With the release of Get Hard, Will Ferrell is back in wily comic mode as a white-collar con dreading his imminent trip to prison. Think 25th Hour made up of dirty laughs.

For the release, we decided to look back at the ups and downs of Ferrell’s film career and rank every single one of his movie performances. Yes, everything from the stupid (Boat Trip, the awkward early years) to the stupendous (INSERT CATCH PHRASE HERE) to the interestingly great work he’s done while uncredited. We would have included Funny or Die shorts, but that would have doubled this list. So, we’ll just say this now: The Landlord is a flawless viral video.



Now on to Ferrell at the movies.

–Blake Goble

Senior Writer

41. Darren Clark

The Thin Pink Line (1997)

Ferrell is just an extra in this mockumentary, so if you’ve never heard of The Thin Pink Line, why start learning about it now? It’s got Jason Priestley, Jennifer Aniston, Maura Tierney, David Cross, and it’s just terrible. Terrible. Now enjoy, or wince, at this clip featuring a sparkle-vested, awkwardly tall Ferrell. It’s truly his worst, because no one could see his talents yet. –Blake Goble

Best Line: Dialogue not found

40. Gil

The Suburbans (1999)

Here we get shy, soft-voiced, Dad-humored, pre-fame Will Ferrell in a low-rent rock comedy with Craig Bierko and Jennifer Love Hewitt. The Suburbans is one of those flops that gets re-packaged on DVD with all the stars on the cover, after they’ve become stars. Ferrell got to be the nerdy guy in a bro band. –Blake Goble

Best Line: “I have a handheld GPS satellite-controlled system, that’s just, dynamite…”

39. Al

Men Seeking Women (1997)

Ferrell’s first film is a forgettable one (his top-billed co-stars are Grant Shaud and Anthony Palermo, to which you may be asking yourself, who?), but at least his debut made an impression. At the time that he was shooting Men Seeking Women as Al, a nerdy 33-year-old who makes a bet with his friends to see who can be the first to get a girlfriend, Ferrell was still a virtual unknown, having only just joined the cast of Saturday Night Live. Of course, he became a much bigger star by the time the indie comedy was released in 1997; and judging by the emphasis on his name and face in the promotional materials, the belated star of the film as well. –Leah Pickett

Best Line: [Trapped under a car] “I’ve been worse.”

38. Michael, Brian’s Boyfriend (uncredited)

Boat Trip (2002)

Wherein Ferrell upstages an Oscar winner in one completely irrelevant scene. –Randall Colburn

Best Line: “Oh, Larry, you’re still here. Your mother died. This morning. I’m sorry, I thought you got my Post-It.”

37. Lance Delune

The Ladies Man (2000)

As with several films based on one-note SNL characters, Ferrell shines the brightest here as a supporting character — a wimpy husband who’s obsessed with Greco Roman wrestling. More oil! –Dan Caffrey

Best Line: “Are you sure you don’t want just a dab? It’s a lemon essence, and it is delightful.”

36. Jack Wyatt

Bewitched (2005)

This lame, if ambitious, riff on the Bewitched TV series works against most of Ferrell’s strengths. He’s great when allowed to unleash Jack Wyatt’s formidable ego, but the tenderness of the film’s romantic core doesn’t suit him. –Randall Colburn

Best Line: “You shall lick my face, and I shall lick your snout!”

35. Dave

The Wendell Baker Story (2005)

A strange passion project from Luke Wilson and Andrew Wilson (Owen’s brothers, yes), Wendell Baker Story depicts a well-meaning ex-con and his hijinks at a retirement home. Will Ferrell slugging Luke Wilson in the face in a grocery story is the cameo. Forgettable movie, but it’s a smirking bit part for Ferrell. –Blake Goble

Best Line: “You’re a real character, aren’t ya, god you’re a real character?!”

34. Mattress Salesman (uncredited)

The Internship (2013)

Ferrell’s filthy, butt-obsessed bro pops in to give this abysmal Google commercial at least one funny scene. Just look at that neck tat. It had to have been his idea. –Randall Colburn

Best Line: “Have you done the back door yet? Back door? Back door action? Knock knock? Back door? It’s me. With my penis.”

33. Jackie Moon

Semi-Pro (2008)

Classic Ferrell scream-riffing, this time in a silly wig. –Randall Colburn

Best Line: “SUCK MY COCK I’LL MURDER YOUR FAMILY!”

32. Franz Liebkind

The Producers (2005)

Although the 2005 film adaptation of The Producers pales in comparison to the original 1968 film and even the 2001 Broadway stage musical, starring much of the same cast, Ferrell is still sidesplitting as Franz Liebkind, a former Nazi whose musical tribute, Springtime for Hitler, is picked up by producers Max Bialystock (Nathan Lane) and Leo Bloom (Matthew Broderick) in their effort to stage “the worst play ever written” and defraud investors of $2 million from the sure-fire flop. Sure, Ferrell’s German accent is laughably bad — emphasis on the laughable — but his singing and dancing? Not too shabby. –Leah Pickett

Best Line: “The Fuhrer wasn’t a mousy little mama’s boy! The Fuhrer was BUTCH!”

31. Cam Brady

The Campaign (2012)

Throwing Southern politics into the mix makes for Ferrell at his sleaziest and meanest. But it also means there’s some sex-scandal stuff that’s funny in a cringe-worthy, icky kind of way. –Dan Caffrey

Best Line: “Let’s do something crazy weird next time like lick each other’s buttholes in a Denny’s bathroom.”

30. Sky Corrigan/Jesus

Superstar (1999)

Superstar literally has one funny bit, but it’s funny enough to make the film worth seeking out. Ferrell plays Sky Corrigan, the hunky crush of Molly Shannon’s awkward Catholic schoolgirl Mary Katherine Gallagher. Naturally, when she sees Jesus, he has a strikingly similar resemblance to her object of affection, lending a casual, Dude-like demeanor to our Lord and Savior. –Dan Caffrey

Best Line: “I’m a mixture of your mind’s images of God, some past authority figures, uh, Sky, and your dad. Basically, your subconscious came up with me to help you deal. Dig?”

29. Corbitt

Winter Passing (2005)

An utterly indistinct indie with a decent heart, Winter Sleep was one of Ferrell’s early and feeble attempts at drama. Complete with shy, affectless staring, Ferrell showed a commitment to scaling back when he was quickly getting a reputation for going all out. It’s Ferrell’s offbeat persona nearly on mute. –Blake Goble

Best Line: “Crack cocaine will fry your brain.”

28. Cubby the Funeral Director

Drowning Mona (2000)

Drowning Mona is a terrible excuse for a film, and you would be wise to skip it. The only, albeit awkward, laughs come from Ferrell’s bizarre cameo as Cubby the Funeral Director, as he takes each of his would-be-boring lines (“You and everyone’s mother, haha!”) and spins them to sound as creepy as possible. If only he and co-star Danny DeVito could have run away together and made a Death to Smoochy-style black comedy over this DOA dud. –Leah Pickett

Best Line: “In my experience, wakes aren’t very well attended.”

27. Armando

Casa de mi Padre (2012)

Casa de mi Padre is like watching one big inside joke for people who cherish, or mock, Spanish Soap operas. It may as well be the Funny or Die movie, as it’s one experimental short comedy expanded mercilessly into 84 minutes of Will Ferrell playing a hapless Mexican. For a film that’s the very definition of a one-note joke, Ferrell sees it through, complete with melodramatic mockery and even some butt nudity to boot. –Blake Goble

Best Line: “Yo soy Armando Alvarez!!!”

26. Hobie

Melinda & Melinda (2005)

While he doesn’t quite work as a Woody Allen stand-in (let’s face it, Owen Wilson has been the only actor in recent years to really pull this off), Ferrell takes the nebbish cuckold role of Hobie to a far weirder place than other Allen proxies like Colin Firth and Jason Biggs are likely capable of going. His crazy eyes when he finds his wife in bed with a mutual friend – “You’re having an affair with Steve Walsh? He’s wonderful!”– are next level. –Leah Pickett

Best Line: “Did I tell you I played Uncle Vanya once? With a limp. It was interesting.”

25. Ted, the Man in the Yellow Hat

Curious George (2006)

Listen, before passing away, my Grandmother loved this movie because it was just cute in her eyes. So, cheers to the monkey for making her happy. That said, Ferrell wasn’t too bad as The Man in the Yellow Hat. Using his higher pitch and excitable shtick, Ferrell was the loving, well-meaning father to that infamous little chimp. Ferrell’s fine here. –Blake Goble

Best Line: “You don’t give a monkey a latte!”

24. Steve Butabi

A Night at the Roxbury (1998)

In A Night at the Roxbury, Chris Kattan is basically playing Chris Kattan. Ferrell, however, spun the wordless head-bobber of the popular SNL sketch into a fleshed-out character, a doofy dude-bro with a voice and countenance all his own. –Randall Colburn

Best Line: No line in this film is funnier than this shirt:

23. Phil Weston

Kicking & Screaming (2005)

This Ferrell heyday vehicle about a competitive boys’ soccer team is not great, per se, but entertaining nonetheless, and probably better off with Ferrell at the helm than one of his early aughts contemporaries like Adam Sandler, Kevin James, or worse, Rob Schneider. Ferrell plays Coach Phil Weston somewhere between tightly wound and batshit insane so that even when the plot falters, his outbursts sweep in to make his performance, if not the movie itself, memorable. –Leah Pickett

Best Line: “I am angry. I’m like a tornado of anger, swirling about.”

22. Bob Woodward

Dick (1999)

Somebody, please, release this on Blu-Ray, or put it on Netflix Instant, or something! Andrew Fleming’s Dick was the delightfully teen-oriented take on Watergate led by Michelle Williams and Kirsten Dunst; a clever cutesy-fied All the President’s Men. Take Ferrell as a buffoonish Bob Woodward (not far from the truth) getting into a slap fight with Bernstein (Kids in the Hall’s Bruce McCulloch) on live TV. In a true story made ludicrous and funny, Ferrell helps us get in on the joke. –Blake Goble

Best Line: “Don’t … will you … you smell like cabbage!”

21. Chazz Michael Michaels

Blades of Glory (2007)

Blades of Glory isn’t a great movie, but it is a fun one thanks to the two lead performances from Will Ferrell and Jon Heder as rival figure skaters forced to team up. On Ferrell’s end, it’s the sort of performance we’ve seen from him before — self-absorbed and arrogant — but it stands out because he’s actually supposed to be a good skater, despite him clearly being out of shape and, at 40 years of age, a bit too old to be a current champion of the sport. The silliness is inspired, so inspired in fact, that a choice quote became immortalized by Jay-Z and Kanye. –Dan Caffrey

Best Line: “I remember Boston. And that victory was as sweet as the cream pie for which the town was named.”

20. McDermott (uncredited)

The Goods: Live Hard, Sell Hard (2009)

The Goods was quietly released in August 2009, buried under The Hangover, and scarcely heard from again. It’s worth watching if only for Ferrell’s brief, uncredited cameo as McDermott, “the greatest car sale DJ anyone has ever seen.” McDermott meets an untimely end when he dresses up like Abraham Lincoln and gets airdropped on the day of a big car sale, only to discover that he has a bag of dildos strapped to his back instead of a parachute. –Leah Pickett

Best Line: “Just like John Wilkes Booth, our prices are gonna sneak up behind you and blow your brains out!”

19. Dr. Rick Marshall

Land of the Lost (2009)

Saying someone didn’t “get” a movie (or any piece of art for that matter) is an elitist, shitty thing to do, but I maintain to this day that most people didn’t “get” the Land of the Lost reboot. Like The Brady Bunch films before it, the film commented on the inherent ridiculousness of the source material by amplifying it — in this case, parodying Sid and Marty Kroft’s ’70s sci-fi hokum by turning it into a bona fide stoner comedy. Much of its success relies on both the fact that the Krofts produced it (thus the movie never feels mean-spirited) and how Will Ferrell transformed the show’s Dr. Rick Marshall from a rugged, competent scientist to an arrogant dimwit. It’s actually a fairly understated Ferrell performance, one that stands out for its smugness and condescension rather than yelling (although he still does yell). –Dan Caffrey

Best Line: “Forget about the Polish. It’s the T-Rexes who are the real dummies of the world.”

18. Mustafa

Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery (1997)

I think this was my, and likely much of the world’s, first encounter with Ferrell. Here, his signature style of prolonged riffing was still fresh and stood out in a film that prided itself on the broadness of its gags. It’s also a pitch-perfect satirization of the sort of nebulous booby traps found in so many swinger-era spy films. –Randall Colburn

Best Line: “I’m very badly burned!”

17. Mustafa

Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me (1999)

Ferrell made his three minutes of screen time count in Mike Myers’ super spy sequel. The sheer pity we feel for Mustafa, not to mention the guilt for laughing at his pain, the same silly pain in a joke made in the first film. But this time the joke was nastier, funnier, and a little more memorable. And the best part is that Mustafa didn’t die until after the movie was over. So very mean. We thank you for your pain, Mustafa. –Blake Goble

Best Line: “Hello up there!

I seem to have fallen down a cliff.

I’m still alive, but I’m very badly injured.

I think my legs are broken. I’ll try to stand.

Yes, they are broken.”

16. Big Earl (uncredited)

Starsky & Hutch (2004)

Here we have Ferrell in a moment of silly power, moments before Anchorman came out, and people were curious to see what he was capable of. With his hairnet, jean outfit, and strangely homoerotic intensity for dragons and Owen Wilson, Ferrell made the most out of a side role that he filmed in one day. It’s a role that screams “just doing things until it’s funny,” and he found a high spot in his character career: a sleazy, funny prison dude. –Blake Goble

Best Line: “Oh, eureka. God, that’s nice. It’s like a little bowl of oatmeal with a hole in it. I got one too. I just got a little more brown sugar on mine.”





15. Nick Halsey

Everything Must Go (2010)

Ferrell dips into his dramatic range for this underrated indie, playing an alcoholic in the throes of a midlife relapse. After he is fired from his job and his wife leaves him, Nick holds an indefinite yard sale, camping out on his front lawn and waiting for his life to restart. Nick may be sad and stalled, but he also has a warmth to him: a hopefulness buried under years of dejection and despair and a vulnerability that Ferrell peels back in layers, flawlessly. –Leah Pickett

Best Line: “You know they say that the dining room is the least utilized room in the house? I think it’s the front lawn. It’s starting to look good, don’t you think?”

14. Allen Gamble

The Other Guys (2010)

Ferrell’s best in the quiet moments of this failed attempt at reviving the action comedy genre when his paper-pushing detective is forced to react to the machismo of his fellow cops.

Damon Wayans Jr. saying he’ll make Ferrell piss blood from his ass? Not funny.

Ferrell responding with a meek “that’s horrible,” though? Hilarious. –Randall Colburn

Best Line: “They were so convincing in their argument! They swung me!”

13. Ron Burgundy

Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues (2013)

Anchorman 2 is maximalist absurdity — messier and far less restrained than its predecessor. But while it doesn’t have the cohesion of the first film, it arguably has more individual laughs. It feels like Adam McKay just let the camera roll and asked Ferrell and co. to do whatever the hell they wanted, whether it’s nursing a baby shark to adulthood or fighting alongside a Were-Hyena version of fellow newsman Harrison Ford. The end product may not make a whole lot of sense, but it’s a case study in improv as camaraderie. Very funny camaraderie. –Dan Caffrey

Best Line: “I’ll tell you, those fellas, they got the looks, they got the curves, they got the chi-chis, and then at some point during the evening, you reach down below the belt looking to get a little angel hair pasta, and you get a handful of the Battle of the Bulge.”

12. President Business/Man Upstairs

Lego Movie (2014)

As soon as we hear Ferrell’s voice announce, “Hi, I’m President Business, president of the Octan corporation and the world … follow the instructions, or you’ll be put to sleep, and don’t forget Taco Tuesday’s coming next week,” we know we’re in for a treat. We love him as the bad guy, we love him as the good guy, and here, he gets to play both, reminding us why, in 2015, Ferrell is still the Man. –Leah Pickett

Best Line: “All I’m asking for is total perfection.”

11. Federal Wildlife Marshall Willenholly

Jay & Silent Bob Strike Back (2001)

Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back carries the countenance of a zany, warmhearted farce, but the only one on screen who seems to understand that is Ferrell’s Dudley Do-Right-ish Federal Wildlife Marshall Willenholly. –Randall Colburn

Best Line: “Fire a warning shot into his bulbous ass!”





10. Chazz Reinhold (uncredited)

Wedding Crashers (2005)

The best scene in Wedding Crashers doesn’t happen until two-thirds of the way through, when the main character of John, played by Owen Wilson, visits a character who is oft-spoken of but not seen until this moment: Chazz Reinhold, played by Ferrell. Chazz is the sage of wedding crashers, a legendary guru to single bros looking to get laid. However, much to John’s surprise, Chazz is also a pudgy, bathrobed forty-something who lives with his mom and has segued into funeral crashing to pick up chicks. From his opening line (“What the fuck do you want?”) to his belief that grief is nature’s most powerful aphrodisiac (“Just living the dream!”), Ferrell nails what is arguably his most iconic cameo to date. –Leah Pickett

Best Line: “MA, THE MEATLOAF!”

9. Megamind

Megamind (2010)

It’s a testament to Ferrell’s talented silliness that his voice came through in what looked like a Dreamworks payday on the superhero genre. As Megamind, the blue, bulbous baddie of Metro City, Ferrell struggles with boredom and finding his purpose after finally killing his lifelong enemy. It’s a nifty twist, but Ferrell nails both the childishly comical (his mispronunciations are choice) and the startlingly sincere. Megamind’s not bad; he was just set up that way. It’s great voice work from Ferrell and a demonstration of his better qualities when he focuses in on a good character. –Blake Goble

Best Line: “Ollo?”

8. Damian Weebs

Tim and Eric’s Billion Dollar Movie (2012)

As proprietor of the post-apocalyptic wasteland that is the Swallow Valley Mall, Damian Weebs adds a sense of impotence and paranoia to Ferrell’s screamy aggression. Even when forcing Tim and Eric to watch Top Gun on repeat (the one thing that seems to make Weebs happy), he’s on the verge of tears the entire time, unable to find true comfort in a self-created world that involves vagrants, an escaped wolf, and a slowly dying man-child named Taquito. Leave it up to the Tim and Eric team to make Ferrell even weirder than he already is. –Dan Caffrey

Best Line: “Anyone can run a stupid fucking mall. Even you.”

7. Ricky Bobby

Talladega Nights: The Legend of Ricky Bobby (2006)

NASCAR fans make for an easy target. Lazy one, too. And yeah, there are lots of cheap jokes in Talladega Nights, but what saves ‘em is Ferrell’s warm, straight-faced delivery, which injects every Southern stereotype with a dose of Southern hospitality. –Randall Colburn

Best Line: “Well, let me just quote the late, great Colonel Sanders. He said, ‘Well, I’m just too drunk to taste this chicken.’”

6. Mugatu

Zoolander (2001)

Ferrell has always specialized in demented characters who are simultaneously pompous and insecure. In Zoolander, some of that internal poison bleeds into his external appearance — Mugatu’s baby pink skin and devil-horned coif make him look like a bloated, much scarier Klaus Nomi. When combined with his overblown sense of entitlement and raging jealousy towards Derek Zoolander, he becomes a true supervillain for the ages, one who’s as ugly on the outside as he is within. –Dan Caffrey

Best Line: “I invented the piano-key necktie!”





5. Frank

Old School (2003)

As Old School’s Frank “The Tank” Ricard, Ferrell was given the chance to oscillate between his two strongest comedic muscles. One is finding humor in the banality of suburban domesticity, which he captures with such tenderness in the film’s first act that it’s almost painful to see his regression. The other?

Screaming like a goddamn lunatic. –Randall Colburn

Best Line: “Actually, a pretty nice little Saturday. We’re going to go to Home Depot.

Yeah, buy some wallpaper, maybe get some chlorine, stuff like that.

Maybe Bed, Bath, and Beyond, I don’t know if we’ll have time.”

4. Buddy

Elf (2003)

Buddy is Ferrell’s most loveable and huggable character for a reason: he’s just so goddamn earnest. Because he was raised by elves in Santa’s North Pole, Buddy retains a sweet, childlike innocence and sense of wonder, even after he makes the trek to New York City to find his birth father (a curmudgeonly James Caan) and learns, on top of syrup not being an essential food group, that not everyone believes in the power of Christmas cheer in the same way he does. The film’s tagline is “Discover your inner elf,” which is also an apt summation of why Buddy is so endearing: he represents the kid in all of us. He enjoys smiling, eating cookie dough, making snow angels, and holding hands. He answers the phone with “Buddy the Elf, what’s your favorite color?” Coupled with Ferrell’s natural wellspring of enthusiasm and superb comedic timing, really, what’s not to love? -Leah Pickett

Best Line: “SANTA! OH MY GOD! SANTA’S COMING! I KNOW HIM! I KNOW HIM!”

3. Harold Crick

Stranger Than Fiction (2006)

Stranger Than Fiction is a comedy-drama, often amusing and at turns heartbreaking; in other words, a lot like life. However, the protagonist, Harold Crick, exists in highly unusual circumstances: Harold is a fictional character in the mind of an author (Emma Thompson) who is toying with the idea of killing him off. He eventually learns the truth — that a writer is narrating his every move and heretofore, he has had no control over his destiny — and the realization propels him to break out of his monotonous routine as an IRS agent and live a more meaningful life while he still can. It’s a thrilling concept, strange and beautiful, and while all of the actors are superb in bringing it to fruition, it’s Ferrell’s Harold who steals the show. Whether he is sparring with a literature professor (Dustin Hoffman) over hearing the author’s voice in his head or romancing a tax-delinquent baker (Maggie Gyllenhaal) he has been assigned to audit, he carries the film on his sad-sack shoulders and comes out on the other side swinging. –Leah Pickett

Best Line: “I brought you flours.”

2. Brennan Huff

Step Brothers (2008)

Will Ferrell swears a LOT in Step Brothers. I always seem to forget this, as the ostensible takeaway from Brennan Huff is the character’s doofy innocence. Sure, Ferrell physically captures the petulant nature, giddiness, and thin-lipped glares (so precious in hindsight) of a spoiled teenager, but in his words he’s laced the language of a sociopath. That Ferrell was able to layer so much bile and misogyny into the character — a character who on paper was probably a lot less threatening — without losing Brennan’s sympathetic backbone is a testament to the actor’s commitment. I’m scared of this dude, and I sorta think I’m supposed to be. –Randall Colburn

Best Line: “Robert better not get in my face. ‘Cause I’ll drop that motherfucker.”

1. Ron Burgundy

Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)

The initial temptation is to transcribe a handful of lines from Anchorman, the very definition of a “quotable” movie, but that’s too easy. Admit it, you all quote it because you love it. We do too. But perhaps the most appropriate praise for this cult classic is how divinely crass and negative it is. If the famous Second City credo is “yes, and,” then Anchorman’s is “no, now I’m going to say whatever I want, and you’re going to find it really damn odd and funny.” With Adam McKay at the helm, Will Ferrell gave his calling card performance as Ron Burgundy. Burgundy wasn’t just a macho-man reporter or a guy who looked like all our dads in the ‘70s, but he was egocentric id incarnate. And that’s Ferrell’s grand gift: a misogynistic jerk, who calls women “smelly pirate hookers,” that we’ve grown to love because we can keep laughing at him. It’s a hell of a strange thing, but in an age of likeability needed to sell a movie, Burgundy is a legendary dick. It’s Ferrell’s finest and most undoubtedly lasting moment as a comic actor, a performance artist, and mustached pop cultural touchstone.

Ferrell, we won’t act like we’re not impressed. –Blake Goble

Best Line: They’re all deservedly on the tip of your tongue, so, we’ll go with one not made into scorched Earth by frat boys: “I’m on right now? … I don’t believe you.”