This is my āFavorite Films of 2021ā list. But unlike a lot of these lists youāll see, mine is unranked, incomplete, and I cheated and included first-time watches of older films.1 Iāll keep it spoiler-free and Iām not reviewing films here, just sharing why each item on the list was special to me.
The French Dispatch (2021)
Iāll start with one of my favorites (of my favorites). Wes Andeson doubles (triples?) down and becomes even more himself. Thereās a sense in which this one tips further into the surreal and absurd. The amount of intercutting and movement between narrative frames is quite intricate. Where Wes used Aspect Ratio precisely in The Grand Budapest Hotel to delineate time period, here he just uses it almost willy-nilly for certain scenes or individual shots seemingly simply becauseā¦ it seems to work for that shot.
I genuinely donāt know of another modern (popular commercial) director who is playing with the form in such a unique, original, and truly free way. Conventions be damned, even Wesās own. I couldnāt imagine how his style was going to evolve past The Grand Budapest Hotel as that felt like a kind of summit, and I canāt imagine where it will go from here.
The Beatles Get Back (2021)
Peter Jacksonās 8 hour Beatles doc for Disney+ is what got me through having COVID. There are a lot of people who just wonāt have the time for the length of this documentary, or the interest, but I found its laid-back pacing created a very unique experience watching a documentary that Iāve never had before. Setting aside the fact that itās The Beatles, Iāve never watched a documentary that just put on screen so much raw creative process. Relatively linear and uninterrupted, we just get to sit in the studio with John, Paul, George, and Ringo and just watch them work. Itās a bit mundane in places but that only adds to the fascination. I love getting to be a fly on the wall, and it was great to hang out with āThe Fourā while I was sick in bed.
The Humans (2021)
Is ālate-capitalist domestic horrorā a genre? Iām not sure Iāve ever watched a film that so perfectly renders a location as an expression of the characterās internal anxiety (at least not in this way, setting German Expressionism aside). This film is the location. Without ever actually visually warping the environment, it gradually feels as though itās closing in around the characters. Adaptations of stage productions are often fraught, but the performances here from the entire cast (especially Steven Yeun, whoās revealing himself to be world-class) make the single location script engaging and unnerving.
Rat Film (2016)
Itād be wrong to say Theo Anthonyās essay film-style documentary is about rats. Rats in Baltimore are the primary subject matter, but only insofar as the ratsā existence and behavior are a reflection of a very human story. Like a more somber, feature-length episode of the amazing HBO series āHow To With John Wilson,ā Rat Film is a freewheeling, diverging exploration of a fascinating subject.
Licorice Pizza (2021)
One of the things I love about Paul Thomas Andersonās period work is that the films arenāt just period pieces in terms of the location and costume design, but also in terms of how theyāre shot. The whole visual vibe of this film is beautiful. The film already feels old. The soundtrack is great too.
Thereās been a lot of talk about the filmās more controversial elements, and I wonāt address them here. (I more or less agree with Broey Deschanelās excellent breakdown of the issue if youāre interested in that). All Iāll say is that I walk away from every PTA film with a weird conflicted, unsettled feeling about the characters and ending and this one is no different.
The Harder They Fall (2021)
Jeymes Samuelās directorial debut had a goofy grin plastered across my face for two hours. Maybe not the best film I watched all year, but easily the most fun! Samuel engages Western Genre Tropes with an energy and lightheartedness that justifies treading over that tired ground. The cast is great.
The Green Knight (2021)
A medieval, hallucinogenic, symbolic exploration of death and rebirth from David Lowery? Iām in. Iāve shared my thought pretty thoroughly in this video.
The Big City (1963)
Satyajit Ray was one of the most recommended directors in my comments sections recently, and Iām so glad I finally took the plunge into his filmography in 2021. The Big City is delightful, heartwarming, and expertly crafted. I highly recommend it.
Sans Soleil (1983)
Chris Markerās masterwork is impossible to describe. Documentary? Travelogue? Essay? Is it nonfiction or fiction? Marker bends time and space and shifts seamlessly between topics to blend cultural observation and critique with history and personal musings. Itās a singular piece of work. I love films that make me have to re-evaluate my conception of what a film can be and go āoh, you can do that?ā And this is one of those.
Some Kind of Heaven (2020)
Some Kind of Heaven is a documentary about the largest retirement community in the US. The hook here is that itās shot with almost a Wes Anderson kind of aesthetic. It eschews the naturalism that most docs use in favor of a more stylized approach, but one that allows you to really get inside the charactersā experiences. (Yes I said characters. Theyāre real people, but theyāre also characters āwatch the film and youāll know what I mean). It dives headlong into a specific place but finds characters and struggles that are emblematic of much larger more universal themes.
Bo Burnham Inside (2021)
Is Inside a comedy special? Not really. Itās not really a movie, or a television show either. Itās a liminal piece of work made during a liminal time, and itās maybe one of the best pieces of cultural criticism weāve seen in popular media in the last 5 years (at least). Nobody else has so woefully conveyed the barrage of mixed emotions that social media and modern society on the internet can produce especially when theyāre amplified by isolation, as Bo Burnham does in Inside.
Pig (2021)
Unexpectedly one of my favorite films of the year. An astounding work from first-time Director Micheal Sarnoski. I donāt want to say too much about the film because itās much better to go in blind if you can. Iāve covered it in depth in my recent video. But Iāll say this, even if it looks like a film you wonāt like, give it a chance! Also, Nicolas Cage shows once again that he truly has the chops given the right material- this is some of his best work.
Thatās all for now, and thatās far from a complete list of everything I loved from last year. The Lost Daughter, Drive My Car, The Souvenir Part II, The Tragedy of Macbeth, Titane, Judas and the Black Messiah and many others were great watches that I thoroughly enjoyed.
Iām including old films because thereās such a recency bias to ābest of the yearā lists and often the best stuff I watch for the first time in a given year isnāt from that year itās from the past.
Apu trilogy is a must watch by Satyajit Ray