The winter box office season means that the cineplexes are filled with would-be blockbusters and awards contenders alike. This year is no different as Tom Holland’s Spider-man swings back into theaters alongside Benedict Cumberbatch’s Doctor Strange.

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While British actors are certainly in their fair share of big-budget Hollywood entertainment, they are also some of the most highly sought performers for prestige projects. As these actors trade in their superheroes trade in their tights for period costume dramas, biopics, and more character-driven work, who among them is the most valued? Ranker gives users the option to upvote and downvote individual actors, leading to a collective understanding of current popularity. No list is definitive, but there is no denying the collective charisma and charm of these actors.

Benedict Cumberbatch

Phil Burbank looking off in the distance in The Power of the Dog

The varied credits from Doctor Strange to the Grinch to Alan Turing show that Cumberbatch isn't an actor that fits easily into one box. He is widely respected amongst his peers while also being a crowd favorite. His depth of characterization has led to him being an Academy Award nominee.

Currently, he appears in Jane Campion's The Power of the Dog, where it would seem he is all but destined to receive his second Academy Award nomination for his work. After that, he will be in Spider-Man: No Way Home as Doctor Strange, before being in Sam Raimi’s return to the genre with Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness.

Michael Caine

John Cutter holding on to a rope and looking intently at something in The Prestige

Just 18 months shy of his 90th birthday, Caine is the oldest member of the list. He was a British sex symbol in films like Alfie but he was never pigeonholed by the constraints that might entail and has since gone on to have a career almost seventy years in the making.

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Through his collaborations with Christopher Nolan, Caine has reintroduced himself to another generation. The six-time Academy Award nominee (and winner of two) has crafted a body of work that is truly remarkable. Even at 88, he is still actively working, continuing to amass a career that is coveted by many as one of the most prominent movie stars in history. If anything, nine seems to be too low a spot for Mr. Caine.

Tom Hiddleston

Loki looking confused in episode 1 of Loki

Hiddleston is a true chameleon that has garnered much of his fame for being the playful trickster of the MCU. He has also worked with renowned directors like Guillermo del Toro, Jim Jarmusch, Steven Spielberg, and Terrence Davies.

Hiddleston has shown that he is a wide-ranging talent appealing to many. His power as an actor isn't limited to playing the jester of the MCU, but to his ability to slide into a variety of characters. With several projects in the work, and recently completing the Loki TV series, Hiddleston proves he is game for nearly everything that is thrown at him as a performer. His spot makes sense from a popularity standpoint. 

Colin Firth

King George V in front of a microphone in The King's Speech

From his early work in the much revered BBC Pride and Prejudice to his Academy Award-winning work in The King’s Speech, he is one of the most reliable screen presences around. Firth is an actor that easily vacillates between high and low status. He has the kind of low-key sex appeal that lets him pass for an everyman while having a ruthless charm that affords him the ability to disappear into comedies and dramas alike.

Recently, he has been popping up in small roles in big movies to lend an aura of calm and respectability in things like 1917. Up next, he is re-teaming with his Shakespeare in Love director, John Madden, and the retelling of the true-crime docuseries of the same name, The Staircase. He is still relatively young, so Academy Award winner Colin Firth has many roles left to cement his standing as one of the great British performers.

David Tennant

The Tenth Doctor in a spacesuit in Doctor Who

Tennant is most known for being the 10th Doctor in the long-running BBC series, Doctor Who. In addition, he is well known for the crossover success of Broadchurch.

The Scottish actor is a prolific voiceover actor and a well-known stage legend. While he isn’t as widely known in America, he is considered one of the finest contemporary performers out of Britain. This placement does show that talent aside, having a large cadre of fans is crucial to scoring a high spot on the list.

Patrick Stewart

Darcy looking serious in Green Room

The Captain of the USS Enterprise and Professor Xavier, these towering pop culture figures alone would make Stewart one of the most recognized thespians of today. With over two decades in both of these franchises, there is a tenderness to his presence and a genuine sense of time. 

Recently, his icy and pragmatic turn in the relentlessly tense Green Room is yet another reminder that he is a versatile treasure that is impossible to box in. Stewart is more renowned as a stage actor but outside of his two franchises, he isn’t a particularly prolific film actor. A spot this high shows just how beloved his characterizations in the Star Trek franchise and the X-Men films are.

Ian McKellen

Gandalf the White holding a sword in the battlefield in The Return of the King

Gandalf is one of the two or three most instantly recognizable characters of all time. McKellen doesn't just embody the character physically, but he brings true pathos to a role that could've been merely surface. It is a beautiful piece of acting that stands alongside the Lord of the Rings films as a marker of timelessness.

Apart from this though, McKellen has amassed a body of work that is truly exceptional. From his work as James Whale in Gods and Monsters to his long-running portrayal of Magneto in the X-Men films, he is an actor of tremendous generosity. His portrayal of an aging Sherlock Holmes is a fine example of an actor effortlessly embracing their age. 

Gary Oldman

Commisioner Gordon on top of a building next to the Bat signal in Gotham

His portrayal of perhaps the most British figure of all time, Winston Churchill, is the rare work of makeup artistry that doesn't overshadow the performance. Oldman finds the humanity of Churchill like he does all of his characters. His work as George Smiley in Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy is another renowned British icon, this time from the mind of the famed novelist John le Carré.

His spot on this list is probably secured by playing Sirius Black in the Harry Potter series as well as Commissioner Gordon in Nolan's Batman saga. He grounds each of those roles with distinct humanity that shines through even in the weight of those franchises. Though it is his more challenging work in films like Mank and The Darkest Hour that will secure his legacy moving forward.

Anthony Hopkins

Anthony standin in the middle of his living room in his robe

Hopkins commands authority in every role while having a perfect understanding of what the material calls for. He is an actor who fits into mannered British period dramas and pulpy crime thrillers with the same level of ease.

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Hopkins, as of earlier this year for the film The Father by Florian Zeller, is the oldest person to win the Academy Award for acting. His career dates back to his screen debut in 1968’s The Lion in Winter alongside screen legends, Katharine Hepburn and Peter O’Toole. Most famously, he won his first Academy Award for his chilling portrayal of Hannibal Lecter in the Best Picture-winning Silence of the Lambs. Even at number two, that could be too low of a spot to put Mr. Hopkins on this list. 

Alan Rickman

Snape looking angry in the Harry Potter series

Rickman crafted a career playing one of the most memorable villains in history with Hans Gruber in Die Hard to the mercurial Professor Snape in the Harry Potter films. Outside of this, he was able to show his softer side in a Christmas favorite, Love Actually, and his deft comedic touch in Galaxy Quest

Rickman was a renowned Tony-nominated stage actor. His work on stage, film, and his portrayal of two of the most famous characters in cinematic history, make it easy to see how he would be crowned with the number one spot on this list. Sadly, as the only performer on the list who is no longer with us, his tragically cut short career is all there is to remember him by, and truly, what a career he left behind. 

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