Tag: catwoman

  • Best Batman Movie Villains

    Colin Farrell as Penguin
    Colin Farrell as Oswald Cobblepot/the Penguin in Warner Bros. Pictures’ action adventure ‘The Batman,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Jonathan Olley/™ & © DC Comics. Copyright: © 2021 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    There is no comic book superhero with more iconic villains than Batman! Most heroes have one or two famous enemies, but the Caped Crusader has more than a handful that are now household names.

    Most of Batman’s most dangerous adversaries have appeared in a film alongside the masked hero, but a few have starred in their own movies like ‘Catwoman,’ ‘Joker,’ ‘Suicide Squad’ and ‘Birds of Prey (and the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn).’

    While two actors have won Oscars for portraying Batman’s most iconic villain the Joker, Heath Ledger and Joaquin Phoenix for ‘The Dark Knight’ and ‘Joker,’ respectively. And the list of Oscar-winning actors that have played Batman villains includes Jack Nicholson, Halle Berry, Anne Hathaway, Tommy Lee Jones, and Marion Cottillard.

    With ‘The Batmancurrently in theaters, we’ve decided to countdown the ten greatest Batman movie villains of all time. For this list, we are only including villains from pure Batman movies, not other DC films like ‘Justice League’ or ‘Suicide Squad.’

    Let’s begin!

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    10) Ra’s al Ghul – Batman Begins / The Dark Knight Rises

    Liam Neeson as Ra's al Ghul in Batman Begins movie
    Warner Bros. Pictures

    While he starts off in ‘Batman Begins’ as Bruce Wayne’s mentor Henri Ducard, Liam Neeson’s character is eventually revealed to be Ra’s al Ghul, leader of the League of Shadows. One of Batman’s greatest enemies from the comics, and grandfather to Wayne’s own son, Ra’s al Ghul was a great addition to Christopher Nolan’s series, and even returned for a cameo in ‘The Dark Knight Rises.’

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    9) Scarecrow – The Dark Knight

    Cillian Murphy as Scarecrow in The Dark Knight movie
    Warner Bros. Pictures

    Also first appearing in ‘Batman Begins,’ Cillian Murphy‘s Dr. Jonathan Crane/Scarecrow, is the only villain to appear in all three of Christopher Nolan’s ‘Dark Knight’ movies. The actor’s menacing and realistic performance brought new dimensions to the scary comic book character.

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    8) Riddler – Batman Forever

    Jim Carrey as Riddler in Batman Forever movie
    Warner Bros. Pictures

    Jim Carrey stole every scene he was in, in the otherwise forgettable, ‘Batman Forever.’ As the Riddler, the comedian went “full-Carey” and delivered a fun and absolutely outrageous performance, which unfortunately was not enough to save the rest of the movie.

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    7) Two-Face – The Dark Knight

    Aaron Eckhart as Two Face in The Dark Knight movie
    Warner Bros. Pictures

    The bar was set low for Two-Face after Tommy Lee Jones’ hammy performance in ‘Batman Forever,’ and Aaron Eckhart hit it out of the park. The movie allows us to see the origin of the character, and watch his evolution from heroic attorney, to disfigured madman.

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    6) Bane – The Dark Knight Rises

    Tom Hardy as Bane in The Dark Knight Rises movie
    Warner Bros. Pictures

    While ‘The Dark Knight Rises’ did not mark Bane’s first on screen appearance, that unfortunately was ‘Batman & Robin,’ Tom Hardy‘s performance is clearly the best. Putting the odd voice choice aside, the actor is physically commanding and completely believable as the man that broke Batman’s back.

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    5) Maximillian Shreck – Batman Returns

    Christopher Walken as Max Shreck in Batman Returns movie
    Warner Bros. Pictures

    An original character created for Tim Burton‘s ‘Batman Returns,’ corrupt businessman Maximillian Shreck almost causes more trouble for Batman than Penguin and Catwoman. Played ruthlessly and with complete joy by the great Christopher Walken, he is an equal advisory for both Batman and Bruce Wayne, tries to get Penguin elected Mayor of Gotham, and is the reason Selina Kyle becomes the Catwoman.

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    4) Penguin – Batman Returns

    Danny DeVito as Penguin in Batman Returns movie
    Warner Bros. Pictures

    Taking what Burgess Meredith created on the ‘Batman’ TV series and making it a million times darker, was exactly how Danny DeVito portrayed Oswald Cobblepot/Penguin in Tim Burton’s sequel. In fact, the actor’s performance was so horrific and scary (as it should be), McDonald’s refused to put toys of the character in their Happy Meals.

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    3) Joker – Batman

    Jack Nicholson as Joker in Batman movie
    Warner Bros. Pictures

    Heath Ledger and Joaquin Phoenix may have won Oscars for playing the Joker on screen, but to anyone who group up in the 80’s and 90’s, Jack Nicholson is the one true Joker. Not only was his performance hilarious and unexpected, taking the role set a precedent for other Oscar-winning actors to play comic book characters on screen.

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    2) Catwoman – Batman Returns

    Michelle Pfeiffer as Catwoman in Batman Returns movie
    Warner Bros. Pictures

    While Michelle Pfeiffer was not originally cast as Catwoman in ‘Batman Returns,’ that was Annette Bening, her name has become synonymous with the role. Pfeiffer gives a stellar performance, both as Selina Kyle and Catwoman. She is strong, funny, and stylish, and has great chemistry with both Michael Keaton and DeVito.

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    1) Joker – The Dark Knight

    Heath Ledger as Joker in The Dark Knight movie
    Warner Bros. Pictures

    Heath Ledger is the first actor to ever win an Oscar for playing a comic book character. As great as all the Joker actors were before him, and have been since, Ledger’s performance is still clearly the best. The actor channeled a chaotic madness that perfectly matched the character, and his one on one scenes with Christian Bale’s Batman are some of the best cinematic moments in the franchise’s history.

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  • 10 Female Superheroes Who Deserve a Movie After ‘Captain Marvel’

    10 Female Superheroes Who Deserve a Movie After ‘Captain Marvel’

  • The Lousy Reason We Never Got a Michelle Pfeiffer Catwoman Movie

    The Lousy Reason We Never Got a Michelle Pfeiffer Catwoman Movie

    Warner Bros.

    Ever wondered why we didn’t get a standalone Catwoman movie with Michelle Pfeiffer after her purr-fect portrayal of the slinky villain in “Batman and Robin?”

    One very stupid Warner Bros. executive, apparently.

    As part of #shareyourrejections on Twitter, screenwriter John August told the story of how his Catwoman movie got voted down 20 years ago. Because the exec wanted Sarah Michelle Gellar instead of Pfeiffer. And she had to be washing her hair.

    August (who’s penned films including “Go,” “Big Fish,” and “Charlie’s Angels“) envisioned a plot where Selina Kyle leaves Gotham and is unaware of what her alter-ego is up to.

    (Also, he shares that the Gellar-obsessed exec had nothing to do with her 2004 hit movie “The Grudge,” in which she washes her hair. But we bet the unnamed exec owns that on Blu-ray.)

    Here’s the whole Twitter thread.

    https://twitter.com/johnaugust/status/1030158543788204033

    https://twitter.com/johnaugust/status/1030222011077865473

    https://twitter.com/johnaugust/status/1030242596151410688

  • ‘Gotham’s’ Camren Bicondova Would Love a Selina-Barbara Alliance

    Milly - Front Row - February 2017 - New York Fashion WeekAs “Gotham’s” presumptive future Catwoman, young Selina Kyle’s just getting into the earliest of her feline nine lives — but as actress Camren Bicondova keeps discovering, they’re never without some serious intrigue.

    As the saga of the pre-Batman Gotham City returns with a run of episodes to close out its third season, Bicondova is back as Selina, once again straddling the line between good girl and bad girl following a major falling out with the slowly emerging Dark Knight, Bruce Wayne. And as the 17-year-old actress revealed to a small group of press, Selina will face new temptations to walk on the more shadowy side of the street than her justice-seeking paramour.

    We left Selina and Bruce in a pretty fractured place when we last saw them. How does their relationship fare as the season picks up?

    Camren Bicondova: That relationship is crazy. It’s not necessarily toxic, their relationship, but it’s definitely a wild ride. When we pick up this season, it’s kind of catching them on their little downfall. Then for the rest of the season after that, it’s them going their separate ways and trying to figure out who they are.

    How does Selena move forward from being betrayed by her mother yet again?

    I think it impacts her immensely. I think because Selina didn’t want to start a relationship with her mom again, because her mom did her so wrong from the beginning of her life. The fact that she abandoned her again, just in a different way, it hurts Selina, because all she wants to feel is loved. I think that betrayal from her mother definitely skyrockets her into this direction that she didn’t necessarily see herself going into.

    As the remainder of Season 3 plays out, how much more does she evolve toward becoming the Catwoman we know she could become as an adult?

    She does evolve a little more towards that direction, but she definitely does not become Catwoman. She’s just searching for what she wants in life, and she’s searching for what she necessarily needs also. She knows that she wants independence, and she knows that she needs to survive, but it’s a question of, does she want to continue surviving, or does she want to go above and beyond that?

    Where does that search for independence take her?

    It takes her to a certain person that she thinks could help her. Then no more. No, I’m not going to say any more than that.

    You are a dancer as well — did any of your dance background help you with Selina’s physicality?

    Definitely. The majority of Selina’s being is her body language and the way that she moves. Because she doesn’t say much, most of her communication revolves around how her body sits and moves. If I weren’t a dancer, I don’t think that I would be able to pull Selina off. I’m pretty sure that I would not be able to play this role if I wasn’t a dancer. So it definitely helps.

    What character would you like to see Selina ally with, whether it’s a true partnership or not? Who would you like to see her interact more with?

    I think a little interaction with Jerome would be cool — I don’t necessarily think an alliance with Jerome would be good for her. She needs some stability in her life. She has enough chaos going on. She needs stability.

    But as far as an alliance goes, I don’t think she’s ever had an alliance with Barbara. I think that would be cool. Even if it’s like a little like, “Oh, we’re friends — okay, bye.” I think that would be a really cool dynamic.

    There was a glimmer of a connection early in the series…

    The only way that that happened was because Selina broke into her apartment and was squatting there. At the time, Barbara was having some drinking issues, and Selina does not deal with things like that. She can deal with shady business of all sorts, but she will not deal with drug addiction or alcoholism. I think Selina kind of shied away from her because of that. I think they just went their separate ways. I don’t think they dislike each other, I just think they were just not good mix.

    Selina takes on a leadership role with Poison Ivy, even though Ivy looks like an adult. How does that go?

    She does. It’s so funny. It’s always great when I get to work with Maggie [Geha] because Maggie is so much taller than me; she’s the sweetest person — she’s literally Ivy. I think out of everyone, the person who is the most like her character is Maggie.

    I love their dynamic, because Selina is just this short little thing, this small package with a lot of boom. Ivy is just this really tall, beautiful piece of Ivy-ness, but she’s so dorky, and she’s so innocent. So it’s really fun playing that dynamic of this little person who is much more wise, and much more confident, talking to this very tall person who’s very innocent and not so wise.

    “Gotham” airs Mondays on Fox.

  • Writer Ed Brubaker Reveals His Journey From Marvel Comics to ‘Westworld’

    Ed Brubaker could have easily rested on his laurels as one of the most popular, prolific, and influential comic book writers of his generation -– he was, among other landmarks, the one who broke the long-standing taboo about resurrecting Captain America’s late sidekick Bucky. In doing so, created the Winter Soldier.

    But when movies and TV series began mining graphic storytelling -– including his own -– for an ongoing array of high-profile projects, he saw an open door and stepped through it. Now, in addition to his award-winning roster of comics projects, he’s also a member of the writing staff on HBO’s hit sci-fi series “Westworld.”

    Throughout his award-winning career in comics, Brubaker’s work has always attracted big attention: at DC Comics, he reinvented Catwoman as a more heroic character, co-wrote the street-level, inside-the-Gotham-City-police-ranks series “Gotham Central,” and trail-blazed a resurrection of crime noir comics with “Scene of the Crime.” At Marvel Comics, in his heralded stint on “Captain America,” he killed off the patriotic superhero and replaced him with Cap’s guilt-wracked former sidekick before resurrecting him. He also crafted popular runs on “Daredevil,” “The Immortal Iron Fist,” and “Uncanny X-Men.”

    And as several of his creations and storylines are being increasingly incorporated into the entertainment industry’s comics-derived output, Brubaker’s gone Hollywood himself: as a supervising producer on “Westworld,” he’s been a member of the writer’s room throughout the first season and was credited alongside co-creator Jonathan Nolan with writing the fourth episode “Dissonance Theory.”

    Moviefone recently spoke to the writer about his path from comics to TV, checking out “Westworld” fan theories, seeing his ideas inhabit a massive Marvel movie, and the reason why noir remains a genre he returns to again and again.
    Moviefone: What’s really fascinating to me is, here we are, in this big convergence of mass media, pop culture and the comic book world. You’re one of that rare group of people who’s been able now to work on both sides – creating the content that the films and TV shows are based on, and also moving over into the Hollywood realm as well. Was that a transition that happened quickly? Tell me a little bit about how you got to bleed over from one to the other.

    Ed Brubaker: I actually started taking trips to LA to talk about screenwriting jobs. I started doing screenwriting in like 2000 or 2001. I worked on a few indie film projects that never got made. I had always been wanting to work in film and comics. I was making my living primarily in comics, but the thought was always like, ‘It’d be great if I could sell one of these things and maybe get the gig to write the screenplay so I could break into that field.”

    In 2001, [studio] people’s assistants knew who you were if you were in comics, but nobody at like any of the studios cared about people who wrote comics at all. By the time I’d moved down to LA, it became a big deal if you were a big deal in comics. You could get hired to work on TV shows or sell pilots.

    A lot of it was just that the people who were those assistants in the 90s and early 2000s are now the people who are running things, and they grew up reading comics, and they’re super into comics. I think there are a lot of other writers in comics who could come out here and get hired on shows, and make a living as a screenwriter, as well as sticking to writing comics. But you give up different things as a screenwriter than you do as someone who just sits at home and just writes comics all the time. You can live anywhere and write comics. If you want to work in TV, you pretty much have to live in LA.

    I got lucky. With “Westworld,” I came in — I had written several TV pilots and a couple movies that were on the verge of getting made. And I had all this comic book experience, so I was able to come in at a much higher level than a first-time writer would be able to. I had already paid my dues in 15 years of writing comics, so I was able to get to be an outside-the-box hire and come in as supervising producer, which normally you couldn’t do. So that’s one of the advantages of that.

    When you’re part of a TV writing room, it’s not about you. It’s not about you sitting down and creating a story on your own. It’s about sitting in a room with six to eight people, and talking about what the story is and debating different ways scenes could go. It’s like a completely different part of your brain.

    I love collaborating with people, so I really feel like I took to it. There was definitely some adjustment to realizing, “Oh, okay – I’m one of a group of people who are helping to create something,” instead of being able to just be like, “I want to write this scene, and just go do it.” So I’m glad I have both. I’m glad I’m still doing my comics and doing the TV writing and film writing.
    You’ve written in so many different genres in comics. Where did you find your way in, creatively, to the big “Westworld” concept and the game plan that Jonah [Nolan] and Lisa [Joy] had put together? And what do you feel like has been your key contribution to the series so far?

    That’s a tough one. When I went in for the interview, I went in and I read the pilot script, which was a little bit different than what was aired. It was longer and had a lot more stuff in it, but I thought it was one of the best scripts that I’d ever read. And I always loved sci-fi, and I loved the original “Westworld” movie as a kid. So I just really wanted to work on the show, and to work on an HBO show that was going to be so high-end and seemed like it would just be the greatest experience that you could get. If you’re going to work on someone else’s thing, you want it to be the best possible thing, so you can see how the stuff gets made, actually.

    But as far as contribution to the show — I was one of six or seven other writers that were in the room besides the showrunners. We all just kicked around ideas. Ultimately, the show is what the showrunners and the network want it to be. I can point to lines of dialogue that I’m like, “Oh, I wrote that. That’s what I’m credited for.” It was a good half or more of the dialogue in there is stuff I wrote. Overall, you’re part of a team and building a big project together.

    There’s a large audience that has embraced the show, and every week you see a new flurry of fan theories. Do you guys look at that at all, just out of a “What are they guessing right? Are they hip to some of the clues we’ve planted?” Do you guys pay any attention to that stuff?

    Yeah, definitely. I’ve looked at some of it, just because it’s fascinating to see. When we were working on the show, I always just assumed it was going to end up being a huge show, just because the pedigree of the show, it’s HBO, and every person in it is a movie star. I’d be like, the episodes themselves are so good that I expected it would be a hit, but I wasn’t 100% sure it would become the obsession for people that it’s become, where they’re picking apart every possible clue and mystery. It was really gratifying to see that, in a way.

    I’ve said to a couple people: I don’t think there’s any wrong way to watch the show. You can watch the show for the overall message about humanity of whatever, or you can watch the show for the secrets and the mysteries, or you can watch it just to get the kick-ass adventure part of it. It really is all those different things. I feel like they all come together to be a larger whole.

    My wife knows nothing about the show. She swore me to secrecy because she wanted to watch the show. When we have people over to watch it, she leaves the room immediately after the show is over so that we don’t end up talking about everything and ruining it for her. It’s fun to watch her try to figure out the theories and then I’m like, “Do you want me to tell you something?” She’s like, “No! I want to figure it out on my own.” So it’s kind of cool.

    Your crime noir comic book “The Fade Out,” set during the Hollywood blacklist era, just got collected in hardcover from Image Comics. You clearly have an affinity for Old Hollywood, and Old Hollywood’s way of telling a crime story, but putting a very contemporary spin on it. And I understand that you have a familial connection to the Old Hollywood system?

    Yeah. My uncle, John Paxton, wrote a bunch of noir films back in the ’40s. He wrote “Murder, My Sweet,” and “Crossfire,” and in the ’50s he wrote “The Wild One” and “On the Beach.” He was a pretty big screenwriter in the ’40s or ’50s, and even into the early ’60s. So I grew up with hearing these stories about Hollywood, and about the Blacklist and everything. The director that he worked with all the time was Eddie Dmytryk, and Adrian Scott was his best friend and producer that he always worked with at RKO. And they were both in the Hollywood Ten.

    A while back, a couple years before I started writing “The Fade Out,” my aunt sent me all my uncle’s old screenplays. Every time a movie would get made, she had the original typescript bound in leather to preserve it. So now I have all those. I was flipping through them. Just found a bunch of articles. She would put things about any articles about his movies and put them in those things.

    I think my fascination with noir films came from that my uncle had written them, and my dad always wanted us to read and write, and go to the movies and stuff, so whenever one of my uncle’s films would be on the “Late Show” or whatever, he would keep us up to watch it. I started watching noir films when I was probably seven or eight years old, so I have a fascination with that.

    Perfect age, right?

    Yeah, totally appropriate age! My dad was very inappropriate on things he would let kids watch, but that’s fine.

    Seems to have paid off.

    It’s every parents’ discretion -– as long as you don’t tell their mom.

    Especially now with “Westworld” having hit big, has it energized your other projects –- either the comic book properties that you own yourself, or the stuff that you’ve been working on as far as screenplays?

    Unfortunately, a lot of the Hollywood stuff you’re never allowed to talk about until they announce it. I have two different projects that are based on my books that are in development, at various stages. One is pretty close to being announced. Currently, I’m actually working on a TV show with a director that is a friend of mine, and that we’ve already sold, but it hasn’t been announced yet. It’ll probably be announced in the next week or two. And that’s a thing that we created together.

    So definitely being part of a hit HBO show has helped people take me a little bit more seriously as a screenwriter and not just some guy who just appeared in Hollywood and did a few things. I feel like once you’re actually in production on something, and you see how hard it is to actually get stuff made, you kind of understand the industry a little bit better.

    Every time I put out a new project, there’s always a bunch of studio interest or various production companies that reach out to you about it. It seems like that happens more and more lately, I think partially because Marvel’s owned by Disney, and Warner Brothers owns DC. So the new properties that come out are coming out from places like Image, where the creators actually own it, and then the studios or the producers can reach out directly to the creators. So I feel like, in a way, Marvel and DC being owned by two of the biggest corporations in the world has made it much better for independent comics, as far being as the only ones Hollywood could option.

    But yeah. I definitely feel it’s it’s opened some doors for me. It’s certainly made it easier to get press on my comics. I had lunch with Lost” for a few years. We were just talking about how different it is to what people think it is, in a way. It’s still a job. It’s a more exciting job than most jobs you would have, probably, because you’re helping to create a story.

    But he was saying, some of the stuff that I see on my Twitter whenever there’s an episode of “Westworld,” people are like congratulating me for the episode. I’m like, wow, I’m just one of a team of people. I feel uncomfortable getting extra attention for “Westworld,” in a way.

    I’m happy if that attention then goes to my comic book writing. Especially “The Fade Out,” I feel like is especially timely, unfortunately. I turned on the internet today and saw there’s talk of starting a new House Un-American Activities Committee. I was like, “Oh, great. Perfect timing to release my hardback, about how awful the Blacklist was for everybody.” Bizarre world.
    Every time I spoke with the Russo brothers when “Captain America: The Winter Soldier” came out, they made a point to credit you for much of the inspiration that they’ve found in the comics you wrote. To see that get translated into film and become a thing that the mass culture is going to think and know about Captain America now –- what was that experience like for you?

    It’s still very bizarre. Last year, I had trick or treaters dressed up as the Winter Soldier. I had to stop and take pictures -– I had to make them take pictures with me. They were like a little freaked out by it. My wife’s like, “He created the Winter Soldier.” They were like, “Oh.” And then they were, like, really excited about it. I was like, “We shouldn’t have told them that!” Yeah. It’s very bizarre.

    When I started writing “Captain America,” my pitch for the book was bringing back Bucky, and making him the Winter Soldier, and having him be grown up, so that it wouldn’t be like a teen sidekick, but this dark sort of redemption story -– almost like “The Bourne Identity” or something. I was coming in at a time at Marvel where they were ready to try to shake things up and to do things that they hadn’t done before. So I got very lucky in the timing of that, that they were willing to bring Bucky back.

    I was just trying to reflect what was going on in the world a little bit, and the comics, and a superhero version of it. I remember when the issue came out that revealed the Winter Soldier was Bucky, I thought that would be my last issue of “Captain America.” I thought people were going to be so mad. Now, to see that those are the comics that have influenced the Marvel movies, especially the “Captain America” movies, they have a very similar tone to the comics I wrote. The storylines for the last two, good portions of them were adapted from comics I wrote, so that’s just bizarre to me! It’s always hard to wrap my head around.

    When I went to the premiere of “Civil War” movie, I was just sitting there in the theater and watching it, and then I’d be like, ‘Oh, wait — I know this storyline.” It took me until the second time to watch it to actually appreciate the movie because I was just, like, having my mind blown over and over again. And just the other day I got a text from Sebastian Stan about my episode of “Westworld.” This is bizarre -– I’m getting texts from the Winter Soldier! To me, it’s always just been, I kind of can’t believe it happened. I wish my dad had lived to see it. He would be very impressed with me. But yeah. It’s weird.

    If my agents want anyone to take a meeting with me, they just go, ‘He’s the guy who created The Winter Soldier.” It’s definitely opened a lot of doors.

  • These Are the 10 Most Toxic Superheroes of 2015: Click If You Dare

    It’s a bird! It’s a plane! It’s … Cybercrime! Maybe computer hacking isn’t the most exciting supervillain power, but it is quite damaging. The folks at Intel Security just released their 2015 list of “Most Toxic Superheroes” — timed for San Diego Comic-Con, when more people are searching online about superhero movies/shows/characters.

    As Intel noted:

    Research conducted by Intel Security revealed the top superheroes most likely to be targeted by cybercriminals where these searches can result in sites containing viruses, malware and other inappropriate content.”

    The top 10 superheroes most likely to affect online users this year are:

    1. Aquaman — 20.00%
    2. Iron Fist — 19.69%
    3. Wolverine — 19.58.%
    4. Wonder Woman — 19.38%
    5. Doctor Strange — 19.17%
    6. Daredevil — 18.96%
    7. Tie: The Incredible Hulk, Iron Man — 18.85%
    8. Catwoman — 18.65%
    9. Green Lantern — 18.44%
    10. Batman — 18.33%

    This is apparently Aquaman’s return to the #1 spot, where he first landed in 2013. He doesn’t get the superhero spotlight that often so … in a way, this is good for his ego. Congrats, man.


    FYI, the percentage indicates chance of landing on a website that has tested positive for online threats such as spyware, adware, spam, phishing, viruses or other malware. Be careful out there!

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