Striking, deeply expressive, and completely fearless in his character choices, Brody permanently etched his name into Hollywood history over two decades ago when he became the youngest man to ever win the Oscar for Best Actor at just 29 years old.
Since that monumental victory, he has absolutely refused to be boxed into a single genre. He has seamlessly bounced between meticulous Wes Anderson art-house comedies, incredibly gritty television dramas, and most recently, a sprawling, three-and-a-half-hour architectural epic that has revitalized his standing as one of our greatest living actors. To honor the beloved actor on his special day, we are counting down the ten absolute most outstanding roles that define his remarkable and wildly unpredictable career.
1. Władysław Szpilman in The Pianist (2002)
There is simply no discussing Adrien Brody without starting with his towering, agonizing masterpiece. In Roman Polanski’s devastating Holocaust drama, Brody played a real-life Polish-Jewish radio station pianist desperately trying to survive the total destruction of the Warsaw Ghetto. Brody famously sold his apartment, disconnected his phones, and starved himself to lose 30 pounds in order to authentically connect with the profound deprivation of the character. The resulting performance is a haunting, raw, and physically shattering masterclass that rightfully earned him the Academy Award for Best Actor.
2. László Tóth in The Brutalist (2024)
More than twenty years after his Oscar win, Brody delivered a staggering bookend to his legacy with Brady Corbet’s breathtaking, 70mm epic. Playing László Tóth, a Hungarian-Jewish architect and Holocaust survivor who emigrates to America to rebuild his life and career, Brody anchors the monumental film with quiet, devastating intensity. Navigating the corrupting influence of wealth, the immigrant experience, and profound trauma, his deeply layered, commanding performance proved to modern audiences that he is operating at the absolute peak of his dramatic powers. He won the Oscar for Best Actor.
3. Dmitri in The Grand Budapest Hotel (2014)
Brody has been a frequent, highly reliable collaborator in Wes Anderson’s quirky cinematic universe, but his turn as the villainous, foul-mouthed Dmitri Desgoffe und Taxis is arguably his best comedic work. Dressed in all black and sporting an unhinged, tyrannical energy, he serves as the perfect, aggressively violent foil to Ralph Fiennes’s fiercely polite Monsieur Gustave. Brody perfectly understood the specific, rapid-fire comedic rhythm required for the movie, proving he can be absolutely terrifying and hilariously absurd at the exact same time.
4. Luca Changretta in Peaky Blinders (2017)
Stepping into the gritty, smoke-filled streets of Birmingham for the fourth season of the massive BBC hit, Brody delivered one of the most menacing television antagonists of the decade. Playing the ruthless, impeccably tailored New York mafia boss Luca Changretta, he arrived in England with a singular goal: completely eradicate the Shelby family. His intense, chew-the-scenery mobster swagger and terrifyingly calm confrontations with Cillian Murphy’s Tommy Shelby injected a massive shot of adrenaline into the beloved series.
5. Pat Riley in Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty (2022–2023)
In this highly stylized, fast-paced HBO drama about the 1980s Los Angeles Lakers, Brody pulled off a staggering transformation. He tracked the evolution of Pat Riley from a deeply depressed, washed-up former player wandering around in his pajamas to the slick-haired, fiercely competitive, Armani-wearing coaching legend we know today. Brody brilliantly captured the agonizing self-doubt and the eventual, ruthless confidence of a man desperately fighting to secure his legacy on the basketball court.
6. Salvador Dalí in Midnight in Paris (2011)
Sometimes, an actor only needs three minutes of screen time to completely steal an entire movie. In Woody Allen’s whimsical time-traveling romantic comedy, Brody pops up as the legendary, eccentric surrealist painter Salvador Dalí. Delivering a hilariously intense, rapid-fire monologue entirely obsessed with rhinoceroses, Brody’s absurdly funny and pitch-perfect caricature remains one of the absolute most memorable and frequently quoted moments of the entire film.
7. Henry Barthes in Detachment (2011)
In this heavily overlooked, deeply melancholic indie drama, Brody delivers one of his most subtle and quietly devastating performances. He plays a substitute teacher who deliberately avoids any emotional connections with his students or colleagues to protect himself from his own lingering trauma. When he is placed in a severely underfunded, chaotic public school, his protective walls slowly begin to crack. It is a profoundly heartbreaking, agonizingly real look at the brutal emotional toll of the modern education system.
8. Jack Driscoll in King Kong (2005)
Following his massive Oscar win, Brody took a hard left turn into the world of massive, big-budget CGI blockbusters. In Peter Jackson’s epic remake, he played the intellectual playwright Jack Driscoll, who is unexpectedly forced to step up and become a rugged action hero when the woman he loves is taken by a giant ape. Brody brought an incredibly grounded, intellectual vulnerability to the traditional “leading man” trope, effectively balancing the movie’s massive visual spectacle with genuine human emotion.
9. Josh Aaronson in Succession (2021)
Appearing as a guest star in the third season of HBO’s ruthless corporate juggernaut, Brody made an immediate, massive impact. He played Josh Aaronson, a wildly wealthy, heavily layered billionaire investor who forces Logan and Kendall Roy to hike across his private island while he covertly tests their broken relationship. Brody’s quiet, calculated intimidation—hidden beneath an absurdly casual wardrobe of multiple layered sweaters—perfectly matched the cutthroat energy of the series, earning him a well-deserved Emmy nomination for Outstanding Guest Actor.
10. Peter Whitman in The Darjeeling Limited (2007)
Another brilliant entry in his Wes Anderson collaboration catalog, Brody starred alongside Owen Wilson and Jason Schwartzman as one of three deeply estranged, grieving brothers traveling across India by train. Brody plays Peter, an expectant father who is absolutely terrified of his impending responsibilities and heavily grieving the recent loss of his own father. His tall, lanky physical comedy paired with his deep, soulful sadness perfectly anchored the film’s beautiful meditation on grief and familial bonding.





