Matt Damon has cemented himself as one of the defining actors of his generation, building a career that balances blockbuster stardom with acclaimed dramatic work.
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To celebrate the actor, Variety is ranking his 12 best film performances.
After getting his start with small roles in films such as “Mystic Pizza” (1988) and the prep-school drama “School Ties” (1992), Damon broke through as Will Hunting, a South Boston janitor at MIT with a prodigious gift for mathematics. Damon, who developed the story as a student at Harvard, co-wrote the screenplay with his childhood friend Ben Affleck, helping turn Gus Van Sant’s “Good Will Hunting” into a box office sensation that grossed more than $225 million worldwide against a reported $10 million budget. The film won two Academy Awards: supporting actor for Robin Williams and original screenplay for Damon and Affleck. Affleck, 25, became the youngest person ever to win the original screenplay Oscar, a record he still holds; Damon was 27.
Over nearly three decades, Damon has earned five Academy Award nominations across four categories. Along with his dual nominations for “Good Will Hunting” in actor and original screenplay, he received a supporting actor nod for “Invictus” (2009), a lead actor nomination for “The Martian” (2015) and a best picture nomination as a producer of “Manchester by the Sea” (2016), which won original screenplay for Kenneth Lonergan and actor for Casey Affleck. His producing resumé grew stronger when “Air” (2023), which he also starred in, emerged as one of that year’s most acclaimed films.
In recent years, Damon has continued to show remarkable versatility. He reunited with “The Martian” director Ridley Scott on “The Last Duel” (2021), which he co-wrote with Affleck and Nicole Holofcener, and deepened his partnership with Christopher Nolan, first in the best picture winner “Oppenheimer” (2023) and now in the ambitious adaptation of Homer’s “The Odyssey.” The Nolan collaboration, which began with “Interstellar” (2014), has become one of the most fruitful of Damon’s later career with roles in the best picture winner “Oppenheimer” (2024) and “The Odyssey” (2026).
Whether leading prestige dramas, anchoring blockbuster franchises such as the “Bourne” films or elevating ensembles with memorable supporting work, Damon has remained one of Hollywood’s most dependable leading men. Few actors have navigated commercial and critical success with such consistency while continuing to challenge themselves with new roles and collaborators.
This list focuses exclusively on Damon’s theatrical film performances. Otherwise, his Emmy-nominated portrayal of Scott Thorson in Steven Soderbergh’s HBO film “Behind the Candelabra” would almost certainly have made the cut.
Honorable mentions: “Interstellar” (2014), “Margaret” (2011), “Ocean’s Eleven” (2001), and of course, “Thor: Ragnarok” (2017)
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‘Invictus’ (2009)
The scene that proves it: “I think he wants us to win the World Cup.”
Clint Eastwood’s biopic about Nelson Mandela (played by Morgan Freeman) may not have aged gracefully, but Damon’s command of a South African accent and his ability to elevate the material still stand out. As Springboks captain François Pienaar, he earned a supporting actor nomination alongside Freeman in lead. Whether both nods were warranted depends on your read of that year’s field, but Damon is never the problem with the movie.
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‘Oppenheimer’ (2024)
The scene that proves it: “Are we saying there’s a chance that when we push that button, we destroy the world?”
As the tough general in Christopher Nolan’s best picture winner, Damon delivers a memorable supporting turn that is built on exasperation and grudging respect. He commands with a sense of urgency, and still manages to stand out among a huge cast ensemble that netted them all the top prize at Screen Actors Guild Awards. Damon was an integral part to that success, despite never catching on with awards groups.
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‘Saving Private Ryan’ (1998)
The scene that proves it: “Tell her when you found me, I was here, and I was with the only brothers I have left.”
A sprawling epic that follows Tom Hanks and his squad as they search for a single surviving paratrooper in World War II, it is, and always will be, one of the best films of the 1990s. Damon’s reveal in the closing stretch, as Ryan learns the truth about his brothers and absorbs the “earn this” charge from Hanks, bleeds beautifully into the older version of the character played by Harrison Young. It is another example of Damon’s gift for connecting with cinephiles and casual moviegoers alike.
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‘The Martian’ (2015)
The scene that proves it: “Creating water.”
Landing an Oscar nomination for lead actor despite missing the SAG Awards field, Damon won the Golden Globe for best actor in a comedy or musical, a curious category for what is essentially a survival drama from Ridley Scott. His stranded astronaut stretches the actor well past his expected register, drawing strong reviews and box office. Watney’s improvised effort to make water on a dead planet has never looked so cool.
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‘The Bourne Ultimatum’ (2007)
The scene that proves it: “If you were in your office right now we’d be having this conversation face to face.”
Damon’s evolution into an action star can be hit or miss, but the first three Jason Bourne films have him operating on all cylinders. His peak arrives in this third entry, which won three Academy Awards, for film editing, sound mixing and sound editing. It lets him do everything audiences always suspected he could, helping cement Bourne as one of the defining action heroes of the 2000s.
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‘Dogma’ (1999)
The scene that proves it: “Opening scene.”
Hilarious and endlessly fun, Damon’s Loki, a fallen angel scheming alongside Ben Affleck’s Bartleby to sneak back into heaven, is not just funny but at times genuinely remarkable, never more so than in the opening set-piece where he talks a nun out of her faith. It is hardly award-worthy work, but Kevin Smith’s provocation is a must-see, and it remains one of the most purely enjoyable showcases of the Damon-Affleck chemistry.
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‘True Grit’ (2010)
The scene that proves it: “Shooting contest.”
A performance that has grown in estimation since its release, Damon’s scene-stealing work as Texas Ranger LaBoeuf opposite Jeff Bridges in the Coen brothers’ remake lands some of the film’s biggest laughs while playing beautifully off Oscar nominee Hailee Steinfeld. Nominated for 10 Academy Awards, it is well worth a revisit.
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‘The Departed’ (2006)
The scene that proves it: “Just kill me.”
Sleazy and cunning as Colin Sullivan, the crooked cop feeding secrets to the mob, Damon makes the audience despise every inch of him in Martin Scorsese’s best picture winner. The gut-punch of the elevator climax is heightened by his work, by William Monahan’s Oscar-winning screenplay and by sensational performances from Leonardo DiCaprio, Mark Wahlberg and Vera Farmiga.
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‘Stillwater’ (2021)
The scene that proves it: “It looks different.”
A divisive film for a divided America, “Stillwater” offers a thoughtful look into flyover country as Bill Baker (Damon) fights to prove the innocence of his imprisoned daughter, played by Oscar nominee Abigail Breslin. His chemistry with French co-star Camille Cottin deepens the work. The awards traction never came, but in hindsight it stands as one of the more underrated turns of Damon’s career.
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‘The Odyssey’ (2026)
The scene that proves it: Reuniting with the dog
Nolan hands Damon his most demanding canvas yet in the sword-and-sandal epic “The Odyssey,” casting him as the mtyhological king clawing his way home. The veteran decides to play Odysseus as a haunted, plain-spoken warrior weighed down by everything his actions have cost. Many critics have greeted the performance as a career high. Shot entirely on IMAX 70mm and welcomed as one of the best-reviewed films of Nolan’s career, it looks poised to put Damon back in the Oscar conversation for the first time in a decade.
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‘The Talented Mr. Ripley’ (1999)
The scene that proves it: “Fake somebody, then a real nobody.”
This has been creeping up the ranking of Damon’s finest efforts for years, and in time it may come to be regarded as his best, especially given that the Academy ignored the master-class entirely. Playing off nominee Jude Law, Gwyneth Paltrow, Cate Blanchett and the late Philip Seymour Hoffman, in a staredown for the ages, Damon owns every inch of Anthony Minghella’s cunning, murderous identity thief.
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‘Good Will Hunting’ (1997)
The scene that proves it: “It’s not your fault.“
The boy genius from Southie with a broken childhood is the role that made audiences fall in love with Damon. Earning an Oscar nomination for lead actor, he is surrounded by an impeccable ensemble, including Robin Williams in his Oscar-winning turn, nominee Minnie Driver and Damon’s fellow screenplay winner Ben Affleck. It still stands as his finest acting moment to date.