Ridley Scott has been a consistent fixture in the movie industry since 1977, but what does his filmography look like when ranked from worst to best? From taut historical dramas such as The Last Duel to a new Alien franchise entry, Ridley Scott's movies have offered up some of Hollywood's best pieces of entertainment in recent years. Indeed, Scott's latest release in the form of House of Gucci drew a mixed critical reception, with the film's standout character performances existing in contrast to a poorly paced script.

Hailing from the predominantly working-class area of South Shields, England, Scott and his brother, the late director Tony Scott, were influenced by sci-fi classics such as 2001: A Space Odyssey and The Day the Earth Stood Still. Ridley Scott began his own career making short movies and commercials before finding work with the early serials of Doctor Who in the 1960s. Since making his feature debut, Scott has never stopped; dabbling in various styles and stories, but he remains best-known to the world for his science-fiction entries in the late 1970s and early 1980s that helped establish a whole new era of the genre in cinema at the time.

Related: Why Ridley Scott is Sci-Fi's Most Important Director

At 82, Scott shows no signs of slowing down, with the veteran director still helming several ongoing projects. In addition to his latest film, House of Gucci, Scott is currently working on the retitled Napoleon (formerly pitched as Kitbag) alongside long-time ally Joaquin Phoenix, who will play the titular French military leader in another historical epic. The veteran director also plans to revisit one of his most critically acclaimed canons to date, with talk of a Gladiator 2 project gaining genuine traction. Here's every Ridley Scott movie ranked from worst to best, including the true story-inspired House of Gucci.

27. Exodus: Gods and Kings

Moses leads an army in Exodus: Gods and Kings

Everything about 2014's Exodus: Gods and Kings feels so staggeringly misguided, although it's not hard to see why Scott would have been drawn to the idea of making the sort of Biblical epics that Hollywood used to produce. The result is disappointingly flat and seriously lacking in the grandeur and intensity that source material like the story of Moses desperately needs. Many modern-day blockbusters have been criticized for trying to make things too grim or edgy, and Exodus suffers a similar fate. If the casting choice of Christian Bale as Moses helped to get the movie made, this fact was clearly lost on Bale, who appears bored with both the script and his character's motivations for the majority of Exodus, ensuring this ranks as the worst of Ridley Scott's historical epics.

26. A Good Year

A Good Year

Scott and Thor 4's Russell Crowe made for a formidable duo with Gladiator, and 2006's A Good Year marked their first reunion following the pair's initial Oscar-winning success. Alas, this romantic comedy about an arrogant yuppie who finds love and a sense of purpose at his family's vineyard estate in Provence translates as a limp cinematic effort. Crowe and Marion Cotillard's chemistry reaches negative levels of charm — it's not funny, and the entire affair feels limp and derivative of a dozen other stories about rich people finding themselves in beautiful locations. There's no real reason to sympathize with Crowe's whinging character who owns a beautiful apartment, a vineyard, a family who love him, and the attention of one of France’s most beautiful actresses. As a result, A Good Year was a poor fit for director Ridley Scott and Crowe in every single way, with its critical reception cementing this consensus in 2006.

25. Robin Hood

Robin Hood in the middle of a battle

While A Good Year never made any sense as a Ridley Scott project with Russell Crowe in the lead, a big-budget reimagining of the Robin Hood legend seemed like a logical step for the pair to take. Audiences hoped that this movie, a more historically rooted take on a highly familiar story, would bring Scott back to his Gladiator heights. Instead, Robin Hood is a dishearteningly joyless slog that takes itself far too seriously. It simply gets the historical aspects of its source material wrong, then doesn't even bother to have fun with the Hood lore itself. There's a deliberate lightness and sense of mischief to the Robin Hood stories that are completely absent in Scott's film, but there's also no real reason for audiences to invest in the portentous drama that has taken its place. The cast is strong, at least, although Crowe's accent choice for the savior of Locksley is certainly a strange one.

Related: Robin Hood Was The 2010s Dumbest Shared Movie Universe Attempt

24. 1492: Conquest of Paradise

Ridley Scott 1492: Quest for Paradise

Paramount had grand plans for Scott's 1492: Conquest of Paradise, a fictionalized dramatization of Christopher Columbus's travels to the New World. They even ensured that it would be released in time to celebrate the 500th anniversary of Columbus's voyage. Unfortunately, the film is an overlong history lesson that cuts out most of the history in favor of lore and pretty scenery. The Italian Columbus is played by a Frenchman, Gerard Depardieu, who is clearly struggling with the English dialogue, making every Columbus scene a slog that undermines Conquest of Paradise's otherwise gorgeous exposition. Gallingly, the movie also treats Columbus himself as a saint-like figure contrasted against the terror of another explorer, Adrián de Moxica. It’s an offensive whitewash of history that reduces Columbus to an almost cutesy hero rather than a violent genocidal colonizer who tortured the indigenous population — ensuring Conquest of Paradise leaves a very sour taste by its conclusion due to a severe lack of historical accuracy.

23. G.I. Jane

G.I. Jane

Demi Moore was infamously lambasted for her performance in G.I. Jane, in which she plays a Naval officer who becomes the first woman to undergo training in the U.S. Navy Special Warfare Group. At the time, she was an easy tabloid target, and in hindsight, her performance here is exciting, balancing bombast with fragility and the weight of smothering expectations. The real problems, however, lie with the rest of the movie. Many of the film's moments pack a real punch, especially in showing the sheer brutality of the training Moore's character is put through. While its intentions are noble when it comes to tackling issues of misogyny, it's all too ham-fisted to make the impact it wants to. This story needed a more layered approach than G.I. Jane was willing to give in 1997.

22. The Counselor

The Counselor Car - Awkward Sex Scenes

There is no zanier movie in Scott’s filmography than the movie The Counselor, a picture that arrived amid much hype in 2013. This excitement was justified at the time, especially considering Ridley Scott, Pulitzer Prize-winning author Cormac McCarthy, and a cast of Oscar winners and nominees that included Javier Bardem, Michael Fassbender, Brad Pitt, and Penelope Cruz, were all assigned to the project. Ultimately,  this wordy and tough-to-describe crime thriller is nigh incomprehensible. McCarthy's dialogue doesn't work as well on-screen, even when it's being delivered by some of this generation's finest talents. There's a fascinating grimness and ugliness to the movie that may prove divisive to some, but Scott doesn't seem to have a handle on any of it. The glorious bright spot of The Counselor is a giddily off-the-hinge performance from the now-retired Cameron Diaz, whose car scene opposite Javier Bardem was bafflingly bizarre.

21. Legend

Tim Curry as the Darkness in Legend

After helping to redefine sci-fi with Blade Runner, Scott decided that he wanted to do the same with fantasy, so he joined forces with William Hjortsberg for the lavish 1985 movie Legend. Inspired by the Brothers Grimm, early Disney animation, and the works of Jean Cocteau, Legend is certainly a feast for the eyes at every turn that nails the aesthetic of classic fairy tales. This being said, the story itself is paper-thin and feels extremely gaudy in hindsight even by the 1980s' standards.

Related: Every Matt Reeves Movie Ranked From Worst To Best

A young Tom Cruise, years before he would become the biggest star on the planet, is more petulant than charming, and he doesn't hold a candle to the work done by Home Alone 2's Tim Curry as the Lord of Darkness, complete with agonizingly detailed devil-style make-up that took five and a half hours to apply every day. As a result, Legend is best viewed through a dreamlike haze, encouraging its audiences to forget narrative cohesion in favor of its admittedly stunning exposition.

20. Black Rain

Michael Douglas in Black Rain

Scott has shown his prowess in all manner of genres and styles, and with Black Rain he shows off his skills in the cop thriller world. The '80s were overloaded with stories like this — the police officer who doesn't play by the rules, the job that goes wrong, the journey into the depths of the criminal underworld — and Black Rain isn't exactly the best of them. It is, however, wildly stylish. Still, that’s not enough to uplift a movie saddled with genre clichés and a questionable depiction of the Yakuza. Black Rain made money at the box office, mostly because its star Michael Douglas was commercial gold at the time, but Black Rain remains unspectacular. It feels like a film any journeyman studio director could have made, which isn’t good news for Scott.

19. Body of Lies

Body of Lies is one of those movies that's so jam-packed with skill, ideas, and obvious potential that you can't help but be confused as to how that enviable combination resulted in something so derivative. Based on a novel by David Ignatius, this action-drama about the CIA's attempt to capture an Islamic terrorist includes a slew of acting talent — Leonardo DiCaprio, Russell Crowe, and Moon Knight's Oscar Isaac, to name but three — then saddles them with stock thriller roles that could be found in any number of similar movies. The film itself is slick enough and joins all the dots — but to what end? It’s fine but ultimately unnecessary unless you’re a Ridley Scott completionist.

18. Someone To Watch Over Me

someone to watch over me ridley Scott

Between Blade Runner and Thelma and Louise, Scott found himself in a bit of a rut during the 1980s, with a string of flops that left critics wondering if the director could produce meaningful work outside of sci-fi. He followed up the fantasy of Legend with the slick noir-inspired crime thriller Someone To Watch Over Me, starring Sniper's Tom Berenger as an NYPD detective who becomes embroiled in an illicit affair while investigating a mob murder. It’s certainly a stylish film but devoid of fun or thrills, despite the best efforts of the cast and a more frenzied third act.

Related: Every Peter Jackson Movie Ranked From Worst To Best

17. Hannibal

Hannibal Lecter staring into the camera

Scott took on the unenviable task of directing the follow-up to The Silence of the Lambs, Jonathan Demme’s multi-Oscar-winning thriller that made household names of Hannibal Lecter and Clarice Starling. The Thomas Harris book was deeply divisive with fans and took some bizarre turns that Scott and screenwriter Steven Zaillian (with contributions by David Mamet) mercifully decided to avoid. A lot of Hannibal is therefore fascinating, especially the deeply atmospheric scenes set in Venice, which were also the best part of Harris' second book.

Julianne Moore is an excellent actress, but it’s hard not to feel the absence of Jodie Foster in the beloved role of Clarice. A big problem with Hannibal is less the movie itself than the reality that sheer cultural overload and endless parodies had long since rendered Anthony Hopkins’s cannibal psychiatrist more funny than scary, and despite a truly repulsive turn by Gary Oldman as the main villain, Hannibal simply cannot conjure up the true tension of The Silence of the Lambs.

16. House Of Gucci

Lady Gaga in House of Gucci

Ridley Scott's latest offering, House of Gucci, veers between salacious drama and dour boardroom sequences as it depicts the internal power struggles the fashion behemoth Gucci faced in 1978. This is, in essence, House of Gucci's main issue, with the film unable to settle on a consistent tone as it shows both the real scandals Gucci faced coupled with some outrageous creative liberties taken when portraying members of the Gucci board. This is not to say House of Gucci is not thoroughly enjoyable, however, with Lady Gaga's performance as Patrizia Reggiani a career-best for the twelve-time Grammy-award winner to date.

15. Kingdom of Heaven

Kingdom of Heaven

When discussing Kingdom of Heaven, it is important to remember that the version that made its way to theaters in 2005 is by far the inferior cut of the movie. Hoping to replicate the financial and critical success of Gladiator, 20th Century Fox panicked at the lukewarm preview screenings for Scott's crusading epic and opted to cut 45 minutes from the runtime in an effort to make Kingdom of Heaven a more digestible, single-sitting offering. Unfortunately, the result was a deeply flawed historical drama with obvious holes throughout.

Related: Every Joel Schumacher Movie Ranked From Worst to Best

Fresh off of the success of The Lord of the Rings: Return of the King, Orlando Bloom was the hottest star on the planet at the time, and casting him may have been a smart business choice, but artistically it was a mistake — he was nowhere near ready to handle a role of this heft or complexity. He's acted off the screen by co-stars like Eva Green, Edward Norton, and Jeremy Irons. The theatrical cut further flattens out some of the nuances of this tangled period in history, making the film weaker than it should have been and consigning Kingdom of Heaven to a grade of middling historical drama at best.

14. Prometheus

Elizabeth looks on in a space suit from Prometheus

Scott’s return to the franchise he helped to launch was a major deal for Alien franchise fans, so Prometheus certainly had weighty expectations resting upon its shoulders. Did it succeed in passing them? Not exactly, but the result is still a fascinating, if evidently flawed, sci-fi horror prequel. Scott has always had a keen eye for casting, and Prometheus benefits from including figures like Noomi Rapace, Charlize Theron, Idris Elba, and a scene-stealing Michael Fassbender. Its biggest weakness lies in overwhelming the story with the exposition that the original never needed to provide a backstory that has intriguing moments but is less satisfying as a whole than its individual parts. It does, however, benefit from astonishing production design and perhaps the most terrifying incubation scene in all of sci-fi cinema to date.

13. Alien: Covenant

Scott's Alien: Covenant shares many of the weaknesses of Prometheus, but this sequel is buoyed by its sheer bleakness. The echoes of Frankenstein ring heavily throughout what may be the darkest entry in the Alien series as it delves fully into the recesses of humanity's arrogance. More unsettling than the aliens themselves is Michael Fassbender, who plays not one but two identical androids who represent the ultimate questions of artificial intelligence and free will. Watching Fassbender flirt with himself — and having surprisingly excellent chemistry as a result — is a strange high-wire act of intrigue and morbidity, and Fassbender’s dual performances fully display his talents as a leading man. The Alien franchise has never been big on happy endings, but the pure nihilism of Alien: Covenant as a sequel, and the idea that humanity’s destruction by its own hand may be necessary for the evolution of the universe as a whole, is sharply radical for a 2010s blockbuster.

12. White Squall

White Squall

Based on the 1962 book The Last Voyage of the Albatross by Charles Gieg Jr. and Felix Sutton, White Squall is a coming-of-age drama with a disaster-film edge. Jeff Bridges plays a captain in charge of a sailing trip with a group of young boys that goes horribly wrong when a freak storm hits their vessel. All of the movie's best scenes are set on the ship, but unfortunately, there's just not enough of them - but what Scott offers viewers is exuberant nonetheless. Only the Brave's Jeff Bridges is particularly riveting and has strong paternal energy with his young cast, including Ryan Phillipe and Scott Wolf. It’s just a shame that the rest of the movie isn’t as lively or forceful as it is during the ship scenes.

Related: Every Spike Lee Movie Ranked From Worst to Best

11. All The Money in the World

All The Money In The World

It’s hard to think about 2017’s All the Money in the World as just a movie, given the drama surrounding its post-production and the dramatic reshoots the film underwent to recast one of the main actors entirely. As a sheer feat of cinematic commitment, it’s incredibly impressive that Scott removed Kevin Spacey from the narrative and replaced him with Star Trek's Christopher Plummer in only eight days of shooting, a month before the film's premiere (Plummer went on to receive an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor).

Ultimately, the final product is a sharp, dextrous thriller centered on a group of people who would be criticized for being ridiculous if they weren’t all real. There's pitch-black humor in this dark story of a kidnapped young man and his miserly grandfather who refuses to pay the demanded $17 million ransom. All the Money in the World understands how money corrupts and the ludicrous ways it can poison even the simplest ideas or problems. While Plummer got all the headlines for his last-minute performance here, the real star of the show is Michelle Williams, who conveys the agony and frustration of being yet another pawn in a rich man’s world with galling conviction.

10. Matchstick Men

Matchstick Men, Nicholas Cage, Alison Lohman

Method-actor Nicolas Cage may dominate pop culture perceptions as king of the B-Movie nowadays, but it's always a delight to see a film where audiences are reminded of just how brilliantly engaging a performer he can be when given the right material. 2003's Matchstick Men sees Cage play a con man who begins to question his career after a series of panic attacks lead to the discovery that he has a teenage daughter. The laughs are more general than riotous here, and it's about as sentimental as Scott ever gets, but the central character work of Cage, a scene-stealing Sam Rockwell, and the criminally underrated Alison Lohman are wholly worth the ride. Scott’s filmography is jam-packed with titles you may not have seen, but it’s Matchstick Men that remains his most overlooked to date.

9. The Last Duel

Matt Damon screaming in The Last Duel

While a convoluted piece of cinema at times, Ridley Scott's The Last Duel remains as lavish a medieval drama as audiences are likely to find in contemporary culture. The Last Duel is undoubtedly a thought-provoking and stunningly acted tale, with a stellar cast of Matt Damon, Jodie Comer, and Adam Driver sparkling within their respective honor-bound roles. Upon its release in 2021, critics likened The Last Duel in parts to the seminal Akira Kurosawa film Rashomon, and while Scott's tale does not quite live up consistently to this comparison due to the weight of its own self-appointed grandeur, The Last Duel is still a towering spectacle from a master of historical drama.

Related: The Last Duel’s Box Office Failure Proves Streaming Isn’t The Real Villain

8. American Gangster

Frank Lucas points a gun at a civilian in the middle of the street in American Gangster

Scott's American Gangster is a drama about the criminal career of drug trafficker Frank Lucas, who smuggled heroin into the country on planes returning from the war in Vietnam, was criticized extensively upon release for seemingly romanticizing the plight of its protagonist and painting him as the true hero of the tale. Yet despite undeniably focussing on Lucas' burgeoning empire and self-confidence, American Gangster is a much savvier offering than many critics gave it credit for at the time. The movie is a sly subversion of the tale of the hard-working entrepreneur who makes up the backbone of the so-called American Dream. The movie shows Lucas as a near-mythic character at times because that's how history has begun to view such figures. Potential MCU incumbent Denzel Washington is in fine form here, but never at the expense of the ego and nihilism that permeates Lucas's ambition, making American Gangster a must-see crime epic from Ridley Scott.

7. Gladiator

Ridley Scott Gladiator

It’s become commonplace nowadays to downplay Gladiator’s technical skill and sheer entertainment value or to write off its Best Picture Oscar win as one of the Academy’s many mistakes. This cynicism does nothing to quash the fact that 2000’s Gladiator is an absolute blast of a movie and perhaps Scott’s most wholeheartedly enjoyable piece of work. It’s a classic homage to the swords and sandals epics of old Hollywood, akin to Ben Hur (remade in 2016) and Spartacus, with Scott demonstrating a keen eye for historical detail and striking action set-pieces. It’s a simply-drawn tale of good versus evil and honor through bloodshed, but not a crudely told one. Crowe is excellent in the lead, but the absolute scene-stealer of the ensemble is Joaquin Phoenix as the sniveling emperor who manages to be deeply menacing even though he has the patience and emotional tenacity of a toddler (Phoenix’s turn here would go on to be highly influential in pop culture, with Joffrey from Game of Thrones being one notable example of a villain inspired by Gladiator).

6. Black Hawk Down

Best Military Movies Black Hawk Down

Scott’s war drama from 2001 may not be the most seamless movie in his filmography to sit through, but it’s unbeatable in terms of pure immersion. Featuring a cast of dozens of recognizable faces — including Josh Hartnett, Ewan McGregor, Hugh Dancy, Venom's Tom Hardy, Jason Isaacs, Eric Bana, and Orlando Bloom — Black Hawk Down details in agonizing specificity the U.S. military's disastrous 1993 raid in Mogadishu, Somalia. This depiction of modern warfare is one tangled in socio-political complexities that manages to avoid so many of the genre’s more trite or sentimental clichés. What Black Hawk Down drives home is the reality that, regardless of how much the tools or tactics change over the decades, war remains a ghastly, harrowing affair at any level.

5. The Martian

The Martian Matt Damon farming potato

Based on the gripping novel by Andy Weir, The Martian was seen as something of a minor comeback for Scott, thanks to its major critical and commercial success, as well as the seven Oscar nominations it received (it also won the Golden Globe for Best Comedy/Musical, a decision that rightly seemed to baffle Scott). While one could argue over the semantics of this being a comeback for a director who has never really gone away, it is fair to say that The Martian is a towering success of a movie. Combining a classic survival-and-rescue tale with a wider exploration of science's limits, the movie manages to be great fun without ever losing sight of its emotional center or the sheer terror of its core concept. This may be Matt Damon’s best performance as well as Scott’s funniest film (although its labeling by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association as a comedy is still somewhat suspect). It’s a much simpler tale than Blade Runner and a flashier one than Alien, but for everyone who wondered if Scott could still pull off that classic sci-fi movie magic, The Martian was all the proof they needed.

Related: Every Kenneth Branagh Movie Ranked From Worst To Best

4. The Duellists

The Duelists

When Ridley Scott made his feature directorial in 1977 with the historical drama The Duellists, he was best known for making commercials, including one advert for bread that was later voted the UK's favorite commercial in a 2006 poll. He had a burgeoning talent for bringing the cinematic to the small screen in short narrative bursts, but The Duellists represented an opportunity to expand that into a full feature. The result was a gorgeous story of warring Napoleonic officers that earned Scott critical praise and comparisons to legendary movie director Stanley Kubrick. There’s a meticulous quality to The Duellists, especially in its production design and cinematography, that betrays the reality of this being Scott’s first-ever movie. Later on, Scott would be less concerned with fidelity to history, but The Duellists is remarkably authentic in every single detail (except for the American accents of Keith Carradine and Harvey Keitel). Forget being one of Scott’s best movies — this may be one of the best directorial debuts ever made.

3. Thelma and Louise

Thelma and Louise smiling while taking a selfie with a polaroid camera

No film in Scott’s filmography matches the pure emotional punch that Thelma and Louise packs. Scott seemed like a curious choice for the movie at the time — a gruff English director best-known for sci-fi films who had had several flops in a row by the end of the ‘80s — yet he feels right at home in this great modern-day Western centered on two best friends who try to outrun not just the law, but also the crushing agony of patriarchy. Turning the typically male-driven buddy comedy subgenre on its head, Thelma and Louise is uplifted by its vibrant portrayal of a loving, prickly, and deeply relatable friendship. It’s a film that embraces its Americana imagery while exposing deep-rooted social misogyny in a climax that goes down as one of the true tear-jerkers of modern American cinema.

2. Blade Runner

Rick Deckard pointing a gun in Blade Runner

Regardless of which cut you watch – and there are plenty of arguments in favor or against every single version available – Blade Runner’s majesty remains undefeated. Perhaps Scott’s most impeccably composed movie, as well as his most intricately designed, this adaptation of Philip K. Dick’s Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep was a critical and box office disappointment upon release in 1982. Shockingly, it took a few years before audiences caught up to its genius and rightly labeled it as one of the best sci-fi films ever made as more and more viewers delved into the movie's nuanced themes. Blade Runner is a story about the complexities of emotion, whether organic or programmed, and the turmoil created by those divides. Scott would prefer audiences watch The Final Cut – the only one he had any real control over – but regardless of which version is on offer, Blade Runner endures as one of the all-time movie greats.

1. Alien

Sigourney Weaver as Ripley in a space suit in Alien

It’s staggering to remember that Alien was only Ridley Scott’s second feature movie as a director because this now-iconic sci-fi horror, one of the most influential films of its kind, is remarkably self-assured from the get-go. Entire industries have been built in the entertainment world around thinly-veiled rip-offs of this movie, but it’s the original that still reigns supreme. Over 40 years later, Alien is still a terrifying tale of isolation and facing the horrifying threat of the unknown. Its genius lies in how lived-in it feels, from the easy-going relationships between the main characters to the wear and tear of their ship.

Throughout the many Alien sequels, both made and canceled, writers and directors have made the mistake of trying to overcomplicate what should be a simple hook. Part of Alien’s primal fear lies in how helpless it makes the humans who must face up against a monstrous evil whose only agenda is to survive. These are blue-collar workers, not scientists or military figures, and their ordinariness is what lingers. The full reveal of the alien itself remains one of horror and sci-fi cinema’s truly iconic moments, and Ridley Scott’s been chasing that high ever since.

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