We ranked all of Channing Tatum's movies by their Rotten Tomatoes scores.
His heist movie "Logan Lucky" earned the top score to date.
"Foxcatcher" and "21 Jump Street" are also ranked high.
For close to 20 years, Channing Tatum has entertained us on the big screen.
Whether it's his dance moves, dramatic chops, outlandish comedic ability, or thrilling us in action movies, Tatum has nearly done it all in his career.
Most recently, Tatum portrayed the Marvel character Gambit, thanks to being featured in the hit action movie, "Deadpool & Wolverine." It's a role he's been trying to get to the screen for over a decade.
Here we look back on Tatum's career, ranking his movies from worst to best, according to Rotten Tomatoes.
Note: This list does not include Tatum's cameos in "The Lego Movie" and its sequels, "Step Up 2: The Streets," "Don Jon," "This Is the End," and "Bullet Train".
“Supercross: The Movie” (2005)
The title says it all: This early 2000s movie looks at the sport of motorcycle racing, Supercross. In one of the earliest roles of his career, Tatum plays an egotistical racer named Rowdy Sparks.
In the role that made him a star, Tatum plays a troubled kid who helps a ballet student (Jenna Dewan) integrate hip-hop moves into her routine. And in the process, sparks fly between the two.
In real life, sparks flew between Tatum and his costar Dewan, who eventually married in 2009. They divorced in 2019.
This comedy, starring Vince Vaughn and Kevin James, centers on two best friends whose relationship is tested after one believes the other's wife is having an affair. Tatum steals comedic scenes while playing the character Zip, who's caught kissing the married woman.
Tatum and Rachel McAdams star in this romantic drama in which they play newlyweds whose relationship is strained after McAdams' character suffers memory loss following a car accident.
This outlandish animated comedy spoofs the history of the American Revolution. Tatum voices George Washington, who forms a superteam to defeat King James of England.
Tatum plays a street kid whose talents as a fighter grab the attention of a con man (Terrence Howard), who plugs him into the bare-knuckle fighting circuit.
In one of Tatum's first appearances on screen, he appears in this teen crime drama that also stars Anne Hathaway, Bijou Phillips, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, and Freddy Rodriguez.
In the final movie in the "Magic Mike" franchise, Tatum's titular character finds himself in London thanks to a wealthy socialite (Salma Hayek) who pushes him to do something with his dance talents that goes beyond stripping.
In this action movie from the director of "Independence Day," Tatum plays a US Capitol officer who protects the president (Jamie Foxx) after a terrorist attack happens at the White House.
In this dramatic retelling of the protests during a 1999 World Trade Organization conference in Seattle, Tatum plays a police officer who questions the tactics used to confront the protesters.
Tatum makes his screen debut in this sports drama based on a true story. It stars Samuel L. Jackson as a basketball coach who tries to reach his players, who are amazing stars on the court, but are struggling academically.
In this drama that shows life after war, Tatum plays a decorated soldier dealing with PTSD. Ryan Phillippe, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, and Abbi Cornish also star.
In the second movie in the "Magic Mike" franchise, Tatum's titular character and his dancing friends set out on a road trip to perform at a stripper convention.
In this romantic comedy set around the Apollo 11 moon landing, Scarlett Johansson plays a marketing director hired by NASA to fix its public image, while Tatum plays the mission's launch director.
Tatum is cast in Michael Mann's biopic, which stars Johnny Depp as John Dillinger, a famed bank robber who's been targeted by the FBI. Tatum portrays a bank robber named Charles "Pretty Boy" Floyd.
Tatum gives a memorable performance in this Quentin Tarantino movie as Jody Domergue, who sets a trap at an outpost to rescue his sister (Jennifer Jason Leigh) from a bounty hunter. Things don't go as planned, as he gets shot in the face by a character played by his "Coach Carter" co-star, Samuel L. Jackson.
Based on Dito Montiel's memoir about growing up in Queens in the early 1980s, Tatum starred as one of his friends in the film while Shia LaBeouf played young Dito. Montiel directed the film and would also direct Tatum in "Fighting" and "The Son of No One."
Tatum plays an Army Ranger tasked with escorting a military dog to the funeral of a fallen fellow soldier. But the road trip there is filled with outlandish behavior as Tatum's character and the dog struggle to get along.
Tatum teams with director Steven Soderbergh to tell the story of a stripper's life. The movie is based loosely on Tatum's time as a stripper in Tampa when he was 18.
In the third movie in the Deadpool franchise, Tatum shows up to help out the Merc with a Mouth by playing the Marvel character Gambit. For years, Tatum has been trying to bring the character to the screen.
Tatum plays a billionaire tech mogul who throws a lavish party on a private island. However, the guests soon realize this party isn't exactly what it seems.
In this adventure rom-com, Tatum plays Alan, the cover model of romance novels written by Loretta (Sandra Bullock). While on her book tour, Loretta is kidnapped. Alan decides to prove he's a hero in real life by setting out to rescue her.
Tatum's first team-up with Soderbergh is this thriller starring Gina Carano as a double-crossed operative. Tatum plays one of the fellow operatives Carano takes out in her quest for freedom.
Ryan Reynolds plays an NPC in a popular video game who decides to no longer be a nobody. Tatum plays an avatar who helps Reynolds' character discover a vital source code buried in the game.
After the first "Magic Mike" movie, Tatum joined Soderbergh's next movie, a thriller in which he's the husband of a woman (Rooney Mara) dealing with depression. He's given medication that ultimately ruins their lives.
In this animated movie, Tatum voices a character who is stuck in a love triangle that leads to some interesting discoveries. Diego Luna and Zoe Saldaña also star.
Based on the hit 1980s TV show where young-looking cops go undercover in high schools to solve crimes, Hill and Tatum are cast in the big movie reboot. The duo has to infiltrate a drug ring at a high school and not mess it up by reliving their teenage anxieties.
This fictional comedy, which marks one of the last times the Coen brothers have directed a movie together, looks at Hollywood in the 1950s. Tatum stars in a Gene Kelly-type role and is featured in a hilarious dance number.
In one of Tatum's most acclaimed performances, he plays wrestler Mark Schultz, who, in hopes of getting out of the shadow of his brother Dave (Mark Ruffalo), agrees to help millionaire Jon Du Pont (Steve Carell) form a wrestling team for the Olympics. It results in a horrific ending for all three men.
Tatum teamed with Soderbergh again for this heist movie set in the South. Tatum plays a laid-off construction worker who plans with his brother (Adam Driver) to rob the Charlotte Motor Speedway during a race. Daniel Craig, Riley Keough, and Katie Holmes also star.