The 32 greatest Ben Affleck movies
Dunkin's number one customer has playeꦕd bank robbers,🦩 Batman, and Nike CEOs! So here are the greatest Ben Affleck movies of all time

What are the greatest Ben Affleck movies? It's a tough question to answer. Not since Ted Williams of the Red Sox has there been a man as synonymous with Bos🏅ton as Ben Affleck. And there's a reason for that status: Ben Affleck has been in some of the best (and, to be blunt, the worst) films ever made. But there are at least 32 movies starring the award-winning actor that are well worth your time.
Born in California but raised in Massachusetts, Ben Affleck – who inherited his acting chops from his estranged father🧸, a former theater actor – began his own career in local commercials at the age of seven. Though his mother, a teacher, hoped her sons (both Ben and Casey Affleck, also a major actor)🐼 would pursue other careers, acting was simply in the family blood. In high school, Affleck grew closer with a childhood friend, Matt Damon; the two eventually created a joint bank account that would pay for their trips to New York for auditions.
While his acting career can be traced back to PBS children's specials, Affleck's time in Hollywood saw him zig-zag as uncredited extras (such as in 1992's Buffy the Vampire Slayer) and minor roles (such as his unnameඣd bully in 1993's Dazed and Confused) before eventually finding his stride. After 1997's Good Will Hunting, Affleck (along with best buddy Matt Damon) was never the same.So, grab yourself a nice tall Dunkin Donuts iced coffee and settle in: here are 32 of the greatest Ben Affleck movies of all time.
32. Bounce
Year: 2000
Director: Don Roos
Ben Affleck transforms from playboy to repentant would-be lover in Don Roos' romantic drama Bounce. Affleck stars as an advertising executive who switches seats with a family man (Tony Goldwyn) only for the plane to crash in a huge disaster. After connecting with the man's widow (Gwyneth Paltrow), his chance to make amends becomes an unexpected shot at love. While its understated tone ꦏmight come off as too sleepy for some, Bounce boasts solid performances by both Affleck and Paltrow.
31. Hypnotic
Year: 2023
Director: Robert Rodriguez
Ben Affleck and director Robert Rodriguez team up in this mind-bending action thriller. In Hypnotic, Ben Affleck plays a detective who discovers that his missing daughter and some high-profile bank robberies might be connected somehow, leading him on a chase aided by a fortune teller (Alice Braga). Though Hypnotic isn't as refined as anything from its obvious inspirations of Christopher Nolan and David Fincher's works, it's pure popcorn entertainment that doesn't demand too 𝓡much brain power.
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30. Boiler Room
Year: 2000
Director: Ben Younger
Ben Affleck's total screen time in Ben Younger's Boiler Room is short, but it's by far one of his most memorable moments. In this white-collar crime drama, a group of ambitious and hyper-aggressive twenty-somethings try to make their millions at a cutthroat Long Island brokerage firm. Ben Affleck has a minor role as established broker Jim Young, whose five-minute monologue about getting what'𓄧s yours can in🍃spire anyone to hustle the day away. In the spirit of Glengarry Glen Ross and future works like The Wolf of Wall Street and HBO's Industry, Boiler Room cranks up the heat.
29. Forces of Nature
Year: 1999
Director: Bronwen Hughes
A meet-cute between Ben Affleck and Sandra Bullock is something of an act of God𓃲. In Bronwen Hughes' surprisingly dreamlike rom-com, Affleck plays a copywriter on his way from New York to Georgia for his wedding when his plane is 🧸grounded in a freak occurrence. With time running out, Affleck's character – named Ben, funny enough – joins up with a free-spirited drifter (Bullock) to get to his wedding on time. Together, they tempt fate and Ben's commitment while learning from each other over many, many miles.
28. Mallrats
Year: 1996
Director: Kevin Smith
Wildly immature sexual politics aside, Kevin Smith's Mallrats is a '90s slacker c🦂ult classic that casts an ember on the cultural influence shopping malls had on American youths. In Smith's sophomore movie following his seminal hit Clerks, two best friends, T.S. (Jeremy London) and Brodie (Jason Lee), spend the day causing chaos at their local shopping mall after their girlfriends dump them. Ben Affleck, dressed like a wannabe Calvin Klein model, plays slimy Shannon Hamilton, who has already scooped up T.S.' girlfriend Rene (Shannen Doherty).
27. Paycheck
Year: 2003
Director: John Woo
Paycheck was panned by critics during its release in 2003, dismissed as another lunkheaded action flick by John Woo where guns go bang and explosions go boom. And sure, that♊ is Paycheck in essence.𝔉 But it has some merit, too, being one of the only sci-fi movies made by action auteur John Woo. Ben Affleck reinforces his action lead chops as a top-rate engineer who undergoes regular memory wipes but must now race against time to piece together what he's forgotten. Paycheck is a Hitchcock imitator with some of Woo's heroic bloodshed flair; a middling movie is a small price to pay to see something so unusual.
26. Jersey Girl
Year: 2004
Director: Kevin Smith
Departing from his "View Askewniverse" continuity and sensibilities, director Kevin Smith reveals his skill at conventional studio romantic comedies with the 2004 movie Jersey Girl. Ben Affleck stars as a widowed single father and former celebrity publicist who raises his daughter in his New Jersey hometown. After meeting a pretty grad student (Liv Tyler), Affleck's character finally gets a new lease on life. Although Jersey Girl bombed hard at the box office, it is lovely stuff from Affleck and Sm𝓀ith, who are not usually so wholesome.
25. Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back
Year: 2001
Director: Kevin Smith
It may only be a supporting role, but Ben Affleck has never been more chill than in his return as Holden (fℱrom Chasing Amy) in Kevin Smith's laugh-out-loud road trip flick Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back. In this Avengers-like sequel to Smith's shared universe of New Jersey comedies, the titular Jay (Jason Mewes) and Silent Bob (Smith) set out to Hollywood to get royalties for a major movie based on their comic book likenesses. Affleck plays both a⛦n exhausted Holden and a version of himself, whose work on the hypothetical film "Good Will Hunting 2: Hunting Season" is interrupted by some loud extras. No one but Jay has seen Phantoms, but apparently, Affleck was the bomb in it.
24. Extract
Year: 2009
Director: Mike Judge
Mike Judge's Extract may not have the same footprint as the creator's other memorable works like Beavis and Butt-Head, Office Space, or Idiocracy, but this laid-back workplace comedy has some juice. In the footsteps of his own cult comedy Office Space, Judge returns to roasting workspaces, this time at a flavor factory. Jason Bateman plays factory boss Joel, whose personal and professional lives collide when a beautiful con artist (Mila Kunis) starts working at the factory as a temp. With a sh🍌aggy haircut and an unkempt beard, Ben Affleck plays against his own type to appear in the supporting role of bartender Nathan, Joel's sleazy best friend and confidant.
23. Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice
Year: 2016
Director: 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Zack Snyder
Though his casting set the internet ablaze, Ben Affleck wound up being the Batman we all deserved – just maybe not the one we needed circa 2016. In Zack Snyder's highly divisive DC epic, Ben Affleck debuts as a world-weary Batman who squares off with Superman (Henry Cavill) in a superheroic showdown of the ages. While Snyder's baroque and exceedingly grim vision for the DC Universe polarized audiences, leaving the 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:superhero movie to attract overwhelmingly negative reviews, Batman v Superman🐻: Dawn of Justice has aged rather well as a director-oriented take on the biggest superhero icons of all t⛎ime.
22. To the Wonder
Year: 2012
Director: Terrence Malick
A floating camera, minimal dialogue, and unconventional means꧂ of cinematic storytelling make To the Wonder a polarizing but no less provocative work of art. From auteur Terrence Malick, this experimental romantic drama sees Affleck fall for a beautiful French woman (Olga Kurylenk𝔍o) in Paris. But upon their move to rural Oklahoma, their romance fizzles, leaving Affleck's troubled lead Neil to rekindle a romance with an old flame (Rachel McAdams). To the Wonder might captivate you or leave you snoozing, but its meditative spiritualism makes it undeniably one of a kind.
21. Armageddon
Year: 1998
Director: Michael Bay
You don't want to miss a thing about Michael Bay's Armageddon. This wham-bam sci-fi blockbuster, a massive hit in 1998, stars Bruce Willis as blue-collar deep-core driller Harry, whose team is recruited by NASA to break up an asteroid before it destroys all life on Earth. Ben Affleck co-stars as A.J., who plans to marry Harry's daughter (Liv Tyler) upon their return, much to Harry's dismay. Superfluous and furious, Armageddon is just too big to fail, especially with Aerosmith's all-time arena rock ballad "I Don't Want to Miss a Thing" as an end cred⛦its needle drop.
20. The Tender Bar
Year: 2021
Director: George Clooney
We can all use an Uncle Charlie. In George Clooney's warm adaptation of Pu💙litzer-winner J. R. Moehringer's 2005 memoir, a young J.R. (Daniel Ranieri, with Tye Sheridan also playing an older version of the character) learns the ropes of manhood from his wisecracking, street smart uncle Charlie (Ben Affleck). Over many years of sitting at Charlie's bar, J.R. hones in on his destiny of becoming a writer. Though The Tender Bar doesn't aspire to much beyond the sentimental patina of first-wave Gen X nostalgia, the movie is a winning turnout for Affleck, whose Uncle Charlie is the surrogate father figure we wished we had.
19. Going All the Way
Year: 1997
Director: Mark Pellington
Just before the breakout success of Good Will Hunting, Ben Affleck played a Korean War veteran who comes home to disappointment and disillusionment in Mark Pellington's Going All the Way. Based on the novel by Dan Wakefield, Ben Affleck and Jeremy Davies play high school alumni who reconnect as Korean War veterans. But back home in Indianapolis, the soldiers have a new mission: to navigate their estrangement to once-familiar surroundings. While the theatrical version of the film drew mostly positive reviews in 1997, an extended "director's cut" version was released in 2022 with an additional 50 minutes of scenes that alter the movie to include more thematic darkness and sensitivity towards the characters' existential crises. It's become one of the 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:best war movies that too few have actually seen.
18. The Sum of All Fears
Year: 2002
Director: Phil Alden Robinson
Picking up where Harrison Ford left off, Ben Affleck steps into the shoes of Jack Ryan in Phil Alden Robinson's The Sum of All Fears. The world is on the brink of total nuclear destruction when a billionaire Neo-Nazi attempts to trigger a war between the US and Russia. As the world's superpowers come closer to activating armageddon, Affleck's Jack Ryan races against time to stop it. Big and bombastic, The Sum of All Fears is slightly dumber than its predecessors, but its alarming depiction of domestic terrorism was potent in the ꦜimmediate aftermath of 9/11.
17. Changing Lanes
Year: 2002
Director: Roger Michell
In this dramatic thriller that quietly🦩 functions as an exercise in ethics, Ben Affleck and Samuel L. Jackson co-star as two men from different worlds whose car accident in crowded New York City ignites a bitter war of personal vendettas. As Affleck and Jackson trade devastating blows that ruin both of their lives, Changing Lanes raises questions about what is right and what is just. Though Jackson may be the better actor of the two to watch, Affleck is no slouch, inhabiting the role of an over-privileged jerk eerily well.
16. The Way Back
Year: 2020
Director: Gavin O'Connor
The Covid-19 pandemic buried what could have been the movie universally recognized as holding one of Ben Affleck's greatest performances in years. Gavin O'Connor's The Way Back sees Affleck play a former high school basketball star who works to make amends by coaching his alma mater's team. Though The Way Back treads very familiar narrative ground, Affleck's stand-out performance suggests an intimate understanding of his character. Though the movie saw a muted release due to the pandemic, critics heape💙d praise on Affleck's work.
15. Zack Snyder's Justice League
Year: 2021
Director: Zack Snyder
In a nutshell, the disaster that was the 2017 movie Justice League inspired a years-long, somewhat problematic fan campaign for Zack Snyder's original cut of the movie. In 2021, Warner Bros. yielded and – with some touch-ups by Snyder, including new scenes – finally released Zack Snyder's Justice League. Though Snyder's "director's cut" still buckles under the weight of its ambitions, the "Snyder Cut" is a far more complete film with heart and soul beneath its Teflon surface. Ben Affleck anchors the movie as Batman, who returns to unite the world's greatest heroes and resurrect the now-dead Superman to save Earth from an alien threat. This is also easily one of the 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:best DC movies ever made, so it's well ꦆworth your time𝕴 and attention.
– for its exaggerated storytelling and factual inaccuracies, Argo earns its Best Picture Oscar as a popcorn thriller that relishes the fantasy of Hollywood coming to the rescue.1. Good Will Hunting
Year: 1997
Director: Gus Van Sant
The movie that launched Ben Affleck and Matt Damon to superstardom is still among the best movies of their careers. Written by Affleck and Damon (who originally conceived it as a high-concept action thriller), the Oscar-nominated drama follows an MIT janitor and a self-taught savant, Will (Damon), who undergoes court-mandated therapy with a life-changing therapist (Robin Williams). Along for the ride is Ben Affleck as Chuckie, Will's lifelong best friend who insists there's a better life for him bey𒁏ond Boston. Plenty has been said about Damon's star-making performance and Williams' unforgettable monologues. Still, Affleck contributes his own share as the best friend we all need to push us beyond our comfort zone.

Eric Francisco is a freelance entertainment journalist and graduate of Rutgers University. I♓f a movie or TV show has superheroes, spaceships, kung fu, or John Cena, he's your guy to make sense of it. A former senior writer at Inverse, his byline has also appeared at Vulture, The Daily Beast, Observer, and The Mary Sue. You can find him screaming at Devils hockey games or dodging enemy fi🥂re in Call of Duty: Warzone.
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