Given he celebrated his 80th birthday in 2023, there's no better time than now to celebrate the remarkable acting career of the untouchable Robert De Niro. Born in 1943, his earliest film roles were in the mid to late 1960s, but it was the early 1970s that saw him become a breakout star. Ever since, he's excelled in both leading and supporting roles across just about every genre out there and is still active as an actor, with recent roles that include About My Father and Killers of the Flower Moon.
His name's one of the few that's always guaranteed to be brought up whenever it comes to discussing the greatest movie actors of all time. In addition, going through his decades-long filmography makes it apparent that few, if any, other actors have ever been in as many classic movies as Robert De Niro has. The following titles represent the best of the best within De Niro's vast and impeccable body of work, and are ranked below from great to greatest.
25 'Awakenings' (1990)
Appeared as Leonard Lowe
There are plenty of titles that demonstrate De Niro's capacity as an actor outside the gangster movie genre that made him famous, with Awakenings being one of the best examples in this regard. It focuses on the relationship that develops between a patient (De Niro) who's just been awoken from a decades-long coma, and his doctor (Robin Williams).
The film's set in the late 1960s, and is inspired by real-life people and events, including the encephalitis lethargica epidemic of 1919 to 1930, where those affected really were made catatonic for decades. As a film, Awakenings can be heavy-going at times, but it's an effectively told story, with De Niro and Williams both giving excellent performances (the former receiving an Academy Award nomination, too).
Awakenings
- Release Date
- January 11, 1991
- Director
- Penny Marshall
- Cast
- Robert De Niro , Robin Williams , Julie Kavner , Penelope Ann Miller
- Runtime
- 121 minutes
24 'A Bronx Tale' (1993)
Appeared as Lorenzo
Though Robert De Niro has acted in more than 100 movies throughout his career, the number of films he's directed is considerably smaller. More specifically, he's only directed two: one being the 2006 spy film The Good Shepherd, and the other being 1993's A Bronx Tale, which is a coming-of-age crime/drama film.
The latter's the better of the two, and he also has a supporting role in the film, playing the working-class and hard-nosed father of a young man who finds himself drawn to a life of crime as a way to break free of his otherwise humble life. A Bronx Tale doesn't revolutionize the crime genre, but it's very well-made and contains plenty of great performances, and is surprisingly good, considering it was De Niro's first time directing.
A Bronx Tale
- Release Date
- September 29, 1993
- Director
- Robert De Niro
- Cast
- Robert De Niro , Chazz Palminteri , Lillo Brancato Jr
- Runtime
- 120
23 'Midnight Run' (1988)
Appeared as Jack Walsh
The buddy comedy genre was probably at its peak during the 1980s, with the most well-known titles likely being those in the Lethal Weapon series, as well as 48 Hrs. One of the best that's not quite as well-known, however, would be 1988's Midnight Run, which stars De Niro and Charles Grodin as a bounty hunter and targeted criminal respectively.
The two find themselves thrust together, and needing to cooperate, to some extent, if they're to have a chance at surviving numerous adversaries as well as each other. It's a road movie, buddy comedy, action movie, and crime flick all rolled together, and it largely makes for a very entertaining and breezy watch.
Midnight Run
- Release Date
- July 20, 1988
- Director
- Martin Brest
- Cast
- Robert De Niro , Charles Grodin , Yaphet Kotto , John Ashton , Dennis Farina , Joe Pantoliano
- Runtime
- 126
22 'Stardust' (2007)
Appeared as Captain Shakespeare of the Caspartine
Standing as a rare fantasy movie within Matthew Vaughn's filmography, as well as a rare Robert De Niro fantasy movie, Stardust is a fun and underrated (funderrated?) 2000s cult classic. It revolves around a falling star who it turns out is actually a young woman, the appearance of whom sets off a wild and comedic adventure revolving around the numerous people who want to get their hands on her.
De Niro plays a supporting character named Captain Shakespeare who's the lead pirate on a flying ship. He's not in the movie a great deal, but steals the scenes he does appear in, with Stardust being not just a good time for those who like their fantasy movies light, but also a significant showcase for De Niro's capacity to act in goofy, lighthearted roles.
Stardust
- Release Date
- August 10, 2007
- Director
- Matthew Vaughn
- Cast
- Charlie Cox , Claire Danes , Robert De Niro , Sienna Miller , Mark Strong , Ian McKellen
- Runtime
- 127 minutes
21 'Cape Fear' (1991)
Appeared as Max Cady
One of many collaborations between Martin Scorsese as director and Robert De Niro as actor worth celebrating, Cape Fear is the rare remake that does justice to the original and then some. Its premise is the same as the first Cape Fear from 1962, with both movies following the terror a family experiences when a brutal criminal begins targeting them after being released from prison.
De Niro plays that criminal - the fearsome Max Cady - and it's easily one of his most intense, uncomfortable, and ferocious performances. De Niro also engaged in somehow more method acting than usual for the role, putting on a ton of muscle and spending $25,000 to have his teeth sharpened/ground down before filming, and subsequently repaired after filming. There's method acting, and then there's doing what De Niro did for Cape Fear.
Cape Fear
- Release Date
- November 15, 1991
- Director
- Martin Scorsese
- Cast
- Robert De Niro , Nick Nolte , Jessica Lange , Juliette Lewis
- Runtime
- 128 minutes
20 'Meet the Parents' (2000)
Appeared as Jack Byrnes
One of the most accessible (and overall funniest) movies Robert De Niro ever starred in, Meet the Parents is an essential early 2000s comedy. Its sequels - Meet the Fockers (2004) and Little Fockers (2010) - are largely skippable, but the original still holds up as a genuinely funny and very easy-to-watch comedy about the difficulty of meeting a partner's parents for the first time.
De Niro's the father who clashes with his potential future son-in-law, played by Ben Stiller, with their dynamic largely carrying the movie. Like any comedic film featuring De Niro, it's nice to see him out of his usual element and excelling nonetheless, with Meet the Parents ranking as one of his best movies of the 21st century so far.
Meet the Parents
- Release Date
- October 6, 2000
- Director
- Jay Roach
- Cast
- Robert De Niro , Ben Stiller , Teri Polo , Blythe Danner , Nicole DeHuff , Jon Abrahams
- Runtime
- 108
19 'American Hustle' (2013)
Appeared as Victor Tellegio
American Hustle is a darkly comedic crime movie that's loosely based on real-life events. It takes place towards the end of the 1970s and into the early 1980s, following two people who are forced to cooperate with an aggressive FBI agent who makes them enter a criminal underworld, interacting with various people who are affiliated with the mafia along the way.
Those expecting a ton of De Niro might be disappointed, because he's really just in this as an extended cameo, playing a mafia boss who still manages to be intimidating despite his small amount of screen time. Thankfully, the pace, energy, and star power of American Hustle keeps it engaging overall, even during its predominantly De Niro-free runtime.
American Hustle
- Release Date
- December 3, 2013
- Director
- David O. Russell
- Cast
- Christian Bale , Bradley Cooper , Amy Adams , Jeremy Renner , Jennifer Lawrence , Louis C.K.
- Runtime
- 129 minutes
- Main Genre
- Crime
18 'Casino' (1995)
Appeared as Sam "Ace" Rothstein
Casino was the last collaboration between Robert De Niro and Martin Scorsese for close to a quarter of a century, at one point in time standing as an impressive "end" to the string of films they made together. It's a dark and very violent look at how the mob ran Las Vegas during the 1970s, considering gangsters controlled the city's numerous lucrative casinos.
It's not quite the greatest crime movie the two cinematic legends made together, but it has a ton to offer, with a fast-paced epic narrative, plenty of stylish and memorable images, and great performances from the likes of De Niro, Sharon Stone, and Joe Pesci, to name a few. It's a long and sometimes challenging film, but still stands as an essential 1990s gangster movie.
Casino
- Release Date
- November 22, 1995
- Director
- Martin Scorsese
- Cast
- Robert De Niro , Sharon Stone , Joe Pesci , James Woods , Frank Vincent , Pasquale Cajano
- Runtime
- 178 minutes
- Main Genre
- Biography
17 'Joker' (2019)
Appeared as Murray Franklin
Filmmaker Todd Phillips wasn't shy about referencing certain Martin Scorsese movies in his 2019 movie, Joker, and perhaps some of this borrowing was mitigated by casting frequent Scorsese collaborator Robert De Niro. He has a supporting role as a talk show host idolized by the film's main character, Arthur Fleck.
But the narrative does belong to Fleck, with the film ultimately belonging to Joaquin Phoenix, too, who plays Fleck and convincingly portrays his breakdown and re-emergence as the titular character well-known for being Batman's arch-nemesis. Overall, Joker might not win many points for originality, but it does earn a good number for the quality of its acting, and the stomach-churning, consistently nerve-wracking story it tells.
Joker (2019)
- Release Date
- October 2, 2019
- Director
- Todd Phillips
- Cast
- Joaquin Phoenix , Robert De Niro , Zazie Beetz , Frances Conroy , Brett Cullen , Shea Whigham
- Runtime
- 122
16 'Mean Streets' (1973)
Appeared as John "Johnny Boy" Civello
The first of many Scorsese + De Niro collaborations, Mean Streets was arguably the film that put both the director and his favorite actor on the map. It's a loosely plotted film about a group of young men living in New York City, and the things they do while attempting to move up within both the world at large and the mobster lifestyle they find themselves in.
Harvey Keitel (also known for his numerous Scorsese collaborations) is the closest thing to a main character here, with De Niro proving impressive in a star-making supporting role. The energy and vibrancy on offer in Mean Streets ensure it still feels gripping and even somewhat fresh to this day, with its various qualities - and the fact it helped boost the profiles of numerous people involved - ensuring it stands as one of the most historically significant crime movies of all time.
Mean Streets
- Release Date
- October 14, 1973
- Director
- Martin Scorsese
- Cast
- Robert De Niro , Harvey Keitel , David Proval , David Carradine
- Runtime
- 112 minutes
15 'Silver Linings Playbook' (2012)
Appeared as Patrizio "Pat" Solitano Sr.
A romantic dramedy about a troubled young man (Bradley Cooper) moving back in with his parents, Silver Linings Playbook is a movie that manages to be feel-good and also quite realistic/grounded. Robert De Niro and Jacki Weaver are featured as the parents, while Jennifer Lawrence (in an Oscar-winning role) plays a young woman Cooper's character begins a relationship with.
It tackles mental health conditions in a surprisingly thoughtful way, which is a good thing obviously, because the mishandling of something so delicate could've made Silver Linings Playbook a disaster. Narratively and visually it's sound, but it's the kind of film you watch for the performances, and thankfully, all the main ones on offer here are very strong.
Silver Linings Playbook
- Release Date
- September 8, 2012
- Director
- David O. Russell
- Cast
- Jennifer Lawrence , Robert De Niro , Bradley Cooper , Julia Stiles , Chris Tucker , Shea Whigham
- Runtime
- 122
- Main Genre
- Comedy
14 'Brazil' (1985)
Appeared as Archibald "Harry" Tuttle
Dystopian science-fiction movies rarely get funnier (or darker) than the cult classic 1985 film Brazil. It's about a low-level bureaucrat who frequently daydreams to escape the mundanity of his existence in a strange futuristic world, only for the lines between his reality and his dreams to begin crossing in disorientating and, eventually, tragic ways.
If that doesn't make Brazil sound wonderfully wild enough, it's also a movie where De Niro occasionally pops up as a resistance fighter/freelance heating engineer named Archibald Tuttle, with him stealing every scene he appears in. It's one of the strangest movie De Niro's been in, and one of his most unusual roles, but nevertheless, Brazil's still up there with the best movies he's appeared in.