50 Greatest Movie Assassins
The ultimate hit list
Pulp Fiction (1994)
The Assassins: Jules Winnfield (Samuel L. Jackson) and Vincent Vega (John Travolta), sharp-suited representatives of gangster Marcellus Wallace (Ving Rhames).
Weapon Of Choice: Lulling their adversaries into a false sense of security with idle chit-chat. Specialist subject? Food, mostly.
Coolest Element: Jules' fire-and-brimstone recital of Ezekiel 25:17, especially when it looks as if Divine intervention has saved the killers from being Swiss-cheesed.
Goldfinger (1964)
The Assassin: Auric Goldfinger's mute henchman Oddjob (Harold Sakata).
Weapon Of Choice: Everybody remembers the razor-tipped bowler hat, but Oddjob shows comparable creative flair with a can of gold spray paint or a car crusher.
Coolest Element: He's also a loyal, hard-working butler. Every home should have one.
The Terminator (1984)
The Assassin: A Cyberdyne Systems Model 101 Terminator (Arnold Schwarzenegger), a cyborg killer sent back in time by Skynet to kill Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton), mother of future revolutionary leader John.
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Weapon Of Choice: The best a Los Angeles gun shop can offer. Failing that, its metallic endoskeleton is a formidable combat chassis.
Coolest Element: It absolutely will not stop.
Grosse Pointe Blank (1997)
The Assassin: Martin Blank (John Cusack), the Grosse Pointe high school dropout who 'hit' the big time.
Weapon Of Choice: Whatever works, although he's most notable for killing the president of Paraguay with a fork.
Coolest Element: He might be a conscience-stricken killer in the throes of a mid-life crisis, he hasn't forgotten the 'airplane ride' move he used to do with teenage sweetheart Debi Newberry (Minnie Driver).
Le Samoura (1967)
The Assassin: Ascetic lone gunman Jef Costello (Alain Delon), who practices his hitman duties based on Bushido principles.
Weapon Of Choice: Anonymity. Once he is identified, his effectiveness is at an end.
Coolest Element: Delon's pared-down combo of raincoat and hat - he's easily cinema's most stylish assassin.
Lon (1994)
The Assassins: French hitman Léon (Jean Reno) and his wannabe protégé, twelve-year-old Mathilda (Natalie Portman).
Weapon Of Choice: Léon favours Berettas with silencers, but he gives smaller guns to Mathilda.
Coolest Element: Léon's childlike obsession with drinking milk, highlighting his affinity for Mathilda over the sick villainy of big bad Stansfield.
Kill Bill (2003-4)
The Assassins: Beatrix 'Black Mamba' Kiddo (Uma Thurman) and her roaring rampage of revenge against her former colleagues in the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad.
Weapon Of Choice: Complementary expertise, as various members specialise in different methods (knives, firearms, poisons) - but really it's all about Kiddo and her Hattori Hanz samurai sword.
Coolest Element: The fact that the Vipers are still so deadly it takes Kiddo two films to get through them all.
The Day Of The Jackal (1973)
The Assassin: Looking to assassinate Charles de Gaulle? You'd best get in touch with the professional known only as The Jackal (Edward Fox).
Weapon Of Choice: A custom-built sniper rifle that can be converted into a pair of crutches so that the Jackal can smuggle it past security.
Coolest Element: The Jackal's chameleonic ability to become whatever he needs to be - English or Danish, straight or gay, chalk or cheese.
No Country For Old Men (2007)
The Assassin: Anton Chigurh (Javier Bardem), an angel of death with a bowl cut.
Weapon Of Choice: A captive bolt pistol normally used to kill cows - it's silent, accurate and also handy for blowing out motel room locks.
Coolest Element: Anybody who stands in his way gets a 50/50 choice - live or die on the toss of a coin. Call it, friendo.
The Bourne trilogy (2002-2007)
The Assassin: He was born David Webb but, after Operation Treadstone got their hands on him, he became Jason Bourne. Whichever name, he's also Matt Damon.
Weapon Of Choice: A specialist in hand-to-hand combat, using whatever comes to hand - be it a pen, a magazine or a towel.
Coolest Element: Bourne is a deadly fighter, an ace driver and a specialist at going 'off-grid.' Not bad considering he's also suffering from amnesia.
Idris Elba was so dedicated to voicing Knuckles for Sonic 3, he recorded the lines while wearing Knuckles gloves
Jim Carrey used to shun sequels to "move on and do something new" but changed his mind when playing Robotnik in the Sonic movies: "I'd like to have a character that I could sit with for a bit"