While menacing portrayals of sinister villains, unnerving characterizations of oddball outsiders, and darkly deranged depictions of otherworldly entities, he’s also had plenty of more comedic roles throughout his acclaimed career. Through collaborations with all-time great directors like Robert Eggers and Wes Anderson, Dafoe has never shied away from showing off his funny side.

Many of the greatest actors of modern times, Dafoe’s often underappreciated talent for comedy showcases his incredible range.

10 Speed 2: Cruise Control (1997)

Willem Dafoe as John Geiger

Sandra Bullock looks fearful in front of Willem Dafoe in Speed 2: Cruise Control

While Speed 2: Cruise Control is notorious for being one of the worst movie sequels of all time, I believe that if you recontextualize this action thriller as an accidental comedy, it becomes immensely more enjoyable. One of the main reasons Speed 2 worked so well as a comedy was Willem Dafoe’s over-the-top performance as the villainous John Geiger. As a disgruntled former employee of a cruise company, Geiger hijacked a ship and sought revenge through acts of terror.

Speed 2- Cruise Control - poster

Your Rating

Speed 2: Cruise Control
Release Date
June 13, 1997
Runtime
125 Minutes
Director
Jan de bont
Writers
Graham Yost, Jan de bont, Randall McCormick, Jeff Nathanson

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming

In a deranged and maniacal performance, Dafoe leaned so far into camp that his menace ended up being more ridiculous than it was threatening. With a petty motivation, a goofy evil plan, and a cartoonish intensity, Geiger felt closer to a James Bond villain than anything that could actually be imagined in the real world. With cheesy one-liners and a playful sense of fun, Dafoe’s performance single-handedly saved Speed 2: Cruise Control from completely sinking.

9 Beetlejuice Beetlejuice (2024)

Willem Dafoe as Wolf Jackson

Actor Willem Dafoe as Wolf Jackson in Tim Burton's Beetlejuice Beetlejuice.

One of the best things about Willem Dafoe is that he fits equally in deadly serious horror stories and the tongue-in-cheek Gothic fantasy of the world in the works of Tim Burton. This made him the ideal addition to the cast of the sequel Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, which leaned into nostalgia for the original film without losing the spark that made it such a classic. While of course Michael Keaton’s seamless ability to lose himself in the role of Betelgeuse was the movie’s highlight, Dafoe’s role added to its appeal.

Beetlejuice Beetlejuice Film Poster

Your Rating

Beetlejuice Beetlejuice
PG-13
Comedy
Supernatural
Fantasy
Horror
Release Date
September 6, 2024
Runtime
104 Minutes

WHERE TO WATCH

Dafoe played Wolf Jackson in Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, an afterlife detective who was a B-movie action star in life before being killed by a live grenade. After discovering that Betelgeuse brought a living person into the Netherworld, Wolf embarked on a manhunt for him in a goofy chase influenced by classic film noirs. As a genre-bending mix of bizarre and surreal characterizations, Dafoe's faux seriousness in the midst of an outrageously silly situation made for laugh-out-loud viewing.

8 The Grand Budapest Hotel (2014)

Willem Dafoe as J. G. Jopling

Willem Dafoe wearing brass knuckles in The Grand Budapest Hotel

Willem Dafoe proved he was the perfect villain for Wes Anderson’s signature brand of whimsy in The Grand Budapest Hotel. As an assassin working for Dmitri Desgoffe-und-Taxis (Adrien Brody), Dafoe portrayed Jopling with all the intensity of a classic silent movie henchman, and his exaggerated presence, paired with his leather trench coat, meant he stuck out like a sore thumb. In typical Dafoe fashion, it was the over-the-top nature of his menacing presence that meant he was unintentionally hilarious in every scene he was in.

Your Rating

The Grand Budapest Hotel
Release Date
March 28, 2014
Runtime
100 Minutes

WHERE TO WATCH

While the ensemble cast of The Grand Budapest Hotel featured one of the most impressive rosters in modern cinema, Dafoe managed to stand out as a particularly memorable villain. Although Jopling had very little dialogue, his intense stares and silent rage showed off Dafoe’s talent for physical comedy. As a character who harkens back to the comedy of times past and the nostalgic eras that influenced Anderson’s film, Dafoe’s performance as Jopling highlighted his skill as a classic character actor capable of imbuing his roles with a unique energy.

7 Finding Nemo (2003)

Willem Dafoe as Gill

Gill swims in the fish tank in Finding Nemo

While Willem Dafoe won’t be the first actor you think of when people mention children’s animated entertainment, he did subvert audience expectations with his role in Pixar’s Finding Nemo. As a Moorish Idol ray-finned fish, Gill’s life in a dentist's fish tank forced him to develop a tough exterior. While there was a sense of seriousness at the heart of his character, the way Dafoe played this imprisoned fish with the same level of intensity of a POW in a gritty war movie made for hilarious viewing.

01133771_poster_w780.jpg

Your Rating

Finding Nemo
G
Animation
Family
Release Date
May 30, 2003
Runtime
100 minutes

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming
BUY

Gill was an inspiring character whose speeches to Nemo and the rest of the Tank Gang provided them hope as he hung onto the dream to one day escape from his glass cage. The characterization of Gill leaned into Dafoe’s reputation for playing deathly serious characters and was a funny nod to his cinematic legacy that could be enjoyed by adult viewers and would likely go right over the kid audience ' heads. It’s this willingness to tackle roles that you wouldn’t expect from him that made Dafoe such a consistently surprising and funny actor.

6 The Lighthouse (2019)

Willem Dafoe as Thomas Wake

Willem Dafoe as with his mouth agpe as a sea god in the Lighthouse

While Robert Eggers' The Lighthouse was a deeply atmospheric and psychological horror movie, it was also very funny at times. With Robert Pattinson and Willem Dafoe as nineteenth-century lighthouse keepers stuck at their remote New England post due to an intense storm, the claustrophobic and inescapable nature of their plight captured the sheer hilarity of two people who simply cannot get away from one another. Through dramatic monologues and poeticism that bordered on the insane, Thomas Wake was one of Dafoe’s most darkly funny characters.

Your Rating

The Lighthouse
Release Date
October 18, 2019
Runtime
110 minutes

WHERE TO WATCH

Through drunken rambling, gaslighting, and psychological torment, Wake became a symbol of existential terror for his fellow lighthouse keeper, Ephraim Winslow. While Dafoe delivered his dialogue with utmost seriousness, this intense commitment to the role was what made it so unintentionally funny. Of all the men that Dafoe has played over the years, Thomas Wake represented the absolute pinnacle of his insanity and allowed the actor to let loose in a manner that he seldom, if ever, got to before.

5 Mr. Bean’s Holiday (2007)

Willem Dafoe as Carson Clay

An audience watching a Carson Clay movie in Mr. Bean's Holiday

Often, the funniest aspect of Willem Dafoe’s performances was how his faux seriousness was often completely juxtaposed with the rest of the movie, a factor that was never more true than in Mr. Bean’s Holiday. As the ultimate encapsulation of physical comedy and lowbrow humor, Rowan Atkinson’s all-time great character of Mr. Bean came face-to-face with Dafoe’s hilarious performance as the pretentious, self-absorbed filmmaker Carson Clay.

01262201_poster_w780.jpg

Your Rating

Mr. Bean's Holiday
G
Family
Comedy
Release Date
March 22, 2007
Runtime
90 minutes
  • Headshot of Rowan Atkinson
    Rowan Atkinson
    Mr. Bean
  • Headshot Of Willem Dafoe
    Carson Clay
  • Headshot Of Maxim Baldry
    Maxim Baldry
    Stepan
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Karel Roden
    Emil

The reason that Clay was so funny was because Dafoe played the part absolutely straight, as his fictional movie Playback Time poked fun at the deeply artistic and melodramatic movies he’s been part of in the past. The seriousness of Clay made Mr. Bean’s antics all the more hilarious, as he consistently ruined the filmmaker's projects. With a deadpan performance, it’s impressive that Dafoe was able to keep a straight face amid the outrageous goofiness of Mr. Bean.

4 American Psycho (2000)

Willem Dafoe as Donald Kimball

Willem Dafoe as Agent Kimball in American Psycho smiling.

While Christian Bale’s performance as Patrick Bateman in American Psycho was a masterclass in unnerving acting, it’s important to give kudos to Willem Dafoe’s memorable turn as the private investigator Donald Kimball. As a figure who may or may not suspect Bateman for the murder of Paul Allen, Dafoe’s performance as Kimball had a cryptic energy that was subtly hilarious. With an offbeat acting style, part of the power of Kimball’s role was that you never quite knew what he was thinking.

Your Rating

American Psycho
Release Date
April 14, 2000
Runtime
101 minutes

WHERE TO WATCH

This disorienting performance added to the satirical nature of American Psycho and was due to director Mary Harron filming Dafoe’s scenes in three different ways. Dafoe was filmed as if he didn’t suspect Bateman at all, again where he was suspicious, and finally where he knew Bateman killed Allen, and all three versions were spliced together in the final edit. This clever editing trick was why Dafoe’s performance was so strange, and the way his character shifted from one moment to the next made him unintentionally hilarious.

Related
The Amazing Reason Willem Dafoe's American Psycho Scenes Were So Unsettling

Paul Allen’s card is nice, but Willem Dafoe’s unsettling American Psycho scenes are simply sublime thanks to an amazing behind-the-scenes trick.

3 The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou (2004)

Willem Dafoe as Klaus Daimler

Willme Dafoe's Klaus Daimler holding a gun in The Life Aquatic.

As the first of many collaborations between Willem Dafoe and director Wes Anderson, The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou dove straight into the deep end when it came to the filmmakers' uniquely quirky sense of humor. As the German crew mat Klaus Daimler, Dafoe’s performance traded his unusual eerie energy for an endearingly awkward and hilariously insecure character who desperately sought the approval of Bill Murray’s Steve Zissou. As a nautical adventure film that paid homage to the French diving pioneer Jacques Cousteau, The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou was packed with fascinating and funny characters like Klaus.

The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou - Poster

Your Rating

The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou
Release Date
December 25, 2004
Runtime
119 Minutes

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming

While Klaus was a fully grown adult, Dafoe portrayed him as almost childlike in the jealous way he reacted to Steve’s newly discovered son Ned (Owen Wilson.) Through deadpan delivery and a thick, overpronounced German accent, pretty much everything about Klaus’s presentation was funny, and he was a major part of the movie’s cult appeal. While Klaus’s sulking led to some of The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou’s funniest moments, there was also a relatable humanity at the heart of his character that made him incredibly endearing.

2 Nosferatu (2024)

Willem Dafoe as Prof. Albin Eberhart von Franz

Prof. Albin Eberhart von Franz (Willem Dafoe) looking worried in Nosferatu

Image via Focus Features

While director Robert Eggers isn’t exactly associated with comedy, there’s a subtle humor underpinning his work that means even his most horrific projects contain laugh-out-loud moments. This was certainly the case with Nosferatu, a remake of the classic 1922 silent movie Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror and an unofficial adaptation of Bram Stoker’s Dracula. Within this story, Dafoe played the Swiss philosopher Prof. Albin Eberhart von Franz, an expert in alchemy, mysticism, and the occult and one of the few people who truly understand Count Orlok and Ellen's psychic connection.

Nosferatu (2024) Official Poster

Your Rating

Nosferatu
Release Date
December 25, 2024
Runtime
132 Minutes

With an over-the-top sense of theatricality, it was clear that Dafoe was having the time of his life with this role as he delivered some of Nosferatu’s funniest lines of dialogue that were masked in the Gothic seriousness of this dark tale. As the most recent of three movies Dafoe has made with Eggers, Nosferatu was yet another astounding showcase that this pairing was a match made in heaven. While both artists initially appear to have an air of seriousness about them, buried just underneath the surface, there is a unique talent for comedy.

1 Spider-Man (2002)

Willem Dafoe as Norman Osborn / Green Goblin

Spiderman 2002 tobey maguire willem dafoe

Many younger people’s first introduction to Willem Dafoe was as Norman Osborn in Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man back in 2002. This incredible performance acted as the inspiration for countless memes as classic lines like “I'm something of a scientist myself” highlighted the humor at the heart of this iconic superhero movie. Dafoe’s role as Osborn represented the best of what a movie supervillain could be, as his dark transformation into the Green Goblin played into the actor’s unmatched talent for outrageous theatricality, unhinged characterizations, and deranged dialogue.

Spider-Man 2002 Poster

Your Rating

Spider-Man
Release Date
May 3, 2002
Runtime
121 Minutes

WHERE TO WATCH

Dafoe was perfectly cast in his role in Spider-Man and was an essential part of the film's success, which helped kickstart the age of superhero movies that we’re still living through today. While Dafoe’s characterization of Norman had plenty of laugh-out-loud moments, it was when in costume as the Green Goblin that he could truly let loose with some of his most frantic and berserk dialogue. The popularity of Willem Dafoe’s performance has endured, and he even reprised his role in Spider-Man: No Way Home, as the multiverse of the Marvel Cinematic Universe opened the door for his return.