The What's On Your Mind Thread and the Battle of Hogwarts

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Aw I love this little show thingy. 51 minutes wow.
ULTIMATE DISNEY.
I've rode all of these rides, but I just like how recent this video is (:
 

30. Commodore Barbossa
Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003)
Actor: Geoffrey Rush

The only live action villain to make this Top 30, Barbossa inspires fear as the not-quite-living antagonist of last year's wildly popular adaptation of the famous Disneyland attraction. All of the elements of Pirates somehow fit into a comfortable place between fresh and formula, and that certainly includes this memorable character, who makes a compelling counterweight to Johnny Depp's fun lead role.
 
you don't go all that fast on Space Mountain apparently. WHY ARE THEY NOT TELLING ME THE EXACT SPEED?!

yesss RNRC time!
 
29. Governor Ratcliffe
Pocahontas (1995)
Voice: David Ogden Stiers
Animator: Duncan Majoribanks

Take David Ogden Stiers (no stranger to voicing Disney characters) and put him behind a brash governor in colonial times and you get John Ratcliffe. Faced with the "New World", theunpleasant brute only sees personal riches and his distrust of Native Americans (whose gold he wants) and destruction of the land are not traits that many would find desirable.
 
28. Kaa
The Jungle Book (1967)
Voice: Sterling Holloway

Not the most fear-inspiring villain, Kaa definitely makes an impression as the cunning type. The tool of this snake's choice: hypnotism. The unmistakble Sterling Holloway voiced many a Disney character, but this is his one unequivocal baddie.

Kaa is a likable villain, namely because his own pride gets in the way of him actually doing anything truly evil. The warm reception of test audiences had Disney adding another Kaa sequence to the final film, which was the last animated work that Walt personally oversaw. Particularly memorable is Kaa's simple little song "Trust in Me."
 
27. Randall Boggs
Monsters, Inc. (2001)
Voice: Steve Buscemi

Generally, villains need power to make their punch effective. Often, they'll be physically imposing (i.e. "large and in charge"). But Randall Boggs, the second most successful scarer in Monstropolis, more the slight and sleazy type, which seems entirely appropriate since he's voiced by Steve Buscemi, a master of slight characters in film. But this weasel does have a power and a very cool one at that. He can become invisible at any time, as he rapidly adapts to his surroundings to make him a presence felt, not seen. This proves useful in his shady efforts to reinvent Monsters, Inc, and makes him a threatening nemesis to our likable heroes Sulley, Mike, and Boo.
 
26. Sid Phillips
Toy Story (1995)
Voice: Erik von Detten

The villain of Toy Story, Pixar's first feature and the first wholly computer-animated film, is Sid, the boy next door. This boy spends his days destroying and disfiguring toys, even his sister's most treasured dolls.

The toys only have to worry about their creative/destructive neighbor until Andy's family makes their upcoming move to a different part of town. But these last few days are particularly dangerous for Buzz and Woody when they find themselves in the terror zone that is Sid's room.
 
lol my brother always talks my mom into getting him (and me and my other brother) fast food. he called me asking if I wanted Sonic... I had lunch already so I just want my favorite food ever, mozzarella sticks. I'm trying to get some meat on my bones.
 
25. Madame Mim
The Sword in the Stone (1963)
Voice: Martha Wentworth

Aaron Wallace, of the University of North Carolina, states, "Madame Mim’s wickedness really lies in her lunacy. She’s just mad enough to do someone harm and break all the rules. She does both with much hilarity."

The Sword in the Stone may have been forgotten or ignored by some, but the wizard's duel between the backhanded Mim and the wise Merlin remains a memorable highlight from the film.
 
24. Clayton
Tarzan (1999)
Voice: Brian Blessed
Animator: Randy Haycock

On Tarzan's brawny villain, Jake Lipson says, "Clayton is, like any classic Disney villain, hungry for money and power, and intensely voiced (this time by Brian Blessed). But what makes him stand out from the crowd is his harshness. Like Cruella De Vil before him, Clayton's cruel treatment of animals (in this case, the apes), and Tarzan himself, makes him a chillingly cold villain so different from the run-of-the-mill animated bad guy. His character is also a home-hitting statement on poachers and why we need to make sure animals and the world are safe."
 
23. Pete
Countless shorts, TV programs, and films, from "Alice Solves the Puzzle" (1925) to The Three Musketeers (2004)
Voice: Billy Bletcher/Will Ryan/Arthur Burghardt/Jim Cummings
 
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