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12 Best Russell Crowe Movies, Ranked According to IMDb

One of the greatest stars of 21st century cinema, Russell Crowe has been entertaining audiences all over the world for decades. Defined by his endeavor and his versatility, many of Crowe’s most famous roles are his heroic lead parts, but he has also flourished as heinous villains and even in smaller parts amid vast, ensemble casts. To highlight his talents further, he has also narrated docuseries and tried his hand at directing with some success.




However, it is undeniably in acting where his legacy has been established and consolidated, winning several significant accolades including the Academy Award for Best Lead Actor for his performance in the iconic historical epic Gladiator, an achievement he followed up immediately with another Oscar-nominated performance in A Beautiful Mind. Crowe’s resumé is extensive and full of acclaimed projects, many of which have received high rankings on IMDb. The best Russell Crowe movies on IMDb are a healthy mix of comedies, blockbusters, and searing dramas, showcasing his versatility as a performer.


12 ‘The Next Three Days’ (2010)

IMDb Rating: 7.3/10

Elizabeth Banks as Lara Brennan wearing a prison uniform and talking to Russell Crowe as John Brennan in 'The Next Three Days'
Image via Lionsgate


A rewarding remake of the 2008 French film Pour Elle (‘Anything For Her’), The Next Three Days excels as a grounded action thriller that offers plenty of excitement in its simple and effective premise. The life of a married couple is uprooted when Lara (Elizabeth Banks) is arrested for murdering her boss despite her insistence that she is innocent. When her last chance to appeal the verdict fails, John (Crowe) puts together a plan to break her out of prison.

Although the film has some pacing issues and is occasionally contradictory in its tone, it does largely thrive as a riveting action flick with firm, established stakes, and characters in a predicament that is easy to care for. While critics were divided on the film, general audiences proved to be more welcoming, with its 7.3 rating on IMDb a solid and respectable score. It also features Liam Neeson in a supporting role. – Ryan Heffernan


The Next Three Days

Release Date
November 18, 2010

Director
Paul Haggis

Runtime
122

Main Genre
Crime

11 ‘The Nice Guys’ (2016)

IMDb Rating: 7.4/10

Holland and Jackson drive around in a convertible at night looking for clues.
Image via Warner Bros. Pictures

A career highlight from Shane Black that makes exceptional use of its brilliant comedy duo in Crowe and Ryan Gosling, 2016’s neo-noir black comedy The Nice Guys has become one of the biggest cult classics of the 2010s. Set in the seediness of 1970s L.A., it follows the uneasy alliance between a tough enforcer and a hapless P.I. as they investigate the disappearance of a young woman, a case that ends up having ties to significant political figures.


Hilarious and hectic, The Nice Guys has overcome its disastrous box office display with stunning immediacy to be widely regarded as one of the best comedy movies in recent years. It holds up well on multiple rewatches as a ridiculously entertaining buddy cop movie that brought out the comedic genius in both of its leading stars. As its popularity has steadily grown, interest in a possible Nice Guys sequel has materialized.

The Nice Guys

Release Date
May 15, 2016

Director
Shane Black

Runtime
116

10 ‘Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World’ (2003)

IMDb Score: 7.5/10

Russell Crowe as Jack Aubrey looking to the distance in Master and Commander
Image via 20th Century Fox


Made in 2003, Peter Weir‘s Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World is based on three of Patrick O’Brian‘s novels and is set in the Napoleonic Wars. It recounts the start of the friendship between Captain Jack Aubrey and his ship’s surgeon and, when the occasion calls for it, naturalist Stephen Maturin.

Crowe plays a young commander of a British man-o’-war ordered to hunt down and destroy a French frigate, convincing audiences that he could indeed have filled the role. His tremendous performance receives considerable help from Weir’s direction and some of the best naval action sequences ever filmed, plus a great performance from Paul Bettany as Maturin. Considered by some to be among the most historically accurate movies, Master and Commander beautifully brings the early 19th-century naval experience to life with epic grandiosity.


Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World

Release Date
November 14, 2003

Runtime
138 minutes

9 ‘Les Misérables’ (2012)

IMDb Score: 7.5/10

Les Miserables (2012)
Image via Universal Pictures

Adapted from the celebrated eponymous musical, Les Misérables asks Crowe to not only play an early 19th-century French police inspector but to sing his way through the plot. Crowe stars as Javert, the film’s de-facto antagonist with a decades-long obsession to bring Jean Valjean to justice.


Here, Crowe is part of an ensemble cast that includes Hugh Jackman, Anne Hathaway, Amanda Seyfried, and Eddie Redmayne. Jackman and Hathaway were standouts, receiving Oscar nominations for their roles, with Hathway winning Best Supporting Actress. However, Crowe’s role as the initially vindictive and ultimately tragic inspector adds significantly to the film’s emotional depth. His singing has attracted much criticism from fans and audiences, and the Oscar-winning film hasn’t aged exactly well. However, Crowe’s impressive commitment to Les Misérables cannot be denied.

8 ‘3:10 to Yuma’ (2007)

IMDb Score: 7.6/10

Russell Crowe as the criminal Ben Wade aiming his gun off-camera in '3.10 to Yuma' (2007)
Image Via Lionsgate 


Considered one of the best Westerns of the last 20 years, 2007’s 3:10 to Yuma is the second film made from a 1953 Elmore Leonard short story. The first version, made 50 years before, is also considered one of the great Westerns! The film follows Ben Wade (Crowe), a captured outlaw who must be taken to prison on the 3.10 train to Yuma. The problem is getting him to the train without his gang rescuing him.

Crowe stars as a ruthless but congenial villain, while Christian Bale plays one of the posse’s deputized to escort him to his train. The pair become, if not friends, then allies of a sort, finding more in common with each other than either would like to admit. 3:10 to Yuma deftly handles thought-provoking themes of morality, loyalty, and sympathy while still delivering a thrilling Western that ranks among the genre’s best modern entries.


7 ‘The Insider’ (1999)

IMDb Score: 7.8/10

Close-up of Russell Crowe outside at night in The Insider
Image via Buena Vista Pictures

Based on a magazine article about Jeffrey Wigand, a tobacco company whistle-blower, 1999’s The Insider is a brilliantly made, tension-filled drama. More importantly, it’s a vital story about how the media – when all else fails – can be an essential channel for telling the public the truth about crucial issues.


An extraordinary cast is capped with Al Pacino playing a television producer trying to film Wigand’s story, often against opposition from his own broadcaster. Crowe stuns as Wigand, delivering a tense, determined, absorbing performance that earned him a nomination for an Academy Award for Best Actor. Crowe is The Insider‘s beating heart, perfectly enhancing the film’s anxious tone with his modulated, precise performance.

The Insider

Release Date
November 5, 1999

Director
Michael Mann

Runtime
157 Minutes

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6 ‘American Gangster’ (2007)

IMDb Score: 7.8/10

Russel Crowe as Richie Roberts looking pensive with a bandaged hand in American Gangster
Image via Universal Pictures


Released the same year as 3.10 to Yuma, American Gangster has Crowe playing on the side of the angels in this crime drama set in Harlem. The film tells the true story of heroin kingpin Frank Lucas (Denzel Washington) and the policeman, Detective Richie Roberts (Crowe), who eventually brought him down. Roberts discovers Lucas is shipping his heroin from Thailand to the US in the coffins of dead soldiers being returned from the war in Vietnam. Roberts offers Lucas a deal: rat on the army of corrupt cops and DEA officers for a chance at a lighter sentence.

The twist at the end is that Roberts subsequently becomes a defense attorney, and Lucas is his first client, something so absurd it could only happen in real life. Directed by Ridley Scott, American Gangster is tight, thrilling, and visceral, offering a worthy showcase for the Oscar-winning duo at its center.


5 ‘Zack Snyder’s Justice League’ (2021)

IMDb Score: 7.9/10

Justice League
Image via Warner Bros. Pictures

Russell Crowe’s most obvious credit in the DCEU comes in Man of Steel, the film that launched the superhero franchise, where he appears as Jor-El, Kal-El’s (Henry Cavill) father who sends him to Earth when Krypton is destroyed. While the character was killed off in a flashback scene in Man of Steel, Crowe returned to the franchise, albeit in an uncredited cameo, in Zack Snyder’s Justice League.


The much-anticipated re-release of 2017’s Justice League, the 2021 film was an extended version of the major crossover event, one that more accurately displayed Zack Snyder’s original vision throughout its four-hour runtime. Its 7.9 score on IMDb is indicative of it being not only a hit with fans of Snyder and superhero films, but a thoroughly enjoyable action blockbuster that far surpasses the original 2017 release and stands among the best films in the DCEU. – Ryan Heffernan

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4 ‘Cinderella Man’ (2005)

IMDb Score: 8.0/10

Russell Crowe as James J. Braddock on the boxing ring fighting against an oppenent in the film Cinderella Man.
Image via Universal Pictures


This Ron Howard film from 2005 tells the story of boxer James Braddock, who, against all the odds, won the World Heavyweight Title in 1935 when he defeated fellow American Max Baer (Craig Bierko). An honorable, determined, and courageous man, Braddock became a hero for all Americans struggling through the Great Depression and was nicknamed ‘The Cinderella Man’ by sports writer Damon Runyon.

Cinderella Man features a tough and physically resilient character who also possesses great moral and emotional strength that is right up Crowe’s street. Together with Howard’s directing and the appeal of a hero for the common people, Cinderella Man makes for a film that is both entertaining and fulfilling and remains one of the all-time best boxing movies.

Cinderella Man

Release Date
June 2, 2005

Runtime
147

Main Genre
Biography


3 ‘L.A. Confidential’ (1997)

IMDb Score: 8.2/10

Russell Crowe standing next to Guy Pearce who is looking into a car in L.A. Confidential
Image via Warner Bros.

Although not his first American film – that was the underrated 1995 Western The Quick and the Dead – this 1997 production firmly set Crowe’s feet on the path of Hollywood stardom. Almost universally acclaimed on its release and based on the James Elroy novel of the same name, L.A. Confidential‘s story about corruption and crime in post-war Hollywood can still be held up as the neo-noir crime film par excellence.

With outstanding performances from Guy Pearce, James Cromwell, and an Oscar-winning Kim Basinger, L. A. Confidential is among the best films from the 90s. Crowe is exceptional as Detective ‘Bud’ White, an honorable if excessively brutal, cop who hates men who harm women. Mysterious and stylish, L. A. Confidential is a neo-noir masterpiece and one of Crowe’s best efforts.


L.A. Confidential

Release Date
September 19, 1997

Director
Curtis Hanson

Runtime
138 minutes

2 ‘A Beautiful Mind’ (2001)

IMDb Score: 8.2/10

Russell Crowe as John Nash, standing seriously in front of a chalkboard in A Beautiful Mind
Image via Universal Pictures

Some true stories can only be told properly in fiction: A Beautiful Mind, about mathematician John Nash, is just such a story. The real Nash, a genius who, with two others, won the 1994 Nobel Prize in Economics, was also living with schizophrenia and spent many years in and out of psychiatric hospitals. Controversially, director Ron Howard and writer Akiva Goldsman decided to represent Nash’s illness as a series of hallucinations, with mixed results.


Crowe plays Nash with great insight, sympathy, and, appropriately enough, intelligence, perfectly matched by a riveting Jennifer Connelly as his wife, Alicia. Director Ron Howard brings the best out of Crowe, with the Australian actor delivering arguably his finest performance as Nash. A Beautiful Mind works better as a sweeping love story than a biopic about a misunderstood genius, but Crowe’s electrifying performance more than makes up for any of the film’s weak spots.

1 ‘Gladiator’ (2000)

IMDb Score: 8.5/10

Russell Crowe as Maximus, standing in the arena with the sunlight above him in Gladiator.
Image via Universal Pictures


From its extraordinary opening battle to its climax in the Colosseum, Gladiator is a dark and tumultuous journey through ancient Rome. The film covers the Roman army, slavery, gladiatorial contests, the Senate and the imperial family in just over two hours, leaving the audience in no doubt they’d just seen one of the greatest historical films – and revenge stories – ever made.

Driven by Ridley Scott’s direction, the story is firmly anchored by Crowe’s Academy Award-winning performance as Maximus, a Roman general betrayed by Joaquin Phoenix‘s evil Emperor Commodus, who becomes a hero as a gladiator while aspiring to return to Rome to confront Commodus. Crowe’s gravity, presence, and stoicism ensure the audience understands that although Gladiator is not real history, it is, in its way, true history.


Gladiator

Release Date
May 5, 2000

Runtime
155 minutes

NEXT: The Best Ryan Gosling Movies, Ranked

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