Top 15 Actors Who Swear the Most
There are actors whose filmographies come with a higher quota of colorful language. From crime epics to raunchy comedies, certain careers are packed with roles where profanity is part of the character’s voice and the script’s rhythm. Looking across major roles, you can trace repeat collaborations with directors and writers who favor sharp dialogue and characters who talk like real people in high pressure situations.
This list brings together performers known for profanity heavy parts across multiple films. The selections focus on bodies of work where swearing is frequent and central to the scenes that made these movies memorable. You will see recurring titles and creative teams because the same storytelling styles keep drawing these actors back to scripts where strong language does the job.
Jonah Hill

Jonah Hill racks up curse filled dialogue in comedies and crime dramas. His supporting and lead turns in ‘Superbad’, ’21 Jump Street’, and ‘This Is the End’ keep the insults flying in rapid fire exchanges. His work with Judd Apatow and frequent collaborators places him in ensemble scenes that rely on riffs and improvised lines filled with profanity.
Hill’s profanity count spikes in ‘The Wolf of Wall Street’, where his character’s scenes with Jordan Belfort feature extended rants and office floor chaos. Add ‘War Dogs’ and ‘Get Him to the Greek’ and you get a filmography where swearing shows up in party sequences, sales calls, and friend group arguments that run through entire acts.
Leonardo DiCaprio

Leonardo DiCaprio’s curse heavy roles often arrive in crime and revenge stories. ‘The Wolf of Wall Street’ places him at the center of obscenity laden sales meetings and narration. ‘The Departed’ throws him into undercover tension where profanity drives confrontations with handlers and mobsters.
DiCaprio’s collaborations with Quentin Tarantino in ‘Django Unchained’ add explosive exchanges with characters who trade threats and slurs within period dialogue. His turns in ‘Gangs of New York’ and ‘The Aviator’ also include swearing in boardrooms, barrooms, and backstage corridors where the stakes are high and tempers run hot.
Samuel L. Jackson

Samuel L. Jackson’s signature roles come with scripts that lean on profanity for punch and cadence. ‘Pulp Fiction’ gives him long monologues and interrogations that stack curses into memorable speeches. ‘Jackie Brown’ builds on that pattern with criminal negotiations that escalate quickly.
Jackson continues the streak in ‘The Hateful Eight’ where cabin standoffs depend on language as a weapon. Add ‘Shaft’ and ‘Die Hard with a Vengeance’ and you see a throughline of characters who control rooms with loud voices, blistering put downs, and constant swearing that marks authority and menace.
Adam Sandler

Adam Sandler’s comedic persona began with juvenile insults that tip into profanity. Films like ‘Happy Gilmore’, ‘Big Daddy’, and ‘Grown Ups’ thread curses into arguments with friends, rivals, and authority figures. The words arrive in bursts during sports outbursts and family squabbles.
His dramatic turn in ‘Uncut Gems’ raises the profanity density even more with nonstop phone calls, hallway fights, and gambling runs that fuel expletive heavy dialogue. ‘Funny People’ and ‘The Meyerowitz Stories’ also include scenes where comics and family members trade swears as they work through career frustrations and personal conflicts.
Al Pacino

Al Pacino’s crime classics make heavy use of profanity as part of criminal culture and street level pressure. ‘Scarface’ features tirades that anchor confrontations in offices and nightclubs. ‘Heat’ relies on shouted curses during robberies and debriefs after violent encounters.
In ‘Glengarry Glen Ross’ Pacino’s real estate shark spits curses during sales calls and late night bar talks where every insult is a tactic. ‘Carlito’s Way’ adds more profanity during club management scenes and criminal negotiations, keeping the language elevated whenever trust breaks down.
Joe Pesci

Joe Pesci’s swearing stands out in rapid, staccato bursts. ‘Goodfellas’ gives him scenes where insults and threats tumble over each other in barroom stories and back room meetings. ‘Casino’ continues the pattern with profanity laden management disputes and street level enforcement.
Pesci’s exchanges with Robert De Niro often hinge on expletives that mark rising stakes and thin patience. In ‘The Irishman’ he dials the volume down yet still uses sharp curses during delicate conversations with teamsters and mob bosses where a single word can change a fate.
Robert De Niro

Robert De Niro’s toughest roles put profanity in the everyday vocabulary of cops, crooks, and boxers. ‘Raging Bull’ uses blunt language in family disputes and locker room scenes. ‘Goodfellas’ and ‘Casino’ add casual swears to planning sessions and violent fallouts.
De Niro’s modern comedies keep the habit alive in a different register. ‘Meet the Parents’ and ‘Dirty Grandpa’ insert curses into awkward family dinners and spring break chaos. Across genres, his characters deploy swearing to set boundaries, vent anger, and control the pace of conversations.
Seth Rogen

Seth Rogen’s comedies are built on profanity driven banter among friends under stress. ‘Pineapple Express’ features relentless cursing during foot chases and living room debates. ‘Superbad’ stacks swears into high school misadventures and convenience store mishaps.
‘This Is the End’ amplifies the volume with end times panic where the insults fly from scene to scene. ‘Neighbors’ brings swearing into suburban showdowns over noise complaints and petty revenge. Across these projects, his dialogue keeps the curses coming in naturalistic friend group chatter.
Danny McBride

Danny McBride often plays abrasive characters whose lines are loaded with profanity. ‘Pineapple Express’ gives him wild tangents and sudden bursts of swearing during shootouts. ‘Your Highness’ uses crude language as a running joke inside a fantasy quest setup.
His big screen work mirrors his television persona with characters who use swears to mask insecurity and assert dominance. Films like ‘This Is the End’ and ‘Tropic Thunder’ keep the tone profane during arguments, betrayals, and on set meltdowns where every line lands harder with a curse.
Mark Wahlberg

Mark Wahlberg’s profanity heavy scenes show up in crime thrillers and buddy comedies. ‘The Departed’ outfits his character with quick, biting insults during briefings and interrogations. ‘Ted’ relies on swearing for banter with a foul mouthed teddy bear in everyday Boston settings.
‘Pain and Gain’ adds gym floor trash talk and crime planning that leans on expletives. ‘The Other Guys’ mixes police frustration with office gripes that keep the language spicy from scene to scene. Across genres, his dialogue turns to cursing when confrontations heat up.
Jason Statham

Jason Statham’s action films include swearing as part of hard boiled exchanges with criminals and corrupt officials. ‘Snatch’ features rapid fire curses during pawn shop negotiations and boxing ring cons. ‘Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels’ adds street slang and profanity to chaotic heists.
In ‘Crank’ the language spikes during citywide chases where every phone call is a row. The ‘Transporter’ series keeps it briefer yet still drops curses during fights and double crosses. His characters speak in clipped lines where profanity marks impatience and threat.
Melissa McCarthy

Melissa McCarthy uses profanity as a comedic tool in espionage spoofs and buddy cop setups. ‘Bridesmaids’ features expletive filled bridal party conflicts and public blowups. ‘The Heat’ pairs her with a straight laced partner while she delivers curses during interrogations and stakeouts.
‘Spy’ showcases profanity in office politics and field mishaps as her character adapts to undercover work. ‘Tammy’ and ‘Life of the Party’ include family squabbles and college chaos where the language loosens in moments of stress. Across these films, swearing helps land punchlines and clarify power dynamics.
Ryan Reynolds

Ryan Reynolds anchors profanity heavy scripts with fast talk and meta humor. ‘Deadpool’ lives on explicit quips that pepper fights and fourth wall commentary. ‘The Hitman’s Bodyguard’ puts him next to a contract killer for road trip arguments loaded with curses.
‘6 Underground’ and ‘Free Guy’ add action and gamer humor where profanity punctuates rapid dialogue. His delivery style leans on quick setups and blunt payoffs, keeping swears frequent across chase scenes, henchmen encounters, and locker room style exchanges.
Benicio del Toro

Benicio del Toro brings profanity into terse conversations in cartel thrillers and noirs. ‘Sicario’ places him in interrogation rooms and border operations where a few chosen curses underline threats. ‘Traffic’ uses strong language in political, legal, and street level scenes that intersect across the drug trade.
In ‘Savages’ the dialogue between rival crews turns coarse during kidnappings and negotiations. ’21 Grams’ uses swearing to reveal raw nerves in grief and guilt. His characters favor low volume delivery where each curse word carries weight in quiet rooms.
Kevin Hart

Kevin Hart’s film roles mix rapid fire jokes with bursts of profanity. ‘Ride Along’ puts him in patrol car arguments and precinct hallways where the language gets heated. ‘The Wedding Ringer’ adds best man schemes that end in loud, curse filled mishaps.
In ‘Central Intelligence’ and ‘Get Hard’ he trades swears with co stars during training montages and fish out of water lessons. The dialogue relies on expletives to keep pace with slapstick and verbal sparring, filling scenes with constant chatter that rarely stays clean.
Robert Downey Jr.

Robert Downey Jr. has profanity sprinkled through crime comedies and action mysteries. ‘Kiss Kiss Bang Bang’ uses sharp, curse filled narration and sarcastic exchanges during Hollywood noir twists. ‘Tropic Thunder’ keeps the language hot on a chaotic set where actors argue through staged firefights.
‘Due Date’ adds road trip meltdowns with steady swearing in cramped spaces and airport lines. Even outside his clean cut franchise roles, his smaller scale features leave room for expletive laced dialogue that moves quickly through jokes, clues, and confrontations.
Share the names we missed and the films that prove it in the comments.


