Fantastic Man - Villains

Villains

(in order of appearance in the TV series)

  • Boss Elvis (played by Rez Cortez)
a trigger-happy syndicate leader
  • Singkit (played by Pen Medina)
an entrepreneur whose Chinese restaurant is a front for his illegal business. He is involved in smuggling and drug trafficking. He uses chopsticks as his deadly weapons. Another special ability of Singkit is he can summon animal spirits.
  • Budol (played by Kempee de Leon)
a con artist and an illegal dealer of pirated goods who uses hypnosis on his victims
  • Madam Tisay (played by Paolo Contis)
is a loud club owner who uses witchcraft to get her way. Madam Tisay is involved in prostitution and white slavery, and employs a coven of witches as performers for her club.
  • Gobo (played by Benjie Paras)
a circus freak with an unnatural strength and an impossibly feeble mind. Gobo is the leader of a pack of midget-thieves posing as circus performers. He can crush rocks with the use of his head, bend metal with his bare hands and does other extreme acts.
  • Tadtad (played by Ariel Rivera)
the main antagonist of Fantastic Man in the first season. He is the head of a crime syndicate and who is really Fredo's father Danny. He is a master of disguise and uses it to hide the scars and burns of his face. He also has molten fire powers. He sacrifices his life to save his son from two alien invaders working for the warlord Draxor.
In season 2, a clone of his father who is being held in stasis by the P.S.I, a government agency, as a power source of their center.
  • Kate (played by Cristine Reyes)
A high school cheerleader who was present at the time when almost everyone in her school disappeared after seeing the blinding light right above their campus. She later returned with the ability to let out a powerful screech, as well as being able to generate powerful gales and whirlwinds by doing so.
  • Dexter (played by Dion Ignacio)
A high school basketball player and Kate's boyfriend from the same high school. After the mysterious disappearance, he returned with the power to combust objects by generating flames from his hands and channeling them at targets. With this power, he significantly weakened Fantastic Girl (Wena), forcing her to stay behind and replenish herself while Fantastic Man went after Dexter. Dexter's powers were later stripped away by a mysterious guy in a black robe.
  • Jobet (played by Ryan Yllana)
A stuttering and obese high school nerd who was the subject of Dexter's constant bullying at high school prior to the students' mysterious disappearance. Upon returning, he exhibited the power to rapidly melt metal. His power seems to operate even via broadcast.
  • Candy / Ice Candy (played by Arci Muñoz)
the best friend of Jobet. Another high school student who mysteriously disappeared and returned having the ability to manipulate cold and ice. This placed Fantastic Man at a heavy advantage against her. Powers later stripped away by the mysterious guy in a black robe.
  • Arman (played by Rainier Castillo)
has healing powers, but can also revive the dead as mindless zombies whose allegiance is only for Arman himself
  • Bornok (played by Mike Tan)
he has shape-shifting abilities which can copy another person flawlessly.
  • Elektrika (played by Sherilyn Reyes)
she has electric powers.
  • Super Dings (played by Jose and Wally)
A spoof villain of the superheroines, Super Twins.
  • Draxor (played by Luis Alandy)
an alien warlord who has mind-controlling abilities and energy manipulation powers. He has come to Earth to gather all the powers accidentally absorbed by the various individuals in the series including the powers of Fantastic Man and Fantastic Girl. The mysterious guy in the black robe is his lackey who later betrays him by absorbing his powers as well as his life.
  • Sylvia (played by Cristine Reyes)
A woman from a Special Episode. She owns a Resort and is actually a Vampire.

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Famous quotes containing the word villains:

    Why do villains have so much influence? Because the honest people are terribly dense.
    Franz Grillparzer (1791–1872)

    I don’t believe in villains or heroes, only in right or wrong ways that individuals are taken, not by choice, but by necessity or by certain still uncomprehended influences in themselves, their circumstances and their antecedents.
    Tennessee Williams (1914–1983)