Top 10: Lead Performances of the Last 25 Years
by Kurt SchlichterA great performance sticks with you long after you’ve scraped the theater floor-gum off your Keds. But too often, professional drama geeks and mainstream media critics will bestow their blessing on freaky, idiosyncratic performances that hew to the party line *(cough) Heath Ledger (cough) Brokeback Mountain (cough)*, leaving the rest of us to scratch our collective heads. If that was good, we wonder, how bad do you have to be to be bad?
What follows is a list of the Top 10 performances of the last quarter century. It focuses on lead roles, or at least substantial ones – no cameos, thank you. Interestingly, there are no straight comic performances here, and many of the roles are villains. And it is also focused on movies people have actually heard of.
So, this is not an exhaustive list – it overlooks plenty of great performances. But it is my list and based on my criteria alone – and I’m sure I’ll hear about my myriad defects of insight, taste, breeding and general mental competence in the comments. For example, Daniel Day Lewis is missing because I decided not to invest three hours into There Will Be Blood (2007) since after seeing the “I drink your milkshake!” clip I just can’t take it seriously.
Johnny Depp is missing for his Captain Jack Sparrow character from the Pirates of the Caribbean films because he’s mildly amusing for about the first hour or so of this seemingly endless series but eventually makes me long to walk the plank off into the blessedly Depp-free depths of the briny.
Leonardo Di Caprio is missing because he’s always terrible. I’m sure my passing him over will make him cry all the way to the supermodel bank.
And you film snobs out there are out of luck. This list completely ignores foreign language films – if you’re outraged at my glaring omission of Migbor Ombungliani’s shattering portrayal of Yegiv the Goatherd in the Albanian Dogme 95 epic The Thousand Meaningless Agonies of My Existence, you need to find yourself a different list. And probably a girlfriend.
Speaking of girls, there are not many here. It just worked out that way, and I’m not sure why. But this is a pure meritocracy. If you want a quota system, you probably need to hit the Huffington Post. Of course, on the HP, half the Top Ten would be performances from Brokeback Mountain with the rest of the slots spread out among the various dreary, America-hating, soldier-sliming, anti-war movies that have zipped through the theaters since 9/11 on the way to their final reward in the Blockbuster remainder bins (“At number seven, we have Ryan Phillip as the emotionally shattered, psychotic vet in Stop-Loss , followed by number six, some actor you never heard of as the emotionally shattered, psychotic vet in Redacted ….”).
So here are the top ten performances of the last 25 years, in order:
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10. Denzel Washington – Training Day (2001): Denzel Washington is so good because crooked LAPD cop Alonzo Harris is so damn bad – he’s like the Antichrist with a badge. There’s an incredible smoothness to his performance, as if all the goodness of his previous characters was seamlessly turned 180 degrees. It’s his comfort in the role that is so mesmerizing – there is nothing “actory” about his performance, though of course (minor spoiler) the character himself is pretending to be something he is not throughout the movie. The way he talks, the way he moves, his ease in that sordid world – it is all so different from the Denzel Washington we’ve known before. The movie itself is watchable, but kind of dopey. But Washington? You can’t look away.
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9. R. Lee Ermey – Full Metal Jacket (1987): Some may say that Ermey simply did in front of Stanley Kubrick’s camera what he had done for years as a real USMC drill instructor. To some extent, that might be accurate, but remember that being a drill instructor is itself a kind of performance. While the amazing barracks scene takes the Basic Training experience to the nth degree, there is a lot of truth to it, as I found out when I reported to Basic at Ft. Sill about a month after seeing this movie. I vividly recall Drill Sergeant Whittlesey fulminating to our formation about our utter inability to meet even the lowest standards of competence when, in what was undoubtedly a flash of insanity, I turned my head slightly from the rigid position of attention and saw the other drill sergeants cracking up. Ermey’s performance is dead-on and unforgettable, and not just to those of us who have experienced the delights of Basic Training firsthand.
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8. Kevin Spacey – American Beauty (1999): The Nineties were the Age of Spacey, with stunning showcases in Swimming with Sharks (1994), Seven (1995), The Usual Suspects (1995) and L.A. Confidential (1997). However, his turn as suburban loser turned rebel Lester Burnham best captures the kind of calm, semi-smarmy, cynical detachment that Spacey does better than anyone else. Through Spacey, you can feel Lester’s angst, understand his moral quandaries, and see him come out of the shell he retreated into rather than face the world. It’s a great performance in a movie that is often frustrating in its treatment of military men as sexually-repressed sociopaths, such a hackneyed Hollywood cliché that the filmmakers should have been embarrassed to wheel it out again. Spacey’s work actually makes it worth wading through that nonsense.
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7. Helen Mirren – The Queen (2006): Mirren brought to life a living person, the Queen of England, a relic of an age when people actually considered the idea of “royalty” as something more than the joke it is. The essential ridiculousness of the concept of a monarch aside, Mirren’s Elizabeth is a woman of values a half-century out of date, values that had allowed Britain to survive the Depression and the Blitz and to defeat the Axis. But Mirren shows how the Queen had grown detached from her subjects, a people who have become vulgar, sentimental and maudlin in an age of celebrity and who choose to idolize a feel-good empty vessel like Lady Diana over a monarch who symbolizes a mature, strong and faithful nation. Watching this pampered but smart, tough but cunning woman deal with the changes (mostly for the worse) in her country before the backdrop of the death of “the People’s Princess” is riveting. The Queen is a great film about a formerly great people and their descent into juvenile mawkishness (their awesome warriors excepted), and its impact largely comes from Mirren’s staggering achievement in the lead role.
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6. Val Kilmer – Tombstone (1993): I have no idea what “I’m your huckleberry” is supposed to mean, but I do know that Val Kilmer was incredible as the tubercular sawbones Doc Holiday in this retelling of the legendary gunfight at the O.K. Corral tale. It’s no one note performance – you can see he’s sometimes scared even behind the smartass, ironic demeanor, but that dose of reality (compounded by the toll he shows his vices and his consumption taking upon him) only makes the character come more alive. Mention Tombstone to anyone and the first thing you’ll hear is the name “Val Kilmer.” That says it all.
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5. Meryl Streep – The Devil Wears Prada (2006): Yeah, I saw this movie about ladies in the fashion industry and, dammit, I liked it. They’ll probably take back my Airborne wings and break my cavalry saber for admitting it. But you gotta give credit where credit is due, and Streep deserves it. Her Miranda Priestly is best known for overbearing arrogance, but that’s only a part of her character. Streep actually lets us peer inside and see her humanity, to understand why she demands excellence, and to see the price she pays for holding herself to her own exacting standards. The movie wimps out a bit by not forcing the heroine to really confront and deal with the choices the Miranda character faced – things just sort of work out for the heroine deus ex machina-style thanks to an unconvincing, off-screen intervention by Miranda herself. But while the movie finds an easy way out, Streep’s performance takes the character down a hard road and turns a caricature into a character.
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4. Steve Coogan – 24 Hour Party People (2002): This is probably the “smallest” of the pictures on the list, but it’s one of the best. Coogan plays the real-life British music impresario Tony Wilson, who discovered and championed bands like Joy Division in the late-70s and 80s. Coogan takes the role and runs with it, totally inhabiting the character in an often surreal portrayal that captures all the excitement, excess and exhilaration of the times. Beyond the fascinating story (especially the first half involving Joy Division) and the incredible music (buy the soundtrack now), Coogan’s performance sticks with you as a real, larger-than-life character made both human and more than human by an incredible actor.
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3. Sharon Stone – Casino (1995): Stone got a bad rap for Basic Instinct (1992), where her cervix seemed to overshadow what really was a great femme fatale turn in a really good, really pulpy film noir classic. In her heyday in the ’90s, Stone was actually Hollywood’s only real movie star, in the way actresses used to be stars. She was talented and beautiful, but distinctive too – she had that intangible something that put her on a plane above her peers. In Casino, as De Niro’s harpy of a wife Ginger, she uses that glamour to show why De Niro’s character would fall for – and keep being drawn back to – a woman who redefines the term “bad news.” It is a relentless, heartfelt, devastating performance that makes you care (a little bit) for her as she meets the fate she has earned even as you let out a sigh of relief knowing she won’t be back to wreak more havoc.
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2. Heath Ledger – The Dark Knight (2008): Even the conventional wisdom gets it right once in a while. Since just about everyone on Earth has seen it, there’s no real reason to talk about why it’s such an incredible performance. Ledger got a lot of praise for Brokeback Mountain (2005), but his performance there was just a collection of scowls, tics and mumbles that constitute nothing more than what Hollywood thinks real gay cowboys are like. As with the movie itself, most of the acclaim was simply wishful thinking – they loved the subject so they had to praise the portrayals. There’s no wishful thinking here – this was acting far beyond what some comic book movie had any right to incorporate. And it makes the loss of Ledger to the scourge of drugs that much more of a waste.
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1. Ralph Fiennes – Schindler’s List (1993): This is the most terrifying portrait of pure evil ever put on the screen, made all the more horrifying by a performance that shows how a real-life normal man consciously chose to immerse himself in darkness and luxuriated in it, who willingly paid a terrible price in exchange for becoming, for a time, a dark god with the power of life and death. Fiennes earned a Best Supporting Actor for his portrayal of the real war criminal Amon Goeth, but this was truly the lead role. Goeth was the Nazi commander of a forced labor camp that he turned into a private kingdom subject only to his cruel and sick whims. In scenes like where Goeth uses a high powered rifle to amuse himself by picking off victims from the porch of his mansion, Fiennes shows us a cultured, intelligent man who makes a deliberate decision to embrace evil. He shows us that the potential for evil lurks inside all of us just as Oskar Schindler’s example teaches that the potential for good exists there too. What is so powerful is how Fiennes shows that Goeth chose to experience the transitory joy of wickedness knowing it would lead to his death. It is a performance that will leave you shaken.
And here are some honorable mentions: Glenn Close in Fatal Attraction (1987), Bill Murray in Groundhog Day (1993), and Tommy Lee Jones as Sam Gerard in The Fugitive (1993) were all memorable. Robert De Niro was great as the taciturn criminal in Heat (1995) (Al Pacino also deserves a shout-out for his ferocious and highly entertaining scenery chewing, but I would not call it “good” acting). As great as Anthony Hopkins was as Hannibal Lector in Silence of the Lambs (1991), Brian Cox was even better in a smaller role as the cannibalistic convict in 1986’s Manhunter. The less said about the sequel Hannibal (2001) the better, though it also featured Ray Liotta. Liotta gets a nod for Goodfellas, as do Bobby De Niro and Joe Pesci (and for that matter, those last two should also be mentioned regarding the aforementioned Casino).
And to further rile the members of Team Snooty, let’s not forget Alan Rickman in Die Hard (1988). Yeah, artistes, I went there.






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231 Comments
"The essential ridiculousness of the concept of a monarch aside…" This reminds me of Frank Drebin's line in The Naked Gun: "For no matter how silly the idea of having a queen might be to us…"
You should check out There Will Be Blood, if only to put the "milkshake" scene (it's based on a real quote) in context.
Good choices all around (nice to see Val Kilmer get some love and Sharon Stone at least get some credit). Gary Oldman should be on the list somewhere. I don't know for what film but he should still be there.
Ralph Fiennes performance is at once mesmerizing and horrifying. I cannot agree more with your assessment. The worst part is that if you read the book "Schindler's List" by Kennelly, you will see that the real man was as sick and evil as the role showed on screen. Nothing was exaggerated.
I think you're right on! I gasped when I saw you had Val for Tombstone. He never makes it on the list, but like you said everyone knows and quotes him from that movie. Ralph Fiennes deserves his Oscar already. They give everyone else one for past achievements, why not him.
Sharon Stone? ReallY?! EEEEWWW. Just…ew! Im sorry, she will forever be known as The Cervix. I dont care what she did in Casino. I suppose those of the Vagina Monologues consider her a memorable performance…but for acting? PUH-LEEZ.
*grumble*…and I guarantee you, LA Confidential if remembered FAR more for Bud White than he is for Spacey's performance.
I feel Clint Eastwood, the last of the real movie stars, belongs on this list somewhere. I'm going to nominate his role in "Unforgiven."
Meh, I'm the farthest thing from a film buff that exists and I've seen maybe half of these movies but as another anti-snooty person, thanks for mentioning Rickman in Diehard! Love and adore that man–he's the only reason the most recent Harry Potter films have been tolerable.
I agree about Alan Rickman in Die Hard. You can't have a great hero without a great villain and as all the sequels proved, and pretty much every other action movie has proved, there is no better villain than Hans Gruber as brought to life by Alan Rickman.
While I heartily agree with Val Kilmer as Doc Holliday, I've always preferred Dennis Quaid's Doc from Costner's 'Wyatt Earp"
How could you leave out Frances McDormand in "Fargo?"
Any "best of" list is bound to generate some criticism for not include someone's favorite. But this is a solid list. Ledger easily overshadowed Bale in The Dark Knight. You weren't so much watching to see how Batman would save the day as you were waiting to see what crazy thing the Joker would do next.
One of my favorite performances was Robert Duvall. I know, the film is over-long by about an hour, but Duvall is pitch-perfect in every scene. Another one that would be considered controversial that's among my favorites is a recent one: Denzel Washington in The Book of Eli. He took what could easily have been a 2-dimensional character in a so-so film and gave us a profoundly sad, ethical, powerful yet humble man.
As for Dicaprio, I think he's an excellent actor. But he is utterly humorless. I have seen several films with him and even on those rare occasions when he tries to do something slightly funny he injects it with such anger and resentment you can't enjoy it. body of Lies is an example. There are several scenes where he's supposed to be charming, and he just comes across as a guy trying to be charming.
I'd have to include Tom Hanks in "Big" and Jeff Bridges for "The Big Labowski."
Good point about Oldman. Playing by Kurt's rules, True Romance may not qualify, so can't go wrong with Sid & Nancy or State of Grace.
How about 'The Professional'? Gary Oldman was top notch as the DEA bad guy in that one.
Believe it or not, I almost said The Professional.
it's a few years past the 25 year mark, but Bob Hoskins' performance from "The Long Good Friday" stands out to me. the sequence of emotions visible on his face in the final scene is pitch perfect for the character and his impending fate.
My friends and i have argued about this for years, and i'm the only one who feels this way, but Dennis Quaid was a much better Doc Holiday in Wyatt Earp. Quaid truly embodied that character- losing over 50 pounds to play the sickly gunslinger. Granted, Kilmer had better catchphrases, but Quaid's performance was greatly overlooked, as was Wyatt Earp.
Actually, I really recommend There Will be Blood. The scene you object to is the culmination of the character at a point where he has descended into utter madness. That is why it's so extreme. Most of the film he incredibly reserved and holds back, over time he becomes more and more unhinged. It's really an impressive performance, especially from the writing standpoint. There is a lot of subtlety in scenes where he manipulates people by letting them talk and saying just enough to get them to believe he is on their side, when he isn't at all.
Billy Bob Thorton in 'Sling Blade' belongs on this list. The opening monologue alone is one of the creepiest and most effective scene setters I have seen, and the camera is fixed on his face for nearly the whole 15 minutes or so of it.
A very good list, though. The presence of Kilmer's Holiday brought a broad smile to my face, remembering how he managed to make every scene he appeared in a delight to watch, until the final scene which was simply gut wrenching. Glad to see him getting some long term recognition.
Sean Penn in Dead Man Walking
I haven't watched all that many movies in the last quarter-century, but I agree with Val Kilmer in Tombstone and R. Lee Ermey in Full Metal Jacket. The latter was utterly believable.
I couldn't agree more with Ralph Fiennes as number 1. I saw that movie not long after it came out at a post theater in Wurzburg Germany, it's a movie and a performance that stays with you for a long time. Afterwards driving home I remember seeing elderly Germans and thinking to myself, "how could they"? A close German friend use to say when she was drunk and we were arguing politics and war that "Hitler had some good idea's". I don't know whether she did it for shock value or what, but her Grandfather who I had met numerous times wasn't a nazis, but he had fought in the war and still believed in it according to her, (his brother was presumed lost at Stalingrad). Believed in what I wonder???
This is my ramble for the day. I guess I'm one of the very few people on Earth who has yet to see The Dark Knight.
Awesome movie "Romeo is Bleeding" – talk about human weakness, Gary Oldman is brilliant in that film as well.
I just saw Jeff Bridges' performance in "Crazy Heart". After seeing so many mediocre movies in the last several years I'd almost forgotten what real acting was. His was a stunning performance. BTW, who knew Mr. Bridges could sing as well as he does?
Feh, Keds suck. Redball Jets, baby!
Agreed, but, it's also funny. Even before there were parodies, it's just a funny thing to say.
What no love for Alan Covert in "Grandma's Boy"? LOL just kidding. Great list.
Wow, what a great performance and movie. And, shout out for the folks, including R. Lee Ermey, who played the parents of the murder victims. I'll never forget the scenes with them and Susan Sarandon's character. Sarandon was brilliant, too. Magnificent film and performances.
Second time I watched it I wondered why in the hell I glossed over this performance. In retrospect I chalk it up to a complete denial which just doesn't happen. Call it temporary Zinn Disease. Horrifying indeed. Power performance.
(Candy in Splash on a happy note too)
All super choices.
Blown away that Brian Cox gets the nod over Hopkins. Couldn't agree more. I thought I was the only one who thought that and he carries that to Deadwood.
And the Professional…Natalie Portman could have just hung it after that gig. I some cases I wish she did.
Since you skipped foreign films, how about Bruno Ganz in Downfall?
Sharon Stone was stupendous in Casino; glad to see her on the list. Next time you view Casino, just watch her legs. Yes, her legs.
Oldman in True Romance is a freakin gas.
1988's "Rain Man" contains not only the mesmerizing and justly celebrated tour de force by Dustin Hoffman in the title role, but also the best performance I've ever seen by Tom Cruise.
That list is pretty good, but I'd replace Sharon Stone with Robert Downey, Jr. from Tropic Thunder. It would have been so easy for that part to have been a complete disaster and he pulls it off magnificently. He's also very funny and good comedic performances rarely get the acclaim they deserve.
Good list but Daniel Day Lewis in "Gangs of New York" cannot be overlooked. Same with Mel Gibson in "Braveheart" and Eastwood and Hackman in "Unforgiven".
I disagree with the choice of Ledger. He played a mythological character of unspecified boundaries which gave him such broad license that anything bizarre and outrageous was viewed as extraordinary. He did a commendable job with the role and took it away from its typical casting but to me playing a lunatic who really has no personality, no conflict and real no objective is like a child scribbling with crayons and people calling it genius . I just don't buy the "Heath Ledger was mesmerizing as The Joker" idea.
Honorable mention just for we market junkies….Trading Places. Slapstick yes.
"Looking good Louis"
Quaid's Doc Holliday definitely is the more historically accurate portrayal of the real life John Holliday.
I love Fiennes, Ledger and Mirren.
Off the top of my head, I'd have to list:
1. Heath Ledge — The Dark Knight
2. Mickey Rourke — The Wrestler
3. Sean Connery — The Untouchables
4. Francis McDormond — Fargo
5. Jodie Foster — The Silence of the Lambs
6. Hillary Swank — Million Dollar Baby
7. Gene Hackman — The Unforgiven
8. Harrison Ford — Witness
9. Gary Oldman — Bram Stoker's Dracula
10. (Tie) Paul Giamatti and Laura Linney — John Adams
Others: Linda Hamilton — Terminator 2: Judgement Day; Robert Duval — Open Range; Russell Crowe — Cinderella Man; Nicole Kidman — Moulin Rouge!; Holly Hunter — Raising Arizona; Jon Voight — Uprising.
And we can't overlook Jeff Bridges' The Dude in "The Big Lebowsky"!
Cheers to the inclusion of Oldman as Dracula and Duvall in "Open Range", though both of those guys are superior in just about every role they've played.
The legendary Sir Christopher Lee should be on list for his imposing performances in the Stars Wars prequels and the Lord of the Rings trilogy.
Hans Conreid as Dr. Terwilliger is much ignored.
GREAT point! How could I forget Lee.
As a Star Wars fan, I'd also have to mention Ian McDiarmid in the Star Wars prequels. I agree with a lot of the criticism that hits those pics, but he was unforgettable — especially in 'Revenge of the Sith.'
Good List.
My list would include:
Bill Murray for Groundhog's Day – His best performance if ya ask me.
DDL in Gangs of New York – A dumb, bloated movie, but a completly menacing permormance by DDL
Anything by Gary Oldman
Just finished watching "The Fugitive" – I haven't seen it in years. I had forgotten how good Tommy Lee Jones is in that film.
I love Oldman….Murder in The First is good…for Him, Slater, and Bacon
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y5r4WqhVdVs
Any list of the performances of all-time, never mind the past 25 years, that omits Tom Hanks performance in "Forrest Gump" is basically shite. And I while I know BH is all about honoring and glorifying the military (which I am all for), seriously, how is R. Lee Emery's role in "Full Metal Jacket" a "lead?" I mean, it's pivotal and important, and sure, Mr. Emery was vividly and memorably vicious, but a "lead?" More like an extended cameo.
I thought DiCaprio was pretty good in "What's Eating Gilbert Grape? " Not good enough to make a list like this, but good acting, anyway.
I agree. That's the thing about him, he's a great actor. I've never seen him give a bad performance. But there is no humor to his characters. Ordinarily that could be attributed to the writing or directing, but in his case even when there's supposed to be humor it's not there.
I'd like to see what he'd do in a solid villain role. Perhaps that would lend itself better to his type of humor. Something akin to Alan Rickman in Die Hard, where you're supposed to both like and hate the villain, and when he says something funny there's an undercurrent of menace.
I would say Daniel Day-Lewis is great in pretty much anything he does, and agree with a few others that the performance in There Will Be Blood was outstanding. I disagree with the Streep choice because we only see her character in a single role, that is, as the boss, not as a wife, mother, friend, etc. She did that well, but it was just a supporting role (no way she should have been nominated for Best Actress). I'll toss out Russell Crowe in The Insider as a excellent performance.
Definitely agree. I would question, however, why there's a need for a movie character to demonstrate that evil lurks inside of us – or that we all have good inside us, for that matter. But that's a whole 'nother discussion about movies and art in general. Fiennes is brilliant!
I'm not usually someone to make a big stink about the politics of actors. Still in Penn's case I usually will not pay to see anything he's in. He is the very definition of an extremist Hollywood activist, and I get tired of having political opinions shoved in my face by Hollywood. He's a good actor, a bit of a scene-chewer, but enjoyable. Still, I'll be damned if I'm going to pay money for anything he produces.
I sat all the way through "There Will Be Blood"…I want those two and a half hours of my life back!
Good call !
Agreed. I think they were two different kinds of movie. "Tombstone" manufactured an entertaining "legend" – a ripping yarn about the famous gunfight. "Wyatt Earp" was more of a biopic. They both took some liberties with the characters and events, but "Earp" was the more accurate of the two. I liked Quaid's Holliday. He played a better consumptive, and I think he captured Doc's actual personality (what little we actually know of it) better than Kilmer. By all accounts, Doc was nobody's idea of a suave southern gentleman – he was a mean, unpleasant little cuss. But again, Kilmer wasn't playing the historical Doc. He was playing a legendary Doc with certain story/character roles to fulfill. I think his Doc is unforgettable due almost entirely to his strength as an actor.
Forest Whitaker as Idi Amin in Last King of Scotland
joaquin phoenix's role as Johnny Cash was very underrated. Whether it is top 25 is strictly a matter of opinion. Philip Seymour Hoffman as Truman Capote was really good as well.
DDL's performance in "Last of the Mohicans" was superb. Of all his movies, still my favorite. The "Unbearable Lightness of Being" was also good.
I would nominate the late Ulrich Muhe in THE LIVES OF OTHERS, which is probably the best new film I've seen in the last 25 years. Muhe gives a remarkable performance as an East German Stasi agent who has a gradual awakening of conscience. It is the sort of film that renews your faith in cinema and I can't imagine anyone else even halfway as effective in the part. His work in that film really stays with you long after you watch it.
I don't know. Quaid got to say "You can kiss my Rebel prick!" That's a pretty good catchphrase in my opinion. Not as colorful as "I'm your huckleberry," but what it lacks in poetry it makes up for in…profanity. Not sure why it never caught on.
I thought it was ironic that his son was the only person he had to talk to . . . SPOILER: and then his son goes deaf.
Then he has his brother to pal around with . . . SPOILER: then he's a fraud.
My favorite is when Eli asks him about the money and Daniel just slaps him. Then the next scene Eli's at the dinner table still covered in oil. That's the only part i laughed at in the theatre. And it was a good laugh.
DiCaprio in "The Basketball Diaries" (1995).
First and only time I went to someone (my daughter) and said, "Who is that actor? He's powerful."
Ah, was it only 15 years ago?
PATRICK SWAYZE IN ROAD HOUSE.
That oughta occupy all ten spots for just about… eternity.
Great List. I agree with Ralph Fiennes his performance was chilling. One of my favorites that hasn't been mentioned was Kevin Costner in Dances with Wolves
Interesting idea, I never thought of it like that. Ledger's definitely doing *something* attention-getting up there on the screen, but exactly who or what was he playing? By definition, the Joker in Dark Knight was kind of…nobody. No public record, no known background (or take your pick of backgrounds depending on which story he's telling), no apparent purpose other than to be the anti-Batman to the nth degree. So how did Ledger know who to play or how to play him. Maybe that's actually to his credit – taking an anti-somebody and making a positive character out of it. Definitely something to ponder, though…
Interesting; as someone who rarely watches movies made recently (well, there are all kinds of snobs), I'm struck by how many of your choices are actually movies I've seen. Ralph Fiennes was, indeed, incredible in what was an otherwise flawed movie — but then consider the director. I would have picked John Goodman in The Big Lebowski, probably one of the most perfectly conceived performances I've seen in newer movies. Good choices, overall, though. Thanks for an excellent read!
I think Hans as Dr. Terwilliger just kind of goes without saying. I mean, he's so good there's no need put him on any lists. He's in a class by himself.
How could you omit Steve Guttenberg as Sgt. Carey Mahoney in "Police Academy 3: Back in Training"?
As somone else said: Bruno Ganz as Adolf Hitler in DOWNFALL.
Agree about Forrest Gump. Brilliant performance by Hanks.
Re FMJ: It's really two stories in one. In the first half of the movie, Sgt. Hartman and Pvt. Pyle are the real "main characters." Joker and Cowboy are just sort of witnesses – although their final resort to cruelty against Pyle is a critical point in the overall narrative. But the fact is, Ermey totally stole the show. The basic training segment belongs to him. I'm not sure I'd put him in the top 10 of the last 25 years – but he definitely made an impression.
Very good! "Rob Roy" had one of the best villains ever in Tim Roth as well as one of the best manly heroic leads in Liam Neeson.
Definately McDormand.
Yes! Definately BB Thornton's Sling Blade. That is such a fantastic role, awesome job.
I think he's actually played and sung for many years, just not on film. It's a really great movie, and the soundtrack is equally wonderful, even if you're not a country music fan.
I came here specifically to mention Hanks as Gump.
Good call.
I have to agree with BenBulben. Much can be forgiven in a Top Ten list, since so much must be overlooked, but ignoring Hanks in Forrest Gump is like failing to mention Citizen Kane in a Best Movie Ever Made competition. Sometimes a fictional character takes on such a life of its own that we tend to take it for granted, as if it's a real person who was just effortlessly playing him/herself. Such is the fate of Hanks' Gump, which ranks among the finest performances in the entire history of cinema, not simply the last 25 years.
Less serious, but equally irksome to me, are the omissions of Judi Dench in Notes on a Scandal (a lead, or co-lead performance, in my book) and Jim Caviezel in The Passion of the Christ. (I know the category is disallowed, but on the foreign front I liked That One Guy in That One Movie–you know, the fellow who played the disillusioned Stasi eavesdropper in Communist East Germany a few years ago–and Gotz George as Josef Mengele in After the Truth.)
You can't have a great hero without a great villain…
As Bruce Willis said about the Die Hard series, the intelligence of any good-guys-versus-bad-guys story depends on the intelligence of the baddest guy.
Hell, Hoskins is good in anything, even Who Framed Roger Rabbit.
Actually the inclusion of Val Kilmer for Tombstone is a good choice,however I prefer Meryl Streep in Bridges of Madison County rather than Prada. Russell Crowe for Beautiful Mind, the Insider and Cinderella Man. Robert DiNiro for Heat .There has been a lot of fuss over There Will Be Blood but I did not like that film and thought DDL'S villian was not all that interesting. He was a great Hawkeye in the Last of the Mohicans. Kathy Bates work in Dolores Claiborne was really compelling and pretty much taken for granted. Another of the overlooked was Angela Bassett in What's Love Got To Do With It , she plays Tina Turner most convincingly.
I was just thinking that myself—too bad he was up against Ledger's Joker on Oscar night. Not that I have any delusions that Downey would have won for such a farcical role if Ledger hadn't been nominated, but at it would have been his nomination that everyone remembered (Like Sigourney Weaver's Best Actress nod for Aliens).
Of course Downey was helped out considerably by the actor playing the rapper-turned-actor, who displayed just the right amount of stunned indignation at Downey's character to make the whole thing acceptable.
Absolutely. Remember when the father shows Susan Sarandon's character a picture of his murdered son as a child, sitting on a bike? Heartbreaking. I think it's one of the best movies of the last 25 years.
Well then, your loss.
Phillip Seymore Hoffman in Capote
Okay, no love for Depp in the Pirates series, but what about Depp for Ed Wood? His cheerful optimism is simply awesome, with some quirkiness involved. I'd say it's by far his best performance.
Since you stated love for villains, how about Javier Bardem for No Country For Old Men? Christopher Waltz for Inglorious Basterds?
What about Duvall in The Apostle? An unforgettable performance.
phillip Seymore Hoffman in Capote, Daniel Day Lewis in My Left Foot.
It take a special kind of actor to make empty handcuffs appear alive before the animator gets to it…
definitely Hoskins…
Totally agree on There Will Be Blood. Saw it, tried really hard to like it, then went to sleep. DDL's character seemed like he stepped out of a Batman movie rather than real life. Way too over the top.
Excellent call on Bates as Delores Claiborne. I only just saw this movie a year ago and went into it expecting a typical, second-rate Stephen King flick. Wrong. It's right up there with The Green Mile in terms of overall excellence, and that's largely due to Bates' awe-inspiring work in it.
I wonder if Downey would have won the Oscar had it not been for Ledger. Comedic performances seem to have a better chance of being recognized in the supporting categories, like Marisa Tomei in "My Cousin Vinny" and Kevin Kline in "A Fish Called Wanda".
Crowe was great in The Insider, I'd throw out A Beautiful Mind and Cinderella Man too.
R. Lee Ermy would have topped my list. No other performance was more memorable than his.
Skip There Will Be Blood unless you enjoy movies in which you despise the main character. Same with Sharon Stone in Casino – the only satisfaction I got out of that film was Nicky (Joe Pesci) getting beaten to death in the cornfield.
I agree with the previous comment in preferring Dennis Quaid's Doc Holliday in Wyat Earp. More realistic, I felt. BTW "I'm your huckleberry" was an old west expression meaning "I'm the one you're looking for".
One other addition, Randy Quaid in Kingpin. Funniest movie ever?
Wow, a critic actually recognizes Val Kilmer's performance in Tombstone! I liked him in Willow too, even though it's a children's movie. Reminds me that I said "hurrah!" when Leonard Maltin gave 3 and half stars to Abbot and Costello Meets Frankenstein. Now that's my type of critic! Unfortunately, he lost me when he gave 1 and half stars to Blade Runner.
I've got to give Leonardo some love here. You can argue about whether he was the right choice for the role or not, but his performance in Blood Diamond was impeccable, in my opinion. He also did a good job with what he was given in The Departed. Don't dis the man just because he's pretty. He's earned the right to be called a real, honest-to-God actor.
Work a psychiatric hospital for a little while…
Ledger's psychotic homicidal sociopath was PERFECT…
When Nicholson's Joker lowers his head at Grissom's desk and says, "Wait'll they get a load of me…", you see the psychosis for a few seconds…the utter hatred of others…the rest is scenery chewing and Cesar Romero mimicry…
With Ledger, the licking of the scars…the shooting of cohorts without even bothering to look at them…the pencil "trick"…the burning money…the bombs…THERE was a Joker who took compromising values and murder seriously, (pardon the pun)…
Scared the hell out of me…there really are people out there just like him…most are Jihadists…
What Duvall movie are you referring to?
Of course it could be one of many.
I can’t think of a list off the top of my head, but I know it would include Casey Affleck as
Bob Ford in The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford. In my opinion, his was one of the most mesmerizing and powerful performances of the last 25 years in one of the most underrated movies of the decade. Hell, I might even put Brad Pitt as Jesse James in there somewhere.
I'm with MovieGuy, when it comes to Penn…I just can't.
Oh how I wanted either of those. Dad always got the 5 pair for $10 at a discount place. He knew I'd wear through the good ones as quickly as the cheap ones.
I love that movie.
Classic camp.
That scene really is awesome, for the reasons mentioned above. Daniel really is very reserved in his evil and madness (except maybe for the scene where he wallows Eli in the mud) up until the final scene. The milkshake scene is the culmination of his evil and insanity overflowing into a final burst of violence. Really worth a look-see, I promise.
I was at "Fort Lost in the Woods" in the late 70's…
Ermey was doing Ssgt. Richardson and Ssgt. Carr…without the hitting and choking…
By then, it was illegal to lay hands on recruits, unless they swung first…
Ermey finally set the bar in concrete Jack Webb started building in "The D.I."…
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