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The 25 Best Films of 2023

The full spectrum of life's colors shone on screen this year, from vibrant pink to haunted grey

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Best Films of 2023: Barbie (Warner Bros.), Killers of the Flower Moon (Apple TV+), Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse (Sony), Oppenheimer (Universal), Past Lives (A24), and Renaissance: A Film by Beyoncé (AMC Theaters)

    Our Annual Report turns to the world of film with our 25 Best Movies of 2023 list. Find all of our awards, lists, and exclusive features recapping the year’s best in music, film, and TV here.


    At the beginning of 2023, the world of cinema felt like it was standing on a bit of a precipice — sure, in 2022 people had at least gone to see Tom Cruise fly around in a jet plane again, and Cruise was due to also ride a motorcycle off a mountain in the summer. But Cruise alone couldn’t keep theaters afloat; Americans would need more reasons to go to the movies.

    Thankfully, those reasons arrived in droves: Multiple animated features redefined what the medium was capable of, while established and emerging auteurs delivered some of the best work of their career. There were heartbreaking true stories, captivating thrillers, daring dramas, and delightful adventures — and perhaps you might have heard something about a little phenomenon known as Barbenheimer. (Or Oppenbarbie, should that be your preference.)

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    Like any year, there were some flops in the mix and some disappointments from the greats, but there was so much for film fans to be grateful for over the last 12 months, only wetting the appetite further for what’s to come in 2024. Here are the best movies of 2023.

    Liz Shannon Miller
    Senior Entertainment Editor


    25. All of Us Strangers

    best movies of 2023 All of Us Strangers

    All of Us Strangers (Searchlight Pictures)

    Directed by: Andrew Haigh
    Cast: Andrew Scott, Paul Mescal, Jamie Bell, Claire Foy
    Studio: Searchlight Pictures

    Adapted from the Japanese novel Strangers, Andrew Haigh’s latest is sentimental about the fragilities of life and the slipperiness of queer existence. A lonely writer named Adam (Andrew Scott, never warmer and sadder than here) is coping with the prospect of new love with neighbor Harry (Paul Mescal, brilliantly brittle) and the missed opportunity to know his long-lost parents (Claire Foy and Jamie Bell). Until, that is, a magical circumstance allows Adam to drop by his parents’ house to see them, crystallized on the day before their death, the same age that Adam is now. It’s a conceit that’s never explained, and good for Haigh on his restraint — that’s not the point. Instead, Strangers soaks us in the melancholy of a modern queer man reassuring his parents, forever stuck in the AIDS-panicked ‘80s, that things will get better for him, a tale anchored by beautiful turns from Haigh’s four leads. — Clint Worthington

    24. They Cloned Tyrone

    they-cloned-tyrone best movies of 2023

    They Cloned Tyrone (Netflix)

    Directed by: Juel Taylor
    Cast: John Boyega, Teyonah Parris, Jamie Foxx, Kiefer Sutherland, David Alan Grier
    Studio: Netflix

    Juel Taylor’s funky, acerbic debut was another great surprise this year, a well-paced mix of ‘70s conspiracy sci-fi, blaxploitation, and Peele-ian social commentary. And at the center of it is one of 2023’s most invigorating acting trios: John Boyega, Teyonah Parris, and Jamie Foxx as three low-rung members of an impoverished Black community who find out their degenerated social setting isn’t as organic as it may seem. All through its deeper ideas of social control and racial hierarchies, They Cloned Tyrone never forgets to be charming and downright fun — aided largely by Foxx’s red dwarf of charisma and costume designer Francine Jamison-Tanchuck’s eye-candy costumes. — C. Worthington

    23. Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves

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    Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves (Paramount)

    Directed by: Jonathan Goldstein, John Francis Daley
    Cast: Chris Pine, Michelle Rodriguez, Regé-Jean Page, Justice Smith, Sophia Lillis, Hugh Grant
    Studio: Paramount

    As Consequence covered upon this film’s original release, Hollywood’s track record with adapting the world’s most famous RPG for the screen has had a lot more failures than successes. But directors John Francis Daley and Jonathan Goldstein knocked this fantasy adventure out of the park by remembering one key fact about D&D: It’s a game designed to be played with friends, for fun. The charming cast, led by Chris Pine, Michelle Rodriguez, and Justice Smith, made it easy to fall in love with this rough-and-tumble found family of eventual heroes, and the wit and skill with which the world of the game was brought to life have us keeping our fingers crossed that a sequel will be greenlit sometime soon. — L.S. Miller

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    22. You Hurt My Feelings

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    You Hurt My Feelings (A24)

    Directed by: Nicole Holofcener
    Cast: Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Tobias Menzies, Michaela Watkins, Arian Moayed, Owen Teague, Jeannie Berlin
    Studio: A24

    Julia Louis-Dreyfus and director Nicole Holofcener reunite for a tale of miscommunication, bruised egos, and, yes, hurt feelings. After Louis-Dreyfus’ Beth accidentally overhears her husband Don (Tobias Menzies) criticize her latest creative endeavor, she’s thrown into a crisis of character that exposes both the inherent silliness of hurt feelings and how genuinely affecting those experiences can be. Bolstered by great performances and a tastefully comedic tone, the film manages to get deeply emotional without ever becoming crushingly depressing — quite a feat in 2023. — Jonah Krueger

    21. Poor Things

    best films 2023

    Poor Things (Searchlight Pictures)

    Directed by: Yorgos Lanthimos
    Cast: Emma Stone, Mark Ruffalo, Willem Dafoe, Ramy Youssef, Christopher Abbott, Jerrod Carmichael
    Studio: Searchlight Pictures

    In adapting Alasdair Gray’s 1992 novel, Yorgos Lanthimos once again delivers an examination of humanity through the lens of silly people and sheer absurdism. Through fish-eyed shots and Lanthimos’ signature style of dialogue, Emma Stone’s Frankenstein’s Monster (or rather, Willem Dafoe’s Monster) Bella Baxter learns and examines the arbitrary nuances of a quickly developing world as Duncan Wedderburn (Mark Ruffalo) prances her around Europe. For Lanthimos, it’s a surprisingly joyful joint; and yet, the film manages to retain all of the artistry and humanistic curiosity that made his previous work so enthralling. — J. Krueger

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