Russell Crowe Breaks Down His Career, from 'Gladiator' to 'The Pope's Exorcist'
THE POPE'S EXORCIST is in theaters now, https://www.thepopes-exorcist.movie/
Director: Funmi Sunmonu
Director of Photography: Joe Machart
Editor: Matthew Colby
Celebrity Talent: Russell Crowe
Line Producer: Romeeka Powell
Associate Producer: Emebeit Beyene
Production Managers: Natasha Soto-Albors
Talent Booker: Meredith Judkins
Post Production Supervisor: Edward Taylor
Post Production Coordinator: Jovan James
Supervising Editor: Kameron Key
Assistant Editor: Justin Symonds
Released on 04/21/2023
You know, I wish that every
young actor could have something like a, Gladiator,
in their career.
When I first saw it, I was blown away by it.
And when I first saw it with a crowd,
that's when it really freaked me out.
Emperor
puts that knife under Maximus' arm towards the end,
people were angry
they were standing in their seats and going-
[laughing] And I was like, Whoa!
This is big.
[upbeat music]
Hello, I'm Russell Crowe
and this is the timeline of my career.
[upbeat music]
Now, where did you say that pain was?
I thought you said it was over here.
Oh, yeah. There.
I think I was 12 when I did, The Young Doctors.
It was a school tour.
The end of the year we're allowed to pick
things that we wanted to do from a list
and one of the things was to go and visit a TV studio.
So I go to the TV studio
and there was an actor there
that I knew from when I was even younger.
His name was Roy Harries-Jones.
And he said to me, Are you here for a casting?.
[laughing]
And I said, No, I'm just with the school group.
And he said, Well, let them do that.
Come on, I'll introduce you to the casting agent.
And I ended up sitting with the casting agent,
I missed the whole tour,
but I had a really nice conversation
and that ended up with me getting the job.
Russell, is your mother here with you?
No.
Where is she?
With my dad.
And where's your dad?
Where he is every night,
in the pub.
As so often happens on those soap operas,
they sort of shape it around your real life
and at that time, my dad was managing pubs,
they'd been caterers for a while,
but then they went into hotels.
And so we would live
in the hotel that my dad was running.
So they made up this story about the child
not having a lot of parental sort of guidance around,
'cause his family were always working and stuff like that,
which is pretty much my story, you know.
It's funny to look back on it now,
as I grew up
and started moving into the industry,
I didn't have the same fear that some other actors have
about working on camera and stuff because
I popped that bubble when I was a little boy.
A couple of years later,
I did another little thing in TV
and a couple of years after that, another little thing
and touring in bands
and I was a nightclub DJ for a while.
I started floating back into the acting thing
through musical theater.
And so I didn't get my first
audition for a lead role in a feature film until I was 25.
You want some advise, Ms. Bracken?
It's Lynn.
Ms. Bracken,
don't ever try to bribe me or threaten me,
or I'll have you and Patchett in up to your ears.
By the time we get to, LA Confidential,
that's probably my 15th or 16th film.
I received the script from Curtis Hanson
and it described Bud White as
the biggest man
in
the Los Angeles Police Department.
And I was like,
Curtis, why did you send this to me?.
But I met with him and
he told me that he'd seen all the stuff
and that he really believed in what I did.
And did a lot of Australian independent films,
things like, Romper Stomper, and, Proof,
and a few American independent films as well,
where I always insisted as part of the negotiation
that my name was above the title.
Everybody used to scratch their head about that
but it paid off later
when serious producers started looking at my work,
there wasn't just one role above the title,
there was many.
They kind of got more confident about being able to
hire me, I suppose, in American films, because
that looked legit. You know what I mean?
[laughing]
When I flew to LA, I moved into this hotel
and we began rehearsals and a few days into the rehearsal,
the studio stopped paying the bill at the hotel
and they stopped paying for my rental car.
The studio didn't want me to be in that role,
they wanted, I think Sean Penn
and Robert De Niro in the film or something.
Things that they could quantify
and understand.
So there was a probably a four or five day period there
where I was leaving the hotel of a morning
by going down the back stairs
because I knew the manager of the hotel
was waiting for me in the foyer
to ask when the bill was going to be paid.
If I'd paused and said, I'm not turning up to work,
they just would've taken that opening
to get me out of the movie.
One of the producers of the film
who really, really believed in the film,
against the wishes of,
let's call them the studio for the film,
he took a print by himself
and he flew to the Cannes Film Festival.
It was selected to be in main competition.
Suddenly this film that everybody had already written off,
now people started going, How is that possible?,
This film that we thought was one thing
is regarded by the greatest film market
and festival in the world as something else.
It really changed the trajectory for the film.
And if it had not been screened at Cannes in the way it was,
I don't think it would've got the attention that it did.
[ominous music]
My name is Maximus Decimus Meridius,
commander of the Armies of the North,
General of the Felix Legions.
Father to a murdered son.
Husband to a murdered wife.
And I will have my vengeance,
in this life or the next.
Gladiator's my 20-something movie.
I was confident about my abilities as a leading man.
What I wasn't confident about with, Gladiator,
was the world that was surrounding me.
At the core of what we were doing was a great concept,
but the script, it was rubbish,
absolute rubbish.
And it had all these sort of strange sequences.
One of them was about chariots
and how famous gladiators,
and this is all true, right?
To use certain types of chariots and
some famous gladiators had endorsement deals
with products for olive oil and things like that,
and that's all true,
but it's just not going to ring right to a modern audience.
They're going to go, What the is all this?
The energy around what we were doing was very fractured.
I did think it couple times,
maybe my best option is just to get on a plane
and get out of here, you know?
It was my continued conversations with Ridley
that sort of gave me faith.
He said to me at one point in time,
Mate, we're not committing anything to camera
that you don't believe in, a hundred percent.
So when we actually started that film,
we had 21 pages of script
that we agreed on.
A script is usually between 103 or four or 110 pages,
something like that.
So we had a long way to go
and we basically used up
those pages in the first section of the movie.
So by the time we got to our second location,
which was Morocco, we were sort of catching up.
Blessed father, watch over my wife and son
with a ready sword.
Whisper to them, I live only to hold them again.
Ridley wanted to shoot me during this after battle prayer
and amongst the trinkets on the shelf
that the art department had left there,
they had these little figurines
so I picked up these figurines
and like directed a prayer towards them,
as if they were my wife and child.
That ends up becoming this huge story point.
But it was like, that was created on the night
and there was an actor in the room there
playing the character of Cicero,
a guy called Tommy Flanagan,
he was booked as a day player for one day's work.
And we shot that scene and then Ridley was like,
There's something about those figurines,
we have to figure out,
you know, there's something about that.
So we need to hang on to that actor.
That led to Tommy Flanagan being flown to Malta,
for months, he was there for months.
We still didn't know what we were going to do,
but we knew we were going to
come back to his character, you know?
And then as it turned out,
we came up with the idea of him
not only coming to see Maximus, but bringing the figurines.
You would fight me?
Why not?
Do you think I'm afraid?
I think you have been afraid all your life.
Joaquin was going through the same thing as I was.
When you walk onto a set that big,
it's very easy for imposter syndrome
to sort of come over you.
It's like, What am I going to do with this?
And he would go to his costume
appointments and they'd put him in this armor
and all this finery, you know.
I remember one day he said to Ridley,
Ridley, I don't understand.
I'm a kid from Florida, what am I supposed to do in this?
Go out and wave to people.
And Ridley's like, Yeah,
that's what you're supposed to do.
We all know this now,
we know how fine an actor he is now.
But back then,
it was only Ridley Scott
that knew how fine an actor he was.
He was the one convincing Joaquin
to do this and to do it the way he did it.
The subtleties and the menace
and all of these things that he brought to that role.
When I first saw it, I was blown away by it.
And when I first saw it with a crowd,
that's when it really freaked me out because
it was like going to a movie when I was a kid.
People were so connected to the film
and they were voicing that connection.
The
Emperor
puts that knife under Maximus' arm towards the end.
People were angry,
they were standing in their seats and going-
[laughing]
Calling him a mother.
And I was like, Whoa!
This is big.
Last time I saw, Gladiator,
I actually watched it in the Coliseum in Rome
and I actually got a little bit embarrassed
that I'd received so much attention for that film.
It's an incredible ensemble cast
with beautiful performances from end to end,
not only Joaquin, but Connie Nielsen,
Richard Harris,
Derek Jacobi,
Tomas Arana,
Djimon Hounsou,
I mean, come on man,
It's just beautiful stuff.
I wish that every
young actor could have something like a, Gladiator,
in their career.
We made that film in 1999
and I'll bet you money,
somewhere in the world tonight,
that film is playing on primetime television.
It has the longest legs and people
they're not just connect to it,
but they love it with a passion.
[upbeat music]
I need a map.
When the script arrived,
I was actually on tour with my band,
I was in Texas, I was in Austin, Texas.
But you know, I find it hard
when my brain is doing something else,
if I'm like on another film set or
if I'm touring with the band like that or whatever,
if I'm focused on another project,
it's kind of like letting some of the details
of another project into my head while I'm working,
it's something I try and avoid doing. You know?
So I read between gigs.
This particular copy of the script
had come to me directly from Jeffrey Katzenberg.
But he was very insistent and so,
I took it outside on that back porch
and as the sun was going down in Austin
and I started to read and it blew me away.
I think probably at that point,
it elevated to the most perfect script I'd ever read
and had this built in trick,
and it was such a good trick that it fooled the reader
at the same time as it would fool the viewer.
'Cause I read the script, I really got to the book,
the Sylvia Nasar book on the same subject
and just took that in.
And so when I sat in Los Angeles to meet with Ron Howard,
I knew way more about the subject matter than he did.
I was pretty rude to him in those conversations,
'cause I realized that-
You know, I would say,
Well, what about such and such in this year or whatever?,
He goes, I don't know about that,
and I go, Dude, what are you doing?
You're supposed to be directing this.
And he said to me something like,
Oh, Russell, I will assure you,
I will know everything by the time we start shooting,
something like that and I was like,
That was a good line, bro.
[laughing]
It was a very interesting
process, but
a very difficult process.
When you bring in,
on top of the other practical details
about what you look like at a certain point,
then there's also the thing of actually
beginning to understand
the tells of the diseases that we were dealing with.
You know, I think there's 20, 21, 22 physical tells
and they come on at different times.
And so there was a map for that as well,
which point in time there would be like physical tells
or tells that certain muscle spasmic things
or something that would happen,
it was just, it was very complicated.
The best way to ensure everybody's safety
is for you to continue your work.
Well, I'll just quit.
You won't.
Why would I not?
Because I keep the Russians from knowing you work for us.
I was on the set
and I was sitting there and I looked across
and there was John Nash
and I had been asked by Ron Howard if I wanted to meet him,
but on this film I thought,
Oh, it's just so far back in time and everything
and he'll be a very different man now
that maybe I shouldn't meet him.
But there he was,
he was just standing there on the set.
And so I just went up to him,
I went, Hi John, I'm Russell.
And he did this really funny double take,
he goes, I just saw you on the television the other day
and you didn't look anything like this.
And I said, Can I get you a coffee or a tea?.
And then he went into this
dissertation about tea
and the qualities between
like Southern Indian tea or Northern Indian tea
and how they suited his palate.
And he was just jamming along about tea
and I was listening
and I just said to myself, This is fantastic.
There are some
Northern Indian teas which are dense enough,
I enjoy the flavor that they have.
And I have not been in this room for quite so many years.
I wonder what tea they serve.
There's a scene that they call, The Pens Scene, right?
Where he's offered a cup of tea.
And all of the things that I do in that,
when I'm talking about tea
are stolen from that first conversation.
Even the thing of bending forward to sniff the tea
before sipping it
and waiting until it had cooled down before drinking it.
It was like, all of those things
I got from a real life conversation with John.
I didn't quit on you.
And I didn't quit tonight.
I didn't always lose, I won't always lose again.
I can still fight.
Go home. I can still fight.
Go home to Mae and the kids, Jim.
Go home?
Go home with what?
Go home with what?
A broken hand from Mount Vernon?
I had actually read that script
in the year that, LA Confidential came out.
I just thought it was such an incredible story,
I didn't know anything about this guy
and then I realized it was
a true story and I fell in love with it,
I fell in love with the simplicity of it.
But I fell in love with that journey too.
This man had had success and he'd done everything right,
but then there was the Wall Street Crash in '29.
The way he
came back from that situation,,
he was fighting on behalf of his kids
and putting a roof over their heads and feeding them.
So he was so
noble.
I just loved the guy.
Nobody wanted to do it,
nobody wanted to do a boxing movie.
I mean, Ron's vibe was, Look man,
I can see why you want to do it,
but I don't see where there's any
joy for me as a director.
So many wonderful boxing films have been made over time,
it's a pretty crowded ground.
So I understood what Ron was talking about.
I asked,
Look, I know you don't like this script the way it is,
but if we were brought in Akiva,
who had written, A Beautiful Mind,
he will understand what it's missing
and he'll emphasize those nuances.
So we did that and that was when,
after that is when Ron agreed to direct it.
[indistinct] that sucker!
[inspiring music] [loud smacking]
He's showing tremendous determination.
[inspiring music] [loud smacking]
Opening of that film. I was 40 years old,
but I weighed the same
as when I did my first lead role
in the feature film when I was 25 years old.
So I'd managed to somehow
reverse non-specific male weight gain
and get back down
to 81 kilos or some like that.
That preparation for, Cinderella Man,
was long and it was arduous.
We started in November,
2003
for a shoot that I believe
started around about April, 2004.
A typical day of preparation on that
would be getting up
prior to the sun and going for a walk,
just three or four kilometers.
And then we would do a session in the gym
and some yoga.
Towards the end of the morning, you then get into the ring
and you'd do all the sort of related
boxing stuff, then we'd have a break, have lunch.
We'd do another boxing session, another weight session
and then we would eat dinner
and then after dinner, we'd go for a walk
and then go to bed and that would start again the next day.
In the middle of that preparation,
I actually subluxated my left shoulder
and had to have an operation.
They normally
insist you do seven weeks of rehab,
I rehabbed in
21 days.
On the 21st day, got into the ring
and did ten three minute rounds.
That shoulder still gives me problems,
I had to have another operation
and it's like just full of arthritis and everything now,
'cause I didn't want
everybody to lose their job,
I didn't want the film to collapse,
it was like $80 million sort of Damocles
hanging over my head and I just had to,
I had to make it work,
you know, I had to get back into it.
This is the newly formed
Essex County Narcotics Squad.
Our mandate is to make major arrests, no street guys.
Heroin, cocaine, amphetamine,
no grass under a thousand pounds,
no powder under 40 kilograms.
Any less than that,
than somebody else can waste their time.
American Gangster,
it was a problematic project.
They'd set it up and gone
to make it with a different director
and contracted Denzel.
But the film, for whatever reason,
had collapsed and didn't get made.
So now it's this big black mark,
but it was a black mark against Ron Howard and Brian Grazer,
who are friends of mine,
because we had made, A Beautiful Mind, together.
We've had that success together,
we made, Cinderella Man, together,
we've had that success together.
And it was Brian actually that came to me and he said,
Do you see anything in this?
Do you see any way
we can get out of this hole that we're in?.
And because it was like, when I say hole,
they were in a massive money hole.
They'd spent 30 or 40 million or something
with nothing to show for it.
And I said to him, Well listen man,
I didn't even read the last draft I got sent,
'cause the title's stupid.
[laughing]
It had a different name at one point,
I think it was called, True Blue,
or something like that, right?
I know what it refers to
and I know that it actually refers to,
it was the name of a particular heroin
that Denzel Washington's character Frank was selling.
And that's all well and good, but who knows that?
Who knows?
Brian said, Well we've done a little bit of a rewrite
where we think we've divided the characters a bit more,
but we've also changed the title.
And he said, American Gangster,
and I said, I am very close to being in,
that's a cool title.
So then,
I said
to Brian, 'cause he said he wanted to attract a filmmaker
like Ridley to a piece like that,
and I'd just worked with Ridley on, A Good Year,
so we were sort of in touch really regularly, you know?
And I said, I don't know Brian,
we can send that to him,
but he's just, he's not even probably going to read it.
I let Ridley know it was coming and he had a read of it
and he just loved the time period
and he loved the fact that it was going to be set
all in Manhattan and
the boroughs of New York and the storyline.
And the thing is,
the great benefit was Denzel was attached.
Denzel and I were already friends,
we did, Virtuosity, together,
way back when we were a lot younger.
So I knew that that would work,
But they'd paid him,
'cause of the failed production.
Denzel had done the honorable thing
and he hadn't [indistinct].
We represent progress,
the kind of progress
that's going to see them lose a lot of money.
With you out of the way,
everything can return to normal.
Normal is seeing the police ride up to my house,
dragging my little 12 year old cousin out
and tying him to a pole,
shoving a shotgun in his mouth so hard they bust his teeth,
then they bust two shotgun shells in his head,
knock his head off, that's what normal is to me.
I don't give a about no
[loud banging]
police and I don't give a about no police now.
In that movie,
by the time you get to this
coffee cup scene with interrogation and
Frank is still trying to intimidate,
even though he's not in a very good position,
you know, smacking the coffee cup off the table and stuff,
which is about a power shift between the two characters.
And Denzel is such a fine actor
that he recognized the opportunity
and went with the power shift.
I love working with Denzel, I love his company
and I love working with Ridley,
so it was magnificent.
But also around that,
that was what I met the RZA and he's still,
Bobby Diggs remains one of my closest friends.
Everybody that I worked with, Yul Vazquez and Johnny,
the group of guys that were Richie Roberts detectives,
we're very tight and all super professional
and just fun to be around.
I hereby open
this holy council over the god.
Where we have many, many serious matter
to be talk about.
Such as,
where are we going to hold this year's orgy?
It's trying to find
some sort of truth to a very extreme character.
And you've got to be able to deadpan those moments
in order for them to be funny.
Taika and I, our families,
in the Maori part of my family,
we come from what they call, The same canoe,
it's like Ngati Porou, right?
So
he's in fact my cousin,
in the broader Maori sense, you know?
He arrived for an official meeting,
within the first couple of minutes
I knew that this official meeting
required a gin and tonic or a tequila
or something like that because it was that kind of vibe.
I fell in love with him as a bloke, you know?
So then he sort of said,
Listen, I've come up with this thing
and I don't know if you'll respond,
but you know,
what I'm thinking, all the different roles you've done,
you know, what about a Greek god?.
[laughing]
They are asking me to play the role
with the same voice as Maximus.
His voice, I used to call,
Royal Shakespeare company two pints after lunch,
this faux upper class kind of voice, you know?
So I said to Taika,
You cannot make me do this in an English accent.
I want to do this as a Greek guy.
And everybody just was like,
What are you talking about? You know?
Zeus is a Greek god,
he's no other god from any other civilization,
he is a Greek god.
They came back to me and they said,
We'll only let you do that if you also agree
to simultaneously shoot
every scene in the accent that we think is going to work.
It was fun and fine,
but I doubled the length of every working day I had
because I had to shoot every scene as a Greek guy
and then turn around and shoot every scene
with an English accent as well.
But the studio said at the time
that they would cut both things together
and they would screen both.
The characterization that got the biggest response
in the audience was the one they were going to go with.
The Greek characterization
absolutely smashed the English one,
just smashed it,
by 10 or 15 points, you know what I mean?
And true to their word,
they went with what they said.
We need your lightning bolt.
My lightning bolt is called Thunderbolt.
So I think, to use somebody's secret weapon like this,
that you should at least get the name right when you ask.
Can I borrow
Thunderbolt?
Finding out that not only Chris is a wonderful guy,
but he's a really good actor man.
He's got some comedy chops like crazy, you know
his sense of timing and everything,
So I really enjoyed it.
[ominous music]
[Speaker] Father Gabriel Amorth,
[ominous music]
on the night of June 4th,
you performed an exorcism.
[intense music]
It was not an exorcism.
What fascinated me
was this guy in the middle of it, you know?
When I read
the job description, Chief Exorcist of the Vatican,
I absolutely, hand on my heart,
thought somebody just made that up.
And I go, Oh here's a snappy job title,
Chief Exorcist for the Vatican.
[laughing] You know, it's like.
But then I looked it up and realized, that's a real job.
What's more that the guy had been in the job for 36 years.
So it was my fascination with him as a person
that got me connected.
And then the more I found out about him,
the more fascinated I became.
And having broken
the ice with
the Zeus thing and using the Greek accent,
here they are asking me to play
an Italian priest.
Okay, so what do you think he sounds like?
And the response initially was,
We're thinking like just sort of a mid-atlantic,
non-specific American accent.
And
I'm like, You cannot get anyone more Italian
than this guy.
That doesn't interest me. I'm not going to do it that way.
I said, I'll do the role,
but you got to let me be Italian
and you got to actually let me,
give me a few scenes where I speak
in an Italian language
and then we'll come up with an idea
of how he transitions from Italian language into English.
And they were brave enough to allow me to do it
and so far the response from people has been
pretty good, so we'll see what happens.
[upbeat music]
I never actually know the number of films that I've made,
but it always surprises me
that other people have made more than I have,
'cause I feel like I've been working constantly.
But I'm 58 now.
All my wrinkles are earned.
My gray hairs are all earned.
And now I play characters with wrinkles and gray hair.
The most amazing thing is for me
that I still love my job
and I can genuinely say that
and I know
when I'm
forced to get up at four o'clock in the morning,
it doesn't bother me because I know why I'm there.
[upbeat music fading]
Starring: Russell Crowe
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Jude Law Breaks Down His Career, from 'The Holiday' to 'The New Pope'
Willem Dafoe Breaks Down His Career, from 'The Boondock Saints' to 'Spider-Man'
Kerry Washington Breaks Down Her Career, from Django Unchained to Scandal
Kristen Stewart Breaks Down Her Career, from Panic Room to Twilight
Billy Eichner Breaks Down His Career, from Parks and Recreation to The Lion King
Julia Louis-Dreyfus Breaks Down Her Career, from Seinfeld to Veep
The Russo Brothers Break Down their Career from "Arrested Development" to "Avengers: Endgame"
Richard Dreyfuss Breaks Down His Career, from Jaws to Daughter of the Wolf
John Turturro Breaks Down His Career, from "The Big Lebowski" to "The Night Of"
Terry Crews Breaks Down His Career, from 'White Chicks' to 'Brooklyn Nine-Nine'
Kumail Nanjiani Breaks Down His Career, from 'Silicon Valley' to 'The Big Sick'
Harrison Ford Breaks Down His Career, from 'Star Wars' to 'Indiana Jones'
Anthony Mackie Breaks Down His Career, from 'Avengers: Endgame' to '8 Mile'
Martin Freeman Breaks Down His Career, from 'The Hobbit' to 'Black Panther'
Mark Wahlberg Breaks Down His Career from 'Boogie Nights' to 'Ted'
Richard E. Grant Breaks Down His Career, from 'Downton Abbey' to 'Star Wars'
Kristen Bell Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Gossip Girl' to 'Frozen'
James Marsden Breaks Down His Career, from 'X-Men' to 'Westworld'
Justin Roiland Breaks Down His Career, from 'Rick and Morty' to 'Adventure Time'
Kristen Bell, Terry Crews, Jeff Goldblum & More Break Down Their First IMDb Credit
Anna Kendrick Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Pitch Perfect' to 'Twilight'
Simon Pegg Breaks Down His Career, from 'Shaun of the Dead' to 'Star Trek'
Judd Apatow Breaks Down His Career, from 'Superbad' to 'Freaks and Geeks'
Seth Green Breaks Down His Career, from 'Family Guy' to 'Austin Powers'
Wu-Tang's RZA Breaks Down His Career From Music to Movies
Joseph Gordon-Levitt Breaks Down His Career, from '10 Things I Hate About You' to 'Inception'
Cinematographer Robert Richardson Breaks Down His Career, from 'Kill Bill' to 'The Hateful Eight'
Ralph Macchio Breaks Down His Career, from 'Karate Kid' to 'Cobra Kai'
Black Lives Matter Co-Founder Alicia Garza Breaks Down Her Career
Michael K. Williams Breaks Down His Career, from 'The Wire' to 'Lovecraft Country'
Obama's White House Photographer Breaks Down His Photojournalism Career
Jim Parsons Breaks Down His Career, from 'The Big Bang Theory' to 'Young Sheldon'
Gerard Butler Breaks Down His Career, from '300' to 'Law Abiding Citizen'
'Joker' Make-Up Artist Breaks Down Her Career
Frank Langella Breaks Down His Career, from 'Dracula' to 'The Americans'
Aaron Sorkin Breaks Down His Career, from 'The West Wing' to 'The Social Network'
Dolly Parton Breaks Down Her Career, from '9 to 5' to 'Hannah Montana'
Glenn Close Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Fatal Attraction' to '101 Dalmatians'
David Oyelowo Breaks Down His Career, from 'Selma' to 'Come Away'
Gillian Anderson Breaks Down Her Career, from 'The X-Files' to 'The Crown'
BTS Breaks Down Their Music Career
Louis Vuitton's Nicolas Ghesquière Breaks Down His Fashion Career
Justin Theroux Breaks Down His Career, from 'Mulholland Drive' to 'The Leftovers'
Zack Snyder Breaks Down His Career, from 'Watchmen' to 'Justice League'
Eric Bana Breaks Down His Career, from 'Hulk' to 'Dirty John'
Kathryn Hahn Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Bad Moms' to 'WandaVision'
Tom Hiddleston Breaks Down His Career, from 'The Avengers' to 'Loki'
Mary J. Blige Breaks Down Her Career, from 'What's the 411?' to 'Respect'
Gael García Bernal Breaks Down His Career, from 'Y Tu Mamá También' to 'Coco'
Sandra Oh Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Grey's Anatomy' to 'Killing Eve'
Jay Duplass Breaks Down His Career, from 'Transparent' to 'The Chair'
Regina King Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Friday' to 'Watchmen'
Rebecca Ferguson Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Mission: Impossible' to 'Dune'
Jeff Daniels Breaks Down His Career, from 'Dumb & Dumber' to 'The Newsroom'
Kirsten Dunst Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Jumanji' to 'Spider-Man'
Jeremy Renner Breaks Down His Career, from 'The Hurt Locker' to 'The Avengers'
Jared Leto Breaks Down His Career, from 'Dallas Buyers Club' to 'House of Gucci'
Halle Berry Breaks Down Her Career, from 'X-Men' to 'Bruised'
Mahershala Ali Breaks Down His Career, from 'Moonlight' to 'Swan Song'
Javier Bardem Breaks Down His Career, from 'No Country for Old Men' to 'Dune'
Priyanka Chopra Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Kaminey' to 'The Matrix Resurrections'
Succession's Brian Cox Breaks Down His Career
John Goodman Breaks Down His Career, From 'The Big Lebowski' to 'The Righteous Gemstones'
Sebastian Stan Breaks Down His Career, from 'Captain America' to 'Pam & Tommy'
David Duchovny Breaks Down His Career
Tony Hawk Breaks Down His Skateboarding Career
Jake Gyllenhaal Breaks Down His Career
Jane Fonda Breaks Down Her Career, from '9 to 5' to 'Grace and Frankie'
Lily Tomlin Breaks Down Her Career, from '9 to 5' to 'Grace and Frankie'
Chris Hemsworth Breaks Down His Career, from 'Thor' to 'Spiderhead'
Dakota Johnson Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Fifty Shades of Grey' to 'The Lost Daughter'
Julie Andrews Breaks Down Her Career, from 'The Sound of Music' to 'The Princess Diaries'
Jeff Bridges Breaks Down His Career, from 'The Big Lebowski' to 'The Old Man'
Sean Combs Introduces Sean "Love" Combs
Johnny Knoxville Breaks Down Every Injury of His Career
Susan Sarandon Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Thelma & Louise' to 'Rocky Horror Picture Show'
Mila Kunis Breaks Down Her Career, from 'That '70s Show' to 'Black Swan'
Andrew Scott Breaks Down His Career, from 'Fleabag' to 'Sherlock'
Eddie Redmayne Breaks Down His Career, from 'Fantastic Beasts' to 'The Good Nurse'
Bill Nighy Breaks Down His Career, from 'Love Actually' to 'Pirates of the Caribbean'
Song Kang-Ho Breaks Down His Career, from 'Parasite' to 'Broker'
Jean Smart Breaks Down Her Career, from '24' to 'Hacks'
Michelle Williams Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Blue Valentine' to 'The Fabelmans'
Black Panther's Costume Designer Ruth E. Carter Breaks Down Her Iconic Costumes
Russell Crowe Breaks Down His Career, from 'Gladiator' to 'The Pope's Exorcist'
Ben Affleck & Matt Damon Break Down Their Careers
Michael Shannon Breaks Down His Career, from 'Boardwalk Empire' to 'Man of Steel'
Patricia Arquette Reflects On Her Career, from 'True Romance' to 'Severance'
Robert Downey Jr. Breaks Down His Career, from 'Iron Man' to 'Oppenheimer'
Michael Fassbender Breaks Down His Career, from 'Inglourious Basterds' to 'X-Men'
Julianne Moore Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Children of Men' to 'May December'
Paul Giamatti Breaks Down His Career, from 'Big Fat Liar' to 'The Holdovers'