Skip to main content
Got a tip?
Newsletters

Paul Thomas Anderson’s 10 Movies, Ranked From Worst to Best

With PTA back in theaters with 'One Battle After Another' — a critical and commercial high point — The Hollywood Reporter takes a look at the California master's remarkable 10 feature films to see how they stack up against one another.

Paul Thomas Anderson — PTA to his legions of obsessive fans — has had a career that barely seems possible. Hailed (rightly) as a genius with Boogie Nights, just his second movie, he has continued to make the case, film after film for nearly 30 years, that he deserves the title. All without directing a single franchise or IP-driven project (no, Thomas Pynchon adaptations don’t count) or, until his latest and biggest swing, One Battle After Another, currently in cinemas, making a movie that grossed more than $100 million worldwide. (There Will Be Blood, his previous box office champ, topped out at $76 million.)

More surprising still is how PTA has stayed at the very top tier — he’s the only filmmaker to have won best director at Cannes (Punch-Drunk Love), Berlin (There Will Be Blood) and Venice (The Master) — while jumping between genres and styles. He’s done period melodramas and a rom-com, a neo-noir stoner comedy and, now, an action movie. The PTA of Boogie Nights and Magnolia, all whip-pan camerawork and kinetic, Scorsese/Altmanesque energy, is the same PTA who showed cool, painterly restraint in Phantom Thread and, with the long, locked-down shots of The Master, evoked Terrence Malick and Stanley Kubrick.

Which is all to say: Ranking Paul Thomas Anderson’s films is a fool’s errand. They are all, in the end, excellent. Personal affinities — for ’70s porn stars or 18th century oil barons, for shaggy-dog comedy versus operatic tragedy — will determine your personal PTA top 10. Here’s ours.