After keeping up a clean streak for over a decade, I managed to miss doing my annual rankings of Best Picture nominees for films that came out in 2024. Honestly, I just wasn't crazy about the slate of films that year, had zero interest in viewing some of the nominees, and was lukewarm at best for many of the films I did watch. And honestly, I was quite busy -- life has a habit of intervening at times. In the end, while I couldn't argue with Anora being one of the better films on that year's Best Picture slate (though I might have gone with Conclave instead), it was a highly underwhelming Best Picture winner, reflecting a very underwhelming set of nominees to begin with.
This year I'm more bullish once again about the slate of nominees, though that does not mean I'll be heaping praise on all of them. Note that my practice is to rank each Best Picture nominee after a single viewing based on my assessment of how worthy they are for the ultimate Oscar category. Note that this is not a prediction of who will win, but rather a statement of how I would vote if I could, along with how I'd rank the also-rans.
As evidenced by 2024, every year is a little different in terms of the collective quality of the films. Sometimes there's a film that is clearly head and shoulders above the rest (think 2023's victory march by Oppenheimer). Sometimes there's a battle royale of multiple highly deserving works, and those are the best years (think Boyhood and Birdman in 2013). Sometimes there's a wide swath of worthy films, but no clear standouts that are going to live in our collective memory forever (think 2014, for which Spotlight captured Best Picture but isn't mentioned much today, but neither are any of its major competition, though The Big Short had arguably the best legs of any of the competitors when it comes to recollections of high cinema from that year and The Martian and Mad Max: Fury Road provided highly rewatchable films).
This year definitely had a stronger slate than last year, but not as uniformly excellent as some past years. I'm not certain that this year will produce any lasting classics. As such, there were just three films I thought were truly great examples of modern cinema, a small middle tier of very well crafted but ultimately lacking nominees, and a sizeable raft of flawed films that I'm unsure will live long in our memories past this year's Oscars ceremony.
10 F1
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| Both films feature lots of cockpit scenes too. |
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| Not that it was all fluff. The decision to include lots of coverage of the support crew throughout the race was a nice added element. |
9 Sentimental Value
I really wanted to put Sentimental Value higher in this list. It tells a powerful story about family relationships, depression, and suicide, and it features one of my favorite actors, the legendary Stellan Skarsgard. But there are too many issues with its execution holding this film back.
For starters, it meanders. Some directors use filler scenes to create spacing in time or highlight evolution of the situation or create tension. This film does not appear to do any of those, or if it was, its purpose was lost on me. Instead, I found myself mentally re-editing the film to tighten it up and make it flow more, which is not something I'd argue a film should evoke in its audience.
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| These two interact exactly once in the film, and never again. There was zero impact from this scene. And yet the film's extensive running time includes several minutes of this. |
In addition, the film periodically inserts other mechanisms that pulls it away from its ongoing feel of realism, whether its introducing a narrator in two spots or a sequence in which three of the characters are continuously overlaid upon each other such that they seem to constantly morph from one to another. That's not to say these mechanisms are bad to use, but since they are infrequent and don't match the feeling of the rest of the film, it's jarring.
But it's still a worthwhile film that deserved consideration, even if I don't think it's close to being Best Picture for the year. Sentimental Value examines issues of depression and suicide and how they impact and are impacted by our relationships with each other. This is told through a story featuring Hollywood's favorite subjects: movie making and theater. Skarsgard plays a famed auteur director while one of his daughters is an acclaimed actress on both tv and the stage. He's penned his latest (and potentially last) movie script about a character that seems suspiciously like his mother, and he hopes his daughter will play her. Things of course aren't that clean, and other elements become involved. The story itself is great, and the messages it relays are important. It just needed a little better storytelling to be worth a higher ranking.
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| Additional uncomfortable interactions between the two primary characters would have been a good first step. |
8 One Battle After Another
The film really would have benefitted from making Chase Infiniti's Willa/Charlene the main character of the film instead of Leonardo DiCaprio's Pat/Bob. Willa/Charlene has the most interesting arc, learning about what her mother actually was like, discovering key secrets about her father, and figuring out a direction in life. However, much of this takes place in secondary scenes that serve as intermissions between Pat/Bob's often inept attempts to escape pursuit and track down where his daughter is being kept. DiCaprio would have benefitted from this shift as much as the film, as his character is not terribly deep and doesn't get much chance to grow, but a Supporting Actor nominee needs those elements a lot less than an Actor in a Leading Role nominee. It's not DiCaprio's fault that this is not among his top ten performances in his illustrious career -- there was ultimately just not much there to the role to work with.
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| He really did make the most of what was an unsatisfying script. |
7 Marty Supreme
Mauser is an ideal example of the objectivist perspective Rand put into her writing, and I have to wonder whether she would have felt proud of what the film makers achieved or slightly put off by someone stealing her slant. Mauser is a single-minded individual obsessed with having the entire world recognize his greatness in his chosen sport of table tennis. Nothing and no one is as important to Marty as achieving that recognition. In pursuing this goal, he lies, he he steals, he cons people, he gets people injured and/or killed, he causes pain. But to whatever degree he might regret any of this, it pales in comparison to his goal of being recognized as the top table tennis, and to Marty, everyone else is either an aid in that mission or an obstacle to be bypassed or removed. Thanos obliterates half of all life forms in the universe and yet ends Avengers: Infinity War with a higher moral standing than Marty Mauser.
And certainly Mauser has many obstacles to overcome. His complete disinterest in being consistent for the people on whom he depends gets him into trouble over and over again, either because they turn on him directly or they get themselves into trouble either to help him or to make up for his lack of help in addressing their needs. From that sense, there's a certain amount of satisfaction in watching his aims get constantly thwarted. Even in the end when he proves his supremacy to himself, it's a pyrrhic victory that will leave him in obscurity after he has managed to alienate almost everyone in his life. That ending is well earned. He also finds connections with a few individuals for the first time the entire film, an ending that is not at all earned.
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| Yeah, congratulations you prick. |
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| Seriously, who thought this was a good idea? |
6 Train Dreams
Robert Grainier is an orphan who, as many orphans have throughout history, grown up directionless without a default path in life to take or rebel against. Robert just moves through life until he meets the great love of his life, Gladys. The home and family they build gives Robert the start of a sense of purpose, that of a father and husband and all-around provider for his family. But it's really Gladys who gives him purpose, proposing ideas of what they might make of themselves. That comes to an end though when Robert comes home from one of his extended trips making money as a logger to find his home engulfed in a wildfire and his wife and daughter missing.
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| Felicity Jones has a talent for playing women who chart the course of their loves' lives. |
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| Our greatest living character actor, William H. Macy is the perfect choice to serve as a guide to the perils of growing old. |
5 Bugonia
The film world is richer and more interesting for the existence of Yorgos Lanthimos, who continues to make the most insanely imaginative movies of anyone in the industry, this time aided by the fact that he took over for Jang Joon-hwan in making an English-language adaptation of Jang's Korean film Save the Green Planet! after the original director developed health concerns. It is the perfect marriage between film and substitute director, as it fits Lanthimos' style and sensibility perfectly.
Bugonia follows the planning, execution, and inevitable downfall of conspiracy theorist Teddy Gatz's plan to kidnap pharmaceutical CEO Michelle Fuller, who he's convinced is a member of a secret race of aliens, the Andromedans (presumably from one of the billions of planets in the Andromeda Galaxy). Teddy is aided by his cousin Don, who's on the spectrum. It's an incredibly small cast, with only a deputy sheriff who is Teddy's former babysitter and holds a shameful secret, and the great Alicia Silverstone as Teddy's mother who was poisoned by Michelle's company serving as significant characters beyond the core three.
Emma Stone is perfect for these types of films, as shown by her continued appearances and success in Lanthimos-directed pictures. She combines a type of artistic fearlessness along with an acute accessibility that allows her to slip into her roles in these otherwise surreal films effortlessly. Whether she's playing things straight or embracing the bizarre, it feels completely natural, and Stone has to show a lot of range in this particular performance. A task that would be hard to pull off for many actresses she makes look easy here.
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| It will be interesting to see how film historians try to summarize Emma Stone's career in few words. |
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| You keep doing you, Jesse. We need you to. |
4 Frankenstein
I will admit I was not excited about yet another Frankenstein remake. I have a soft spot for the old Universal pantheon of monsters, but their basic stories were told -- and told well -- decades ago. Every modern retelling has attempted to put some unfortunate new spin on the classic tales, which is rarely a good idea. These stories are, despite their origins in individually authored works, essentially modern folklore at this point, and changing folklore to fit a new auteur's fancy tends to ignore the great value of folklore being tales that grow and age with a people and not just at the whim of one person. Thankfully, Guillermo del Toro sticks to the heart and spirit of Frankenstein's tale (for the most part), even if bringing a modern sensibility to the storytelling structure itself.
In bringing his own style to Frankenstein, del Toro imbues the world with a certain gothic beauty and level of energy. Despite a two and a half hour runtime, it never feels weighted down or stagnant. The stunning cinematography of Dan Laustsen, paired with the atmospheric score by Alexandre Desplat, heightens that dark and foreboding feeling. Scenes featuring death and the reanimation of the human corpse are affecting without being repulsive. Overall, it is a masterful example of del Toro's ability to put together a strong team of film makers and coordinate all their output into a cohesive whole.
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| I don't think its cinematography will win the Oscar, but it's a beautifully shot film. |
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| Nothing says an Oscar Isaac role like an off-center moral core and a haunting past. |
3 Sinners
I always pause when I hear about a genre film getting significant buzz as a Best Picture candidate. There have been some incredible genre films that have merited nomination, especially in the last few decades since taking genre films seriously became cool. My reticence is not because a genre film can't be worthy of this top honor. It's because it's very difficult to navigate the structural requirements of a given genre to be both a great genre movie and a great piece of cinematic art that bridges all interests and backgrounds to connect with any audience member anywhere, as that is what great films do. The Godfather films (both the original and Part II) are not just masterwork crime stories, they construct a family saga that speaks to the moral downfall of a man that made a choice toward villainy despite feeling he didn't have one. The Lord of the Rings trilogy (and in particular The Return of the King) is not just a fantasy epic, it tells a universal tale of friendship, duty, and the will to conquer the longest odds, resulting in even the viewers who are the least excited by elves and dragons tearing up at the "You bow to no one" scene. Sinners does extremely well in its attempt to transcend its genre roots, and almost succeeds perfectly.
I don't think it's much of a spoiler at this point to note that at its genre core, Sinners is a vampire movie. What sets it apart is that while there are lots of vampires baring fangs and victims who fight back (with varying degrees of success), the film invokes a tie to the folklore of the people. Despite the lead actor being Michael B. Jordan as the Smoke/Stack twins, the real key to the plot is their cousin, the burgeoning blues guitarist Sammie. Sammie has a gift with his guitar, and there's a fascinating scene where Sammie plays a blues song that enraptures the entire crowd in the twins' juke joint and pulls on the eternal threads connecting the people with their ancestors as well as with their eventual descendants. It's a fascinating scene and one I looked forward to seeing followed upon, especially once the fore-mentioned vampires show up, noting they were drawn by Sammie's song and performing as a hive mind an Irish folksong of their own, reflecting the origins of their vampire lord. I was prepared for this confrontation to build on its discussion of the importance of stories and culminate in a resolution to the film based in that concept. Sadly, from there, Sinners launches into combat between the humans and the vampires in a mass fight scene straight out of Buffy the Vampire Slayer. So close to a unique take on the vampire legend, but unfortunately the film makers turned to the traditional genre tropes.
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| This scene is by far the most important not just in Sinners, but possibly among all of the films in 2025. |
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| I mean, just look at that. Gorgeous! |
2 The Secret Agent
The Secret Agent is the political thriller and contemporary commentary that One Battle After Another privately wishes it could be. Despite being a historical movie set 50 years ago in a completely different country, The Secret Agent has more to tell us about the current state of the United States (and many other countries) than any other 2025 film. This movie features wealthy captains of industry using political sway to enrich themselves and punish those that oppose them. Corrupt officials use their office for personal gain and to maintain power. Public funding is twisted away from goals of education and public good toward personal gain for those who are already rich enough to invest in development themselves. Personal resistance is met with at times extreme peril despite attempting to follow all the rules of law. It is a story that could seem quite frightful to someone looking at it with today's lens, but the film also provides a statement about the importance of confronting (safely, though art) those things that frighten us the most.
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| Nothing like being an innocent man surrounded by corrupt cops who "just want to talk". |
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| The violence is at least tastefully done as well. |
1 Hamnet
I think it's in everyone's best interest to just forget that Chloe Zhao made Eternals, because when not saddled with a movie universe's continuity and the need to somehow bring Z-level villains to the screen for what is otherwise a family-dynamic film, she really knows how to make masterwork films. I don't know that Hamnet will win her a second Best Director statue any more than I know it will win her another Best Picture statue, but I will be cheering on if it does, because this is a perfectly made film that reaches the viewer in ways no other nominee does this year. This is movie making and storytelling at its finest.
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| This entire scene was so beautifully shot and acted. |





























