(An alphabetical list of my favorites)
I generally dislike making rankings when it comes to acts of creative expression, whether in the form of film, music, books or other artistic endeavors. That’s in part because there’s simply not enough time to see, hear or read everything worthwhile that’s out there. Blind spots are inevitable.
So without further ado, here’s an alphabetical round-up of 10 movies that moved me the most this year. Some of these landed on other year-end lists and/or will make their presence known come Oscars time.
BUGONIA — A pair of hapless conspiracy theorists (Jesse Plemons and Aidan Delbis), convinced that biotech CEO Emma Stone is actually a malevolent being from another planet, kidnap the tough-as-nails woman in hopes of torturing the truth out of her. Yorgos Lanthimos, taking a more straightforward narrative approach with this remake of “Save the Green Planet!” than with some of his earlier work, elicits striking performances from his leads, capping the battle of wills between the exec and the beekeeper (Plemons) with a conclusion that’s simultaneous frightening and wonderfully goofy.

HAMNET — The speculative Shakespeare tale, suggesting that the Bard’s “Hamlet” was directly inspired by the death of a son, works as a romance and a sorrowful drama, thanks to Chloe Zhao’s inventive direction and the superb work of Paul Mescal as the mercurial, ambitious playwright, Jessie Buckley as his luminous earth-mother wife Agnes and Noah Jupe as the title character.
IT WAS JUST AN ACCIDENT — What happens when a twist of fate leads a man to encounter his former jailer, a sadistic tool of Iran’s authoritarian regime, now living as a happy family man? Celebrated filmmaker Jafar Panahi, who himself has faced persecution and imprisonment by his country’s brutal theocracy, turns in a thriller that’s by turns disturbing and darkly comic.
MARTY SUPREME — A charismatic Timothee Chalamet nails the role of talented, ambitious braggart Marty Reisman, a real-life table tennis player who made his mark in the U.S. and abroad starting in the late ‘40s. Josh Safdie, going solo after a long filmmaking partnership with his brother, turns in a winning comic drama that also features fine work from Gwyneth Paltrow, Abel Ferrara and Fran Drescher.
THE MASTERMIND — Josh O’Connor, an “it” actor of the moment (this year alone, he’s also on the screen in “Wake Up Dead Man,” “The History of Sound” and the under appreciated “Rebuilding”) is quietly engaging as a young father whose plan to steal valuable art from a small-town museum goes hopeless awry. Kelly Reichardt’s heist film, set against the U.S. political turmoil of the early ‘70s and loosely inspired by real-life events, benefits from a cast that includes Alana Haim, Hope Davis and Bill Camp.
NOUVELLE VAGUE — Richard Linklater takes another successful left turn with his spirited take on the making of Jean-Luc Godard’s “Breathless,” the celebrated 1960 neo-noir classic. It’s a treat seeing Godard (Guillaume Marbeck), Jean Seberg (Zoey Deutch) and Jean-Paul Belmondo (Aubry Dullin) brought to life, as well as the likes of Jean Cocteau, Francois Truffaut and other French New Wave icons. But the energy and go-for-broke guerrilla filmmaking vibe of the story are what fuel this surprising gem, shot in black-and-white, in Paris, naturally.

ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER — On second viewing, it’s the sprawl of the thing that makes P.T. Anderson’s most audacious film such a pleasure: The story, loosely based on a Thomas Pynchon novel, encompasses the rise and fall of a radical anti-capitalist group, former bomb maker Leonardo DiCaprio’s attempt to escape from the authorities, sex-crazed colonel Sean Penn’s attempt to track down a teenage girl (Chase Infiniti) who may or may not be the product of his liaison with one of the radicals, a raid on a sanctuary city, an elitist group of white racist power mongers, a convent full of dope-smoking, weapon-brandishing nuns and a thrilling three-car chase. Call it a knock-out punch.
THE SECRET AGENT — Kleber Filho’s historical drama focuses on the efforts of a former professor to survive undercover during the 1970s takeover of Brazilian by a military dictatorship. Wagner Moura excels as a humane, intelligent widower on the lam, arriving in Recife just in time for carnival season, living amongst other folks hiding from the corrupt fascists and attempting to spend time with his young son and the boy’s grandfather without alerting the authorities to his presence.
SINNERS — Ryan Coogler’s music-drenched period drama centers on a pair of twin strivers (Michael B. Jordan x 2) who open a juke joint in the Mississippi Delta, circa the ‘30s. It morphs into a rambunctious vampire story laced with social commentary touching on such themes as racism and cultural appropriation. Bonus: A cameo by blues legend Buddy Guy.

WEAPONS — An oddball crime/mystery tale — 17 third-grade kids from the same classroom suddenly vanish — becomes a creepy, quirky, unpredictable and occasionally frightfully funny horror story, bolstered by Julia Garner’s turn as the kids’ mystified teacher. An unrecognizable Amy Madigan, as the freaky-deaky witch causing the chaos, deserves her own prequel.
Also memorable: Bring Her Back, Frankenstein, Grand Tour, A House of Dynamite, If I Had Legs I’d Kick You, Rebuilding, Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere, Predators, Train Dreams, Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery and Sorry, Baby.
Copyright 2025 by Philip Booth. All Rights Reserved.
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