7 Female Villains For The Marvel Cinematic Universe

With Cate Blanchet set to play Hela in Thor: Ragnarok, the God of Thunder will come to blows with the MCU's very first female super-bad. Is this the exception or a sign of Marvel's new found feminism?

Feature Opinion
By MarkJulian - Jun 27, 2016 12:06 PM EST
Filed Under: Avengers
Female villains Marvel


 
Taika Waiti, director of Thor: Raganarok is set to introduce the very first (Main) female villain of the Marvel Cinematic Universe.  In a recent interview, Waititi stated, "Everyone’s aware of the need [for POC casting] and also the need for female characters. But female representation is something I feel is even still behind in the conversation about representation. It’s something that’s equally important to my mind. So it’s great having female heroes.  This film has [Marvel’s] first female villain, and that’s exciting for me.   I want to see more females onscreen and not just dudes. There’s nothing wrong with that, but there’s a lot of it in the world. We need more representation of all kinds. In all seriousness, from what I’ve seen—although it’s not like I’ve been around a lot of studios—they are aware of it, and they’re very conscious and vocal. I’ve heard people say, ‘We need to make them better.’"

Recently, Iron Man 3 director Shane Black revealed that he initially wanted a female villain to be revealed as the puppet master behind "The Mandarian" but the Marvel brass at the time didn't think a female villain would sell toys.  It's reportedly that very misogynistic viewpoint that led to Kevin Feige maneuvering to wrestle control of Marvel Studios away from Marvel Entertainment CEO Ike Perlmutter.  With Feige now calling the shots, recent casting announcements seemingly indicate that the Marvel Cinematic Universe will be a more open proponent of feminism, as well as diversity.  With that development in mind, here are 7 female supervillain candidates for future MCU films.     



7. Enchantress





Does it seem odd to anyone else that we'll have Skurge introduced in Thor: Ragnarok but not Enchantress?  However, with Karl Urban portraying the giant-axe wielding Asgardian in the God of Thunder's third-solo feature, one has to think that Amora can't be too far behind.  In her earliest appearance, she was sent by Odin to Midgard on a quest to destroy Thor's main love-interest, Jane Foster.  With Natalie Portman confirmed to be absent from Ragnarok (and the foreseeable future) and Thor gaining a new love interest in Tessa Thompson, it doesn't appear that the Thor/Jane romance will serve as the vehicle for the Enchantress' introduction. 

Perhaps another one of Amora's powers will serve as the means for her introduction?  She's nearly as well-versed in Asgardian magic as Tom Hiddleston's Loki but where the Prince of Mischief specializes in deception, Amora focuses on mind-control.  Though Hulk and Thor are teaming up in Ragnarok, should the overarching plot of the MCU ever call for the Green Goliath and the Odinson to become adversaries, Amora has gained control of the Hulk's mind on more than one occasion in the comics.



6. Death




Not necessarily a villain per se, Mistress Death serves as inspiration for the Marvel universe's most disreputable villain, Thanos.  More of an abstract entity than actual character, Death has been operating in the background of Marvel Comics since 1973.  Typically depicted as a slender and youthful humanoid woman or a robed skeleton, the misunderstood Thanos simply wants to prove his love for Death by destroying all life in the universe.  No big deal.  Hailing from the cosmic race known as the Eternals, Thanos was unfortunate enough to be born with the Deviant-recessive gene and was deformed and shunned growing up.  The Eternals hate and fear the Deviant gene to such an extent that his own mother attempted to kill him upon looking at his face for the very first time. 

Growing up shunned and despised, Thanos became fascinated with nihilism until meeting Mistress Death and promptly destroying his entire planet in order to garner her favor.  Besides her association with the Mad Titan, Death is also a prominent character in many of the storylines that feature the Elders of the Universe.  Having already met The Collector (Benicio del Toro) and with The Grandmaster (Jeff Goldblum) set to be introduced in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, do you think Marvel Studios will ever depict cosmic entities such as Death, Eternity and The Living Tribunal?



5. Typhoid Mary




Sure, Mary Walker would make a great villain for Netflix's Daredevil, provided the show receives a third season.  However, a third season appears to be in jeopardy as Marvel and Netflix are apparently waiting until after The Defenders before revealing what their plans are for the Charlie Cox-led series.  However, should Netflix go in a different direction after Defenders (there's rumors of Marvel Knights being the focus) Typhoid Mary would prove a worth addition to the MCU.

A skilled martial artist who possesses telekinesis and pyrokinesis, she's plagued Matt Murdock for years.  Oh, and in addition to her impressive abilities, she's also mentally unstable.  Think of her as an insane version of Elizabeth Olsen's Scarlet Witch (who we'll touch on shortly) who fights like Scarlett Johansson's Black Widow. Like   Wanda Maximoff, Mary Walker is a mutant  but, her close association with Daredevil most likely means she's one of the rare Marvel characters that can be used by both Marvel Studios and 20th Century Fox.



4. Sin





As much as fans would like the Red Skull to return, it doesn't look as if that's happening anytime soon.  Teleported to one of the other Nine Realms at the end of Captain America: The First Avenger, there's been no sign of the Red Skull in the 8 films since his disappearance.  Combine that with the fact that Hugo Weaving hasn't been shy about stating that he didn't particularly enjoy playing the character and has no desire to reprise the role and it would appear that the Red Skull will be remaining on the shelf for quite some time. Does his absence open the door for his daughter, Sinthea Shmidt

Obsessed with super powers, it should come as no surprise that Johann Schmidt experimented on his own daughter.  Placed in a machine that aged her from a child to a full-grown woman, the Skull's procedure also gifted Sin with telepathy, telekinesis, intangibility and teleportation before Captain America was eventually able to reverse the process.  De-aged and placed in S.H.I.E.L.D. custody, Sinthea was "reprogrammed" into believing she was a normal American girl and enjoyed a few peaceful decades until Crossbones located her and reversed S.H.I.E.l.D.'s brainwashing. Whenever the Red Skulll goes missing, Sin usually surfaces to carry on his mission.  

3. Moonstone




Who will be the main antagonist of the Captain Marvel film? How about a villain who also has abilities derived from the Kree and has a similar enough power-set that they've even impersonated Captain Marvel at various times?  With Spider-Man now in play and his Rogue's Gallery at Marvel's disposable, do you think the MCU is ambitious enough to tackle the Dark Reign storyline one day?  With Norman Osborn somehow managing to attain permission from the President of the United States, he created his own team of Dark Avengers with supervillains masquerading as superheroes.  Osborn was able to dig up enough dirt on Moonstone to blackmail her into impersonating Carol Danvers aka Ms. Marvel/Captain Marvel.  

A successful psychologist with criminal aspirations, Dr. Karla Sofen managed to acquire a Kree artifact, aptly named the Moonstone and instantly gained superhuman strength, flight and energy projection capabilities.  However, unbeknownst to Karla, the Moonstone housed the soul of a Kree warrior who slowly influenced her to turn to heroism.  She would go on to join Marvel's version of the Suicide Squad, the Thunderbolts and even serves as its leader for a few missions.    


2. Black Cat




With a deal successfully brokered between Marvel and Sony for the use of Spider-Man in the MCU, Kevin Feige and his team also get to use the wall-crawler's Rogue's Gallery.  This is a huge development as any comic book fan will attest that outside of Batman, Spider-Man has the best collection of supervillains in all of comics.  A key member in that group is his sometimes ally/lover Felicia Hardy aka the Black Cat.  Even with five live-action Spider-Man films and Felicity Jones' portrayal of Hardy in Amazing Spider-Man 2,  Sony somehow failed to get a live-action version of Black Cat on the big screen.

An expert burglar, Felicia Hardy would initially fall in love with Spider-Man (and only Spider-Man), having great disdain for Peter Parker.  In an attempt to become his equal, she gained superhuman abilities thanks to the Kingpin who allowed her to undergo the same experiment that gave the Scorpion his superpowers.  These abilities would later be augmented by Doctor Strange before she inexplicably lost them completely (because comics) and turned to the Tinkerer for technological replacements.  Over the years her various financial hardships and jealously over Peter's relationship with Mary Jane Watson have caused the Black Cat to routinely cross the line between hero and villain.  

1. Scarlet Witch





House of M might be the best crossover event from Marvel Comics in the last 10+ years.  In that storyline, Scarlet Witch reveals just how powerful she is with the single whisper of 'No More Mutants.'  Combined with her reality-altering powers, the Mutant population went from millions to just a few hundred and the entire Marvel timeline was reshaped to reflect a world where Mutants never existed.  Of course, Mutants don't exist in the Marvel Cinematic Universe but it's not hard to imagine Wanda stating 'No More Avengers' instead of 'No More Mutants'. 

That would certainly make for an interesting film, seeing a world where the Avengers never form and many of its heroes never gain their abilities.   However, we're still quite a few tragedies away from Scarlet reaching the fragile mental state that triggered House of M.  Though her brother already perished in Avengers: Age of Ultron, it might take the death of a lover (Vision) or mentor (Hawkeye) to completely push her over the edge.



What do you think about Marvel incorporating more female villains?  The male baddies (aside from Loki) certainly haven't enjoyed much success!  If you have more suggestions or think the MCU should head in a different direction, let us know in the comment section below.


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Motherbrother
Motherbrother - 6/27/2016, 12:44 PM
Who deleted ma comment
Spider2YBanana
Spider2YBanana - 6/27/2016, 12:44 PM
Quicker
Quicker - 6/27/2016, 12:45 PM
I'd be a bit shocked if Death didn't show up in Infinity War
Motherbrother
Motherbrother - 6/27/2016, 12:47 PM
@Quicker - I thought Fox has the rights death because she's a love interest for deadpool
outsider
outsider - 6/27/2016, 12:58 PM
@Quicker - Would love to see Angelina Jolie as Death. Could be like 1-3 days of work for her, if they went partial CGI a la Thanos. I'm sure as they push toward Infinity Wars, Marvel will be able to snag any number of top tier actors/actresses for these smaller roles.
osideous
osideous - 6/27/2016, 1:34 PM
@Motherbrother - uhh considering she was Thanos' love interest first. I highly doubt Fox has her rights.
McGee
McGee - 6/27/2016, 12:50 PM
All women are evil villains. Us dudes gotta stick together.

Chewtoy
Chewtoy - 6/27/2016, 12:50 PM
Screw Norman Osborn and retreads... Give me the original Thunderbolts story ("Marvel's "Suicide Squad" my ass...), with Zemo forming a team of "New" heroes to replace the missing Avengers, who are actually villains in disguise working a con on the public. As such, Moonstone is a must. We have Zemo. Klaw will give us the basis for Songbird. Introduce Beetle as a minor villain in Spider-Man Homecoming, Goliath in Ant-man and Wasp, and Moonstone in Captain Marvel. Boom... Phase 4 storyline set up.
crawley
crawley - 6/27/2016, 12:59 PM
Love me some Moonstone

clark67211
clark67211 - 6/27/2016, 1:08 PM
"With Norman Osborn somehow managing to become President of the United States, he created his own team of Dark Avengers with supervillains masquerading as superheroes."

Ummmm, Orborn wasn't president. You're thinking of Lex Luthor.
blackandyellow
blackandyellow - 6/27/2016, 1:19 PM
A strong "hell no" to Death. Infinity Gauntlet is actually a terrible story. Thanos wants to kill half the universe just because he's trying to fight Death. Then when he's defeated he just throws in the towel and becomes a farmer. Compelling stuff.

Kman
Kman - 6/27/2016, 1:23 PM
@blackandyellow - really? I disagree. Maybe the farmer thing is weird, but it's different motivation than your run of the mill "I want to rule of everything, I want everybody to be my slaves..." or "I just want to destroy everything because I'm crazy." I feel like it gives the character a little more depth that some villains typically don't have.
Viilax
Viilax - 6/27/2016, 1:23 PM
What a lame list, full of jokes. Black Cat isn't even a [frick]ing villain; nonetheless one that could take on a ton of superheroes at once. Marvel's "new found feminism" more like "destroying your childhood for the sake of diversity". I guess movie villains are different but I hate when people make things political when it's completely unnecessary. Oh right, I almost forgot that I live in the ridiculous "PC" era.

...How is no one commenting about how stupid this is?
SnapperCarr
SnapperCarr - 6/27/2016, 1:25 PM
Mark Julian's next articles are way better than Josh's clickbait garbage.

SnapperCarr
SnapperCarr - 6/27/2016, 1:26 PM
How is Umar not on the list? If we get Dormammu and Clea in a Doctor Strange sequel you need Umar as well.

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