Which Movies Feature A Multiverse Conqueror?

2026-04-10 22:14:13 250
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4 Answers

Noah
Noah
2026-04-12 06:36:22
Multiverse conquerors? Now that's a theme that gets my adrenaline pumping! One of the most iconic examples has to be 'The Avengers: Endgame', where Thanos isn't just a villain—he's a cosmic force hell-bent on reshaping reality across timelines. The way he weaponizes the Infinity Stones to enforce his will across dimensions still gives me chills. Then there's 'Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness', where Scarlet Witch's grief twists her into a universe-hopping tyrant. The horror vibes in her rampage through the Illuminati's world? Brutally creative.

Beyond Marvel, 'Everything Everywhere All at Once' flips the script by making its antagonist a nihilistic version of the protagonist herself, Jobu Tupaki. Her multiversal despair is oddly poetic—destruction as performance art. And let's not forget 'The One' (2001), where Jet Li hunts down his alternate selves to become a godlike entity. It's cheesy but weirdly compelling, like a martial arts riff on quantum theory.
Yasmine
Yasmine
2026-04-13 15:52:34
If we're talking multiverse domination, my mind instantly jumps to 'Rick and Morty'. Sure, it's a TV show, but Evil Morty's arc is pure cinema—a jaded clone outsmarting infinite Ricks to break free from the Central Finite Curve. For films, 'The Flash' (2023) deserves a shoutout; Zod's return as a multiversal threat felt like a twisted homage to 'Man of Steel'. And 'Spider-Man: No Way Home'? The Green Goblin wrecking havoc across timelines reminded me why he's Spider-Man's scariest foe—no cosmic powers, just raw, personal chaos.
Ben
Ben
2026-04-14 13:11:07
What fascinates me about multiverse conquerors is how they reflect our fears of losing control. 'Loki' season 2 (yeah, again not a movie, but bear with me) introduced He Who Remains—a variant of Kang who 'won' the multiversal war by pruning timelines. His casual god complex was terrifying. On the cinematic side, 'Interstellar's' fifth-dimensional beings technically qualify—they manipulate reality like chess pieces. And 'The Matrix Resurrections' frames Agent Smith as a virus infecting all systems, which feels like a digital twist on multiverse conquest. Even 'Cloud Atlas', with its reincarnating souls, hints at a kind of temporal domination across eras. These stories all ask: What happens when someone treats existence like a playground?
Bryce
Bryce
2026-04-16 19:50:44
Ever notice how multiverse villains often mirror the hero? 'Into the Spider-Verse' nailed this with Kingpin trying to resurrect his family by collapsing realities—a tragic motive, but his methods are monstrous. 'The Chronicles of Riddick' gets overlooked here; Necromongers aren't strictly multiversal, but their 'convert or die' crusade across galaxies has similar energy. And 'Tenet's' inverted entropy could be seen as a time-warper's conquest tool. Personally, I'd love to see a film where the conqueror wins—imagine a credits roll where every universe fades to their rule. Chilling stuff.
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