Kate Winslet, “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind”
Winslet is easily the best thing about my favorite movie of the decade. She plays the free-spirited Clementine, a woman with neon hair and a quirky personality that you’d more expect from co-star Jim Carrey. She’s complicated and moody, but still the most appealing object of affection on film in the 2000s.
Forget Meryl Streep. With "The Reader," "Revolutionary Road," "The Holiday," "Little Children," "Finding Neverland," "Iris," and "Quills," Winslet is the leading lady of the new century.
Heath Ledger, “A Dark Knight”
Need this even be explained? Ledger’s bold, scary interpretation of The Joker unseats Hannibal Lecter as the definitive cinema villain.
Johnny Depp, “Pirates of the Caribbean” trilogy
No other screen character in the last 10 years can match the prominence and popularity of Captain Jack Sparrow. Thankfully, Depp’s slurring, stumbling rock star antics never got old. Bring on Part 4.
Don Cheadle, “Hotel Rwanda”
Cheadle never stumbles into showy Oscar-baiting as hotel manager Paul Rusesabagina and his struggle to save lives in war-torn Rwanda. Just breathtaking, utterly convincing work.
Jennifer Hudson, “Dreamgirls”
While I’m not big on the film, "American Idol" reject dominates this musical, especially with "And I Am Telling You I’m Not Going."
Daniel Day-Lewis, “There Will Be Blood”
Oil tycoon Daniel Plainview is easy fodder for impersonators, but only because Day-Lewis does something so completely out there and brilliant. "Drainage!"
Anne Hathaway, "Rachel Getting Married"
Where did this come from? The star of "The Princess Diaries" gives the most convincing portrait of addiction and recovery I’ve ever seen.
Javier Bardem, “No Country for Old Men”
Terrifying maniac Anton Chigurh kills people. Sometimes he flips a coin to decide. Just run away if you see him.
Mo’Nique, “Precious”
She’ll win this year’s Best Supporting Actress Academy Award handily. I’m not sold on the movie as a whole but Mo’Nique gives a brutal but totally believable performance as the monstrous mother to the unluckiest teenager in history.
Charlize Theron, “Monster”
Gorgeous starlet Theron got ugly in more ways than one in this grim portrait of serial killer Aileen Wuornos.
I don’t get the fascination for Ledger’s joker other than the fact that he died shortly after.
1/ I found Nicholson’s Joker better than Heath Ledger’s.
2/ Ledger had far more range to display his skill in Brokeback Mountain.