5 David Giuntoli movies and TV shows to watch if you liked him in A Million Little Things

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The Paley Center Presents "A Million Little Things" Screening And Conversation - Source: Getty
David Giuntoli (Photo by Amanda Edwards/Getty Images)

David Giuntoli has managed to create a career that never sits in one place for long. Audiences first connected with him through Grimm, where he played Nick Burkhardt, a detective who suddenly had to face creatures pulled from old folklore while still solving murders in Portland. The show needed a lead who could hold the fantasy world together, and Giuntoli did just that for six years.

Later, he shifted to a very different kind of role with A Million Little Things. As Eddie Saville, he wasn’t chasing monsters but dealing with addiction, fractured trust, and the damage of bad choices. That shift proved he could move into straight drama and still feel convincing.

By jumping from fantasy to network ensemble drama, Giuntoli showed that his career isn’t built on one genre. He keeps finding new ways to connect with viewers, and that steady variety is what has kept his name relevant.


5 David Giuntoli movies and TV shows

1. Grimm (2011–2017)

David Giuntoli (Photo by Amanda Edwards/Getty Images)
David Giuntoli (Photo by Amanda Edwards/Getty Images)

Nick Burkhardt’s story in Grimm began with David Giuntoli walking into a murder case and slowly realizing his family had a secret. What followed was six seasons of him tracking Wesen while juggling the daily grind of a Portland detective. His partnership with Monroe added humor and heart, and his steady friendship with Hank kept the procedural side intact.

Giuntoli played Nick as a man learning to live with powers he never asked for. By the final season, Nick had evolved from a hesitant cop into a hardened protector, and Giuntoli even directed “Oh Captain, My Captain,” proving his stake in the show ran deep.

Grimm thrived because its lead grounded the fantasy world, and without Giuntoli’s act, the show would not have lasted as long as it did. Fans still point to it as the role that launched him into lasting television relevance.


2. 13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi (2016)

David Giuntoli (Photo by Catrina Maxwell/Getty Images for SCAD)
David Giuntoli (Photo by Catrina Maxwell/Getty Images for SCAD)

David Giuntoli stepped into 13 Hours as Scott Wickland, a State Department security agent suddenly surrounded by violence he could not control. While most of the film focused on the military contractors who defended the compound, Wickland’s presence carried the perspective of the civilians and officials forced into survival mode.

Giuntoli brought urgency to a man whose job was protection but whose training was limited compared to the soldiers outside. His scenes emphasized the terror inside the compound rather than the firefight, showing what it meant for the staff trapped behind the walls.

The movie’s scale was massive, and Giuntoli’s role wasn’t center stage, but it mattered. It showed how an actor best known for television could hold his ground in a Michael Bay war film. For audiences, Wickland gave context, reminding them the attack wasn’t just about soldiers but about people scrambling to stay alive.


3. Buddymoon (2016)

David Giuntoli (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)
David Giuntoli (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

Giuntoli’s Buddymoon was born from collaboration rather than studio design. He wrote it with Flula Borg and then played David, a washed-up actor left at the altar. Instead of sinking into despair, his best man drags him on a honeymoon hike, and what unfolds is a road movie built on awkward humor and uncomfortable honesty.

The entire film leaned on two men walking and talking through Oregon forests, and Giuntoli made it work with timing that felt casual rather than scripted. Audiences at Slamdance responded, giving the movie the Audience Award, and critics noticed how it captured heartbreak without leaning on melodrama.

Giuntoli was not only acting but also shaping the film as a producer, proving he had ambitions outside standard roles. For viewers who only knew him from Grimm, this comedy showed another side, one where he carried the story with self-deprecating humor and unpolished but heartfelt charm.


4. Caroline and Jackie (2012)

David Giuntoli (Photo by Christopher Polk/NBC/Getty Images)
David Giuntoli (Photo by Christopher Polk/NBC/Getty Images)

Ryan, played by David Giuntoli, was the character positioned at the edge of the storm in Caroline and Jackie. The film locked viewers into a single evening, where a birthday dinner turned into an emotional ambush.

Caroline wanted to stage an intervention for her sister Jackie, and Ryan found himself pulled into accusations and resentment that had built over years. Giuntoli never dominated the screen, but his performance mattered because he reflected the confusion of being the outsider in a family implosion. The film relied on tension, not spectacle, and Giuntoli matched that tone with a restrained presence.

His role didn’t provide answers but instead showed how relationships can unravel in front of people who barely understand the history. For Giuntoli, this early indie project offered proof he could handle intimate, dialogue-heavy drama. It helped mark him as more than just a network guest star chasing procedural work.


5. Batman: The Doom That Came to Gotham (2023)

David Giuntoli (Photo by Amanda Edwards/Getty Images)
David Giuntoli (Photo by Amanda Edwards/Getty Images)

Voice acting demanded a different side of David Giuntoli, and he delivered it in Batman: The Doom That Came to Gotham. Set in an alternate 1920s universe, the film reimagined Bruce Wayne as a man confronting supernatural horrors drawn from Lovecraft rather than traditional Gotham crime.

Giuntoli’s performance leaned into the exhaustion of a detective who realized logic had no power against monsters. His voice carried weight in every line, giving Batman a slow burn instead of the clipped intensity many other actors use.

DC’s animated projects attract dedicated fans, and this Elseworlds story was no exception. Giuntoli’s take fit the mood perfectly, and for audiences, it was confirmation he could step into an iconic role without copying the past. The release gave him a chance to connect with comic fans who might never have seen Grimm or A Million Little Things, broadening his reach in a new genre.


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Edited by Deebakar