Films of the Year


The second bonus/extra list: my top 20 films of the year.

These are films that were first released (in cinemas or on streaming services) in 2018 in the UK (NB: some of them came out in late 2017 in the US or other markets).

20.
Mission Impossible: Fallout
Lots to enjoy in the latest instalment, particularly a number of the action sequences (and the extent to which so many of those are practical – you still can tell).  But the hype that this is the best of the series (nope, still MI:3), or even that it is one of the best action movies ever (really?) was all bit overblown.  Extremely fun but fairly forgettable.


19.
Mute
Duncan Jones’ future neo-noir labour of love is definitely flawed, but it also puts that Warcraft debacle firmly behind him, has a number of excellent moments and a standout performance from Justin Theroux.


18.
Incredibles 2
Maybe not quite as much fun as the original – though that’d be a big ask – but this is another excellent Pixar sequel that manages to hold on to what made its predecessor great while mixing things up enough to keep the formula fresh. Jack-Jack needs a spin off.


17.
All the Money in the World
Looking past all that de-Spaceying furore, this is an effective, taut thriller built on character dynamics and screenwriting, rather than action or flashy direction. Ridley Scott at his most restrained, this is his best for a while.


16.
Black Panther
I’ve watched it twice – a good sign – and found much to love (the Busan car chase sequence!), but I also think it was overrated, at least in the context of the wider MCU, with an uneven second half and so-so climax.


15.
Downsizing
Thoughtful sci-fi with allegorical threads touching on greed and oppression. Matt Damon is a surprisingly good everyman. Though Christoph Waltz should cut it out already.


14.
Hold the Dark
Perhaps not Jeremy Saulnier’s finest work, but weird and unsettling, with slow build surprises in the moody wilderness. Not even close to the wolf-hunter movie that the promotional stuff made it look like it was going to be. Jeffrey Wright excellent, as ever.


13.
Cargo
A wonderful zombie film, which prioritises the brains of its audience over the brains its zombie are trying to eat. Like all the best zombie movies, much of it examines how awful living people are, although there’s also significantly more hope and humanity here than is often found in the genre. Includes one of the performances of the year from Martin Freeman.


12.
Coco
Mexican Day of the Dead afterlife fun, with a particular thematic focus on the importance of music. Another excellent Pixar offering, and the second one to make this list: funny, sweet and deep. Not up there with the very best Pixar, but still great, and a nice reminder that they don’t just do sequels.


11.
Outlaw King
The early rebellions of Robert the Bruce are effectively realised but never glamorised in David Mackenzie’s grimy historical epic. Easily dismissed as a ‘modern Braveheart’, this is actually a very different film that approaches its historical subject matter with notable reverence. Sometimes intimate, sometimes mud and blood on a grand scale.


10.
Avengers: Infinity War
Almost too much going on for its own good, but still just about managing to keep things balanced and have the right degree of focus, Marvel’s latest attempt to conquer all is lots of fun. The Spidey/Iron Man in space thread is the best. And that shocking finger click will become a movie reference staple in years to come.


9.
Phantom Thread
My expectations were extremely high here, and once you stop trying to compare it to There Will be Blood, this is a remarkable character study of two damaged, co-dependent people, with dressmaking and nothing ever really happening (in a good way). Low key but made with absolute precision, this sticks with you.


8.
22 July
After the disappointing Jason Bourne, it’s great that Paul Greengrass’ next film – this wonderfully made and acted exploration of the aftermath (personal and social) of real-life tragedy – is such a strong return to form. It never quite recaptures the frenzy of the first third, but that’s kind of the point: tragedies leave a long tail of harm that stretch well after they’re ‘over’.


7.
Darkest Hour
Gary Oldman’s performance as Winston Churchill is so outstanding that it is possible to see Darkest Hour as a bit one trick pony, just a showcase for its lead’s acting prowess. But that wouldn’t be fair: the screenplay is also fantastic, as are the supporting cast. The wise ‘snapshot’ in time approach makes this an intimate and focused biopic.


6.
Apostle
Billed as horror, but actually quite a lot more than that. Unsettling, brutal and mysterious, with great performances (Michael Sheen – yes please) and, well, some horror, this twisted low-budget offering owes much to 70s classics like The Wicker Man or The Devils.


5.
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Emotional pain runs through every fibre of this wonderful film, even when its laugh out loud funny. Frances McDormand and Sam Rockwell got all the plaudits, but for me it was Woody Harrelson’s decent but flawed (and tragically unwell) police chief who stole it. I hated In Bruges, and wasn’t much keen on Seven Psychopaths either, so getting material of this quality from Martin McDonagh is a revelation.


4.
Solo: A Star Wars Story
Neither as bad as I’d feared (directorial merry-go-rounds; isn’t ‘young Han Solo’ just a description of the guy in the original trilogy?), nor as great as I’d hoped (it is a Star Wars movie, after all). It’s my least favourite of the four post-Disney-purchase films so far, but that doesn’t mean it’s anything but enjoyable. Much to love, particularly the early days of the Han/Chewie bromance and a movie-stealing Donald Glover nailing Lando. Great to be mauled by that late reveal too.


3.
A Quiet Place
Horror of the year, where simplicity and slow build tension are king, but with much more to say than it seems on its face. Emily Blunt is fantastic as always, but this is John Krasinski’s film in more ways than one. Impressive in all respects, let’s hope the upcoming sequel manages to maintain this high standard.


2.
The Shape of Water
Del Toro’s worthy Oscar Best Picture winner is beautifully weird, romantic and thrilling. Easily his best work since Pan’s Labyrinth, it all clicks (that score, Sally Hawkins’ outstanding performance, the seamless blend of practical and CG effects). The best mute cleaning lady/disgusting frog-man romance movie you’ll ever see.


1.
Hostiles
An amazing western, that charts loss and hardship at the very edge of the civilized world, with both the colonialists and the Native Americans painted from a palate of many colours: there’s atrocity and humanity from all involved. Christian Bale doing his best work since The Machinist, Rosamund Pike subtly charting the process of recovery from unimaginable grief: this is brilliant on the small, character-led scale. But it’s also sweeping and thematically grand.



NB: the best movie I actually watched in 2018 isn’t eligible for this list, as it came out in the UK in 2017: Luca Guadagnino’s exceptional love story, Call Me by Your Name.