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These are the results of the most effective villainous schemer on Fanpop.

1. Scar (The Lion King
2. Queen (Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
3. Ursula (The Little Mermaid)
4. Jafar (Aladdin)
5. Maleficent (Sleeping Beauty)
6. Frollo (The Hunchback of Notre Dame)
7. Shan Yu (Mulan)
8. Dr. Facilier (The Princess and the Frog)
9. Horned King (The Black Cauldron)
10. Hades (Hercules)
11. Sykes (Oliver and Company)
12. Cruella De Vil (101 Dalmatians)
13. Ratigan (The Great Mouse Detective)
14. Gaston (Beauty and the Beast)
15. Lady Tremaine (Cinderella)
16. Clayton (Tarzan)
17. Ratcliffe (Pocahontas)
18. Madame Medusa (The Rescuers)
19. Percival McLeach (The Rescuers Down Under)
20. Captain Hook (Peter Pan)
21. Shere Khan (The Jungle Book)
22. Amos Slade (The Fox and the Hound)
23. Queen of Hearts (Alice in Wonderland)
24. Prince John (Robin Hood)
25. The Hunter (Bambi)
26. Stromboli (Pinocchio)
27. Edgar (The Aristocats)
28. Madame Mim (The Sword in the Stone)
29. Aunt Sarah (Lady and the Tramp)
30. The Ringmaster (Dumbo)
added by Pyjamarama
Source: the scariest villain of them all
added by breebree446
added by Disneylovered
added by Yuki_7
added by peteandco
added by ppv
added by ppv
added by ppv
added by ppv
added by Lovetreehill
Source: www.sandersartstudio.com
added by Lovetreehill
Source: cel-ebration.com
added by Lovetreehill
added by aitypw
added by jlhfan624
Source: Disney/google
added by jlhfan624
Source: Disney/google
added by tp1992
added by megloveskyle
Source: http://screencapheaven.com/testcoppermine/displayimage.php?album=45&pos=434
added by megloveskyle
Source: http://screencapheaven.com/testcoppermine/displayimage.php?album=45&pos=434
When I started this article series, I had to make a decision. Officially, nearly all Disney movies are based on some sort of source text. In reality, it is often something really obscure and practically forgotten. So I made a decision early on: That I would only discuss the books, which are known enough to have an own Wikipedia article. This distinction served me fairly well, with one exception and this is The Fox and the Hound. When this book was published, it was highly praised, and therefore it does have an article. But nowadays it is so hard to come by that you have to pay a three digits...
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I should have expected that this one would be one of the first requests. To say it upfront: Between Victor Hugo’s two “big” novels, I tend to gravitate more towards Les Misérables, mainly because Notre Dame de Paris is so downright depressive. Oh, both books delve deep into the social injustices of their time and the darkness of the human soul. But I think that Les Misérables is the more sophisticated take of those two, much clearer in the message it is trying to tell with much more relatable characters in it.
Notre Dame de Paris is from a literature historic angle the more important...
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