Stories

The 10 Best ’60s TV Villains Who Should Make The Leap To Comic Books

5. King Tut

nightly.net

King Tut is one of the more successful of the series€ original villains largely because he has the most extensive €“ and zany €“ backstory. William Omaha McElroy is a well-respected Egyptologist professor at Yale until, that is, he hits his head. Then he believes himself to be a reincarnation of Tutankhamun intent on becoming the pharaoh of Gotham. Until he hits his head again and then he returns to normal. Until the next time he hits his head€ Tut is such a popular villain from the series, there€s even been a recent, more serious, version of the character in the Batman comics who is derived from Victor Bueno€s original creation. We’d love to see the comics tackle the next villain on our list…

6. Egghead

Bat-Mania

Every Batman villain has a gimmick. And they don’t come more gimmicky than Egghead, egg-cellently brought to life by veteran horror star Vincent Price. The self-proclaimed smartest criminal in the world, Egghead is thoroughly obsessed with eggs €“ his crimes are all egg-related, he puns at an egg-stremely painful rate and he even looks like an egg. As is clear, Egghead isn’t the most well-rounded character in the Batman universe but is made a fantastic villain thanks to Price who hams it up egg-spertly. Sorry, I think I’ve stretched this yolk too far€.

7. The Riddler

bleedingcool.com

As with every incarnation of the character, this Riddler (usually played by Frank Gorshin, but also once by John €˜Gomez Addams€ Astin) is a criminal mastermind, psychologically unable to commit a crime without leaving a clue for Batman and Robin to solve €“ which they invariably always do, no matter how odd. Frank Gorshin brings the character wonderfully to life €“ Jim Carrey in Batman Forever obviously being heavily inspired by his hyperactive performance €“ and is arguably still the definitive version of the Prince of Puzzles.

The Riddler is also the very first villain of the series, appearing in the semi-serious opening episode €˜Hi Diddle Riddle€™ in which the loss of Bruce Wayne€™s parents is mentioned and someone actually dies, something that was huge no-no later in the series. You can’t say the show didn€t develop.

Previous 2 of 3 Next

Show comments
Share
Published by

Recent Posts

John Phillips’ Daughter Chynna Phillips Fearfully Announces She Has 14-Inch Tumor

Chynna Phillips recently shared a heartbreaking health update with her fans. The renowned singer bravely…

7 hours ago

Original Volkswagen Beetle Repurposed To Create Old-Fashioned Mini Bike

Brent Walter, who refers to himself as a “maker and builder of a variety of…

10 hours ago

Demi Moore Reportedly Preparing For Emotional Goodbye To Ex Bruce Willis

Since Die Hard actor Bruce Willis was diagnosed with Frontotemporal Dementia last year, his family…

22 hours ago

Paulina Porizkova And Ricki Lake Stun In Reunion Photo Celebrating 36 Years Of Friendship

Paulina Porizkova and Ricki Lake share an extraordinary bond that defies the boundaries of their…

1 day ago

Kelly Ripa Is The Next Celeb To Go Gray

On Wednesday’s episode of Live with Kelly and Mark, TV personality Kelly Ripa revealed her…

1 day ago

‘Mad About You’ Cast Then And Now 2024

UPDATED: 4/25/2024 Did you ever go "mad" for Mad About You? The hit sitcom that…

1 day ago