1999–2011: Early career and film debut While a student at
Victoria University of Wellington, Waititi was part of the five-member comedy ensemble
So You're a Man, which toured New Zealand and Australia with some success. He and
Jemaine Clement, as the comedy duo The Humourbeasts, received New Zealand's highest comedy accolade, the
Billy T Award, in 1999. Also in 1999, under the surname Cohen, he appeared in the black comedy film
Scarfies. In 2000 he starred in the Haiku film "Titan - extra strength condoms" in the 3rd collection of
rADz (radical art TV advertisements) which played on national television during ad breaks. Among a variety of artistic interests, Waititi began making comical short films for New Zealand's annual
48Hours film contest. He directed the short film
Two Cars, One Night (2003) which involves two young boys and a girl meeting in the carpark of a rural pub in
Te Kaha, New Zealand. The short earned acclaim and was nominated for the
Academy Award for Best Live Action Short in 2005. (It lost the award to the short
Wasp (2003).) His first feature film was a romantic comedy,
Eagle vs Shark. It was released in US theatres for limited distribution in 2007. Waititi co-wrote the film with
Loren Horsley. That year, Waititi wrote and directed one episode of the TV show
Flight of the Conchords and directed another. In 2010, he acted in the New Zealand TV3 improv sketch comedy show
Radiradirah, together with frequent collaborators
Rhys Darby and
Jemaine Clement. His second feature,
Boy, premiered at the
Sundance Film Festival in January 2010, and was nominated for the Grand Jury Prize. Waititi also took one of the main roles, as the ex-con father who returns to his family. On its release in New Zealand,
Boy received enthusiastic reviews and was successful at the local box office, eclipsing several records. In 2011, Waititi directed New Zealand TV series
Super City starring
Madeleine Sami, who plays five characters living in one city. That year, Waititi portrayed
Thomas Kalmaku in the superhero feature film
Green Lantern.
2013–2019: Career breakthrough and expansion In 2013, Waititi co-wrote, co-directed and acted in the vampire comedy
mockumentary What We Do in the Shadows with Clement. It premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2014. Waititi and Clement played members of a group of vampires who live in an appropriately gothic house in modern-day Wellington. A television adaptation of the film was commissioned in May 2018, with Waititi as an executive producer and director. The
series of the same name premiered on
FX in March 2019; its second season received a
Primetime Emmy Award nomination for
Outstanding Comedy Series. Waititi's fourth feature,
Hunt for the Wilderpeople, premiered at the 2016 Sundance Film Festival. When it was released in New Zealand, the comedy adventure broke Waititi's record for a New Zealand film in its opening weekend. Based on a book by
Barry Crump, it centres on a young boy (played by
Julian Dennison) and a grumpy man (played by
Sam Neill) on the run in the wilderness. Waititi wrote the initial screenplay for the 2016 Disney film
Moana, which focused on gender and family. Those elements were passed over in favour of what became the final story. In 2017, Waititi won the award for
New Zealander of the Year, but was unable to receive it in person due to work commitments. That year, he directed his first major studio film,
Marvel Studios's
Thor: Ragnarok, which was released in October. He also portrayed the alien
Korg via motion capture in the film. He had previously directed a short film series for Marvel called
Team Thor, chronicling the lives of Thor and his roommate, Darryl Jacobson.
Thor: Ragnarok earned critical praise and was successful at the box office. Waititi was later consulted by
Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely on Thor's storylines for
Avengers: Infinity War, to maintain the character's consistency in the
Marvel Cinematic Universe. speaking at the 2017
San Diego Comic-Con In 2019, Waititi wrote and directed
Jojo Rabbit, based on the book
Caging Skies by
Christine Leunens, the 1940s-set story of a child in the
Hitler Youth whose mother is secretly hiding a Jewish girl in their home. Waititi plays a buffoonish version of
Adolf Hitler as the boy's imaginary friend. Waititi received Academy Award nominations for
Best Picture and
Best Adapted Screenplay. He won the latter, making him the first person of Māori descent to win an Academy Award in a screenplay category, and the first
indigenous person to be nominated for and win Best Adapted Screenplay. In 2021 he won the
Grammy Award for Best Compilation Soundtrack for Visual Media as a producer of the
Jojo Rabbit soundtrack. In October 2018,
Lucasfilm announced that Waititi would be one of the directors of the
Star Wars live-action streaming series
The Mandalorian, which tells the story of a lone Mandalorian gunfighter in the period between the events of
Return of the Jedi and
The Force Awakens. The series premiered on 12 November 2019; Waititi also voices a droid bounty hunter named
IG-11 in the series. He directed the series' first-season finale, "
Chapter 8: Redemption". His voiceover work earned him a Primetime Emmy Award nomination for
Outstanding Character Voice-Over Performance in 2020. He portrayed
Ratcatcher in the DC superhero film
The Suicide Squad, released in August 2021 to positive reviews. Also in August, Waititi portrayed Antwan Hovachelik, the antagonist of the action comedy film
Free Guy. With
Sterlin Harjo, Waititi co-created the comedy series
Reservation Dogs, which chronicles the lives of a group of indigenous Oklahoma teens, and comprises a main cast, directors, producers, and writers of indigenous peoples. It premiered on
FX and received positive reviews. Waititi executive produced, directed and starred as
Blackbeard in the
HBO Max comedy series
Our Flag Means Death. The first season was released in March 2022. That same year,
Time magazine placed him on its
annual list of the 100 most influential people in the world. Waititi voiced Mo Morrison in the
Pixar film
Lightyear (2022). He wrote and directed the superhero film
Thor: Love and Thunder, a sequel to
Thor: Ragnarok. It released in July 2022. The film received mixed reviews with critic
Mark Kermode complained that "the jokes, the catch-phrases [are] just incredibly tired".
Richard Brody of
The New Yorker described the film writing "The film passes through the nervous system without delivering any sustenance or even leaving a residue." In her mixed review from
NPR, Amy Nicholson added "I was really compelled by the ideas Taika Waititi was teasing in this film, but the actual style of it – the eagerness to please – made me take a step back from everything. [But] what he's discussing is really smart." Waititi also directed a
feature film adaptation of the documentary
Next Goal Wins prior to directing
Thor: Love and Thunder. The film, which had been delayed, was released on 17 November 2023, after
Armie Hammer's scenes were re-shot with
Will Arnett taking over the role. The film premiered at the
2023 Toronto International Film Festival to negative reviews. Esther Zuckerman of
IndieWire praised some of the performances but labeled it as "largely a misfire".
Peter Bradshaw of
The Guardian described it as "a shoddily made and strikingly unfunny attempt to tell an interesting story in an uninteresting way". In 2024, Waititi directed and co-wrote the pilot episode of a
television adaptation of the
Terry Gilliam film,
Time Bandits, alongside frequent collaborators Jemaine Clement and
Iain Morris. In 2024, Waititi directed the pilot and executive produced a television adaptation of the
Charles Yu novel,
Interior Chinatown, starring
Jimmy O. Yang. In 2025, Waititi appeared in
season thirteen of
The Masked Singer as "Detective Lucky Duck". Like
Donnie Wahlberg as "Cluedle-Doo", Detective Lucky Duck gave clues involving each of the contestants. Waititi was revealed to be Lucky Duck in the semi-finals; this surprised his wife
Rita Ora, who was one of the panelists. In February 2026, a
Pepsi commercial directed by Waititi aired during
Super Bowl LX. The commercial depicted a
Coca-Cola polar bear taking on the
Pepsi Challenge, only to find out that it prefers the Pepsi drink. The commercial featured an appearance of Waititi as the bear's therapist. In April 2026,
Netflix announced that Waititi will voice
Willy Wonka in an animated film follow up to
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory titled
Charlie vs. The Chocolate Factory. Waititi also serves as executive producer on the film. ==Personal life==