Early roles and breakthrough (1987–1995) While in New York, Bullock took acting classes with
Sanford Meisner. She appeared in several student films and later landed a role in an Off-Broadway play
No Time Flat. Director
Alan J. Levi was impressed by Bullock's performance and offered her a part in the made-for-television film
Bionic Showdown: The Six Million Dollar Man and the Bionic Woman (1989). This led to her being cast in a series of small roles in several
independent films, and in the lead role of the short-lived
NBC television version of the film
Working Girl (1990). She went on to appear in several films, such as
Love Potion No. 9 (1992),
The Thing Called Love (1993) and
Fire on the Amazon (1993), before her supporting role in the sci-fi action film
Demolition Man (1993). In 1994, she played Annie Porter, a passenger eventually driving a bus that was rigged by a terrorist, in the smash-hit blockbuster
Speed alongside
Keanu Reeves. She was required to read for
Speed to ensure that there was the right chemistry between her and Reeves. She recalls they had to do "all these really physical scenes together, rolling around on the floor and stuff."
Speed received critical acclaim, with
Rotten Tomatoes calling it a "terrific popcorn thriller [with] outstanding performances from Keanu Reeves,
Dennis Hopper, and Sandra Bullock", and it grossed $350 million worldwide, and helped establish Bullock as a
Hollywood actress. She won
Best Actress at the
21st Saturn Awards, and
Best Female Performance and
Most Desirable Female at the
1995 MTV Movie Awards. Bullock headlined the romantic comedy
While You Were Sleeping (1995) as a lonely
Chicago Transit Authority token collector who saves the life of a man. The film had a positive reception from critics, who felt that it was "assembled with such skill—and with such a charming performance from Sandra Bullock—that it gives formula a good name." She received her first nomination for the
Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Comedy or Musical. The thriller
The Net (also 1995), starred Bullock as a computer programmer who stumbles upon a conspiracy that puts her life and the lives of those around her in great danger.
Owen Gleiberman, writing for
Entertainment Weekly, complimented her performance, saying, "Bullock pulls you into the movie. Her overripe smile and clear, imploring eyes are sometimes evocative of
Julia Roberts".
While You Were Sleeping and
The Net made $182 million and $110.6 million, respectively.
Worldwide recognition (1996–2007) In
A Time to Kill (1996), a legal drama based on
John Grisham's 1989
novel of the same name, Bullock portrayed a member of the defense team in the trial for the murder of two men who raped a young girl, opposite
Samuel L. Jackson,
Matthew McConaughey and
Kevin Spacey. She received an
MTV Movie Award nomination for Best Female Performance. She subsequently received $11 million for
Speed 2: Cruise Control (1997), which she agreed to star in for financial backing for her next project,
Hope Floats (1998). Unlike the original film,
Speed 2 was a critical and commercial flop that she later disparaged. In
Hope Floats, she starred as an unassuming housewife whose life is disrupted when her husband (played by
Michael Paré) reveals his infidelity to her on a talk show. Critic
James Berardinelli remarked that her "undisputed strength lies in a blend of light drama and comedy". That film was a commercial success, grossing $81.4 million worldwide. Bullock starred in the comedy
Practical Magic (1998) alongside
Nicole Kidman as two witch sisters who face a curse which threatens to prevent them ever finding lasting love. While the film opened atop the chart on its North American opening weekend, it flopped at the box office. That year, she voiced Miriam in the
DreamWorks Animation film
The Prince of Egypt and wrote, produced, and directed the short film
Making Sandwiches. She next played a free-spirited drifter who begins to talk to a writer (
Ben Affleck) in the romantic comedy
Forces of Nature (1999), on which
Boxoffice Magazine remarked: "The combination of Affleck's deadpan by-the-book persona with the spontaneity of Bullock's character sparks with convincing chemistry."
Forces of Nature made $93 million worldwide. Bullock took on the role of an
FBI agent who must go undercover as a beauty pageant contestant in the comedy
Miss Congeniality (2000), which became another financial success, with a global gross of $212 million. It earned her a second nomination for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Comedy or Musical. In
28 Days (also 2000), a
dramedy directed by
Betty Thomas, Bullock starred as a newspaper columnist obliged to enter a rehabilitation program for alcoholism. Bullock starred in the psychological thriller
Murder by Numbers (2002) as a seasoned homicide detective.
Roger Ebert awarded the film three stars out of a possible four, stating: "Bullock does a good job here of working against her natural likability, creating a character you'd like to like, and could like, if she weren't so sad, strange and turned in upon herself." She teamed up with
Hugh Grant for the romantic comedy
Two Weeks Notice (also 2002), in which she starred as a lawyer who walks out on her boss. Liz Braun, of
Jam! Movies, found Bullock and Grant to be "perfectly paired", stating: "The script allows the two actors to be at their comedic best, even though the film as a whole is amateurish in many ways".
Two Weeks Notice made $199 million globally. That year, she was presented with the
Raul Julia Award for Excellence for helping expand career openings for Hispanic talent in the media and entertainment industry as the executive producer of the sitcom
George Lopez (2002–2007). She also made several appearances on the show as
Accident Amy, an accident-prone employee at the factory Lopez's character manages. As part of a large ensemble cast, Bullock played the wife of a district attorney in the drama
Crash (2004), which won the
Academy Award for Best Picture. She received positive reviews for her performance, with some critics suggesting that it was the best performance of her career to that point. For
Crash, she received the
Actor Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture along with the rest of the cast. She next received a $17.5 million salary for
Miss Congeniality 2: Armed and Fabulous, which Roger Ebert called a "doubly unnecessary" sequel. She was a co-recipient of the 2005
Women in Film Crystal Award. In 2006, Bullock reunited with
Keanu Reeves for the romantic drama
The Lake House, although their characters were separated throughout the film and they were only on set together for two weeks during filming, and played
Harper Lee in
Infamous, a drama based on
George Plimpton's 1997 book
Truman Capote, alongside
Toby Jones and
Daniel Craig.
The Lake House was a financial success, while
Infamous received generally positive reviews. Bullock headlined the supernatural thriller
Premonition (2007) as a housewife who experiences the days surrounding her husband's death in non-chronological order. Despite negative reviews, the film grossed $84.1 million worldwide.
Established career (2008–2014) '' in 2009 In 2009, Bullock starred as a pushy editor-in-chief in the romantic comedy
The Proposal, opposite
Ryan Reynolds, which grossed $317 million at the worldwide box office, making it her fourth-most successful picture to date. That same year, the drama
The Blind Side opened at number two behind
New Moon with $34.2 million, making it Bullock's second-highest opening weekend ever; it went on to gross over $309 million, making it her highest-grossing domestic film, her fourth-highest-grossing film worldwide, and the first one in history to pass the $200 million mark with only one top-billed female star. Bullock portrayed
Leigh Anne Tuohy, the adoptive mother of
Michael Oher, a role she had initially turned down three times due to discomfort in portraying a devout Christian. She was awarded the
Academy Award,
Golden Globe Award,
Actor Award and
Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Actress.
The Blind Side also received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Winning the Oscar also gave Bullock another unique distinction: the prior night, she won the
Razzie Award for Worst Actress for her performance as an eccentric
crossword puzzle writer in
All About Steve (2009), becoming the only actor in history to win both awards for the same year. By 2010, Bullock was said to be "courted for virtually every female starring role Hollywood has to offer", according to
Entertainment Weekly.
Ben Affleck, her co-star in the romantic comedy
Forces of Nature (1999), stated: "Every movie you hear about and every script I see, they say, 'We're going after Sandra Bullock for the woman'." In 2010, she was the
world's highest-paid actress. She would next star alongside
Tom Hanks as a widow of the
September 11 attacks in the drama
Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close (2011), a film adaptation based on the
novel of the same name. Despite mixed reviews, the film was nominated for numerous awards, including an Academy Award for Best Picture. Bullock was nominated for Favorite Actress Drama by
Teen Choice Awards. In 2013, Bullock starred alongside
Melissa McCarthy in the comedy
The Heat as an
FBI Special Agent who, along with a city detective, must take down a mobster in
Boston. It received positive reviews from critics, and took in $230 million at the worldwide box office. Bullock subsequently played an astronaut stranded in space in the sci-fi thriller
Gravity, opposite
George Clooney, which premiered at the
70th Venice Film Festival and was released on October 4, 2013, to coincide with the beginning of
World Space Week.
Gravity received universal critical acclaim and a standing ovation in Venice. The film was called "the most realistic and beautifully choreographed film ever set in space" and certain critics considered Bullock's performance to be the best of her career.
Gravity grossed $716 million worldwide to become Bullock's second-most successful film. Golden Globe Award,
BAFTA Award,
Actor Award, and
Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Actress. On her performance,
Variety wrote: Bullock inhabits the role with grave dignity and hints at Stone's past scars with sensitivity and tact, and she holds the screen effortlessly once
Gravity becomes a veritable one-woman show [...] the actress remains fully present emotionally, projecting a very appealing combo of vulnerability, intelligence and determination that not only wins us over immediately, but sustains attention all the way through the cathartic closing reels. In 2014, she was Hollywood's highest-paid actress.
Success with limited work (2015–present) Bullock provided her voice for Scarlet Overkill, the villainous character, in the animated film
Minions (2015), which became her highest-grossing film to date with a worldwide gross of over $1.1 billion. In 2015, she served as an executive producer and starred, as a political consultant hired to help win a Bolivian presidential election, in the drama
Our Brand Is Crisis, based on the
2005 documentary film of the same name by Rachel Boynton. Peter Debruge of
Variety found Bullock's portrayal to be "easily one of the best female roles of the last 10 years", but film had the worst
wide release opening of her career. '' in 2018 In ''
Ocean's 8 (2018), an all-female spin-off of the Ocean's Eleven
franchise directed by Gary Ross, Bullock played Debbie Ocean, the sister of Danny Ocean, who helps plan a sophisticated heist of the annual Met Gala in New York City. Writing for The Hollywood Reporter, Josh Spieger called the film a "welcome return to the big screen for Bullock" and observed: "She has reached a point in her career where she chooses her roles with care; before Gravity'', she'd only co-starred in a handful of films over the previous five years, including her Oscar-winning turn in
The Blind Side. ''Ocean's 8'' is Bullock's first true franchise film in decades [...] and it suggests that her decision to be more selective in which projects she picks can pay off in dividends". ''Ocean's 8'' had the best debut for the franchise, and ultimately made $297 million globally. Her next role was that of Malorie, a woman who must find a way to guide herself and her children to safety despite the potential threat from an unseen adversary, in the
Netflix post-apocalyptic horror film
Bird Box (2018), based on the
novel of the same name. She received acclaim for her performance, with
Variety and
The Wrap describing it as "wonderfully self-reliant", and "fascinating and terrifying to watch," respectively.
Bird Box was the most-watched film on Netflix within 28 days of its release until 2021. In another production for Netflix,
Nora Fingscheidt's drama
The Unforgivable (2021), Bullock played a woman who is released from prison after serving a sentence for a violent crime. Writing for
Salon.com, Gary Kramer thought Bullock gave a "steely performance" despite the film being "forgettable".
The Unforgivable became the fifth most-streamed on the platform at the time of its release. She took on the role of a successful yet depressed best-selling romance novelist in
Paramount Pictures'
The Lost City (2022), a
Romancing the Stone-style romantic comedy–adventure film, directed by
Adam and Aaron Nee, opposite
Channing Tatum and
Daniel Radcliffe. The film was favorably received by critics, who praised the chemistry between Bullock and Tatum, and grossed $190.8 million globally, which made Bullock "the first actress to have $100 million earners in live-action star vehicles over four different decades", according to
Forbes. She also featured in the
Brad Pitt-starring action thriller
Bullet Train (2022), in a mostly vocal performance. She will reprise her role as Sally Owens in
Practical Magic 2, set for release on September 18, 2026. == Other endeavours ==