1997–2004: Early roles Wilson first appeared onscreen in 1997 in an episode of the soap opera
One Life to Live, followed by a supporting role in the television film
The Expendables (1999). He made his feature film debut in
Galaxy Quest (1999), followed by a minor supporting role in
Cameron Crowe's
Almost Famous (2000). In 2001, he played Dennis Van De Meer in
When Billie Beat Bobby. In 2002, he was cast in a lead role in
Rob Zombie's horror film
House of 1000 Corpses (2003). Beginning in 2003, Wilson played
Arthur Martin, an intern at Fisher & Diaz Funeral Home in
HBO's
Six Feet Under, earning a
Screen Actors Guild award for best drama ensemble for the series. He also had minor roles in ''
America's Sweethearts (2001) and the Melvin van Peebles biopic Baadasssss! (2003). He guest-starred in Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, Entourage, Monk, Numbers, Charmed, Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job, and Reno 911!''
2005–2013: The Office and recognition In 2005, Wilson appeared in the comedy film
Sahara and in the independent
mockumentary film
The Life Coach. The same year, he was cast as neurotic sales representative
Dwight Schrute in the network series
The Office, for which he was nominated for
Emmy Awards for Best Supporting Actor in 2007, 2008 and 2009, and won two
SAG awards as part of Best Comedy Ensemble on the series. As well as acting on the series, he directed three episodes: "The Cover-Up" (season 6), "Classy Christmas" (season 7) and "Get the Girl" (season 8). On February 24, 2007, Wilson hosted
Saturday Night Live, becoming the second
The Office cast member to host (after
Steve Carell). During the
2007 FIFA Women's World Cup, Wilson appeared in ads for the 2007
United States women's national soccer team as public relations manager "Jim Mike". In August 2010, he appeared in the music video for
Ferraby Lionheart's "Harry and Bess" and
Andy Grammer's "
Keep Your Head Up" as the "creepy elevator guy". Wilson starred in the
Fox Atomic comedy
The Rocker (2008). In 2009 he joined the voice cast of
DreamWorks Animation film
Monsters vs. Aliens as villainous alien overlord Gallaxhar; and was featured in
Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, playing a university professor. In 2010, he had the lead role of the unhinged protagonist in
Super. Critic
Roger Ebert faulted the script, but praised Wilson's performance: "[Wilson] never seems to be trying to be funny, and that's a strength." For his role of Paul, the bereft father, in
Hesher (2011), Roger Ebert said of Wilson's work: “He has that rare quality in an actor, an uncanny presence. There are a few like him (Jack Nicholson, Christopher Walken, Bill Murray) who need only to look at something to establish an attitude toward it. Yes, they can get worked up, they can operate on high, but their passive essence is the point: dubious, wise, sadly knowledgable [sic], at an angle to the throughline. Other actors could sit on a sofa and watch TV, but Rainn Wilson makes it a statement. A statement of … nothing, which is the point."
2014–present: continued film and television In 2014, Wilson had roles in the independent horror comedy
Cooties and the thriller
The Boy (2015). In the
Fox crime-drama series
Backstrom, he played Everett Backstrom, an offensive, self-destructive detective, based on
Leif G. W. Persson's Swedish book series of the same name. Wilson was also one of the show's producers. It was cancelled by Fox after 13 episodes. In 2016, Wilson appeared as a guest star on the TV series
Roadies. In 2017, Wilson voiced
Gargamel in the 2017 animated reboot of
Smurfs: The Lost Village for
Sony Pictures Animation. He also starred in the independent comedy film
Permanent, directed by
Colette Burson and produced by
2929 Entertainment. Wilson starred in
Shimmer Lake (2017) for Netflix and
The Meg (2018) for
Warner Brothers. Wilson was cast in the guest role of
Harry Mudd in
Star Trek: Discovery, and directed the
Star Trek: Short Treks episode "The Escape Artist". He has voiced
Lex Luthor in various DC animated films, including
The Death of Superman,
Reign of the Supermen,
Batman: Hush, and
Justice League Dark: Apokolips War. In 2019, Wilson appeared in the independent drama
Blackbird, and in 2020 starred in the independent thriller ''
Don't Tell a Soul. In 2020, he was also a series regular in the Amazon Original Series Utopia as virologist Dr. Michael Sterns. On October 10, 2019, he was featured in the 30-minute YouTube documentary Laughing Matters
, created by SoulPancake in collaboration with Funny or Die, wherein a variety of comedians discuss mental health. Wilson was cast as the villain in the upcoming animated film Hitpig!. In 2020, he executive-produced and narrated the Netflix documentary series We Are the Champions''. Wilson played Trevor Wells, the recurring therapist to Bonnie (
Allison Janney) on nine episodes of the CBS sitcom
Mom. He was also cast in mystery series
Dark Winds on
AMC. In 2023, Wilson appeared in four episodes of
Lessons in Chemistry on
Apple TV. Wilson presented the travel series
Rainn Wilson and the Geography of Bliss in 2023 for
Peacock. Wilson's other streaming credits include a role in
Jerry & Marge Go Large for
Paramount+, and a loose depiction of
Dr. Demento in
Weird: The Al Yankovic Story. Wilson is set to play a lead role in
Code 3, a buddy comedy film. Wilson portrayed Caldwell B. Cladwell in
Urinetown during a limited run production at
New York City Center as a part of their
Encores! series in early 2025. ==Other ventures==