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| First Reformed, dir. Paul Schrader |
Alright, here we go! You all get the gist by now. Here's a link to Part 1 for all the rules behind the making of the list, as well as the movies that placed #31-#85. Now, time to find out what placed in the top 30. How many of them came from familiar faces? How many of them came from new comers? Let's find out...
30. BLINDSPOTTING (dir: Carlos Lopez Estrada)
228 points
A young black man (Daveed Diggs) is released from prison and goes back to his native Oakland while on parole for a year. Now working as a moving company driver with his childhood friend, a white man named Miles (Rafael Casal, who also co-wrote this), he must now live his life on the final days of parole while also being the witness to a police officer murdering an unarmed black man. It's a movie that explores not just police brutality, but race relations, gentrification, and privilege.
29. MINDING THE GAP (dir: Bing Liu)
248.5 points
A movie following around the lives of three young men from different racial and class backgrounds. It places this poll as 2018's highest-scoring documentary, in what was a year filled with plenty of solid documentaries (see: all the documentaries mentioned in part one).
28. THE BALLAD OF BUSTER SCRUGGS (dir: Ethan Coen, Joel Coen)
249 points
A series of short stories set in the American Wild West during the days of western expansion and American exceptionalism. Featuring a star-studded cast that includes James Franco, Zoe Kazan, Liam Neeson, and Tom Waitts (among others), this project by the Coen brothers was originally made to be a Netflix limited series, before plans got switched up and it became a single movie.
27. SUPPORT THE GIRLS (dir: Andrew Bujalski)
252 points
Regina Hall stars as Lisa, the manager of a Hooters-esque family restaurant, who has to go through a series of challenges over the course of a single day. Haley Lu Richardson and Shayna McHayle also star. The film marks the second time in six years a Bujalski movie makes the top thirty, following Computer Chess placing #23 in the 2013 countdown.
26. MANDY (dir: Panos Cosmatos)
275.5 points
Imagine John Wick but mix it with the giallo horror franchise and pretentious '80s neon-lighting. That's what you get in this stylish, chaotic revenge thriller that stars Nicolas Cage and Andrea Riseborough as a married couple trying to survive a cult of murderers.
25. FIRST MAN (dir: Damien Chazelle)
283 points
After the incredible success that was La La Land (hundreds of millions in the box office, 6 Oscars, #3 in the 2016 countdown), director Damien Chazelle (who also was himself one of those who took 6 of La La Land's Oscar nominations) decided to explore the life of Neil Armstrong during his time as astronaut at NASA. Starring Ryan Gosling, the movie focuses not just on the struggles at NASA that led him to become the first man to walk on the moon, but also the politics of the age and Armstrong's struggles at home with his wife, Janet (Claire Foy), and his two young boys.
24. PADDINGTON 2 (dir: Paul King)
284 points
A film so beloved by critics it officially became the most popular movie on Rotten Tomatoes to earn a 100% rating (at 216 critics and counting), this sequel to the 2015 original (which didn't even make that year's countdown) one again follows the adventures of the Ben Wheatley-voiced bear living in the house of a delightful British family. We see his various picaresque adventures attempting to get a job, followed by his attempt to clear his never after getting framed for robbery by an evil actor (played by Hugh Grant). It's got charm, delightful physical comedy, and even references to The Grand Budapest Hotel.
23. THE OTHER SIDE OF THE WIND (dir: Orson Welles)
285 points
When the legendary actor and filmmaker Orson Welles passed away in 1985, he left behind him a series of movie projects left unfinished due to various circumstances, the most common of which being financial and copyright issues. One of those was a project called The Other Side of the Wind, which was a collaboration between himself and life partner Oja Kodar and was filmed on-and-off between 1970 and 1976 but never completed. However, various people did spend the following decades after his death trying to make his finished film a reality, including Kodar, director Peter Bogdanovich, and producer Filip Jan Rzymka and director Frank Marshall, and it wasn't until recently that they were finally able to get the necessary footage, funding, and distribution deal from Netflix to get aversion of the movie that's as close to Welles' vision as possible. That version premiered at last during the fall, and it appears to be a satirical and poignant examination of Hollywood in the 1970's, as well as auterism and the sexual politics of that age. Starring John Huston (himself a legendary deceased director) as a stand-in for many people (including Welles himself), as well as Bogdanovich, Kodar, Susan Strasberg and many notable guest appearances.
22. CAN YOU EVER FORGIVE ME? (dir: Marielle Heller)
291.5 points
Based on the novel of the same name, it stars Melissa McCarthy as a struggling writer named Lee Israel, who decides to create fake letters from famous authors in order to make money. It also features a performance by Richard E. Grant that has been a buzz this awards season, and it makes it the second straight time a Marielle Heller film makes it into a year-end top twenty-five (after The Diary of a Teenage Girl appeared at #20 in the 2015 countdown).
21. ZAMA (dir: Lucrecia Martel)
304.5 points
After what was essentially a decade-long absence in filmmaking, the esteemed Argentinian Lucrecia Martel made a startling comeback with this adaptation of the famous novel by Antonio di Benedetto. It focuses on the life of Don Diego de Zama (played by Daniel Gimenez Cacho) as he deals with life as a judicial official of the Spanish empire in the days of colonial South America, with all the tribulations and inter-cultural conflict that occurred. The film has already appeared in the 2017 countdown (at #45) and continued to make impressions on more critics as it finally became commercially released worldwide.
20. MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE - FALLOUT (dir: Christopher McQuarrie)
329 points
The high-octane action series starring Tom Cruise as a secret IMF agent continues to deliver, with more and more critics seeming to appreciate as the franchise matures. Now, in its sixth installment, it not only makes its first-appearance in the year-end countdown, it gets a coveted top 20 spot to boot. Should be interesting to see what kind of amazing set pieces the future movies in the series will do to top that.
19. WIDOWS (dir: Steve McQueen)
352 points
After making 2013's most-acclaimed movie (12 Years a Slave, ranked #1 in that year's countdown) and even earning a Best Picture victory at the Academy Awards, the director Steve McQueen finally pulled enough sway to get his first major Hollywood release made. With a script co-written by Gillian Flynn (who wrote Gone Girl, #9 in the 2014 countdown) it features a trio of bank-robber widows (Viola Davis, Michelle Rodriguez, Elizabeth Debicki) attempting a big heist of their own in order to settle debts and maintain financial stability in their new life. Set in Chicago, it also features a major secondary story about an alderman race that happens in the city, which stars Colin Farrell and Brian Tyree Henry.
18. COLD WAR (dir: Pawel Pawlikowski)
396 points
Joanna Kulig and Tomasz Kot star in this period drama about a relationship between artists that develops in Cold War-era Poland. It marks the first feature from Pawel Pawlikowski since his Oscar-winning Ida (#7 in the 2014 countdown). It won Best Director at the Cannes Film Festival in May, and is set to become a frontrunner for Best Foreign Language Film at the Oscars.
17. SORRY TO BOTHER YOU (dir: Boots Riley)
397.5 points
Lakeith Stanfield stars in this satire on capitalism, about a black man living in Oakland who joins a telemarketing agency in order to make money and finds a talent in the position after switching to his "white voice" in order to make calls. It's also got Armie Hammer as an immoral capitalist at the head of his telemarketing agency, Tessa Thompson as Stanfield's artist girlfriend, Steven Yeun as the telemarketing agency's radical laborer trying to star a worker's strike, and even David Cross and Patton Oswalt doing the "white voices" (among others).
16. SPIDER-MAN: INTO THE SPIDERVERSE (dir: Bob Persichetti, Peter Ramsey, Rodney Rothman)
411 points
Just when you thought that bringing in Tom Holland as the new Spidey would regenerate the Spider-Man film franchise following a dismal duo of movies starring Andrew Garfield, Sony and the producers duo of Phil Lord and Christopher Miller go on and make a dazzling movie for the comic book character that's also the highest-ranked animated film in this year's countdown, and without the slightest use of Marvel Studios to make it good! In it, a New York teen named Miles Morales gets bitten by the same radioactive spider that bit Peter Parker, and learns to become a Spider-Man for a new generation as a series of other Peter Parkers and spider-people suddenly travel inter-dimensionally to his universe for reasons that are explained as the movie goes on. It features dazzling 3D animation, as well as homages to not just previous Sony Spider-Man movies, but also to the Spider-Man comics history.
15. THE RIDER (dir: Chloe Zhao)
412 points
A film following the life of an ex-rodeo rider (Brady Jandreau) struggling with poverty and the severe injuries that he received while competing in the past. This film of a quintessential example of a small indy that gains traction through word-of-mouth, dating back to its festival circuit days in 2017 where it got enough buzz to appear in last year's countdown at #72 and now again in 2018's top 15.
14. ANNIHILATION (dir: Alex Garland)
450 points
Natalie Portman stars as a biology professor who travels into an alien world with a team that also includes such stars as Jennifer Jason Leigh, Tessa Thompson, and Gina Rodriguez. It's the second appearance for a Portman-led movie on this countdown (following Vox Lux at #85), the second appearance in the year's top 20 for a movie starring Thompson (following Sorry to Bother You) and the second straight top-15 appearance for an Alex Garland (following Ex-Machina's #26 position in 2015).
13. LEAVE NO TRACE (dir: Debra Granik)
452 points
From the director of Winter's Bone (#2 in the 2010 countdown) comes this drama about a veteran sufferring from PTSD (Ben Foster) who decides to leave civilization behind and live in the woods of the Pacific Northwest with his teenage daughter (Thomasin McKenzie).
12. A STAR IS BORN (dir: Bradley Cooper)
465 points
Coming in with a bunch of hype and a long history of three previous versions of the same movie to live up to, Bradley Cooper's directorial debut managed to deliver with the critics, to the point where it's also considered one of the biggest contenders for Best Picture at the Academy Awards. In it, Cooper plays Jackson Maine, a famous country singer who discovers another singer (played by Lady Gaga) at a drag show, woos her into a relationship, and then helps spark her own major career as a pop star while he battles alcoholism and major family strife with his brother (Sam Elliott). It has been nominated at almost every major awards show, from the Golden Globes to the SAG Awards and the PGA Awards.
11. HEREDITARY (dir: Ari Aster)
471.5 points
A typical family-conflict drama is given the horror movie treatment, with supernatural and cultish elements thrown into the mix. Toni Collette plays a miniature artist who has to deal with a bunch of issues, including the strange death of her mother, major tensions with her son (Alex Wolff) after he accidentally kills her daughter (Milly Shapiro) in a car-accident, and strange ghost presences hanging out in her home. Gabriel Byrne and Ann Dowd also star.
10. SHOPLIFTERS (dir: Hirokazu Kore-eda)
524.5 points
We kick off this year's top 10 with this Japanese drama about a group of poverty-stricken individuals that develop a intimate relationship bordering on the familial while living together in the same shack. This film managed to win the prestigious Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival, and it's the highest-placed movie on the year-end countdown to have also won a Palme since Blue is the Warmest Color placed at #9 in the 2013 countdown.
9. YOU WERE NEVER REALLY HERE (dir: Lynne Ramsay)
525.5 points
And now from a movie which wowed the 2018 Cannes Festival, to a movie which wowed at the 2017 Cannes Film Festival (even picking up that year's awards for Best Screenplay and Best Actor), it's Joaquin Phoenix playing a traumatized man working to stop a New York politician's daughter from becoming trapped in a child sex-trafficking ring. It's as creepy as you'd expect from the director of We Need to Talk About Kevin (#19 in the 2011 countdown).
8. BLACKKKLANSMAN (dir: Spike Lee)
546.5 points
Spike Lee's biggest commercial and critical success in over a decade, based on the true story of the first ever police detective in Colorado Springs and his attempt to take down the local chapter of the Ku Klux Klan in the 1970's. With performances by John David Washington, Adam Driver, Laura Harrier, and Topher Grace, it manages to discuss a critical period in U.S. history while also relaying it to the present. It won the Grand Prix at the year's Cannes Film Festival, and has since gone on to become an awards season darling.
7. IF BEALE STREET COULD TALK (dir: Barry Jenkins)
583 points
Like Steve McQueen, director Barry Jenkin's last movie (Moonlight) was also a triumph in many ways. It ran away with the #1 spot in the 2016 countdown, and surprised everyone by beating favorite La La Land to win Best Picture at the Academy Awards. So how does he follow-up on that? By adapting a James Baldwin story of course, and what a project that turned out to be. With dazzling performances (led by Regina King, who will probably win a Best Supporting Actress Oscar for it), an beautifully intimate cinematography, and a script that most have approved of, If Beale Street Could Talk managed to deliver in more ways than one, and solidified Jenkins as anything but a one-hit wonder. Expect to see many more great films from him in the future.
6. BLACK PANTHER (dir: Ryan Coogler)
596.5 points
The year's highest-ranking superhero movie, as well as the highest ranked superhero movie ever since this countdown was established a few years back. Based on the Marvel comic, it follows the life of a prince from the fictional African nation of Wakanda named T'Challa (Chadwick Boseman), his attempt to establish himself as Wakanda's leader following his dad's death, and the battle he wages against a rebel named Killmonger (Michael B. Jordan). This film may not be finishing this year's countdown as the year's most critically-acclaimed, but it still did really well among critics to the point where Rotten Tomatoes has it as the highest rated overall on its website. It was also THE big movie phenomenon of 2018, generating massive media coverage and massive bucks to boot (currently, it's the third highest-grossing movie in U.S. history, behind only Star Wars: The Force Awakens and Avatar). It's also the third-straight Ryan Coogler movie to make a top-20 appearance on the countdown, following Fruitvale Station (#18 in 2013) and Creed (#14 in 2015).
5. EIGHTH GRADE (dir: Bo Burnham)
632.5 points
An examination of a young thirteen year-old American girl's life in the late 2010's (with Elsie Fisher in the lead role) as she deals with the end of middle school and the start of her journey into high school. It's the highest-placed movie in 2018 among a first-time film director.
4. BURNING (dir: Lee Chang-dong)
782 points
A Korean drama about a young man (Yoo Ah-in) who develops a relationship with a former classmate (Jeon Jong-seo) only to have her leave on a trip to Africa and come back in the arms of a Korean-American (played by Steven Yeun, the second time he's appearing in the year's top 20). It's a story that gets stranger and more mysterious as it goes on, with illusions to William Faulkner and Alfred Hitchcock and themes that include class conflict and masculinity. Overall, it's no surprise that such a film placed this high. At the time it was released at the Cannes Film Festival back in May, it was so loved by critics that it earned the highest score ever in Screen Daily's famous jury grid.
3. THE FAVOURITE (dir: Yorgos Lanthimos)
848 points
Greek director Yorgos Lanthimos' recent American projects continues to be a smash, with this latest from him appearing to be his most beloved effort yet. Based on real events that took placed in England during the 17th Century, it stars Olivia Colman as Anne, Queen of Great Britain, who gets involved in a love trial with Sarah Churchill, the Duchess of Marlborough (played by Rachel Weisz) and Abigail Hill, Sarah's down-on-her-luck cousin (played by Emma Stone) who joins the palace as a maid. While this happens, a war between Britain and France breaks out, with the politics of that war getting involved in the story as well.
2. FIRST REFORMED (dir: Paul Schrader)
1119.5 points
A minister of First Reformed in upstate New York (played by Ethan Hawke) deals with many conflicts that come to undermine his faith, including climate change, the greediness of his church official superiors and his battle with stomach cancer. Amanda Seyfried and Cedric the Entertainer are among some of the other prominent members of the cast. The film has received numerous awards, many of them for Schrader's screenplay and for Hawke's acting.
And the movie which placed at the top of 2018's countdown is...
1. ROMA (dir: Alfonso Cuaron)
1530 points
In 2013, Mexican director Alfonso Cuaron (and cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezki) wowed audiences worldwide with the IMAX 3D thriller Gravity, particularly with its masterful tracking shots of Sandra Bullock floating across a wrecked space station. It earned Cuaron an Oscar for Best Directing, and was a beloved hit by critics, finishing #2 in the 2013 countdown in a relatively close battle with #1 finisher 12 Years a Slave. So how did Cuaron manage to follow-up? By applying his tracking shots and directorial prowess into a more personal setting, that of the Roma neighborhood in Mexico City set during the period that was his childhood.
Starring newcomer Yalitza Aparicio, the film takes an Upstairs, Downstairs look into an upper middle class household as as Aparicio's maid character deals with her own turmoil as the family which employs her goes through a messy divorce between the husband and wife. From the moment it premiered at the Venice Film Festival, where it earned the coveted Golden Lion for Best Film, critics and audiences grew to appreciate its rich setting, its terrific acting, and even Cuaron's excellent first foray into making a film with himself as the cinematographer. It ends 2018 as the movie with the most #1 spots, not to mention the only movie to appear in over 40% of the polls used to make this countdown. Will Oscar gold be next for it? Time will tell, but in the meantime I bet it feels good for Cuaron to know that, at least this time, there was no Steve McQueen (or anyone else from that matter) to stop a film of his from being ranked as the year's most critically acclaimed.
Congrats to all the filmmakers whose films were as acclaimed to appear on this year's top 30. I shall wrap this series of articles up at a later time with a reveal of the movie that just barely missed out on the top 85, as well as the critics lists I actually used to compile this countdown. So stay tuned!


