What makes a great cinematic villain? Owning an excellent bad-guy outfit, like Darth Vader? Having a sinister voice, like Voldemort or Darth Vader? Plotting evil schemes, like Auric Goldfinger or Darth Vader?
Who are cinema's greatest villains? Which do you genuinely come to hate – or unexpectedly come to admire? Let us know in the thread below.
We're also keen to hear about new films you've been watching. Here's what some @guardianfilm followers had to say about movies they'd seen recently:
Fast Girls – ridiculous dialogue, NO character motivation and a plot so paper thin it would dissolve in a light mist, awful.
Snow White and the Huntsman – visually stunning but hampered by poor characterisation and not enough directorial discipline.
Iron Sky. Not great, not bad. And that's a sad fact when it's about Nazis on the moon.
Rock of Ages: a cliche-ridden script, lazily written to hang 80s hit songs from and blandly acted out.
Cosmopolis – written with the subtlety of a gun blast to the hand... visually good though.
Abe Lincoln: Vamp Hunter just a cheap ploy to cash in on recent success of ironic B-Movies. No wink to audience, avoid.
• If you've seen any films in the last week, good or bad, let us know. You can either leave a comment in the thread below, or tweet your thoughts with the hashtag #gdnreview. We'll pick the best and show them off here once a week.
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