Current:Home > MarketsThe best movies we saw at New York Film Festival, ranked (including 'All of Us Strangers') -Secure Growth Solutions
The best movies we saw at New York Film Festival, ranked (including 'All of Us Strangers')
Charles Langston View
Date:2025-04-10 05:44:32
NEW YORK − The Big Apple is the place to be for cinephiles this fall, with an especially stacked lineup at this year’s New York Film Festival.
The annual event officially kicks off Friday with “May December” starring Natalie Portman and Julianne Moore, with more movies on the docket led by Emma Stone (“Poor Things”), Bradley Cooper (“Maestro”), Adam Driver (“Ferrari”), Saoirse Ronan (“Foe”) and Glen Powell (“Hit Man”). The festival, which runs through Oct. 15, will see fewer A-listers on the ground celebrating their films amid the ongoing actors’ strike.
In the meantime, here’s the best of the fest offerings we’ve seen so far:
Looking for a good horror movie?We ranked the century's best scary films
5. 'Strange Way of Life'
In Pedro Almódovar’s chic but slight new Western, a wistful rancher (Pedro Pascal) reconnects with the gruff sheriff (Ethan Hawke) he fell in love with 25 years earlier. Clocking in at just 31 minutes, the film is overstuffed with too many narrative threads, although Pascal’s lovely turn helps elevate this vibrant riff on “Brokeback Mountain.”
4. 'Anatomy of a Fall'
A writer (Sandra Hüller) becomes the prime suspect in her husband’s mysterious death in Justine Triet’s intriguing courtroom thriller, which won the top prize at this year’s Cannes Film Festival in France. Ambiguous, painstaking and occasionally overwrought, the movie is grounded by Hüller’s astonishing performance, which flickers between tenderness and rage, and keeps you guessing until the very last frame.
3. 'Evil Does Not Exist'
After the Oscar-winning “Drive My Car,” Ryusuke Hamaguchi is back with another stunning slow burn. The Japanese filmmaker turns his lens to a tight-knit rural community, which is upended when a Tokyo talent agency waltzes into town with plans to install a “glamping” site. At first a wickedly funny slice of life, the film gradually morphs into something far more chilling and resonant, showing how even the most peaceful creatures can strike back when threatened.
2. 'The Zone of Interest'
Jonathan Glazer ("Under the Skin") delivers a harrowing gut punch with this singular Holocaust drama, which is set just outside the walls of Auschwitz concentration camp at the palatial house of a Nazi officer (Christian Friedel) and his wife (Sandra Hüller). What makes the film so uniquely stomach-churning is that the violence never plays out onscreen. Rather, distant screams, cries and gunshots puncture nearly every scene, as this wealthy family attempts to live their day-to-day in willful ignorance of the horrors happening right outside their door.
1. ‘All of Us Strangers’
Andrew Haigh’s hypnotic tearjerker is nothing short of a masterpiece, following a lonely gay man (Andrew Scott) and his handsome new neighbor (Paul Mescal) as they help each other reckon with childhood trauma and grief. A sexy and shattering ghost story at its core, the film makes brilliant use of surrealist fantasy to explore larger themes of memory, parents and what it means to be truly seen. Scott delivers a career-best performance of aching vulnerability, and his scenes with the always-captivating Mescal are electric.
Fact checking 'Cassandro':Is Bad Bunny's character in the lucha libre film a real person?
veryGood! (415)
Related
- Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
- HGTV stars Chip and Joanna Gaines list popular Magnolia House for $995,000
- Parents of autistic boy demand answers after video shows school employee striking son
- Scotland player out of Rugby World Cup after slipping on stairs. Not the sport’s first weird injury
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Why Every Fitspo TikToker Is Wearing These Flowy Running Shorts
- Lincoln Riley says Oklahoma fans threatened family's safety after he took USC job
- Beyoncé, Taylor Swift reporter jobs added by Gannett, America's largest newspaper chain
- 'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
- Russia expels 2 US diplomats, accusing them of ‘illegal activity’
Ranking
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- Climate change is un-burying graves. It's an expensive, 'traumatic,' confounding problem.
- Taco Bell sign crushes Louisiana woman's car as she waits for food in drive-thru
- Brazilian Indigenous women use fashion to showcase their claim to rights and the demarcation of land
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- How to help the flood victims in Libya
- Cyprus holds military drill with France, Italy and Greece to bolster security in east Mediterranean
- Intensified clashes between rival factions in Lebanon’s largest Palestinian refugee camp kill 5
Recommendation
Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
The UAW unveils major plan if talks with Big 3 automakers fail: The 'stand up strike'
Saudi Arabia executes 2 soldiers convicted of treason as it conducts war on Yemen’s Houthi rebels
What's next for Jets quarterback Aaron Rodgers after Achilles injury?
A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
Palestinian leader Abbas draws sharp rebuke for reprehensible Holocaust remarks, but colleagues back him
Applications for US jobless benefits tick up slightly
Top Chef's Stephanie Izard Shares What's in Her Kitchen, Including a $11 Find She Uses Every Day