12.31.2019

The Best Films of the Decade (2010-2019)

957 films were considered for this list

Complete rankings by year viewable on Letterboxd (subject to change)
2019  |  2018  |  2017  |  2016  |  2015  |  2014  |  2013  |  2012  |  2011  |  2010

Honorable Mentions: Shame (Steve McQueen, 2011), Certain Women (Kelly Reichardt, 2016), Killer Joe (William Friedkin, 2012)

10. Resident Evil: Afterlife (Paul W.S. Anderson, 2010)
Which one of von Trier's five obstructions was a bulky 3D camera rig? After years of above-par blockbuster filmmaking, Anderson found his zenith when he locked down to the symmetry of shooting natively in 3D at the height of the fad's latest resurgence. "Afterlife" single-handedly proved to me that the controversial format can be utilized as a diorama-like composition tool and not just a thrill gimmick. The content is objectively take or leave, but I do personally very much enjoy the "Resident Evil" movies (as detailed many times over in the depths of this blog). In returning to the director's chair after letting others helm parts two and three of the first trilogy, it's honestly a boon to have the here "Æon Flux"-esque muse Milla Jovovich even more central to the affair with the already thinly cherry-picked video game basis sidelined that much further. Who could have guessed highly stylized zombie action movies could feel like true passion projects? After several similar yet lesser outings, Anderson would break from the cumbersome camera rigs for 2016's "Resident Evil: The Final Chapter", but "Afterlife" will almost certainly remain his most inspired work.


9. The Ballad of Buster Scruggs (Ethan & Joel Coen, 2018)
Leave it to the Coens to craft an anthology of remarkably different Western sub-genres written and adapted at different points in their overlapped career, then tie it all together in what is a coherently existential comment on the human condition as well as their most visually impressive film thus far. Each additional ingredient is as strong as in any of the brothers' best efforts, resulting in a thoroughly captivating comfort whether you're watching a whimsical musical number or an allegorical carriage ride to hell.


8. Drive (Nicholas Winding Refn, 2011
Yes, we knew 2011 was as great as it was while it was happening (supplemental shout-outs to Lars von Trier's "Melancholia", Terrence Malick's "The Tree of Life", Woody Allen's "Midnight in Paris", etcetera). Refn said he wanted to capture the feeling of driving at night while listening to music, and few directors have delivered so victoriously such a stripped-down concept. Almost ten years later "Drive" still feels as cool as ever, and is still the absolute peak of Refn's consistently must-see output - a modern go-to when correlating infectious mood, or the characterization of a tragic protagonist.


7. Young Adult (Jason Reitman, 2011)
Perhaps even less likely than a Paul W.S. Anderson movie appearing on any given best-of list is a Jason Reitman movie showing up, yet here we are. Contrary to how I feel about Anderson's work, I am not so generally keen on Reitman's. In fact, the prior collaboration of Reitman and screenwriter Diablo Cody wound up being one of my least favorite films of its own decade. Then the perfect storm that is the character Mavis Gary brought Reitman, Cody, and Charlize Theron to a shared page that wound up feeling sublimely familiar. Each reaction shot, each soundtrack cue, even each minor cut felt like it was done with my exact sensibility in mind. The enchantment cast by "Young Adult" was one I could not have shaken had I wanted to as I devoured every showing I could spare the time for during its theatrical run.


6. Dolor y gloria [Pain & Glory] (Pedro Almodóvar, 2019)
Where Almodóvar's camera is far more concerned with secondarily allowing a narrative play out in colorfully set medium shots and lingering close-ups, it is the director's driving passion for his craft that seeps through every last moment of "Pain & Glory" and makes for such a deeply affecting experience. Almodóvar's is a story of life's chances coming full circle - a deeply relatable reflection on the simultaneous love and agony that both feed and suffocate our endeavors, all projected in the eyes of a tender Antonio Banderas. It includes hardly any depiction of the actual production process, yet this is one of the greatest films about filmmaking.


5. Song to Song (Terrence Malick, 2017)
Malick's recent period focused on the modern, mostly manmade world did need to climb a hill of embrace through revisitation as it navigated "To the Wonder" and "Knight of Cups". Those films flourish as we let ourselves meld with the subject matter and the increasingly ethereal and musical editing of Emmanuel Lubezki's life-affirming cinematography. "Song to Song" completes this period as its pinnacle, as deep in a fever state of creation as Malick has gone, with the classic nature elements here feeling as other-worldly as the Baltic shores of Żuławski's"On the Silver Globe". To be fair, including a Patti Smith appearance can be chalked up as cheating when it comes to my lists.


4. The House that Jack Built (Lars von Trier, 2018)
Despite a strong respect for - and occasional love of - von Trier's decidedly boundary-pushing work, after feeling incredibly let down by "Nymphomaniac" the basic premise of this reportedly exploitative affair had me worried ol' Lars had finally gone off the deep end after taking too much criticism to heart. Thanks to some friendly encouragement that wall didn't stay up long, however, and I relished in what may in fact be the auteur's greatest feat yet. "House" uses the framework of a philosophical serial killer with a varied basis in true fact to sculpt a deep analogy for von Trier's own career and how his legacy is regarded. What could have come off akin to a Twitter tantrum winds up evolving into an immensely rewarding delve through what it means to be an unapologetic artist today. Each chapter gifts something new to chew on as the overarching threads develop, and the interpretable epilogue stands among my favorite sequences in all of cinema.


3. A Ghost Story (David Lowery, 2017)
There is something barely describable to Lowery's visual poem that examines a scope of human quandary, from grand and chaotic implications of mortality to the fleetingly consuming struggle of hauling an overstuffed suitcase across an uneven walkway. It is a journey of grief and whispers that instantly hooks and demands revisitation after revisitation. This is a film to buy real estate and retire in.


2. Inside Llewyn Davis (Ethan & Joel Coen, 2013)
So if you want to be in my top films of a decade, just have Carey Mulligan sing in a bar while the main character looks on pensively, I guess (see honorable mention for "Shame"). Apparently muted blue tones are also a plus. Also in your favor would be an intrinsic weaving of affecting music - in this case a soundtrack I still haven't removed from rotation no matter how many plays it gets. One of this film's two versions of folk standby "Dink's Song" was playing the moment my son was born. We nearly named the kid "Llewyn" but since we're not, y'know, Welsh, that name went to a cat we adopted a few years later (who now barfs all over our apartment in metaphoric tribute to his namesake). The Coens have always loved relatable dopes on odysseys from one ineffectual man behind a desk to the next, and with "Inside Llewyn Davis" they perfected their own formula. The filmmakers' passion for the material is felt through every last moment, and such passion is the greatest intangible any film can possess.


1. 山河故人 [Mountains May Depart] (Jia Zhangke, 2016)
In 2016 (or 2017 prior to the Academy Awards, as is my self-imposed cutoff), I called Kelly Reichardt's Paradise Valley-set "Certain Women" my favorite of the year. I had by that point seen and loved what was my first Jia, but it took a spontaneous desire to watch it again, and then again and again before I realized just how much I adore it compared to other incredible films as ranked on such lists as these. It's not 100% perfect (CGI plane crash), but even the maniacally meticulous Stanley Kubrick's greatest achievements have their minor flaws. This is Jia's culturally steeped work at its most loving. Between the words are where the true connections can be found, particularly in the first act which I have watched back even more times than the film as a whole. Jia looks both backward and forward into the significance of his homeland and how it generates defining ripples across generations, from geopolitical and technological tides down to a slight glance given to a would-be partner. "Mountains May Depart" is a conceptual risk that pays off in its broad strokes and its minutia.

Select Review Extracts, 2019

3 from Hell (Rob Zombie)
Despite my devotion to his work, with “31” Zombie had me worried he’d stalled out. Thankfully, “3 from Hell” is less another blatant “Rejects” retread and more a welcome return to the formula Zombie introduced to his catalogue in that 2005 departure. While I had readied to embrace something even weirder (Dr. Satan?), this ultimately minor episode succeeds in remixing the Firefly Family ingredients while keeping them winningly familiar. Even the figurehead of “31” Richard Brake is a seamless addition to the chemistry. If evaluating Zombie’s films by which feel most like one of the man’s songs come to life, “3 from Hell” is easily in the top conversation, perhaps second only to, well, naturally, “House of 1,000 Corpses”. Letterboxd.

The 15:17 to Paris (Clint Eastwood, 2018)
Timeline discernible from the “Letters from Iwo Jima” poster on the kid’s wall. Proud of Clint for including the phrase “Instagram-worthy.” Letterboxd.

Ad Astra (James Gray)
Shake it. Quake it. Space baboon. Letterboxd.

Alita: Battle Angel (Robert Rodriguez)
If "RoboCop" took place in the "Titanic" movie universe under the narrative guidance of whoever was responsible for "Street Sharks". If you can jive with contrivances in the school of a Saturday morning cartoon, there is enough in "Alita" to leave you interested in the clear direction for a follow-up without all the origin story-itis. The best part is that one Toto song finally makes sense. Also 100% thought that was James Cameron before he took the goggles off. Letterboxd.

The Art of Self-Defense
(Riley Stearns)
84% for this weakly derivative pile of first draft pith is one of the clearest arguments against the Tomatometer to date. Letterboxd.

Bad Times at the El Royale (Drew Goddard)
As if a ‘90s Tarantino wannabe with a dash of surreality was originally intended for the stage and somehow actually turned out okay, “Bad Times” dwells on its concepts with assurance and (mostly) elevates its own material scene after scene. Also Jon Hamm sounds exactly like John Cena and it freaked me out. Letterboxd.

Blindspotting (Carlos López Estrada)
There’s enough to admire, particularly in Daveed Diggs, that I’ll likely recall it somewhat fondly even though it tries to tank itself with nearly every other scene. Almost as tense as David Ayer on a good day and as unsubtle as Oliver Stone on a bad one. Letterboxd.

Close (Vicky Jewson)
Tomb Raider by way of Tom Clancy. Though rarely rising above direct-to-whatever sensibility, there is plenty to mine from this extremely expedient Noomi paycheck. And there is little more agreeable in cinema today than Noomi getting a paycheck. Letterboxd.

Dogman (Matteo Garrone)
"Dogman" hardly masks its ordinary anti-fascist parable beneath the veil of a dog groomer learning to manipulate people in the same way he does his business subjects, though it thrives on an incredible charm achieved in tandem through Garrone's sympathetic camera and Marcello Fonte's instantly winning performance.

Dolemite Is My Name (Craig Brewer)
“Baadasssss!” is to “Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song” as “Dolemite Is My Name” is to “Dolemite”, and you can take that as you will. Straight-forward even for post-“Black Snake Moan” Brewer, this telling of Moore’s cultural significance is reverent enough that it’s easy to look past its ever-present biopic autopilot gloss. As with Mario Van Peebles’ film about his father Melvin’s struggle to break through, your own reverence for Moore’s path on the opposite end of the soul cinema phenomenon will likely gauge your mileage with this similar yet appropriately more punchline-heavy piece. Letterboxd.

Dumbo (Tim Burton)
As with "Maleficent", "Dumbo" proves some merit to Dreamla-- I mean Disney's widely uninspired money-grab of a live action adaptation phase. Burton puts veteran care and winning irreverence into his compositions, while building effectively archetypal human stories around the nostalgia in what could otherwise have felt like a slight attempt at new millennium redemption of how the original film teaches captive circus animals the merits of getting plastered on clown champagne thanks to racist side characters. Most importantly, Farrell devotees will not be disappointed. Letterboxd.

Frozen II (Chris Buck, Jennifer Lee)
Even with realistically tempered expectations, a direct-to-VHS-worthy story that undermines the achievements of FROZEN II’s predecessor - most egregious of all that original’s coming out allegory - fails even its better moments by making them feel unearned. That said, is Night Ranger available to cover the “Lost in the Woods” power ballad? Letterboxd.

Godzilla: King of the Monsters (Michael Dougherty)
In vintage creature feature fashion the folly of man incurs the barrage of tracing paper-thin characters confined to barfing expository dialogue on cheap sets, fleeing for the safety of their green screens when incompatible special effects sequences begin. As “Uprising” was a colossal letdown on the heels of del Toro’s incredible “Pacific Rim”, this Sally Hawkins affair is an even bigger step down from del Toro’s “The Shape of Water”. Okay, that hilarious joke out of the way, there wasn’t too far lower to go from Gareth Edwards’ 2014 follow-up to his much more promising “Monsters” so in knowing its role “King of the Monsters” at least rewards with several of the monster movie moments we tolerate monster movies’ remainders to see even if the admittedly cool monsters pale against even this franchise’s dumbed down version of Kong. Plus it’s at least clever enough to set its climax at Fenway Park. You know, the home of the Green Monster. Letterboxd.

Joker (Todd Phillips)
Aggressively terrible, but we’ve long known that Joaquin and talk shows don’t mix, so. Letterboxd.

The Land of Steady Habits (Nicole Holofcener)
If I remember it as anything other than “that one Ben Mendelsohn movie,” it will be as a film more concerned with the yuppie suburbia it may or may not be trying to chastise than with its awfully distracting continuity errors. It is inoffensively brisk, though. An acceptable $7.99 red blend from CVS even though Total Wine was right there. Letterboxd.

The Man Who Killed Don Quixote (Terry Gilliam)
Feeling nigh every bit the '90s transplant it is - for which mileage may vary - Gilliam's longstanding bugaboo gets off to a fine start, aided by the fortune of an Adam Driver upgrade, yet wears itself out with each subsequent blurring of lines that mutates its trajectory beyond recognition by the end. Letterboxd.

The Other Side of the Wind (Orson Welles)
Unlike “On the Silver Globe” proving unfinished films can be monumental, there is sadly so little to “The Other Side of the Wind” that it leaves me wondering only these two things: why anyone even tried, and whether latter years Welles was more bitter or more horny. Letterboxd.

Shaft (Tim Story)
A “Shaft” film with an image of Isaac Hayes' Chef from “South Park” and a song that samples James Brown’s “Black Caesar” soundtrack? We truly have seen it all. Tim Story’s characteristically lighter and perilously scripted revival of this notorious name begins with the promise of keeping in the spirit if not the tone of its origins, but quickly wears out its welcome through the overblown and oversimplified caricature of the soul cinema hero type transplanted in a world of Uber drivers, smartphones, and women who get turned on when shot at. Richard Roundtree’s brief presence legitimizes the affair but the true John Shaft is left with hardly anything to say or do, which may be for the best as otherwise it could have been him ending up with lines where he worries if his dick pics are still saved to the cloud. Letterboxd.

Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker (J.J. Abrams)
Act 1, Scene 1: “Palpy, why ya back?” “Because the last movie sucked; no more questions please.” Pacing? What's that? Abrams is so consumed with playing damage control for "The Last Jedi" that he's produced something even worse - a sloppy emblem of the creative failure this soft reboot trilogy has been, and one that wastes the potential of even the revival's passable aspects. Happy that Lando and Leia were obviously getting busy, though. Letterboxd.

Togo (Ericson Core)
Content for the sake of content, and a prime example of “one for you, one for them.” What’s worse, the ever-present Instagram filter, or that do-nothing dick Balto? Letterboxd.

Toy Story 4 (Josh Cooley)
As could only be anticipated, Toy Story: Fury Road is yet further evidence the major ideas for its franchise were exhausted with the first installment. Minor components are creatively realized with success exceeding that of the prior sequels making for an enjoyable if, well, minor experience. Go figure, Cliff Claven has the best line. Letterboxd.

Tully (Jason Reitman)
"Tully" rests well shy of the prior collaboration between Reitman, Diablo Cody, and Charlize Theron, but uses an idea that likely sounded rote on paper to speak agreeable truth to how our lives tend to be compromised against expectation as our youth escapes before we realize it was even on the run.

Velvet Buzzsaw (Dan Gilroy)
Glimpses of an interesting film biting at the business of modern art that suffocate when stitched to an embarrassingly pedestrian, go-nowhere “A Nightmare on Elm Street” wannabe. One would be forgiven for watching due to the Jake Gyllenhaal factor, and rewarded only by another look at Daveed Diggs. Letterboxd.

White Boy Rick (Yann Demange)
As much vintage soul cinema spirit as can be reasonably wished for in a 2018 film starring white people. A seedy enough image of Detroit I almost expected RoboCop to save the day. In one scene a character is nicknamed “Scarface” then walks inside and “Serpico” is on TV. Liked it. Letterboxd.