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The 50 Best Action Film Of The 21st Century So Far

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Fanpup says...
I remember visiting this website once...
It was called The 50 Best Action Film Of The 21st Century So Far
Here's some stuff I remembered seeing:
One of the most iconic stars of action cinema this century returns to the big screen this week, as Matt Damon gets back in his old shoes as Jason Bourne in, well, “
Jason Bourne,” his fourth time playing the forgetful super-spy since 2002’s “The Bourne Identity.” And few action stars are as important to the genre as Damon and his creation.
As we entered the new millennium, action movies were still in the Bruckheimer years, a time of endless “Die Hard” rip-offs, where aging muscleheads were continuing to crank out movies to increasingly diminishing returns. Within a few years, the landscape changed enormously with 9/11, and though accidental (the film was shot before that date), Jason Bourne arrived with perfect timing, a new kind of action hero for a new age.
As the Bourne series progressed, so too did the action movie — the visceral, realistic quality introduced in the second installment spread to the James Bond series, for instance, while a similar kind of tone was applied to almost every other franchise. And the big action heroes were no longer Arnie, Sly and Bruce Willis, but Charlize Theron, Emily Blunt and Zhang Ziyi.
With Bourne now back, we thought it was the perfect time to take another look back at the recent history of the genre, and so we’ve expanded our old list and picked out the 50 Best Action Movies since the year 2000. It shows a genre in rude health, albeit with room for improvement — there’s still dispiritingly few of these movies directed by women, for instance, though we hope the likes of Patty Jenkins and Ava DuVernay will be changing that in the years to come.
Take a look at our picks below, and let us know your favorites in the comments. And if you’re looking for more recommendations, check out our Best Foreign-Language, Animated and Sci-Fi films features.
One of the best of the spate of the revenge movies that served as Hollywood’s rageful howl in the years after 9/11, “Man On Fire” is an unrelentingly tough, sometimes ludicrously violent film made with the exact right mix of sincerity and ludicrous style. The second adaptation of A.J. Quinnell’s novel, the film sees Denzel Washington in one of his most iconic turns as John Creasy, a former CIA agent and Marine who takes a job as the bodyguard to a young girl (Dakota Fanning), and goes on a bloody trail of violence when she’s kidnapped. Tony Scott’s heightened, saturated, twitchy style finds its groove here (it was near-unwatchable in some of his later films), painting a picture of a hellish Mexico City through the center of which stomps a steely-eyed Washington. “Creasy’s art is death,” Christopher Walken says at one point, “and he’s about to paint his masterpiece,” The same could have been said of Scott.
It will no doubt cause consternation, but especially with our list at 50, we felt justified in interpreting “action” in a broad sense, including films that expand on, subvert, or generally make us reconsider our old ideas of the genre. Denis Villeneuve‘s “Sicario” is a case in point. While it has set pieces, such as the border stand-off and several tense chase sequences, its overall mood is far more thoughtful and deliberate than rock’em-sock’em. A lot of this is down to Roger Deakins‘ extraordinary cinematography, in which we’re as likely to focus on the movement of a curtain or motes of dust dancing in a sunbeam as we are on an explosion or a close-up of a reloading gun or whatever. As a result, “Sicario” feels at times almost woozily disconnected from the thick of the action, a perspective which brings its own kind of suspense.
It would be difficult to call Quentin Tarantino, probably the most adored director of his generation, ‘underrated’ in many respects, but the praise heaped on his writing sometimes means that he doesn’t get his due as an action director. And “Django Unchained” is, whatever other problems it might have, a hell of an action movie. Tracking the title character (Jamie Foxx) and his German dentist/bounty hunter pal (Christoph Waltz) as they set out to free Django’s wife (Kerry Washington) from slaver Leonardo DiCaprio, it’s overlong and self-indulgent and tonally problematic in places, but it satisfies on a bone-deep level, and much of that is to do with the crunchy, splattery action sequences, which demonstrate that every minute Tarantino spent studying with Peckinpah and Woo VHS-es was well spent — the final shootouts in particular can stand with anything that he cooked up in “Kill Bill” in terms of set pieces.
Sam Raimi‘s first go at the Spideyverse was a pretty decent effort, but his sequel blew it out of the water, and remains probably the greatest superhero film of the pre-Christopher Nolan, pre-MCU era. Mostly that’s down to the clear, and very human, stakes that are established throughout, and to a truly tragic villain in Alfred Molina‘s Doc Ock, but it’s certainly helped by a collection of excellent action scenes. These range from set pieces like the fight on top of a runaway R train, to the moment where Dr. Octavius fuses with his creation and becomes octopussified, to the many exhilarating scenes of webslinging. In fact it’s probably the simplest scenes, as Tobey Maguire swings and swoops through the city, that really warrant a “Spider-Man 2” slot on this list: using a technique that was developed especially for this series and that reached its apotheosis here, it reminds us that yes, with great power comes great responsibility, but also the ability, more or less, to fly.
James Cameron is many things: a maniac, a genius, richer than many entire nations, unaware that people aren’t as interested in deep-sea diving as he is. But he’s first and foremost a great action-director. His work on “The Terminator” and “Aliens” rightly remains near the peak of the genre, let alone his later work. And while “Avatar” might have made a surprisingly light dent on pop culture, given that it’s the top-grossing movie of all time, it holds to Cameron’s usual standards in terms of the execution of the action sequences. Earlier scenes all grip, but it’s the epic battle that takes up most of the last third of the movie, as the Na’vi take on the invaders, that’s the most indelible moment: juggling multiple levels of the fight across a wide cast, Cameron keeps things thrilling, inventive and, crucially, geographically crystal-clear. It’s an extraordinary future-war unlike anything people had seen before in a blockbuster.
Hong Kong director Johnnie To is such an action maven that he could take up several more spots than the mere two we’ve allotted him, but as a brilliant summary of the different approaches to action that even a single filmmaker can take, “Drug War” provides the perfect counterpoint to “Exiled” (see no. 5). Here, To mostly keeps the action on a very low flame, favoring an engagingly talky and involved first two acts in which lines of betrayal and loyalty criss-cross between a criminal and a cop, who form an uneasy alliance to bring down an organized crime ring. But that all ultimately feels simply like a set up for a bravura, almost dialogue-free finale, in which a shoot-out between gangsters and police occurs outside a school, and incurs a massive body count. To literally takes no prisoners, orchestrating an sprawling gunfight that feels like it lasts for hours, because he packs so much tension into each moment.
In the early ’90s, after “Nikita” and “The Professional,” Luc Besson looked like he might be the next big action director, but he then made a string of misfires, and though he was more successful than ever as the producer of the “Taken” series, he had seemingly stepped away from directing. And then came “Lucy,” a $500 million sleeper hit that must number among the strangest blockbusters ever. Scarlett Johansson (in the third of the unofficial Scarlett Johansson Post-Human Trilogy begun by “Under The Skin” and “Her”) plays the title character, a naive ex-pat who’s forced into being a drug mule, only for the drug to, essentially, turn her into a god. Careening into increasingly trippy territory until a third act that’s probably best experienced on some kind of hallucinogen, Besson makes the whole thing look great on a relatively slim budget, and more impressively, pulls off the trick of making the action thrilling even when there are relatively few stakes involved.
As effective as it is as a horror film, Adam Wingard’s “You’re Next” stood out in part because of how well choreographed its carnage was: like a sort of bloody “Home Alone,” it worked as an actioner as well as a slasher pic. The director’s follow-up shifted the balance in the other direction, though you were some way into the film before you realized it was really an actioner. Dan Stevens, in a career-reinventing role, plays a seemingly charmingly young man who befriends a family whose son he served with in the military, who turns out to be a brainwashed super-soldier, essentially. Even on a modest budget, Wingard handles the shootouts and punch-ups beautifully, while neatly subverting the “Captain America” archetype in the process. It’s stylistically striking too, an homage to a certain kind of 1980s Cannon actioner that builds and embellishes on the concept rather than just being a pastiche.
Of all the Liam Neeson-as-grizzled-action-hero films we could have chosen (for indeed, it is quite the populous sub-genre these days) it may seem counter-intuitive to have gone with this Jaume Collet-Serra peril-on-a-plane thriller. It certainly is less about crunching the faces of unnamed ethnic human traffickers than it is about gleefully gravity-free mystery twists and turns, but it certainly has enough fisticuffs, explosions, gunplay and high-concept thrills to merit the “action” tag too. It’s also quite delightfully aware of its own silliness, as opposed to the grim, icky, right-wing self-seriousness of “Taken” and its ilk. This is probably why it attracted such a quality cast (Julianne Moore, Scoot McNairy, Corey Stoll, Michelle Dockery, Lupita Nyong’o and Nate Parker) who all seem to be having a good time bouncing off the immovable object that is Liam Neeson, whose bulk seems to fill about 90% of the airplane cabin where it almost entirely takes place.
The biggest flop of 2015 so far is also one of the best action movies in quite some time. Michael Mann’s divisive techno-thriller just edged out “Miami Vice” for a slot on this list (“Collateral” and “Public Enemies” also have some stunning sequences, but we wouldn’t classify them as ‘action’ in the same manner), but really the two films are something of a piece: both are propulsive actioners shot virtually entirely in gorgeous nighttime, where the romance is just as important as the bullets flying. For our money, “Blackhat,” in which Chris Hemsworth plays a blackhat hacker named Hathaway (a line that should double as one of Ron Burgundy’s warm-ups) who teams with the Chinese to take down a mysterious figure who’s caused a nuclear meltdown, takes the honors. Mann pushes further into a kind of action-movie expressionism than ever before, driven by mood, atmosphere and sound, and the results are glorious.
Where the hell are Jack Reacher and The Way of the Gun? Christopher Mcquarrie has directed at least 2 films on par if not better than he did with Mission Impossible: Rogue Nation.
The Way of the Gun is from 2000, which was the last year of the last century.
not true, christ was born 0 AD therefore 99 AD was the last of that century otherwise a century would be 101 years and not 100, and 2000 AD is the new century and last 1999 AD
it would also mean we all celabrated the millenium a year early
i’ll explain further so you don’t have to reply, if you dont count 0AD as a year then 365 days of that year don’t count, i.e 30 th december 0 AD would mean christ had been around for 1 year all but 1 day and yet you are counting it as no time what so ever
No Donnie Yen or Tsui Hark on this list… That’s a shame.
But good call for Sleepless Night, easily one of the best French action films I’ve seen – and I’m French.
Fury Road is a worthy #1. Raid 2 is way up there in my mind. Winter Soldier I think should be on this list
‘Avatar’ at No. 46? Behind ‘Lucy’, ‘Hot Fuzz’ and ‘The Force Awakens’? I’m sorry but that’s just ridiculous.
(And no, I don’t remember when ‘Fury Road’ turned into a Bergman ‘movie’ in the middle. Because it didn’t. Unless you’ve never seen a Bergman film.)
I don’t think I agree with Lucy making the list, but Fury Road a very worthy no one. That movie is a miracle.
Black Hat, Avatar, Lucy, Apocalypto, The Force Awakens? Civil War, but no Winter Soldier? The Revenant was an awesome film but it isn’t action and I can say the same about Gravity. You include Lucy but no Oldboy? Man, even Snowpiercer beat the crap of most of the movies that you listed. Honestly, if in an action list of the century doesn’t include IP Man as one of the top 10 spots it’s just a flawled list.
I don’t really see “Gravity” and “The Revenant” as action films, and I’m surprised that “Pineapple Express” was almost on the list because to me it is a (great, hilarious) comedy and little else. “Haywire” is awesome, sad to see it left out of the list. Overall, I’m satisfied with the ranking (and shocked by the fact that I’ve watched the vast majority of it).
Weird list. Off the top of my head, no Kung Fu Hustle, Minority Report, Hanna, Snowpiercer, Deadpool, Ip Man, Kick-Ass, Pacific Rim, Inception, Scott Pilgrim, The Incredibles, Children of Men, or Drive?
Miami Vice without question belongs in the place of Blackhat, if you have to include either of them at all (I would have left them out).
Equilibrium should take the place of some of these dramas that only have a couple action setpieces.
Casino Royale is a top 10 action movie of the past 10 years. I’d swap that out with The Dark Knight, which certainly isn’t great because of the action.
Man of Steel has some of the craziest superhero action I’ve ever seen. Doesn’t make it a good movie, but it’s a great spectacle.
For starters the best action movie of the 21st Century is:
FLASHPOINT directed by Wilson Yip and starring Donnie Yen.
Other movies left out the list that should have been there are:
Captain America Winter Soldier Kick Ass 1 & 2
The Raid 2(the real king of art house action, NOT Fury Road)
True Legend(Yuen Wo Ping allowed free reign to make a Kung Fu classic)
Transformers 3 Dark of the Moon(yes corny as heck but my god was the action amazing)
And let’s be real, Korean movies attempt to be Hong Kong action movies but they lack the heart.
Gravity and Black Hat aren’t even action movies.
omg you lose all credibility with indiana jones and the crystal skull, easily the worst indy film and just a terrible film full stop
I’m just speaking the truth, nobody in the world likes that film. I guess the truth hurts
Do you even think before you speak in your stupid overgeneralized nerd assumptions?
I bet you’re just one of the many people that doesn’t even understand all the 1950s pop culture references in Crystal Skull. That movie went over a lot of people’s heads.
it went over their heads cos it was totaly unbelievable, who cares for pop culture in an indy film, the only nerdy one here is you, it’s an action film and if you see anything else in it then that makes you weird/nerdy. As for generalized assumptions, you believe a film with a small fan base should be in the top 50 action films based solely on the fact people missed the 1950’s pop culture references in it, now who is stuck up their own behind.
The two fights Indy has against the Putin look alike are amazing especially in the context oof a major studio picture made after 2000.. I actually stopped reading after I read ” a film with a small fanbase”. You’re an idiot. Don’t waste your time writing back because I won’t read any of it.
ok I’m back and dont lie we all know you read it, I have since watched a few more films on your list and I have to question if you are human, are you ? kick ass 1 and 2 are you kidding me ?
NEW War Adventure Movies BEST Action Movies 2016
PLease like and share it to your friends. Thanks
In IP MAN 3, Donnie Yen fought with Thai Box in a tiny enclosed lift, with Yen’s wife at the corner. He was protecting her and fighting at the same time. That’s the most thrilling fight scene I’ve seen in my life.
Have you seen how fast Donnie Yen’s punches move?
Finally watched “Drive” after reading the endless Hype. What a snoozer.
Blackhat? non stop? Lucy? where’s Winter Soldier? This list is a joke LOL
where tf is rurouni kenshin trilogy and the man from nowhere
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