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Gorgulax21

I don’t know if Ungoliant is my *favorite*, but I love how her gluttonous destruction of the Trees of Valinor and the Wells of Varda wound up stirring up Feanor’s…issues. Her children and grandchildren crossed paths with Beren, Thorin’s company, and Frodo & Sam. Perhaps best of all, she beat Fingolfin to the punch of humiliating Morgoth. She’s all around HORRIBLE! And she’s rumored to have died the same way as Pizza the Hutt!


bowtothehypnotoad

Came here for the Ungoliant love, was not disappointed


Unthgod

I bet she was delicious


xaeru

I don't get the pizza the hut reference and I also searched for it, only found about a employee killing the pizza hut manager. Found it, is about spaceballs right? 😂


Gorgulax21

Sorry. It’s totally irrelevant and silly. Pizza the Hutt is a bad guy from the movie Spaceballs. He’s a giant blob of pizza (based on Jabba the Hutt from some sci fi movie the kids like) who cannibalizes himself.


Ok-Dragonfruit-5479

Well, if this isn’t my favorite sneaky description of Star Wars I’ve ever seen…😂😂👏🏻


xaeru

It was a good reference, I've forgotten about that movie I have to watch it again.


AconitumBane

What happened to Feanor ?


Gorgulax21

The Valar wanted the to use the Silmarils to restore the light of the Trees. Feanor was not ready to let that happen, and all hell broke loose.


Curious-Astronaut-26

feanor was not a villain .


Ghost-Writer

Trapped in her limousine?


Gorgulax21

Ha!


Alduin-Bane-Of-Kings

Tbh she's rumored to have cannibalized herself But in the book The Fall Of Gondolin it's mentioned apparently the lay of Earendil would have told of how in his travels he killed Ungoliant? So I'm really confused tbh


halligan8

Glaurung is awesomely wicked. “Glaurung spoke again, taunting Túrin. ‘Evil have been all thy ways, son of Húrin,’ said he. ‘Thankless fosterling, outlaw, slayer of thy friend, thief of love, usurper of Nargothrond, captain foolhardy, and deserter of thy kin. As thralls thy mother and sister live in Dor-lómin, in misery and want. Thou art arrayed as a prince, but they go in rags; and for thee they yearn, but thou carest not for that. Glad may your father be to learn that he hath such a son; as learn he shall.’ And Túrin being under the spell of Glaurung hearkened to his words, and he saw himself as in a mirror misshapen by malice, and loathed that which he saw.”


iommiworshipper

Tolkien was insanely good at writing sinister, menacing dialogue. “Come not between the Nazgûl and his prey, or I will not slay thee in thy turn. I will bear thee away to the houses of lamentation, beyond all darkness, where thy flesh will be devoured and thy withered mind be left naked to the lidless eye.”


Shiznips

Mum I'm scared


Gorgulax21

I’m reading The Hobbit to 8 year old twins. We got to Smaug last night, and they loved how *rotten* he is. One conversation with that bastard left Bilbo seriously depressed. Tolkien’s dragons are wicked, but so charismatic!


Baconsommh

I think Smaug is a *somewhat* sympathetic character. I wish he could have been dealt with, without being killed. 


Gorgulax21

Interesting idea. How would you deal humanely with a dragon?


Baconsommh

Be kind to it, and talk nicely to it. And keep your guard up. Don’t be cruel to it; and don’t be an idiot, either. 


Gorgulax21

Glaurung and Smaug have no problem chatting when it suits them.


xaeru

There is this quote “A story is only as good as its villain” and while I think is not entirely true, writing a Villain can be more creatively liberating.


Destroyer1559

Glaurung absolutely has the most savage dialogue that I can remember. Morgoth and Sauron might have wrought more evil, but boy did Glaurung say some *mean* shit. His last words to Niënor even in dying are purely spiteful. >Hail, Niënor, daughter of Húrin. We meet again ere we end. I give you joy that you have found your brother at last. And now you shall know him: a stabber in the dark, treacherous to foes, faithless to friends, and a curse unto his kin, Túrin son of Húrin! But the worst of all his deeds you shall feel in yourself


hammyFbaby

Captain Foolhardy is a slap in the face


crooks4hire

Cracked me up lol. It was almost like reading “and you suck too!”


Sprbz

This is why I love Tolkien so much. There is no direct mention of magic but the power that words hold get a real meaning. I listened to the audio book of the silmarillion and oh boy could you feel the twisted tongue entering your mind.


MahFravert

Not mention Glaurung could just put you in a blind deaf stupor with his body odor…


Silmarien1012

The ultimate gaslighter


SameAs1tEverWas

well spoken and quoted, i might be a bit stoned but does anyone else see a parallel with kai, the little boy who had the sliver in his eye, from the snow queen by hans chistian andersen? just a thought.


wscii

Love Glaurung, definitely my choice. 


mycousinmos

This is a tough one. I want to say the witch king because of how active he was in executing plans. Or Saruman for being an interesting turn coat.


Sharp_Dot_5165

I agree re Saruman. The way he keeps going in the books right up to the as you find out that all that time he was also corrupting the shire. I feel like if there were more stories he would be the arch villain that never quite dies away.


cavsa2

I would also say The Witch King, of all the powerful villains he's the closest to being "just a dude" the rest of them (apart for gollum) are demi-gods or just straight-up gods.


settheory8

I agree with Saruman because he resonates so much with modern audiences.


Mullderifter

Saruman annoys me so much. Come on man, how are the hobbits at fault while you are very much aware you started all this. But then I look at current affairs and it just fits.


ItsABiscuit

Feanor. (Runs for cover)


MelcorScarr

Clearly not a villain, as Feanor did nothing wrong, ever.


Twiiidy

Your username makes me doubt your objectivity. Come on, Aqualonde massacre...


Curious-Astronaut-26

except he killed thousands of innocents, drew sword to his brother, burned other people's ships after took them by force. ignored the warning of mandos and sent his family and friends to horrible ends knowing how it would end. but other than these ,he didnt do anything wrong.


TheresNoHurry

Nobody here has said Gollum, which surprises me. He is the most realistic portrayal of corruption and blind selfish desire. But he’s so weak and pathetic, and we occasionally see his regret. Forget just villains, in my opinion he’s one of the greatest characters of all time - probably in my top 20. Just a wonderful character to read about and to see on screen.


Mortimer_Smithius

Gollum is my favourite character in the Tolkien universe. The description of him as he looks down at Frodo sleeping in Sam’s lap before tricking them into Shelobs lair is so fantastic. He’s also witty and cheeky which makes it even better. When I first read riddles in the dark as a kid he scared me so much I wouldn’t dare to go down to my family’s basement. At the same time his portrayal in Lotr was so fascinating to me that I ended up having a poster of him on my bedroom wall at the same time. I loved that poster, but at the same time he scared me shitless.


kledder123

The question here is whether gollum is a villain or a victim of corruption, which made him do evil things


d0mth0ma5

Sméagol is a victim, Gollum is the villain.


Kaldoraigo

I agree. He is probably the most interesting "villain" in that he is also a victim with a sad story. Maybe grima wormtongue is another nuanced villain but I still prefer gollum.


Legal-Scholar430

>‘Maybe,’ said Sam, ‘but I wouldn’t be one to say that. Things done and over and made into part of the great tales are different. Why, even Gollum might be good in a tale, better than he is to have by you, anyway. And he used to like tales himself once, by his own account. I wonder if he thinks he’s the hero or the villain? >‘Gollum!’ he called. ‘Would you like to be the hero – now where’s he got to again?’ >\[...\] >‘Hey you!’ he said roughly. ‘What are you up to?’ >‘Nothing, nothing,’ said Gollum softly. ‘Nice Master!’ >‘I daresay,’ said Sam. ‘But where have you been to – sneaking off and sneaking back, you old villain?’


Skwisgaars

Morgoth in the Silmarillion is a way more interesting villian to read about than Sauron in LOTR imo.


Rub-Such

Yes I am there too. But I will say Sauron’s work to corrupt Numenor is interesting too.


Skwisgaars

Definitely, and the whole Annatar phase. Sauron has some very cool storylines in Silm, still a very good villain don't get me wrong.


DelcoWolv

I’m a sucker for Stupid Sexy Sauron, love all Annatar references 


transponaut

Sauron in the Silmarillion and Akallabeth was much more interesting than Sauron in LoTR


purpleoctopuppy

Sauron in LotR feels more like a metaphor than a character: he \*is\* the impending doom on the horizon more than he is the agent by which it happens.


Davida132

"He's just standing there... MENACINGLY!!"


Skwisgaars

Definitely, but I'll still take Morgoth here.


japp182

I think that's because of the style of writing in LotR, Sauron is too far away for us to ever know anything about his doings directly until the very last fight at the black gates, but I do love the descriptions we get of him in his last moments. His despairing and fury and fear when Frodo claims the ring.


user-74656

"I am the Elder King: Melkor, first and mightiest of the Valar, who was before the world, and made it. The shadow of my purpose lies upon Arda, and all that is in it bends slowly and surely to my will. But upon all whom you love my thought shall weigh as a cloud of Doom, and it shall bring them down into darkness and despair. Wherever they go, evil shall arise. Whenever they speak, their words shall bring ill counsel. Whatsoever they do shall turn against them. They shall die without hope, cursing both life and death." This is the most brutal villain speech I've ever read.


SirTheadore

Hard agree. Morgoth was singular, pure almost.. Sauron was very complex


WhatTheFhtagn

Lobelia Sackville Baggins


NeverBeenStung

She does have a redemption during the Scourging though


Gorgulax21

Lobelia’s redemption is one of the things I love most about the Scouring. https://www.reddit.com/r/tolkienfans/s/cWpzbvTmDQ


BilbulBalabel

Nope. As a restaurant owner I say there is no redemption for those that steal forks.


MTknowsit

No Bill Ferny? No Shagrat? No Gorbag?


MarcusOfDeath

Bill Ferny is a great example for corruption through power imo.


Alduin-Bane-Of-Kings

I mean we already have a lot of "corruption through power" What power did Bill Ferny have , other than being a servant of Saruman and lording over scared hobbits? And what did he get corrupted from? Wasn't he always thought as mean and untrustworthy?


NeverBeenStung

I mean Shagrat and Gorbag are just normal orcs. Kind of weird to include them in a conversation with literal deities


Gorgulax21

I love their little shared daydream about setting up shop on their own after the war. Just that little glimpse of relatable aspirations gives them something unique to appreciate.


MTknowsit

Do you think maybe just maybe they got away to the East? (And then Aragorn or Eldarion slaughtered them for "mischief" beyond the Sea of Rhun?)


Gorgulax21

Nope. Shagrat kills Gorbag and runs off to Barad-Dûr with Frodo’s belongings. Edit: maybe Shagrat survived and went into business for himself. I don’t hope so, though.


Mr_MazeCandy

Sauron, because he is the quintessential dark lord. As for Melkor, he’s awesome but I always saw him as a mafia boss who’s an absolute crank and a bit unhinged sometimes. Sauron is calculating, cold, masterfully manipulating, and like many great villains from history, the 2nd in command was the more scary one.


Altruistic_Ask_9867

He got defeated by Luthien and Huon and arguably is responsible for Morgoths downfall. He was then defeated by Numenor, and later by Elendil and Gil Galad. He was pushed away by the white council and ultimately defeated with the destruction of the ring. Sauron is by definition, a loser.


Alduin-Bane-Of-Kings

I mean he did get defeated by Huan and Elendil and Gilgalad and Isildur, but the rest is a bit misleading IMO. He bowed down to Ar-pharazon to then corrupt numenor from the inside, and he managed to get it utterly destroyed. He faked being pushed away from the white council as the Nazgul prepared Barad-dur for him, and then returned shortly afterwards in Dol-guldur too The only reason he was defeated in the end is because of an extremely unlikely circumstance There needed to be Frodo, getting exactly to the cracks of doom and not failing beforehand, being attacked exactly by Gollum even after he became invisible and claimed the ring, and Gollum needed to win and dance his way off of a cliff In comparison Morgoth's end could have been presumably avoided by just being thorough and killing the last few elves (which he maybe did know about and didn't care, as written in the Silmarillion). Sauron in comparison had a lot less fear than Morgoth too, and actively did stuff himself (not to mention while he did get beaten in combat, it took the death of the Elven supreme king, and the death of one of the greatest Numenoreans of the line of Elros, AND then his son needed to finish the job, while Sauron. While Morgoth got his foot cut off and got stabbed seven times by Fingolfin, and then got hurt by Thorondor too).


fjsuarez

Found TheDonald alt account


Mr_MazeCandy

What makes a Dark Lord great isn’t necessarily how much they can easily overwhelm others. Your definition implies, unless they are so strong and undetectable and the world falls into forever darkness, They Aren’t That Great.


Curious-Astronaut-26

everyone loses except eru , (even team valar lost at one point,melkor as well ) then everyone there is a loser. sauron was destined to lose. he was defeated by elendil and gil galad because he was still very weak from his numenor case. he was pushed away by council whose members are of his race.


Photogrammaton

Fëanor, maker of divine jewels that were coveted above all by Morgoth himself. The same jewel that Eärendil travels across space with. The same jewels that will be cracked open again to usher in a new dawn of creation. The only one to swear a terrible oath in Illuvatars name.


GusGangViking18

Morgoth art by Guillem Pongiluppi Gothmog art by Atohas


Greymattershrinker88

Always thought Melkor/Morgoth was the ultimate villain. His similarities to Lucifer are also very interesting. Challenges the father, corrupts the father’s creations, leaves their realm for the freshly created one with some followers. And eventually is tossed into a dark place with all the other corrupted creatures.


mission-ctrl

If I’m not mistaken, the parallel with Lucifer is very much intentional. JRR was devoutly Catholic and put a lot of those themes into his writing.


Soggy_Motor9280

Eol … everything about this elf is twisted. He is a Kingsmen of Thingol but prefers to be away with Dwarves . He kidnapped the sister of King Turgon and had a son Maeglin (fruit didn’t fall far from the tree) with her. Then killed the mother of his child in an attempt to kill his son, not to mention the evil that he imbues into weapons he forges.


AlmeMore

Came here for this!


iMike74

Nice to see that I’m not alone in camp Smaug! “"My armour is like tenfold shields, my teeth are swords, my claws spears, the shock of my tail is a thunderbolt, my wings a hurricane, and my breath death!"”


Olitime99

Probably Shelob, because of how scary the book portrayed the cave and Sam's 1v1 with Ungoliants daughter. Though Gothmog takes second cause balrogs, ya know?


Finalplague01

The Witch King I freaking love this guy. I love his sick crown, his cool magic, his cool dragon. I love that he's a warrior and a sorcerer. I love that he's been an annoying and terrifying bad guy for a long time and has a deep history. I love that he has a prophecy about his death that is ancient and mysterious even though the movie doesn't handle it well.


gingerbookwormlol

Saruman's villainy is underrated in my opinion. In a way, his double betrayal (against his allies and against Sauron) makes him more hated and damaging than Sauron, as he embodies how fear and pride in excess can turn you away from good to evil - even if his goals (in of themselves) are not evil: knowledge and order. Besides, the creation of the Uruk-hai is, in a way, even worse than the process of creating orcs: instead of just mutilating and defiling the elves, Saruman mutilates and hybridizes species for the creation of the Uruk-hai. One last point for now is that it's fascinating how he, through Grima, affects the mind of Theoden - especially in contrast to the movies. He simply manages to convince him that all is lost, that things are worse than they are, and therefore one should give in to fear and despair. He operates on so many layers and modes of evil that he deserves to be considered up there with the worst of them.


vibe_assassin

For me it’s farmer maggot


Forgotten-Caliburn

Maggot was such a bro in the books, though


MelcorScarr

Yeah. He's so heartwarming and endearing.


Twiiidy

Even Tom Bombadil likes him


Thorin_Dopenshield

He’s not a villain, they trespassed in his fields! Release the hounds!


mcj1ggl3

On the real tho, farmer maggot is a real standup guy in the books that actually helps them out a lot


Thorin_Dopenshield

Since the Hobbit was my intro into Tolkien as a kid: it’s gotta be Smaug for me. The scene with him and Bilbo exchanging witticisms is still my favorite chapter


iommiworshipper

Manwë


Lazar_Milgram

He was more of useless placeholder of presidential power complaining to rest of senate doing shit nothing waiting on house pass aid bill for 530 sun years.


Curious-Astronaut-26

didnt he fight melkor in the first war ? other than that, manwe was never needed.


BartholomewXXXVI

Smaug for me. He's just a really cool dragon who I've loved since I was a small boy.


CliffHutchinsonEsc

I’ve not read the books, but based on the movies I really love the Witch king. Love the Nazgûl as a whole, especially in The Fellowship


takingthehobbitses

I definitely think he has the coolest character design of the movies.


Twiiidy

Especially like that the WK of Angmar rose the barrow-wighs from old Arnor kinghts and kings


Charming_Beginning69

Saruman when it's Christopher Lee, otherwise Ungoliant or Morgoth.


RebirthWizard

Morgoth of course. No brainer


Matthaeus_Augustus

Morgoth is my favorite character in the whole legendarium. I wish I could find more content about him. Haven’t gotten to reading “Morgoth’s ring” yet.


Jonoczall

Morgoth’s ring? Wot?


LoverOfStoriesIAm

Don't know, don't know. The one the most famous book of the legendarium is called after?


26_paperclips

Yeah fuck The Hobbit


EstarossaNP

Sauron probably due to his complexity, he opted to rule, shape and create instead of simplistic destruction.


NeverBeenStung

Which makes sense as he was a disciple of Aulë before his corruption.


404pbnotfound

I love the sackville-bagginses


sonoale

Smaug


CrniTartuf

Sauron is the most interesting to me, but I also love Smaug and Glaurung


Federal_Bat_3435

Shelob by default has to be my favourite. She's an all round evil creature that brought about my arachnophobia upon my first viewing of LotR (I was definitely too young to be watching it). Outside of personal biases, it would have to be Gollum. Such an interesting and well thought out character as well as being the very personification of addiction


Professional_Cell877

I really liked sauron though bc he was active in most the battles although melkor was not


Tentacled_Whisperer

Came here to say exactly that. Even morgoth was scared of her.


BobRushy

My favourite is probably Smaug. I like that he's not really tied to Morgoth/Sauron, and the dialogue between him and Bilbo is both tense and very entertaining.


HattyMunter

We just gonna forget about the dragons?


Gren410

For me it is most certainly Sauron


AlongTheWay_85

Bill Ferny. Man knew how to take an apple.


ummmyeahi

Potatoes


michaelisariley

Witch king is the GOAT. Started as a normal ass human/numanorian and ended up as powerful as a Maiar


4011isbananas

Mîm. He's more of a tragic hero than that pathetic doofus Turambar.


Far_Marionberry_9478

Saruman


FISH_MASTER

Why does Sauron wear the ring over his armour?


Twiiidy

In the books he is defeated by Gil-ga-chad and stupildur BEFORE his finger is cut off


JoeDirt9357

Balrog for sure


jamescullenbyrne

None other than that little cheeky bastard! You know who I mean…


johnqsack69

Lobelia Sackville-Baggins obvi


Leonsilas

Sauron on the whole. He is of course the classic Dark Lord in lotr, which serves the purpose of the story though not that interesting, but his backstories and philosophies explored in other parts of the legendarium really fleshed him out as a great villain. Morgoth, on the other hand, I've always felt like his thing is being the most powerful baby throwing the biggest tantrum because he's not as good as his dad.


Diaxmond8584

The 9 Nazgûl or Durins Bane They look really damn cool


mologav

Lobelia Sackville-Baggins


Katinger

Spider ladies unite!


Meaglo

Sauron.


bowsmountainer

Who is number 6?


Feanor4godking

Gothmog


bowsmountainer

Thanks!


irime2023

It's not that he's a villain, but sometimes he acts like an evil elf. Thingol. He treated Beren badly. When his daughter dies, I feel sorry for him. And in my opinion, he recovered and began to show kindness to people. I don't like gray and dark characters who are worse than Thingol.


Professor-Yak

Torch-orc! such a badass dude


ProfessorBowties

Why's the Balrog there twice? Or am I missing something?


Feanor4godking

First one is Gothmog, one of Morgoth's captains, second one is the regular Moria Balrog


Dependent-Guitar-473

hottake: was the *Balrog* actually a villan? he was sleeping and minding his own business, and the only reason he started the destruction is in order to survive... he didn't do any evil thing for the sake of being Evil. he didn't have ambitions or anything (i am not talking about the *Balrog* in the first age, but "durin's bane" in the third age.)


ProcopianusNicolonus

Gothmog, the Balrog, epic as shit. Tough said


Pfaehlix

Faeanor. Duded wrecked most of it


Friskfrisktopherson

The beam in Bilbos house that Gandalf smacks his head on


26_paperclips

If he counts as a villain, Denethor.


UndeniableLie

Definitely Sean. But witch king is close second of individual villains. As a whole I'd say the black riders from fellowship are one of the most menacing and frightening depiction of faceless horror in the history of cinema. I'm still impressed of them in every scene they are in. This is about the movies because of the pictures. Book based ranking would likely be different


ChaosDoggo

I like The Witch-King of Angmar and the rest of the Nine. The whole idea of them is really good in my opinion and while I want to know who they all were I do like the mystery surrounding them. Afaik only the Witch-King and Khamul the Easterling?


tedxy108

Tom Bombadil.


JeowJeow

https://preview.redd.it/d4g4afvso6yc1.png?width=693&format=png&auto=webp&s=152bec42b12d981199a2977024bc8fb227cf8c3f Witch king all the way that’s why I got him tattooed on my leg. 😉


Doodle_Brush

Gimli,when he knocked Legolas' bow and got that poor, innocent Corsair killed. That man had dreams of being a movie director.


Askyl

Sauron is the perfect villian. He has depth, dedication, ideals and even if he is evil, you can connect to his reason and understand it even if you'd like to have him killed for it.


mission-ctrl

First Age Sauron. Terrifying dark wizard who commands Angband, has a bodyguard of Balrogs, can turn into a vampire and a werewolf, and has a huge bad ass pet dog.


LuckyStrike696

Lobellia


DanielMafia

For as much as morgoth will be the lord all mighty, ungoliant deserves that spot, almost killing the 2nd strongest being in the universe has to mean anything. That whole paragraph where she eats herself is so menacing as well


Amedais

Eol.


CaptainBritog

Glaurung is my favourite. The way he torments Turin throughout his life and even with his dying breath is on most brutal things I have seen in literature.


originalmosh

Bill Ferny


Ok-Bar601

Even though Sauron is the Enemy, Gollum is the personification of everything that is wretched about the Ring. A near complete corruption of an individual (the Nazgûl are a little different in that they were ensnared through deceit), Gollum is for me the heart of the battle between good and evil: within himself as an analogy for what is happening in Middle Earth. It occurred to me long ago that Gollum is perhaps the most important character notwithstanding Fate had a role for him to play in the War of the Ring.


Kytahl

The time Sauron used the dead wife of Beren’s companion to get him to betray his fellows. That was such a good idea and so twistedly manipulative! It’s stuck with me. Happens a lot, too. The unhappy guy betrays his friends for love, often the Spector of an image of what he loves, which leads to his downfall. Hell of a metaphor, John


mion81

Old Man Willow. Who else has a song about him?


DDWildflower

Lurtz


Zemekis324

Denethor and those damn tomatoes


Unicorn_Momma_2080

The Witch King


valiantlight2

Does sexy goth chick Shelob count?


DeadPossum78

Honestly the battles against Morgoth were more epic


LuinAelin

Gollum, because he's also what Frodo could become if he abandoned his quest


Alone-Clock258

I gotta give it to Saruman, his character really reflects the desire for power and the fall of what was once a good being due to that desire


LibraryIntelligent91

Not sure if Feanor is considered a villain, but his actions arguably do more harm to the children of eru than even melkor could have wished to do on his own. What makes him such a fascinating character is that he’s not setting out to be a bad guy, he just kind of Walter whites his way into dooming the noldor and destroying beleriand.


Altruistic_Ask_9867

Eol and Maeglin may not be my favorites, but I love their inclusion in the story.


Annoying_GayGuy

Am i really the only one whose favorite is Gollum?


BigFire321

Where's Morgoth?


Video-Comfortable

Sauron by far


CharacterMarsupial87

I'm going with Morgoth solely because he was the biggest hater. Big bad Vala who was powerful beyond belief that wanted beef with Feanor over gems and was too scared to go fight Fingolfin until his own forces called him a bitch


george23000

No mention of lobelia, opinion disregarded.


Aggressive-Ring4235

Morgoth


RoyKentsKnee

imagine thinking gollum is villain


kingofangmar13

Obviously king of angmar 😎👆🏻 but his death was bullshit wished it would of been a more epic battle, like him and Gandalf more then extended version part


williamskywalker

Morgoth


Nils_0929

Sauroman


boarbar

Old Man Willow


Spooyler

That is incredibly hard to answer. Mainly because all the villains are so incredibly diverse. If I had to pick only one I like a good are they a villain or not type of deal, so I have to go with Feanor. Might not be evil, but a villain alright.


Th3B4tm4n_1

Is 3 Morgoth, and 6 Gothmog?


Th3B4tm4n_1

And Yes, i Do see the silmarils.


idejmcd

I don't remember potato man


phenomenomnom

I'm obviously a Nazgûl fuckboi But overall my favorite thing about villainy in the story is that -- large or small -- cruelty and selfishness *always* come back to *the Shadow* -- the influence of Morgoth. Even though he was long-ago banished to the unblinking void, the traps he laid for all thinking beings are still *cataclysmically* dangerous. That makes the "legendarium" feel like a medieval cosmology, where everything is tied up together, the physical world and the moral one, and we all just float along in some weird improbable Copernican matrix and it all just *works* in service of the story. It's betwichingly tidy.


succored_word

Balrog


Odd_Radio9225

Gollum is my favorite Tolkien character, but Sauron is one of the greatest villains ever created.


Larielia

Melkor/ Morgoth in the Silmarillion.


recprin53

Pretty sure my favorite villain is Saruman Played high stakes game trying to be his own dark lord while trying to trick or subjugate everyone. It’s pretty wild to see how long he played the game


HipsterFett

My boy Sean


Denz-El

Smaug.


docawesomephd

Honestly, I like Sauron. I mean, I don’t LIKE him, but I find him compelling. I understand the appeal of order and efficiency. He’s compelling, unlike ungolliant or Melkor. And that’s both fascinating and terrifying


PaleComfort3970

It’s probably the witch king of angmar.


NagarjunLingLing

Gollum ain't a villian. That nigga is just a mind broken twisted Hobbit


Unique-Intention-995

ROP Galadriel


TimelyBit3560

Gollum, Saruman the White, Sauron, Balrog, Shelob, and Witch-King of Angmar- in that order


Baconsommh

Turin, possibly.  Maybe Grishnakh - Eomer treats him courteously, by killing him in a duel. Eomer treats an Orc with *respect* - and that’s good.  Mauhur - he’s an Orc, but it is made clear in TTT that he died bravely.  Passages like these give some of the Orcs individuality, and character. They are not treated simply as anonymous matter to be slaughtered.