The remarkable Robin Williams remains a comedy icon, and even though he is gone, the legacy of his film work lives on. Equally adept at outrageous comedy and sensitive drama, Williams was a one-of-a-kind performer, one whose unique style will likely never be equaled. He tragically died on August 11, 2014.
After success as a stand-up comic and television stardom via “Mork and Mindy,” Williams turned to film and achieved success far beyond what his TV success could have indicated. He won an Academy Award for “Good Will Hunting” (1997), one of four Oscar nominations he earned in his career (also including “Dead Poets Society,” “The Fisher King” and “Good Morning, Vietnam”). Williams also earned two Screen Actors Guild Awards (for 1996’s “The Birdcage” and “Good Will Hunting”) and received nine Golden Globe nominations, winning statues for 1987’s “Good Morning, Vietnam,” 1991’s “The Fisher King,” 1993’s “Aladdin” and 1994’s “Mrs. Doubtfire.”
Williams was a two-time Emmy winner, two-time Grammy winner and Tony nominee (the only portion of EGOT he did not achieve). He received the Cecil B. DeMille Award at the Golden Globes in 2005.
Take a tour in our photo gallery of his 20 greatest movie performances, ranked from worst to best.
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20. TOYS (1992)
Director: Barry Levinson. Writers: Valerie Curtin, Barry Levinson. Starring Robin Williams, Michael Gambon, Joan Cusack, Robin Wright, LL Cool J.
In Williams’ career, Barry Levinson’s “Toys” is an odd case, because, even with Oscar-winner Barry Levinson at the helm, the film was not a hit, critically or commercially. Still, Williams, as the son of a toy mogul who has been passed over to inherit the business, brings a sense of wonder and determination to see that this wrong is righted, a quest that immediately brings the audience over to Williams’ side.
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19. JUMANJI (1995)
Director: Joe Johnston. Writers: Greg Taylor, Jonathan Hensleigh, Jim Strain. Starring Robin Williams, Kirsten Dunst, David Alan Grier, Bonnie Hunt.
Although the Dwayne Johnson vehicle “Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle” (2017) proved to be the bigger hit, the original that Williams established paved the way. In Joe Johnston’s film, Williams plays Alan, who, as a child was sucked into the board game Jumanji and reappears 26 years later as an adult. Although not a success critically, Williams received good reviews, and anecdotally, the film has become a favorite among family audiences.
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18. HOOK (1991)
Director: Steven Spielberg. Writers: Jim V. Hart, Malia Scotch Marmo. Starring Dustin Hoffman, Robin Williams, Julia Roberts, Bob Hoskins, Maggie Smith.
Steven Spielberg’s fantasy-adventure film bringing the Peter Pan story into modern day received mixed reviews, but Williams’ performance as a grown-up Peter, now a workaholic lawyer, received favorable notices. His Peter has the story’s biggest arc, moving from a man who has put career ahead of his family, only to learn, after his children have been kidnapped by Captain Hook (Dustin Hoffman), that the best way to be a responsible adult is to never forget your lessons from childhood.
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17. HAPPY FEET (2006)
Director: George Miller. Writers: Warren Coleman, John Collee, George Miller, Judy Morris. Voices: Elijah Wood, Robin Williams, Brittany Murphy, Hugh Jackman, Nicole Kidman.
Williams is often at his best in animated features where he can let his vivid imagination run wild. In George Miller’s Oscar-winning “Happy Feet,” Williams voices a myriad of characters — Cletus, Ramón (an Adelie penguin) and Lovelace (a rockhopper penguin), as well as the film’s narrator. Williams returned for 2014’s “Happy Feet Two,” his final animated film before his death.
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16. NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM (2006)
Director: Shawn Levy. Writers: Thomas Lennon, Robert Ben Garant. Starring Ben Stiller, Carla Gugino, Dick Van Dyke, Robin Williams.
Williams had one of his biggest hits in Shawn Levy’s comic fantasy film about a museum night watchman (Ben Stiller), who learns that after dark, the exhibits come to life, including a wax figure of President Theodore Roosevelt (Williams). He appears to be having an absolute blast playing the Rough Rider, as Roosevelt aids the watchman in foiling a robbery plot at the museum.
Photo : Disney/Paramount/Kobal/REX/Shutterstock
15. POPEYE (1980)
Director: Robert Altman. Writer: Jules Feiffer. Starring Robin Williams, Shelley Duvall, Paul Dooley, Paul L. Smith.
Robert Altman’s stylized adaptation of the legendary Max Fleischer cartoon was widely derided when it first opened in 1980, but looking at it again with some distance, it’s actually a pretty remarkable achievement, creating a cartoon world in real locations. Williams, in his first big screen lead performance, absolutely has Popeye down (as does Shelley Duvall as Olive Oyl). “Popeye” may have been a box-office flop, but it’s a film that’s definitely worth reevaluating.
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14. WHAT DREAMS MAY COME (1998)
Director: Vincent Ward. Writer: Ronald Bass. Starring Robin Williams, Cuba Gooding Jr., Annabella Sciorra, Max von Sydow.
In Vincent Ward’s imaginative film, Williams portrays Chris Nielsen, a pediatrician who is killed in a car crash and who must negotiate the afterlife with the help of his late mentor Albert Lewis (Cuba Gooding Jr.). Chris is awed by the beauty of heaven but is dismayed when he learns that his grieving wife has committed suicide and may be going to hell. The Oscar-winning visuals of the film are so striking that they might have overwhelmed other actors, but Williams stands out by his sheer force of personality.
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13. ONE HOUR PHOTO (2002)
Writer/Director: Mark Romanek. Starring Robin Williams, Connie Nielsen, Michael Vartan, Gary Cole.
Of all of Williams’ dramatic roles, his Sy Parrish in Mark Romanek’s “One Hour Photo” is one of his most chilling. For most people today, the idea of taking your film to a one hour photo mart might seem dated, but Williams’ performance is not. As Sy, a photo developer who becomes obsessed with photos depicting the goings-on of a local family, Williams digs deep into the character, revealing a socially-inept man who is trying to reach out to others in absolutely the wrong way.
Photo : Melinda Sue Gordon/Universal/Kobal/REX/Shutterstock
12. PATCH ADAMS (1998)
Director: Tom Shadyac. Writer: Steve Oedekerk. Starring Robin Williams, Monica Potter, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Bob Gunton.
Another huge Williams hit, “Patch Adams” is a biographical comedy based on the life of Dr. Hunter “Patch” Adams, who was a patient in a psychiatric hospital but decided to dedicate his life to medicine by showing kindness to his patients, an approach that didn’t sit well with the powers that be. While firmly rooted as a biography, “Patch Adams” provided Williams with the room to utilize his many improv comedy skills. For his performance as Patch, Williams earned his ninth Golden Globe nomination.
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11. MOSCOW ON THE HUDSON (1984)
Director: Paul Mazursky. Writers: Paul Mazursky, Leon Capetanos. Starring Robin Williams, Maria Conchita Alonso, Cleavant Derricks.
One of Williams’ first films that offered him a chance at a character-actor turn, Paul Mazursky’s “Moscow on the Hudson” is the delightful story of Vladimir Ivanoff (Williams), a saxophonist with a Russian circus who decides to defect while on a tour of the United States. As with so many of Williams’ best characters, his Vladimir is conflicted, but aspirational and poignant. For his performance as Vladimir, Williams earned his first Golden Globe nomination.
Photo : Louis Goldman/Columbia/Kobal/REX/Shutterstock
10. AWAKENINGS (1990)
Director: Penny Marshall. Writer: Steven Zallian. Starring Robert DeNiro, Robin Williams, Julie Kavner, John Heard.
Williams earned his fourth Golden Globe nomination in this Penny Marshall-directed film from Oliver Sacks’ memoir. Dr. Malcolm Sayer (Williams) is a dedicated physician working with catatonic patients who discovers that the drug L-Dopa is able to awaken his patients from their comas which, in some cases, have lasted for decades. Williams’ work here is sensitive and detailed and is a far cry from the broader approach to doctors that he needed to take in “Patch Adams.”