EntertainmentThe 32 greatest movie cameosWhen you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
EntertainmentThe 32 greatest movie cameosWhen you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
(Image credit: DreamWorks Pictures)

For all its somber seriousness and interrogations of the human condition that movies are capable of, they’re also just a good time. Which is why, when a famous face shows up for a fun cameo, you know there’s good vibes happening behind the scenes. But what celebrity cameos are actually the greatest of all time?
While there are no strict rules as to what constitutes a cameo, they are technically limited to walk-on appearances – an inconsequential, often nameless part. (Just as often, the cameo is the celebrity playing themselves.) To commemorate this fun part of movie culture, we’ve decided to rank the 32 greatest cameos in movie history.
Because even filmmakers these days play it fast and loose with what counts as a “cameo,” let’s set some parameters. In limiting cameos to a single appearance for a single scene, we’ll rule out some frequently mentioned “cameos” like Mike Tyson in The Hangover, Bill Murray in Zombieland, Tom Cruise in Tropic Thunder, whose 10 minutes of screentime kind of disqualifies it as a “cameo.” Nor will we include any of the major faces who show up inDeadpool & Wolverine, as their lengthy fight scenes required a lot more time and preparation to shoot than a typical cameo. And speaking of Marvel movies, we’re going to exclude Stan Lee’s many, many cameos in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Because you know them already.
Without further ado, here’s some famous faces in famous movies you probably didn’t expect to see.
32. Daniel Craig in Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015)
(Image credit: Lucasfilm)

31. James Franco in Knocked Up (2007)
(Image credit: Universal Pictures)

James Franco has done several cameos throughout his career, from Justin Lin’s low-budget mockumentary Finishing the Game to the 2011 action-comedy The Green Hornet. But in 2007, Franco played himself in an amusing bit for the Seth Rogen/Katherine Heigl rom-com Knocked Up. Franco appears on set to give an interview about Spider-Man 3 when Heigl’s character (employed as an E! News reporter) yaks in front of him due to her pregnancy. As if the scene can’t get any more late 2000s, Franco quips, “If this is one of those joke shows, I’m not into it,” referencing shows like Punk’d which had everyone in a chokehold at the time.
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30. Jim Starlin in Avengers: Endgame (2019)
(Image credit: Marvel Studios)

29. Stan Lee in The Princess Diaries 2: A Royal Engagement (2004)
(Image credit: Walt Disney Pictures)

Consider this proof that The Princess Diaries takes place somewhere in the Marvel multiverse. The Generalissimo appears as a foreign wedding guest whose only grasp of English is from The Three Stooges, which leads to a gross (and hilarious) misunderstanding when he accidentally hits on Julie Andrews' Queen Renaldi. With The Princess Diaries 2 predating the explosive popularity of the MCU and Lee’s many known appearances in those movies, his appearance here is a bizarre but precious novelty.
28. Tobey Maguire in Tropic Thunder (2008)
(Image credit: Para)

While Tom Cruise’s unannounced appearance in Tropic Thunder is whatmostpeople tend to name as the movie’s best cameo, it’s technically not a cameo at all. With a whopping 10 minutes of screentime and a pivotal part in the story, Cruise’s Les Grossman is really a supporting role. Which is why the movie’s best cameo isactuallyTobey Maguire. The Spider-Man star appears as himself in a fake movie trailer for Satan’s Alley, where he gives bedroom eyes to award-winning “actor” Kirk Lazarus (Robert Downey Jr., in the role that earned him his first nomination for Best Supporting Actor at the 2009 Oscars).
27. Margot Robbie, Anthony Bourdain, and Selena Gomez in The Big Short (2015)
(Image credit: Paramount Pictures)

Writer/director Adam McKay knows that explaining the finer details regarding the 2007-2008 financial crisis is not what you’d call “movie worthy.” Which is why it’s a stroke of genius how he trots out celebrities like Anthony Bourdain and Selena Gomez to plainly summarize complex ideas like “synthetic CDOs” while cooking salmon or playing poker. The movie also has a cameo from Margot Robbie just two years after her breakout performance in The Wolf of Wall Street. The soon-to-be Barbie star helpfully walks audiences through the mind-numbing, sleep-inducing concept of subprime mortgages in a bubble bath, because, well, how else can you make that lecture sound exciting?
26. Brad Pitt in Deadpool 2 (2018)
(Image credit: 20th Century Studios)

25. Jason David Frank and Amy Jo Johnson in Saban’s Power Rangers (2017)
(Image credit: Lionsgate)

When the Mighty Morphin Power Rangers got their big screen reboot in 2017, two stars from the original series showed up for a nostalgic applause. After the dust settles from the movie’s climactic Megazord battle against Goldar, Jason David Frank and Amy Jo Johnson - who played Tommy and Kimberly, the original Green and Pink Rangers respectively - appear as one of many Angel Grove citizens who stand in awe at their new superhero guardians. Frank and Johnson also filmed a different cameo, appearing as patrons at a Krispy Kreme in a deleted scene.
24. Lucy Lawless in Spider-Man (2002)
(Image credit: Sony Pictures Releasing)

23. Quentin Tarantino in Desperado (1995)
(Image credit: Sony Pictures Entertainment)

Filmmakers Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez make up one of Hollywood’s most visible, strongest friendships. The two have not only collaborated before - like with their 2007 project Grindhouse - but have worked on each other’s sets, sometimes for as little as a single dollar. Rewinding the clock back to 1995, Rodriguez was still making his way into Hollywood when he got the chance to helm a big budget sequel to his ‘93 indie sensation El Mariachi. Tarantino, who blew up the Cannes Film Festival a year earlier with his seminal picture Pulp Fiction, shows up in the cameo role of a “Pick-Up Guy” who spends a long time telling a convoluted dirty joke to a bartender (Cheech Marin, another big cameo in the movie).
22. Lou Ferrigno in The Incredible Hulk (2008)
(Image credit: Universal Pictures)

21. Pamela Anderson in Borat (2006)
(Image credit: 20th Century Studios)

While Pamela Anderson plays a key role in the narrative of Sacha Baron Cohen’s hit shockumentary Borat, she doesn’t appear until much later in the movie. But what an unforgettable cameo it is. After Borat travels through all of America in search of the Baywatch star to claim as his bride, Kazakhstan’s self-proclaimed best journalist finally locates her at a bookstore signing and makes his grand attempt to steal her away. While the movie has an abundance of unscripted hilarity, Anderson’s cameo was one of the only few moments in the movie that was completely staged with Anderson a willing participant in its hijinks.
20. John Hurt in Spaceballs (1987)
(Image credit: MGM)

19. Martin Scorsese in Taxi Driver (1976)
(Image credit: Columbia Pictures)

18. Jimmy Buffett in Jurassic World (2015)
(Image credit: Universal Pictures)

17. Matt Damon, Luke Hemsworth, and Sam Neill in Thor: Ragnarok (2017)
(Image credit: Marvel Studios)

16. Dan Aykroyd in Casper (1995)
(Image credit: Universal Pictures)

15. Huey Lewis in Back to the Future (1985)
(Image credit: Universal Pictures)

Huey Lewis and the News memorably contributed the song “The Power of Love” to Robert Zemeckis’ iconic adventure hit Back to the Future. But that’s not the only time audiences hear Huey Lewis in the movie. In the audition scene for the Battle of the Bands, Huey Lewis appears as one of the judges. Marty McFly’s aggressive shredding over a cover of “The Power of Love” doesn’t amuse Huey Lewis, however, and his band The Pinheads get rejected from entry.
14. Bruce Willis in Split (2017)
(Image credit: Universal Pictures)

It’s the cameo that spawned a thousand explainer articles on the internet and led to the 2019 sequel film Glass. In 2017, M. Night Shyamalan stunned the world when his buzzy psychological horror movie Split, starring Anya Taylor-Joy and James McAvoy (playing the villain who suffers from multiple personality disorder), ends with a surprise cameo from Bruce Willis. But Willis isn’t just showing up for no reason. Willis returns in his role of David Dunn from Shyamalan’s cerebral thriller Unbreakable, released way back in 2000. The cameo scene reveals that Split takes place in the same shared universe as Unbreakable, with both movie’s characters coming to blows in the finale Glass. But because an entire generation of moviegoers hadn’t seen Unbreakable, the cameo created alotof confusion as it did excitement from die-hard Unbreakable stans.
13. Johnny Depp and Peter DeLuise in 21 Jump Street (2012)
(Image credit: Sony Pictures Releasing)

12. Eminem in Funny People (2009)
(Image credit: Universal Pictures)

While Eminem is primarily known around the world as a rap artist, he is an underrated actor, having proven some of his chops in the movie 8 Mile. In 2008, Eminem demonstrated his funny bone when he played himself in a deliriously funny cameo for Judd Apatow’s Funny People. While the movie itself is actually an emotional dramaaboutcomedians, Eminem steals the show from even Adam Sandler when he unleashes a cuss-laden tirade against actor Ray Romano (also playing himself) and Seth Rogen. A few years later, Eminem played himself again in a different Seth Rogen film when he revealed his true orientation in The Interview.
11. Matt Damon in EuroTrip (2004)
(Image credit: DreamWorks Pictures)

10. Patrick Stewart in Robin Hood: Men in Tights (1993)
(Image credit: 20th Century Studios)

It’s good to be the king. As Star Trek: The Next Generation approached its final season, series star Patrick Stewart dressed out of his Starfleet uniform and into the regal armor of King Richard for Mel Brooks' outrageous medieval satire Robin Hood; Men in Tights. Appearing at the end of the movie, King Richard takes back his sacred authority from his selfish brother John (Richard Lewis). In restoring dignity and glory to all of England, King Richard declares that all toilets will now be known as “johns.” All hail the king.
9. Tom Cruise, Gwyneth Paltrow, Kevin Spacey, Danny DeVito, and Steven Spielberg in Austin Powers in Goldmember (2002)
(Image credit: New Line Cinema)

8. Arnold Schwarzenegger in The Rundown (2003)
(Image credit: Universal Pictures)

During his governorship of California, action superstar Arnold Schwarzenegger took time out of his busy schedule to make a quick cameo in The Rundown, the 2003 action-comedy starring Dwayne Johnson and Seann William Scott. With The Rundown cementing Johnson as the next new action hero for the 21st century, Schwarzenegger’s blink-and-you-miss-it appearance, in which he side-eyes Johnson and tells him to “Have fun,” feels like a symbolic passing of the torch from an icon to his successor. Now, what will it take for them to appear in the same movie?
7. Bob Barker in Happy Gilmore (1996)
(Image credit: Universal Pictures)

Imagine disappointing Bob Barker. Well, you don’t have to picture it, because that’s exactly what Adam Sandler did in the classic ’90s sports comedy Happy Gilmore. Halfway through the movie, Sandler’s hockey player-turned-golf wunderkind Happy Gilmore participates in a celebrity golf tournament, where he’s paired up with legendary The Price Is Right host Bob Barker. An unruly heckler (Joe Flaherty) throws Happy off his game, which disappoints Barker to the point they throw hands. And as it turns out, Barker’s gotmitts.
6. Neil Patrick Harris and Ryan Reynolds in Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle (2004)
(Image credit: New Line Cinema)

Fresh from National Lampoon’s Van Wilder, Ryan Reynolds was an up-and-comer Hollywood player when he made a surprise cameo in the raunchy 2004 movie Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle. The cult comedy primarily stars John Cho and Kal Penn as two buds who traverse all of New Jersey to satisfy the late-night munchies. Reynolds briefly appears as a panicked nurse who whisks Harold and Kumar into an emergency room to save a patient with a gun-wound. (Luckily for everyone, Kumar is a med school whiz kid.) Reynolds wasn’t the only guest on the menu, however. Late in the movie, television star Neil Patrick Harris appears as himself, a hitchhiker with his own lethal cravings. After Harris renewed his profile via the hit sitcom How I Met Your Mother, Harris returned for the 2011 holiday sequel A Very Harold & Kumar Christmas.
5. Mark Hamill and Carrie Fisher in Jay and Silent Bob: Strike Back (2001)
(Image credit: Dimension Films)

Leave it to New Jersey nerd extraordinaire Kevin Smith to make space for two galactic icons. In Smith’s 2001 comedy Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back, the title heroes finally star in their own movie, which is all aboutstoppinga Hollywood studio from launching a film franchise based on their comic book alter egos. The movie is jam-packed with celebrity cameos, from George Carlin to Matt Damon. But the MVPs are undoubtedly Star Wars vets Mark Hamill and Carrie Fisher. Hamill appears as himself, being cast as the would-be movie’s villain “Cock Knocker,” while Fisher is a naive nun who picks up Jay and Bob for a brief ride. Amusingly, neither Hamill nor Fisher knew they were in the movie together until they saw each other at the premiere.
4. Everyone in the “News Fight” Melees in Anchorman (2004) and Anchorman 2 (2013)
(Image credit: Paramount Pictures)

3. Keanu Reeves in Always Be My Maybe (2019)
(Image credit: Netflix)

During production of the Netflix rom-com Always Be My Maybe, director Nahnatchka Khan and writer/star Ali Wong wanted Keanu Reeves but believed him to be too much of a pipe dream to get on board. As they prepared a list of alternatives, they made the ask to Reeves anyway, and to their delight, The Matrix and John Wick star was enthusiastically on board. Reeves shows up in the movie as Wong’s new love interest, playing an exaggerated version of himself for a disastrous double date. Reeves was so involved, he even pitched his own ideas to make his character over-the-top, and contributed suggestions to Randall Park’s song “I Punched Keanu Reeves.”
2. Anna Q. Nilsson, H.B. Warner, and Buster Keaton in Sunset Boulevard (1950)
(Image credit: Paramount Pictures)

1. Harrison Ford in Brüno (2009)
(Image credit: Universal Pictures)

It’s quick, it’s profane, it’s so Harrison Ford - and that’s why it’s so good. While few people on Earth would call Sacha Baron Cohen’s 2009 mockumentary Brüno an all-time great movie, the movie enjoys one killer moment when Cohen’s obnoxious fashion journalist touts a one-on-one exclusive interview with Harrison Ford for most of the movie. The punchline: It’s just Ford telling him off. Like Pamela Anderson in Cohen’s previous movie Borat, Ford was fully in on the joke and his cameo was scripted.
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GAME REVIEWSMOVIE REVIEWSTV REVIEWS
1Nemesis review: “A magical sense of tension”
1Nemesis review: “A magical sense of tension”
1
Nemesis review: “A magical sense of tension”
2Arcs review: “A whole lot of game in a small package”
2Arcs review: “A whole lot of game in a small package”
2
Arcs review: “A whole lot of game in a small package”
3Path of Exile 2 review: “A stellar start to a thrilling and brutal dark adventure”
3Path of Exile 2 review: “A stellar start to a thrilling and brutal dark adventure”
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Path of Exile 2 review: “A stellar start to a thrilling and brutal dark adventure”
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4Indiana Jones and the Great Circle review: “The best adventure Indy has embarked on in over 30 years”
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5Marvel Rivals review: “So preoccupied with trying to be like Overwatch that it forgets to play to its own strengths”
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1Sonic the Hedgehog 3 review: “Keanu Reeves as Shadow is wasted whilst Jim Carrey steals the show”
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Mufasa: The Lion King review – “It’s no Hakuna Matata but this Disney origin story is a class above the 2019 movie”
3Kraven the Hunter review: “The insistence on an R-rating helps save this, with a decent helping of bloodthirsty action”
3Kraven the Hunter review: “The insistence on an R-rating helps save this, with a decent helping of bloodthirsty action”
3
Kraven the Hunter review: “The insistence on an R-rating helps save this, with a decent helping of bloodthirsty action”
4The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim review – “An uninspired expansion of the most iconic screen take on Tolkien”
4The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim review – “An uninspired expansion of the most iconic screen take on Tolkien”
4
The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim review – “An uninspired expansion of the most iconic screen take on Tolkien”
5Nightbitch review: “Amy Adams' disappointing dark comedy is all bark and no bite”
5Nightbitch review: “Amy Adams' disappointing dark comedy is all bark and no bite”
5
Nightbitch review: “Amy Adams' disappointing dark comedy is all bark and no bite”
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2Doctor Who 2024 Christmas special review: “Ncuti Gatwa is as magnetic as ever in this delightful festive treat”
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Doctor Who 2024 Christmas special review: “Ncuti Gatwa is as magnetic as ever in this delightful festive treat”
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3
Secret Level review: “An uneven experience with serious highlights that ultimately make up for the misses”
4Skeleton Crew review: “Perfectly captures the vibes of classic Star Wars with a swashbuckling twist”
4Skeleton Crew review: “Perfectly captures the vibes of classic Star Wars with a swashbuckling twist”
4
Skeleton Crew review: “Perfectly captures the vibes of classic Star Wars with a swashbuckling twist”
5Creature Commandos review: “James Gunn’s heartwarming, R-rated tale about super-monsters proves that the DCU is in good hands”
5Creature Commandos review: “James Gunn’s heartwarming, R-rated tale about super-monsters proves that the DCU is in good hands”
5
Creature Commandos review: “James Gunn’s heartwarming, R-rated tale about super-monsters proves that the DCU is in good hands”