Who Wants to Be a Movie Villain (by Personality Type)?

“I read the story of Red Riding Hood today. I think the wolf was the most interesting character in it. Red Riding Hood was a stupid little thing so easily fooled.”

L.M. Montgomery

Do Villains Have More Fun?

Movie villains are often complex characters with all kinds of nuanced nooks and crannies to explore. At least the good ones are. If they are too cartoon-like, they may not hold much interest as a character and certainly won’t elicit much of the intense reaction that a good villain should. Often, they are more complicated than the hero, whose motivation is more black-and-white – stop the bad guy. On the occasions when the heroes aren’t so black-and-white, they sometimes wander a little into villainous territories themselves.

The movie villain can be a more interesting and important role. Without the villain, who would the hero vanquish? Or, as the late film critic Roger Ebert put it:

What about you?

What about you?

Free

Only 10 minutes to get a “freakishly accurate” description of who you are and why you do things the way you do.

Take the Test

Personality Types, Heroes, and Villains

Does the villain role appeal to some personality types more than others? Are there some who would have fun with an opportunity to release their inner maniacal laugh? To explore this further, we asked our community to answer “yes” or “no” to the statement: “You would enjoy playing a villain in a movie.”

Agreement with “You would enjoy playing a villain in a movie.”

The primary personality traits that predict who would answer “yes” to our statement are Thinking, Intuitive, and Prospecting. Anyone familiar with our personality framework will see that the most obvious Role that corresponds with these traits is the Analyst Role – and all the types within it, but particularly, the Debater (ENTP) and the Logician (INTP).

Agreement with “You would enjoy playing a villain in a movie.”

Evil and the Intuitive Would-Be Actor

Why would Analysts be more likely than the other Roles to desire to play Darth Vader or Professor Moriarty in a film? Partly because of their core Intuitive trait. (This is also shared by the Role with the second-highest percentage of respondents answering “yes” to the research question: Diplomats.)

Intuitive personalities are likely to see many shades of gray when looking at the same villain. They are likely to see that there is much to understand about this character, if the part is well written. Maybe they’re evil because somewhere along their timeline, something good went bad.

Maybe there is a genuine conflict within the evildoers as they struggle with different impulses. Maybe the villains are sometimes more of a victim than their victims. (Think Gollum in The Lord of the Rings series. His addiction to the Ring put him squarely under its influence and made him one of the villains of the piece. Yet Frodo urged forgiveness for Gollum in the end, having experienced the power of the One Ring himself.)

Perhaps the villain is well-intentioned but simply misguided – or perhaps they’re not. Perhaps they are genetically predestined for evil and have an interesting lineage. Whatever the case, their stories are generally the more complex when compared to the hero. Such complexities are seductive to Intuitive personality types.

This would explain the responses of both Analysts and Diplomats. However, we find that Analyst personalities are more likely than Diplomats to say they would like to play villains. The difference is, as it always is when comparing these Roles, between the Feeling and Thinking traits.

Analysts are probably not quite as moved as Diplomats by the human cost of the damage that a villain causes. There are those people who cringe at the sight of bad things happening on the screen. Others, sitting next to them, may take a more objective view. One relies on emotion, the other on logic. One sees pain and misery, and the other focuses on an interesting puzzle based on an adversarial relationship. It’s a different perspective.

Diplomats might also enjoy taking on a villainous role as an exploration of the human condition. These personalities like delving deeper into what it means to be human, and pretending to be evil may be an interesting way for them to do that.

Explorers, Sentinels, and the Bad Guys

Explorers with the Observant and Prospecting core personality traits came in third among Roles. Even so, more than half of Explorer respondents said they would enjoy playing a movie villain.

Personality types with the Observant trait are more concrete thinkers. Often, they focus more on what is in front of them. They are efficient in their ability to deal with what is rather than what might be – which might include a variety of different reasons why a villain is a villain. For them, it’s more likely that the good within a person is simply good, and evil is simply evil.

For Observant types, a villain is to be dealt with – not understood. Being vanquished is probably not the most interesting part to play if that’s all one sees in it.

While an Explorer may be bound by the Observant individual’s more concrete view of evil, the Prospecting personality trait balances this with a bit of rebellious spirit. As Explorers often find their own sometimes unsanctioned solutions in life, so do rogue masterminds on the big screen. What’s more rebellious than a Bond villain trying to take over the world? Because of this, playing the role of the dastardly scoundrel would likely be a kick for many Explorers.

Sentinels are the only group where less than half of them said they want to release their inner “Bwahahaha” in a film. Sentinel personality types often cling to set values and, therefore, are more likely than others to distinguish a clear divide between good and evil. The combination of Judging and Observant traits produces an orderly person who holds things together, rather than tearing them apart.

Most Sentinels would probably feel more comfortable in the hero’s role and find the villain’s role secondary and not as interesting. The heroes do the job, clean up the mess, and restore stability. What Sentinel, interested in acting, wouldn’t like to play that part in a movie?

Conclusions

Make-believe villains are harmless and usually essential to a good story line. If we look at the personality traits represented in our research, individuals who want to pretend to be the evildoers are probably not as concerned with ideas of good and evil as those who don’t want to play that part. They see the villain as an interesting alternative to the hero and, if the film is good, a worthy and wily opponent.

But whether it’s about the hero or the villain, stories are useful tools for exploring what resonates in the lives of different personality types. So, what kind of character would you like to play? Let us know in the comments below.

Further Reading

Personality Theory in Fiction Writing IV: The Depths of Evil – “Bad Guys”

“Frankly, My Dear…”: Personality Types Who Don’t Give a Damn about Old Movies

All Our Heroes are Antiheroes: Moral Leeway and Personality Type

Support staff Sentinel icon with a speech bubble.
Full understanding is just a click away…

Take our free Personality Test and get a “freakishly accurate” description of who you are and why you do things the way you do. If you’ve already taken the test, you can to revisit your results any time you’d like!

Comments

Please to join the discussion.

ENTP avatar
Without villians, heros are nothing. Everybody needs to a bad guy to hate like the scence in Scarface. Without Joker or badass villians is Gotham would be important? And also mostly villians are cooler than heros.
A grayscale avatar for an anonymous user
Aaaaaaaaaaa, THIS IS SO ME! I'm always wondering why I love to be a villain rather than the hero, especially that smart villain. I feel like I'm an Evil that idolise these complex thinking villains. But it's ok now, a lot of Logician love the villain way of thinking, it's more fun! But at the end, if they lose to the hero, I always think that they are too naive and need more tricks to defeat the hero. Anyway, good job team!
A grayscale avatar for an anonymous user
I just dislike blant characters and villains often have had a dramatic character change in their life, while heroes havent. But there are also some hero type characters with interesting character changes, wich makes them equally interesting in my mind. Best example for this is Derek from American History X! But characters like this are rare, more common is the good guy turning bad, while bad guy turning good is as interesting or even more interesting!
INTP avatar
To me I would love to play the "villain",but that may also have to do whith the reason I hate the words "hero" and "protagonist" and don't forget "villian" and "antagonist".I hate these words becuase it makes the world sound so black and white even in the movies and realms of "villians" and "heros" but in truth their is no black and white only diffrent shades of grey.How can we judge somone if we dont fully understand why they act the way they do and we can never understand them becuase we will never go through everything they have and even if we did we still wouldnt understand them becuase we are diffrent pepole and we differ.Also it is verry hypocritical because yes the "villain" dose bad things and cause damage and kill and steal but so do the "heros" but like the pepole we are, we rationalize what the "hero" dose and ,we then say it was neaseray to save the day ,but to the "villians " we say get away from me you are horrible and do these horrible things that , we then list (although the "hero" dose the same things for different reasons.). Also the "hero" and "villain" are bolth victims becuase they have to have a reason to act the way they do or they would just hide their abilities and use them to help their own life. Whether it was bad parents or other abuses or deaths or in genral horrible obsticals that drasticly change a person ,the only diffrence beetween the "villian"and "hero" is how they handeled the obstical ,the "heros" either handled it verry strongly or had somone to help them through it or even bolth which made them go "I dont want this happing to somone else" so they end up doing to the "villian" what they dont want to happen to other pepole or do the things that we judge the "villian" for doing.The "Villian" on the other hand dosent handle it well and has no one to help them though it so they either go insane,think that it is okay to do that to pepole if they can,this is their way to handle it,or they are doing what they think is right,or the classic mistake of doing the wrong thing for the right reason,and dont forget the chance that their victims couldve harmed them or the "villian" dose this to the victims becuase they realise how hypocritical it is that the victim treat them that way for the same things that the "hero" dose when the "hero"is cheered on and those thing the "villian is juged for is ignored.So if you read this please think on it and mabey you might veiw the "heros" and "villians" less as "heros" and "villians" and more as diffrent types of victims effected by the reason why they are a victim.
INTJ avatar
I would honestly love to be a villian. There is nothing more exhilarating than a challenge, especially when that challenge involves manipulation, deception, moves made in secret, clever lies, exploiting the weaknesses of your enemy, creating a bold plan. And it is all made even better by the fact that there are no morals. In real life, you obviously can't kill off half the world to fix overpopulation. But as a villian, in a world that doesn't actually exist and no harm is really done, you could do anything. It's almost fun to think of what could be accomplished if there were no rules...
A grayscale avatar for an anonymous user
I would love to be a villian.The thrill of going against the system, manipulating others,forming an army, revolution and then totalitarian regime.oh god.it escalated so quickly
A grayscale avatar for an anonymous user
Going against a system to make another system... Thrilling XD