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Then there are the following villains, all of them iconic and all of them severely underutilized in at least one of their movies. What a letdown.
5) Michael Myers in Halloween Ends

People have bashed on Halloween Ends quite a bit, and it’s all deserved. Sure, after Halloween Kills ended up being a full-on Michael fest it made sense to dial him back in the trilogy-capper, but not to the point where he’s barely in it.
And how they dialed him back is the biggest problem. Watching a bullied teen become a vicious killer simply hits too close to home (in the U.S., at least) in the 2020s. Halloween Ends is a really tough movie to watch, and not just because someone has their tongue cut off and placed on a turntable.
4) Pinhead in Hellraiser: Inferno

The original Hellraiser has Pinhead and his fellow Cenobites in it for less than 10 minutes, and it works like a charm. Why? Because its central plot is so compelling, and the fact that one of the two main villains is actively avoiding the Cenobites allows their absence to make full sense.
In Hellraiser: Inferno, we’re basically just watching a corrupt cop procedural. And when Pinhead pops up towards the end for all of five minutes (having worn the corrupt cop’s therapist as a disguise), it feels shoehorned in. And there’s a good chance that is exactly the case, because Pinhead himself, Doug Bradley, has claimed Inferno wasn’t initially meant to be a Hellraiser movie. Director Scott Derrickson has disputed this claim, but if indeed Bradley is right, it wouldn’t be much of a shock.











