Guy Ritchie (birthname:
Guy Stuart Ritchie) is a brand unto himself as a British crime fiction moviemaker of hyper action and exaggerated macho violence, launching the careers of such macho-styled actors as
Jason Statham and Vinnie Jones.
Never a critics darling (and a multiple winner-nominee of the Razzie and Stinkers Bad Movie awards), Ritchie immediately established his style with his smash hit ($28 million gross) debut writing-directing feature,
Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels (1998), which probably remains his best-reviewed and most awarded movie co-starring Jones and Statham in their feature debuts, with Jason Flemyng, Dexter Fletcher, and Sting.
Ritchie’s second, extremely similar movie was
Snatch (2000), with Statham, Jones,
Brad Pitt,
Benicio del Toro, Dennis Farina, and Rade Šerbedžija, and was an even bigger hit with a global take of $83.6 million. Ritchie’s third feature,
Swept Away (2002), was a disastrous and universally panned remake of Lina Wertmüller’s Italian movie, starring Madonna and Adriano Giannini, followed by a failed return (a weak $6.7 million return) to the crime genre with the panned
Revolver (2005), co-written with producer Luc Besson, and starring Statham and
Ray Liotta.
Slightly more successful was writer-director Ritchie’s
RocknRolla (2008), produced by Joel Silver and co-starring
Gerard Butler, Tom Wilkinson, Thandiwe Newton, Mark Strong, and (in early film performances)
Idris Elba, and
Tom Hardy. Guy Ritchie reinforced his collaboration with producer Joel Silver for the $90 million big-budget hit,
Sherlock Holmes (2009), on which he was director only, starring Robert Downey Jr., Jude Law, and
Rachel McAdams, and grossing $524 million globally.
The success spawned the sequel,
Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows (2011), again with Ritchie as director only, and stars Downey Jr., Law, and McAdams grossing $544 million. As director-writer-producer, Ritchie turned to a more modern franchise, a big-screen version of
The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (2015), starring Henry Cavill, Armie Hammer, Alicia Vikander, and Elizabeth Debicki, but with middling box-office results ($107 million return).
Again as director-writer-producer, Ritchie shifted back in the period to medieval fantasy with
King Arthur: Legend of the Sword (2017), with Charlie Hunnam,
Djimon Hounsou, and Law, though it failed to make back its big budget of $175 million. In a departure, Guy Ritchie (as writer-director) worked in lighter fantasy mode for his biggest box-office hit ($1.05 billion), Disney’s
Aladdin (2019), with Will Smith, Mena Massoud, and Naomi Scott.
In the same year, Ritchie enjoyed a second hit ($115.2 million) back in his familiar crime-comedy mode with
The Gentlemen (2019), starring Matthew McConaughey, Charlie Hunnam, Henry Golding, and Michelle Dockery. Ritchie loosely adapted Nicolas Boukhrief’s French film,
Le Convoyeur (2004) for the commercially successful ($104 million) heist movie,
Wrath of Man (2021), reuniting with Jason Statham, Josh Hartnett,
Raul Castillo, and Eddie Marsan, and then re-upped with Statham as well as regulars Hugh Grant, Josh Hartnett and new collaborators Aubrey Plaza and Cary Elwes for the spy comedy,
Operation Fortune: Ruse de Guerre (2023), released theatrically by
Lionsgate and then streaming on Amazon.
Guy Ritchie shifted to the more serious mode of the contemporary war movie set during the U.S. war in Afghanistan with one of his best-reviewed movies,
Guy Ritchie’s The Covenant (2023), starring Jake Gyllenhaal and
Dar Salim, released by
MGM in the U.S. (and on Amazon Prime internationally) with an 82% Rotten Tomatoes rating. In another departure from his crime movie brand, director-writer-producer Guy Ritchie turned to a true drama of World War II for
The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare (2024), produced by Jerry Bruckheimer and starring Henry Cavill, Eiza Gonzalez, Alan Ritchson, Henry Golding, and Cary Elwes.
Ritchie was director/writer and a producer (with Ivan Atkinson and John Friedberg) on Untitled Guy Ritchie Project (date to be announced), an action movie shot and set on Tenerife Island in the Canary Islands archipelago co-starring Henry Cavill,
Jake Gyllenhaal,
Eiza Gonzalez, Carlos Bardem, and Fisher Stevens, and released by Lionsgate. Ritchie was the director and a producer for the heist adventure movie shot in Bangkok, Vienna, and Luxor, Egypt, Fountain of Youth (date to be announced), starring John Krasinski, Natalie Portman, Domhnall Gleeson, Gonzalez, and Carmen Ejogo, and produced with Apple Studios.