WTOP Film Critic Jason Fraley counts down the Top
30 Most Memorable Movie Dads.
16. Capt. Von Trapp (Christopher Plummer) - "The Sound of Music" 16. Captain Von Trapp (Christopher Plummer)
- "The Sound of Music"
Christopher Plummer's Capt. Von Trapp had the
most daunting task of any dad on this list:
find a new governess for his seven singing
children, then sneak them out of Nazi-occupied
Austria.
Fatherly Advice: "Oh, there's nothing
wrong with the children. Only the governesses."
1. Atticus Finch (Gregory Peck) - "To Kill a Mockingbird" (1962) 1. Atticus Finch (Gregory Peck) - "To Kill a
Mockingbird" (1962)
The AFI's No. 1 Movie Hero is also my pick for
the No. 1 Movie Dad. Scout and Jem Finch had a
moral
mountain of a man as a father. Atticus taught
them never to judge a book by its cover,
whether it's the falsely accused black man Tom
Robinson, or the misunderstood hermit Boo
Radley. Atticus led by example, even when it
was against popular opinion. He was a father
figure to us all, teaching us why it's a sin
"to kill a mockingbird."
Fatherly Advice: "You never really
understand a person until you consider things
from his point of view. Until you climb into
his skin and walk around in it."
2. Vito Corleone (Marlon Brando) - "The Godfather" (1972) 2. Vito Corleone (Marlon Brando) - "The
Godfather" (1972)
As Marlon Brando said in Mario Puzo's script
for "Superman" (1978): "The father becomes the
son, and the son the father." Movies don't get
more tragic than watching Don Vito Corleone try
his best to keep his son from a life of crime,
and then watching Michael Corleone follow right
in his father's footsteps, only much more
perversely. The genius of "Part II" is watching
the two men's lives unfold simultaneously,
charting similar paths in very different times.
Fatherly Advice: "A man that doesn't
spend time with his family can never be a real
man."
3. Clark Griswold (Chevy Chase) - "National Lampoon's Vacation" (1983) 3. Clark Griswold (Chevy Chase) - "National
Lampoon's Vacation" (1983)
No father is as dedicated to his family's
happiness and as demented in achieving it as
Clark W. Griswold. Loading up the family
station wagon and setting off on the "holiday
road," Clark dragged a dog, killed an aunt and
chased Christie Brinkley's sports car - all on
a mission to Wally World. His Christmas
"staycation" was just as priceless.
Fatherly Advice: "Everybody in the car.
Boat leaves in two minutes. Or, perhaps you
don't want to see the second largest ball of
twine on the face of the earth, which is only
four short hours away."
4. John Kinsella (Dwier Brown) - "Field of Dreams" (1989) 4. John Kinsella (Dwier Brown) - "Field of
Dreams" (1989)
While James Earl Jones dropped the daddy
bombshell in "Star Wars," he led Kevin Costner
to mend his bruised relationship with his dead
father in "Field of Dreams." The film's famous
line, "If you build it he will come," does not
refer to Shoeless Joe Jackson, but rather John
Kinsella. The result still has the power to
reduce grown men to tears: "Hey, Dad? Wanna
have a catch?"
Fatherly Advice: " is the place
dreams come true."(Heaven)
Heaven
5. Darth Vader (James Earl Jones) - "The Empire Strikes Back" (1980) 5. Darth Vader (James Earl Jones) - "The
Empire Strikes Back" (1980)
In one of the greatest twists in movie history,
Darth Vader revealed Luke Skywalker's Anakin
roots. Contrary to popular belief, Vader never
actually said, "Luke, I am your father," but
the revelation was so secret that no one on set
was told about it, not even David Prowse, who
wore Vader's costume. It was not until James
Earl Jones was recording the voiceover that he
did a double-take.
Fatherly Advice: "No, I am your father."
6. George McFly (Crispin Glover) - "Back to the Future" (1985) 6. George McFly (Crispin Glover) - "Back to
the Future" (1985)
We remember the DeLorean, the flux capacitor,
the 1.21 gigawats. How easy it is to forget
that "Back to the Future" is mostly about
fatherhood, as 1985 teen Marty McFly must
return to his father's youth in 1955 and get
him to fall in love with his mother, or else be
erased from existence.
Fatherly Advice: "Last night, Darth
Vader came down from Planet Vulcan and told me
that if I didn't take Lorraine out, that he'd
melt my brain."
7. Furious Styles (Laurence Fishburne) - "Boyz n the Hood" (1991) 7. Furious Styles (Laurence Fishburne) -
"Boyz n the Hood" (1991)
Every kid would be lucky to have a father like
Furious Styles, ever wise and thinking deeply
while clanking those metal balls. Furious
taught Cuba Gooding Jr. everything from fishing
to gentrification, and was a calm force amidst
the storm of gun violence in south central Los
Angeles.
Fatherly Advice: "Any fool with a
can make a baby. But only a real man
can raise his children."(penis)
penis
8. Henry Jones Sr. (Sean Connery) - "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade" (1989 8. Henry Jones Sr. (Sean Connery) - "Indiana
Jones and the Last Crusade" (1989)
Who else could play Indiana Jones' father but
James Bond? Henry Jones Sr. left his life's
work to his son in a Grail Diary, adding new
depth to one of cinema's greatest
action/adventure heroes. The father-son subplot
resurrected the "Raiders" franchise after the
bizarre "Temple of Doom" (1984).
Fatherly Advice: "Junior, I have to tell
you something. The floor's on fire, see. And
the chair!"
9. Mufasa (James Earl Jones) - "The Lion King" (1994) 9. Mufasa (James Earl Jones) - "The Lion
King" (1994)
Arguably the greatest animated movie dad,
Mufasa took a rambunctious Simba and tried
teaching him the meaning of the "circle of
life." His death at the hand of a stampede,
orchestrated by brother Scar, had audiences -
young and old - sobbing in the theaters. His
ghostly return put an end to "Hakuna Matata"
and inspired Simba to regain his rightful place
as king.
Fatherly Advice: "A king's time as ruler
rises and falls like the sun. One day, Simba,
the sun will set on my time here, and will rise
with you as the new king."
VIDEO
10. Dr. Evil (Mike Myers) - "Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery" (1999) 10. Dr. Evil (Mike Myers) - "Austin Powers:
International Man of Mystery" (1999)
He failed with Scotty, but Dr. Evil sought a
second chance by cloning himself as Mini-Me.
Together, the two sang "Just the Two of Us" as
they tried to take over the world. The
mastermind doesn't need much for a Father's Day
gift. All he asks for are "sharks with frickin'
laser beams attached to their heads."
Fatherly Advice: "Scotty, don't!"
11. George Bailey (Jimmy Stewart) - "It's a Wonderful Life" (1946) 11. George Bailey (Jimmy Stewart) - "It's a
Wonderful Life" (1946)
George Bailey put everyone - literally
everyone in town - ahead of himself. So when
"George lassoed stork," his ticket out of
Bedford Falls was officially canceled. While
the weight of small-town life brought him to
the end of his rope, he saw the light and
rushed home to embrace his kids lovingly on
that staircase. Who can forget little Zuzu
telling daddy what happens every time a bell
rings?
Fatherly Advice: "Zuzu's petals.
Zuzu's...there they are!"
12. The Old Man (Darren McGavin) - "A Christmas Story" (1983) 12. The Old Man (Darren McGavin) - "A
Christmas Story" (1983)
Winning the leg lamp. Fixing the furnace.
Changing the flat. Battling the Bumpus dogs.
And weaving a tapestry of obscenity that's
still hanging over Lake Michigan. Ralphie's
father put fear in his kids ("Daddy's gonna
kill Ralphie"), while protecting their dignity
("He looks like a pink nightmare").
Fatherly Advice: "'Fra-gi-le.' Must be
Italian."
13. Matt King (George Clooney) - "The Descendants" (2011 13. Matt King (George Clooney) - "The
Descendants" (2011)
George Clooney delivered arguably the
performance of his career as a father learning
of his comatose wife's affair. Embarking on a
Hawaiian quest to find his wife's lover, he
gradually wins the love of his two daughters
and becomes a better man in the process.
Fatherly Advice: "I don't want my
daughters growing up entitled and spoiled. And
I agree with my father: you give your children
enough money to do something, but not enough to
do nothing."
14. Ted Kramer (Dustin Hoffman) - "Kramer vs. Kramer" (1979) 14. Ted Kramer (Dustin Hoffman) - "Kramer
vs. Kramer" (1979)
Dustin Hoffman could relate to Robin Williams
in the "crossdressing" gimmick, as he had done
it in "Tootsie" (1982). But he could also
relate to the divorce themes, playing a father
in an intense custody battle with ex-wife Meryl
Streep. Who can forget him burning the food the
first time he makes breakfast, or the joy in
his face as he teaches his son how to ride a
bike?
Fatherly Advice: "How much courage does
it take to walk out on your kid?"
15. Daniel Hillard (Robin Williams) - "Mrs. Doubtfire" 15. Daniel Hillard (Robin Williams) - "Mrs.
Doubtfire"
It's hard to imagine a father going to greater
lengths than dressing up as an old British
nanny just to be near his kids after a nasty
divorce. The gimmick was hilarious, as Robin
Williams danced to "Dude Looks Like a Lady" and
brought some of the best performances from
Sally Field and Pierce Brosnan.
Fatherly Advice: "I just want to know
one thing. Are your kids well-behaved? Or do
they need like, a few light slams every now and
then?"
30 Most Memorable Movie Dads Jason
Fraley , WTOP Film Critic
Father's Day weekend is upon us, and what
better way to enjoy it than sitting down for a
nice lazy day movie with Dad.
WTOP is counting down the Most Memorable Movie
Dads in Hollywood History.
Some refuse to stand up for their kids, like
James Dean's father in "Rebel Without a Cause"
(1955). Others intimidate their sons, like
Robert Duvall in "The Great Santini" (1979), or
scare them with mashed-potato mountains, like
Richard Dreyfuss in "Close Encounters of the
Third Kind" (1977).
If you say Vince Vaughn in "Old School" (2003),
I'm laughing my "earmuffs" off. If you say
Noah Cross in "Chinatown" (1974) or Satan in
"Rosemary's Baby" (1968), you're just sick.
Here's my list of the dads who take care of
business, go the extra mile, teach valuable
lessons and will do anything for their kids,
from dressing as a woman to taking long
vacations on the holiday road.
17. Chris Gardner (Will Smith) - "The Pursuit of Happyness" (2006) 17. Chris Gardner (Will Smith) - "The
Pursuit of Happyness" (2006)
Few father-son combos have depicted undying
devotion like Will Smith and real-life son
Jaden in this true story of Wall Street rags to
riches. Homeless, embracing his son and crying
on a public bathroom floor, Smith breaks our
hearts as a down-on-his-luck man just wanting
better for his child.
Fatherly Advice: "You got a dream. You
gotta protect it. People can't do somethin'
themselves, they wanna tell you you can't do
it. If you want somethin', go get it. Period."
18. George Banks (Spencer Tracy) - "Father of the Bride" (1950/1991) 18. George Banks (Spencer Tracy/Steve
Martin) - "Father of the Bride" (1950/1991)
Long before Steve Martin helped Kimberly
Williams get ready for her wedding (practicing
for Brad Paisley), Spencer Tracy helped
Elizabeth Taylor get ready for her big day
(practicing for Eddie Fisher, Richard Burton
and five others). No matter which version is
your favorite, these two "fathers of the bride"
are must-see romantic family comedies.
Fatherly Advice: "Who presents this
woman? This woman? But she's not a woman. She's
just a kid. And she's leaving us."
19. Jack Byrnes (Robert DeNiro) - "Meet the Parents" (2000) 19. Jack Byrnes (Robert DeNiro) - "Meet the
Parents" (2000)
From "The In-Laws" (1979) to "Guess Who's
Coming to Dinner" (1967), Hollywood has mined
gold out of the awkwardness of "meeting the
parents." Most memorable is Robert DeNiro's
Jack Byrnes as the father every boyfriend fears,
an ex-CIA operative who reads poetry to his
mother's urn, showers his cat with gifts and
will do anything for his daughter "Pamcakes."
Fatherly Advice: "I have nipples, Greg,
could you milk me?"
VIDEO
20. Calvin Jarrett (Donald Sutherland) - "Ordinary People" (1980) 20. Calvin Jarrett (Donald Sutherland) -
"Ordinary People" (1980)
The teenage pregnancy of "Juno" pales in
comparison to what Calvin Jarrett had to deal
with in "Ordinary People." At the outset of the
movie, he has lost his favorite son to a
boating accident and must deal with the anger
of his wife (Mary Tyler Moore) and grief of his
son (Timothy Hutton). The film's final clutch
between father and son is classic family drama.
Fatherly Advice: "He just wants to know
that you don't hate him."
21. Mac MacGuff (J.K. Simmons) - "Juno" (2007) 21. Mac MacGuff (J.K. Simmons) - "Juno"
(2007)
Few remember the name Mac MacGuff, but J.K.
Simmons carved a place in our hearts by
grappling
with one of the toughest scenarios for any
parent: teen pregnancy. Judging by his
hilarious quips, we can see where Juno gets her
spunk.
Fatherly Advice: "I'm gonna punch that
Bleeker kid in the wiener next time I see him."
22. Royal Tenenbaum (Gene Hackman) - "The Royal Tenenbaums" (2001) 22. Royal Tenenbaum (Gene Hackman) - "The
Royal Tenenbaums" (2001)
The patriarch of Manhattan's most eccentric
family, Royal Tenenbaum didn't know how to love
his wife or raise three child prodigies. So, he
pretended to have cancer in order to win them
back.
Fatherly Advice: "Anybody interested in
grabbing a couple of burgers and hittin' the
cemetery?"
23. Lester Burnham (Kevin Spacey) - "American Beauty" (1999 23. Lester Burnham (Kevin Spacey) -
"American Beauty" (1999)
He's not the type of dad you'd like to have,
with rose-petal dreams of romancing your
teenage best friend. On the surface, Lester
Burnham is a creep. Looking closer, he's a
study of a suburban mid-life crisis, a dad who
wants to understand his daughter and smiles
fondly at a family photo with his final breath.
Fatherly Advice: "Janie, today I quit my
job. And then I told my boss to go (screw)
himself, and then I blackmailed him for almost
$60,000. Pass the asparagus."
24. Richard Hoover (Greg Kinnear) - "Little Miss Sunshine" (2006) 24. Richard Hoover (Greg Kinnear) - "Little
Miss Sunshine" (2006)
Holding together a dysfunctional family is
perhaps the hardest job of any dad. Greg
Kinnear held together a tired wife, drug-
addicted father, suicidal brother-in-law,
speechless stepson and dreamer daughter on a
cross-country trip in a push-start, constantly-
beeping VW van.
Fatherly Advice: "There's two kinds of
people in this world, there's winners and
there's losers. OK, you know what the
difference is? Winners don't give up."
25. Marlin (Albert Brooks) - "Finding Nemo" (2003) 25. Marlin (Albert Brooks) - "Finding Nemo"
(2003)
How far would you swim to find your son? Albert
Brooks' papa fish swam to the far ends of the
ocean in search of his lost kid, Nemo.
Fatherly Advice: "I have to get out of
here! I have to find my son! I have to tell him
how old sea turtles are!"
VIDEO
26. Chief Martin Brody (Roy Scheider) - "Jaws" (1975 26. Chief Martin Brody (Roy Scheider) -
"Jaws" (1975)
We all remember Chief Brody's race across the
beach when he realizes the shark is headed
straight for his son, Michael, in the Amity
pond. But his best fatherly scene comes as he
downs wine at the dinner table, feeling guilty
over the death of a young swimmer, when he
spots his son mimicking his every move. As
father and son fold hands, it's a powerful
little moment in a major blockbuster film.
Fatherly Advice: "Come here. Give Daddy
a kiss."
27. Noah Levenstein (Eugene Levy) - "American Pie" (1999 27. Noah Levenstein (Eugene Levy) -
"American Pie" (1999)
Jim's dad took the awkwardness of the "birds
and the bees" and made a hilarious character.
Discussing everything from masturbation to
using protection, Jim would have loved for his
pops to shut his "pie" hole, but we couldn't
stop laughing.
Fatherly Advice: "Well,
they're safer than a tube sock."(On condoms)
On condoms
28. Geppetto (Christian Rub) - "Pinocchio" (1940) 28. Geppetto (Christian Rub) - "Pinocchio"
(1940)
How badly did Geppetto want a son? He made one
out of wood, "wished upon a star" to turn him
into a real boy and battled a giant whale to
prove his love.
Fatherly Advice: "Figaro, you know what
I wish? I wish that my little Pinocchio might
be a real boy."
29. John Quincy Archibald (Denzel Washington) - "John Q" (2002) 29. John Quincy Archibald (Denzel
Washington) - "John Q" (2002)
Sure the film was a "health care" remake of
"Dog Day Afternoon" (1975). But few fathers
have gone to such lengths for their sons as
Denzel Washington's John Q, holding a hospital
hostage while demanding a heart transplant for
his son.
Fatherly Advice: "I am not going to bury
my son! My son is going to bury me!"
30. Bryan Mills (Liam Neeson) - "Taken" (2008) 30. Bryan Mills (Liam Neeson) - "Taken"
(2008)
Some movie dads you just shouldn't mess with.
Liam Neeson plays a retired CIA agent who
travels across Europe to save his daughter, who
was kidnapped on a trip to Paris and sold into
prostitution.
Fatherly Advice: "If you let my daughter
go now, that'll be the end of it. I will not
look for you, I will not pursue you. But if you
don't, I will look for you, I will find you,
and I will kill you."
WASHINGTON – WTOP is counting down the Most Memorable Movie Dads in Hollywood History. See whether you agree with WTOP Film Critic Jason Fraley’s list of the dads who take care of business, go the extra mile, teach valuable lessons and will do anything for their kids.
Read more from WTOP Film Critic Jason Fraley by clicking “Fraley on Film ” under the “Living” tab above, following @JasonFraleyWTOP on Twitter, and checking out his blog, The Film Spectrum .
(Copyright 2012 by WTOP. All Rights Reserved.)