The vast and varied career of Denzel Washington was filled with powerful scenes that highlighted his incredible acting skills. As a two-time Academy Award-winning performer, Washington has earned his reputation as among the finest actors of his generation, and he has never shied away from tackling challenging roles. With a level of nuance rarely seen in Hollywood, Washington consistently delivered career-defining scenes with ease and, in the process, made the extraordinary look simple.

The best scenes in Washington’s movie career were scattered throughout the years, as he kept the quality of his work high and never faltered when it came to delivering powerful performances. From portrayals of real-life figures in effective biopics to playing some of the most iconic characters in all fiction, Washington has proven himself capable of excelling across genres and has maintained mainstream appeal among viewers of all ages. While Washington has received acclaim for the power of his roles, it’s important to highlight particular moments and scenes that embody his innate skill.

10

Malcolm X’s Address To The People

Malcolm X (1992)

Malcolm X (1992)
PG-13
Biography
Drama
History

Malcolm X is a biographical drama directed by Spike Lee. It stars Denzel Washington as the titular civil rights leader. The film chronicles Malcolm X’s life from his early days as a street hustler to his rise as a prominent and controversial Nation of Islam spokesperson, culminating in his advocacy for human rights before his assassination in 1965.

Director

Spike Lee

Release Date

November 18, 1992

Studio(s)

40 Acres And A Mule Filmworks
, JVC
, Largo Entertainment

Distributor(s)

Warner Bros. Pictures

Writers

Spike Lee
, Arnold Perl
, Alex Haley

Cast

Denzel Washington
, Angela Bassett
, Albert Hall
, Al Freeman Jr.
, Delroy Lindo

Runtime

202 minutes

Budget

$34 Million

Main Genre

Drama

By the early 1990s, Denzel Washington had already proven himself to be an actor of immense talent, and for his role in Glory, he had won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor. However, in Spike Lee’s extraordinary biopic Malcolm X, Washington took things to another level with his portrayal of the African-American civil rights leader. Washington transformed himself into an uncompromising leader as he took viewers on a journey through Malcolm’s controversial life, the context of his fight against racism, and his eventual assassination.

While this epic biopic was full of powerful scenes from Washington, Malcolm X’s address to the people was a moment that gave context to the entire film and proved the actor’s immense talent. Washington delivered the speech with calm composure as audiences listened with bated breath while he explained how Black people had been led astray by politicians in America. This scene highlighted Washington’s commitment to challenging roles and the fearless way he chose overtly political parts and made a name for himself in Hollywood on his own terms.

9

Joe Miller’s Get It Out Of The Closet Speech

Philadelphia (1993)

Philadelphia

PG-13
Drama

Philadelphia (1994) is a legal drama directed by Jonathan Demme, starring Tom Hanks and Denzel Washington. Tom Hanks plays Andrew Beckett, a lawyer who is fired due to his HIV-positive status, while Denzel Washington portrays Joe Miller, a personal injury attorney who takes on Beckett’s wrongful dismissal case. The film addresses themes of discrimination, prejudice, and social justice in the context of the early AIDS epidemic.

Director

jonathan demme

Release Date

January 14, 1994

Writers

Ron Nyswaner

Cast

Tom Hanks
, Denzel Washington
, Roberta Maxwell
, Buzz Kilman
, Karen Finley
, Daniel Chapman
, Mark Sorensen Jr.
, Jeffrey Williamson

Runtime

125 Minutes

Budget

$26 million

Main Genre

Drama

Philadelphia was a trailblazing movie within Hollywood, as it was among the first mainstream films to explicitly address the AIDS epidemic and the unjust homophobia associated with it. Together with Tom Hanks as Andy Beckett, an HIV-positive man suing his former employer, Denzel Washington gave an extraordinary performance as Joe Miller, the lawyer representing him. While Hanks took home the Academy Award for his role, Washington was just as essential to the film’s success and gave a powerful Oscar-worthy performance.

The best example of Washington’s acting prowess came through the many courtroom arguments seen in Philadelphia. A prime example of this was Joe Miller’s “get it out of the closet speech,” which saw him bravely pointing out the homophobia at the heart of their court case and firmly attacking society’s fear of homosexuals and AIDS. By taking the court’s prejudices and throwing them back at them, Washington highlighted that the court case in Philadelphia was about far more than one man’s unfair dismissal and represented a systematic issue of hatred and fear.

8

Released From Solitary

The Hurricane (1999)

The Hurricane (1999) - Poster - Denzel Washington

The Hurricane (1999)

R
Drama

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The Hurricane (1999), directed by Norman Jewison, stars Denzel Washington as Rubin “Hurricane” Carter, a middleweight boxer wrongly imprisoned for murder. The film depicts Carter’s journey through the American legal system and the efforts of a diverse group of supporters aiming to prove his innocence.

Director

Norman Jewison

Release Date

September 17, 1999

Studio(s)

Universal Pictures
, Azoff Entertainment
, Beacon Communications
, Beacon Pictures
, Buena Vista International
, Touchstone Pictures

Writers

Armyan Bernstein
, Dan Gordon

Cast

Denzel Washington
, Vicellous Shannon
, Deborah Kara Unger
, Liev Schreiber
, John Hannah

Runtime

146 Minutes

Budget

50000000.0

Main Genre

Drama

Denzel Washington has always been incredibly talented at capturing the essence of real people whenever he portrays them in biopics. For his role as Rubin Carter in The Hurricane, Washington took audiences on a journey about a once-promising boxer whose life was destroyed after he was wrongly convicted of a triple murder. While Carter’s life had previously been immortalized in a song by Bob Dylan, Washington’s performance truly showcased his painstaking struggles.

For nearly 20 years, Carter struggled to cope with life in prison, and the scene in which he was released from solitary confinement was truly one of Washington’s very best. As the prison guard pleaded with Carter to cooperate with him, Washington’s stern determination not to be treated like a common criminal shone through. Carter never gave up on fighting for his freedom, and the intensity with which he wanted to seek justice oozed out of every word Washington spoke.

7

Killing Roger

Training Day (2001)

Training Day

R
Crime
Thriller
Drama

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Denzel Washington and Alonzo Harris star in Training Day, an action thriller that follows the two stars as Los Angeles narcotics officers. Jake Hoyt is prepping on his first major training day for a promotion as he spends spend a tense twenty-four hours across several L.A. crime-ridden neighborhoods as Jake sees the danger and horrors of the job.

Director

Antoine Fuqua

Release Date

October 5, 2001

Studio(s)

Warner Bros. Pictures

Distributor(s)

Warner Bros. Pictures

Writers

David Ayer

Cast

Eva Mendes
, Ethan Hawke
, Denzel Washington
, Scott Glenn
, Cliff Curtis

Runtime

122 minutes

Budget

$45 million

Denzel Washington as the crooked LAPD cop Det. Alonzo Harris was the best villain role in Washington’s entire career, as he captured the brutal corruption at the core of his character. Washington played the role with an air of menace throughout. While Ethan Hawke’s portrayal of Officer Jake Hoyt, a straight-laced, ambitious cop on his first day as a detective, was a solid juxtaposition to this corruption. Washington had plenty of incredible scenes in Training Day, but the moment he killed the narcotics officer Roger was the tipping point where Hoyt realized things had gone too far.

Washington played this scene with an air of cool confidence as he shot the quarrelsome, arrogant, corrupt, and greedy LAPD officer like it was nothing. Hawke’s reaction in this scene must also be commended, as his fear and uncertainty about the situation were palpable. The scene where Roger was murdered in cold blood by Alonzo stood out as particularly jarring because they were associates with one another, and the way that Washington shoThe Equalizert him and immediately came up with a cover-up plan showcased that he was capable of anything.

6

Frank Lucas’s Interrogation

American Gangster (2007)

American Gangster

R
Biography
Crime
Documentary
Drama

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American Gangster is a 2007 crime film directed by Ridley Scott, featuring Denzel Washington as Frank Lucas, a heroin kingpin in Harlem, and Russell Crowe as Richie Roberts, the detective determined to bring him down. The film explores the rise of Lucas in the drug trade and the eventual intersection of their lives amidst the backdrop of a corrupt and morally complex society.

Director

Ridley Scott

Release Date

November 2, 2007

Writers

Steven Zaillian
, Mark Jacobson

Cast

Carla Gugino
, Idris Elba
, John Hawkes
, Cuba Gooding Jr
, Russell Crowe
, Denzel Washington
, Ted Levine
, Josh Brolin
, Chiwetel Ejiofor
, Joe Morton

Runtime

157 minutes

Budget

$100 million

American Gangster was one of Ridley Scott’s greatest movies and boasted two incredible performances from Russell Crowe and Denzel Washington. With a story loosely based on the real criminal career of Frank Lucas, a Black American drug smuggler whose operation rivaled even the Italian mafia, Washington’s cool charisma and stern, no-nonsense style made him the perfect candidate for the role of Lucas. While Washington had plenty of incredible scenes in American Gangster, the moment he came face-to-face with law officer Richie Roberts stood out.

Frank Lucas’s interrogation scene was a masterclass in acting, as Crowe and Washington played off against one another in a meeting the entire movie had been building toward. The scene had all the tenets of Washington’s best work as he waxed lyrical about the hypocrites of the law and showcased how Lucas justified his crimes to himself. Driven by two strong performances and an incredible script, the interrogation in American Gangster was a thrilling scene of cat-and-mouse that solidified Washington’s reputation as one of the best actors of all time.

5

The Plane Goes Down

Flight (2012)

Flight

R
Thriller
Drama

Written by John Gatins and directed by Robert Zemeckis, Flight is a Drama featuring Denzel Washington in the lead role as Captain Whip Whitaker, a commercial airline pilot with a troubled lifestyle. The plot sees Whip landing a plane and being heralded as a hero while knowing that he was responsible for the crash in the first place.

Director

Robert Zemeckis

Release Date

November 2, 2012

Studio(s)

Paramount Pictures

Distributor(s)

Paramount Pictures

Writers

John Gatins

Cast

Don Cheadle
, Kelly Reilly
, Melissa Leo
, John Goodman
, Bruce Greenwood
, Denzel Washington

Runtime

138 minutes

Budget

$31 million

Denzel Washington teamed up with director Robert Zemeckis for the excellent drama Flight, in which he starred as an alcoholic pilot. With a litany of personal problems and drugs and alcohol in his system, the most intense scene in Flight came when Captain Whip Whitaker miraculously crash-landed the plane after a mechanical failure. Although Whitaker was first hailed as a hero, this narrative quickly changed when the truth started to spill out after an investigation into the crash highlighted his addiction issues.

Flight was a thrilling film with a fantastic Washington performance, and the entire story was based on the power of its plane crash scene. With cool confidence, Washington guided his co-pilot and ensured the safety of everyone on board, even while dealing with the effects of his intoxication. It was a testament to Washington’s acting skills that he was able to simultaneously play to so many layers, which included his role as a brave pilot, a struggling addict, and an inebriated man with care and complexity.

4

Her Life Will Go On

The Equalizer (2014)

The Equalizer (2014) - Poster - Denzel Washington With A Rifle

The Equalizer (2014)

R
Thriller
Action
Crime

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The Equalizer is an action thriller directed by Antoine Fuqua starring Denzel Washington as Robert McCall, a former intelligence operative who lives a quiet life in Boston. When he encounters a young girl named Teri, played by Chloë Grace Moretz, threatened by violent Russian gangsters, McCall comes out of retirement to use his skills to restore justice. The film reimagines the 1980s TV series of the same name.

Director

Antoine Fuqua

Release Date

September 24, 2014

Studio(s)

Lonetree Entertainment
, Columbia Pictures
, Village Roadshow Pictures
, Escape Artists
, LStar Capital
, Mace Neufeld Productions

Writers

Richard Wenk
, Richard Lindheim
, Michael Sloan

Cast

Denzel Washington
, Marton Csokas
, Chloe Grace Moretz
, David Harbour
, Haley Bennett

Runtime

132 Minutes

Budget

55000000.0

Main Genre

Thriller

Despite having such a varied and interesting career, Denzel Washington has only done one franchise, and that was as Robert McCall in The Equalizer series. McCall was a former Marine and former Central Intelligence Agency Case Officer who returned to his role to protect a teenage trafficking victim from members of the Russian mafia. This powerful motivation saw him ruthlessly take out a gang of Russian gangsters in the first action sequence in The Equalizer, which hinted at McCall’s extraordinarily brutal nature.

In the most effective scene in The Equalizer, Washington sat with his murder victim, Slavi, and spoke to him as he bled out and faced the consequences of his evil behavior. In this moment, Washington proved McCall’s potential as a new franchise star as he calmly told his victim that he would die while the teenage girls’ “life will go on.” This scene was packed with meaning as Washington subtly muttered “I’m sorry” under his breath, which was directed not at his victim but at his late wife, whom he promised he was done with his murderous ways.

3

White People’s Court

Roman J. Israel, Esq (2017)

Roman J. Israel, Esq.

PG-13
Thriller
Drama

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Roman J. Israel, Esq. is an Oscar-nominated film starring Denzel Washington. Washington plays Roman J. Israel, Esq, who abandons his idealistic beliefs as a defense attorney to take extreme action as a civil rights advocate. The film was released in 2017 and directed by Dan Gilroy, who previously helmed Nightcrawler starring Jake Gyllenhaal.

Director

Dan Gilroy

Release Date

November 3, 2017

Studio(s)

Sony

Distributor(s)

Sony
, Columbia Pictures

Writers

Dan Gilroy

Cast

Colin Farrell
, Carmen Ejogo
, Denzel Washington
, Nazneen Contractor

Runtime

129minutes

Budget

$22million

One of Denzel Washington’s most underrated performances was as the title character in Roman J. Israel, Esq. Washington was nominated for an Oscar for his role in the powerful legal drama about an idealistic defense attorney in the midst of a personal and professional crisis. While Roman J. Israel, Esq underperformed at the box office, it stood as among Washington’s greatest roles as he portrayed his real-life character with nuance and depth in several extraordinary scenes.

One moment in Roman J. Israel, Esq, that encapsulated his entire character was the ‘White People’s Court’ scene as Isreal spoke to a prosecuting attorney about his case. The rival attorney was unwilling to listen to Israel’s plea for bail, and Washington’s powerful yet reserved speech showcased his character’s entire ethos. As Washington explained how the young man found himself in legal trouble, he stated, “Each one of us is greater than the worst thing we’ve ever done,” in a quote that effectively demonstrated Israel’s empathic nature and willingness to fight for those left behind by society.

2

“I Ain’t Got to Like You”

Fences (2016)

Fences

PG-13
Drama

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Fences is a period drama written by American playwright August Wilson. It was directed by Denzel Washington, who also plays Troy Maxson, a garbage collector whose checkered past prevented him from fulfilling his potential as a baseball player. The movie was well-received by both critics and viewers, with many praising Washington’s performance as the bitter sanitation worker.

Director

Denzel Washington

Release Date

December 25, 2016

Studio(s)

Paramount Pictures

Distributor(s)

Paramount Pictures

Writers

August Wilson

Cast

Mykelti Williamson
, Stephen Henderson
, Russell Hornsby
, Denzel Washington
, Christopher Mele
, Saniyya Sidney
, Viola Davis
, Jovan Adepo

Runtime

139 Minutes

Budget

$24 million

Not only was Denzel Washington an extraordinary actor, but he was also a talented director capable of getting the best out of himself in his acting roles. This was certainly the case for his part as Troy Maxson in Fences, the adaptation of the play by August Wilson that Washington directed and produced himself. While this dialogue-driven story of a working-class African-American father in the 1950s was full of powerful scenes, none could match the “I ain’t got to like you” speech.

This moment came when Cory Maxson confronted his father about why he never felt he liked him. In response, Washington summed up the pain and difficulties of being a working-class father providing for his family. With intense passion, Troy told his son that he does not have to like him, as he has devoted his life to providing for him and giving him the skills he needs to make it in the world. While this scene was full of confrontation, it was also packed with love, shown through acts of service and the unspoken power of a father-son bond.

1

Tomorrow, And Tomorrow, And Tomorrow

The Tragedy of Macbeth (2021)

The Tragedy of Macbeth

R
Thriller
Drama
History

Joel Coen presents The Tragedy of Macbeth, a film based on the classic play written by William Shakespeare, starring Denzel Washington and Frances McDormand. The film retells the story of Macbeth, which entails ambitious goals that result in a usurpers plot and murder that shakes the kingdom to its core.

Director

Joel Coen

Release Date

December 25, 2021

Studio(s)

A24

Distributor(s)

A24

Writers

Joel Coen

Cast

Frances McDormand
, Harry Melling
, Corey Hawkins
, Bertie Carvel
, Brendan Gleeson
, Moses Ingram
, Alex Hassell
, Denzel Washington
, Kathryn Hunter

Runtime

105 minutes

Budget

$200,000

The illustrious career of Denzel Washington was packed with complex and difficult movie roles that highlighted his position as among the best actors. While Washington has proven himself an action star, a dramatic powerhouse, and an often impressive comedic performer, he truly pushed himself to the limit with his role as Macbeth in Joel Coen’s The Tragedy of Macbeth. This Shakespearean tragedy was a true tour de force for Washington, and immense power can be felt in his “tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow” soliloquy.

As a scene first performed in 1606, there were many ways Washington could have tackled this speech, as the means through which it’s presented provided incredible insight into Macbeth’s psychology. As a character tethered on the verge of madness, Washington controlled his acting as he stayed reserved even while his entire world was falling apart around him. The Tragedy of Macbeth may seem like an anomaly in Denzel Washington’s career, but the ease with which he played one of the most complex characters in all literature proved no role was too challenging for him.