Stephen Spielbergis responsible for creating some of the most iconic movie characters of all time, including some truly reprehensible villains. One of the most famous directors, producers, and writers of all time, Stephen Spielberg’s movies run the gamut of tone, style, and genre, from heartwarming family-friendly adventures to haunting historical dramas. Thanks to this variety in his body of work, Spielberg has been able to come up with some of themost unique and memorable movie villainsever.
In many cases, Spielberg keeps his antagonists memorable by crafting some truly vile characters.From despicable Nazi leaders to incomprehensible ancient evils, Spielberg’s most evil villains might be human, natural, or something else entirely. PerhapsSpielberg’s upcoming UFO moviewill add yet another profoundly dark villainous role to the annals of his storied filmography, outdoing even the worst cinematic evildoers he’s already been able to conjure.

The 15 Best Steven Spielberg Movies, According To Reddit
Between whimsical sci-fi movies, jaw-dropping blockbusters, and a couple of tearjerking biopics, these are Redditors' favorites of Spielberg’s films.
10Major Toht
Raiders of the Lost Ark
When it comes to the villains of the very first oftheIndiana Jonesmovies, René Belloq might be the more well-known.Serving as a distinct foil to Indiana, the treasure hunter seeks out powerful artifacts like the Ark of the Covenant solely for their monetary value rather than their historical significance. However, this capital-driven mindset pales in comparison to the evil of the Nazi officer, Major Toht, whose face is hauntingly melted off in the climax of the film.
His pursuit of the Ark implies a level of sadism unmatched by even his fellow Nazi operatives, callously willing to order his own men killed for convenience’s sake.

A member of the Gestapo secret police, Major Toht is already likely responsible for countless horrendous war crimes under Nazi leadership. However, his pursuit of the Ark implies a level of sadism unmatched by even his fellow Nazi operatives, callously willing to order his own men killed for convenience’s sake.Despised by his enemies and subordinates alike, Toht is a good candidate for the most depraved and downright evilIndiana Jonesvillain.
9Amon Göth
Schindler’s List
Another Nazi villain, Amon Göth sticks out as particularly evil for very different reasons than Major Toht. Whereas Toht enjoys cartoonishly over-the-top violence and takes ghoulish joy in the suffering of others, Göth is consigned to his actions in a much more gravely realistic way. The sociopathic Göth is a ruthless S.S. officer that oversees multiple concentration camps, dealing with the mass deaths of those interned therein with little human emotion.
Amon Göth doesn’t just facilitate atrocities under his command, but actively participates in disturbing sadistic acts of his own, randomly firing on crowds from the comfort of his villa and brutally attacking his personal staff.Even if he does get his comeuppance in the end, Göth’s horrific actions are impossible to scrub from the mind.This is made all the more sobering by the fact that he appears in Spielberg’s most grounded and heady film.

8Bruce The Shark
Jaws
Evil isn’t always necessarily human in nature.While the capacity for higher thought might be considered a requirement for sadism, the cold, unthinking laws that govern nature, such as predator and prey, can translate as a very ancient evil.This truly shines through via the great white shark that terrorizes beachgoers onthe Amity Island ofJaws, one of the most iconic movies ever made and the first true blockbuster.
Affectionately nicknamed “Bruce” by crew members of the film, the shark fromJawsis an unblinking, unfeeling evil, the depths of which are ruminated on by the seasoned sailor Quint as he reminisces on his own encounters.Even if the shark isn’t aware of the pain it’s inflicting, its primal urges to hunt, consume, and claim territory can be thought of as a sort of vicious cruelty in its own right. If the manyJawssequels are anything to go by, Bruce may have been capable of holding grudges and seeking revenge, implying a disturbing level of sentience after all.

7Mola Ram
Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom
Despite being an Indiana Jones movie,Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doomis one of the darkest films Stephen Spielberg has ever directed.From its unpleasant cultural representation of India to its decidedly meaner characterization of Indiana and his companions, the action adventure romp is unusually terrifying and bleak. No small contributor to this tone is the film’s villain, Mola Ram, the twisted shaman leader of the titular temple’s dark cult.
Mola Ram’s very appearance is the stuff of nightmares, wearing an ungulate skull and a shrunken human head while painting his face foreboding shades of red and black.His ultimate goal to bring about the manifestation of his fell god, Kali Ma, would see entire nations and religions crushed in the coming of a new age.To achieve these goals, Mola Ram is willing to engage in ritual sacrifice, making him by far one of the most brutal and bloodthirsty of Spielberg’s villains.

6The Truck Driver
Duel
Before Stephen Spielberg madeJaws,his very first feature film presented a similarly menacing silent killer. When the film’s protagonist cuts off a semi-truck in traffic, its driver stops at nothing to run him off the road, relentlessly pursuing his hapless prey off the road.The truck itself is an evil, ominous shape that wordlessly rams through other cars and even buildings in the effort of putting the focus of its ire under the tires once and for all.
The fact that he’s willing to go to such grat lenghts to kill after such a minor incident puts him at a whole new level of villainy, and the multiple license plates decorating the bumper of his big rig imply he may have done so before.

What makes the truck driver fromDuelso menacing is the fact that he’s never fully revealed, with only an arm and a cowboy boot ever peeking out of the shrouded shadows of the truck’s cabin. The fact that he’s willing to go to such great lengths to kill after such a minor incident puts him at a whole new level of villainy, and the multiple license plates decorating the bumper of his big rig imply he may have done so before.Duelis oneextended chase scenewith an utterly terrifying pursuer.
5Lamar Burgess
Minority Report
One of Spielberg’s most creative premises,Minority Reporttakes place in a world in which precognitive law officers, known as PreCogs, are able to predict crimes before they happen and send out arrests to the would-be perpetrators.The PreCrime program is the brainchild of Lamar Burgess working alongside Dr. Iris Hineman, though the pair were keeping a sinister secret from the public.Minority Report’s PreCogs only observed one of multiple possible timelines, a fact which was delicately covered up by Burgess.
What makes him truly evil, however, is his willingness to callously murder others to maintain his position of power.

Burgess' influence and deep running connections in nearly every sector ofMinority Report’s world make him a truly menacing opponent.What makes him truly evil, however, is his willingness to callously murder others to maintain his position of power, with his conspiracy surrounding the death of PreCog Anne Lively forming the basis of the film’s conflict. Though he is ultimately outsmarted in the end, Burgess was willing to go to great lengths to keep PreCrime intact.
4The Martians
War of the Worlds
Most ofStephen Spielberg’s films concerning alien lifepaint extraterrestrials in a very kind, benevolent light.However,War of the Worldsstands alone as a dramatic exception, with some of the most hostile and dangerous aliens ever put to film. Just like the book of the same name it’s based off of,War of the Worldsdepicts an alien invasion of Earth, with an aggressive expansionist alien empire utilizing advanced technology to make mincemeat out of the Earth’s militaries.
It’s not enough that these outer space invaders destroy military targets and capture areas of tactical significance.The 2005 film also details how willing the terrifying tripods are to completely wipe clean human survivors from a given area using their stomach-churning disintegration rays.Utterly devoid of empathy for humanity, seeing Earth’s population as little more than pests, the Martians ofWar of the Worldsare particularly evil.

3“Mister” Albert Johnson
The Color Purple
Spielberg was a controversial choice for the director ofThe Color Purple, navigating the story of oppressed Black women despite being a Jewish man himself.However, if there’s one element of the film Spielberg was able to truly succeed with, it was the deplorable villain “Mister” Albert Johnson. Danny Glover plays Mister, an abusive husband who marries Whoopi Goldberg’s Celie.
Mister is so deplorable because of how evil he is with what little power he has. Constantly abusing Celie, Mister takes out his frustrations on multiple vulnerable women, assaulting Nettie when he is spurned away from marrying her. It’s clear that Mister’s failure to win his father’s approval slowly boils over into internal anguish he heartlessly takes out on Celie.Though Mister ends the film doing one good deed, it certainly doesn’t make up for the years of domestic violence Celie suffers under his despicable household.

2Corporal Chuck “Stretch” Sitarski
1941
1941might widely be considered to be theweakest of Stephen Spielberg’s movies, but the more obscure film quietly hides one of the most vile antagonists Spielberg has ever created. Unlike most of Spielberg’s period films set in the throes of World War II,1941’s most vile character isn’t a simple Nazi.Instead, Corporal Chuck “Stretch” Sitarski forms the basis of the film’s antagonist backbone, proving that a member of the United States military can be just as deplorable as any other soldier when allowed to act unchecked.
Stretch abuses his position of power frequently, namely in his pursuit of women.The Corporal’s advances on civilian women are aggressive enough to make Biff ofBack to the Futurefame blush, resulting in a truly unsettling character fighting for the side audiences are supposed to cheer for. Even if he’s more of a simple bully, Stretch is easily among Spielberg’s most unsettling commentaries on human nature made flesh as a cinematic villain.

1The Beast
Poltergeist
Though Spielberg didn’t technically directPoltergeist, his status as a producer and writer on the film clearly marks it with his signature vision.This is clear nowhere stronger than in the film’s ultimate villain, the titular ghost of Reverend Henry Cane, also known simply as “The Beast”. Though The Beast’s background and identity aren’t fully explored until the second film, his appearance in the original movie is by far the most profoundly dark spectral presence the Freeling family has to contend with.
As a ghost, The Beasts manifests in all manner of horrific imagery, from giant flaming skulls to gaunt, spectral figures, all bent on abducting the soul of the Freeling family’s young daughter for his own nefarious ends.
In life, Henry Cane was a satanic pastor with an apocalyptic view of the world, preaching a zealous religion of nihilism that resulted in mass death. As a ghost, The Beasts manifests in all manner of horrific imagery, from giant flaming skulls to gaunt, spectral figures, all bent on abducting the soul of the Freeling family’s young daughter for his own nefarious ends. The Beast proves that even in death,Stephen Spielberg’s most noteworthy villains refuse to give up on their evil ways.