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The 10 best Robert De Niro movies to stream right now

From Raging Bull to The Godfather Part II, these are the roles that have defined Robert De Niro's long career

There are few actors working today who can match the career that Robert De Niro has had. Some, like Brad Pitt or George Clooney, have been in plenty of great movies, but even they don’t stack up to the kind of career that De Niro has had over the last half century. De Niro’s success can be chalked up, at least in part, to his collaboration with great directors. De Niro has been in some of Martin Scorsese’s best movies, and Scorsese isn’t the only director who knows how to use him.

Really, though, it’s De Niro himself who deserves a lot of the credit. Although he’s been in plenty of schlock, the best movies of his career are up there with the best movies ever made. When he emerged on the scene, De Niro showed off his ability to play a range of different types, and his skills have only deepened as the years have gone by.

Raging Bull (1980)

Raging Bull
89 %
8.2/10
r 129m
Genre Drama, History
Stars Robert De Niro, Joe Pesci, Cathy Moriarty
Directed by Martin Scorsese
Any list of the best Robert De Niro movies is going to feature plenty of his collaborations with Martin Scorsese. His best performance in one of Scorsesse’s movies may come in Raging Bull, where he plays boxer Jake La Motta. In the film, which De Niro got in great shape for, De Niro plays La Motta as a wounded, prideful man who has plenty of talent in the ring but proves to be hugely self-destructive outside of it. Raging Bull is a movie about failure as much as success, and it’s one that features some of the best direction of Scorsese’s hugely acclaimed career.

GoodFellas (1990)

GoodFellas
90 %
8.7/10
r 145m
Genre Drama, Crime
Stars Ray Liotta, Robert De Niro, Joe Pesci
Directed by Martin Scorsese
De Niro doesn’t have the showiest role in Goodfellas, but his performance is key to the story the movie is trying to tell. The film follows Henry Hill, a mid-level Mafia man who is close with Jimmy Conway, De Niro’s character in the film. Although De Niro has partnered with Scorsese to play plenty of protagonists, here, his role is to be charming and insidious. Like all good mobsters, De Niro’s Conway is kind and dangerous. He’s not reckless, and that’s part of what makes him such a terrifying presence in a movie filled with men who just can’t seem to control themselves.

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The Irishman (2019)

The Irishman
94 %
7.8/10
r 209m
Genre Crime, Drama, History
Stars Robert De Niro, Al Pacino, Joe Pesci
Directed by Martin Scorsese
Robert De Niro’s latest collaboration with Scorsese is one of his best. The movie follows De Niro’s lead character, a half-Irish gangster who becomes ensconced in the mafia and one of Jimmy Hoffa’s best friends, over the course of decades. Where many of Scorsese’s earlier gangster movies are designed to be fun, at least on some level, The Irishman is all about living a life in which you alienate everyone who is supposed to care about you. The Irishman doesn’t end with a blaze of gunfire. It ends with an old man alone, having alienated everyone he ever knew or loved because of the life he chose to lead.

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Silver Linings Playbook (2012)

Silver Linings Playbook
81 %
7.7/10
122m
Genre Drama, Comedy, Romance
Stars Bradley Cooper, Jennifer Lawrence, Robert De Niro
Directed by David O. Russell
In the later phase of his career, De Niro has worked a lot. Not all of those projects have been a tremendous success, but he’s occasionally proved that he’s still one of the best actors to ever step in front of a camera. One of his best performances in recent memory came in Silver Linings Playbook, where he has a supporting role. De Niro plays the father of a bipolar man who was recently released from a mental hospital. He’s just one part of a great ensemble cast, but he has several scenes where he plays a wounded, older man who is desperate to bond with his son that are deeply affecting.
Silver Linings Playbook - Official Trailer (HD)

The Godfather: Part II (1974)

The Godfather: Part II
90 %
9/10
r 202m
Genre Drama, Crime
Stars Al Pacino, Robert Duvall, Diane Keaton
Directed by Francis Ford Coppola
The Godfather: Part II was not De Niro’s first role, but it was the one that proved he was an acting powerhouse who would be around for decades. After the success of the first film, The Godfather: Part II told two stories at once. The first was a continuation of Michael Corleone’s rise to power as the head of a powerful criminal empire. The second was Vito Corleone’s rise to power decades earlier, after he immigrated from Italy as a child. It’s that second story that won De Niro his first Oscar, and proved that he could live up to the titanic performance that Marlon Brando had already won an Oscar for two years earlier.

Taxi Driver (1976)

Taxi Driver
94 %
8.2/10
r 114m
Genre Crime, Drama
Stars Robert De Niro, Jodie Foster, Albert Brooks
Directed by Martin Scorsese
In spite of all the movies they made together later, Taxi Driver may still be the most iconic Scorsese/De Niro collaboration. In the film, De Niro totally inhabits the role of Travis Bickle, a lonely taxi driver who becomes convinced that he alone is capable of cleaning up the crime he sees as he drives every night in New York City. The movie is really about Travis’ deteriorating mental health as he becomes obsessed with a woman and a young girl, and you ultimately realize how unwell he truly is. De Niro is mesmerizing in the role, and proved here that he could carry a movie and make you feel sympathy for a very complicated person.

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Heat (1995)

Heat
76 %
8.3/10
r 170m
Genre Action, Crime, Drama, Thriller
Stars Al Pacino, Robert De Niro, Val Kilmer
Directed by Michael Mann
The premise of Heat is remarkably simple, but that’s part of what makes it great. De Niro plays a master criminal, and Al Pacino plays a veteran cop, and they play an elaborate game of cat and mouse for almost three hours of screen time. The movie works because both De Niro and Pacino are thoroughly committed and because the mechanics of the plot are so compelling. Heat is ultimately about how the cop and the criminal are not so different, and it’s about how the “action is the juice,” as Tom Sizemore’s character so memorably articulates in the film.

The Deer Hunter (1978)

The Deer Hunter
86 %
8.1/10
r 184m
Genre Drama, War
Stars Robert De Niro, Christopher Walken, John Cazale
Directed by Michael Cimino
The Deer Hunter is a war epic that spends plenty of time on war’s aftermath. De Niro plays one of three friends who work at a steel mill in rural Pennsylvania. All three men are eventually drafted to fight in Vietnam, and the war has devastating effects on each of them. Christopher Walken gets the showier role in this film as a veteran who traps himself in Vietnam, but De Niro does excellent work after returning from the war. His trauma is subtler, but no less real, and it feels of a piece with many of the wounded men the actor has played throughout his long career.

Once Upon a Time in America (1984)

Once Upon a Time in America
75 %
8.3/10
r 229m
Genre Drama, Crime
Stars Robert De Niro, James Woods, Elizabeth McGovern
Directed by Sergio Leone
De Niro has made his fair share of gangster films, but Once Upon a Time in America may be the most epic. Clocking in at almost four hours long, the film tells the story of De Niro’s Noodles as he rises from a kid on the streets of New York to eventually become a mafia boss. The film was the final work from director Sergio Leone, and the Italian director certainly left everything on the table. Once Upon a Time in America is about the brutality of our system, where anything is possible, as long as you’re willing to do just about anything.

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The King of Comedy (1982)

The King of Comedy
73 %
7.8/10
pg 109m
Genre Drama, Comedy
Stars Robert De Niro, Jerry Lewis, Sandra Bernhard
Directed by Martin Scorsese
Scorsese often tasked De Niro with playing pretty disturbing people, and Rupert Pupkin may be one of the actor’s most disturbing creations. In The King of Comedy, which Joker took as a major source of inspiration, De Niro plays Pupkin as a delusional man who is a celebrity in his own mind. He eventually meets and becomes obsessed with a late-night talk show host, and begins to stalk him. When Pupkin isn’t granted a spot on the host’s show, he ultimately kidnaps the late night host in exchange for a guest spot. The movie is uncomfortable from the word go, and that’s exactly how De Niro and Scorsese wanted it to be.

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Joe Allen
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Joe Allen is a freelance culture writer based in upstate New York. His work has been published in The Washington Post, The…
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