I’m talking about a moment when a villain has the hero at their mercy and then does a move to really show what an utter bastard they are. There’s no shortage of them, but one that really sticks out to me is one line from “Se7en” at the climax from Kevin Spacey as John Doe.
“Oh…he didn’t know.”
Anyone who’s seen “Se7en” will know exactly what I mean. As brutal as that film’s outcome is, that just makes it all the worse.
What’s your worst?
Black knight when the joker sends him to the wrong warehouse.
I vividly remember hearing gasps in the theater.
I alwaysbinterpreted that scene differently, that batman knew what the joker was doing and made the decision himself to save Harvey, because he thought Harvey was that important for Gotham, more so than batman personal feelings for his girlfriend
You seem to remember that Martin Lawrence film very differently from me!
“But for me, it was Tuesday”
By the same token, Thanos’ line of “I don’t even know who you are” to Scarlet Witch after she says he took everything from her. Certainly not true, and cruelly dismissive of her valid pain.
Also, love how she had >!an entire redemption arc in Wandavision (as much as possible, given she held an entire town hostage), but then Marvel just threw that away to make her the Big Bad in Doctor Strange’s next movie. Complete character assassination.!< But I digress…
Wasn’t that alternative timeline thanos that said that though? He wouldn’t have met her yet so that version of him didn’t kill vision.
When Walter White tells Jessie that he could have saved his girlfriend but instead just watched her die.
not really a villain but the elevator scene in Mad Men where Don Draper says “I don’t even think about you”
Not a film, but in the Foundation TV series what the emperor does at the end of season 1 is pretty damn cruel.
!He catches a conspirator and has her ‘erased’ – killing not just her family, but everyone who knows her or has been in contact with her throughout her life so there will be no memory of her existence.!<
Woo-jin explaining “things” to Mr. Park in Old Boy.
This one. The big reveal of Old Boy is just so brutal
You asked about film but I’m gonna answer comic books. For me, the X-Men scene where Dark Beast "cask of Amontillado"s original Beast behind the brick wall is my top answer. The comic spends time clarifying that Hank McCoy’s (Beast) nature is inquisitive, and his curiosity so great that merely not knowing an answer is harder for him than receiving a negative answer, so that the cruelty is extra-pronounced when Beast asks Dark Beast why he is doing this and Dark Beast just grins at him and says “Because” before placing the last brick. As a kid, I found that level of taunting truly to be haunting
Lucille.