1
Moonlight
Heartrending account of a black teenager’s struggle to come to terms with his gay identity: potentially difficult material handled with almost miraculous lightness of touch by director Barry Jenkins. Read more
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La La Land
Unashamed homage to the glory days of the Hollywood musical, with Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone cooking up genuine chemistry as a jazz musician and wannabe actor trying to make it in LA. Read more
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Toni Erdmann
The three-hour German comedy that everyone who went to Cannes thought ought to have won is a sad and ecstatic delight about parenthood and professional priorities in the west today. Read more
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Arrival
Emotionally intelligent alien-contact sci-fi from Sicario’s Denis Villeneuve,with Amy Adams as the unhappy linguist called in to try and decipher communications from mysterious extraterrestrial arrivals. Read more
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Elle
An audacious comeback from Paul Verhoeven has Isabelle Huppert on career-best form as an icy career woman dealing with a violent sexual assault in a shocking manner. Read more
4
A Bigger Splash
Superbly acted four-hander from I Am Love director Luca Guadagnino, with Tilda Swinton’s musician having her idyllic holiday home invaded by fast-talking (and dancing) Ralph Fiennes. Read more
5
Jackie
Natalie Portman delivers a standout, Oscar-worthy performance as Jackie Kennedy, telling her story during and after the assassination of JFK in 1963. Read more
6
Fire at Sea
Low-key, elegiac documentary dealing with a toughly contemporary subject: the life-threatening trips taken by refugee boats across the Mediterranean to the Italian island of Lampedusa. Read more
7
Love & Friendship
Whit Stillman consolidates his return with a superbly witty adaptation of Jane Austen’s novella Lady Susan (with a title borrowed from another early Austen work), featuring Kate Beckinsale as a hard-headed society beauty. Read more
8
Little Men
Ira Sachs’ follow-up to Love Is Strange, a beautifully observed study of a liberally inclined family with money worries, and the effect it has on their son. Read more
9
The Handmaiden
Supercharged erotic potboiler by Oldboy’s Park Chan-wook, adapted from Sarah Waters’s novel Fingersmith and transposed to 1930s Korea. Read more
10
Weiner
Freakishly topical documentary about disgraced congressman Anthony Weiner, whose addiction to sexting became a contentious feature of the Clinton-Trump presidential election. Read more
11
Sausage Party
Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg put their potty-mouthed talents to work on a gross-out comedy animation, featuring food items who have only the haziest idea of what happens outside the supermarket shelves. Read a full review
12
Manchester By the Sea
Casey Affleck stars in Kenneth Lonergan’s acutely observed study of a handyman who becomes the legal guardian of his nephew in the Massachusetts town of the title. Read a full review
13
Nocturnal Animals
Tom Ford’s cruelly beautiful adaptation of Austin Wright’s book Tony and Susan, starring Amy Adams as the woman disturbed by the manuscript of novel she receives from her ex-husband. Read a full review
14
Loving
Sturdy, righteous drama about an interracial marriage that fell foul of the law in 1950s America, with Ruth Negga and Joel Edgerton both impressive in the lead roles. Read a full review
15
The Club
Jackie director Pablo Larraín skewers Chile’s culture of denial in the post-Pinochet era, through a troubling study of a retirement home for “sinning” priests. Read a full review
16
Our Little Sister
A tender story of three sisters whose lives are affected by the arrival of a fourth family member, a half-sister, by the Japanese auteur Hirokazu Koreeda. Read a full review
17
Paterson
Jim Jarmusch’s slow-burn story about a bus-driving poet, played elegantly and mysteriously by Adam Driver, whose apparently happy life in New Jersey suffers unexpected disruption. Read a full review
18
The Lobster
One-of-a-kind black-comic satire, with Colin Farrell barely recognisable as a hapless singleton desperate to avoid being transformed into a crustacean, directed by “Greek freak” pioneer Yorgos Lanthimos. Read a full review
19
Hell or High Water
Robustly impressive bankrobber movie that carries some of the charge of the Hollywood new wave, featuring Chris Pine and Ben Foster as brothers on a complicated criminal mission. Read a full review
20
Doctor Strange
Marvel’s bizarre, surreal tale of Benedict Cumberbatch’s superpower-encumbered medic, enlisted by Tilda Swinton’s Ancient One to fight evil Mads Mikkelsen. Read a full review
21
American Honey
Brit auteur Andrea Arnold heads to the US for a raucous, scabrous road trip following a group of hard-partying kids as they sell magazine subscriptions door to door. Read a full review
22
20th Century Women
Impressive 1970s-set fable about motherhood and adolescence by Mike “Beginners” Mills, starring Annette Bening as a matriarch attempting to raise her boy right with the help of younger female friends. Read a full review
23
Things to Come
An exceptional performance by Isabelle Huppert ballasts Mia Hansen-Løve ’s study of a philosophy professor mired in mid-life crises. Read a full review
24
Deadpool
An unexpected comedy hit for Ryan Reynolds as the “pansexual” Marvel character, a smartmouth, self-deconstructing superhero who battles Game of Thrones’ Ed Skrein as Ajax. Read a full review
25
Tale of Tales
Gomorrah’s Matteo Garrone conjures up an eccentric, exotic collection of 16th-century Italian folktales, with Salma Hayek, Toby Jones and John C Reilly among the talent on show. Read a full review
26
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
Highly likable new runner in the Harry Potter stakes, boasting an original JK Rowling script derived from the Hogwarts textbook and Eddie Redmayne as “magizoologist” Newt Scamander. Read a full review
27
Green Room
Blue Ruin director Jeremy Saulnier pits a bunch of rockers against feral, marauding skinheads (led by Patrick Stewart) in a gruesomely effective siege-horror flick. Read a full review
28
Dheepan
Palme d’Or winning thriller by A Prophet’s Jacques Audiard, following Sri Lankan civil war escapees fending off threats and violence on a drug-ridden French housing estate. Read a full review
29
The Childhood of a Leader
Amazingly prescient work, by first-time director Brady Corbet, about the origins of fascism as depicted through the early years of a kid who is destined to grow up a dictator. Read a full review
30
Chronic
Sombre, disturbing drama by Mexican director Michel Franco, with Tim Roth as a carer of terminally ill people who cultivates an unhealthy significance in the final stages of his patients’ lives. Read a full review
31
Sing Street
Charming 1980s-set comedy from Once’s John Carney about a bunch of Dublin schoolboys who get a band together to try and impress local girls – particularly Lucy Boynton’s Raphina. Read a full review
32
Zootopia
Entertaining and funny Disney animation about a bunny rookie cop, working in a city populated by animals, who gets a sniff of a missing-mammal case and aims to prove her worth. Read a full review
33
Embrace of the Serpent
Oscar-nominated study of indigenous peoples in the Colombian Amazon, based on the journals of two 20th-century explorers and detailing the havoc wreaked by the west. Read a full review
34
The Light Between Oceans
Swoonsome melodramatic weepie with Michael Fassbender and Alicia Vikander as a lighthouse-keeping couple who decide to keep a baby they find drifting in an open boat in post-first world war Australia. Read a full review
35
Everybody Wants Some!!
Subtle 1980s-set comedy from Richard Linklater, conceived as a semi-sequel to Dazed and Confused, as it follows a bunch of jocks to college on baseball scholarships. Read a full review
36
From Afar
Raw, disturbing story by Venezuelan director Lorenzo Vigas (winner of Venice’s Golden Lion) about a well-off middle-aged man who falls in love with a teenage street thug. Read a full review
37
Cemetery of Splendour
Apichatpong Weerasethakul’s follow-up to the Palme d’Or winning Uncle Boonmee, an elegantly mysterious fable set largely in a hospital filled with soldiers who have succumbed to sleeping sickness. Read a full review
38
Hunt for the Wilderpeople
New Zealand-set comedy snappily directed by Taika Waititi (What We Do in the Shadows), featuring Sam Neill as a gruff backwoodsman who heads for the hills with teen delinquent Julian Dennison. Read a full review
39
High-Rise
Ben Wheatley’s phantasmagorical adaptation of JG Ballard’s housing-block dystopia, starring Tom Hiddleston as a doctor caught in between-floors class warfare. Read a full review
40
I, Daniel Blake
Righteously angry, nerve-touching benefits-assessment drama by Ken Loach, which won him a Cannes Palme d’Or for the second time. Read a full review
41
The Witch
Creepy, disturbing horror with folk-tale elements set in 17th century New England, following an immigrant family’s terror as they are tormented by mysterious, witch-like entity. Read a full review
42
Wiener-Dog
Black-comic anthology of dachshund-themed stories by Todd Solondz, with Greta Gerwig, Danny DeVito and Ellen Burstyn among the dog owners whose emotional lives are anatomised. Read a full review
43
Hail, Caesar!
Tricksy Coen brothers comedy set in postwar Hollywood, with Josh Brolin as the film-biz fixer trying to hush up the disappearance of George Clooney’s biblical-epic star. Read a full review
44
The Eagle Huntress
Eye-opening documentary about a teenage girl who breaks taboos among Kazakh émigrés in Mongolia by becoming the first female to take up traditional eagle-hunting. Read a full review
45
The Jungle Book
Live-action retelling of the Rudyard Kipling stories, directed with verve by Jon Favreau and garnished with impressive CGI-animated animal performances. Read a full review
46
The Clan
Gruesome Argentinian crime thriller from director Pablo Trapero, which offers a political edge in its study of a family who specialise in “disappearing” their kidnap victims. Read a full review
47
Fences
Denzel Washington directs a powerfully performed adaptation of August Wilson’s stage play, with Washington as a baseball player turned garbage collector and Viola Davis as his wife. Read a full review
48
10 Cloverfield Lane
Sort-of sequel to the JJ Abrams-produced found-footage monster movie. This one is recast as a Hitchcockian thriller about a girl (Mary Elizabeth Winstead) trapped in an underground bunker. Read a full review
49
The Neon Demon
Nicolas Winding Refn’s follow-up to Only God Forgives: a self-consciously trashy and blood-soaked fable about the flesh-devouring LA fashion industry. Read a full review
50
Deepwater Horizon
Impressively tense disaster movie about the catastrophic 2010 oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, with Mark Wahlberg doing his American-everyman thing as hero engineer Mike Williams. Read a full review
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