6 Most Iconic English Villains In Star Trek

4. Steven Berkoff – Hagath

Albeit the greater part of his vocation has been in the theatre, as a dramatist and director and a performing artist, Steven Berkoff appeared to be Hollywood’s go-to British antagonist of the 80s. He showed up in Rambo: First Blood Part II and Beverly Hill’s Cop. He likewise joined the rundown of famous Bond villains when he battled against Roger Moore in Octopussy.
Berkoffboards Deep Space Nine as a business accomplice of Cousin Gaila. Helping Quark to acknowledge there is something else to life than owning your own particular moon. Hagath is an arms merchant who appears to live by only one Rule of Acquisition, the 34th: War is good for business.
He provided weapons to the Bajoran resistance. However, rather than for his own reasons, he did as such to receive the benefits of their friendship.

 

3. David Warner – GulMadred

Having effectively played St. John Talbot in The Final Frontier and the Lincolnesque Chancellor Gorkon in The Undiscovered Country, David Warner’s third and last Star Trek role may have been on the little screen, yet it left the greatest impression. In the second portion of the Next Generation two-parter, Chain of Command is ruled by the cross-examination of Picard by GulMadred.
It was a heavyweight skirmish of wills between captains of two superpowers on the very edge of war. The way that Picard is sedated, stripped, and tormented may make it appear to be somewhat uneven, yet he wasn’t given charge of the Enterprise for anything. Once Madred brags about his ascent through the ranks after childhood in poverty, Picard utilizes his foe’s shortcoming to keep hold of his sanity. Showing compassion for the cruel person with an affectation of reasoning and level headed discussion as somebody who was once himself harassed and beaten; he can keep the high ground and decline to “admit” that there were five lights before him. Warner’s execution is all the more great considering that he was given the role with just three days’ notice. All that he knew about Cardassians was “that they weren’t really nice.” Furthermore, he really delivered his lines from cue cards. You’d not be able to tell this from such an awesome execution. In fact, it is currently referred to one as of TNG’s finest minutes.



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