Current:Home > My2023 was a great year for moviegoing — here are 10 of Justin Chang's favorites -Triumph Financial Guides
2023 was a great year for moviegoing — here are 10 of Justin Chang's favorites
View
Date:2025-04-11 23:27:59
Film critics like to argue as a rule, but every colleague I've talked to in recent weeks agrees that 2023 was a pretty great year for moviegoing. The big, box office success story, of course, was the blockbuster mash-up of Barbie
and Oppenheimer, but there were so many other titles — from the gripping murder mystery Anatomy of a Fall to the Icelandic wilderness epic Godland — that were no less worth seeking out, even if they didn't generate the same memes and headlines.
These are the 10 that I liked best, arranged as a series of pairings. My favorite movies are often carrying on a conversation with each other, and this year was no exception.
All of Us Strangers and The Boy and the Heron
An unusual pairing, to be sure, but together these two quasi-supernatural meditations on grief restore some meaning to the term "movie magic." In All of Us Strangers, a metaphysical heartbreaker from the English writer-director Andrew Haigh (Weekend, 45 Years), Andrew Scott plays a lonely gay screenwriter discovering new love even as he deals with old loss; he and Paul Mescal, Claire Foy and Jamie Bell constitute the acting ensemble of the year. And in The Boy and the Heron, the Japanese anime master Hayao Miyazaki looks back on his own life with an elegiac but thrillingly unruly fantasy, centered on a 12-year-old boy who could be a stand-in for the young Miyazaki himself. Here's my The Boy and the Heron review.
The Zone of Interest and Oppenheimer
These two dramas approach the subject of World War II from formally radical, ethically rigorous angles. The Zone of Interest is Jonathan Glazer's eerily restrained and mesmerizing portrait of a Nazi commandant and his family living next door to Auschwitz; Oppenheimer is Christopher Nolan's thrillingly intricate drama about the theoretical physicist who devised the atomic bomb. Both films deliberately keep their wartime horrors off-screen, but leave us in no doubt about the magnitude of what's going on. Here's my Oppenheimer review.
Showing Up and Afire
Two sharply nuanced portraits of grumpy artists at work. In Kelly Reichardt's wincingly funny Showing Up, Michelle Williams plays a Portland sculptor trying to meet a looming art-show deadline. In Afire, the latest from the great German director Christian Petzold, a misanthropic writer (Thomas Schubert) struggles to finish his second novel at a remote house in the woods. Both protagonists are so memorably ornery, you almost want to see them in a crossover romantic-comedy sequel. Here's my Showing Up review.
Past Lives and The Eight Mountains
Two movies about long-overdue reunions between childhood pals. Greta Lee and Teo Yoo are terrifically paired in Past Lives, Celine Song's wondrously intimate and philosophical story about fate and happenstance. And in The Eight Mountains, Felix van Groeningen and Charlotte Vandermeersch's gorgeously photographed drama set in the Italian Alps, the performances of Luca Marinelli and Alessandro Borghi are as breathtaking as the scenery. Here are my reviews for Past Lives and The Eight Mountains.
De Humani Corporis Fabrica and Poor Things
Surgery, two ways: The best and most startling documentary I saw this year is Lucien Castaing-Taylor and Véréna Paravel's De Humani Corporis Fabrica, which features both hard-to-watch and mesmerizing close-up footage of surgeons going about their everyday work. The medical procedures prove far more experimental in Poor Things, Yorgos Lanthimos' hilarious Frankenstein-inspired dark comedy starring a marvelous Emma Stone as a woman implanted with a child's brain. Here is my Poor Things review.
More movie pairings from past years
veryGood! (65689)
Related
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Why Cities Suing Over Climate Change Want the Fight in State Court, Not Federal
- Here's what will happen at the first White House hunger summit since 1969
- Two men dead after small plane crashes in western New York
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Wildfires to Hurricanes, 2017’s Year of Disasters Carried Climate Warnings
- Zendaya and Tom Holland’s Date Night Photos Are Nothing But Net
- City in a Swamp: Houston’s Flood Problems Are Only Getting Worse
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- The Summer I Turned Pretty Season 2 Finally Has a Release Date
Ranking
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Is California’s Drought Returning? Snowpack Nears 2015’s Historic Lows
- Why Cities Suing Over Climate Change Want the Fight in State Court, Not Federal
- This rare orange lobster is a one-in-30 million find, experts say — and it only has one claw
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- COVID Risk May Be Falling, But It's Still Claiming Hundreds Of Lives A Day
- How a Texas court decision threatens Affordable Care Act protections
- Today’s Climate: June 9, 2010
Recommendation
Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
The Most Accurate Climate Models Predict Greater Warming, Study Shows
Shoppers Praise This NuFACE Device for Making Them Look 10 Years Younger: Don’t Miss This 67% Discount
The economics behind 'quiet quitting' — and what we should call it instead
Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
Trump the Environmentalist?
Georgia's rural Black voters helped propel Democrats before. Will they do it again?
How to show your friends you love them, according to a friendship expert