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Tag: zombieland

  • Ruben Fleischer Still Loves What ‘Zombieland’ Became

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    Zombieland came out in 2009 at the height of the post-apocalypse media fad, and helped put actors like Emma Stone and Jesse Eisenberg on the map. The same is true of its director, Ruben Fleischer, who’s gone on to helm other action-comedies like Venom, Uncharted, and as of this weekend, Now You See Me: Now You Don’t.

    Talking to Deadline, Fleischer reminisced about the original Zombieland, whose script he initially dismissed. But once he clocked it as a road trip movie like “National Lampoon’s Vacation meets zombies,” he got more on board with it. Being his feature film debut, he admitted that he “truly had no idea what I was doing.” But he thinks that ended up working to his advantage, speculating the cast and crew appreciated how honest he was in not knowing things.

    “My 1st AD, the DP, Woody [Harrelson] even, just were all very patient and helped me out,” Fleischer recalled. “A strength I have is that I think that a lot of young directors feel like they have to show that they know everything. And I was very happy to say, ‘I don’t know, and I need help.’” If you still hold that first Zombieland in high regard, he’s right there with you, saying he recently rewatched it and said he’s “pretty impressed” at how well it holds up. “This sounds arrogant, but it came off pretty good.”

    With Now You See Me back in action, where does that leave Zombieland? Fleischer said he’s “starting to talk about” a third film with Sony, and if things go well, it would arrive in 2029. “We kind of left [Double Tap] all saying, ‘We’ll see you in 10 years.’ That’s coming up now, so we’re starting to figure that out.” At the moment, it’s not a hard confirmation, since he’s got other projects he wants to tackle, including a “classic Western” with a vampire lead, “like Unforgiven, if Clint Eastwood was a vampire.” Even with other things on his to-do list, Fleischer seemed hopeful about bringing back his zombie-killing crew one last time.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Justin Carter

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  • ‘Now You See Me: Now You Don’t’ Director Ruben Fleischer Talks Unannounced Characters and the Active Fourth Chapter

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    [This story contains spoilers for Now You See Me: Now You Don’t.]

    Ruben Fleischer is used to kicking off franchises, but Now You See Me: Now You Don’t is the first time he’s joined one. 

    As the director of both Zombieland movies, Venom and Uncharted, the third Now You See Me movie certainly fits Fleischer’s penchant for fun action set pieces and banter between likable characters. But the most obvious selling point was the chance to reteam with two of his Zombieland actors, Jesse Eisenberg and Woody Harrelson, for the fourth time each. The Zombieland reunions didn’t stop there as Fleischer then brought in screenwriters Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick to punch up the script while filming was already underway.

    With Mark Ruffalo unavailable due to Task, the third installment repositions Eisenberg’s J. Daniel Atlas as the ringleader of the Horsemen. The original four magician-vigilantes of Atlas, Merritt McKinney (Harrelson), Jack Wilder (Dave Franco) and Henley Reeves (Isla Fisher) are currently at odds with each other over a failed heist that resulted in the imprisonment of Ruffalo’s Dylan Shrike in Russia. So Atlas decides to recruit three Gen Z magicians — played by Ariana Greenblatt, Dominic Sessa and Justice Smith — all of whom share the Robin Hood-like ethos of the Horsemen.

    Ultimately, each generation of the Horsemen bands together to take down Rosamund Pike’s Veronika Vanderberg, who launders money for arms dealers through her South African diamond company. After a job well done, Ruffalo’s character then appears via a holographic message to reveal that he’s no longer in prison and tee up their next trick. 

    “It was only when we were doing reshoots this past summer that [Ruffalo] happened to be available for a day in New York. We were able to shoot him against a green screen and add him to the final scene of the movie,” Fleischer tells The Hollywood Reporter in support of Now You See Me: Now You Don’t’s current theatrical release.

    If this third installment’s box office run continues to show that the audience still has an appetite for magician-led heists, Fleischer and co. are already planning their next move, one that would hopefully include the entire stable of Horsemen. The count is currently nine.

    “That’s certainly the aspiration, but when you have an ensemble franchise like this with so many characters and storylines to service, it obviously presents challenges,” Fleischer admits. “We have to be real smart and intentional with how we structure the film. So we’re in the midst of that right now as we’re working on the fourth installment.”

    John M. Chu’s previous chapter, Now You See Me 2 (2016), opted to write out Fisher’s character due to the actor’s pregnancy at the time. Lizzy Caplan’s Lula May then took her place as the one female Horseman. However, the latter’s status became a bit of a mystery when Now You See Me: Now You Don’t’s marketing highlighted the return of Fisher without any acknowledgement of Caplan. That raised the dreaded question of whether Caplan would be removed from the story in the same expositional way Fisher was a decade ago. Fortunately, the two actors are not alternating appearances, as Caplan’s Lula returns at a crucial point midway through the movie. Disguised as an intoxicated older woman, she breaks a few Horsemen out of jail before revealing herself.

    “It was really important to me that we rectify the past. Isla’s character, Henley, was written out with just a line of exposition, and audiences were just forced to accept Lula in her place,” Fleischer says. “So I was really grateful that we could right the ship on that. We could not only feature both of them, but we could also suggest that they’re friends and that there’s solidarity among female magicians.” 

    As for Zombieland 3, Fleischer has his sights set on 2029 in order to maintain the end-of-decade release pattern that started with 2009’s Zombieland and continued with 2019’s Zombieland: Double Tap.

    “We always talk about it. Last month was the 16th anniversary of Zombieland, and an email went around among the cast and producer and writers. Everybody expressed their desire to make another one,” Fleischer shares. “2029 is when we always said that it should come out because the second one [in 2019] was ten years after the first one. When we were making the second one, we all agreed we should do this thing again in ten years. So we’ve got a little bit of time to figure it out, but we’ve got to get on it, that’s for sure.”

    Below, during a recent spoiler conversation with THR, Fleischer also discusses Eisenberg’s decision to not return to the role of Mark Zuckerberg in The Social Reckoning, as well as his disappointment over the Venom’s franchise inability to bring Eddie Brock and Peter Parker together.

    ***

    Woody Harrelson as Merritr McKinney, Jesse Eisenberg as J. Daniel Atlas, Dominic Sessa as Bosco, Dave Franco as Jack Wilder, Justice Smith as Charlie, Isla Fisher as Henley Reeves, and Ariana Greenblatt as June in Now You See Me, Now You Don’t.

    Katalin Vermes/Lionsgate

    This is the first time you’ve directed a sequel to an existing franchise. You usually start film or TV series, be it Zombieland, Venom or Uncharted. Did Jesse Eisenberg and Woody Harrelson recruit you for this job?

    I don’t know if they directly recruited me, but their involvement is definitely why I did this movie. I am a huge fan of Jesse and Woody, and if I could make every movie with them, I would. I’ll even acknowledge I’ve tried to do that. This was my fourth film with both of them, and it was just so fun to be paired with two people I respect and trust and truly love watching on screen so much. So I felt really lucky to get to work with them again. 

    Your Zombieland writers Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick are also credited writers. When did they come in?

    We had a great script, but we were looking to fix some of the action. This was actually while we were already working in Budapest. So we had a really great draft, but we just wanted to take it to the next level. So they came in and helped out and added their genius to it all. That’s part of why it works so well. They really know how to write for Woody and Jesse and, as it turns out, all of the characters.

    Dominic Sessa as Bosco, Jesse Eisenberg as Daniel Atlas, Isla Fisher as Henley Reeves, and Justice Smith as Charlie in Now You See Me: Now You Don’t.

    Katalin Vermes/Lionsgate

    This may be the first time you’ve joined a franchise midstream, but you have worked off of source material before via Venom and Uncharted. So did you basically just treat the first two films as that? 

    Totally. I approached this as a fan of the franchise. I often think about myself as the audience member on set. My role as a director is just imagining what I would want to see as an audience member, whether it’s a Venom movie or an Uncharted movie or a Now You See Me movie. I asked myself, “What are the key elements to the IP and what you’re trying to make?” And I think it’s the dynamic, banter and relationships among the Horsemen. It’s all the twists and turns, a great third-act reveal and then magic throughout. So I really approached it as a fan of the franchise, and besides things I wanted to bring to the surface, I distilled what worked well from what didn’t work as well in the first two movies. 

    That’s why a lot of the magic in this movie was all practical. It was shot in-camera. I didn’t want to rely on visual effects to achieve the magic. That may count as movie magic, but I was really interested in providing the audience with as close to the experience of going to a live magic show as you could possibly manifest on screen. Magic traditionally doesn’t translate super well from stage to screen because audiences are so savvy and aware that they can be manipulated through editing or visual effects. So I kept the shots longer without cuts to really prove that the magic is real. I also created environments where there’s magic inherent to the set design. It was just important to me to fill every frame with as much magic as I possibly could.

    I’m certainly not the first person to make this comparison, but filmmakers and magicians overlap quite a bit. You both have a bag of tricks to create visual illusions for an audience. So what practical magic trick were you most proud of here? 

    The movie is filled with magic tricks and good set pieces, but what was most important to me is that I wanted the movie as a whole to work like a magic trick. There had to be a big third-act reveal that the audience doesn’t see coming. The first Now You See Me did a great job of that, and I would argue that the second one, a little less so. So I took inspiration from The Usual Suspects and The Sixth Sense, which gave me, as an audience member, the greatest feeling of amazement and wonder. Those third-act reveals were like a great magic trick. 

    So we devised a twist for this film that I thought was really satisfying, and the most gratifying step in the whole process of making this movie was definitely our first test screening where we played it for an audience. When that reveal happened, there was literally an audible gasp from the audience. I was just so gratified and proud that it had worked and that we were able to pull the wool over the eyes of the audience. 

    Not only did they not see it coming, but they were actually invested in the reveal. Sometimes, you can have a reveal that is more of a head scratcher, but to feel that visceral reaction from an engaged and surprised audience, it gave me a slight indication of what a real magician might feel when they’re performing a trick for an audience. So, as a filmmaker, this was about as close as I can imagine getting to that look of amazement after a great magic trick.

    Justice Smith as Charlie, Ariana Greenblatt as June, Dominic Sessa as Bosco, Jesse Eisenberg as Daniel Atlas, Isla Fisher as Henley Reeves, and Dave Franco as Jack Wilder in Now You See Me: Now You Don’t.

    Katalin Vermes/Lionsgate

    Mark Ruffalo’s character, Dylan Rhodes/Shrike, organized the Horsemen, and he led them throughout the prior films either directly or indirectly. With Mark shooting Task and Crime 101, did that basically allow you to put Atlas (Eisenberg) in more of the leadership role?

    Yeah, it was a combination. Ultimately, Ruffalo’s character, Dylan, orchestrated the whole thing, and maybe it’s my own personal bias, but I always found myself gravitating towards Jesse. So we coordinated it so that he was now the ringleader of this gang of magicians. That also happened to coincide with the fact that Mark Ruffalo was unavailable over the course of our filming, and it was only when we were doing reshoots this past summer that he happened to be available for a day in New York. We were able to shoot him against a green screen and add him to the final scene of the movie.

    If there’s a fourth film, is the idea to have everyone back? 

    That’s certainly the aspiration, but when you have an ensemble franchise like this with so many characters and storylines to service, it obviously presents challenges. We have to be real smart and intentional with how we structure the film. So we’re in the midst of that right now as we’re working on the fourth installment. It’s an exciting challenge, but it’s certainly a challenge to juggle so many compelling characters who are played by such charismatic actors.

    Apparently, Michael Caine hasn’t actually retired. Did anyone make a phone call for the sake of curiosity? 

    I think that was only revealed after we were done shooting. But if we’re lucky enough to make another Now You See Me, we will definitely give him a call. 

    After missing out on the second film, Isla Fisher’s character, Henley, reclaims her spot in the Horsemen. When Henley explains that she didn’t feel safe doing tricks while pregnant, the movie is basically borrowing the real-life explanation for her absence, right?

    Yeah, I think the reason why Isla was unable to be in the second movie was because she was pregnant. So we just leaned into that reality and made it Henley’s storyline. She’d retired from magic because she wanted to prioritize family life, which is a juxtaposition against Jesse’s character. He’s still single, and he’s still fighting the good fight of the Horsemen.

    Dave Franco as Jack Wilder, Jesse Eisenberg as Daniel Atlas, and Isla Fisher as Henley Reeves in Now You See Me: Now You Don’t.

    Katalin Vermes/Lionsgate

    I appreciate that you not only found room for Lizzy Caplan’s Lula to return, but you also established an existing friendship between her and Henley. It would’ve been odd if the previous female characters kept swapping in and out of each film. And one of the funniest scenes of the movie is when Lula has to play catch-up on everything she missed to that point.

    I really appreciate you saying that. It was really important to me that we rectify the past. Isla’s character, Henley, was written out with just a line of exposition, and audiences were just forced to accept Lula in her place. So I was really grateful that we could right the ship on that. We could not only feature both of them, but we could also suggest that they’re friends and that there’s solidarity among female magicians. In truth, there’s a very small number of female magicians. So the fact that we now have three female magicians was worthy of acknowledgement in the film. 

    Whether it’s Isla and Lizzy or everybody else, there is solidarity among the cast as a whole. They really love each other. It’s crazy how much affinity these actors have for one another. Perhaps my favorite part of getting involved with this movie was just joining this family of incredibly talented actors who really love working together. So if we can continue to make these movies, I know that everybody would feel really happy and lucky. We are proud of the movies, for sure, but we also just have such a great time making them.

    These films have always gone after corruption and greed, particularly among the one percent. So it made a lot of sense to bring in Gen Z characters since they’re keenly aware — more so than any other generation — of how much the older generations have set them back. 

    Yeah, the Robin Hood nature of the Now You See Me movies is inherent to them, and that attitude is very well represented in the young Horsemen that are introduced in this film. There was also a fun meta quality to these actors who grew up loving the Now You See Me movies and were excited to portray magicians in the franchise. The magicians they’re portraying grew up loving the Horsemen and aspired to become magicians, in part because of the Horsemen. So there was this fun life-imitating-art quality of Dominic [Sessa], Justice [Smith] and Ariana [Greenblatt] playing magicians who admire the older Horsemen, while Justice, Ariana and Dominic are also young actors who admire Jesse, Woody, Isla and the rest of the crew. 

    Dominic was the biggest fan of the franchise, and he was also the most committed to learning magic and becoming a magician. This is the biggest movie of his career, and while it’s the fourth movie he’s made, it’s the first to be released after The Holdovers. So he just stepped right into the role, and you never would have known that it was only his fourth movie. He just has such a natural quality. He’s effortlessly charismatic and really confident, and he just fit right in with the rest of the gang. 

    Ariana Greenblatt as June, Justice Smith as Charlie, Dominic Sessa as Bosco, and Jesse Eisenberg as Daniel Atlas in Now You See Me: Now You Don’t

    Shane Mahood/Lionsgate

    Now You See Me: Now You Don’t and F1 both shot at the same Abu Dhabi locations. How close in proximity were you?

    We definitely crossed paths in Hungary, but I think that their Abu Dhabi time was ahead of us. I don’t think we could have filmed at the same time because we were both using that crazy [Yas Marina Circuit] track that is at The W hotel. Not only did Now You See Me and F1 both shoot in Hungary and Abu Dhabi, but the other movies that were shot in both places are the two Dune movies, which I was surprised to learn. They did a lot of their stage work in Budapest, and they shot a lot of the desert stuff in Abu Dhabi. In our movie, when that convoy goes to the mine in the middle of the desert, that’s pretty much the same desert where they shoot the Dune movies. 

    This is Jesse’s third time playing Daniel Atlas. He’s also played Columbus twice for you in the Zombieland films. Thus, were you surprised when you found out that he didn’t want to reprise his Social Network character in the upcoming sequel? 

    No, I think that Jesse has a good sense of what he wants to accomplish as an actor. It’s been really exciting to see him turn over this new page as a director as well. He’s constantly challenging himself creatively, so I don’t know exactly why he made the decision about not continuing on in The Social [Reckoning]. But he has made such exciting career choices every step of his journey, and I’m always excited to see what he does next. 

    The Venom trilogy wrapped up last year without any Venom and Spider-Man interactions. Did that not surprise you given how much red tape there is between Sony and Marvel Studios?

    Honestly, I always hoped that Venom and Spider-Man would cross paths on screen. They’re both such compelling characters. Obviously, they’re inherent to one another in the comics, but I wasn’t very involved with the Venom movies after the first one. So I can’t speak to why they went down the road that they did, but speaking as a fan, it would’ve been really exciting to see those two on screen together. 

    I know that Zoey Deutch is very eager to adorn herself in Von Dutch attire again, but is the Zombieland franchise still hibernating at the moment? 

    (Laughs.) We always talk about it. Last month was the 16th anniversary of Zombieland, and an email went around among the cast and producer and writers. Everybody expressed their desire to make another one. 2029 is when we always said that it should come out because the second one [in 2019] was ten years after the first one. When we were making the second one, we all agreed we should do this thing again in ten years. So we’ve got a little bit of time to figure it out, but we’ve got to get on it, that’s for sure.

    ***
    Now You See Me: Now You Don’t is now playing in movie theaters.

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    Brian Davids

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  • Every Emma Stone Movie, Ranked

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    Photo-Illustration: Vulture; Photos: Disney, Lionsgate Films, Searchlight Pictures

    This list was originally published on September 20, 2017. Emma Stone’s latest movie, Bugonia, hit theaters on October 24, 2025.

    Emma Stone has said her idol, and role model, as an actress is Diane Keaton, and it makes total sense: Now that you’re thinking about it, it’s hard not to connect them, right? Like Keaton, Stone is instantly likable, dazzlingly funny — you can make an argument she’s a comedienne first and foremost — and relatable while never losing that star wattage. In the span of a decade, she went from making her debut (in Superbad) to being a beloved Hollywood fixture and an Oscar winner to boot. But also like Keaton, it’s not difficult to imagine her expanding on this, pushing herself while never losing that inherent affability. She’s one of us while being the best of us … which is an excellent definition of a movie star. It’s going to be extremely fun updating this list as the years go forward — after all, look where Keaton went. Who’s to say Stone can’t go just as far … or further?

    This week, she returns to theaters with Bugonia, in which she once again teams up with Greek filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos, continuing one of modern movies’ most rewarding partnerships. In the film, she flexes both her comedic and dramatic muscles, proving as always how good she is in either mode. But don’t forget that she’s also a producer on Bugonia: Although we’re ranking her finest performances, it’s important to point out how pivotal she’s been in championing other directors’ work as well. (Not for nothing, but two of 2024’s signature movies, A Real Pain and I Saw the TV Glow, were shepherded by her company, Fruit Tree.) Stone swears she has no interest in directing, but it’s hard not to imagine that one day she’ll get the itch to try that, too. Also like Keaton, she’s a creative force who seems capable of just about anything.

    Here are her 24 roles, ranked. We omitted bit parts — though we love her in Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping — and voice roles (although she’s awfully fun in The Croods). And we didn’t include The Curse since that’s television. But no matter how you choose to measure it, she’s had a pretty great career already.

    Year: 2008
    Director: Peter Cattaneo
    Run time: 1h 42m

    It’s insane to think there was a time in human existence that Bradley Cooper, Josh Gad, Christine Applegate, Jane Lynch, Jason Sudeikis, Will Arnett, Fred Armisen, Aziz Ansari, Demetri Martin, Keir Gilchrist, and Emma Stone all played supporting characters in a movie that starred Rainn Wilson, but, hey, 2008 was quite a year. Stone has a thankless, off-brand role as a moping member of a teenage rock band who drafts a former drummer in a Metallica-esque band (Wilson) to fill in so they can play their school prom. This thing is junky — and it’s not Wilson’s fault he has to do so much heavy lifting, in his underwear no less — and Stone escapes dignity intact, barely, from the wreckage.

    Year: 2014
    Director: Woody Allen
    Run time: 1h 37m

    Stone spent two years trying out the role of Woody Allen’s modern muse, not unlike Scarlett Johansson the decade before, but her stint didn’t come with any Match Point–style breakthrough: The two movies she made with Allen were among the director’s most formulaic work. She struggles particularly here as a “mystic” who performs illusions and inspires a cynical fellow magician (Colin Firth), briefly, to suspend his disbelief. Certain actors benefit from Allen’s hands-off approach, but Stone might not be one of them. She looks lost and flailing most of the time, forced to carry way too much of the narrative and the film’s attempts at charm. Stone isn’t necessarily to blame — Magic in the Moonlight is a minor trifle, even for late-career Allen — but this just isn’t a great fit.

    Year: 2013
    Director: Ruben Fleischer
    Run time: 1h 53m

    If you don’t remember Gangster Squad, it’s the other nostalgic, old-school-Hollywood-themed movie in which Stone plays an aspiring actress who moves to Los Angeles to become famous and falls in love with Ryan Gosling. Of her three collaborations with Gosling, this one is easily the worst. A limp attempt at recapturing the snarl and sex appeal of a bygone era’s gangster pictures, the film mostly feels like an excuse for big names to play dress up in fedoras. Stone isn’t terrible as Grace, the girlfriend of an infamous crime boss (Sean Penn) who starts to have feelings for the cop (Gosling) who’s helping to bring him down. But despite the timeless nature of her appeal in most roles — you get the sense that she could have been a star in any era — she doesn’t quite convince as a noir-ish love interest.

    Year: 2011
    Director: Will Gluck
    Run time: 1h 49m

    Stone only really has one scene here, but it’s a silly, fun one: She gets to break up with Justin Timberlake and then leave the movie all together. It’s worth noting that her male counterpart, the guy breaking up with Mila Kunis, is Andy Samberg. Stone is clearly here as comic relief, and it’s telling that the movie (ostensibly a comedy) trusts her to carry that responsibility on her own. Stone and Samberg would have the opportunity to reconnect a few years later with her cameo in Popstar, and even though that part is too slight to make this list, it’s even funnier. (“Turn up the beef!”)

    Year: 2015
    Director: Woody Allen
    Run time: 1h 35m

    The better of Stone’s two Woody Allen films, Irrational Man finds her playing a bright, impressionable college student who’s smitten with her brilliant, morose philosophy professor (Joaquin Phoenix), who starts developing feelings for her, too. If Magic in the Moonlight was Stone’s chance at a frothy Allen period comedy, Irrational Man is more Crimes and Misdemeanors, analyzing morality, guilt, and the absence of God in the midst of a murder plot. Stone’s role is crucial — she comes to understand just how troubled and dangerous her teacher is, and must take action — but the actress doesn’t bring enough gravitas to this drama. Her effervescence gets reduced to blandness in Allen’s movies, which ultimately feels more like his issue than hers.

    Year: 2015
    Director: Cameron Crowe
    Run time: 1h 45m

    Photo: Neal Preston/Columbia

    Our mild defense of Stone’s notorious casting as Allison Ng, an Air Force captain whose father is half-Hawaiian and half-Chinese, is that part of the joke of the character is that she loves bragging about her ethnically diverse background — even though she looks like, well, Emma Stone. But that joke, like many in Aloha, isn’t particularly good, and it also doesn’t help that Stone plays Allison with a little too much earnest adorableness, never establishing much of a rapport with Bradley Cooper’s spiritually adrift military contractor. (That’s a problem, considering they’re supposed to fall in love.) Stone has since apologized for her part in the whitewashed casting, satirizing herself during a 2015 SNL skit in which she auditions for Star Wars based on her ability to play Asian characters. It’s a sign of how flawed Aloha is that its best moment comes when Stone dances with Bill Murray to Hall and Oates’ “I Can’t Go for That (No Can Do).” She’d show off more dance moves in a better movie a year later.

    Year: 2009
    Directors: Michele Mulroney and Kieran Mulroney
    Run time: 1h 50m

    A rambling, moody, mostly dull middle-aged-white-guy-in-crisis movie about a blocked writer (Jeff Daniels) with an imaginary superhero friend (Ryan Reynolds), Paper Man only comes to life when Stone is onscreen as a teenage girl who befriends this sad-sack after losing her twin sister. Daniels is morose and whiny and Reynolds is hammy and over-the-top, which allows Stone to steal the movie, giving it its only modicum of zest and soul. She’s too good to be the fantasy of some old white guys, and soon, she wouldn’t have to be.

    Year: 2013
    Director: Various, Stone’s segment by Griffin Dunne
    Run time: 1h 30m

    This star-studded Kentucky Fried Movie homage — seriously, how did this movie get Hugh Jackman, Kate Winslet, Halle Berry, Chris Pratt, Dennis Quaid, Uma Thurman, Naomi Watts, and Richard Gere? — only has two decent segments. One is a cruel but admirably strange joke on homeschooling starring Watts and Liev Schreiber, and the other is a gonzo scene in which Stone and Kieran Culkin exchange supercharged sexual banter in a grocery store over the intercom. It’s as dumb as everything else in this movie, but both Culkin and Stone play it perfectly. Check out the way Stone says, “He was a wizard, Neil! We’re still laughing.

    Years: 2012 and 2014
    Director: Marc Webb
    Run time: 2h16m (The Amazing Spider-Man); 2h 22m (sequel)

    The Marc Webb–Andrew Garfield reboot of the Spider-Man series was pretty much dead on arrival — this might be the least-inspired comic-book sequel since Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer — but the one thing that does work is the relationship between Peter Parker and Gwen Stacy. Garfield and Stone were dating in real life during the film, and it’s telling that the movie essentially stops every time they start talking to each other: They’re incredibly charming. Unfortunately, the comic-book gods must be fed, and thus, the lousiness of the rest of the movie and the end of a franchise flirtation that, all told, Stone is probably pleased to be rid of.

    Year: 2009
    Director: Mark Waters
    Run time: 1h 40m

    Stone plays the actual ghost-girlfriend of the title — a character named Allison who visits Matthew McConaughey’s slick bachelor and shows him the error of his ways with the women in his past. She has crazy wigged-out hair and braces, but she’s also quick and goofy in a way that McConaughey isn’t: This was right before the McConaissance, back when he was still mailing in stuff like this. It’s a small part, but Stone makes it count. When the movie is looking for a final joke beat at the end, it goes back to her, the one person who consistently provided them.

    Year: 2021
    Director: Craig Gillespie
    Run time: 2h 14m

    Photo: Disney+

    A little more than ten years after killing her first starring vehicle (Easy A), Cruella demonstrates how far Stone has come. Playing the future Cruella de Vil in an origin story nobody asked for, she’s at the peak of her movie-star powers as she rocks a British accent and struts through scenes as her glammed-out alter ego, happily wrapping the film around her finger. It’s a showy performance, but because there remains something so self-effacing and charming about her, it’s never overindulgent — you’ll get a kick out of how much of a ball she’s having. Unfortunately … this is an origin story nobody asked for, and the filmmakers have given her so little to work with that she has to do all the heavy lifting herself. This may be the first time that one of her films was too small to contain her.

    Year: 2008
    Director: Fred Wolf
    Run time: 1h 38m

    One of the most underrated and endlessly rewatchable comedies of the last 15 years, The House Bunny is so stupid/funny/sweet that it’s impossible to resist. That’s especially true of Stone as Natalie, a delightfully nerdy member of a loser sorority that’s transformed by the dim-bulb beauty Shelley (Anna Faris), who’s been kicked out of the Playboy Mansion. This geek-to-chic comedy was meant to be Faris’s big breakthrough, but Stone holds her own as the nerdy straight woman to Shelley’s ditzy, kindhearted stupidity. They’re a terrifically funny pair as Stone perfected her adorkable persona just as major stardom beckoned.

    Year: 2025
    Director: Ari Aster
    Run time: 2h 25m

    Stone’s role — to the chagrin of many critics who found Ari Aster’s “pandemic western” snide, formless, and frustrating (we’re among them) — is smaller than the ads make it look. That she’s so haunting during her short screen time speaks even worse of the movie. She plays Louise, the utterly stricken wife of Joaquin Phoenix’s Sheriff Joe, a woman so damaged that her pain and loss threaten to overwhelm the often glib film every time she appears. Stone has never looked quite so broken before, and there is something so raw and upsetting about her performance that you wish it were in a movie more worthy of it.

    Year: 2007
    Director: Greg Mottola
    Run time: 1h 59m

    One of the reasons you like Jonah Hill’s Seth in this movie — even though he’s disgusting, he says horrible things about women, and he can’t even steal a keg properly — is because of the great taste he has in his idealized crush. Stone’s Jules is smarter and kinder than everyone else in the movie. She has her shit together, yet she’s just silly enough to find Seth sort of charming, in spite of herself. This was her first movie role. Who wouldn’t want to see more?

    Year: 2011
    Director: Dan Fogelman
    Run time: 1h 47m

    Photo: Warner Bros.

    If this irritatingly cutesy rom-com had focused more on Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling’s story line, we would have liked it a lot more. The rest of the film strains to be profound about how screwy love can be, but she’s a delight as Hannah, a goody-goody law-school grad who decides she’s had it with her noncommittal boyfriend and takes a chance on Jacob, a seductive womanizer who’s blessed to look like Ryan Gosling. Like several Stone roles, Crazy, Stupid, Love. allows her to start off as slightly nerdy before she gets to show off her wilder side — which, naturally, is still kinda nerdy but very endearing. Hannah may be uptight, but she’s funny as hell, and Stone’s wiseass attitude is on great display when she convinces him to take off his shirt, losing her mind after she finally checks out his abs. The highlight of the movie comes later in the same scene, when Stone and Gosling re-create Dirty Dancing’s most famous moment (with the help of a body double). It’s light on its feet, but also very sexy.

    Years: 2009 and 2019
    Director: Ruben Fleischer
    Run time: 1h 28m (Zombieland); 1h 39m (Zombieland: Double Tap)

    This is another supporting role, but she brings her no-nonsense, brash-but-so-fun persona to the next level as one of the few survivors of the zombie holocaust, foraging throughout the bombed-out landscape with Jesse Eisenberg, Abigail Breslin and Woody Harrelson. (And Bill Murray, of course.) This is a minor part, but she makes it a major one: She grabs the funky, off-kilter Zombieland and ramps it up into something soulful and warm. It was exciting to watch a star being born — while the best you can say about the ill-advised sequel is that, even though she was by then way too famous to be doing something like this, she still seemed to give it her goofy all.

    Year: 2011
    Director: Tate Taylor
    Run time: 2h 26m

    Tate Taylor’s surprise monster hit could have been cloying and white-savior-y — and at times it is — but Stone grounds it with her ability to play characters who are screw-ups and awkward and gangly but also glamorous and more capable than just about everyone else around them. Impressively, she knows when to step aside and cede to her co-stars, giving Octavia Spencer, Viola Davis, and Jessica Chastain the room they need to lead the movie … before reeling it back in to keep the movie centered. It’s a quietly impressive performance, and the mark of a true star.

    Year: 2017
    Directors: Valerie Faris, Jonathan Dayton
    Run time: 2h 2m

    Stone couldn’t have known at the time — Battle of the Sexes was shot before La La Land’s awards campaign really got rolling — but this crowd-pleasing biopic is the perfect soft landing after that Oscar-winning game changer. Here, she plays Billie Jean King, the best player in women’s tennis in the early 1970s, who decides that she and her tour mates shouldn’t be paid so much less than their male counterparts. The film is a feminist parable that can sometimes be too rah-rah — favoring sentiment over nuance — but Stone supplies the heart, showing us a woman fighting for equality but also wrestling with her sexuality, getting involved with a beautiful hairdresser (Andrea Riseborough) but keeping the relationship under wraps for fear of angering fans and promoters. In future years, Battle of the Sexes may be the movie we point to where Stone pivoted away from her more adorable roles to something a little more grown-up and weary. Her King is intelligent and cutting, but she’s also a person who seems to be looking for something just out of reach, which gives the performance real poignancy. Stone and Riseborough’s tentative romance is sensual in a relaxed way; it’s the film’s emotional centerpiece. And when King finally faces off with that showboating Bobby Riggs (Steve Carell) in the finale, Stone guides her character to an ending that’s more emotional and tempered than one might expect — even if you know how their match ended up in real life.

    Year: 2025
    Director: Yorgos Lanthimos
    Run time: 1h 58m

    Photo: Atsushi Nishijima/Focus Features

    As you’ll notice from the top rungs of our rankings, we are very high on Stone’s recent collaborations with Yorgos Lanthimos, which have found her enjoying great success while pushing herself into daring new terrain. Put it this way: We think Bugonia is the least effective of their four films, yet look where we placed it on this list. And that’s because Stone is terrific as Michelle, a callous pharmaceutical CEO who is kidnapped by two local conspiracy theorists (Jesse Plemons, Aidan Delbis) who are convinced she’s an alien with nefarious plans for the human race. Her head shaved bald for most of Bugonia’s run time, Stone captures this darkly comic thriller’s central tension, leaving audiences wondering if Michelle is an extraterrestrial or merely a one-percenter trapped in a terrifying situation. The film’s twists and turns wouldn’t be nearly as effective without Stone’s tightly controlled performance. Michelle is funny, she’s calculating, she’s scared, and she may be harboring a dark secret. Stone delights in leaving us guessing until the final, shocking reveal.

    Year: 2014
    Director: Alejandro González Iñárritu
    Run time: 2h

    Stone received her first Oscar nomination for this Best Picture winner, playing Michael Keaton’s prickly daughter Sam, who’s a recovering addict and a hell of a flirt. Birdman was a major changeup for Stone: She’d done other dramas, but she’d never seemed this dangerous. Shedding her cutie-pie image, Stone convincingly berates her character’s delusional father, and then practically steals the movie during a rooftop scene with Edward Norton’s vain leading man. In a movie that, for better and for worse, is a celebration of flashy virtuosity, Stone is a stealth missile, blowing up every scene she’s in.

    Year: 2024
    Director: Yorgos Lanthimos
    Run time: 2h 45m

    After winning her second Oscar for Poor Things, Emma Stone and Lanthimos reunited for this freewheeling, super-dark lark that consists of three short films in which Stone and other cast members play different characters in each. The second and third shorts, “R.M.F. Is Flying” and “R.M.F. Eats a Sandwich,” are the ones in which she takes center stage, and she’s predictably terrific as, respectively, a wife lost as sea who returns home (but may not be herself) and a cult member in search of a strange woman. Perhaps you’ve come to expect a certain degree of twisted weirdness from Stone when she hooks up with Lanthimos, but Kinds of Kindness proves that there’s still plenty of nuttiness for her to explore. None of her three performances in this triptych is like the others, and each is a dazzling, tightly controlled tour de force. Plus, nobody dances like her.

    Year: 2018
    Director: Yorgos Lanthimos
    Run time: 2h

    Photo: Atsushi Nishijima/Twentieth Century Fox

    As a rule, we tend not to get hung up on so-called category fraud when it comes to which actor gets positioned as the lead for Oscar consideration. That said, as great as Olivia Colman is in The Favourite, technically speaking Emma Stone’s character, the conniving Abigail, is the real main character, driving the action forward and worming her way into the Queen’s heart (and bed). The edginess that Stone brought to her role in Birdman was sharpened for this film, resulting in a darkly comic turn that’s also surprisingly touching. (As much as Abigail is using Queen Anne, she does have some sympathy for this ailing, lonely woman.) Much has been made of the fact that Yorgos Lanthimos’ spiky comedy is like an 18th-century All About Eve, which means Stone is in the Anne Baxter role, and it’s delicious watching this poisonous schemer get exactly what she wants — and still receive the comeuppance that she so richly deserves.

    Year: 2010
    Director: Will Gluck
    Run time: 1h 32m

    This teen riff on The Scarlet Letter was Stone’s first starring role, and she later admitted that the stress of making it led to many sleepless nights. You’d never know from watching the breezy, sneakily emotional Easy A, which is the epitome of Stone’s sweet-and-spiky persona. She plays Olive, a precocious, misfit 17-year-old who lies about losing her virginity, which suddenly makes her unexpectedly popular. Even when the movie’s inspiration starts to flag, Olive is such a likable, original teenager — smart but sensitive, funny but vulnerable — that she’s like a magnet pulling you into the screen.

    Year: 2023
    Director: Yorgos Lanthimos
    Run time: 2h 21m

    Stone’s second collaboration with Yorgos Lanthimos is even wilder than the first, finding her delivering a master class in physical comedy as a naïve innocent named Bella whose body was fished out of the river after she committed suicide. Now reawakened by Dr. Baxter (Willem Dafoe), a mad scientist who lives for his unholy experiments, she doesn’t know who she once was, babbling like an idiot and exuding the emotional intelligence of an infant. But Bella is a quick study, whisked away by a horny lawyer (Mark Ruffalo) in this jet-black comedy, which may be the purest expression of her irreverent, inspired goofball side. She’s a revelation in Poor Things, navigating Bella’s sexual and personal evolution over the course of the film, transforming from a naïf to a fully empowered young woman, consistently hilarious throughout. The movie lets Stone rip, proving that despite winning an Oscar, she’s not afraid to still take big swings. This one she knocks out of the park, and she got Academy Award No. 2 in the process.

    Year: 2016
    Director: Damien Chazelle
    Run time: 2h 8m

    Photo: Dale Robinette/Courtesy of Lionsgate Entertainment Inc

    Many actors win their Oscar for a role that’s not close to their finest work. Happily, that’s not the case with Emma Stone. She’s never been better than she was as Mia, a struggling young actress who’s trying to find herself just as she falls for a suave jazz pianist (Gosling, again). La La Land has been debated, dissected, mocked, and scorned, but the film’s many critics haven’t really complained about Stone. That’s because she’s perfect: Hollywood is full of starlets, but none have just the right combination of wide-eyed optimism, snarky wit, and gal-next-door sweetness that Stone brought to the performance. Which moment in this nostalgic, bittersweet musical won her the Best Actress Oscar? Was it when she and Gosling tap-dance in the Hollywood Hills, or when they swirl among the stars at the Griffith Observatory? Was it the teary speech where Mia admits that maybe she’s not talented enough to make it? All are indelible, but the answer has to be “Audition (The Fools Who Dream),” in which Mia gives the casting directors (and the audience) a four-minute primer on her hopes, fears, and upbringing. Right there, you see an actress who is finally tapping into the greatness that’s always been inside her, just dying to come out. That applies to Mia as much as it does Stone, who, with La La Land, turned her lovable, indomitable spirit into something timeless.

    Grierson & Leitch write about the movies regularly and host a podcast on film. Follow them on Twitter or visit their site.

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    Will Leitch,Tim Grierson

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