The love of film is subjective. There are no “best” and what might be meaningful and entertaining for one might not be for another. And that’s what makes it so wonderful. Those of us who love movies love all sorts and have our own particular tastes. 2024 brought me 182 new movies that I experienced, some of them I adored, many I enjoyed, and some were just not for me. I rewatched an additional 100 films meaning I spent a total of over 540 hours doing what I love, watching film.
This past year was one where I saw many films I enjoyed and found it very hard this year to narrow my favourites down to only 10. This year I truly enjoyed a host of films including Alien: Romulus, The Apprentice, Babygirl, The Beautiful Game, Blink Twice, Blitz, Civil War, Close to You, Conclave, Cora Bora, Cuckoo, Didi, Dogman, Drive Away Dolls, Fancy Dance, Flow, Furiosa, Gladiator II, The Great Escaper, His Three Daughters, Hit Man, Housekeeping for Beginners, Humane, Hundreds of Beavers, I am Celine Dion, In a Violent Nature, Inside Out 2, It’s Only Life Afterall, It’s What’s Inside, Kill, Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim, Love Lies Bleeding, Monkey Man, The Piano Lesson, A Quiet Place Day One, Rebel Ridge, Rumours, Saturday Night, Sting, Super/Man, Twisters, Under Paris, Universal Language, Wicked, Wicked Little Letters, Will & Harper, Woman of the Hour, and yes even Joker: Folie a Deux. Yet none of those made my favourites list… although a few of them came close…
After much internal deliberation I have picked the following 10 films as my favourites of the past year (plus a couple special mentions), each offering me something unique and different so they cannot be ranked against each other. I wouldn’t trade out one for another. I’ve listed them in alphabetical order with my favourite of the year at the end. I highly recommend them if you haven’t already seen these amazing films.
Special Mentions:
Luca Guadagnino pulled off a minor miracle with these two incredible if imperfect films, one which explores the inherently homoerotic nature of heterosexual male friendships, a bold and evocative premise, and the other a deep dive into queer self-loathing and alienation in the mid-20th century. Both are highly erotic and uncomfortable films which centre deeply divisive characters who still manage to tap into relatable emotions. Both are gorgeous examples of big swing film making that are unforgettable. I found this back to back release from a singular film maker to be deeply fascinating and reminded me why I love cinema in the first place.
Here are my top ten:
A young woman who works as a stripper gets pulled into a hilarious and heartbreaking world of dysfunction when she marries the son of a Russian oligarch who she met in the club where she works.
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again; I have never met a Sean Baker film I didn’t like. Anora may be my favourite of his works yet (although Tangerine holds a special place in my heart). Yes Mickey Madison deserves all the glory she is receiving for this tour de force performance but the entire cast is truly remarkable. This reworking of the Pretty Woman scenario is funnier, more touching, and far more realistic than the famous film it is easy to compare it to. Anora, amongst all the laughter and empowerment, is also quite heartbreaking. I immediately wanted to watch it again… and again… and again…
Dune Part Two
Paul Atreides continues his rise to power against the Galactic Imperium in this epic adaptation of the famous “unfilmable” and seminal science fiction novel.
Director Villeneuve has pulled off the impossible by bringing this epic to the screen in such a compelling and captivating pair of films. He has addressed many of my issues with the source material yet stayed true to the spirit and vision of the novel’s author, while delivering a smart but accessible, earnest epic unseen since the Lord of the Rings Trilogy. I can revisit Parts One and Two endlessly and still find beauty in this story, one he correctly sets out as a tragic deconstruction of the “hero’s arc”.
Emilia PĂ©rez
A musical, a crime saga, a journey of four women to assert who they are and who they love. Unlike almost any other film you might see.
This is the sort of film that you should see with little to no information about it and just let the experience of it wash over you. I know for many it will be too much, but if you can be along for this ride, it is an emotional powerhouse and a singular thing of beauty. I felt so much each time I have watched it. At its core it is centered around the strong performances of the stars. But for me it is the sheer unexpected nature of it which keeps me so engaged in what a film Emilia PĂ©rez is.
After being gay-bashed while in drag, a young man seeks revenge against his closeted attacker.
Femme is a thriller that had me on the edge of my seat right up to its end moments. It broke my heart, raced my pulse, and awoke some old wounds. Its nuanced and complicated characters make its story so powerfully satisfying. It features incredible performances by Nathan Stewart-Jarrett and George MacKay. The film’s twists and turns keep you wondering and make you question what you know and what you feel.
A juke box musical set to the song catalogue of the Indigo Girls about a clown and a song writer falling in love.
I am not sure you could tailer-make a movie more for me than this movie feels like it was. Some of my favourite music and a sweet little oddball gay love story all filmed like it was directed by the love child of Baz Luhrmann and Julie Taymor. Visually stunning, deliciously weird, and overloaded with cuteness, G&D has me smiling throughout while I hum along.
After a mysterious baby washes up on the shores of a remote island, the people begin to experience incredible prosperity and health… until she grows older and it stops.
This sort of Black Mirror/Twilight Zone style thriller is my horror genre vibe. A cautionary tale about how societies collapse in on themselves. Beautifully shot and powerfully acted, The King Tide is chilling in its unflinching take with a brave ending that will wipe you out.
A young woman loses her family but makes herself a new life in this gorgeous stop motion animated story told to her pet snail.
I have a soft spot for Claymation and I haven’t seen it done this well in so long. But it’s the story at the heart of Memoir that is just so powerful and well told. It ranks right up there with the other films on my list in terms of an emotional punch. Just because it is animation does not mean it is for small children, Memoir is filled with adult themes and some of the most mature explorations of relationships of any film I saw all year. Memoir is easily one of the most moving and touching films of the year.
A young man looking for work finds himself a chosen community on a queer ranch and explores himself in rodeo and drag.
Gilford’s meditative and melodic coming of age (and identify) tale is gorgeous and loving. Plummer is so exciting to watch and deserves to be a big star one day while Park steals so much of the show as a calming and caring nurturer. I just felt so affirmed watching this story. It’s about community and finding one’s way in a world that often doesn’t set out a path for you.
Convicts in the titular prison find rehabilitation through theatre during their incarceration.
Cast mostly with real former convicts who were part of the program this story is based on, Sing Sing is in no way inspiration porn. It is gritty and real and explores the humanity of those we don’t want to see as human. Domingo is at his best here reminding us why he is one of the best working actors of the day. But it is the film’s unflinching look at real people that makes Sing Sing so damn powerful.
And now my favourite film of 2024:
Two strangers bond over their love of an old TV show and find connection that takes them out of this world.
I knew I was watching something special the first time I watched I Saw the TV Glow and each time I have watched it since it has moved me with its powerfully abstract yet groundedly familiar story. It is a glimpse a bit into madness but also into liberation. Perhaps the two are related. Not since the work of David Lynch has a film tore at reality in such a way as to reach inside to find truth. Shoenbrun has made a masterpiece and it’s touching and lovely and terrifying all at once. It has haunted me and stuck with me more than any other film in 2024.
I wanted to highlight some of my favourite performances of the year including leads such as Daniel Craig (Queer), Kirstin Dunst (Civil War), Lily Gladstone (Fancy Dance), Elliott Heffernan (Blitz), Caleb Landry Jones (Dogman), Mickey Madison (Anora), Elliot Page (Close to You), Charlie Plummer (National Anthem), Zoe Saldaña (Emilia Pérez), Sebastian Stan (The Apprentice), and Megan Statler (Cora Bora).
There were also supporting performances which were incredibly memorable for me such as Enrico Colantoni (Humane), George Mackay (Femme), Mason Alexander Park (National Anthem), Adam Pearson (A Different Man), Hunter Schafer (Cuckoo), and Cory Michael Smith (Saturday Night).
And that’s a wrap for 2024, a year when loving movies was as satisfying a passion as ever. Here’s to what’s coming in 2025!