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Worst Things Doctor Doom Has Ever Done. There are a few characters vying for the position of Marvel’s top villain. Strangely, several of them are in the Avengers, but that’s a story for another time. There isn’t going to be a true consensus among fans who the biggest bad is in Marvel, but there’s a good chance that Doctor Doom would top a majority of people’s lists.
A low- born, poverty- stricken boy, Victor Von Doom (geez, these names) became a world renowned scientist and attempted to use his influence and intelligence to help his desperate home country, Latveria. However, he was scarred in an accident which really triggered his vanity and instability. Rather than help his country, he rules it with an iron hand. Doctor Doom is a tragic character. He truly believes himself to be the good guy and does (sometimes) mean well, but his ego gets in his way. Well, that and the borderline insanity.
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Spock is a fictional character in the Star Trek media franchise. Spock was first portrayed by Leonard Nimoy in the original Star Trek series, and also appears in the. With his solo movie on the way, we have the lowdown on the worst things Doctor Doom has ever done.and some weird stuff too. Directed by Adam Nimoy. With Chris Pine, Zoe Saldana, Mayim Bialik, Karl Urban. An examination of the enduring appeal of Leonard Nimoy and his portrayal of Spock in.

Despite having a large role in the Marvel Comics verse, his depictions in film have been less than flattering. However, with the news that FOX has a solo film in development focused entirely on the Latverian dictator, we thought we’d take a look at this complicated character’s equally complicated history. Here are the 1. 5 Worst Things Doctor Doom Has Done, and yes, the doctor will see you now. Took over the entire world…Doctor Doom has taken over the world on several occasions.
Rather than using cosmic powers as he has in Secret Wars, there was one time where it was all thanks to a combination of magnificent scientific prowess and absolute cruelty. Victor kidnapped the Purple Man (who was still a non- threatening D- lister at the time) in order to hook him up to machinery that would allow him to control the minds of everyone in the world. But first, Doom needed to make sure Purple Man knew his place. Kilgrave attempted to use his abilities to make Victor kill himself, but his will was too strong. No one had ever been able to resist Purple Man’s psychic abilities until right then. Kilgrave toed the line after that.
And then Doom took over the world and…actually made it a better place. The economy boomed, wars ended, and everybody loved him for it.
As Spock once said, “Sometimes wanting is better than having.” Sure, everybody loved Victor Von Doom, but they were brainwashed into it. It wasn’t real. He wanted everyone to give up their free will freely, which is an incredible insight into his ego and psychosis.
Then Namor—the poor man’s Aquaman—shows up. Turns out, Doom forgot about Namor and Atlantis because, well, wouldn’t you?
Between the boredom of ruling over a peaceful world along with ruling over the brainwashed silent masses of said world, Doom decided to stand back and allow Namor to destroy his machinery, freeing the Purple Man from his prison and saving the world. War, cruelty and the unending production of Fast and Furious movies continued. But we had our freedom back, which is nice. He wouldn’t let a crippled boy leave Latveria. Doctor Doom isn’t exactly a people person in the traditional sense.
He does love his people, but only as long as they don’t get in his way. When the Avengers invaded Latveria (it’s really hard to pick a side here), Doctor Doom closed the borders to make sure they couldn’t escape, hoping to use his forces to smoke out, surround, and destroy Earth’s Mightiest Heroes. There was only one problem: a disabled Latverian boy needed to leave the country to get a life- saving surgery (what a surprise that Latveria has awful health care). Doom worried that re- opening the borders would give the Avengers a chance to escape, so he basically shrugged and told the kid that life isn’t fair. It is, actually, a valuable life lesson, but not one the kid can really appreciate or adapt to for very much longer.
You know, because Doctor Doom essentially just let him die and whatnot. He’s Incredibly Cheap. Being fiscally responsible is an important quality in a leader, but then again, so is honesty. Doctor Doom is a chizler and a liar.
This isn’t a great sign. Luke Cage had a run- in during his Hero for Hire days and ended up taking the Latverian despot on as a client. Some of Victor’s Doombots had gone rogue, and he needed them destroyed. He hired Cage because the bots were disguised as African Americans, giving the freelancer a greater reason to take the job. Doom then skipped town rather than pay Cage the $2.
First, Luke Cage needs to know his worth. Even adjusted for inflation, that was a low rate. Second, Doom is the leader of an entire country.
Granted, it’s a crap country, but he can afford more than that. Another incident saw Doom spend the money to create the Terrible Trio—a gang of super- powered maniacs—to do his bidding. Rather than pay them for their services, he banished them to limbo until they were useful to him again. He stole Namor’s Sea Horn just to be a dick. We mentioned earlier that Namor is a braying jackass who was really quite angry at Doctor Doom.
Well, we may have the reason why. In the kid- friendly series Spidey Super Stories, Doctor Doom was reduced to being little more than a spastic nuisance. He ended up touring Atlantis, where Namor took Victor to see his poorly decorated throne room. Upon seeing a giant sea horn, which was a priceless Atlantean musical instrument, Doctor Doom began playing it, to the king’s chagrin.
Then Doom ran off with it, getting away on some bizarre Atlantean cro- magnon hippo- dinosaur looking thing while yelling, “Ha- ha! I’m the master of the world!”Admittedly, after this we really can’t argue his point. While we can never be entirely certain, there is also a good chance that before leaving Atlantis, the good doctor left an upper- decker in the royal washroom. Dr. Doom revealed as a Brony. Doctor Doom is known for his odd, courtly, yet overwrought patois. Watch Freezer Online there.
Writer Brian Michael Bendis, meanwhile, is very well known to comic fans for his dialogue. The art is sometimes drowned out by his poppy, talky dialogue balloons as characters ramble on in conversations that are meant to be more realistic than we normally see.
Unfortunately, Bendis does tend to overwrite. It’s become something that the Internet loves to roast—altering and parodying the dialogue in the comics he’s written. Bendis’ Doctor Doom dialogue was less than stellar, so an internet hero changed it, and immortalized the good doctor as a Brony.
Doom then regales us with a reading of his My Little Pony fanfiction (called Galaxy Trails; it’s only the first volume). It has since taken on a life of its own.
There’s a popular redub of the old Fantastic Four cartoon where the doctor declares his love for the series, more altered comic book panels of Doom describing his favorite characters, and entire catalogues of fan art mixing Doctor Doom and the My Little Pony franchise together. It’s all quite unsettling. His movie appearances. Common sense would dictate that if you’re going to be a world- conquering villain, you should exude dominance and scare those around you. Casual fans will only know Doctor Doom from the recent Fantastic Four movies.
The first two were goofy and campy, and featured a version of Victor whose skin turned to metal, making him look like a cheap- ripoff of the T- 1. The 2. 01. 5 reboot turned him into a Tron–inspired Crash Test Dummy. It tried for grim; but ended up becoming a parody. Rather than be played like a man whose fall from grace is both operatic and tragic, the live- action Von Doom is a socially awkward, lovelorn creep who becomes evil because the plot requires him to.
