Returning to films, Hackman earned strong notices for his work in 1964's Warren Beatty's #Lilith and 1966's #Hawaii, but the 1967 World War II tale #First to Flight proved disastrous for all involved. At Beatty's request, he co-starred in Bonnie and Clyde, winning a Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination and establishing himself as a leading character player. After making a pair of films with Jim Brown (1968's #The Split and 1969's #Riot), Hackman supported Robert Redford in #The Downhill Racer, Burt Lancaster in #The Gypsy Moths, and Gregory Peck in #Marooned. For 1970's #I Never Sang for My Father, he garnered another Academy Award nomination; the following year, Hackman became a star as New York narcotics agent Popeye Doyle, a character rejected by at least seven other actors. He headlined William Friedkin's thriller #The French Connection, winning a Best Actor Oscar and spurring the film to Best Picture honors. Upon successfully making the leap from supporting player to lead, he next appeared in the disaster epic #The Poseidon Adventure, one of the biggest money-makers of 1972.
After co-starring with Al Pacino in 1973's #Scarecrow, Hackman delivered his strongest performance to date as a haunted surveillance expert in Francis Ford Coppola's 1974 classic #The Conversation. After tapping his under-utilized comedic skills in Mel Brooks' #Young Frankenstein, he starred in Arthur Penn's grim 1975 thriller #Night Moves; the Western #Bite the Bullet followed before he agreed to #The French Connection II. While remaining the subject of great critical acclaim, Hackman's box office prowess was beginning to slip: 1975's #Lucky Lady, 1977's #The Domino and #March or Die were all costly flops, and although 1978's #Superman -- in which he appeared as the villainous Lex Luthor -- was a smash, his career continued to suffer greatly. Apart from the inevitable #Superman II, Hackman was absent from screens for several years, and with the exception of a fleeting appearance in Beatty's 1981 epic #Reds, most of his early-'80s work -- specifically, the features #All Night Long and #Eureka -- passed through theaters virtually unnoticed.
Finally, a thankless role as an ill-fated war correspondent in Roger Spottiswode's acclaimed 1983 drama #Under Fire brought Hackman's career back to life; the follow-up, the action film #Uncommon Valor, was also a hit, and while 1984's #Misunderstood stalled, the next year's #Twice in a Lifetime was a critical success. By the middle of the decade, Hackman was again as prolific as ever, headlining a pair of 1986 pictures -- the little-seen Power and the sleeper hit #Hoosiers -- before returning to the Man of Steel franchise for 1987's #Superman IV: The Quest for Peace. #No Way Out, in which he co-starred with Kevin Costner, was also a hit. In 1988 Hackman starred in no less than five major releases: Woody Allen's #Another Woman, the war drama #Bat 21, the comedy #Full Moon in Blue Water, the sports tale #Split Decisions, and Alan Parker's #Mississippi Burning. The last named, a civil-rights drama set in 1964, cast him as an FBI agent investigating the disappearance of a group of political activists; though the film itself was the subject of considerable controversy, Hackman won another Oscar nomination.
During the '90s, Hackman settled comfortably into a rhythm alternating between lead roles (1990's #Narrow Margin, 1991's #Class Action) and high-profile supporting performances (1990's #Postcards from the Edge, 1993's #The Firm). In 1992, he joined director and star Clint Eastwood in the cast of the revisionist Western #Unforgiven, appearing as a small-town sheriff corrupted by his own desires for justice; the role won Hackman a Best Supporting Academy Award. The performance helped land him in another pair of idiosyncratic Western tales, #Wyatt Earp and #The Quick and the Dead; in 1995, he also co-starred in two of the year's biggest hits, the submarine adventure #Crimson Tide and the Hollywood satire #Get Shorty. Three more big-budget productions, #The Birdcage, #The Chamber, and #Extreme Measures, followed in 1996, and a year later, Hackman portrayed the President of the United States in Eastwood's #Absolute Power. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi