The 1980s was not just a great time for movies but for the people in them. Many of our all-time favorite actors got their start in ’80s movies (or at least started to hit it big during that time).
The question is, in what film did these stars hit their peak of cinematic brilliance during that decade? Let’s see if we can provide an answer by looking at the best ’80s movies starring the most iconic ’80s actors, in our opinion.
Bruce Willis (Die Hard)
While the TV series Moonlighting made Bruce Willis a household name, playing John McClane, a New York cop at war with violent German thieves in an LA high-rise on Christmas Eve, made him a movie star in 1988. However, Die Hard might be the actor’s best film in any decade, let alone the greatest action movie of all time.
Sigourney Weaver (Aliens)
Fans have been debating which is the best Alien movie for years but no one disagrees that James Cameron‘s Aliens is the best Alien movie of the ’80s. The 1986 sci-fi movie classic, in which our human protagonists take on plenty more than just one vicious extraterrestrial this time, saw Sigourney Weaver reprise Xenomorph survivor Ellen Ripley to Academy Award-nominated acclaim.
Jack Nicholson (Terms Of Endearment)
The single most iconic Jack Nicolson performance from the 1980s, arguably, comes from the horror movie classic, The Shining. However, we chose to highlight his Academy Award-winning performance in director James L. Brooks’ tragic 1983 Best Picture Oscar winner, Terms of Endearment, as Garrett, who forms a complicated relationship with his widowed next-door neighbor, Aurora Greenway (Shirley MacLaine).
Meg Ryan (When Harry Met Sally…)
Meg Ryan made up one of Hollywood’s most beloved onscreen couples with Tom Hanks, but we loved her the most in the ’80s when she was falling in love with Billy Crystal in When Harry Met Sally… Considered one of the greatest rom-coms of all time, director Rob Reiner and Nora Ephron’s clever and sweet 1989 favorite traces the titular duo’s evolution from enemies, to friends, to lovers over the course of 12 years.
Tom Cruise (Top Gun)
Everyone had the need, the need for speed, in 1986 when director Tony Scott‘s romantic, action-packed instant classic, Top Gun, ruled the box office, captured the hearts of audiences everywhere, and spawned an acclaimed blockbuster sequel in 2022 called Top Gun: Maverick. If Tom Cruise was not a movie star before then, there was no doubt he was at the top of A-list after giving his all as daredevil Navy pilot, Maverick.
Meryl Streep (Sophie’s Choice)
There are few actors with as much esteem in Hollywood as the great Meryl Streep, who earned her second Academy Award for her mesmerizing, heartbreaking performance in the title role of Sophie’s Choice. Writer and director Alan J. Pakula’s adaptation of William Styron’s passionate novel follows the relationship between a Polish woman who survived the Holocaust and a Jewish-American man (played by Kevin Kline) who is obsessed with the tragedy.
Michael Keaton (Beetlejuice)
The all-time best Michael Keaton movie and performance might always be up for debate but no one can deny that, in the 1980s, no film saw him demonstrate his high-energy comedic talents and versatility better than Beetlejuice. The Oscar nominee plays the title role of Tim Burton‘s 1988 horror-comedy classic (actually spelled “Betelgeuse”) — a sleazy “bio-exorcist” begrudgingly enlisted by a recently deceased couple (played by Alec Baldwin and Geena Davis) to scare their home’s new inhabitants out.
Sally Field (Steel Magnolias)
The 1980s was a great time for Sally Field, who won both of her Oscars during that decade — one for Norma Rae in 1980 and another in 1985 for Places in the Heart. However, we believe the one film that best encapsulates the actor’s stunning range is the powerful, charming 1989 dramedy Steel Magnolias, in which she shines brightly among an ensemble cast including Dolly Parton, Shirley MacLaine, Olympia Dukakis, Daryl Hannah, and Julia Roberts as a close-knit group of Louisiana women.
Eddie Murphy (Coming To America)
There were few movie stars in the ’80s bigger than Eddie Murphy, who made such a huge impact in very little time on SNL before hitting it big with feature-length classics like 48 Hrs. and Beverly Hills Cop. Yet, 1988’s Coming to America was the first film to see him disappear into multiple roles and, not to mention, African Prince Akeem’s search for love in Queens, New York, amounts to a hilarious and heartfelt story.
Molly Ringwald (The Breakfast Club)
The first face we tend to picture when we think of the Brat Pack is Molly Ringwald, who was the go-to young female actor for coming-of-age dramedies of the ’80s, such as Pretty in Pink and Sixteen Candles. However, her best film — and, arguably, the greatest high school movie of all time — is writer and director John Hughes’ The Breakfast Club, in which she and four of the decade’s most essential stars (Emilio Estevez, Ally Sheedy, Anthony Michael Hall, and Judd Nelson) play a group of socially disparate teens who find unexpected kinship during Saturday detention.
Denzel Washington (Cry Freedom)
Two-time Academy Award winner Denzel Washington received his first Oscar nomination for his moving portrayal of activist Steve Biko in director Richard Attenborough’s Cry Freedom. The 1987 film focuses primarily on the friendship between the influential Black anti-Apartheid activist and the white South African journalist Donald Woods (Kevin Kline), who puts his own life at risk to investigate Biko’s death.
Jodie Foster (The Accused)
Not only does 1988’s The Accused feature one of Jodie Foster’s most powerful, Academy Award-winning performances, but it is also an enduringly relevant indictment of a flawed justice system that silences women. Foster plays Sarah Tobias, the victim of a violent assault who, along with her prosecuting attorney, Katheryn Murphy (Kelly McGillis), is challenged by a case that puts the blame on her.
Robert De Niro (Raging Bull)
Out of all of Robert De Niro and director Martin Scorsese’s collaborations, none have been as unique and as moving as 1980’s Raging Bull. De Niro delivers a roaring one-two punch in the masterful sports movie as real-life boxer Jake LaMotta, tracing his rousing success in the ring and his tragic self-destructive tendencies outside of it.
Cher (Moonstruck)
In 1987, Cher proved that she was a master in both the world of music and the world of acting with her Academy Award-winning performance as Loretta Castorini in Moonstruck. Soon after the widowed Italian-American woman agrees to marry her boyfriend, Johnny Cammareri (Danny Aiello), she finds herself falling deeper and deeper in love with his brother, Ronny (Nicolas Cage).
Harrison Ford (Raiders Of The Lost Ark)
One of Harrison Ford’s all-time greatest characters is the rough, resourceful, globe-trotting archeologist Dr. Henry “Indiana” Jones. The iconic hero was first introduced in 1981’s Raiders of the Lost Ark — director Steven Spielberg and producer George Lucas’ tribute to cinema that would later inspire countless tributes to its stunning visual design, John Williams’ sweeping score, and its endlessly thrilling, wall-to-wall action.
Diane Keaton (Reds)
Diane Keaton is an absolute revelation in co-writer and director Warren Beatty’s 1981 historical epic, Reds. She plays famed activist Louise Bryant who falls in love with radical-minded fellow journalist John Reed (Beatty) as he hopes to bring the ideals of Russia’s Communist Revolution to the United States.
Robin Williams (Dead Poets Society)
The late Robin Williams gives us the best of both his comedic energy and dramatic authenticity in director Peter Weir’s moving 1989 drama Dead Poet’s Society. As English teacher John Keating, he serves as a much-needed role model to a close-knit group of Catholic boarding school students (played by rising stars such as Ethan Hawke and Robert Sean Leonard) who learn how to seize the day.
Michelle Pfeiffer (Scarface)
It was in the ’90s when three-time Academy Award nominee Michelle Pfeiffer really began to hit her stride but her strongest work in the ’80s is, arguably, Scarface. She stars in director Brian de Palma’s 1983 gangster movie classic as Elvira Hancock, who becomes the wife of Cuban crime lord, Tony Montana (Oscar winner Al Pacino).
Morgan Freeman (Glory)
One of the most inspiring Morgan Freeman performances comes from 1989’s beloved, moving war movie, Glory. The Oscar winner stars as Sergeant Major John Rawlins, who is the highest-ranked Black member of his regiment in the U.S. Army during the Civil War.
Whoopi Goldberg (The Color Purple)
Legendary comedian Whoopi Goldberg earned her first Academy Award nomination for her heartbreaking performance as Celie Johnson in 1985’s The Color Purple. Director Steven Spielberg’s adaptation of Alice Walker’s seminal novel chronicles decades in the life of the Black, Southern woman as she endures dehumanizing adversity and traumatic abuse.
Kurt Russell (Escape From New York)
One of co-writer and director John Carpenter’s best movies, 1981’s Escape from New York, takes place in a war-torn future when Air Force One crash lands inside a maximum security prison that used to be the Big Apple and the President of the United States (Donald Pleasance) is taken hostage by the prisoners. The only one who can save him is a recently arrested, hardened war veteran named Snake Plissken, which is easily one of Kurt Russell’s coolest roles and certainly one of his greatest performances.
Glenn Close (Fatal Attraction)
While we do not condone treacherous acts like boiling a family’s pet rabbit alive, we would consider Alex Forrest to be a villain with understandable motivations, and not just because Glenn Close gives a brilliant performance in 1987’s intense thriller, Fatal Attraction. It was married lawyer Dan Gallagher’s (Michael Douglas) mistake to indulge in a one-time fling with the New York editor, who then misconstrues the affair for love and continues to taunt him and his family in increasingly horrifying ways.
Sylvester Stallone (First Blood)
Sylvester Stallone has played many iconic roles in many great action movies, especially in the 1980s, but his best role from that decade would have to be John Rambo in First Blood. The 1981 adaptation of David Morell’s novel is not a conventional shoot-em-up thriller like the later Rambo movies but an emotionally charged, nuanced drama in which the burdened Vietnam veteran is pushed to the edge by a cruel sheriff (Brian Dennehy) and wages a war against a whole town.
Goldie Hawn (Overboard)
Many of Oscar winner Goldie Hawn’s most memorable roles see her sharing the screen with her real-life romantic partner, Kurt Russell, and the couple’s chemistry was at an all-time high in director Garry Marshall’s Overboard. Hawn stars in the inventive and charming 1987 rom-com as a spoiled socialite with amnesia who is convinced by a carpenter (Russell) that she is his wife and the mother of his four boys to get back at her for her cruel treatment.
Bill Murray (Ghostbusters)
Academy Award nominee Bill Murray is one of the most beloved comedic talents of the ’80s (or any decade, really) and to understand why, all you need to do is watch 1984’s Ghostbusters. Also one of director Ivan Reitman’s best movies, the spooky, kooky classic sees Murray’s masterfully witty Peter Venkman team up with Ray Stantz (writer Dan Aykroyd), Egon Spengler (Harold Ramis), and Winston Zeddmore (Ernie Hudson) to rid New York of its scariest spirits.
Geena Davis (The Accidental Tourist)
Geena Davis earned an Academy Award for her wonderfully eccentric performance in 1988’s The Accidental Tourist as Muriel Pritchett. Emotionally distant travel writer Macon Leary (William Hurt) meets and begins to fall for the free-spirited dog trainer after splitting with his wife (played by Kathleen Turner), following the death of their son, in director Lawrence Kasdan’s moving dramedy.
It is no wonder why Chris Prat’s Peter Quill regarded Kevin Bacon’s role in Footloose as one of the greatest heroes in cinematic history. Ren singlehandedly brought dance back to the cruelly repressed small town of Bomont in the timelessly entertaining music movie from 1984.
Kathleen Turner (Romancing The Stone)
The ultimate romantic adventure comedy would have to be director Robert Zemeckis’ 1984 hit, Romancing the Stone. Kathleen Turner is wonderful as novelist Joan Wilder, who enlists the help of a rogue mercenary to help rescue her kidnapped sister in Colombia and ends up joining him on the search for a prized artifact.
Arnold Schwarzenegger (The Terminator)
The film that made Arnold Schwarzenegger the leading action movie hero of the 1980s remains his best action movie from the decade, as far as we are concerned. The Austrian bodybuilder gives a pitch-perfect, ice-cold performance as one of the best ’80s movie villains — the cybernetic title role of James Cameron’s The Terminator, which is sent from a war-torn future to prevent the birth of humanity’s savior by killing his mother, Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton).
Jane Fonda (9 To 5)
After taking the ’70s by storm as one of the decade’s biggest and most acclaimed stars, Jane Fonda started off the 1980s right with 9 to 5. In the hilarious workplace satire, her character, Judy Bernly, teams up with fellow office assistants Violet (Lily Tomlin) and Doralee (Dolly Parton) to turn the tables on their nightmare of a boss (played by Dabney Coleman).
Dustin Hoffman (Rain Man)
In his second Academy Award-winning performance, Dustin Hoffman plays autistic-savant Raymond Babbitt in Barry Levinson’s Best Picture Oscar winner, Rain Man. He stars opposite Tom Cruise as his younger brother, Charlie, who gets to meet him for the first time in this beautiful family story from 1988.
Daryl Hannah (Wall Street)
You can find Daryl Hannah in many of the ’80s’ most iconic cinematic classics but the cream of the crop would have to be Wall Street. She stars in Oliver Stone’s riveting 1987 drama as Darien Taylor, who once shared a romance with corrupt stockbroker Gordon Gekko (Michael Douglas) and begins a relationship with his ambitious protege, Bud Fox (Charlie Sheen).