions he had before his mother died. Meanwhile, Palpatine names Anakin his representative on the Jedi Council; the Council declines Anakin the rank of Jedi Master, however, shaking his faith in the Jedi.
Palpatine eventually reveals to Anakin that he is Sith Lord Darth Sidious, the mastermind of the war, and that the dark side holds the power to save Padmé's life. Conflicted, Anakin reports Palpatine to Jedi Master Mace Windu. Despite orders to remain behind, Anakin follows Windu to the Chancellor's office to ensure Palpatine is captured alive. He walks in on Windu ready to kill Palpatine and intervenes on the Sith Lord's behalf, severing Windu's lightsaber arm; Palpatine then kills Windu with a blast of Force lightning. Desperate to save his wife, Anakin pledges himself to the dark side and becomes Palpatine's Sith apprentice, Darth Vader.
On Palpatine's orders, Vader leads a squadron of clone troopers to kill everyone in the Jedi Temple during the Great Jedi Purge, and then assassinates the Separatist leaders on Mustafar. There, Vader meets with Padmé, who begs him to flee with her. He refuses, saying that the two of them can overthrow Palpatine and rule the galaxy. When Obi-Wan emerges from Padmé's ship, Vader accuses her of conspiring against him and uses the Force to choke her into unconsciousness. Vader then battles Obi-Wan in a lightsaber duel which ends when Obi-Wan severs his remaining organic limbs. Vader then slides too close to a lava flow and bursts into flame. Obi-Wan takes Vader's lightsaber and leaves him to die.
However, Palpatine finds Vader and has his apprentice's ruined body reconstructed with the cybernetic limbs and the black armor seen in the original trilogy. When Vader regains consciousness, Palpatine informs him that Padmé died as a result of his anger, and Vader destroys the medical droids in a fit of despair. Vader is last seen alongside Palpatine and a young Grand Moff Tarkin viewing the original Death Star's construction.
Star Wars: Rebels[]
Darth Vader appears in Star Wars Rebels, once again voiced by James Earl Jones. In this series, set during the early days of the Rebel Alliance, he hires anInquisitor to hunt down the remaining Jedi across the galaxy.
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story[]
Vader at first discussed with Orson Krennic about The Death Star, and about the priority to destroy the rebels. He informed that Grand Moff Tarkin is controlling the weapon, and as Orson asked if he can be in charge, Darth Vader choked him with force powers, and left him behind to suffer. Darth Vader was later ordered by Tarkin to find the plans. He managed to kill most soldiers onboard but one soldier escaped him, and managed to hand the plans to Princess Leia.
Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope[]
Darth Vader is depicted as a ruthless cyborg who serves the Galactic Empire. Early in the film, Obi-Wan Kenobi tells Luke Skywalker that Vader is a former Jedi who "betrayed and murdered" Luke's father and helped the Empire destroy the Jedi Order. Along with Grand Moff Tarkin, Vader is charged with recovering the Death Star's technical schematics, which were stolen by the Rebel Alliance seeking to overthrow the Empire. To that end, he captures and tortures Princess Leia Organa, and stands by while Tarkin destroys her home planet of Alderaan with the Death Star's superlaser. While the princess is being rescued, Vader fights Obi-Wan in a lightsaber duel and kills his former master. During the film's climactic battle scene, Vader leads a squadron of TIE fighters and destroys several Rebel fighters. He pursues Luke's X-Wing fighter, but a surprise attack from Han Solo's Millennium Falcon clips him and sends him flying into deep space.
Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back[]
In Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back, set three years later, Darth Vader leads an Imperial starfleet in pursuit of the Rebels. He leads an invasion of the Rebel base on Hoth, but the protagonists escape. He later confers with the Emperor telling him that Luke Skywalker has become a threat to the Empire, and must not become a Jedi. Vader persuades the Emperor that Luke would be a great asset if turned to the dark side of the Force. Vader captures Han Solo, Leia Organa, Chewbacca, C-3PO, and R2-D2 on Cloud City, and uses them as bait for Luke. He has Han tortured, frozen in carbonite, and delivered to bounty hunter Boba Fett, but Leia, Chewbacca, and the droids escape thanks to Lando Calrissian. Vader engages Luke in a lightsaber duel, which ends when Vader cuts off Luke's right hand and reveals that he is Luke's father; he then entreats Luke to turn to the dark side so they can "rule the galaxy as father and son". Horrified, Luke throws himself into Cloud City's reactor core and ultimately escapes aboard the Millennium Falcon. Onboard his Star Destroyer, Vader telepathically tells Luke that it is his destiny to join the dark side.
Sebastian Shaw as Anakin Skywalker unmasked and redeemed in Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi.
Star Wars: Episode VI - Return of the Jedi[]
In Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi, set one year later, Darth Vader arrives aboard the half-constructed second Death Star. He intimidates the battle station's commander, Moff Jerjerrod, into stepping up construction. When Emperor Palpatine personally arrives, he assures Vader that the two of them will turn Luke to the dark side.
Luke surrenders himself to Vader in the hope that he can turn his father back "to the light side". Vader brings Luke onto the Death Star, where the Emperor tries to seduce Luke to the dark side. A lightsaber duel erupts between father and son, during which Vader learns Leia Organa is Luke's twin sister and threatens to turn her to the dark side if Luke will not submit. Enraged, Luke attacks and overpowers Vader, severing his mechanical right hand. Realizing he is close to suffering his father's fate, Luke refuses the Emperor's command to kill Vader and take his place.
Enraged, the Emperor unleashes a torrent of Force lightning upon Luke. The sight of Luke's agony breaks the dark side's hold on Vader, and he kills the Emperor by throwing his former master down the Death Star's reactor shaft. In the process, however, he is mortally wounded by the Emperor's lightning. Redeemed, Anakin Skywalker asks Luke to remove his helmet so he can look at Luke with his own eyes. With his dying breath, he tells his son that there was good left in him after all. Luke escapes the Death Star with his father's remains, which he later ceremonially burns in a funeral pyre. As the Rebels celebrate the destruction of the Death Star and the fall of the Empire, Luke sees his father's spirit, standing alongside those of Obi-Wan and Yoda.
Star Wars: Episode VII - The Force Awakens[]
In this film, set 30 years later, Kylo Ren takes Lord Vader's mask and rebuilds it, saying, "Nothing will stand in our way. I will finish what you started."
Literature[]
Darth Vader appears numerous times in comic books such as Dark Horse Comics's Star Wars Tales and Marvel Comics' Star Wars series (1977–1986).
In James Luceno's Dark Lord: The Rise of Darth Vader (2005), set a few months after the events of Revenge of the Sith, Vader disavows his Anakin identity as he systematically pursues and kills the surviving Jedi and cements his position in the Empire. The novel also reveals that Vader plans to eventually overthrow Palpatine, and that he betrayed the Jedi because he resented their supposed failure to recognize his power.
Vader's Quest (1999) depicts Vader hiring a bounty hunter to bring him information about the pilot who destroyed the Death Star, ultimately meeting Luke for the first time. In the novel Splinter of the Mind's Eye (1978), Vader and Luke duel for the first time, and Luke cuts off Vader's right arm. Shadows of the Empire (1996) reveals that Vader is conflicted about trying to turn his son to the dark side of the Force, and knows deep down that there is still some good in him.
Anakin's redeemed spirit appears in The Truce at Bakura (1993), set a few days after the end of Return of the Jedi. He appears to Leia, imploring her forgiveness. Leia condemns him for his crimes and banishes him from her life. He promises that he will be there for her when she needs him, and disappears. In Tatooine Ghost (2003), Leia learns to forgive her father after learning about his childhood as a slave and his mother's traumatic death. In The Unifying Force (2003), Anakin tells his grandson Jacen Solo to "stand firm" in his battle with the Supreme Overlord of the Yuuzhan Vong.
In The Dark Nest trilogy (2005), Luke and Leia uncover old recordings of their parents in R2-D2's memory drive; for the first time, they see their own birth and their mother's death, as well as their father's corruption to the dark side. In Bloodlines (2006), Jacen—who has himself turned to the dark side—uses the Force to "watch" Anakin slaughter the children at the Jedi Temple.
Video games[]
Darth Vader plays a central role in Star Wars: The Force Unleashed (2008) as the hidden true main antagonist. He is the playable character in the first level of the game, where he and his armies invade Kashyyyk to hunt down Kento Marek who had survived the Order's destruction. Vader kills Kento and kidnaps his young Force-sensitive son, whom he raises as his secret apprentice. Vader sends Galen Marek codenamed Starkiller (the game's main protagonist) on various missions throughout the galaxy, with the ultimate goal to assassinate Palpatine so that Vader can rule the galaxy himself. Toward the end of the game, however, it is revealed that Vader isn't planning to overthrow Palpatine at all; he is merely using his apprentice to expose the Empire's enemies. At the game's climax, the player chooses between attacking Palpatine to help his Rebel friends escape the Death Star or killing Vader to become the Emperor's new apprentice, with the first choice being the canon ending. He returns in the sequel Star Wars: The Force Unleashed II as the main antagonist and final boss.
Vader is also a playable character in the video games Lego Star Wars: The Video Game, Lego Star Wars II: The Original Trilogy, Lego Star Wars: The Complete Saga, Soulcalibur IV, Star Wars: Battlefront II, Star Wars: Empire at War, Star Wars: Empire at War: Forces of Corruption, and Star Wars: Galactic Battlegrounds. He also is an active but non-playable character in Star Wars Galaxies, Star Wars: Battlefront, (as an evil pig) a non-playable character in Angry Birds Star Wars, and a playable character in Angry Birds Star Wars II.
Anakin Skywalker is a playable character in the video games Star Wars: Battlefront II, Lego Star Wars: The Video Game, Lego Star Wars II: The Original Trilogy, Lego Star Wars: The Complete Saga, Star Wars: The Clone Wars - Lightsaber Duels, Star Wars: The Clone Wars - Jedi Alliance, Star Wars: The Clone Wars - Republic Heroes, and is featured (as a playable Angry Bird) in Angry Birds Star Wars II.
Characteristics[]
In Attack of the Clones, Anakin Skywalker feels "smothered" by Obi-Wan Kenobi and is unable to control his life. By Revenge of the Sith, however, his "father-son" friction with his master has matured into a more equal, brotherly relationship. Once he becomes Darth Vader, each evil act he commits makes it harder for him to return to the light, but he ultimately escapes the dark side and redeems himself before he dies, by saving his son Luke Skywalker, and killing Palpatine in Return of the Jedi.
Eric Bui, a psychiatrist at the University of Toulouse Hospital, argued at the 2007 American Psychiatric Association convention that Anakin meets six of the nine diagnostic criteria for borderline personality disorder (BPD), one more than necessary for a diagnosis. He and a colleague, Rachel Rodgers, published their findings in a 2010 letter to the editor of the journal Psychiatry Research. Bui says he found Anakin Skywalker a useful example to explain BPD to medical students. In particular, Bui points to Anakin's abandonment issues and uncertainty over his identity. Anakin's mass murders of the Tusken Raiders in Attack of the Clones, and the young Jedi in Revenge of the Sith count as two dissociative episodes, fulfilling another criterion. Bui hoped his paper would help raise awareness of the disorder, especially among teens.
Cultural impact[]
Darth Vader's iconic status has made the character a synonym for evil in popular culture; psychiatrists have even considered him as a useful example to explain borderline personality disorder to medical students. Anakin's origin story in The Phantom Menace has been compared to signifiers of African American racial identity, and his dissatisfaction with his life has been compared to Siddartha's before he became Gautama Buddha. A Mexican church advised Christians against seeing The Phantom Menace because it portrays Anakin as a Christ figure. A slime-mold beetle of the Genus Agathidium is named after Vader, and several buildings across the globe are regularly compared to him. A grotesque of Darth Vader looms over the east face of the Washington National Cathedral's northwest tower. During the 2007–08 NHL season, Ottawa Senators goaltender Martin Gerber performed so well in an all-black mask that fans endearingly termed him "Darth Gerber".
Many commentators and comedians have also evoked his visage to satirize politicians and other public figures, and several American political figures have been unflatteringly compared to the character, including General George Custer, the subject of an acrylic painting titled "Darth Custer" by Native American artist Bunky Echohawk. In 2005, Al Gore referred to Tele-Communications Inc.'s John C. Malone as the "Darth Vader of cable", and political strategist Lee Atwater was known by his political enemies as "the Darth Vader of the Republican Party".
On June 22, 2006, U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney referred to himself as the Darth Vader of the Bush administration. Discussing the administration's philosophy on gathering intelligence, he said to CNN's John King, "It means we need to be able to go after and capture or kill those people who are trying to kill Americans. That's not a pleasant business. It's a very serious business. And I suppose, sometimes, people look at my demeanor and say, 'Well, he's the Darth Vader of the administration.'" Jon Stewart put on a Darth Vader helmet to address Dick Cheney as a "kindred spirit" on The Daily Showon January 25, 2007. Cheney's wife, Lynne, presented Stewart with a Darth Vader action figure on her appearance on the show on October 10, 2007. Both Stewart and Stephen Colbert have occasionally referred to Cheney as "Darth Cheney". In the satirical cartoon show Lil' Bush, Dick Cheney's father is portrayed as being Darth Vader. At her presidential campaign event on September 19, 2007, Hillary Rodham Clinton also referred to Cheney as Darth Vader. At the 2008 Washington Radio and Television Correspondents' Association Dinner, Cheney joked that his wife Lynne told him that the Vader comparison "humanizes" him. George Lucas told The New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd, however, that Cheney is more akin to Emperor Palpatine, and that a better stand-in for Vader would be George W. Bush. An issue of Newsweek referenced this quote, and compared Bush and Cheney to Vader and Palpatine, respectively, in a satirical article comparing politicians to various Star Wars and Star Trek characters.
Many films and television series have paid homage to Darth Vader. Marty McFly in Back to the Future (1985), dressed in a radiation suit, calls himself "Darth Vader from the planet Vulcan" to convince the past version of his father to ask his mother to dance. Rick Moranis plays "Dark Helmet" in the Star Wars parody Spaceballs (1987). In Chasing Amy (1997), Hooper X speaks at a comic convention about Darth Vader being a metaphor for how poorly the science fiction genre treats black people; he is especially offended that Vader, the "blackest brother in the galaxy", reveals himself to be a "feeble, crusty old white man" at the end of Return of the Jedi.
The character has gained much positive reception as a classic film villain. Darth Vader ranked number two on Empire magazine's 2008 list of The 100 Greatest Movie Characters. Premiere magazine also ranked Vader on their list of The 100 Greatest Movie Characters of All Time. On their list of the 100 Greatest Fictional Characters, Fandomania.com ranked Vader at number 6. Darth Vader was also the #1 supervillain on the Bravo series Ultimate Super Heroes, Vixens and Villains. Darth Vader was also ranked as #1 in IGN's list of top 100 Star Wars characters. Furthermore, Darth Vader's quote in The Empire Strikes Back — "No, I am your father" (often misquoted as "Luke, I am your father"), — is one of the most well known quotes in cinema history. The line was selected as one of the 400 nominees for the American Film Institute's 100 Years... 100 Movie Quotes, a list of the greatest American movie quotes. Vader received the Ultimate Villain recognition at the 2011 Scream Awards.
In 2010, IGN ranked Darth Vader 25th in the "Top 100 Video Game Villains".
In Ukraine, the Internet Party of Ukraine regularly lets people named Darth Vader take part in elections.
Behind the scenes[]
Concept and creation[]
Brian Muir sculpted Darth Vader's costume using Ralph McQuarrie's design.
In the first draft of The Star Wars, tall, grim general "Darth Vader" was already close in line with his final depiction, and the protagonist "Anikin Starkiller" had a role similar to Luke Skywalker's as the 16-year-old son of a respected warrior. Vader's mask was originally designed by Ralph McQuarrie as part of Vader's spacesuit and not intended to be part of the regular costume. Brian Muir sculpted Vader's costume based on McQuarrie's design.
After the success of Star Wars, Lucas hired science fiction author Leigh Brackett to write Star Wars II with him. They held story conferences and, by late November 1977, Lucas had produced a handwritten treatment. The treatment is similar to the final film, except that Vader does not reveal he is Luke's father. In the first draft that Brackett would write from this, Luke's father appears as a ghost to instruct Luke. Lucas was disappointed with the script, but Brackett died of cancer before he could discuss it with her. With no writer available, Lucas had to write the next draft himself. In this draft, he made use of a new plot twist: Vader claiming to be Luke's father. According to Lucas, he found this draft enjoyable to write, as opposed to the year-long struggles writing the first film.
The new plot element of Luke's parentage had drastic effects on the series. Michael Kaminski argues in his book that it is unlikely that the plot point had ever seriously been considered or even conceived of before 1978, and that the first film was clearly operating under an alternate storyline where Vader was a separate character from Luke's father; After writing the second and third drafts in which the plot point was introduced, Lucas reviewed the new backstory he had created: Anakin had been Obi-Wan's brilliant student and had a child named Luke, but was swayed to the dark side by Palpatine. Anakin battled Kenobi on the site of a volcano and was badly wounded, but was then reborn as Vader. Meanwhile, Kenobi hid Luke on Tatooine while the Galactic Republic became the tyrannical Galactic Empire and Vader systematically hunted down and killed the Jedi. This change in character would provide a springboard to the "Tragedy of Darth Vader" storyline that underlies the prequels.
After deciding to create the prequel trilogy, Lucas indicated the series would be a tragic one depicting Anakin's fall to the dark side. He also saw that the prequels could form the beginning of one long story that started with Anakin's childhood and ended with his death. This was the final step towards turning the film series into a "Saga".
For the first prequel, Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace, Lucas made Anakin nine years old to make the character's separation from his mother more poignant. Movie trailers focused on Anakin and a one-sheet poster showing him casting Vader's shadow informed otherwise unknowing audiences of the character's eventual fate. The movie ultimately achieved a primary goal of introducing audiences to Anakin.
Michael Kaminski, in The Secret History of Star Wars, offers evidence that issues in Anakin's fall to the dark side prompted Lucas to make massive story changes, first revising the opening sequence of the third prequel, Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith, to have Palpatine kidnapped and his apprentice, Count Dooku, murdered by Anakin as the first act in the latter's turn towards the dark side. After principal photography was complete in 2003, Lucas made even more massive changes in Anakin's character, re-writing his entire turn to the dark side; his fall from grace would now be motivated by a desire to save his wife, Padmé Amidala, rather than the previous version in which that reason was one of several, including that he genuinely believed that the Jedi were plotting to take over the Republic. This fundamental re-write was accomplished both through editing the principal footage, and new and revised scenes filmed during pick-ups in 2004.
Portrayals[]
Darth Vader was portrayed by bodybuilder David Prowse and by stunt performer Bob Anderson during the character's intense lightsaber fight scenes. James Earl Jones provided Vader's voice, but was initially uncredited in Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope and Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back because he felt his contributions were too small to warrant recognition. The character has also been voiced by Scott Lawrence and Matt Sloan for several video games.
Anakin Skywalker has been portrayed by Sebastian Shaw in Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi, Jake Lloyd in Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace, and Hayden Christensen in Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones, and Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith. He also briefly reprises his role in the final scene of Return of the Jedi as a force ghost replacing Sebastian Shaw. The character has also been voiced by Mat Lucas for the 2003 micro-series Star Wars: The Clone Wars, and Matt Lanter in the CGI Star Wars: The Clone Wars, and later animated TV series.
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Rusty Nail |
Patrick Koster |
King Leo |
Lord Percival |
Princess Regina |
Mark McKinney |
Count Dooku |
Jango Fett |
Lamar Burgess |
Connor Rooney |
Harlen Maguire |
Mr. Kwai |
Darren "Wall Street" Bettencourt |
Giant Thug |
Gustav Graves |
Graves Corporation (Miranda Frost, Zao, Vladmir Popov, Mr. Kil, Dr. Alvarez, General Han, General Li, General Dong & Van Bierk) |
Kingpin |
Bullseye |
Wesley Owen Welch |
Jose Quesada |
Falon |
Maynard Odet |
Odet Family (One Eye, Saw Tooth & Three Finger) |
James Moriarty |
Dorian Gray |
Dante |
Sanderson Reed |
Edward Hyde |
Daniel & Aurelio Rosas-Sanchez |
Happy Chapman |
Wendell |
VIKI |
Antarctic Queen Xenomorph |
Grid |
Chopper Predator |
Celtic Predator |
Scar |
Zerbino |
Saladin |
Vanessa |
Redhead |
Lead Teen |
Lead Teen's Crew |
Reggie and Arthur |
Kirigi |
The Hand (Typhoid Mary & Tattoo) |
Demons |
John Ketcham |
Guy of Lusignan |
Raynald of Châtillon |
General Grievous |
Doctor Doom |
Gianni Chellini |
Lola |
Dimitri |
Dr. Sonovich |
Jimmy Murtaugh |
Andy |
Frank Jones |
Napoleon Dynamite |
Michael Jackson |
Tyler Jackson |
Major Baine |
Lord Dargis |
Rommel |
Miranda Priestly |
Professor Bedlam |
Rome |
Durza |
Galbatorix |
Shruikan |
Cecil Fredericks |
Gus & Reginald |
The White Bitch |
Bink |
Willy Wonka |
Captain Jack Swallows |
Silas |
Galactus |
Thomas Gabriel |
Mai Linh |
Trey |
Rand |
Robert Russo |
Emerson |
Casper |
Brother |
Ma |
Pa |
Sister |
Three Toe |
Agent 47 |
Mikhail Belicoff |
Udre Belicoff |
Yuri Marklov |
Diana Burnwood |
Ian Hawke |
Gunnison Predalien |
Wolf |
Xerxes |
Persian Emissary |
Happy Feet |
Councilman Traitoro |
Paris Hilton |
Roland Cox |
Paladin |
Mark Kobalt |
Marko Hoxha |
Albanian Mafia (Patrice Saint-Clair, Ali, Sheikh Raman & Jean-Claude Pitrel) |
Stuart St. John |
Megumi Tanaka |
Jack Wander |
Boss Kim |
Thug Kim |
The King of Ward Three |
Number Two |
King Piccolo |
Mai |
Oozaru |
Kahmunrah |
Al Capone |
Ivan the Terrible |
Napoleon Bonaparte |
Skip |
Zirkonians (Razor & Tazer) |
Ricky Dillman |
Jennifer Check |
Nikolai Wolf |
Carlos Chavez |
Crawford |
Floyd |
Miles Quaritch |
RDA (Parker Selfridge & Lyle Wainfleet) |
Ryan Edwards |
Ares |
Luke Castellan |
Hades |
Medusa |
Mrs. Dodds |
Gabe Ugliano |
Charon |
Lotus Eaters |
Lotus Land Bellhop |
Hydra |
Minotaur |
Bosco |
Agent Lynch |
Brock Pike |
Russell Morrison |
John Fitzgerald |
Naomi |
Berserker Predator |
Tracker Predator |
Falconer Predator |
Edwin |
Stans |
Jack |
Rachel |
Antoine |
Jenna McCarty |
Eleanor Reigns |
The Green Mist |
Governor Gumpas |
Pug |
Edward Edwardian |
Blefuscians |
Nat Jones |
August Rosenbluth |
Robert Ledgard |
Vera Cruz |
Zeca Ledgard |
Marilla Ledgard |
Fulgencio |
Steven Jacobs |
Dodge Landon |
Douglas Hunsiker |
Timekeeper Raymond Leon |
Alien |
Zoe |
Jason |
Aliens |
Andrew Detmer |
Richard Detmer |
Adam |
Jack Barts |
Vadoma |
David 8 |
Peter Weyland |
Engineers |
Deacon |
Mr. Harter |
Lydia |
Mac Miosky |
Murad Hoxha |
Suko |
The Cook |
Mayor Nicholas Hostetler |
Yuri Komarov |
Irina Komarov |
Viktor Chagarin |
Alik |
Kronos |
Chris Rodriguez |
Polyphemus |
Cyclopes |
Manticore |
Colchis Bull |
Charybdis |
Edwin Epps |
Mary Epps |
William Ford |
James Birch |
Slave Boat Worker |
Ivan Block |
Malkina |
Birdman |
Jackson Hilliker |
Sally Hilliker |
Danny Hilliker |
Amy Elliot-Dunne |
Greta |
Sir Lancelot |
Xiangliu |
Dmitri Desgoffe-und-Taxis |
J.G. Jopling |
Koba |
Dreyfus |
Carver |
Pharaoh Rameses II |
Richmond Valentine |
Valentine Corporation (Gazelle, Charlie Hesketh, Chester King & Morten Lindström) |
South Glade Mission Church (Church Leader) |
Dean Baker |
Rottweiler |
Poodle |
Oleg Malankov |
Maxim |
Christian Longo |
James Suggs |
Poltergeists (Clown Doll) |
John Fitzgerald |
Toussaint |
Harvester Queen |
Ian Cox |
Mr. Barron |
Malthus |
Dr. Heinreich Volmer |
Alan Rikkin |
Abstergo Industries |
Tomás de Torquemada |
Neomorphs |
Praetomorphs |
Colonel McCullough |
Alpha-Omega (Red & Preacher) |
Winter |
Poppy Adams |
Golden Circle (Bennie and Jet, Beauty-Bot, Clara Von Gluckfberg, Angel & Charles) |
United States President |
Agent Whiskey |
Redneck Bar Patrons |
Colonel Richard Strickland |
Lanfranco Cassetti |
David Strine |
Ultimate Predator |
Will Traeger |
Jatemme Manning |
Harry Rawlings |
Morgana |
Vector |
Grewishka |
Chiren |
Nova |
Zapan |
H. Clifford McBride |
Rev-9 |
Legion |
Cthulhu |
Hal |
Spitz |
The Dognapper |
The Man in the Red Sweater |
Antwan Hovachelik |
Dude |
Jacques le Gris |
Pierre d'Alençon |
Jets (Riff, Ice, Action, A-Rab, Baby John, Snowboy, & Tiger) |
Sharks (Bernardo & Chino) |
Captain Morton |
The Flock (Grigori Rasputin, Erik Jan Hanussen, Mata HariGavrilo Princip, Vladimir Lenin, Adolf Hitler & Alfred Dupont) |
Kaiser Wilhelm II |
Brendan |
Julius |
Moira |
Kurr |
Heavy Merc |
Feral Predator |
The Mother |
AJ Gilbride |
Frank
Animated Television Homer Simpson |
Bart Simpson |
Milhouse Van Houten |
Sideshow Bob |
Blue-Haired Lawyer |
Springfield Mafia (Fit Tony, Johnny Tightlips, Legs, Louie, Frankie & Don Vittorio D'Maggio) |
Kang and Kodos |
Jessica Lovejoy |
Terwilliger Family (Robert Terwilliger Sr., Dame Judith Underdunk, Cecil Terwilliger, Francesca Terwilliger & Gino Terwilliger) |
Judge Constance Harm |
Hank Scorpio |
Miss Goodthighs |
Artie Ziff |
Gina Vendetti |
Bart Simpson's Creatures |
Comic Book Guy (Lego) |
Frank Grimes, Jr. |
Lyle Lanley |
Mav & Portia |
Rex Banner |
Dexter Colt |
Julia |
Glamorous Godfrey |
Howard K. Duff VIII |
Lucille Botzcowski |
The Devil |
Ned Flanders |
Groundskeeper Willie |
Hugo Simpson II |
Homer's Clones |
Burnsiverse |
Jonathan Frink Sr. |
King Snorky |
The Blob |
The Grand Pumpkin |
El Coyote |
Peter Griffin |
Griffin Family (Lois Griffin, Meg Griffin, Brian Griffin & Stewie Griffin) |
Carter Pewterschmidt |
Ernie the Giant Chicken |
Bertram |
Glenn Quagmire |
John Herbert Silverbird |
Diane Simmons |
Pouncey |
Mr. Washee Washee |
Alana Fitzgerald |
Stan Smith |
Smith Family (Francine Smith, Hayley Smith, Roger Smith & Klaus Heissler) |
Avery Bullock |
Santa Claus |
Brian Lewis |
Cleveland Brown |
Tubbs-Brown Family (Donna Tubbs-Brown & Rallo Tubbs-Brown) |
Lester Krinklesac |
Arianna the Bear |
Principal Farquhare |
Derek, Laine and Reggie |
Hip Hop Illuminati (Kenny West, Will.i.am, Questlove, Nicki Minaj & Bruno Mars) |
Donny |
Lloyd Waterman |
Johann |
Dragon Flyers (Krogan, Mr. Murderous Pile of Yak Dung & Flyer Leader) |
Dragon Hunters (Viggo Grimborn, Ryker Grimborn, Cleve, Ingar Ingerman, Dragon Hunter Commander & Fight Master) |
Alvin the Treacherous |
Dagur the Deranged |
Amos |
Gruffnut Thorston |
Slitherwings |
Firecomb Crasher |
Hookfang's Nemesis
Live-Action Television Socs (Bob Sheldon & Randy Adderson) |
Delia York |
Dr. Louis Hastings |
Alexander York |
Reese Wilkerson |
Commandant Spangler |
Ida Kenzel |
Oliver |
Donnie |
Lionel Herkabe |
Randy Zane |
Emily |
Josh |
Mallory Wilkerson |
Tina |
Daisy Wilkerson |
Renee Wilkerson |
Nell |
Molly Merchants |
Marv Merchants |
Vera Murchins |
Hannah Cleary |
Charvi Vikram |
Kayla Moore |
Tate Langdon |
Langdon Family (Constance Langdon) |
Hayden McClaine |
Larry Harvey |
Moira O'Hara |
Charles Montgomery |
Infantata |
Bianca Forest |
R. Franklin |
Fiona |
Bloody Face (Dr. Oliver Thredson, Johnny Morgan & Imposters) |
The Devil |
Arthur Arden |
Sister Jude |
Timothy Howard |
Leigh Emerson |
Jenny Reynolds |
Aliens |
Sinclair |
Hughes |
Jessica |
Fiona Goode |
Marie Laveau |
Madison Montgomery |
Delphine LaLaurie |
The Axeman |
Hank Foxx |
Spalding |
Papa Legba |
Minotaur |
Joan Ramsey |
Archie Brener |
Alicia Spencer |
Elsa Mars |
Bette and Dot Tattler |
Dandy Mott |
Stanley |
Maggie Esmerelda |
Twisty the Clown |
Chester Creb |
Dell Toledo |
Edward Mordrake |
Rita Gayheart |
Larry Gayheart |
Penny's Father |
Lucious Lyon |
Anika Calhoun |
Camilla Marks |
Frank Gathers |
The Chanels (Chanel Oberlin, Sonya Herfmann, Sadie Swenson & Libby Putney) |
Red Devil (Hester Ulrich, Boone Clemens, Gigi Caldwell & Pete Martinez) |
Green Meanie (Cassidy Cascade, Ingrid Hoffel, Wes Gardner & Jane Hollis) |
Mary Mulligan |
Nurse Thomas |
John Lowe |
Countess Elizabeth Johnson |
James Patrick March |
Sally McKenna |
Addiction Demon |
Ramona Royale |
Jeffrey Dahmer |
Aileen Wuornos |
John Wayne Gacy |
Hazel Evers |
Shelby Miller |
Tomasyn White |
Polk Family |
Agnes Mary Winstead |
Scáthach |
Ally Mayfair-Richards |
FIT (Kai Anderson, Ivy Mayfair-Richards, Beverly Hope, Harrison Wilton, Meadow Wilton, Gary Longstreet & Jack Samuels) |
Winter Anderson |
Babe Babbitt |
Michael Langdon |
The Cooperative (Miriam Mead, Wilhemina Venable, Dinah Stevens & Jeff Pfister and Mutt Nutter) |
Ariel Augustus |
Mr. Jingles |
Donna Chambers |
Margaret Booth |
Richard Ramirez |
Montana Duke |
Bruce |
Lavinia Richter
Video Games Piet Gruber |
Wolf Hongo |
Kenny Sinclair |
Reese Hoffman |
Elena Goshkin |
Amir El Kahr |
Victor Rashenko |
Matt Groening |
Lard Lad |
God |
Patty & Selma Dragon |
Stubborn Ape
Animated Television Duke Sigmund Igthorn |
Ogres |
Crocosaurus |
Flintheart Glomgold |
Magica De Spell |
Beagle Boys (Ma Beagle) |
Stan and Heff |
Fat Cat's Gang (Fat Cat) |
Norton Nimnul |
Aldrin Klordane |
Baby Thaddeus |
Ratso Ratzkiwatzki |
Evil Manta |
The Sorceress |
Lobster Mobster and Da Shrimp |
Mozenrath |
Mirage |
Mechanicles |
The Collector (Bonkers) |
Demona |
David Xanatos |
Kent Powers |
Henry Villanova |
The Green-Eyed Monster of Jealousy |
Ivy DeVil |
Judge Dimsdale De Vil |
Lawson's Crew (Erwin Lawson |
Randall Weems |
Greg Skeens |
Swinger Girl |
Kurst the Worst |
Menlo) |
The Ashleys (Ashley Armbruster |
Ashley Boulet |
Ashley Quinlan |
Ashley Tomassian) |
Gelman |
Conrad Mundy |
Tad White |
James Stone |
Dr. Slicer |
Gilda |
Mayor Phillip Fitzhugh |
SAL 3000 |
DeSilvo |
Earl Raymond |
Cousin Zeke |
Al Roker |
Chuckles |
Skeleton King |
Mandarin |
Valeena |
Dark Ones (Dark One Worm) |
The Formless |
Huntsman |
Huntsgirl |
Dark Dragon |
Dr. Bedlam |
Carl the Evil Cockroach Wizard |
Night Master |
Coop |
Eradicus |
Eradicus' Minions
(Ella Mental |
Indestructo-Bob |
Rubber Chucky |
Mollecu-Lars) |
Heinz Doofenshmirtz |
Norm |
Vanessa Doofenshmirtz |
Lucius Heinous VII |
Kendall Perkins |
Brad Buttowski |
Brianna Buttowski |
Harold Buttowski |
Brick Bristol |
Bill Cipher |
Li'l Gideon |
Stanley Pines |
Abraham Kane |
Donald Duck's Raw Anger |
Jordan Buttsquat |
Suzi |
Lord Dominator |
Lord Hater |
Commander Peepers |
Rippen |
Toffee |
Ludo |
Meteora Butterfly |
Mina Loveberry |
Solaria Butterfly |
Tom Lucitor |
Commander Heist |
Lazlo |
Zhan Tiri |
Lady Caine |
Varian |
King Edmund |
Cassandra |
Bradford Buzzard |
Flintheart Glomgold (2017) |
Magica De Spell (2017) |
General Lunaris |
Obake |
Diane Amara |
Noodle Burger Boy |
Globby |
Chris |
High Voltage |
Baron Von Steamer |
Momakase |
Mel Meyer |
Mad Jacks |
Trina |
Hardlight |
Chip Whistler |
Gwendolyn Zapp |
Hunter De Vil |
Cuddles |
Clarissa Corgi |
Portia Poodle |
Canal Crew (Fergus, Sid Squirrel & Big Fee) |
Bessie the Cornish Cow |
King Andrias |
Captain Grime |
Sasha Waybright |
The Core |
King Aldrich |
Emperor Belos |
Hunter |
Lilith Clawthorne |
The Collector (The Owl House) |
Infinity Ultron |
The Ghost Council |
The Chairman |
The Barrister Ghosts |
Lady Rancora |
Vivica
Live-Action TV Miss Hendra |
Victoria Kayne |
Gorog |
Dominic |
Evil Alex |
Dr. Evilini |
The Mummy |
Ronald Longcape Jr. |
Penelope |
Kaita |
Lanny Parker |
King Kalakai/Yamakoshi |
Zadoc |
Farhog the Fierce |
Lexi Reed |
Susan Skidmore |
Sally Jensen |
Sensei Ty |
Rhoda Chesterfield |
Creepy Connie Thompson |
Darla Shannon |
Madeline |
Bryn Beitbart |
McD |
Brooke |
Victor Krane |
Douglas Davenport |
Marcus Davenport |
Giselle Vickers |
Taylor Krane |
Sebastian Krane |
Principal Perry |
Ludmila Ferró |
Jade & Matias LaFontaine |
Gregorio Casal |
Gery López |
Priscila Ferró |
Clément Galán |
Esmeralda Di Pietro |
Milton Vinicius |
Crash Bernstein |
Helga Rooney |
Missy Bradford |
Dawn Buckets |
Laughy Cat |
Brad & Brads |
Agent Johnson |
Brett Willis |
Zane Willis |
Mitch Bishop |
Janet Smythe |
Sebastian |
Cyd Ripley |
Gladys |
Hazel Swearengen |
Dr. Sharon Chen |
Ámbar Smith |
Sharon Benson |
Rey Gutiérrez |
Benicio |
Red Sharks (Gary López) |
Emilia |
Ramiro Ponce |
Matteo Balsano
Literature King Nicholas
Video Games Mizrabel |
Oswald Gardner |
Admiral Evar |
Cogs |
Herbert P. Bear |
Atticus Thorn |
Foxy Loxy |
Goosey Loosey |
Jolly Roger |
Shadow Blot |
False Shadow Blot |
Sephiroth
Shorts Peg Leg Pete |
Donald Duck |
Kat Nipp |
Old Man Tree |
Skeletons |
Grim Reaper |
Mad Doctor |
Demon Cats |
Gustav the Giant |
Lonesome Ghosts |
H. U. Hennessy |
Witch |
Pluto's Devil |
Ben Buzzard |
Zeke Midas Wolf |
Izzy Wolf |
The Three Little Wolves |
Boogeymen |
Captain Katt |
Mortimer Mouse |
Butch the Bulldog |
Foxy Loxy |
Ajax Gorilla |
Beppo Gorilla |
Witch Hazel |
Adolf Hitler |
Nazi School Teacher |
Little Hans |
Julius |
Dr. Frankenollie |
Grace Goodwin |
Molly |
Bear
Comics Phantom Blot |
Trudy Van Tubb |
Doctor Vulter |
Solego the Chaos God |
Arpine Lusène |
Monsieur Molay |
Azure Blue |
Lawyer Sharky |
Eli Squinch |
Sylvester Shyster |
Fantomius |
Inquinator |
Spectrus |
Raghor |
Zafire |
Newton |
The Raider |
Emil Eagle |
Sr. X |
X-1, X-2 and X-3 |
Professor Nefarious |
Fliplip, Sidney and Armadillo |
Neighbor Jones |
Anacleto Faina |
Anacleto Mitragli |
Beagle Boys |
Ottoperotto
Inquisitorius The Grand Inquisitor |
The Second Sister |
The Third Sister |
The Fourth Sister |
The Fifth Brother |
The Sixth Brother |
The Seventh Sister |
The Eighth Brother |
The Ninth Sister |
The Tenth Brother
Officials and Military Officers Admiral Conan Antonio Motti |
Admiral Garrick Versio |
Admiral Kassius Konstantine |
Admiral Kendal Ozzel |
Captain Bragg |
Captain Lorth Needa |
Commandant Cumberlayne Aresko |
Commander Brom Titus |
Director Armand Isard |
Director Orson Callan Krennic |
Fleet Admiral Firmus Piett |
General Maximilian Veers |
Governor Arihnda Pryce |
Grand Admiral Savit |
Grand Admiral Thrawn |
Grand Moff Wilhuff Tarkin |
Major General Cassio Tagge |
Moff Gideon |
Moff Raythe |
Moff Tiann Jerjerrod |
Taskmaster Myles Grint |
Vice Admiral Rampart
Operatives and Other Officials Agent Alexsandr Kallus |
Commander Appo |
Commander Crosshair |
Commander Fox |
Commander Gideon Hask |
Commander Iden Versio |
Commander Vult Skerris |
Endo Frant |
Veris Hydan |
Governor Tiber Saxon |
Grand Vizier Mas Amedda |
Grand Vizier Sate Pestage |
Minister Maketh Tua |
Protectorate Gleb |
Scorch |
Senator Orn Free Taa |
Sly Moore |
Tenn Graneet |
Vaneé |
Viceroy Gar Saxon
Soldiers Emperor's Royal Guard |
Stormtroopers |
501st Legion |
Purge Troopers |
Death Troopers |
Imperial Navy Troopers |
Dark Troopers
Affiliates The Client |
COMPNOR |
Cylo |
Doctor Pershing |
Imperial Navy |
Imperial Special Forces |
Lama Su |
Morgan Elsbeth |
Naare |
Nala Se |
Rukh
Military Officers Admiral Frantis Griss |
Allegiant General Enric Pryde |
Captain Moden Canady |
Captain Phasma |
Colonel Erich S. Datoo |
Colonel Kaplan |
Commander Gideon Hask |
Commander Pyre |
General Armitage Hux |
General Brendol Hux |
Grand Admiral Rae Sloane |
Major Baron Elrik Vonreg
Officials and Operatives Agent Terex |
Agent Tierny |
BB-9E |
FN-2199 |
Lady Carise Sindian