Ranking 11 Movie Bosses From Amazing to Horrible

Horrible Bosses 2 opens this weekend, reuniting stars Jason Sudeikis, Jason Bateman, and Charlie Day as three guys who have moved on, sort of, after being fed up with their employers. Wretched bosses are hardly the first of their kind, in life and in the movies, so we've rounded up some of the best and worst of the big screen's most memorable supervisors. Here is our ranking — starting with the best and the harmless all the way to the awful and insidious.

Joe, Empire Records
Warner Bros.

Joe, Empire Records

Joe is the record store manager who's more father figure than boss. Need counseling, bail money, a great drummer? Joe's your guy. Let's face it — he's a superb manager. Superb.

Rob, High Fidelity
Touchstone Pictures

Rob, High Fidelity

Rob might be the most easygoing boss ever; you can really just roll in to his store whenever you get up and denigrate the customers' terrible music taste as you wish. He'd be on my top five list of movie bosses.

Bobby and Paulette, Adventureland
Miramax

Bobby and Paulette, Adventureland

Married couple Bobby and Paulette might be nerdy and irritating as manager and co-manager team of Adventureland, but if a disgruntled customer ever chases after you, they'll be there wielding a baseball bat to defend you.

Gus, Never Been Kissed
20th Century Studios

Gus, Never Been Kissed

Newspaper editor Gus may not have the most faith in his reporters, using tough love to get his point across, but in the end, he cares more about his employees than the story itself.

Rose, Don't Tell Mom the Babysitter's Dead
Warner Bros.

Rose, Don't Tell Mom the Babysitter's Dead

There are few bosses as encouraging and supportive as Rose — earn her trust and she'll forgive most well-meaning indiscretions, like forging your age to work for her. And if you're ever in a jam? Just tell her you're "right on top of that, Rose."

Bill Lumbergh, Office Space
20th Century Studios

Bill Lumbergh, Office Space

Bill Lumbergh might be the most passive aggressive boss on this list. What does he even really do anyway, besides drink coffee, ask about memos, and make you come in on Saturday? He's the worst kind of manager: the kind who hovers while he micromanages, one monotone syllable at a time.

Edward Grey, Secretary
Lionsgate

Edward Grey, Secretary

Edward Grey is the original Christian Grey. He's a challenge to work for, as he expects perfection and has little patience for errors. Worse, if you mess up on the job, he'll give you a spanking.

Dr. Evil, Austin Powers
New Line Cinema

Dr. Evil, Austin Powers

Dr. Evil's leading style is right there in his name, but is he really asking so much? All he wants are some frickin' sharks with some frickin' laser beams attached to their heads. He's the boss; he needs the info!

Jordan Belfort, The Wolf of Wall Street
Paramount Pictures

Jordan Belfort, The Wolf of Wall Street

Sure, the company culture is a constant party, but when your boss is only thinking of himself, he's not exactly the man you want to be working for.

Miranda Priestly, The Devil Wears Prada
20th Century Studios

Miranda Priestly, The Devil Wears Prada

"That's all . . ." Magazine editrix Miranda Priestly can reduce you to nothing with one withering, head-to-toe glance. She demands more than any one person can give, and once you disappoint her, she'll make sure you never work in this town again.

Julia Harris, D.D.S, Horrible Bosses
New Line Cinema

Julia Harris, D.D.S, Horrible Bosses

This dastardly dentist is gorgeous, but she's an insidious sexual harasser and blackmailer.