Total Recall: Jude Law's Best Movies

We count down the best-reviewed work of the Side Effects star.

Jude Law

Over the course of a career spanning two decades and dozens of movies, Jude Law has become one of the most successful actors of his generation -- in fact, just a few years ago, he made the industry's "top 10 most bankable" list. This weekend, he has the honor of starring in Side Effects, Steven Soderbergh's (alleged) swan song as a director of feature films; to celebrate, we decided to take the opportunity to pay tribute to some of Mr. Law's biggest critical hits. Of course, given his propensity for smaller parts, we had to prune a few entries from the upper reaches of Law's Tomatometer; his roles in films like The Aviator, Hugo, and Lemony Snicket weren't quite substantial enough to make the grade. Still, we think you'll find plenty to love in this week's list. Without further ado... Jude Law's best movies!


71%

10. Wilde

If a person wanted to film an Oscar Wilde biopic, they could hardly do better than Richard Ellmann's Pulitzer-winning biography for source material -- and they couldn't ask for a more perfect leading man than Stephen Fry, who uses 1997's Wilde as an acting clinic. In fact, although most critics agreed Brian Gilbert's film was flawed, they were too enthralled by Fry's performance -- in addition to solid supporting turns from Jennifer Ehle, Michael Sheen, and Law (who plays Lord Alfred Douglas, the self-absorbed object of Wilde's ultimately ruinous affections) -- to find much fault with Wilde. In the words of the Sunday Times' Shannon J. Harvey, "There's never been a better story about the misadventures of one of the world's greatest writers. Fry should have been Oscar nominated, and Law is equally electrifying."


71%

9. eXistenZ

It suffered from close proximity to The Matrix -- not to mention an unfortunately spelled title -- but most critics thought David Cronenberg's eXistenZ was one of the more enjoyable, and overlooked, futuristic thrillers of the '90s. This is admittedly a rather short list (Johnny Mnemonic, anyone?), but still -- given Cronenberg's track record, eXistenZ's ignominious commercial fate is a little puzzling. On the other hand, Cronenberg didn't do himself any favors with a storyline about a game developer (Jennifer Jason Leigh) and a low-level employee at her company (Law) on the run from bad guys wielding freaky guns that shoot human teeth. Sound bizarre? It is, and that doesn't even take into account the script's constant shifts between the real world and an increasingly difficult-to-detect virtual reality. Not a film with particularly broad appeal, in other words, but it tickled the neuroreceptors of critics like Jim Ridley of the Nashville Scene, who wrote, "Cronenberg makes leaps of logic, character, and setting so baffling that they don't become clear until the end. Even then, the final outcome is so devious you'll sit poking yourself to make sure you won't disappear with the click of the projector."


71%

8. Cold Mountain

As a book, Charles Frazier's Cold Mountain was a bestselling phenomenon, and just the kind of sweeping, romantic period piece that cried out for a film adaptation. That cry was answered with Anthony Minghella's stately take on the tale of a Confederate Civil War soldier (Law) who deserts and slowly wends his way back to his beloved (Nicole Kidman) while dodging Union troops and the southern Home Guard. Released on Christmas Day 2003, the Cold Mountain movie was a $173 million hit, but not without its detractors; Cinema Crazed's Felix Vasquez Jr., for instance, called the Miramax production "So utterly manufactured for Oscar, it was nauseating." Still, most critics were willing to look past the flaws in Minghella's beautifully filmed epic; in the words of Philip Martin of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, "There are intimations of a genuinely moving film; in its best moments, Cold Mountain is a fantasy that -- like the Lord of the Rings movies -- aspires to Shakespearean heights."


72%

7. Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow

One of a mind-boggling six movies Law starred in throughout 2004, Kerry Conran's Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow was sort of a beta Avatar, combining live action and computer-generated effects in new and exciting ways. Adding to the gee-whiz factor was Conran's gleefully retro storyline, which pitted the heroic Sky Captain (Law, natch) against the giant robot army of the nefarious Dr. Totenkopf (Sir Laurence Olivier, in a display of technology both thrilling and sort of creepy) in an alternate version of 1939. Captain mimicked the Golden Age matinee serials so successfully that many modern filmgoers didn't quite know what to make of it, and as a result, it went the fate of Totenkopf's army at the box office -- but it was welcomed with open arms by critics like Ed Park of the Village Voice, who wrote, "His nostalgia enabled by technology, Conran takes the ghosts in his machine seriously, and the results appear at once meltingly lovely and intriguingly inhuman."


73%

6. A.I. Artificial Intelligence

A project Stanley Kubrick had been working on since the early 1970s, A.I. was the Hollywood equivalent of vaporware for years; even after Kubrick handed the reins to Steven Spielberg in 1995, the movie remained largely in stasis until Kubrick's unexpected death in 1999. As has been the case with more than one sci-fi epic (see: Avatar), the delay was at least partially fortuitous -- by the time production started in earnest, special effects had evolved to the point where the tale of a robot boy (Haley Joel Osment) on his quest to become real could be believably told. A.I. was criticized for its uneasy blend of darkness and sentimentality, exemplified by Osment's character's friendship with Gigolo Joe, the prostitute robot played by Law. Despite grossing more than $230 million, A.I. was regarded by many as a disappointment -- but most critics saw through the catcalls, including Jimmy O of Film Snobs, who wrote, "A.I. stands as a work that allows us to see ourselves in the things that we have created. For good or for bad, it is an eye opening experience."

Comments

Scott Love

Luke Simpson

You know, if Kerry Conran made another movie, I'd definitely see it.

Feb 6 - 04:34 PM

crusader151

Peter Marsh

Excellent list. Love Jude Law.

Feb 6 - 04:46 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

How can "Closer" be rated lower than "Sky Captain" (a film missing at least one dramatic act)? My favorite Jude Law films, like that one "A.I.", "My Blueberry Nights", "I Heart Huckabees", and "Imaginarium of Dr Parnassus" don't tend to get the critical love that boring, bourgeois fodder like "Ripley", "Gattica" and "Cold Mountain". I assume his roles in "Hugo" and "Aviator" were too small to count.

Feb 6 - 05:11 PM

John Stump

John Stump

I was thinking the same thing

Feb 6 - 07:43 PM

Jonathan Lowe

Jonathan Lowe

I thought they were posting the lowest ones (10-1) first and so on, putting Sky Captain in 7th place down.

Feb 8 - 04:23 PM

Jonathan Lowe

Jonathan Lowe

I see , the lists don't match up much at all.

Feb 8 - 04:29 PM

baquiano

Tomas Sancio

Gattaca and Closer are my personal favorites, none of which appear in this Tomatometer list.

Feb 6 - 05:15 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

"Gattaca" is in the top five on page 2.

Feb 6 - 05:46 PM

Matthew R.

Matthew Reimer

As much as I loved Rise Of The Guardians, I feel like that role for him doesn't really make the top 5.

Feb 6 - 05:15 PM

Bradley J.

Bradley J

I thought he did excellent work in the film however.

Feb 6 - 06:36 PM

Matthew R.

Matthew Reimer

He did indeed but like how Tom Hanks's number 1 best movie was Toy Story 2, I feel like it should focus more on the actor's live action roles more then any voice acting but you are right Bradley he did a fantastic job as Pitch.

Feb 6 - 08:16 PM

Colton Rice

Colton Rice

Voice acting is hard work.you have to express a lot of emotions without a single action or facial expression

Feb 6 - 09:18 PM

James B.

James Bradford

Colton Rice, have you seen actors in the sound booth recording their roles? They definitely do use gestures, actions and facial expressions to convey emotion.

Feb 7 - 07:31 AM

Dave J

Dave J

It's funny that the only role I liked Jude Law in is "Enemy At The Gates" since most other roles Jude has done are almost secondary to the other actors and sometimes forgettable!

Feb 6 - 05:31 PM

James B.

James Bradford

While the role may be secondary, I'd argue that the character of Dickie in "Talented Mr. Ripley" is anything but forgettable. He was amazing in that role, in that he played a privileged a-hole who used people, blew through his father's money and cheated on his girlfriend, yet still managed to be charismatic enough to make you believe everyone else would want to be in his company, envy him and, in Tom Ripley's case, want to BE him. Like Paltrow says in the movie, "The thing with Dickie...it's like the sun shines on you, and it's glorious. And then he forgets you and it's very, very cold."

Feb 7 - 06:02 AM

Typhon

Typhon Q

No Sherlock Holmes? He made a great Watson.

Feb 6 - 05:51 PM

Scott Love

Luke Simpson

Just started watching eXistenZ. It's seriously terrible.

Feb 6 - 06:10 PM

Robert Beveridge

Robert Beveridge

His best movie by a country mile, The Wisdom of Crocodiles, made neither list? I'm baffled by this...

Feb 6 - 06:11 PM

Atomic-Paully

Paul Boisvert

I heart Huckabees easily number one for me. His performance was amazing. The accent alone - fuggetaboutit. And the fall from grace, the deconstruction of a fake personality that you wear like a cheap suit. Awesome. Whole movie kicked ass. Whalberg was hilarious. And on and on. Closer is stellar. Owen was a force in that sucker. Sky Captain is a great flick too mostly for it's stylized 50's, yet somehow otherworldly feel. Gattaca is cool. Enemy at the Gates has good ole Eddie Harris so nough said right there. It's solid. And Sherlock Holmes is entertaining as hell. It's a buddy entry. And the interplay tween Downey and the Jude is great. He makes a good Watson but I couldn't help but think he would've made a great Holmes as well. Anyway, onward and upward. Cheers.

Feb 6 - 06:17 PM

Pio William Lumongsod

Pio William Lumongsod

he was in hugo, right?

Feb 6 - 07:23 PM

Ryuhza Timmuns

Ryuhza Timmuns

Very briefly, as the main character's father who is deceased outside of a few flashbacks in the beginning.

Feb 6 - 07:30 PM

Matt Mustin

Matt Mustin

...Contagion's awful.

Feb 6 - 08:47 PM

Keith Allison

Keith Allison

Damn. Never would have expected Contagion to be the film with his highest score.

Feb 6 - 09:19 PM

Frisby2007

George Roman

Jude Law is one badass actor; have yet to see any bad movies with him (as far as I can recall). My boyfriend looks so much like him, so I feel so close to the actor lol

Feb 6 - 10:04 PM

Conor Ashe

Conor Ashe

Good list, but where's Hugo?

Feb 6 - 10:05 PM

Kriftonucci

Jim Ylonen

This list is about noticeable roles, not cameos.
Stop complaining about Hugo.

Feb 7 - 12:28 AM

Smartest Person Here

Greg Bonnette

AI was horrible- long, dull, and the ending? One of the worse ever for a major film. Just bad.

Feb 7 - 02:57 AM

King  S.

King Simba

Glad to see Sky Captain make the list. That had to be one of the most inventive blockbusters in the past decade racing from one imaginative scene to the next, while Paltrow and Law had some really funny moments together in the film. Admittedly, I suppose they could have waited a little for the technology to catch up with the film's imagination but still it's a pretty fun popcorn flick, one that didn't deserve to flop. I was also hopping to see Sherlock Holmes make the list as that was another fun film (and the chemistry between Downey and Law really helped it), but oh well.

I have to admit that A.I is a film I respect a lot more than like. It's a well made and ambitous film, but it just never clicked with me. I love Kubrick and Spielberg but their styles did not mesh well in my opinion (like trying to combine E.T with 2001). It was also hard to get invested in the journey when you knew there was no blue fairy, while the film just didn't know when to end. On the other hand, Haley Joel Osment delivered a fantastic performance. He should have gotten an oscar nomination for his role in that film.

Anyway, fantastic actor. Personally, my top 3 films of his (in order) would be Hugo, The Aviator and Road to Perdition (Never thought Tom Hanks could play a mobster so well and Jude Law was a great villain), though I can see why the first two weren't included given how small of a role he had in them.

Feb 7 - 03:19 AM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

Was it hard for you to invest in "Pinocchio" because because you knew there was no singing crickets?

Feb 7 - 02:26 PM

King  S.

King Simba

You missed my point. In the world of Pinocchio there were blue fairies and talking crickets, but in the world of A.I there were no blue fairies. This made in hard to get invested in David's quest to become a real boy the same way as Pinocchio's because you knew he was chasing nothing but an illusion.

Feb 7 - 11:18 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

As we all are. That's the existential tragedy of the movie. If he can think and feel, doesn't that make him "real"? Or do humans chase the illusion of being the only life capable of determining what's real or not?

Feb 8 - 02:36 PM

Bigbrother

Big Brother

That's the kind of talk that's gonna bring Skynet to reality right there. Be in on your head JJ.

Feb 10 - 04:17 PM

Matthew R.

Matthew Reimer

Sky Captain failed for one reason, its rating. The PG rating was a huge mistake and its target audience was for teens and up so they were trying to get a PG-13 rating. It then flop when it came out because people then considered it to be a kids movie and ended up losing its target audience.

Feb 7 - 02:42 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

It failed for me because, after a pretty terrific 1st Act, we go straight for the climax, missing a great deal of development and plot along the way. It made the same mistake as "Avatar" in the script.

Feb 7 - 02:50 PM

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