The smartest people in the world are often featured in film, sometimes they are real, and sometimes fictional. They don’t always have anything in common, either, other than being geniuses. One might be a math wizard, another a musician who hears music no one else could conceive of. Here is our list of people like that, the smartest people in movies.
The Theory Of Everything
It’s impossible to have a list like this and not include The Theory Of Everything, a movie about the man, Stephen Hawking, who was considered the smartest man in the world for decades. Eddie Redmayne‘s award-winning performance as the physics genius is incredible and the movie makes some complicated science actually fun.
The Big Short
Author Michael Lewis has an uncanny knack for making complicated subjects easily understandable to laypeople. The Big Short is based on one of his best books and breaks down what caused the financial meltdown in 2008/2009 in a way that everyone gets. Margot Robbie explaining it in a bathtub is a nice touch. It also features some really smart, neurodivergent characters based on the real people who saw the crash coming.
Hidden Figures
Tragically, it took nearly 60 years to tell the story of Katherine Goble Johnson (Taraji P. Henson), Dorothy Vaughan (Octavia Spencer), and Mary Jackson (Janelle Monáe). These “hidden figures” were a major force within the US Space Program in its earliest days and their math skills put everyone else to shame. The shame they brought to the program for its racial and gender segregation was even more important.
A Beautiful Mind
The smartest guys in the room are often neurodivergent or suffer from mental health issues. A Beautiful Mind is one of the best examples of how an incredibly brilliant person, in this case mathematician John Nash (Russell Crowe) deals with schizophrenia while revolutionizing mathematics in this true story.
Good Will Hunting
Will Hunting wasn’t a real person, but he was smarter than everyone else around him. Good Will Hunting won Ben Affleck and Matt Damon Oscars for their wonderful script about a kid from South Boston who is shy about his incredible intelligence but has no patience for people who dismiss him because of his working-class roots.
Don’t Look Up
Adam McKay‘s apocalyptic satire Don’t Look Up was a big streaming hit featuring two of the biggest stars around, Leonardo DiCaprio and Jennifer Lawrence as two of the world’s foremost astronomers desperately trying to tell the world about impending destruction from above. No one is listening.
The Social Network
Some people may disagree on whether Mark Zuckerberg is a genius, especially after watching The Social Network. Sure he may have borrowed the idea for Facebook from the Winklevoss twins, but he still built the company that turned into the behemoth we know all too well today.
Real Genius
it’s one of Val Kilmer’s earliest roles is still one of his very best. Real Genius is a true cult classic these days and for good reason. It’s really, really funny. It’s aged much better than the other movie about nerds from that era as well, Revenge of the Nerds.
American Fiction
A truly brilliant writer on the big screen is as rare as hen’s teeth, but Thelonious “Monk” Ellison (Jeffrey Wright) in American Fiction clearly qualifies. He’s the smartest guy in every room he’s in, except maybe with his family, who are every bit as smart as he is.
Sherlock Holmes
There is no detective, fictional or otherwise, as smart as Sherlock Holmes. In some ways, every TV and movie detective is based on the Holmes archetype. His insights and pure genius are what makes him so loveable yet annoying at the same time. There are plenty of great versions of him in pop culture as well, with Robert Downey Jr’s version ranking among the best of them.
Ex Machina
Like it or not, the tech bros are defining a lot of nerd culture. Oscar Isaac’s character, Nathan Bateman, in Ex Machina, a movie that should have been nominated for Best Picture, but wasn’t, is pretty much the epitome of the modern tech bro, Love him or hate him, he’s clearly supposed to be one of the smartest guys in any room he’s in.
The Imitation Game
Alan Turing is a tragic character in history, but there’s no questioning just how brilliant he was or how influential his work has been. The Imitation Game finally brought his amazing, sad, and inspiring story to the masses and Benedict Cumberbatch’s performance as the troubled genius entranced us all.
Oppenheimer
Pound for pound, Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer just might have the most brilliant people in one movie ever made. And all of them were real people. The scale of the Manhattan Project could only be told in a movie with the scale of Nolan’s Best Picture winner.
Stand And Deliver
Genius doesn’t always hail from the hallowed halls of Ivy League universities or big-time board rooms. Sometimes they are just amazing high school teachers like Jaime Escalante, a math teacher in a disadvantaged high school in East LA. Escalante’s story, brought to life on screen in Stand and Deliver, starring Edward James Olmos, is one of the most inspiring movies of the 1980s.
Long before we had Neil deGrasse Tyson to explain to us mere mortals how the cosmos works, we had Carl Sagan. Contact, based on a novel by Sagan, tells the fictional story of Dr. Ellie Arroway (Jodie Foster) and her discovery of life outside our solar system.
Limitless
Just like sports, sometimes genius comes from some performance enhancers. Well, at least, that’s how it works in Limitless, starring Bradley Cooper as a regular who is transformed into the smartest guy in the world with a drug called NZT. Sure, it’s a fictional story and nothing like that exists, but it makes for a really fun movie and some jealousy over what the drug can do.
Proof
Sadly, genius and mental illness often go hand-in-hand, especially on film. Proof is as much about the latter as it is about the former. Gwyneth Paltrow stars alongside Jake Gyllenhaal as a brilliant mathematician living in the shadow of her even more brilliant late father who struggled with mental illness, something she fears could affect her as well.
Idiocracy
The geniuses in Idiocracy aren’t really geniuses at all. They are just the smartest people on earth in a future where the whole world has gotten really, really stupid. Mike Judge’s brilliant, yet somewhat terrifying, vision of the future is something we desperately need to avoid at all costs! It’s a brilliant movie about stupid people.
Moneyball
Every baseball fan knows just how much Sabermetrics has taken over the sport, for better and for worse. It really all started with Billy Bean, played by Brad Pitt, who leads a brilliant cast in Moneyball, the general manager for the Oakland A’s whose story was told first in the book, then in the movie of the same name. There are a lot of really smart people in the movie, though how much better they made baseball in the end is debatable.
Amadeus
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart is a towering figure in the history of music. His genius is undisputed and when he was brought to life on screen in Amadeus, the whole world got to see at least one version of the composer. Sure, there are a lot of artistic liberties taken by director Milos Foreman, but the movie isn’t shy about showing just how brilliant Mozart was in this amazing biopic.
The Martian
It turns out Matt Damon is pretty good at playing smart guys. In Ridley Scott’s 2015 film The Martian, Damon plays a Mars explorer left for dead after an accident on the Red Planet. With no one around to help, he figures out how to feed himself, make contact with his colleagues, and finally escape certain death on the inhospitable planet.
Rope
It is possible to be too smart for your own good, or at least think you’re smarter than you really are. The characters in Alfred Hitchcock’s Rope are one or the other, the viewer has to decide. Loosely based on the Leopold and Loeb murder of the 1920s, two smart college kids try to get away with the perfect murder.
Pi
There is a fine line between genius and madness, and Darren Aronofsky’s first film, Pi, explores that to great depths. It’s not an easy movie to watch, both due to its subject matter and its filming techniques, but like the characters in the movie, it’s a brilliant film.
Searching For Bobby Fischer
Chess masters are often thought of as the smartest guys in the room because the complex game is so hard for most people to master. The level of skill on display in Searching For Bobby Fischer is a great example of just how competitive these geniuses can be when it comes to one of the hardest games in the world to conquer.
Finding Forrester
In Finding Forrester, Jamal Wallace (Rob Brown) is mentored by a brilliant, but reclusive writer played by Sean Connery. The movie shares a lot in common with Good Will Hunting as Wallace is doubted by the elite at every turn, but comes out triumphant in the end.
WarGames
It’s pretty easy to point out the ridiculousness of a high school kid played by Matthew Broderick somehow taking over the nuclear response protocols of the United States during the Cold War, but that isn’t really fair to do with WarGames. Broderick plays high school student David Lightman who unwittingly almost starts World War III after he plays a computer game. It turns out he’s also the only one smart enough to figure out how to stop it.
Little Man Tate
You never really know where genius will come from. Sometimes it comes from the most average of places, as portrayed in Little Man Tate. Fred Tate (Adam Hann-Byrd) is a childhood prodigy being raised by a normal working-class mother played by Jodie Foster. He’s brilliant in school and seemingly a musical genius. All of this means, of course, that he is ostracized by the other kids in school and the movie highlights just how hard it can be for kids like Fred.
Steve Jobs
Like a lot of tech billionaires, calling Steve Jobs a genius is sure to rankle some folks. That’s okay, but no one can deny just how successful he was in building one of the largest computer companies in the world. In the movie Steve Jobs, the Apple co-founder is played by Michael Fassbender and while it’s definitely a loving look at the techie’s life, it does show the downside as well.
Powder
Powder is far from a perfect movie, to say nothing about its very controversial director, Victor Salva. Still, it absolutely deserves a spot on any list of the smartest guys in the room. The main character, Powder, played by Sean Patrick Flanery, is not only the smartest person, possibly on earth, but that intelligence comes with supernatural powers as well, truly unlocking the mind’s full potential or something. Yeah, it’s not perfect.
Revenge Of The Nerds
We’ll just get this out of the way off the top with this entry: Revenge of the Nerds is one of the most problematic movies of the 1980s. There are a lot of reasons why they aren’t worth going into here, except to say they are not trivial. But, it’s also a movie about a bunch of really smart nerds who take on the jocks in that classic battle as old as time immemorial.
Iron Man
Yeah, yeah, how can a comic movie be on this list, you’re probably asking yourself. Well, because at least in the MCU, Tony Stark is absolutely stone-cold genius. you can argue that he’s not, the guy invented the Iron Man suit in a cave in the desert! Who else could do that? Frankly, it’s good that the MCU isn’t just about superpowers gifted by the gods or freak scientific accidents. Sometimes it just takes a really smart person to be a superhero.
Arrival
Denis Villeneuve’s underrated Arrival tackles a problem that will surely come into play if and when contact is ever made with extraterrestrials. How will we communicate? It’ll take a genius to figure that out and in Arrival, that genius is linguist Louise Banks, played by Amy Adams. She’s a different kind of genius than almost all the others on this list, but she qualifies just as much.