Ever since getting his start on the very first season of Saturday Night Live, Bill Murray has been one of the most beloved stars of the screen. Throughout the ‘70s, ‘80s, and ‘90s, he starred in some of the greatest comedies ever made. In the 21st century, he’s reinvented himself as a melancholic dramatic actor, giving heartfelt turns in works by such sharp-witted auteurs as Wes Anderson and Sofia Coppola.

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Murray famously doesn’t have representation, so he chooses his own projects, meaning he’ll appear in anything from a first-time director’s ion project that catches his eye to a big-budget Disney remake. So, here are Bill Murray’s 10 Best Movies, According To Rotten Tomatoes.

Tootsie (90%)

Bill Murray in Tootsie

One of the most hilarious comedies ever made, Hollywood’s lack of female representation.) Bill Murray plays his roommate, who in true Murray fashion, sardonically comments on Michael’s situation.

The Grand Budapest Hotel (91%)

10 Regretful Movie Deaths Grand Budapest Hotel

Bill Murray only has a small role in The Grand Budapest Hotel, but it wouldn’t feel like a true Wes Anderson film if it didn’t have at least a cameo appearance by Bill Murray. The Grand Budapest Hotel, on the whole, is a hysterical movie charting the history of a fictional famous hotel in a fictional country.

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Ralph Fiennes is the MCU’s Flash Thompson – appears alongside him as the bellboy who is telling his life story to a writer in the framing narrative.

TIE: Ed Wood (92%)

Ed Wood

Tim Burton directed this biopic of the titular director, which focuses on his relationship with B-movie actor Bela Lugosi and is interestingly shot and edited in the style of one of Wood’s old films. Bill Murray plays the director’s drag queen friend Bunny Breckinridge, who acted in and helped with the production of his schlocky sci-fi movie Plan 9 from Outer Space. The movie was a box office bomb, because black-and-white biopics of people that hardly anyone has heard of don’t usually break records, but it was highly appreciated by critics and hopefully, in time, it will be appreciated by a wide audience, too.

TIE: Fantastic Mr. Fox (92%)

'Fantastic Mr. Fox'

Wes Anderson recently returned to the quirky style of stop-motion animation that he pioneered with this Roald Dahl adaptation with the movie Isle of Dogs, set in a dystopian future vision of Japan, but it didn’t feel as fresh as Fantastic Mr. Fox. The lead roles are played by a one-of-a-kind casting director’s dream – George Clooney and Meryl Streep – while the ing voice cast is rounded out by Willem Dafoe, Owen Wilson, Jason Schwartzman, and of course, Bill Murray. The movie wasn’t as big of a success at the box office as it should’ve been, so hopefully it’ll find belated success in the future.

Moonrise Kingdom (93%)

Walt and Laura Bishop looking at something

Perhaps Wes Anderson’s finest film, and it also plays on a lot of real human emotions.

TIE: Lost in Translation (95%)

Lost in Translation

The role of Bob in Lost in Translation is what told audiences all over the world that Bill Murray is not just one of the world’s greatest comedic performers; Scarlett Johansson plays a young wife with nothing to do while her husband is working all day. Sofia Coppola’s film is a beautiful story about how these two lost souls come together in one of the most vibrant cities in the world and change each other’s lives.

TIE: The Jungle Book (95%)

Neel Sethi and Baloo in The Jungle Book

As long as Disney insists upon flooding theaters with live-action remakes of their old animated gems, they might as well adapt the ones with room for improvement. The original animated version of The Jungle Book was great, but it had an episodic plot, loosely strung together, and most of its scenes are pretty forgettable.

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Jon Favreau’s 2016 live-action remake of the movie Bill Murray provided the voice of Baloo, Mowgli’s bear companion who talks to him on his level, as opposed to the condescending words of wisdom from the boy’s other father figure, Bagheera.

Groundhog Day (96%)

Secret Movie Messages Groundhog Day

In possibly the greatest display of Bill Murray’s talents as a comic performer, and as an actor in general, Groundhog Day tells the story of Phil Connors, a cynical newscaster who eventually falling in love with Andie MacDowell.

Ghostbusters (97%)

Bill Murray, Harold Ramis, and Dan Aykroyd getting off an elevator in Ghostbusters (1984)

Director Ivan Reitman allowed the cast of Ghostbusters to improvise a lot on the set, and the result is a much livelier and more energetic movie than would’ve been made if they’d just stuck to the script. Since the movie’s writers, Dan Aykroyd and Harold Ramis, come from a background in improv comedy and were starring in the film, they weren’t too precious about how each scene was written, because they knew they’d shake it up during the shoot. Aykroyd and Ramis have incredible on-screen chemistry with their co-stars Bill Murray and Ernie Hudson, so this tale of regular guys taking on a paranormal threat is hilarious and strangely relatable.

All You Need is Cash (100%)

All You Need Is Cash (1978)

A co-production by Eric Idle and Lorne Michaels, this made-for-TV comedy charts the meteoric rise and fall of a British rock band called “the Rutles.” The Rutles are a pretty clear allusion to the Beatles (the obviousness of said allusion is part of the joke), with a parody of “Get Back” called “Get Up and Go,” and a parody of Yellow Submarine called Yellow Submarine Sandwich. The Rutles first appeared on Idle’s BBC sketch show Rutland Weekend Television, and Michaels teamed up with the Monty Python alum to bring the back to American television. Bill Murray played “Bill Murray the K.,” a satirical take on Murray the K.

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