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Matt Damon’s 12 Best Performances

The Martian

2. “The Martian” (2015)
There’s an internet meme discussing just how much money and how many lives have been expended bringing Damon’s characters back from inaccessible places, but Ridley Scott‘s surprise hit, based on Andy Weir‘s bestselling novel, suggests that it might all have been worthwhile. It’s hard to conceive of any other major star who could pull off this deceptively challenging role so effortlessly: let’s not forget that this chatty, funny and remarkably pacy film is largely just Damon spouting gobbits of science to himself while 50 million miles away, a stacked supporting cast (Jessica Chastain, Michael Pena, Kristen Wiig, Kate Mara, Donald Glover, Jeff Daniels and Chiwetel Ejiofor) chew on pencils worriedly. But his inherent likability has never been put to better use than here, as the incredibly resourceful stranded astronaut Mark Watney, who not only manages to to keep himself alive on Mars by “sciencing the shit” out of things, he also manages to stay sane despite the isolation. “The Martian” is such an upbeat and optimistic film that it gives a false impression of the survivability of such a situation, but that quality of positivity, fueled by Damon’s engaging, can-do, game-for-anything approach to the role, is also undoubtedly what powered this otherwise quite prosaic sci-fi tale past $630 million worldwide.

The Talented Mr Ripley

1. “The Talented Mr. Ripley” (1999)
There is an essential niceness to Damon. It’s an inescapable, underlying sense that he’s a guy you’d like to have a beer with. But it’s also fundamentally unthreatening— which is why he is such a continual surprise when he does bulked-up and vengeful, as in the ‘Bourne’ movies, or when he subverts his stolid decency as in “Margaret,” or, to best-ever effect, in Anthony Minghella’s take on Patricia Highsmith‘s classic sunshine noir. It’s a film that only grows in esteem as time passes and an early career high for all its young cast, from a never more golden Jude Law, to Gwyneth Paltrow oozing sophistication and petulance in equal measure, to Philip Seymour Hoffman‘s sly, jealous nemesis. But all of it revolves around Damon’s oddly heartrending portrayal of the moral vacuum that is Tom Ripley, a homicidal sociopath caught in the throes of gay panic and terrifyingly covetous social envy. It’s a role that allows this consummate underplayer to be simultaneously dorky, seductive, naive, heartbroken, creepy and murderous —sometimes Damon seems to summon all of these impulses in one hesitant, desperate smile. Of all the screen Ripleys (yes, even Dennis Hopper), Damon’s read on the chimeric character is perhaps the most compelling: he plays him as just self-aware enough to be afraid of dark, cavernous emptiness within, but not strong enough to resist it.

Special Commendation: “30 Rock”
One regrettable exclusion, purely because it was just a small multi-episode arc on a TV show, is Damon’s outstanding moment as Liz Lemon’s (Tina Fey) pilot boyfriend Carol Burnett (yes, Carol Burnett… GOD we miss “30 Rock”). Appearing in just 4 episodes in seasons 4 and 5, his finest contribution to the show is probably in the great “Double-edged Sword,” when Carol and Liz break up after his plane, on which she is a passenger, is delayed for unexplained hours on the tarmac. As much as we like his overtly comedic turns even in lackluster films like “Stuck on You” and “The Brothers Grimm,” it’s Damon’s time on “30 Rock” (as well as “The Informant!” to be fair) that convinces us more than anything that there’s a Damon-headed comedy masterpiece waiting to happen.

Honorable mentions
If you haven’t thought about it too deeply, it might seem like overkill that we even went to 12 entries on a Best Matt Damon Performances list. But to even glance at his IMDB page is to realize we could have made this list much longer: Damon’s an incredibly prolific performer, much in demand as both a lead and an ensemble player. One crucial early role we excluded just because it’s so small, is as Private Ryan in Spielberg’s war epic “Saving Private Ryan,” but though he doesn’t appear until an hour 40 minutes into the film and is necessarily a kind of anticlimax, Damon’s everyman charisma makes the moment believable but also touchingly memorable.

He was also good Kevin Smith’s messily entertaining “Dogma” alongside pal Ben Affleck, and in Gus Van Sant’s so-so “Gerry,” alongside Ben’s brother Casey. “The Good Shepherd” sees him on typically solid form, though the film is dull as dishwater; “Green Zone” is the Greengrass collaboration everyone forgets, but it’s typically lean and pacy stuff; George Nolfi‘s “The Adjustment Bureau” doesn’t ever quite convince in its more fanciful leanings, but Damon and Emily Blunt almost rescue it; “Syriana” hasn’t aged as well as some of these others, but is still a sincere effort; and he’s certainly not the problem with “Elysium,” Neill Blomkamp‘s disappointing sci-fi. We could go on, but we’ll hand over to you instead: tell us your favorite Damon performances in the comments.

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4 COMMENTS

  1. when I saw this headline, Ripley was the first film to strike as having a really great Damon performance, and #1 it is!

    Carol in 30 Rock, he was so good! At least there’s Kimmy Schmidt on netflix

  2. True Grit, all the way. By far the most idiosyncratic Damon perf, followed by The Informant! He has really evolved as an actor and is one of those performers you can honestly say has never given a bad performance.

  3. I don’t understand a lot of the weird comments in this article. It’s like you guys are conveniently ignoring facts to make points that aren’t really true. And some sentences literally make no sense at all (like the one from my earlier comment). Did no one edit this piece? Fact-check it? Or even proof-read it?

    “’Rounders’ was mostly ignored on its debut….” Yet it “to some degree helped to spark the revival of [poker] in the larger culture”?

    What larger culture, the one made up of people who ignored it? This seems unlikely.

    “…his only hits since ‘Good Will Hunting’ had been supporting roles: ‘Saving Private Ryan’ and ‘Oceans 11.”

    What about your #1 choice, released in 1999? It did quite well, making back three times its budget. And Dogma, while on a smaller scale, made back three times its budget as well.

    “Until these films came along, only a handful of Kevin Smith cameos had seen Damon display his comic chops….”

    I don’t think Damon’s hilarious performance in Dogma could possibly be called a “cameo.” I mean not even the tiniest little bit.

    “…the brilliance of the film is in the way that it keeps his motivations at length to begin with….”

    Huh?

    And I notice that no mention was made of the controversy of The Great Wall and the fact that it will also be released soon. Was this article a subtle reminder that we should like Matt Damon and not hold him responsible for it? (For the record, I do like Matt Damon, although I’m still not going to watch We Bought a Zoo.)

    I really like this website and enjoy these pieces (I’m a big fan of the 50 Foreign Films and the Woody Allen ranking was great too), but this one just felt lazy. Especially at the end, with: “But to even glance at his IMDB page is to realize we could have made this list much longer,” followed by a few half-hearted examples. Face it, other than Dogma and Ryan you listed every movie of his worth seeing in your article. I mean, I’m sure he was good in We Bought a Zoo, too. Still….

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