Every Ryan Gosling Movie, Ranked

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Every Ryan Gosling Movie RankedBold Films/Odd Lot Entertainment


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It's no secret that Ryan Gosling can do it all. He was more than Kenough in Barbie, showcasing his comedic, dancing, and singing chops in one scene-stealing role after another. In Drive, the actor barely even had to speak to ooze cool. (Seriously: Gosling says around 100 lines in that film and it's still easily one of the best movies of his career.) So is Crazy Stupid Love, where the actor puts on an ungodly level of charm. Over the course of his career, the 43-year-old actor has racked up three Oscar nominations, for Half Nelson, La La Land, and Barbie. We have a feeling he's just getting started.

Now, the actor is back and and better than ever in The Fall Guy, an action-packed film about a stunt double who becomes the hero. As the Gosling takeover continues, we looked back in the rearview mirror of our stunt car to rank every film of the actor's career so far.

The Slaughter Rule

Very early in his career, Hollywood really wanted Ryan Gosling to be a football-movie guy! Sadly, The Slaughter Rule is not Remember the Titans. That said, it's a kick to watch the very-Canadian Gosling suit up in a helmet and pads.

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Stay

This psychological thriller—written by Game of Thrones showrunner David Benioff—is almost as confusing as Ryan Gosling’s Conor Oberst hair. You can safely skip this one. Gosling, thankfully, would right the ship with the one-two punch Half Nelson and Lars and the Real Girl in the next two years.

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All Good Things

It’s a movie inspired by Robert Durst that somehow becomes more cliché than its title. We wish that Gosling could give this one another try, given that Mr. Durst is in vogue yet again.

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Song to Song

A Terrance Malick film with Gosling, Rooney Mara, Natalie Portman, Michael Fassbender, Holly Hunter, and Cate Blanchett? About struggling musicians?! We want a redo!

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Gangster Squad

Like Song to Song, it's a damn shame that Gangster Squad was dead on impact, given that the film starred Gosling, Sean Penn, Josh Brolin, and... Emma Stone? Can we just call Gangster Squad the prequel to La La Land?

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Fracture

In Fracture, Anthony Hopkins is basically his Silence of the Lambs character, only this time he’s the defendant and Gosling is the Deputy D.A. trying to prosecute him. While the Hopkins-Gosling battles are entertaining, both actors have done far better work.

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Murder By Numbers

Two bored, rich men do some murder—and it’s up to Sandra Bullock to solve it! (Gosling stars as one of the murderers in question.) Murder By Numbers is a slightly better script away from going down as an early-aughts cult classic.

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Only God Forgives

After their triumph with Drive, Gosling and Nicolas Winding Refn reunited for this immoral bloodbath. While Only God Forgives has moments of Drive-esque greatness, it doesn't come close to the heights of their previous team-up.

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The Ides of March

Gosling stars alongside writer and director George Clooney in this well-acted political drama that had no idea what was coming in 2016. That said, The Ides of March is an eerie watch today—and it perhaps deserves a little more credit than its mixed reception elicited from critics in 2011.

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The Believer

Before he became the puppy-faced heartthrob we know him as today, Gosling starred neo-Nazi in this deeply disturbing indie drama. The Believer makes it this high on the list simply because Gosling flashes the dramatic chops that would earn him his first Oscar nomination six years later.

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The United States of Leland

Gosling as a weirdo-murderer with bad hair? It works... sometimes. For Gosling, The United States of Leland has the same affect as The Believer—it stands as a fascinating early example of what Gosling was capable of as a dramatic actor.

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Remember the Titans

Gosling played Alan Bosley in this beloved Disney classic about a football team whose players must overcome their own prejudice to win the big game. All we want to know is: when is Gosling's next sports movie? It's been too long, man!

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The Notebook

Even though just about every moviegoer saw him in Remember the Titans, this is mainstream audiences’ first real exposure to Ryan Gosling, in this Nicholas Sparks-adapted hit. Give The Notebook a rewatch—we're serious!—Gosling's performance is more sensitive, sweet, and convincing than you remember.

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First Man

As if he's Don Draper in space, Gosling plays Neil Armstrong like a detached, proud explorer who recklessly dedicates himself to his work to avoid talking about his feelings with his friends and family. The real star of this biopic is Damien Chazelle's hyper-realistic direction, but yes—Gosling is a believable Neil Armstrong.

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The Place Beyond the Pines

Not so suprisingly, Gosling pulls off the role of a tatted-up, badass bank robber. The crime drama, which is directed by Derek Cianfrance, still holds up today—it's just that Gosling would far outshine his turn here over the next decade of his career.

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The Gray Man

The Gray Man is a guilty pleasure of ours at Esquire. In the Netflix action spectacle—which is directed by the Russo brothers (Avengers: Endgame)—Gosling plays a CIA agent on the run from another ex-CIA agent (Chris Evans). Watching Evans v. Gosling is exactly as great as you'd think. Netflix, where is the sequel?!

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The Fall Guy

Gosling stars as a stuntman in The Fall Guy, taking the wheel for the first time since 20011's Drive. (More on that film later.) The Fall Guy is practically built for Gosling's charm—and it's directed by a former stuntman... who tells the story of crazy life of a stuntman. If you're in the mood for action, charm, and want to see Gosling fall 12 stories from a building, The Fall Guy is the movie for you.

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Crazy, Stupid, Love

In Crazy, Stupid, Love, Young Ryan Gosling teaches Old Steve Carell how to meet ladies. It’s an absolutely charming rom-com from the aughts/early-2010s period, which increasingly feels like one of the greatest eras of the genre. We only wish that Gosling starred in more of them.

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The Big Short

Gosling disappears into the role of Jared Vennett, the slick narrator of the film, who guides us through this hilarious and shocking re-enactment of the collapse of the housing market. To put it simply: The Big Short doesn't work without Gosling.

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Blue Valentine

This emotionally brutal romantic drama beautifully follows the courtship and implosion of a couple’s relationship in a non-linear order. Gosling was nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Actor, while co-star Michelle Williams earned an Oscar nomination. And for good reason—Blue Valentine nails every emotional beat of this time-spanning story.

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Lars and the Real Girl

Unreasonably attractive (even with a creepy mustache and bad haircut) Gosling falls in love with a sex doll in this gem of a comedy. Lars and the Real Girl works largely because of Gosling’s tender, compassionate, and often hilarious portrayal of loneliness. Give it a rewatch.

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Half Nelson

Half Nelson marked one of many turning points in Gosling’s career. Just as Hollywood was about to lock him into the pretty-boy, heartthrob role forever, Gosling instead took a turn in an indie film as a drug-addled—yet caring—inner-city middle school teacher. His tortured, sensitive performance earned him his first Oscar nomination for Best Actor—and pivoted his future toward the smart complex, awards-worthy roles we know him for today.

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Blade Runner 2049

For all its stunning visuals, it’s easy to overlook Gosling’s understated and complex performance as a Replicant Blade Runner dispatching his own kind and trying to figure out his own past. In Blade Runner 2049, he expertly toes a difficult line: channeling Harrison Ford's aptly gray performance in the original film, while adding his own spin to the character.

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The Nice Guys

This 2016 comedy, where Gosling plays a bumbling '70s private investigator, is extremely underrated. It's an excellent example of his then-underused comedy chops—which, of course, directors would fully weaponize a few years later. The Nice Guys is destined for cult-classic greatness.

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Barbie

Is there any other actor on Earth who could've pulled off Ken? We don't think so. Gosling steals Greta Gerwig's show as Ken, a popular toy come to life—only to experience one existential, masculinity crisis after another. Gosling somehow makes Ken obnoxious as all hell, but deeply lovable. Who wouldn't want to pal around with Ken in his Mojo Dojo Casa House? Is Mattel selling those for real? I'll take 20 of them.

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La La Land

Adding dancing to his arsenal? Sure thing. Gosling exudes sunshine and charm in La La Land. Though the Academy Award for Best Actor eluded him a second time, Gosling—who’s always been an endearing singer, going back to Blue Valentine—absolutely shines as the driven and talented Sebastian Wilder.

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Drive

Shockingly ahead of its time in terms of fashion, visuals, and music, Drive remains one of the most stylish crime dramas of all time. Anchoring the film is Gosling’s quiet and subtle performance as the stunt driver hero. Drive marked yet another critical moment in Gosling's career, too—proving that he could deliver a steely, complicated, leading-man performance. It's the turn that told us—definitively—that Gosling would go down as one of the greatest actors of his generation.

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