Leonardo DiCaprio has spent three decades building a filmography that most actors could only dream of, with a rare ability to disappear into a character while still commanding every scene. These are 15 of his most iconic roles to date.
DiCaprio plays Ernest Burkhart, a man who marries into the Osage Nation while quietly participating in a sinister plot to steal their oil wealth, and the scariest part is how ordinary he makes him feel. It's a deliberately uncomfortable performance, asking the audience to sit with someone complicit in genuine evil without ever fully admitting it to himself. Reuniting with Scorsese for the ninth time, it's arguably the most morally complex role of his career. | © Paramount Pictures
DiCaprio plays Danny Archer, a morally compromised smuggler navigating the brutal diamond trade in war-torn Sierra Leone with a self-serving agenda that slowly starts to crack. The role required him to disappear into a convincing South African accent while carrying the emotional weight of a story that doesn't let anyone off the hook easily. It earned him an Oscar nomination and stands as one of his most physically and dramatically demanding performances outside of his work with Scorsese. | © Warner Bros. Pictures
DiCaprio plays Romeo in Baz Luhrmann's bold, modern retelling of Shakespeare's tragedy, set against a neon-soaked, gun-toting version of Verona that shouldn't work as well as it does. His performance is raw and romantically charged in a way that made an entire generation fall completely in love with him, and it's easy to see why. Coming off the heels of this and Titanic a year later, it cemented him as the defining young Hollywood star of his generation. | © 20th Century Fox
DiCaprio plays Jay Gatsby, the mysteriously wealthy and hopelessly romantic dreamer whose entire world is built around recapturing a love he lost years ago. The role fits him like a glove, letting him be magnetic and tragic at the same time in a way that feels completely natural. Baz Luhrmann's flashy, maximalist style could have swallowed a lesser performance whole, but DiCaprio keeps Gatsby grounded and genuinely heartbreaking underneath all the spectacle. | © Warner Bros. Pictures
DiCaprio plays Calvin Candie, a charming and utterly brutal plantation owner who stands between a freed slave and the woman he's trying to rescue. It was his first time playing a full villain, and he leaned into it with a gleeful menace that caught a lot of people off guard. The performance is deeply unsettling in all the right ways, and it remains one of the most talked-about things he's ever done precisely because it was so far outside what audiences expected from him. | © Sony Pictures Releasing
DiCaprio plays Howard Hughes, the brilliant and deeply troubled aviation pioneer whose genius was slowly consumed by obsessive mental illness. It's a sprawling performance that had to carry a character across decades, balancing magnetic highs with devastating lows. The role earned him his first Oscar nomination and made it clear he was a serious actor, not just a movie star. | © Miramax Films
DiCaprio plays Amsterdam Vallon, a young man who returns to the violent underworld of 1860s New York to avenge his father's murder at the hands of a powerful gang leader played by Daniel Day-Lewis. Holding his own opposite Day-Lewis is no easy task, and while the film ultimately belongs to its villain, DiCaprio brings a quiet intensity to Amsterdam that anchors the whole story. It was his first collaboration with Scorsese, kicking off one of the most celebrated director-actor partnerships in modern cinema. | © Miramax Films
DiCaprio plays Rick Dalton, a fading TV actor desperately trying to stay relevant in a Hollywood that's moving on without him, and the vulnerability he brings to the role is something else entirely. It's a quieter, more internal performance than most people expected from him, full of small moments of self-doubt and wounded pride that feel completely genuine. Paired with Brad Pitt at the peak of their respective powers, it's the kind of effortless, lived-in work that only comes from an actor who has nothing left to prove. | © Sony Pictures Releasing
DiCaprio plays Billy Costigan, an undercover cop embedded deep in a Boston crime organization, slowly unraveling under the pressure of living a double life with no way out. The role is a masterclass in controlled anxiety, with his character constantly on the edge of being exposed in a way that makes every scene feel genuinely tense. It's one of the best performances in a film absolutely stacked with great ones, which is no small achievement when you're sharing the screen with Jack Nicholson and Matt Damon. | © Warner Bros. Pictures
DiCaprio plays Frank Abagnale Jr., a real-life con man who successfully impersonated a pilot, doctor, and lawyer all before the age of 21 while staying one step ahead of an FBI agent played by Tom Hanks. The role plays perfectly to his natural charm, letting him be charismatic and slippery in a way that makes you root for someone you probably shouldn't. It's one of his most purely enjoyable performances, a reminder that before all the prestige epics, he was just as compelling when the material was fun. | © DreamWorks Pictures
DiCaprio stars in this highly anticipated film directed by Paul Thomas Anderson, marking the first collaboration between two of Hollywood's most celebrated talents. Details about the project have been kept fairly close to the chest, but the pairing alone was enough to make it one of the most talked-about releases of the year. If their combined track records are anything to go by, it's the kind of film that will likely be dissected and debated for a long time after people see it. | © Warner Bros. Pictures
DiCaprio plays a federal marshal who travels to a remote psychiatric facility to investigate a missing patient, only to find that nothing about the place adds up. The film is a slow-burn psychological puzzle, and his performance keeps you genuinely unsure of what's real and what isn't right up until the final moments. It's the kind of role that rewards a second watch, because once you know the truth, everything he does in the first half of the movie hits completely differently. | © Paramount Pictures
DiCaprio plays Jordan Belfort, a real-life stockbroker whose rise to obscene wealth through fraud and excess became one of the most entertaining trainwrecks ever put on screen. He throws himself into the role with an energy that's almost exhausting to watch, making Belfort equal parts repulsive and magnetic in a way that's genuinely hard to pull off. It's probably his most purely fun performance, and the fact that you're laughing and cringing at the same time is exactly the point. | © Paramount Pictures
DiCaprio plays Hugh Glass, a frontiersman left for dead in the wilderness after a brutal bear attack, who crawls his way back to seek revenge. The film is punishing to watch in the best possible way, and his performance is almost entirely physical, communicating survival and rage through sheer endurance rather than dialogue. It's the role that finally earned him his long-overdue Oscar, and honestly, after watching what he put himself through for it, nobody in the room was arguing against. | © 20th Century Studios
DiCaprio plays Jack Dawson, a charming drifter who wins a third-class ticket onto the Titanic and falls hard for a first-class passenger played by Kate Winslet. The role made him a global superstar overnight, turning him from a promising young actor into one of the biggest names on the planet. Even decades later, Jack Dawson remains the role most people think of first when his name comes up, which says everything about how much of an impact it made. | © Paramount Pictures
Leonardo DiCaprio has spent three decades building a filmography that most actors could only dream of, with a rare ability to disappear into a character while still commanding every scene. These are 15 of his most iconic roles to date.
Leonardo DiCaprio has spent three decades building a filmography that most actors could only dream of, with a rare ability to disappear into a character while still commanding every scene. These are 15 of his most iconic roles to date.