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For over 50 years, Sir Ridley Scott has been a consistent feature of film, television, and even commercials; it's a difficult task to rank his movies, given how many iconic titles are under his belt. From Exodus to Alien, the director's career has spanned some of Hollywood's best — and worst — pictures in recent years.
As a working-class kid from South Shields, England, Scott and his brother, the late director Tony Scott, were influenced by classic sci-fi like 2001: A Space Odyssey and The Day the Earth Stood Still. Ridley eventually went on to make short movies and commercials as well as work on early serials of Doctor Who. Since making his feature debut, Scott has never stopped. He's dabbled in various styles and stories but remains best-known to the world for his science-fiction movies that helped establish a whole new era of the genre in cinema.
At the age of 82, Scott shows no signs of slowing down. He was working on the historical drama The Last Duel right when the coronavirus pandemic hit, he will make his television directing debut this year with HBO Max’s Raised By Wolves, and he’s also planning a biopic about the Gucci family starring Lady Gaga — and that doesn’t even include his extensive work as a producer in film and television! To celebrate his historic contribution to cinema, the following is a look at Scott’s filmography, ranking his work from worst to best.
25. Exodus: Gods And Kings
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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 end 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. There's no wonder in this tale of the might of God. Furthermore, the whitewashed casting doesn't do the movie any favors. Scott infamously claimed that if his "lead actor is Mohammad so-and-so from such-and-such...I'm just not going to get financed," a comment that further exposed Hollywood's racist blind spots. If the choice of Christian Bale as Moses helped to get the movie made then one would think that would have encouraged the actor to do more than phone it in. Scott has made far greater historical epics than this.
24. A Good Year
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Scott and Russell Crowe made for a formidable duo with Gladiator and 2006's A Good Year was to be their first reunion following their 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 was a limp effort on the part of everyone involved. It's not romantic — 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 this rich jerk who has a beautiful apartment, a vineyard, family who love him, and the attention of one of France’s most beautiful actresses. A Good Year was a poor fit for Scott and Crowe in every single way.
23. Robin Hood
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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 tales 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 gets the history 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 is 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 was deeply confusing. Still, it's at least better than the most recent Robin Hood movie.
22. 1492: Conquest Of Paradise
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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 itself is an overlong history lesson that cuts out most of the history in favor of lore and pretty scenery. It never stops being distracting that the Italian Columbus is played by a Frenchman, Gerard Depardieu, who is clearly struggling with the English dialogue. Most insultingly, the movie 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 rapist who giddily tortured the indigenous population.