Just rewatched "Road To El Dorado," and I forgot how good of a villain this guy was. I liked how fanatical he was, yet also really observant and manipulative. He really had an aura of uncomfortableness to him.
>Do you know why the Gods demand blood? Because Gods don't bleed.
Asher Nguyen
Bumping with another.
>tfw Flag Smasher will never be that main villain of a good Captain America movie >tfw He used to be one of Cap's most formidable foes, and now he's treated like a joke
Cameron Lewis
looking back this movie was fucking racist
Julian Ross
>Doubts the white man >Is the villain
Henry Clark
not the wite man. only the peaceful white man when he saw Cortés and his troops there was nothing he wanted more than to have their superior godly dick I think the strongest selling point of that movie was how well the characters were written and developed Tzekel-Kan was no exception, and being the villain gave him an edge in that regard, with the dark sense of humor and all around dickish personality also he did nothing wrong
Robert Morales
He thought they were gods at first, and when Cortes came, he was perfectly happy to try to lead the destroyer to his people because of his apocalyptic mindset.
Blake Jenkins
Ok, I'll take the b8. How?
Connor Robinson
just finished fmab. now this mutherfucker had an aura of uncomfortableness
Daniel Clark
Calling out a cruel and inhumane cultural practice is not racist. I've read from multiple different actual native-born sources that one thing that is often not missed is the medicine man, or priests of the old religions. A lot of people seemed to live in fear of them.
Tyler Jenkins
This white man villain was delightful, this was before america turned into a melting pot of sjw's mutilating their genitals, so looking back this guy was fun.