Benedict Cumberbatch Movies Ranked by Tomatometer

We’re ranking the films of Benedict Cumberbatch! Let’s start with his Certified Fresh films, including his residency as Doctor Strange in the MCU (Avengers: Endgame, Spider-Man: No Way Home), Best Actor-nominated The Power of the Dog and The Imitation Game, and Best Picture winner 12 Years a Slave. Cumberbatch’s Rotten films with positive Audience Scores include The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies, Third Star, and The Other Boleyn Girl. Alex Vo

#1

12 Years a Slave (2013)
Tomatometer icon 95%

#1
Critics Consensus: It's far from comfortable viewing, but 12 Years a Slave's unflinchingly brutal look at American slavery is also brilliant -- and quite possibly essential -- cinema.
Synopsis: In the years before the Civil War, Solomon Northup (Chiwetel Ejiofor), a free black man from upstate New York, is [More]
Directed By: Steve McQueen

#2

Avengers: Endgame (2019)
Tomatometer icon 94%

#2
Critics Consensus: Exciting, entertaining, and emotionally impactful, Avengers: Endgame does whatever it takes to deliver a satisfying finale to Marvel's epic Infinity Saga.
Synopsis: Adrift in space with no food or water, Tony Stark sends a message to Pepper Potts as his oxygen supply [More]
Directed By: Anthony Russo, Joe Russo

#3
#3
Critics Consensus: Brought to life by a stellar ensemble led by Benedict Cumberbatch, The Power of the Dog reaffirms writer-director Jane Campion as one of her generation's finest filmmakers.
Synopsis: Severe, pale-eyed, handsome, Phil Burbank is brutally beguiling. All of Phil's romance, power and fragility is trapped in the past [More]
Directed By: Jane Campion

#4
#4
Critics Consensus: A bigger, bolder Spider-Man sequel, No Way Home expands the franchise's scope and stakes without losing sight of its humor and heart.
Synopsis: For the first time in the cinematic history of Spider-Man, our friendly neighborhood hero's identity is revealed, bringing his Super [More]
Directed By: Jon Watts

#5

The Imitation Game (2014)
Tomatometer icon 90%

#5
Critics Consensus: With an outstanding starring performance from Benedict Cumberbatch illuminating its fact-based story, The Imitation Game serves as an eminently well-made entry in the "prestige biopic" genre.
Synopsis: In 1939, newly created British intelligence agency MI6 recruits Cambridge mathematics alumnus Alan Turing (Benedict Cumberbatch) to crack Nazi codes, [More]
Directed By: Morten Tyldum

#6

Starter for 10 (2006)
Tomatometer icon 90%

#6
Critics Consensus: Starter For 10 is a spirited coming-of-age tale that remains charming and witty even as it veers into darker teritory. The unique setting of a quiz show makes the film wittier than your average romantic comedy.
Synopsis: Brian Jackson (James McAvoy), a working-class youth from Essex, gets a chance to prove himself when he is accepted to [More]
Directed By: Tom Vaughan

#7

Doctor Strange (2016)
Tomatometer icon 89%

#7
Critics Consensus: Doctor Strange artfully balances its outré source material against the blockbuster constraints of the MCU, delivering a thoroughly entertaining superhero origin story in the bargain.
Synopsis: Dr. Stephen Strange's (Benedict Cumberbatch) life changes after a car accident robs him of the use of his hands. When [More]
Directed By: Scott Derrickson

#8

1917 (2019)
Tomatometer icon 88%

#8
Critics Consensus: Hard-hitting, immersive, and an impressive technical achievement, 1917 captures the trench warfare of World War I with raw, startling immediacy.
Synopsis: During World War I, two British soldiers -- Lance Cpl. Schofield and Lance Cpl. Blake -- receive seemingly impossible orders. [More]
Directed By: Sam Mendes

#9
#9
Critics Consensus: Avengers: Infinity War ably juggles a dizzying array of MCU heroes in the fight against their gravest threat yet, and the result is a thrilling, emotionally resonant blockbuster that (mostly) realizes its gargantuan ambitions.
Synopsis: Iron Man, Thor, the Hulk and the rest of the Avengers unite to battle their most powerful enemy yet -- [More]
Directed By: Anthony Russo, Joe Russo

#10

The Courier (2020)
Tomatometer icon 85%

#10
Critics Consensus: The Courier delivers a rousingly effective old-school spy adventure elevated by a thrilling fact-based story and Benedict Cumberbatch's nervy central performance.
Synopsis: THE COURIER is a true-life spy thriller, the story of an unassuming British businessman Greville Wynne (Benedict Cumberbatch) recruited into [More]
Directed By: Dominic Cooke

#11
#11
Critics Consensus: Visually spectacular and suitably action packed, Star Trek Into Darkness is a rock-solid installment in the venerable sci-fi franchise, even if it's not as fresh as its predecessor.
Synopsis: The crew of the Starship Enterprise returns home after an act of terrorism within its own organization destroys most of [More]
Directed By: J.J. Abrams

#12
#12
Critics Consensus: Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy is a dense puzzle of anxiety, paranoia, and espionage that director Tomas Alfredson pieces together with utmost skill.
Synopsis: In 1970s England the head of MI6, Control (John Hurt), dispatches an agent (Mark Strong) to meet with a Hungarian [More]
Directed By: Tomas Alfredson

#13

Atonement (2007)
Tomatometer icon 83%

#13
Critics Consensus: Atonement features strong performances, brilliant cinematography, and a unique score. Featuring deft performances from James MacAvoy and Keira Knightley, it's a successful adaptation of Ian McEwan's novel.
Synopsis: This sweeping English drama, based on the book by Ian McEwan, follows the lives of young lovers Cecilia Tallis (Keira [More]
Directed By: Joe Wright

#14

Four Lions (2009)
Tomatometer icon 84%

#14
Critics Consensus: Its premise suggests brazenly tasteless humor, but Four Lions is actually a smart, pitch-black comedy that carries the unmistakable ring of truth.
Synopsis: A group of young Muslim men living in Sheffield decide to wage jihad, and they hatch an inept plan to [More]
Directed By: Christopher Morris

#15

The Child in Time (2017)
Tomatometer icon 79%

#15
Critics Consensus: The Child in Time skillfully resists melodrama, trusting the finer details of its story -- and the actors bringing them to life -- to land with a slow-building, devastating impact.
Synopsis: Stephen Lewis, a successful author of children's books, is confronted with the unthinkable when his only child disappears in a [More]
Directed By: Julian Farino

#16

War Horse (2011)
Tomatometer icon 74%

#16
Critics Consensus: Technically superb, proudly sentimental, and unabashedly old-fashioned, War Horse is an emotional drama that tugs the heartstrings with Spielberg's customary flair.
Synopsis: Albert (Jeremy Irvine) and his beloved horse, Joey, live on a farm in the British countryside. At the outbreak of [More]
Directed By: Steven Spielberg

#17

The Mauritanian (2021)
Tomatometer icon 75%

#17
Critics Consensus: The Mauritanian takes a frustratingly generic approach to a real-life story that might have been inspirational in other hands, but Tahar Rahim's performance elevates the uneven material.
Synopsis: Directed by Kevin Macdonald and based on the NY Times best-selling memoir "Guantánamo Diary" by Mohamedou Ould Slahi, this is [More]
Directed By: Kevin Macdonald

#18

The Whistleblower (2010)
Tomatometer icon 75%

#18
Critics Consensus: Rachel Weisz puts on a compelling smoldering act though the film suffers from a literal-minded approach to the material.
Synopsis: The experiences of Kathryn Bolkovac, a cop from Nebraska, who worked as a peacekeeper in post-war Bosnia and exposed a [More]
Directed By: Larysa Kondracki

#19
Critics Consensus: While still slightly hamstrung by "middle chapter" narrative problems and its formidable length, The Desolation of Smaug represents a more confident, exciting second chapter for the Hobbit series.
Synopsis: Having survived the first part of their unsettling journey, Bilbo Baggins (Martin Freeman) and his companions (Ian McKellen, Richard Armitage) [More]
Directed By: Peter Jackson

#20

Black Mass (2015)
Tomatometer icon 74%

#20
Critics Consensus: Black Mass spins a gripping yarn out of its fact-based story -- and leaves audiences with one of Johnny Depp's most compelling performances in years.
Synopsis: While his brother Bill (Benedict Cumberbatch) remains a powerful leader in the Massachusetts Senate, Irish hoodlum James "Whitey" Bulger (Johnny [More]
Directed By: Scott Cooper

#21
Critics Consensus: Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness labors under the weight of the sprawling MCU, but Sam Raimi's distinctive direction casts an entertaining spell.
Synopsis: In Marvel Studios' "Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness," the MCU unlocks the Multiverse and pushes its boundaries further [More]
Directed By: Sam Raimi

#22
#22
Critics Consensus: Penguins of Madagascar is fast and brightly colored enough to entertain small children, but too frantically silly to offer real filmgoing fun for the whole family.
Synopsis: Plucky penguins Skipper (Tom McGrath), Kowalski (Chris Miller), Rico (Conrad Vernon) and Private (Christopher Knights) -- the most elite spies [More]

#23
Critics Consensus: Sparked by a pair of well-matched leads, The Electrical Life of Louis Wain honors its real-life subject by adding a dash of whimsy to the standard biopic formula.
Synopsis: The extraordinary true story of eccentric British artist Louis Wain (Benedict Cumberbatch), whose playful, sometimes even psychedelic pictures helped to [More]
Directed By: Will Sharpe

#24
#24
Critics Consensus: The sheer amount of acting going on in August: Osage County threatens to overwhelm, but when the actors involved are as talented as Meryl Streep and Julia Roberts, it's difficult to complain.
Synopsis: The death and funeral of their father brings three sisters to the home of their mother, Violet (Meryl Streep), an [More]
Directed By: John Wells

#25

Amazing Grace (2006)
Tomatometer icon 68%

#25
Critics Consensus: Amazing Grace is your quintessential historical biopic: stately, noble, and with plenty of electrifying performances.
Synopsis: In 18th-century England, House of Commons member William Wilberforce (Ioan Gruffudd) and his close friend and a future prime minister, [More]
Directed By: Michael Apted

#26
Critics Consensus: If it lacks the powerful voltage that its impressive cast suggests, The Current War: Director's Cut represents a significant improvement over previous versions.
Synopsis: Thomas Edison and George Westinghouse -- the greatest inventors of the industrial age -- engage in a battle of technology [More]
Directed By: Alfonso Gomez-Rejon

#27
Critics Consensus: Though somewhat overwhelmed by its own spectacle, The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies ends Peter Jackson's second Middle-earth trilogy on a reasonably satisfying note.
Synopsis: Having reclaimed Erebor and vast treasure from the dragon Smaug, Thorin Oakenshield (Richard Armitage) sacrifices friendship and honor in seeking [More]
Directed By: Peter Jackson

#28
#28
Critics Consensus: The Grinch gives the classic Seuss source material a brightly animated update that's solidly suitable for younger viewers without adding substantially to the story's legacy.
Synopsis: The Grinch and his loyal dog, Max, live a solitary existence inside a cave on Mount Crumpet. His main source [More]
Directed By: Scott Mosier, Yarrow Cheney

#29
Critics Consensus: Mowgli: Legend of the Jungle brings impressive special effects to bear on the darker side of its classic source material, but loses track of the story's heart along the way.
Synopsis: Human child Mowgli is raised by a wolf pack in the jungles of India. As he learns the often harsh [More]
Directed By: Andy Serkis

#30

Creation (2009)
Tomatometer icon 47%

#30
Critics Consensus: This Charles Darwin biopic is curiously dispassionate, but Creation contains some of director Jon Amiel's best work, and Paul Bettany's performance is not to be missed.
Synopsis: Devastated by the death of his beloved daughter, Annie, Charles Darwin (Paul Bettany) sinks into a deep depression, and cannot [More]
Directed By: Jon Amiel

#31

Third Star (2010)
Tomatometer icon 47%

#31
Critics Consensus: No consensus yet.
Synopsis: James (Benedict Cumberbatch), a dying young man, and his friends travel to the coast of Barafundle Bay in western Wales. [More]
Directed By: Hattie Dalton

#32
#32
Critics Consensus: Though it features some extravagant and entertaining moments, The Other Boleyn Girl feels more like a soap opera than historical drama.
Synopsis: King Henry VIII (Eric Bana) lacks an heir. Seeing this as an opportunity for personal gain, the Duke of Norfolk [More]
Directed By: Justin Chadwick

#33

The Fifth Estate (2013)
Tomatometer icon 35%

#33
Critics Consensus: Heavy on detail and melodrama but missing the spark from its remarkable real-life inspiration, The Fifth Estate mostly serves as a middling showcase for Benedict Cumberbatch's remarkable talent.
Synopsis: WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange (Benedict Cumberbatch) and a colleague, Daniel Domscheit-Berg (Daniel Brühl), join forces to become watchdogs over actions [More]
Directed By: Bill Condon

(Photo by Sideshow, Janus Films; BBC1 / Courtesy Everett Collection; Neal Preston / ©ABC / Courtesy Everett Collection)

Know Your Critic” is a column in which we interview Tomatometer-approved critics about their screening and reviewing habits, pet peeves, and personal favorites.

Carolyn Hinds’ expertise runs the gamut from global cinema to period pieces to Korean television dramas. Her reviews, interviews, and podcasts promote visibility and conversation around major hits, critical darlings, and small releases that may otherwise fly under the radar. Her highly-engaged Twitter conversations, which often involve her live-tweeting screenings at home, are not to be missed.

In addition to writing movie and television reviews for several print and online outlets, Hinds also hosts three podcasts in the ButWhyTho? Network: “My podcasts are three completely different spectrums of entertainment: Here’s What Happened is the more nerdy stuff, then Carolyn Talks is where I get into these really in-depth discussions with film creatives, and for Beyond Romance, it’s just getting to geek out over Asian dramas and films,” Hinds shared in an interview with Rotten Tomatoes. “That’s something I never imagined that would’ve happened when I started.”

“I’m just so proud of being able to make it, push through, especially through all the illnesses and stuff that I’ve had to contend with and having multiple sclerosis, too – that’s such a challenge, and being able to just get up and do what I want to do and do something that I still very much love doing,” Hinds said. “I’m proud of me for that.”

Carolyn Hinds is a freelance film critic, journalist, and podcaster based in Toronto. Her reviews can be found at Mediaversity Reviews, Observer, and ButWhyTho?, among others. She is a member of the African American Film Critics Association. Find Carolyn on Twitter: @CarrieCnh12.


Do you have a favorite experience or memory from watching something in a theater?

I would have to say Black Panther, because I saw Black Panther in the cinema five times. The first time I saw it, I cried my eyes out for the last 10 minutes when he talked about the ancestors – I was bawling my eyes out. I was crying. … There was an event where everyone dressed up in traditional African wear or clothing in homage to the characters.

Then my sister and I met with our dad for a screening, and that was fun. That was, I think, the first time we ever went to the cinema with our dad as adults – every other time we went with our dad was as kids.

What was his reaction to the movie?

He loved it. My dad is a history buff and retired biochemist, but he’s also a published writer, too.

We had a lot of fun talking about the scenes in the film and the history and talking about Black excellence and education, that kind of stuff. But it was also one of the first times I really got to talk with my dad from the perspective of a film critic, too. That was fun.

We argued, but it was so fun.

When you are watching something at home, do you have a ritual that you go through, like “lights down, popcorn in my lap, ready to go?”

I have my popcorn, I have my drink, and I make sure I’m comfortable. I have my phone plugged in, because I live-tweet a lot of stuff – that’s kind of become a ritual for me, too.


(Photo by Sideshow / Janus Films)

Oscar nominations were announced recently! Do you have a film or performer or writer or director that you’re rooting for?

I’m definitely rooting for Denzel Washington, Aunjanue Ellis, and Kodi Smit-McPhee. Benedict Cumberbatch is really good in The Power of the Dog, but I still believe he should have been nominated for his performance in The Electrical Life of Louis Wain. He gave a much more nuanced and powerful performance in that because it’s a more unique role.

Is there anyone that you think should have been nominated?

Hidetoshi Nishijima. He should have been nominated for his performance as Yusuke in Drive My Car. The reason I’m going to go with that is not only because he gives a fantastic performance and I’m familiar with him from watching other Japanese drama and films, but it boggles my mind that films can be nominated for Best Picture, Best International Feature Film, and the cast does not get nominated. That makes no sense.


What, for you, makes a good movie?

For me, a good movie is one that, whether or not it’s about people that I relate to – for instance, if it’s about Black people or if it’s about Asian people, white people, Southeast Asian – even if I don’t have personal connections to, the story and the acting is so well-crafted that I can understand these characters and I feel invested in the story.

An example would be The Power of the Dog. I think The Power of the Dog is such an expertly crafted film, and it has everything to do with the cinematography and the acting and the costume design. The way [Jane Campion] weaves the story, like the reveal of what Kodi’s character did – it was like, my god, the thread, the needles, the way she just dropped all of these little clues in the film.

Drive My Car is also one of my other favorite films. Because of the things that I went through personally, when I watch that film, I love how it discusses grief and how grief can be personal, but then it can be extrapolated to the people that we live around. Each person plays a part in the main character’s grief, only he doesn’t know. They’re narrators for his own idea of where he came from. It’s about how grief and personal accountability is a journey.

What were you watching the first time you saw yourself on screen, if you have seen yourself, and what did you relate to about that character or story?

I know a lot of people would talk about things they saw as kids. I grew up in Barbados, watching North American productions with Black kids, and I watched Caribbean productions with kids on shows and stuff, but, for me, it’s about “as an adult.”

Honestly, I’m going to mention it because I wrote a piece about it and it was probably the most vulnerable I’ve been in a piece for a while. Coming Home Again.

I saw that film at TIFF, and I was bawling my eyes out. It was 2019 and I had just recovered from a surgery. I had a lytic tumor removed from the skull of my head. I had a cranioplasty, which means I had part of my skull removed and replaced with a titanium plate.

That film, I had no idea what the film was about. I hadn’t read the story it was based on before. When it talked about cancer and finding connection to your family through food and culture, it touched me personally – not only because I had been terrified that a tumor that they found would’ve been cancerous, but it also made me think of my grandmother, who died of liver cancer. I was bawling my eyes out.

Every time I think about it – if you hear it in me – I get emotional every time I think about that film.

There’s a thread between Coming Home Again and Drive My Car, maybe a collective experience of grief?

Exactly… Drive My Car was the very first film I saw for 2022. I woke up January the first and I put on my screener for Drive My Car. Coming Home Again and Drive My Car, both films have a lot of meaning for me personally, with regards to my health, and they both discuss journey and grief and understanding where we come from and how grief shapes us as individuals and the people around us. I love both of those films so much for that.


(Photo by BBC1 / Courtesy Everett Collection)

What’s your favorite classic film?

It’s not a film, but it’s a series: I believe the Pride and Prejudice adaptation with Colin Firth is the best. I will argue to the ends of the earth about that. Matthew MacFayden, I love you, but Colin Firth was really Mr. Darcy for me.

My jaw is on the floor. I love this answer.

I will defend that to the end. I love Matthew MacFayden, but sorry, Colin Firth was hotter.

What do you think is the biggest misconception that people have about critics?

That we’re wealthy. [Laughs] Honestly! I’m just like, “People, don’t let this title fool you.” Unless you got a staff job, you’re struggling.

One of the other misconceptions is that so many people think that what white male critics have to say about films is what everyone has to say about films, but that’s extremely far from the truth. I think that it’s because white male credits get so much of the visibility in film criticism, even now. People think, “Oh, if this is what these particular set of critics are saying, that means this is what everyone is saying.”

That dominates and drives the path of the discussions for films from the beginning, and it starts at the festivals. You can see how the conversations start forming before 90% of the critic base even has a chance to see these films.

What motivates you as a critic?

I think it’s important that people get to see the different perspectives and opinions, and also experiences, that create the need for some criticism. I’m never expecting anyone and everyone to agree with me, with my opinions, in a review and interview, or even in my live tweet.

I just think it’s important that people realize, like, “OK, this person has a perspective that might be worth interrogating and considering.” To me, that’s the most important thing about film criticism. Just being honest and giving a perspective that other people may not have considered. As I said, you don’t have to agree with me, but just consider, “OK, you know what? I see your point. I see your perspective.”

Then, in talking to a lot of film creatives, I love the fact that I think so differently because a lot of directors and writers and the actors, they will tell me, “Oh, you’re the first person to pick up on this.”

My mom used to tell me when I was young, she’s like, “Carolyn, you know people say, ‘think outside box.’” She’s like, “For you, there is no box.” I just think about things so completely different to other people. I just love being able to interpret that with regards to film criticism. Just get it all out.


Do you have any advice for rising critics who are still finding their voice?

Write from the perspective that is your own natural voice, because that’s something that I had to learn when I started.

Literally, the way I write is the way I speak. That’s my best advice: Write in the way that comes naturally to you – whichever type of voice you have, use that. Because we all can’t write the same and we all don’t think the same, so criticisms shouldn’t all be the same. Right?

Who are three people that everyone should follow on Twitter?

Rebecca Theodore-Vachon (@FilmFatale_NYC). I love Rebecca’s thoughts and the way she thinks.

I would always encourage people to follow actors. There’s a guy that I started interacting with last year, Edward Hong (@CinnabonMonster). He’s a voice actor and he talks about the challenges of voice acting in Hollywood in particular, especially as a person of color, because he’s Asian.

Another person that I would recommend people follow is Jess Vũ (@jesthevu). She works with CAPE (Coalition of Asian Pacifics in Entertainment). They work with representation for Asians and Asian spaces and they help with promoting films by Asian creatives – not just the big films, but the small projects by Asian creatives and from all over Asia.

Is there someone in your life who is not a critic whose opinion you admire and you seek out on movies?

My twin sister, Charlene. When it comes to talking about films and TV shows, we just sit down and we talk about everything and she understands me – then we also argue. When you’re a twin, your twin is the one person that really gets you and also the one person that will really get on your nerves.


Neal Preston / ©ABC / Courtesy Everett Collection

(Photo by Neal Preston / ©ABC / Courtesy Everett Collection)

Do you have a favorite film from your childhood?

Can I make it a tie? The Lion King and Mulan.

I know all the songs. The nostalgia. That’s when Disney was really Disney, and the nostalgia of those films: The Lion King, Mulan, Hercules, The Little Mermaid – she’s problematic, but the songs are all bangers. Come on, Ariel, you don’t know this man! You gave your fin for a guy you just saw on a ship? Come on, girl.

Then I would also have to go with – I call it, we call it – “the Brandy Cinderella.” That is the quintessential Cinderella story!  That is my Cinderella story. Brandy [Norwood] and Paolo Montalban. Come on now, that era of film, that era in the nineties!

I mean, speaking of hot actors… Brandy and Paolo…

Can’t beat that! Come on. When you talk about truly diverse casting, that film right there is the example. If you want to talk about “color-blind casting,” that film is the example and the level that we all should be aspiring to. Not to mention the fantastic costume designs, because I wanted those gowns! I did.

What do you consider “required viewing?” Do you believe in required viewing?

No, not really. I don’t believe in required watching, but what I do is, if people ask me for recommendations, I like to give recommendations in different genres. I believe in watching films from around the world and from different eras.

I would say Cinderella – Brandy’s Cinderella – is, yes, you should watch that. If I had to, put a gun to my head, pull my hand behind my back, I’d be like, okay, if I must. Because it’s perfect.


Carolyn Hinds is a freelance film critic, journalist, and podcaster based in Toronto. Her reviews can be found at Mediaversity Reviews, Observer, and ButWhyTho?, among others. She is a member of the African American Film Critics Association. Find Carolyn on Twitter: @CarrieCnh12.

Image collage of Ghostbusters: Afterlife, Spider-Man: No Way Home, King Richard, Encanto, and Nightmare Alley

(Photo by Columbia Pictures, Sony Pictures entertainment, Warner Bros. Pictures, Walt Disney Studios, Searchlight Pictures)

We finally got some early signs of normalcy at the box office as Fall approached, with big titles like Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten RingsVenom: Let There Be CarnageNo Time to Die, and Halloween Kills racking up solid returns, but the Holiday Movie Season holds so much more to look forward to. We have exciting new films from Guillermo del Toro (Nightmare Alley), Steven Spielberg (West Side Story), and Joel Coen (The Tragedy of Macbeth); big blockbuster action in EternalsSpider-Man: No Way Home, and The King’s Man; throwback thrills in Ghostbusters: Afterlife and The Matrix Resurrections; remarkable biopics like King RichardBeing the Ricardos, and American Underdog; and, of course, plenty for the kids to enjoy in EncantoClifford the Big Red Dog, and Sing 2. So bundle up for the weather and start planning your holiday viewing now!



Eternals (2021)
47%
Chloé Zhao follows up her Best Picture-winning Nomadland with an entry in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, centering on the titular race of superpowered beings who come out of hiding to defend Earth against an ancient enemy.
Directed By: Chloé Zhao

Spencer (2021)
83%
Pablo Larrain (Jackie) returns to biographical drama with this look at life of Princess Diana during a holiday celebration with the royal family, with Kristen Stewart in the lead role.
Directed By: Pablo Larraín

Finch (2021)
74%
finchfinch
Directed By: Miguel Sapochnik


This live-action adaptation of the popular children’s book series finally arrives in theaters, charting the friendship between a young girl named Emily and her abnormally large red dog. Also streaming on Paramount+.
Directed By: Walt Becker

Passing (2021)
91%
passingpassing
Directed By: Rebecca Hall

Belfast (2021)
86%
Writer-director Kenneth Branagh delivers a semi-autobiographical coming-of-age film about the life of a boy from a working-class family in Northern Ireland.
Directed By: Kenneth Branagh

Red Notice (2021)
37%
The power trio of Dwayne Johnson, Ryan Reynolds, and Gal Gadot star in this globe-trotting action caper about an FBI agent who is forced to team up with one art thief to catch another. Also available to stream on Netflix on 11/12.

More than 35 years after his father struck supernatural comedy gold with Ghostbusters, Jason Reitman follows up with a sequel that follows up with new characters with ties to the past who face off against a familiar threat.
Directed By: Jason Reitman

C'mon C'mon (2021)
94%
Joaquin Phoenix stars in writer-director Mike Mills’ (Beginners) drama about a radio journalist who bonds with his nephew when they are forced to take an unexpected cross-country road trip together.
Directed By: Mike Mills

King Richard (2021)
90%
Will Smith takes center court in this biographical drama of Richard Williams, the father and coach of tennis superstars Venus and Serena Williams. Also streaming on HBO Max.
Directed By: Reinaldo Marcus Green

The Resident Evil franchise gets a fresh start with an origin story that reintroduces fans to the small town where the secret experiments of a mysterious corporation lead to terrifying consequences for an unlucky few.
Directed By: Johannes Roberts

Encanto (2021)
92%
Disney’s latest animated adventure takes viewers to Colombia, where a magically gifted family comes under threat and the lone daughter without any powers may be their only hope for salvation.
Directed By: Jared Bush, Byron Howard

Based on the novel of the same name, this period Western from Jane Campion follows two Montana brothers who turn against each other when a widow and her son enter their lives. Also streaming on Netflix on 12/1.
Directed By: Jane Campion

Silent Night (2021)
67%
Keira Knightley and Matthew Goode headline an ensemble cast in this dramatic comedy about a group of friends who gather to celebrate Christmas despite the fact that mankind faces an imminent apocalypse.
Directed By: Camille Griffin

Red Rocket (2021)
90%
Sean Baker’s latest centers on a down-on-his-luck porn star who returns his Texas hometown in search of redemption and finds it more difficult to earn than he anticipated.
Directed By: Sean Baker

Benedetta (2021)
84%
Provocative writer-director Paul Verhoeven chooses real life for his latest film, a biographical drama about 17th century nun Benedetta Carlini, who joined a convent and began a lesbian affair with another nun.
Directed By: Paul Verhoeven

Wolf (2021)
45%
George MacKay and Lily-Rose Depp star in this drama about a man who believes he is a wolf who is sent to a clinic for treatment and meets another patient who forces him to reconsider his life.
Directed By: Nathalie Biancheri


Encounter (2021)
54%
This sci-fi thriller stars Riz Ahmed as a former Marine who kidnaps his two children from their mother and takes them on the run to protect them from an alien parasite plaguing the world. Also streaming on Amazon Prime on 12/10.
Directed By: Michael Pearce

Being the Ricardos (2021)
68%
Nicole Kidman and Javier Bardem play Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz in Aaron Sorkin’s glimpse behind the scenes of one week in the personal and professional lives of the celebrity couple. Also streaming on Amazon Prime on 12/21.
Directed By: Aaron Sorkin

West Side Story (2021)
91%
Steven Spielberg directs this new adaptation of the popular Broadway musical about a pair of teenagers from rival gangs in 1950s New York City who fall in love with each other.
Directed By: Steven Spielberg

The Unforgivable (2021)
38%
Based on a 2009 British miniseries, this drama stars Sandra Bullock as an ex-con who reenters society and attempts to put her life back together, even as she is shunned at every turn. Also streaming on Netflix on 12/10.
Directed By: Nora Fingscheidt

Nightmare Alley (2021)
80%
Bradley Cooper and Cate Blanchett lead an all-star cast in Guillermo del Toro’s adaptation of the eponymous novel about a carnival con man who meets and falls for a psychiatrist even more adept at manipulation than he is.
Directed By: Guillermo del Toro

In Tom Holland’s third solo film as the MCU’s Spider-Man, an outed Peter Parker turns to Doctor Strange (Benedict Cumberbatch) for help rectifying the situation, only for everything to go sideways in spectacular fashion.
Directed By: Jon Watts

Sing 2 (2021)
72%
In this follow-up to the 2016 animated musical, Buster Moon (Matthew McConaughey) and his gang of performers must find a way to convince a world-famous rocker (Bono) to join them in order to play a glamorous new venue.

Keanu Reeves returns in Lana Wachowski’s new installment in the Matrix franchise, which picks up 20 years after Revolutions and finds Neo rediscovering his identity. Also streaming on HBO Max.
Directed By: Lana Wachowski

The King's Man (2021)
41%
Matthew Vaughn’s prequel to the Kingsman franchise set decades in the past recounts the origins of the titular “Secret Service,” as one man and his apprentice attempt to thwart a coalition of evil tyrants.
Directed By: Matthew Vaughn

Parallel Mothers (2021)
96%
Pedro Almodóvar’s latest collaboration with Penélope Cruz is a drama about two pregnant women — one middle-aged and one adolescent — who meet and feel very differently about giving birth but form a strong bond with each other.
Directed By: Pedro Almodóvar

Don't Look Up (2021)
56%
Leonard DiCaprio and Jennifer Lawrence headline Adam McKay’s star-studded satire about two astronomers who attempt to warn mankind about Earth’s impending collision with a comet. Also streaming on Netflix on 12/24.
Directed By: Adam McKay

In his first film working alone, Joel Coen writes and directs this adaptation of the Shakespearean classic, with Denzel Washington in the lead and Frances McDormand as Lady Macbeth. Also streaming on Apple TV+ on 1/14/2022.
Directed By: Joel Coen

American Underdog (2021)
75%
Zachary Levi stars in this biographical sports drama about remarkable life and career of Hall of Fame NFL quarterback Kurt Warner.
Directed By: Andrew Erwin, Jon Erwin

Based on a memoir by Dana Canedy, this drama directed by Denzel Washington stars Michael B. Jordan as Canedy’s husband Monroe King, a Sergeant in the US Army who died in the Iraq War but left behind a journal for their son.
Directed By: Denzel Washington

The Lost Daughter (2021)
94%
Maggie Gyllenhaal makes her feature directorial debut with this novel adaptation about a woman (Olivia Colman) on vacation who becomes unhealthily obsessed with another woman and her young daughter. Also streaming on Netflix.
Directed By: Maggie Gyllenhaal

On an Apple device? Follow Rotten Tomatoes on Apple News.

November is going to be a massive month for Amazon Prime Video and its sister streaming service IMDbTV, with 11 original series and movies debuting throughout the month. That includes the Benedict Cumberbatch and Claire Foy-starring film The Electric Life of Louis Wain; Pete Buttigieg documentary Mayor Pete; plus the return of Judge Judy Sheindlin in Judy Justice; docuseries Tampa Baes and Always Jane; and the much-anticipated debut of sci-fi epic The Wheel of Time.

Keep reading to find out what else is new on Amazon Prime Video in November, with some highlights noted at the top.



Description: The Electrical Life of Louis Wain is the extraordinary true story of eccentric British artist Louis Wain (Benedict Cumberbatch), whose playful, sometimes even psychedelic pictures helped to transform the public’s perception of cats forever. Moving from the late 1800s through to the 1930s, we follow the incredible adventures of this inspiring, unsung hero, as he seeks to unlock the “electrical” mysteries of the world and, in so doing, to better understand his own life and the profound love he shared with his wife Emily Richardson (Claire Foy).

Premiere Date: November 5, 2021



Mayor Pete (2021)

71%

Description:  Mayor Pete brings viewers inside Pete’s campaign to be the youngest U.S. President, providing an unprecedented intimacy with the candidate, his husband Chasten, and their ambitious team. From the earliest days of the campaign, to his unlikely, triumphant victory in Iowa and beyond. This film reveals what really goes on inside a campaign for the highest office in the land -and the myriad ways it changes the lives of those at its center. Recently appointed to U.S. Secretary of Transportation, Buttigieg serves as the first openly LGBTQ Cabinet member in U.S. history.

Premiere Date: November 12, 2021



Description: Set in a sprawling, epic world where magic exists and only certain women are allowed to access it, The Wheel of Time follows Moiraine (Rosamund Pike), a member of the incredibly powerful all-female organization called the Aes Sedai, as she arrives in the small town of Two Rivers. There, she embarks on a dangerous, world-spanning journey with five young men and women, one of whom is prophesied to be the Dragon Reborn, who will either save or destroy humanity.

Premiere Date: November 19, 2021



Hanna

80%

Description: The third season of Hanna continues the journey of an extraordinary young woman (Esmé Creed-Miles), who was created by the sinister organization Utrax and trained to be an assassin. Hanna is now secretly trying to destroy Utrax from the inside with the help of her previous nemesis, former CIA agent Marissa Wiegler (Mireille Enos). The story crisscrosses Europe and builds to a dramatic climax when Hanna and Marissa discover the true, horrifying scope of the operation and who was ultimately behind it all.

Premiere Date: November 24, 2021


Related: The Best Shows on Amazon Prime Video


$ NEWLY AVAILABLE TO RENT/BUY ON AMAZON VIDEO
* AMAZON ORIGINALS

Available 11/1

Movies





























































































Casper and Wendy’s Ghostly Adventures (2002) (IMDbTV)
Feliz Navidad (2006) (IMDbTV)
The Happy Elf (2005) (IMDbTV)

Series

1 Channels sampling: the first season of these subscription-channel series are available to Prime members this month.






Baking with Julia: Season 1 (PBS Living)1
Courage the Cowardly Dog: Season 1 (Boomerang)1
Irresponsable: Season 1 (Topic)1
Ladies of the Law: Season 1 (ALLBLK)1
Magellan: Season 1 (MHz Choice)1
Mega Disasters: Season 1 (HISTORY Vault)1
Noggin Knows: Season 1 (Noggin)1
The Lucy Show: Season 1 (Best TV Ever)1
The Restaurant: Season 1 (Sundance Now)1
The Roy Rogers Show: Season 1 (Best TV Ever)1
Under Suspicion: Season 1 (PBS Masterpiece)1
Wheeler Dealers: Season 1 (MotorTrend)1


Available 11/5






Available 11/11


Available 11/12





Available 11/14


Available 11/16


Available 11/18


Available 11/19



Available 11/20


Available 11/24

Do, Re & Mi Holiday Special: Merry Nestivus – Amazon Original Special (2021)*


Available 11/26

Anni da cane (Dog Years) – Amazon Original Movie (2021)*


Available 11/29

Burning – Amazon Original Movie (2021)*


Thumbnail: Amazon Prime Video


On an Apple device? Follow Rotten Tomatoes on Apple News.

The Guilty

(Photo by © Netflix)

The Toronto International Film Festival 2021 Movie Scorecard

2021’s awards and festival season continues with the Toronto International Film Festival celebrating its 46th year with opening musical selection Dear Evan Hansen and closer One Second, by Zhang Yimou. Other directors debuting new works include Mélanie Laurent (The Mad Woman’s Ball), Antoine Fuqua (The Guilty), Phillip Noyce (Lakewood), and Michael Showalter (The Eyes of Tammy Faye).

Below, we’re listing every movie playing at TIFF that has received enough reviews for a Tomatometer score, including movies playing at the festival but which debuted earlier in the year, like Dune, The Power of the Dog, Spencer, and Last Night in Soho. We’ll be adding new movies up to the fest’s conclusion on September 18th, so check back often as we update the Toronto Film Festival 20201 Movie Scorecard! Alex Vo

#79

Flee (2021)
Tomatometer icon 98%

#79
Critics Consensus: Depicting the refugee experience through vivid animation, Flee pushes the boundaries of documentary filmmaking to present a moving memoir of self-discovery.
Synopsis: FLEE tells the story of Amin Nawabi as he grapples with a painful secret he has kept hidden for 20 [More]
Directed By: Jonas Poher Rasmussen

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#75

The Lost Daughter (2021)
Tomatometer icon 94%

#75
Critics Consensus: A strikingly assured debut for writer-director Maggie Gyllenhaal, The Lost Daughter unites a brilliant cast in service of a daringly ambitious story.
Synopsis: Alone on a seaside vacation, Leda becomes consumed with a young mother and daughter as she watches them on the [More]
Directed By: Maggie Gyllenhaal

#74

The Rescue (2021)
Tomatometer icon 96%

#74
Critics Consensus: No consensus yet.
Synopsis: The Rescue chronicles the enthralling, against-all-odds story that transfixed the world in 2018: the daring rescue of twelve boys and [More]

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#72
#72
Critics Consensus: Beneath its deceptively placid surface, The Girl and the Spider grapples with deeply meaningful questions of personal identity in the face of fundamental change.
Synopsis: As her roommate Lisa prepares to move out of their apartment, Mara contemplates the end of an era. Furniture is [More]

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#70

Ali & Ava (2021)
Tomatometer icon 94%

#70
Critics Consensus: Ali & Ava's tender, naturalistic love story adds another powerful chapter to writer-director Clio Barnard's filmography.
Synopsis: Both lonely for different reasons, ALI and AVA meet through their shared affection for SOFIA (6), the child of ALI's [More]
Directed By: Clio Barnard

#69
#69
Critics Consensus: Its premise may resonate most with hardcore film fans, but Official Competition's tight focus and sharp humor have a universal appeal.
Synopsis: Penélope Cruz and Antonio Banderas star as two egomaniacs commissioned by a millionaire to make a movie together in this [More]

#68

Hold Your Fire (2021)
Tomatometer icon 95%

#68
Critics Consensus: A documentary with the heart of a thriller, Hold Your Fire edifies just as adroitly as it enrages.
Synopsis: In 1973, four young African-American men stealing guns for self-defense in Brooklyn were cornered by the NYPD. A violent gun [More]
Directed By: Stefan Forbes

#67

Aloners (2021)
Tomatometer icon 98%

#67
Critics Consensus: A meditation on isolation, Aloners poignantly explores grief, or the avoidance of it, and the technological walls we build around us.
Synopsis: Jina (Gong Seung-yeon) is the top employee at a call center, but despite talking to customers all day, she has [More]
Directed By: Hong Sung-eun

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#65
Critics Consensus: Three Minutes - A Lengthening movingly captures a moment in time while honoring lives soon to be cut short by unimaginable horror.
Synopsis: Three Minutes - A Lengthening presents a home movie shot by David Kurtz in 1938 in a Jewish town in [More]
Directed By: Bianca Stigter

#64

Comala (2021)
Tomatometer icon 85%

#64
Critics Consensus: No consensus yet.
Synopsis: A man's journey to learn the story of his estranged father, a failed hitman killed several years ago. [More]
Starring: Gian Cassini
Directed By: Gian Cassini

#63

Neptune Frost (2021)
Tomatometer icon 96%

#63
Critics Consensus: Bursting with ideas and ambition, Neptune Frost is difficult to describe -- and just as hard to resist.
Synopsis: In an otherworldly e-waste camp made of recycled computer parts, a subversive hacking collective attempts a takeover of the authoritarian [More]

#62
#62
Critics Consensus: Movingly depicting persistence in the face of health woes and economic hardship, The Gravedigger's Wife is a tender tribute to the power of family.
Synopsis: Guled and Nasra are a loving couple, living on the outskirts of Djibouti city with their teenage son Mahad. However [More]
Directed By: Khadar Ahmed

#61

Murina (2021)
Tomatometer icon 91%

#61
Critics Consensus: A coming-of-age story with a uniquely sunny noir spin, Murina deftly explores dark themes against a deceptively idyllic setting.
Synopsis: Tensions rise between restless teenager Julija and her oppressive father Ante when an old family friend arrives at their Croatian [More]

#60

INU-OH (2021)
Tomatometer icon 91%

#60
Critics Consensus: Masaaki Yuasa fans will come to Inu-Oh expecting a visual feast -- and this musical animated extravaganza won't leave them disappointed.
Synopsis: From visionary director Masaaki Yuasa, hailed by IndieWire as "one of the most creatively unbridled minds in all of modern [More]
Directed By: Masaaki Yuasa

#59

Petite Maman (2021)
Tomatometer icon 97%

#59
Critics Consensus: Small in narrative scope but deeply impactful, Petite Maman is a delicate, powerfully acted meditation on grief.
Synopsis: Céline Sciamma continues to prove herself as one of the most accomplished and unpredictable contemporary French filmmakers with her follow [More]
Directed By: Céline Sciamma

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#57

I'm Your Man (2021)
Tomatometer icon 95%

#57
Critics Consensus: With a thought-provoking concept brought to humorous life by a pair of well-matched leads, I'm Your Man is an AI rom-com whose intelligence is anything but artificial.
Synopsis: In order to obtain funds for her research, Alma (Maren Eggert) is persuaded to participate in an extraordinary study. For [More]
Directed By: Maria Schrader

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#55

Titane (2021)
Tomatometer icon 90%

#55
Critics Consensus: Thrillingly provocative and original, Titane reaffirms writer-director Julia Ducournau's delightfully disturbing vision.
Synopsis: Titane: A metal highly resistant to heat and corrosion, with high tensile strength alloys, often used in medical prostheses due [More]
Directed By: Julia Ducournau

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#53
#53
Critics Consensus: Brought to life by a stellar ensemble led by Benedict Cumberbatch, The Power of the Dog reaffirms writer-director Jane Campion as one of her generation's finest filmmakers.
Synopsis: Severe, pale-eyed, handsome, Phil Burbank is brutally beguiling. All of Phil's romance, power and fragility is trapped in the past [More]
Directed By: Jane Campion

#52

Jockey (2021)
Tomatometer icon 93%

#52
Critics Consensus: Jockey rests almost entirely on Clifton Collins Jr. in the title role -- and he proves more than up to the task with a brilliant performance that gives this poignant drama its soul.
Synopsis: An aging jockey (Clifton Collins Jr.), hopes to win one last title for his longtime trainer (Molly Parker), who has [More]
Directed By: Clint Bentley

#51

The Survivor (2021)
Tomatometer icon 86%

#51
Critics Consensus: Ben Foster's gripping work in the central role further elevates The Survivor's affectingly character-driven approach to its weighty themes.
Synopsis: After being sent to Auschwitz, Haft is forced to participate in a gladiatorial boxing spectacle along with his fellow prisoners. [More]
Directed By: Barry Levinson

#50

The Wheel (2021)
Tomatometer icon 90%

#50
Critics Consensus: Beautifully filmed and brought to life by a quartet of fine performances, The Wheel spins a quietly moving story about love and relationships.
Synopsis: Albee and Walker, a young couple on the brink of divorce, rent a mountain getaway to save their fledgling marriage. [More]
Directed By: Steve Pink

#49

Night Raiders (2021)
Tomatometer icon 83%

#49
Critics Consensus: Night Raiders strikes grim parallels between its dystopian setting and the present, offering a disturbing reminder that the horrors of the past are often very much still with us.
Synopsis: The year is 2043. A military occupation controls disenfranchised cities in post-war North America. Children are property of the State. [More]
Directed By: Danis Goulet

#48

Spencer (2021)
Tomatometer icon 83%

#48
Critics Consensus: Spencer can frustrate with its idiosyncratic depiction of its subject's life, but Kristen Stewart's finely modulated performance anchors the film's flights of fancy.
Synopsis: The marriage of Princess Diana and Prince Charles has long since grown cold. Though rumors of affairs and a divorce [More]
Directed By: Pablo Larraín

#47

The Box (2021)
Tomatometer icon 89%

#47
Critics Consensus: A rewardingly unsettling watch, The Box handles its sensitive themes with intelligence and empathy.
Synopsis: Teenager Hatzín travels from Mexico City to collect the remains of his father, found in a communal grave in Northern [More]
Directed By: Lorenzo Vigas

#46

Medusa (2021)
Tomatometer icon 84%

#46
Critics Consensus: A stylish and well-acted tonal blend, Medusa confronts religious hypocrisy and sexism with invigorating anger.
Synopsis: Mari and her friends broadcast their spiritual devotion through pastel pinks and catchy evangelical songs about purity and perfection, but [More]

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#43

Dune (2021)
Tomatometer icon 83%

#43
Critics Consensus: Dune occasionally struggles with its unwieldy source material, but those issues are largely overshadowed by the scope and ambition of this visually thrilling adaptation.
Synopsis: Paul Atreides, a brilliant and gifted young man born into a great destiny beyond his understanding, must travel to a [More]
Directed By: Denis Villeneuve

#42

Sundown (2021)
Tomatometer icon 78%

#42
Critics Consensus: Sundown's emotionally muted wavelength may be difficult for some viewers to tune into, but it's enlivened by Tim Roth's strong central performance.
Synopsis: Neil and Alice Bennett (Tim Roth, Charlotte Gainsbourg) are the core of a wealthy family on vacation in Mexico with [More]
Directed By: Michel Franco

#41

Mothering Sunday (2021)
Tomatometer icon 77%

#41
Critics Consensus: Mothering Sunday works at a frustratingly chilly remove, but involving performances and solid overall craft mean it's rarely less than engaging.
Synopsis: On a warm spring day in 1924, house maid and foundling Jane Fairchild (Odessa Young) finds herself alone on Mother's [More]
Directed By: Eva Husson

#40

Belfast (2021)
Tomatometer icon 86%

#40
Critics Consensus: A deeply personal project for writer-director Kenneth Branagh, Belfast transcends its narrative deficits with powerful performances and directorial craft.
Synopsis: BELFAST is a movie straight from Branagh's own experience. A nine-year-old boy must chart a path towards adulthood through a [More]
Directed By: Kenneth Branagh

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#38

Dug Dug (2021)
Tomatometer icon 89%

#38
Critics Consensus: No consensus yet.
Directed By: Ritwik Pareek

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#36
Critics Consensus: Sparked by a pair of well-matched leads, The Electrical Life of Louis Wain honors its real-life subject by adding a dash of whimsy to the standard biopic formula.
Synopsis: The extraordinary true story of eccentric British artist Louis Wain (Benedict Cumberbatch), whose playful, sometimes even psychedelic pictures helped to [More]
Directed By: Will Sharpe

#35

True Things (2021)
Tomatometer icon 79%

#35
Critics Consensus: Elevated by its stars' magnetic chemistry, True Things mines complex, character-driven drama from an ill-advised romance.
Synopsis: Bored by the daily tedium of her office job, Kate (Ruth Wilson) is sleepwalking through life when a chance sexual [More]
Directed By: Harry Wootliff

#34

Compartment No. 6 (2021)
Tomatometer icon 93%

#34
Critics Consensus: Compartment No. 6 can get a little stuffy within its narrative confines, but this well-acted, subtly told love story rewards the viewer's patience.
Synopsis: A young Finnish woman escapes an enigmatic love affair in Moscow by boarding a train to the arctic port of [More]
Directed By: Juho Kuosmanen

#33

Violet (2021)
Tomatometer icon 83%

#33
Critics Consensus: Uneven yet admirably ambitious, Violet takes a thoughtful look at the occasionally profound difference between a person's private thoughts and public face.
Synopsis: What would you do if you weren't afraid? After realizing she's spent years allowing fear to drive every decision she [More]
Directed By: Justine Bateman

#32

Bergman Island (2021)
Tomatometer icon 84%

#32
Critics Consensus: Minor but charming, the well-acted Bergman Island uses the titular filmmaker's legacy as the launchpad for a dreamlike rumination on romance and creativity.
Synopsis: BERGMAN ISLAND follows a couple of American filmmakers, Chris (Vicky Krieps) and Tony (Tim Roth), who retreat to the mythical [More]
Directed By: Mia Hansen-Løve

#31
#31
Critics Consensus: Its themes are occasionally undercut by its storytelling, but outstanding performances give The Mad Women's Ball a poignant, disturbing power.
Synopsis: A committed woman and a tormented nurse prepare to attend a famous ball at a neurological clinic in the 19th [More]
Directed By: Mélanie Laurent

#30
#30
Critics Consensus: The Eyes of Tammy Faye might have focused more sharply on its subject's story, but Jessica Chastain's starring performance makes it hard to look away.
Synopsis: THE EYES OF TAMMY FAYE is an intimate look at the extraordinary rise, fall and redemption of televangelist Tammy Faye [More]
Directed By: Michael Showalter

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#28

Last Night in Soho (2021)
Tomatometer icon 75%

#28
Critics Consensus: Although it struggles to maintain its thrilling early momentum, Last Night in Soho shows flashes of Edgar Wright at his most stylish and ambitious.
Synopsis: In acclaimed director Edgar Wright's psychological thriller, Eloise, an aspiring fashion designer, is mysteriously able to enter the 1960s where [More]
Directed By: Edgar Wright

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#26

Where Is Anne Frank (2021)
Tomatometer icon 76%

#26
Critics Consensus: Where Is Anne Frank approaches a well-known story from a fresh angle while powerfully placing it in the context of the horrific tragedy that surrounds it.
Synopsis: Kitty, the imaginary girl to whom Anne Frank wrote her famous diary, comes to life in the Anne Frank House [More]
Directed By: Ari Folman

#25

The Guilty (2021)
Tomatometer icon 73%

#25
Critics Consensus: The Guilty is another Americanized remake overshadowed by the original, but its premise is still sturdy enough to support a tense, well-acted thriller.
Synopsis: The film takes place over the course of a single morning in a 911 dispatch call center. Call operator Joe [More]
Directed By: Antoine Fuqua

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#23

France (2021)
Tomatometer icon 67%

#23
Critics Consensus: France might have benefited from a more passionate approach to its themes, but Léa Seydoux leads an amusing send-up of celebrity culture.
Synopsis: In FRANCE, a satirical drama set in contemporary Paris, Léa Seydoux stars as France de Meurs, a seemingly unflappable superstar [More]
Directed By: Bruno Dumont

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#20

DASHCAM (2021)
Tomatometer icon 47%

#20
Critics Consensus: DASHCAM is visually and thematically provocative, although the film's grating protagonist undercuts its effectiveness.
Synopsis: At the start of the pandemic, an indulgent and self-deluded livestreaming improv musician abandons L.A. for London, steals her ex-band [More]
Directed By: Rob Savage

#19

Dear Evan Hansen (2021)
Tomatometer icon 28%

#19
Critics Consensus: Dear Evan Hansen does a fair job of capturing the emotion of its source material, but it's undermined by questionable casting and a story that's hard to swallow.
Synopsis: The breathtaking, generation-defining Broadway phenomenon becomes a soaring cinematic event as Tony, Grammy and Emmy Award winner Ben Platt reprises [More]
Directed By: Stephen Chbosky

#18

Three Floors (2021)
Tomatometer icon 48%

#18
Critics Consensus: Lacking the essential spark of director Nanni Moretti's best work, Three Floors does a dreary disservice to its laudable themes.
Synopsis: The lives of three families living in the same apartment building in Rome's Prati neighbourhood. [More]
Directed By: Nanni Moretti

#17

The Starling (2021)
Tomatometer icon 19%

#17
Critics Consensus: Burying its talented cast and worthy themes under mounds of heavy-handed melodrama, The Starling is a turkey.
Synopsis: After Lilly (Melissa McCarthy) suffers a loss, a battle with a territorial bird (The Starling) over dominion of her garden [More]
Directed By: Theodore Melfi

#16

The Desperate Hour (2021)
Tomatometer icon 27%

#16
Critics Consensus: Naomi Watts gives it her all, but The Desperate Hour falls short as a thriller as well as social commentary.
Synopsis: Unfolding in real time, THE DESPERATE HOUR is a "riveting and pulse pounding" thriller from award-winning director Phillip Noyce. Recently [More]
Directed By: Phillip Noyce

#15
#15
Critics Consensus: The Story of My Wife gets a pair of strong performances out of its talented leads, but they're wholly undermined by a story that's nowhere near compelling enough to support the movie's sprawling runtime.
Synopsis: Jakob Störr, a Dutch seasoned sea captain, makes a bet in a café to marry the first woman who enters [More]
Directed By: Ildikó Enyedi

#14
#14
Critics Consensus: No consensus yet.
Synopsis: On a dark night, Xueming hits a pedestrian with his car and flees the scene. Desperate to escape his feelings [More]
Directed By: Shipei Wen

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#11
Critics Consensus: No consensus yet.
Synopsis: Ajo Kawir is a fighter who fears nothing, not even death. His raging urge to fight is driven by a [More]
Directed By: Edwin

#10

The Other Tom (2021)
Tomatometer icon 89%

#10
Critics Consensus: Centered on a mother's struggle to provide care for her son, The Other Tom highlights the difficulty of meeting a child's mental health needs.
Synopsis: Elena is a single mother who relies on Social Services. Her son Tom has behavioral issues and is stigmatized at [More]

#9

Snakehead (2021)
Tomatometer icon 71%

#9
Critics Consensus: Snakehead struggles to maintain a consistent grip on its narrative ambitions, but the cast really sinks its fangs into the material.
Synopsis: Sister Tse comes to New York through a Snakehead, a human smuggler. She gains favor with the matriarch of the [More]
Directed By: Evan Jackson Leong

#8

One Second (2020)
Tomatometer icon 100%

#8
Critics Consensus: No consensus yet.
Synopsis: A movie fan strikes up a relationship with a homeless female vagabond. [More]
Directed By: Yimou Zhang

#7

The Tsugua Diaries (2021)
Tomatometer icon 78%

#7
Critics Consensus: No consensus yet.
Synopsis: Crista, Carloto and João are building an airy greenhouse for butterflies in the garden. The three of them share household [More]

#6
#6
Critics Consensus: With an outstanding cast and a thoughtful story that makes the most of its limited setting, Costa Brava, Lebanon reaffirms that the personal is the political.
Synopsis: The free-spirited Badri family escapes the toxic pollution and social unrest of Beirut by seeking refuge in a utopic mountain [More]
Directed By: Mounia Akl

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#4

Wolf (2021)
Tomatometer icon 45%

#4
Critics Consensus: Despite George MacKay's best efforts, Wolf remains a horror-tinged social allegory that's left to largely chase its own tail.
Synopsis: Believing he is a wolf trapped in a human body, Jacob (George MacKay) eats, sleeps, and lives like a wolf [More]
Directed By: Nathalie Biancheri

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#2

The Good House (2021)
Tomatometer icon 71%

#2
Critics Consensus: The Good House creaks in spots, but with Kevin Kline and Sigourney Weaver providing load-bearing performances, it's far from a fixer-upper.
Synopsis: The Good House follows Hildy Good (Sigourney Weaver), a wry New England realtor and descendant of the Salem witches, who [More]

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Thumbnail image: Netflix.