TAGGED AS: movies, ryan gosling
(Photo by Courtesy Everett Collection. THE FALL GUY)
Not every child actor grows up to be a multiple Oscar nominee, but then, not every child actor is Ryan Gosling. After a stint singing and dancing alongside Justin Timberlake and Britney Spears on The Mickey Mouse Club, Gosling flashed early signs of his potential in movies like Remember the Titans and The Believer, then melted hearts everywhere as Noah Calhoun in The Notebook. Just two years later, he’d garner his first Best Actor nod for Half Nelson, as he starred in a string of acclaimed independent films like Lars and the Real Girl and Blue Valentine. Even as he’s risen to the A-list, he continues to star in a wide variety of projects, from cult favorites like Drive and The Nice Guys to high-profile spectacles like Blade Runner 2049 and La La Land, which earned him his second Oscar nomination. Now, let’s go party with Barbie (and The Fall Guy) as we rank Ryan Gosling movies by Tomatometer!
#1
Adjusted Score: 104331%
Critics Consensus: With its hyper-stylized blend of violence, music, and striking imagery, Drive represents a fully realized vision of arthouse action.
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#2
Adjusted Score: 114147%
Critics Consensus: La La Land breathes new life into a bygone genre with thrillingly assured direction, powerful performances, and an irresistible excess of heart.
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#3
Adjusted Score: 106595%
Critics Consensus: The Nice Guys hearkens back to the buddy comedies of a bygone era while adding something extra courtesy of a knowing script and the irresistible chemistry of its leads.
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#4
Adjusted Score: 97252%
Critics Consensus: Half Nelson features powerful performances from Ryan Gosling and Shareeka Epps. It’s a wise, unsentimental portrait of lonely people at the crossroads.
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#5
Adjusted Score: 105157%
Critics Consensus: The Big Short approaches a serious, complicated subject with an impressive attention to detail — and manages to deliver a well-acted, scathingly funny indictment of its real-life villains in the bargain.
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#6
Adjusted Score: 117106%
Critics Consensus: Barbie is a visually dazzling comedy whose meta humor is smartly complemented by subversive storytelling.
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#7
Adjusted Score: 112938%
Critics Consensus: Visually stunning and narratively satisfying, Blade Runner 2049 deepens and expands its predecessor’s story while standing as an impressive filmmaking achievement in its own right.
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#8
Adjusted Score: 113326%
Critics Consensus: First Man uses a personal focus to fuel a look back at a pivotal moment in human history – and takes audiences on a soaring dramatic journey along the way.
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#9
Adjusted Score: 95547%
Critics Consensus: This emotionally gripping examination of a marriage on the rocks isn’t always easy to watch, but Michelle Williams and Ryan Gosling give performances of unusual depth and power.
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#10
Adjusted Score: 94170%
Critics Consensus: While not exactly exposing revelatory truths, The Ides of March is a supremely well-acted drama that moves at a measured, confident clip.
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#11
Adjusted Score: 84963%
Critics Consensus: Gosling commands the screen with a raw, electrifying performance.
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#12
Adjusted Score: 106281%
Critics Consensus: With action, comedy, romance, and a pair of marvelously matched stars, The Fall Guy might be the rare mainstream movie with something to entertain everyone.
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#13
Adjusted Score: 86214%
Critics Consensus: Lars and the Real Girl could’ve so easily been a one-joke movie. But the talented cast, a great script, and direction never condescends to its character or the audience.
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#14
Adjusted Score: 88632%
Critics Consensus: It never lives up to the first part of its title, but Crazy, Stupid, Love‘s unabashed sweetness — and its terrifically talented cast — more than make up for its flaws.
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#15
Adjusted Score: 89725%
Critics Consensus: Ambitious to a fault, The Place Beyond the Pines finds writer/director Derek Cianfrance reaching for — and often grasping — thorny themes of family, fatherhood, and fate.
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#16
Adjusted Score: 78655%
Critics Consensus: Though Fracture‘s plot is somewhat implausible, the onscreen face-off between Gosling and Hopkins overshadows any faults.
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#17
Adjusted Score: 77175%
Critics Consensus: A bleak but original indie, The Slaughter Rule benefits from outstanding performances by Ryan Gosling and David Morse.
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#18
Adjusted Score: 76447%
Critics Consensus: An inspirational crowd-pleaser with a healthy dose of social commentary, Remember the Titans may be predictable, but it’s also well-crafted and features terrific performances.
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#19
Adjusted Score: 59943%
Critics Consensus: It’s hard not to admire its unabashed sentimentality, but The Notebook is too clumsily manipulative to rise above its melodramatic clichés.
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#20
Adjusted Score: 49604%
Critics Consensus: As visually sumptuous as it is narratively spartan, Terrence Malick’s Song to Song echoes elements of the writer-director’s recent work — for better and for worse.
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#21
Adjusted Score: 48540%
Critics Consensus: Director Refn remains as visually stylish as ever, but Only God Forgives fails to add enough narrative smarts or relatable characters to ground its beautifully filmed depravity.
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#22
Adjusted Score: 37393%
Critics Consensus: It’s well-acted, and the true story that inspired it offers plenty of drama — which is why it’s so frustrating that All Good Things is so clichéd and frustratingly ambiguous.
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#23
Adjusted Score: 36686%
Critics Consensus: The United States of Leland has its moments, but they’re undermined by a muddled plot, unsympathetic characters, and frustratingly uneven performances.
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#24
Adjusted Score: 39370%
Critics Consensus: Though it’s stylish and features a talented cast, Gangster Squad suffers from lackluster writing, underdeveloped characters, and an excessive amount of violence.
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#25
Adjusted Score: 33975%
Critics Consensus: A predictable police procedural that works better as a character study rather than a thriller.
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#26
Adjusted Score: 30057%
Critics Consensus: A muddled brain-teaser, Stay has a solid cast and innovative visuals but little beneath the surface.
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