Gladiator II
Photo Credit: Cuba Scott/ Paramount Pictures.Denzel Washington as Macrinus
Photo Credit: Cuba Scott/ Paramount Pictures.

The best Denzel Washington movies, ranked

These are Denzel Washington's most rewarding movie roles – from 'Glory' to 'Gladiator II', crusading heroes to crack-smoking cops

Matthew Singer
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Are there any true movie stars left? As long as Denzel Washington is still working, there’ll always be at least one. Whether playing civil rights icons or crooked cops, August Wilson protagonists or Shakespearean royalty, Washington has spent four decades proving he can do just about anything on screen. He proved again in 2024, utterly stealing the show as a villainous would-be emperor in Ridley Scott’s blockbuster legacy sequel Gladiator II. He is, indisputably, one of the great actors of his generation. Might he just be the GOAT, though? It’s up for debate, but this survey of his 16 best performances make a damn compelling case.

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Best movies with Denzel Washington

  • Film
Malcolm X (1992)
Malcolm X (1992)

Directed by Spike Lee

One of the very few cradle-to-grave biopics that not only justifies its epic sweep but brings a historical figure into better view, Spike Lee’s career highlight didn’t just elevate Denzel into the Hollywood A-list but managed to recentre Malcolm X himself in the conversation over racial strife in America – and not a moment too soon, given some of the other major events of 1992. Denzel so fully inhabits the role as the revolutionary Black activist that there is a whole generation who, when they think of the former Malcolm Little, see him in their mind’s eye. Now that’s an iconic performance.

  • Film
  • Thrillers
Training Day (2001)
Training Day (2001)

Directed by Antoine Fuqua

It’s a paradox of sorts that this legendary leading man has won both his Oscars for supporting roles. Sitting next to his gong for Glory on the Washington mantlepiece is a statue won taking Ethan Hawke’s cop for a ride as Training Day’s bent LAPD ‘tec Alonzo Harris. Whether imparting the harsh lessons of the streets or spiking his partner with PCP, Washington supercharges Harris with sleazy magnetism and a vicious streak as wide as a Downtown freeway. He even ad-libbed that incredible King Kong line. 

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  • Film
  • Drama

Directed by Joel Coen

It took a while, but thanks to Joel ‘Hey, Where’s Ethan?’ Coen, we finally got to see Denzel in one of the most iconic acting roles in all the performing arts. Coen, in his solo directorial debut, strips Shakespeare’s classic story to its essentials, allowing Washington’s performance as the tormented King of Scotland to truly fill the screen. He doesn’t disappoint.

  • Film
  • Action and adventure

Directed by Tony Scott

His first team-up with regular partner in crime Tony Scott is one of the great submarine flicks. Denzel is the second in command who goes toe-to-toe with sub chief Gene Hackman when they receive a garbled order to launch nuclear missiles against Russian targets. Watching these two titans bellow macho dialogue at one another across a crowded engine room is pure joy.

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  • Film
  • Drama

Directed by Denzel Washington

Denzel’s third film as director saw him step both behind and in front of the camera for an adaptation of August Wilson’s early 1980s play ‘Fences’. Denzel plays Troy Maxson, a proud, loving but flawed husband and father in 1950s Pittsburgh whose disappointments and mistakes seriously affect his relationship with his family, including his wife Rose (Viola Davis) and two sons.

  • Film
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

Directed by Ridley Scott

Ridley Scott’s long-awaited sequel to his sword-and-sandals Oscar-winner mostly ports over the story from the original, replacing Russell Crowe with Paul Mescal. But if there’s a justification for the film’s existence, it’s Denzel as duplicitous earring enthusiast Macrinus. Flamboyant, sexually ambiguous and thirsting for power, Denzel bites down hard on the role, and commits the most grandiloquent act of blockbuster show-stealing since Heath Ledger in The Dark Knight.

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  • Film
  • Drama
Glory (1989)
Glory (1989)

Directed by Edward Zwick

While he’d caught the attention of awards voters two years before with Cry Freedom, for which he earned his first Oscar nomination, Denzel launched his GOAT campaign with this Civil War epic, taking home the statuette for Best Supporting Actor. As Private Silas Trip, a member of America’s first all-Black volunteer army battalion, he shows the authority, backbone and searing presence that would come to define his best performances.

  • Film
  • Action and adventure
Unstoppable (2010)
Unstoppable (2010)

Directed by Tony Scott

‘Unstoppable’ is pure, old school thrills, starring Denzel as a wise railroad veteran (he’s almost at retirement, natch) who must risk his life to stop a train full of toxic gas from ploughing into a populated area. This was ‘Top Gun’ director Tony Scott’s last movie before his death and might just have been his best.

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  • Film
  • Drama
Inside Man (2006)
Inside Man (2006)

Directed by Spike Lee

Yet another Spike Lee collaboration, although very different from their other pairings, Inside Man was Lee’s first true big-budget genre picture, pitting Denzel as a tough New York cop against Clive Owen as the criminal mastermind behind a daring Wall Street bank heist. It was an unexpected critical and commercial hit – and probably the second-best Lee-Denzel pairing after Malcolm X.

  • Film
  • Drama
American Gangster (2007)
American Gangster (2007)

Directed by Ridley Scott

Denzel teamed with Ridley Scott for this suitably epic crime saga about Frank Lucas, who in the 1960s trafficked huge amounts of heroin into the United States via the bodies of dead American soldiers in Vietnam. In this stylish biopic, Denzel plays Lucas while Russell Crowe is the cop determined to put him behind bars – a true clash of acting titans. 

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  • Film
  • Comedy

Directed by Spike Lee

By the time he appeared in his first Spike Lee joint, Denzel had already won an Oscar for Glory, but he landed his first truly iconic role as Bleek Gilliam, a jazz trumpeter whose personal life is in the midst of spiraling out of control. The movie suffers from Lee’s tendency toward melodrama – and some unfortunate antisemitic caricatures – but Denzel is in top form, particularly when it comes to his interplay with Wesley Snipes as his sax-playing frenemy, Shadow Henderson.

  • Film
Devil in a Blue Dress (1995)
Devil in a Blue Dress (1995)

Directed by Carl Franklin

Easy Rawlings is one of the great black fictional heroes: created by author Walter Mosley, he’s an LA-based private detective with all the effortless charm and fascinating flaws of white boys like Philip Marlowe. Sadly, Hollywood’s one attempt to bring Mosley’s stories to screen – this whip-smart thriller with Denzel on smooth form as Rawlings – didn’t do good enough box office to justify a series.

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  • Film

Directed by Spike Lee

Six years after ‘Malcolm X’ (see below), Denzel reunited with Spike Lee for a more personal story about an inmate on temporary release dealing with his son’s dream of going to college on a basketball scholarship. Less dewy-eyed about masculinity and fatherhood than, say, ‘Boyz N the Hood’, this is a stark, convincing family drama.

  • Film
Philadelphia (1993)
Philadelphia (1993)

Directed by Jonathan Demme

The first Hollywood movie to tackle Aids, ‘Philadelphia’ was released when many people were still terrified that touching a gay person would give them HIV. That’s exactly how Denzel’s flashy TV lawyer Joe feels after meeting potential client Tom Hanks, who’s just been sacked from his job for being HIV positive. ‘I admit it,’ he says, ‘I’m prejudiced.’ Of course he takes the case.

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  • Film
  • Thrillers

Directed by Nick Cassavetes

Sometimes, the truest mark of a great actor is how well they do with subpar material. Director Nick Cassavetes’ melodramatic thriller, about a blue collar worker who holds a hospital hostage to get his daughter an emergency heart transplant, isn’t particularly great as a melodrama, thriller or a critique of America’s healthcare system. But Denzel elevates the film simply by being there. Even if nothing else here rings true, you fully believe him as the titular factory worker willing to do whatever it takes to save his child’s life.  

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