RELATED: Titanic: 10 Most Memorable Quotes

In the years since the blockbuster success of Titanic, DiCaprio and Winslet have become two of the biggest movie stars in the world. They’ve both been awarded Oscars (DiCaprio for The Revenant and Winslet for The Reader) in the interim.

DiCaprio: Shutter Island (2010) - 8.2

Leonardo DiCaprio lights a match in Shutter Island

Martin Scorsese took a rare dive into the horror genre for Shutter Island, adapted from Dennis Lehane’s 2003 novel of the same name. The movie ended up emerging as one of the most harrowing psychological thrillers in recent memory.

Leonardo DiCaprio stars as Teddy Daniels, a U.S. Marshal who’s sent to a mysterious mental institution on an island to investigate the escape of a patient. Over the course of the movie, his reality comes crashing down.

Winslet: Little Children (2006) - 7.5

Kate Winslet and Patrick Wilson in Little Children

Winslet starred alongside Patrick Wilson, Jennifer Connelly, and Jackie Earle Haley in Little Children, a dark suburban tale about people stuck in crumbling marriages and the arrival of a registered sex offender.

The movie was based on the Tom Perrotta novel of the same name. Perrotta co-wrote the script adaptation with director Todd Field, with the aim of reworking a lot of the plot during the process.

DiCaprio: The Wolf Of Wall Street (2013) - 8.2

Jordan Belfort wrestles the phone off Donnie since the FBI is listening to the conversations

Leonardo DiCaprio appreciated Jordan Belfort’s brutal honesty when he got a hold of his book The Wolf of Wall Street. Martin Scorsese directed the movie adaptation, which tells its complicated crime story with plenty of pitch-black humor.

DiCaprio played Belfort as a kind of modern-day Caligula. His daily life is a relentless barrage of drugs and sex workers. Some critics even accused the movie of glorifying Belfort’s lifestyle.

Winslet: The Reader (2008) - 7.6

Hanna Schmitz at her home looking down in The Reader

When Kate Winslet played a fictionalized satirical version of herself on the Ricky Gervais sitcom Extras, she joked that she was making a Holocaust movie because it’s a surefire way to win an Oscar.

Interestingly, a couple of years later, Winslet won her first Oscar for starring in The Reader, a movie about the Holocaust. She plays a woman on trial for being a Nazi guard during World War II.

DiCaprio: Django Unchained (2012) - 8.4

Calvin Candie holds a hammer at the dinner table in Django Unchained

Quentin Tarantino’s Django Unchained controversially tackled the challenging subject matter of American slavery through the lens of a wacky, blood-splattered spaghetti western.

RELATED: Django Unchained: Every Major Performance, Ranked Worst To Best

Leonardo DiCaprio’s Calvin Candie — a campy yet sadistic plantation owner — is one of the most reprehensible villains in the entire Tarantino oeuvre.

Winslet: Finding Neverland (2004) - 7.6

J.M. Barrie and Sylvia in a car in Finding Neverland

Before turning his sights to big-budget action movies with Quantum of Solace and World War Z, Marc Forster helmed Finding Neverland, starring an Oscar-nominated Johnny Depp as Peter Pan author J.M. Barrie.

The movie tells the story of the family that inspired the Darlings in Peter Pan. Kate Winslet co-stars as the boys’ mother, Sylvia Llewelyn Davies.

DiCaprio: The Departed (2006) - 8.5

Leonardo DiCaprio and Jack Nicholson in The Departed

Scorsese’s English-language remake of Infernal Affairs is a thrilling cat-and-mouse caper starring Leonardo DiCaprio as an undercover cop trying to figure out which of his fellow officers are on a local mob boss’ payroll.

Matt Damon plays one of those police moles, who’s trying to figure out who the undercover cop is, and Jack Nicholson plays the mob boss Frank Costello, who was heavily inspired by Whitey Bulger.

Winslet: The Life Of David Gale (2003) - 7.6

Kate Winslet's character looking serious, sitting in a domestic setting in The Life of David Gale

One of the most underrated thrillers of the 2000s, The Life of David Gale sees a staunch anti-capital punishment activist played by Kevin Spacey being convicted of murdering a fellow activist, played by Laura Linney, and being sentenced to execution on death row.

Kate Winslet plays the reporter trying to piece together the story, which seems inconsistent. The movie builds toward a shocking twist ending.

DiCaprio: Inception (2010) - 8.8

Leonardo DiCaprio holding a gun in Inception

After The Dark Knight grossed $1 billion, Christopher Nolan had the clout to get his original dream heist movie off the ground. Leonardo DiCaprio stars as Dom Cobb, who leads an operation to infiltrate a wealthy heir’s mind and plant an idea.

RELATED: Christopher Nolan: 5 Reasons The Dark Knight Is His Best Film (And 5 Why It's Inception)

One of the most fiercely original sci-fi movies in recent memory, Inception explores its dream levels much more effectively than Nolan’s later sci-fi opus Tenet explained its time inversion. From the revolving hallway fight to the super slow-motion fall from the bridge to the ambiguous final scene, it’s filled with unforgettable moments.

Winslet: Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind (2004) - 8.3

Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet lying in bed in Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind

Michel Gondry’s surreal masterpiece Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind is the quintessential breakup movie. Jim Carrey stars as a man who struggles to cope with the sadness when his girlfriend, played by Kate Winslet, breaks up with him.

He hires an experimental company to remove her from his memories but changes his mind when the procedure goes wrong and he’s trapped in his own mind as his recollection of the relationship fades away around him.

NEXT: Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind & 9 Other Essential Breakup Movies