Sure, the Joker is great, and Darth Vader is classic, but comic fans know that the greatest supervillain of all time is Doctor Doom, the scarred dictator of Latveria. Doom's prominence in the comics is the exact reason why his low profile in the movies has been so shocking.
Though Doom has been adapted to the big screen on two occasions, in the 2005 Fantastic Four movie and the 2015 reboot, both movies completely missed the point of the character, depicting him in a fashion that had almost nothing to do with the regal, brilliant, egomaniacal antihero that Stan Lee so obviously loved to write.
However, change is in the wings. Now that Disney is acquiring the movie and TV assets of 20th Century Fox, it means that heroes like the Fantastic Four, the X-Men, and the Silver Surfer can finally the Marvel Cinematic Universe. There are even rumblings about a live-action Doctor Doom movie currently in the works.
If you're wondering what's so important about Doctor Doom, or why this infamous mad scientist is so deserving of his own movie, it's time to learn 16 Devious Things You Never Knew About Doctor Doom.
He's not a "villain"
What both Fantastic Four movies totally misunderstood about Doctor Doom is that he's not a regular bad guy. Sure, the name Doctor Doom is pretty menacing, but Doom is a surprisingly sympathetic figure. He could easily be the greatest hero of the Marvel Universe if it wasn't for some of his personality flaws.
In the beginning, Victor Von Doom was a young boy from the fictional Eastern European country of Latveria, a nation ruled by an oppressive regime. After the death of his parents, Victor is forced to flee his homeland, where he travels to the United States. As an adult, he masters the arts of both science and mysticism, forges a futuristic metal armor for himself, and then returns home to Latveria in a blaze of glory, retaking his country for the peasants...
...whom he then enslaves beneath his oppressive rule, as the new dictator of Latveria. So yeah, it's complicated. Doom's people both fear and love him. He's brought them technological abundance and safety, but at the cost of their freedom.
15. He's not actually a doctor...
If there's one thing that is unarguably Doom's greatest flaw, it's his arrogance. Well, that, and his vanity. He's got an ego the size of a planet, and a massive insecurity problem going on whenever others challenge his greatness. That's a big reason why he's never quite made it as a hero, in the long run. Sure, he might save the world, but he's doing it in order to prove his own greatness.
So he'd take it quite personally if someone accused him of not actually being a doctor... but he's not. Keep in mind, Doom was expelled from Empire State University after his little explosion mishap, so he never got to finish his studies. In other words, the title "Doctor Doom" is entirely self-appointed. Though in all fairness, considering that the guy does create robot armies, super-powered armors, and time machines, we'd say he's more than earned the title by now, in his own autodidactic way.
14. How his face got scarred
During Victor Von Doom's early childhood, his mother Cynthia was dragged down to Hell. Yes, actual Hell. Understandably enough, Victor wants to rescue her from there, so when he becomes a student at Empire State University, he builds a machine to her in the netherworld. Just one problem: his calculations are slightly off, as his annoying classmate Reed Richards points out to him. Doom doesn't like being corrected, so he brushes Reed off. Unfortunately, Reed is right, and the machine blows up in Doom's face, leaving a puffy little scar.
Just a little scar. But Doom's pride is severely hurt by his failure, so he leaves New York and goes wandering through the mountains of Tibet, where he takes up residence with the aforementioned clan of monks. There, he forges a metal suit. But once again, he's so impatient that he rushes the process, and presses the red hot mask to his face, resulting in the severe scarring that we all know today. So his impatience has caused him problems a few times.
He has a love/hate relationship with the Fantastic Four
Though Doctor Doom has menaced many of Marvel's heroes, from Captain America to Spider-Man, he certainly has a special animosity for the Fantastic Four. Or really, if we're going to be honest, he's okay with three out of the four: it's just Reed Richards that he despises. Why? Because Richards is smarter than him. That might sound silly, but it really gets under Doom's charred skin.
Despite that, Doom secretly has a lot more affection for the team than he'd like to let on. For one, he actually helped deliver Reed and Sue's second child, a girl. Sure, he did it on the condition that he got to name her, but he nonetheless was named as the child's godfather. He's worked alongside the Fantastic Four on multiple occasions.
Perhaps most significantly, in Secret Wars, he envisions a reality wherein Sue Storm is his wife, with Franklin and Valeria as their children. He definitely has some jealousy issues.
He has a "son"
For all his flaws, Doom does sincerely care about the people of Latveria. On one of Doom's nicer days, he took in a young orphan named Kristoff Vernard, whose mother had recently been murdered by one of Doom's political rivals. Doom didn't just give Kristoff a home: he raised him as his own, and even decreed that young Kristoff would be his heir.
Sadly, things went awry when Doom seemingly died, and Doom's robots reprogrammed Kristoff's mind with Doom's memories, causing the boy to believe that he was the real Doctor Doom (albeit trapped in a child's body). When Doom came back, the two were drawn into an immense conflict, as both believed themselves to be the "true" Doom. Though Kristoff had all of Latveria's resources at his disposal, Doom still won out in the end.
All of this psychological tampering caused a rift to form between Doom and his adopted son for many years, but they have since resolved their differences and worked together again.
He keeps robotic duplicates of himself
Sometimes, Victor Von Doom knows better than to get into a losing scuffle, and sometimes, he wants to be in multiple places at once. That's why he employs "Doombots," which are lifelike android replications of himself which think, act, and talk just like the real deal. These Doombots even believe that they are the real Doom, and considering that the guy rarely takes off his armor, they're pretty convincing.
Aside from the fact that a genius master planner like Victor would believably have Doombots, these android duplicates serve a practical story purpose as well: they make retcons a lot easier.
Think of it this way. Anytime a writer has Doom do something stupid, ridiculous, or out of character, the next writer is free to say, "Nope, that was a Doombot," thereby absolving the mighty Doom of many embarrassing incidents. This trick has been used so often that TVTropes even has a page titled "Actually a Doombot" to describe instances of the same trope being used in other media.
His face isn't scarred anymore
The 2015 Secret Wars storyline might've been the biggest Marvel crossover of all time, but at its heart, it was a Doctor Doom story. This is the story that ends with Reed Richards using the godlike power of the Beyonders to restore the multiverse, which at this point has been devastated. In the process, Reed does his greatest enemy a solid: he warps reality in order to heal Doom's face. Yeah, Reed is a really nice guy.
As a result, Victor now has his old good looks back, much to his delight. However, the restoration of Doom's appearance prompts an even more important psychological development within the world's greatest supervillain: though previously he had sought world peace through world domination, he now sees the errors in his old philosophy, and has turned over a new leaf. He also has taken on a new identity...
He became Iron Man
Since the restoration of his face, Victor Von Doom has been striving to be the hero he always could have been. That doesn't mean he's not still the arrogant, vain glory hound that he always was, but this time, Victor is genuinely trying to atone for his sins, and make the world a better place. However, the name "Doctor Doom" doesn't necessarily sound too heroic.
After Tony Stark falls into a coma, Doom takes on a new, but familiar mantle: Iron Man. Often referred to as the "infamous Iron Man," Victor has started turning his reputation around in a big way, taking on foes like Mephisto, and even earning a lofty spot on the Avengers.
Who knows if Doom will maintain this role— there's a good chance he'll eventually be Doctor Doom again— but he's certainly done a great job proving his worth as an antihero. Though we shouldn't say that too loudly, since it might inflate his already massive ego.
In the future, he's the world's greatest hero
In the dark future landscape of the year 2099, the Marvel Universe has been overtaken by corporate bureaucracies, which run rampant over personal rights and freedoms while conducting countless illegal genetic experiments. In this horrific landscape, new people don the old heroic mantles of ancient figures like Spider-Man and the Hulk. However, the greatest hero of the year 2099 is Doctor Doom— and it's not a new man in the armor, but Victor himself.
See, for mysterious reasons, Victor materializes in the future, having disappeared countless decades ago. Initially horrified by the state of his beloved Latveria, Doom finds himself even more bewildered by the state of the world. Driven to action, Doom decides to save the planet... by conquering it, of course.
What's fascinating about Doom 2099 is that this time, Doom is right. Instead of being the villain, Doom's overthrow of the corporate tyrants is actually cheered on by the population, and they embrace his rule.
He's become a (literal) god
Doom has often tried to seize power for himself, whether it's world domination or new mystical abilities. However, his crowning achievement occurs in the Secret Wars storyline, wherein Victor absorbs all of the power of the Beyonders, and reshapes the entire multiverse in his image. That's right, Doom becomes a literal god: "God Emperor Doom," to be precise.
Doom is ruler of this new universe, and compels the population to worship him as their creator, ruler, and source of life. As mentioned before, he then takes Sue Storm as his wife, and Franklin and Valeria as his children. However, Reed Richards and a collection of other superheroes eventually rise to overthrow Doom's power, and restore the multiverse. It's a complex story, but if anyone ever wanted proof of why Doom is Marvel's greatest villain, Secret Wars is the answer.