• Tony Stark encounters a formidable foe called the Mandarin. After failing to defeat his enemy, Tony embarks on a journey of self-discovery as he fights against the powerful Mandarin Dennymovies we got all you need.
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  • Thor, a powerful god of Asgard, is banished to the Earth by his father for his recklessness. Stripped of his divine power, he joins the other members of S.H.I.E.L.D to save earth from a dark force. .
  • A soldier and his team battle hordes of post-apocalyptic zombies in the wastelands of the Korean Peninsula.
  • Dom and Brian travel from one country to another trying to throw the authorities off their scent. Now they have to bring their team together one more time while being chased by a federal agent.

Sunday, August 30, 2020

BEST TEEN TV SERIES IN 2020

List of the latest teen TV series in 2020 on  TV and the best teen TV series of 2019 & the 2010's. Top teen TV series to watch on Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Prime, Disney+ & other Streaming services, out on DVD/Blu-ray or on TV right now.

NEVER HAVE I EVER 



Created by : Mindy Kaling 

Never have I ever is an American coming of age comedy-drama television series starring Maitreyi Ramakrishnan .The comedy is partially based on Kaling's real childhood story,growing up in the Boston area.It premiered on Netflix on May 21,2020,and is about an Indian student dealing with the death of her father .The series received positive reviews.The series has been described as a watershed moment for South Asian representation in Hollywood and has been praised for Asian stereotypes.On July 1,2020,Netflix has renewed the series for a second season.


I AM NOT OK WITH THIS



I am not okay with this is an American coming of -age comedy-drama web television series,based on the comic book of the same name by Charles Forsman.It was released on Netflix on February 26,2020.The series received positive reviews, with praise for the performance, particularly from Lillis and Oleff.  In 
August 2020, the series was canceled after one season due to circumstances related to COVID-19 pandemic.


STARGIRL



DC's stargirl , or simply stargirl, is an American superhero television series created by Geoff Johns that that premiered on streaming service DC universe. It is based on DC comics superhero Courtney Whitmore created by johns and Lee Moder. The series follows high school Courtney Whitmore, potrayed by Brec Basinger, who discovers the cosmic staff and becomes the inspiration for a new generation of superheroes who become the new Justice society of America.



DARE ME



Dare me is an American teen drama television series based on the 2012 novel of the same name by Megan Abbott.The series was picked up in late January 2019 and premiered on USA Network on December 29,2019.In April 2020,USA Network canceled the series after one season.


EUPHORIA



Euphoria is an American teen drama television created by Sam Levinson,loosely based on the miniseries of the same name.Euphoria follows a group of high school students through their experience of sex, drugs,friendships,love,identity and trauma.The series stars Zendeya and premiered on HBO on June 16, 2019, the series was renewed for its for its second season.


PRETTY LITTLE LIARS:THE PERFECTIONISTS



Pretty liars is an America teen drama mystery thriller television series developed by I.Marlene King and is loosely based on the novel series of the same name written by Sara Shephard .The series follows the lives of four high school girls whose clique falls apart after the disappearance of their leader.One year later,the estranged friends are reunited as they begin receiving messages from a mysterious figure named ''A'' who threatens to expose their deepest secrets.The series premiered on June 8,2010 on ABC Family and ended on June 27,2017. After initial order of 10 episodes ,ABC Family ordered an additional of 12 episodes on June 28,2010.



SCHOOLED



Schooled is an American television sitcom and a direct spin-off to the Goldbergs. It was ordered by ABC with Tim Meadows,Bryan Callen and AJ Michalka in the main cast. the concept aired as a backdoor pilot on a January 24,2018, episodes of the Goldbergs called ''The Goldbergs:1990-Something ''.The series premiered on January 9,2019, ABC renewed the series for a second season, which premiered on September 25,2019.In may 2020 ,the series was canceled after two seasons.



DEADLY CLASS



Deadly class is an American television series developed by Rick Remender and Miles Orion Feldsott for Syfy and is based on the comic book series of the same name created by Remender and Wesley Craig and published by Image Comics. It stars Benedict Wong, Benjamin Wandsworth.set in the late-1980's the seies revolves around king's Dominion,an elite private academy where students are trained to become assassins.

The series is produced by Sony Pictures Television,Universal Cable Productions, in association with Gozie AGBO, chipmunk hill and Getaway  Productions.The first episode premiered as a special preview online on December 20,2018 and on Syfy on December 30;the series would officialy premiere on January 16,2019. The series was canceled in June 2019.


HANNA



Hanna is an American action drama web television series based on the 2011 film of the same name on Prime video .The series was created and written by David Farr, directed by Sarah Adina Smith , and stars Esme Creed-Miles Enos .The first episode was made available on Amazon video as a time-limited preview on February 3,2019.The full eight-episode first season was released on March 29, 2019, and the second season was released on July 3,2020.In July 2020, the series was renewed for a third season.



SEX EDUCATION 



Sex education is a British comedy-drama web television series created by Laurie Nunn .Starring Asa Butterfield as an insecure teenager and Gillian Anderson as his mother ,a sex therapist, the series premiered on 11 January 2019 on Netflix. Ncuti Gatwa, Emma Mackey,Conner Swindells,Aimee Lou Wood and Kedar Williams-Stirling co-star.It became a critical commercial success for Netflix with 40 million viewers streaming the first series after its debut.The second series was released on 17 January 2020,and the show has been renewed for a third season.



CLOAK & DAGGER



Marvel's cloak&dagger or simply cloak & dagger is an American superhero television series created for Freeform by Joe Pokaski based on the Marvel Comics characters of the same name .It is set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU),sharing continuity with the films and other television series of the franchise.The series is produced by ABC Signature Studios ,Marvel Television,and Wandering Rocks Productions, with Pokaski serving as showrunner.

The series stars Olivia Holt and Aurebrey Joseph as Tandy Bowen/Dagger and Tyrone Johnson /Cloak two teenagers with superpowers who form a partnership.A television series featuring the pair had begun development at ABC Family in July 2011.The channel ,renamed Freeform, ordered cloak& dagger to series in April 2016, and pokaski had joined as showrunner by that August .Holt and Joseph were cast in January 2017, the first season aired from June 7 to August 2,2018, and was met with positive reviews .for a second season in July 2018 ,which premiered on April 4, 2019 and concluded on May 30,2019. The series was canceled in October 24,2019.


EVERYTHING SUCKS



Everything sucks is an American comedy-drama web television series created by Ben York Jones and Micheal Mohan that parodies  teen culture of the mid-1990's .Ten half -hour episodes were ordered by Netflix and the series was released on February 16, 2018. The series is set in the real-life town of Boring,Oregon in 1996, and focuses on a group of teenagers who attend the fictional boring high school as they proceed to make a movie together while dealing with issues such as finding their sexualities, mental health,and growing up.

On April 6,2018, it was announced that Netflix had cancelled the series after one season.



NEW WARRIORS



Marvel's new warriors is an unaired American television pilot based on the Marvel Comics superhero team of the same name .It was intended to be set in the Marvel cinematic universe.
The young group learn to cope with their new abilities in a terrifying world .New warriors was planned to premiere in 2018 on Freeform, and had the potential to launch multiple spinoff series based on each of the New Warriors characters.



SIREN



Siren is an American television drama series that premiered on Freeform on March 29,2018. the first season included 10 episodes.In May 2018, the series was renewed for a second season which premiered on January 24,2019, the series was renewed for a third season which premiered on April 2,2020.In August 2020,the series was canceled after three seasons.



THE CHILLING ADVENTURES OF SABRINA



Chilling adventures of  Sabrina is an American comic book series published by Archie Horror, an imprint of Archie Comics, beginning in 2014.The series is a darker take on the characters and the setting of Sabrina the teenage witch.It is written by Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa, with art by Robert Hack, and is inspired by the appearances of Sabrina in Aguirre- Sacasa's other Archie series,Afterlife with Archie.




RIVERDALE



Riverdale is an American teen drama television series based on the characters of Archie Comics.The series was adapted for the CW's by Archie Comic's chief creative officer Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa,and is produced by warner Bros.Television Studios ,In associaton with Berlanti Productions and Archie Comics.Originally conceived as a feature film adaptation for Warner Bros.The series debuted on January 26,2017,to positive reviews .The fourth season premiered on October 9, 2019.In January 2020,The CW renewed the series for a fifth , set to premiere in January 2021.


A TYPICAL



A typical is a coming of - age television series created by Robia Rashid for Netflix.It focuses on the life of 18-year old Sam Gardner who was has autism spectrum disorder . The first season was released on August 11,2017,consisting of eight episodes .The ten episode second season was released on September 7,2018.In October 2018.The series was renewed for a third season of ten episodes, which was released 
on November 1, 2019 .In February 2020 ,the series was renewed for a fourth and final season.the final season  10 episodes will premiere in 2021.


VERONICA MARS



Veronica Mars is an American teen noir mystery drama television series created by screenwriter Rob Thomas. The series is set in the fictional town of Neptune, California and stars Kristen Bell as the eponymous character .The series premiered on September 22,2004,during television network UPN's final two two years ,and ended on May 22,2007,a season on UPN's successor.


THE O.C



The O.C is an American teen drama television series created by Joseph Schwartz that originally aired on the Fox network in the united States from August 5 ,2003, to February 22,2007,running a total of four seasons ''o.c'' an abbreviation of Orange Country ,the location in California in which the series is set.



THE GOSSIP GIRL



The gossip girl is an American teen drama television series based on the novel written by Cecily Von Ziegesar .The series,created by Joseph Schwartz and Stephanie Savage,ran on the CW network for six seasons from September 19,2007,to December 17,2012.Narrated by the unknown,omniscient blogger''Gossip Girl''as Blair Waldorf.


ON MY BLOCK



As childhood friends Jasmine,Monse,Ruby, and Jamal enter high central Los Angeles ,these Kids have more to deal with than solely typical teenage drama . This heartfelt series about growing up in an underprivileged neighborhood is funny,endearing, and honest ,exploring the group's relationships and ups-and-downs of freshman year ,while keeping their friends out of harms way from getting involved in gang activity,Bringing diverse perspectives to the screen.


THE ORDER 



Magic schools have been in vogue since even before Harry Potter took the whole world by storm, and the fantasy subgenre  isn't about to die out anymore soon. If you've already re-read and rewatched J.K.Rowling's series too many times to count and looking for something new,you might want to give Netflix"s the order a shot.


THE 100



The 100 is about a team of teens sent down to bombed-out Earth from a colony floating in space.Inevitably,things go wrong :warring factions emerge, hearts get broken,and ,is required by TV law, beloved characters are killed.Don't let the show's soapy veneer fool you,this is dark,thoughtful material in a slick,teen-friendly package.


13 REASONS WHY



Brian Yorkey's adaptation follows Clay ,a liberty high school student who receives seven cassettes defogging his crush's mysterious rationale for suicide, followed by a second season that uses a series of polaroids to expose school's secrets.


THE SOCIETY



Netflix's summer 2019 sensation blends the anxious social politics into the modern city, introducing us to a group of high school students who suddenly and inexplicably find themselves without parents,siblings,or anyone else at all populating their small town.




OUTER BANKS



Centuries of colonization, wars and storms means there are tons of shipwrecks in the water off the East coast just waiting for enterprising SCUBA divers to stumble across them.It's one of these ships,laden with gold,that's at the center of this teen drama series,which follows a group of high school kids hunting for sunken treasure, while also trying to solve a mystery about one of their friend's missing father.




DAYBREAK



Daybreak follows a boy named Josh who's looking for his girlfriend with a crew of other weird, lost teenage souls in the fallout of a zombie apocalypse.It's all very pompous, imaging how the cheer squad ,football team, and others might rally and respond to flesh-eating creatures, but that's part of the fun, upping the ante of a typical,crude high school setting.


ELITE



This teen drama centered on the a wealthy private high school from Spain  was a surprise hit when it first dropped on Netflix in 2018, and it's easy to see why:a juicy murder mystery that runs through the entire season , obscene displays of wealth,and lots of sex.


THE END OF F***KING WORLD



Somehow, a show about a teenager who's convinced he's a psychopath and wants to find his first human kill manages to come off as a charming love and coming of -age story.


THE FLASH



While the CW's Arrow teeters on the edge of self-parodying grimdark nonsense most of the time, the show's DC Comics  companion ,The Flash, is a lighting -speed breeze .Glee alum Grant Gustin stars as the breaker of sound barriers, who finds himself battling everyone from freeze-gun-wielding mad men to sentient gorillas in an effort to uncover his mother's speedy killer.


THE UMBRELLA  ACADEMY



Umbrella academy is an American superhero web television series based on the comic book series written by Gerard Way. Created for Netflix by Steve Blackman and developed by Jeremy slater, it revolves around a dysfunctional family adopted sibling superheroes who reunite to solve the mystery of their father's death and the threat of an impending apocalypse.


DERRY GIRL



Teen shows are often good for some lauhgs, but few are as goddamn as derry girls. The channel 4/Netflix co-production about catholic school girls in the 90's living through the end of the northern Ireland troubles is all about ,and outright laugh-out-loud hilarious.



GILMORE GIRLS:A YEAR IN THE LIFE 



In case you haven't seen or heard, Netflix revived GIlmore Girls- so you can catch up with wisecracking mother-daughter duo before watching the four-episode follow up.The show takes place in the quirky small town of stars Hollow and features a dynamic supporting cast so fully fleshed, you'll feel like a local after your first hour.


BIG MOUTH



I n big mouth comedian Nick Kroll and his friends essentially hop into an animated time machine to play young. more insecure, and hornier versions of themselves as adolescent tweens beginning to date and watch porn.,coming to grips with their emotions and sexuality, with a no-holds barred approach to the horrors of puberty and the freeing format of animation.


CURSED



Just as everybody is familiar with the story of King Arthur and how  he had to pull that damn sword out of the pesky stone. Cursed is another take on that classic tale, but rather than from the perspective of arthur and his trusty wizard Merlin ,it imagines the origin story who comes into the play in the legend later on.The series follows Nimue a sorceress, who'll go on to become the lady of the lake, but for now his pursuit of the sword of Excalibur herself and meets a young Arthur along the way.


STRANGER THINGS



If you haven't binged Netflix's 80's  paranormal throwback what gives ? it's all your friends can talk about every time a new season drops, and the recent season 3 just as much of an adolescent exploration of hormonal, teenaged feelings as it is another go facing off with monsters from another dimension .


AMERICAN VANDAL



American vandal about teen documentarians who investigate the conspirators behind the high school pranks of a dick-drawing vandal and somebody nicknamed '' the turd burglar'' is much more than two seasons of dick/poop/jokes.


HATERS BACK OFF



Haters back off plays as an origin story of Youtube sensation Miranda Sings ,who has amassed millions subscribes by caking on lipstick, dissing famous people, abusing English language, and uploading tutorials on everything from dancing to making ''TACO BELL POPCISCLES''.But haters  ballinger and her brother Christopher focuses less on the vids and more on Mirand's offline pursuit of fame - love, betrayal, and tragedy all making camoes along the way.


JANE THE VIRGIN 



Somehow ,a melodrama about an accidentally artificially inseminated virgin raising a baby while flitting back and forth between the vertices  of a love triangle, which takes place in a world populated by drug lords, secret twins, wvil professors ,and a police department conspiracy, manages to strike the simplest emotional and comic beats week after week.


CONTROL Z



Control Z is a Mexican teen drama web television series created by Carlos Quintanilla Sakar which follows  a hacker who exposes a huge secret of one of the students. this causes panic and humiliates a secretly transgender student. The hacker continues revealing students' secrets which causes numerous students to turn on one another.Sofia Herrera, an introverted teenager, tries to uncover who this hacker is before the dirt on her becomes public.


LEGACIES



Legacies is an American fantasy drama television series created by Julie Plec that premiered on CW on October 25,2018 .It is a spinoff of the originals and vampire diaries .Legacies follows Hope Mikaelson and Hayley Marshall ,who is descended from some of the most powerful vampire ,werewolf ,and witch bloodlines .Two years after the events of the originals ,17 year old Hope attends the Salvator School for the young and gifted .The school provides a haven where supernatural beings can to control their abilities and impulses.

BLOOD AND WATER



Blood and water is a south African Netflix original web series starring Ama Qamatara .It was released on May 20,2020,In june 2020 ,Netflix renewed the series for a second season .The series revolves around a high school girl whose sister Phumelele was kidnapped as part of a human trafficking network shortly after birth.





Dennymovies we got you the best follow our blog and continue the right choice of you to watch now in this season.





Saturday, August 29, 2020

HIDDEN GEMS IN NETFLIX MOVIES YOU NEED TO WATCH NOW 2020



 While Netflix is good for an afternoon of binge-watching your favorite TV shows, it has a great movie selection, too. With an amazing 83 million subscribers, the streaming service has capitalized on the cord-cutting movement and has recently expanded into offering their own original series and films. Even though the titles Netflix offers change from time to time, they consistently offer up some really great movies, including plenty of titles that are well worth watching even though they might not have attracted the audience they deserved at the box office—or missed theaters entirely on the way to home video.


At the time of this writing, these are the best "hidden gems" on Netflix you may not know about. Some are sleeper hits from the last decade, while others are older classics you may not have seen unless you're a real cinephile. Either way, do yourself a favor and add these to your queue.


TUCKER & DALE VS. EVIL ( 2010)



There are a lot of reasons to watch this blood-and-guts-filled backwoods adventure, but the thing we love most about Tucker & Dale vs. Evil might be the way it turns traditional horror tropes on its head. This comedy horror film stars Alan Tudyk (Wreck-It Ralph, Firefly) and Tyler Labine (Breaker High, Reaper) as a pair of West Virginia hillbillies who encounter a group of clueless college students on a camping trip. When one of the college students accidentally hurts herself, Tudyk and Labine rush to do the right thing and take care of her — until the misguided college kids attempt to rescue her from the "scary" backwoods hicks that they mistakenly believe are getting ready to torture, maim, and murder their friend. All sorts of hilarious and horrific hijinks ensue—and more than a few stereotypes are mocked— all of which makes this movie a perfect choice for your Netflix queue.


EARTHQUAKE BIRD (2019)



Sometimes the scariest parts of a scary movie don't come from monsters or gore, but from menace and dread. That's what propels the precisely paced Earthquake Bird, based on the novel of the same name by Susanna Jones. Alicia Vikander of Ex Machina returns to the kind of moody, unsettling cinema that made her famous, portraying Lucy, a Swedish expatriate who has settled into a life in 1989 Tokyo that is repetitive, bland, and mundane by design, as she's looking to flee from and forget past traumas. She works as a translator, living alone while maintaining some low-key friendships and playing cello in a string quartet. 

One day, Lucy meets Teiji (Naoki Kobayashi), a noodle shop worker and aspiring photographer. She enchants him and lets him make portraits of her, but just when it seems like her icy veneer is starting to thaw, Lucy's life is interrupted by a brash American named Lily (Riley Keough), who goes missing and is presumed dead. Is the mysterious Lucy responsible, either via conscious act or her status as a tragedy magnet? Or is she merely an unreliable narrator? Gabriel Silver of the Detroit Metro Times calls Earthquake Bird "an enjoyable neo-noir film, with enough twists and turns to leave you thinking long after the ending."


MOON (2009)



Back in 2009, a handful of critics raved about Duncan Jones' debut film Moon, calling Jones one of the freshest voices in cinema. Then came Source Code, a slightly less intense but still extremely enjoyable film. After that came Warcraft. Finally, Mute, a disaster by any other name. And the name of Duncan Jones became synonymous with "that one good movie."

But who cares? Because Moon really is a fantastic experience, even if it's barely a cult film at this point. Starring Sam Rockwell and a robot who sounds like Kevin Spacey, it's the definition of a bottle movie — just one man in a lunar research station, slowly losing his mind. Of course, any trailer will tell you that there's a little more to it than that, but we're not trying to spoil anything here. If you've never seen Moon, do yourself a favor and avoid all the marketing and just queue it up on Netflix.


BEYOND SKYLINE (2017)



B-movies tend to get a bad rap thanks to their low budgets and terrible acting and poorly vetted scripts, and let's be honest — Beyond Skyline fits snugly into most of those categories. The basic plot is this: Aliens invade Earth using some high-tech blue lights that turn people into zombies so the aliens can harvest their brains. Enter Frank Grillo, an alcoholic cop with who punches the aliens hard enough to make them regret invading Earth. It's technically a sequel to 2010's Skyline, although all the characters are different and it seems to take place at roughly the same time as the first movie, just from different perspectives. Let's call it a poor man's Cloverfield franchise and move on, because none of that is really important.

What takes Beyond Skyline to the next level is the amount of effort and love the filmmakers clearly put into it. It's chock full of design elements that someone clearly spent weeks perfecting, only for any one element to get just a few seconds onscreen. It's the kind of attention to detail you expect from a big-budget blockbuster, and even then you don't always get it. If Beyond Skyline gets one thing right, it's carrying that passion through to the audience. Also, it's a lot of fun. If you have a soft spot for surprisingly good genre movies, check it out.


PANDORA (2017)



It should be a crime to make a disaster movie this emotional. Pandora is like if San Andreas ended with the Rock killing Mufasa in front of Simba. There's just no law-abiding reason to give an average, run-of-the-mill movie like this so much heart, and yet there it is — the music is swelling, the credits are rolling, and you're wiping tears from your eyes like it's the first time you stubbed your toe. It's absolutely uncalled for, and people should be punished.



Anyway, Pandora is about a nuclear reactor that goes haywire after an earthquake, endangering a small South Korean town. After that, there's about an hour and a half of government people trying to make sure they weren't to blame. Elsewhere, people try to escape the inevitable explosion when the cooling rods stop being...cold enough, maybe. It doesn't matter. Play Temple Run if you want. Snapchat your sister.

But stick around, because out of nowhere it transforms into something so beautiful and touching you can't help but wonder if Netflix's autoplay switched movies without you noticing. And okay — the rest of Pandora isn't that bad. It's an extremely well-made film, but the ending is where all the pieces finally come together into a heartbreakingly beautiful kaleidoscope. Then again, maybe it just looked that way because we were watching it through our tears.


EVOLUTION (2001)



Apart from Futurama, Ghostbusters, and Men in Black, there aren't many movies and TV shows hyper-aware of the absurd, ridiculous situations in which their characters are placed. But sci-fi and comedy fans alike prefer to keep their genres pure, so there are relatively few sci-fi comedies out there. It's takes a delicate touch to balance the weird and silly, and with Evolution, director Ivan Reitman treats an alien invasion the same way he treated the supernatural in Ghostbusters. 

Complete and total madcap chaos begins after a meteor crashes on Earth... thus leaving its single-cell organisms to grow and fester. Aliens are aliens even if they're tiny, but before long, they've evolved into nasty, humanity-threatening monsters. It's up an unlikely and ill-prepared individuals to put a stop to it. Among them are a community college professor (alien-proficient David Duchovny from The X-Files), an amateur fireman (Seann William Scott), and a geologist (Orlando Jones). Evolution is just as unabashedly crazy, boundary-pushing, and often as gross as Reitman's better-known film.


WET HOT AMERICAN SUMMER



Wet Hot American Summer takes place on the last day of summer 1981 at Camp Firewood, and at first, it seems like it'll be an amusing send-up of 1980s summer camp movies. But then the film gloriously descends into madness, becoming one of the most unabashedly silly movies of all time. That's to be expected, as it's directed by David Wain, later to helm Wanderlust and Role Models, and former member of the State, a comedy collective that had its own popular sketch show on MTV in the mid-'90s. 

Wain co-wrote with State member Showalter, who also appears alongside future stars Bradley Cooper, Paul Rudd, Amy Poehler, and H. Jon Benjamin (Bob from Bob's Burgers) as a talking can of vegetables who counsels camp cook Gene (Christopher Meloni) into being proud that he likes to "fondle sweaters." That's not remotely the weirdest thing in a movie that features Skylab crashing, the casual deaths of multiple campers, an '80s-style training montage, a vaudeville comedian, counselors ducking into the nearest town for french fries and heroin, and Elizabeth Banks trying to seduce Rudd while her face is covered in barbecue sauce.


FULLMETAL ALCHEMIST (2017)




Hate on it all you want. Just go ahead and squeeze all that hate out. Is the live-action version of Fullmetal Alchemist as good as the anime? Not even close. Is it cheesy and hilarious and full of moments that blow your mind? Oh, you bet.

For newcomers to the whole thing, the story is about two brothers with a natural inclination for alchemy (the "science" of making things out of other things) who attempt to bring their mother back to life. Things go horribly wrong, and one brother ends up with his soul trapped in a suit of armor while the other loses an arm and a leg. When they're older, they search for the mythical philosopher's stone in the hopes of restoring their bodies.

As far as anime adaptations go, Fullmetal Alchemist is arguably one of the best out there. It doesn't cover the whole story, but it serves as an origin tale and works as a self-contained story that even non-fans can enjoy. That is, you can enjoy it if you already like over-the-top Asian action fantasies. That's all this is.


SPECTRAL (2016)



Sci-fi thrillers with style can feel awfully hard to come by. If that's your kind of thing, chances are you've probably seen all the good ones (and way too many bad ones), which makes Spectral even more of an unexpected treat and a definite Netflix hidden gem. Following a team of U.S. Special Forces soldiers who stumble across a mysterious new enemy while they're off on assignment in Moldova, Spectral jacks the action up into the stratosphere with lightning-quick combat scenes and several nail-biting moments of true, unadulterated terror. The present-day war-torn environment grounds the action even as the movie leaps into the realm of pure science fiction. In the end, Spectral admittedly falls short of cinematic perfection, but it still more than delivers what it promises: a bunch of dudes fighting for their lives against an otherworldly threat. Stick it on, crank up the volume, and enjoy the ride.


OFFICE DOWNE (2016)



Let's just preface this entry by saying that you can't — and shouldn't — expect a lot from Officer Downe. Based on the 2010 graphic novel, the movie is a hyper-stylized splatter-fest about a cop who can't die. Well, he can. He just comes back to life again. That's about it as far as plot goes. There's a criminal organization that dresses like animals, some gun-toting nuns, and a clan of ninja-type people, and as you'd expect, they all take turns trading blows with undead supercop Officer Downe. Fortunately, the movie doesn't ask or expect the viewer to take any of this seriously. It doesn't even ask you to care all that much about who these people are—instead, all it really wants is to have gunfights and explosions, and in that respect, it does okay. Not great, necessarily, but okay. Just turn off your brain and let Downe take care of the rest.


BEASTS OF NO NATION(2015)



Netflix made its first major foray into original films when it acquired Beasts of No Nation. Directed by True Detective vet Cary Fukunaga, this brutally effective 2015 drama tells the harrowing, powerful tale of Agu, a West African child caught in a civil war and recruited to a rebel militia as a child soldier. Idris Elba gives a commanding—and occasionally terrifying—performance as the militia leader who orders his soldiers to perform ever more horrific acts. Beasts of No Nation never had a prayer at the box office—partly due to its uncompromising subject matter, but also because of the ongoing struggle between Netflix and the nation's biggest theater chains, whose execs have resisted the streaming giant's efforts to narrow (or eliminate) the gap between big-screen releases and a film's availability for home viewing. For that reason alone, Beasts missed the boat with most viewers, but this powerfully acted drama definitely deserves to be seen.


THE FUNDAMENTALS OF CARING (2016)



Another winner from Netflix's stable of original films, The Fundamentals of Caring takes the "road movie" formula and gives it a good-natured, offbeat twist. Paul Rudd and Craig Roberts team up as, respectively, a caretaker and a teen afflicted with muscular dystrophy out to explore the country and themselves—and the duo get unexpected company when they pick up a hitchhiking Selena Gomez along the way. Road trip dramedies aren't exactly hard to find, and in terms of quality, the genre's familiar narrative arc has long since settled into a predictable rut filled with wacky quests, beautiful vistas, funny montages, and seemingly insurmountable obstacles that get swept away in the final act. The Fundamentals of Caring includes most if not all of those time-tested ingredients, but the excellent cast—and writer-director Rob Burnett's deft touch with the material—make the movie's more unsurprising moments easy to forgive, and the whole thing adds up to an enjoyably diverting journey.


THE INVITATION(2015)



It's awfully hard to talk about The Invitation without spoiling the best parts, so we'll just keep it simple and leave it at this: if there was ever a dinner party that went downhill, it's this one. Director Karyn Kusama loads the movie with tension right from the start and builds the drama in a way that leaves you guessing right along with the characters. 


The twisty story is brought to life by great, low-key performances from Michiel Huisman (Game of Thrones) and Logan Marshall-Green (Prometheus)—not to mention Tammy Blanchard's turn as an edge-of-crazy housewife. With corkscrew tension that irrevocably mounts as the evening gets later and the party takes a series of turns into the progressively surreal, The Invitation is a swan dive into paranoia. It's also a welcome change of pace for Kusama, whose previous films, Aeon Flux and Jennifer's Body, weren't exactly gems themselves, hidden or otherwise.


CREEP (2014)



Who knew a film with a cast of exactly two people could be so enthralling? Yeah, you might groan at first: if Creep had a downside, it would be the decision to make it in jerky, handheld, found-footage style—the filmmaking version of that jar of pickles in the back of your refrigerator that's been there for years but never seems to gets thrown away, and every now and then it's in a different position, so someone's eating those pickles, although God knows who.

But Creep pulls it off. And beautifully at that. In fact, this may be the first film since The Blair Witch Project that couldn't have been filmed any other way, and arguably the first good one. Creep switches seamlessly between drama, comedy, and horror thanks mostly to a near-perfect performance by mumbling maniac Mark Duplass. Whatever else you take away from it, there's no doubt Creep will give you the creeps.


I DON'T FEEL AT HOME IN THIS WORLD ANYMORE (2017)



Call him Frodo all you want, but Elijah Wood is working hard to reinvent his image as an actor, and we can totally respect that. From his mannequin-obsessed killer in 2012's Maniac to his dirty cop con man in 2015's The Trust (a soft #4 on our list of every Nicolas Cage movie on Netflix, ranked), Wood is clearly capable of branching out. In I Don't Feel at Home in This World Anymore, Wood plays a geeky loner who teams up with a woman in his neighborhood to find the people who robbed her house. Don't let the title bog you down. It's a black comedy extracted from the varicose veins of the Coens' Fargo and Burn After Reading, a subtle, escalating thriller about two everyday people thrust over their heads into a world of crime where anything can—and does—go wrong. IDFAHITWA (nope, just as bad) is moody, occasionally hilarious, and surprisingly poignant.


GREEN ROOM (2016)



The occasional (or frequent) bad gig is a necessary stumbling block for a young band paying its dues, but Green Room isn't a Spinal Tap-esque comedy about the indignities musicians face, like filthy dressing rooms, indifferent audiences, and club owners that won't pay up. No, it's a claustrophobic, intense, and at times horrific pulse-pounder about a regular punk band (whose members include Imogen Poots, Alia Shawkat, and the late Anton Yelchin) that just wants to hit the stage of a seedy concert venue. 


They get waylaid when they're stuck in the "green room" (the backstage waiting area) because the venue is actually a Nazi skinhead bar, and one of the musicians sees the body of a freshly murdered woman. The bad guys then hold the band hostage until they can kill them. (Their leader is the worst of all, portrayed by a very much against type Patrick Stewart.) It's an intense, compelling, low-budget horror movie of a different stripe, and one from which not everyone gets out alive (or intact).


LOOK WHO'S BACK (2017)



Hitler's still something of a controversial figure in Germany. Okay, sure, the guy's controversial everywhere — he's Hitler. But Germans have the added headache of being the country that, how do we put this...tried to kill half the world. It's like being born into a family famous for having that one uncle who founded the KKK.

In that light, this German satire is both unexpected and surprisingly hilarious. Look Who's Back starts with Hitler waking up in in a park in modern Berlin, still in uniform, with no idea how he got there. The first people he meets think he's a crazy hobo, the next ones think he's a Method actor doing a bit, and before long, Hitler's all over the news as the next big German comedian...and the people love him. In fact, it's less a satire on Hitler and more a social commentary on modern-day German nationalism and the country's attempts to move on from a particularly dark historical period, even while some of the population seems willing to welcome a Hitler-like figure back into their midst. On top of all that, it's pretty funny. Look Who's Back is definitely a weird combo, but it's one that happens to work extremely well.


THE TRUST (2016)



There's nothing particularly amazing to say about The Trust. It's a by-the-numbers heist thriller about two cops who decide to steal a drug dealer's stash of cash via a convoluted plan involving disguises and hi-tech machinery. But if there's one fact of life that separates us from the animals, it's this: anytime Nicolas Cage puts on a mustache and says, "I have an idea... It's kind of wacky," you'd be crazy not to stick around for the ride.

In the end, it's dual leads Nicolas Cage and Elijah Wood who elevate The Trust from a forgettable crime whatever into a quirky, fun, still fairly forgettable, but entertaining crime thriller. Wood has an offbeat comedic touch that's hard not to like, and Cage is, well, Nicolas Cage. Even if he's not at full Cage capacity in this movie, he's a good part of the way. He's sailing at half-Cage.


THE TIGER HUNTER (2017)



A little cheesy and a little sweet, The Tiger Hunter is the heartfelt story of an Indian immigrant in the late '70s who came to America in search of a job, only to find something even better — a purpose. It's a total feel-good movie from start to finish, but don't let that keep you away. This is the kind of hidden gem you save for watching after a terrifying horror movie or a double dip of depression like Million Dollar Baby or anything with Sean Penn. In other words, it's Prozac with cinematography.

Most of that comes from Danny Pudi, otherwise known as Abed from NBC's comedy series Community. He's the glue that holds this wishy-washy story together, and his natural charm also manages to fix the parts that get a little too cringe-inducing. You won't laugh or cry, but you'll chuckle and smile at the sweetness. And sometimes, that's all you want out of a movie. Sometimes that's enough.


A SERIOUS MAN (2009)



For just about every high-profile, Oscar-winning film the Coen Brothers put out, they release another low-key movie that slips under the radar and goes virtually unseen. After Raising Arizona came Miller's Crossing; after O Brother, Where Art Thou? came The Man Who Wasn't There; and after No Country for Old Men, we got A Serious Man.

Even by Coen standards, A Serious Man is an unusual movie. It starts with a subtitled prologue set in the 19th century and then moves into a suburb in the Midwest circa the late '60s. The main character is Larry Gopnik, a Jewish husband, father, and physics professor whose life is slowly but surely derailed by a chain of events completely beyond his control. In search of answers, he visits three rabbis to figure out the meaning of life.

It's not the Coens' best movie by a long shot, or even their best comedy (although being a Coen brothers film, there's always going to be someone ready to dispute that, with violence if it comes to it). In the end, you'll probably come away scratching your head. But maybe you'll also watch it again a year later, because there's something there, something you can't put your finger on. There has to be something holding it all together. Or maybe, just maybe, none of it means anything.


CHRISTINE (2016)




We'll come right out and say that there's nothing lighthearted about Christine. Not to be confused with the Stephen King thing about the demonic car, this is a 2016 biopic about Christine Chubbuck, a Florida news reporter who shot herself on live TV. Starring Rebecca Hall in the lead role and Dexter's Michael C. Hall (no relation) as her co-anchor, the movie focuses on Christine's life leading up to the event, and dang, it is nothing less than a sprint through broken glass.

Hall portrays Christine with such power that it's impossible to look away, even while the sense that the elevator's about to drop down the shaft grows to a shrieking crescendo. It's a sad, heartbreaking character study along the lines of Punch-Drunk Love, except that it doesn't even pretend to offer any hope before crushing your soul; it just grabs a hammer and starts breaking off chunks. Is it good? Yes. Will it wither your faith in humanity? Also yes. Look, this is just one of those gems that you'll have to take your chances with.


BLAME! (2017)



There seem to be two camps when it comes to this Netflix animated film — those who like the original manga hate the movie, and those who haven't read the manga generally enjoyed it. At least, they enjoyed it if they're the type of person to watch a feature-length anime in the first place.

But love it or hate it, when it comes to fresh takes on the apocalypse, Blame! has most any other futuristic vision beat, hands down. That's what makes this film so intriguing. In a seemingly endless, continually growing city that goes for miles up, down, and in either direction, robots have taken to exterminating humans. But a small band of people has survived for centuries inside an invisible shield that keeps the robots out. They don't know why the robots can't get inside their colony; they just know that going outside means risking life and limb at the hands of predatory robots.

It's only when a stranger comes to their town that they realize there may be a chance to do something about their predicament and finally stop the expansion of the city. It's not a perfect movie, but for vision alone, Blame! is well worth watching.


THE VAULT (2017)



There's definitely a genre you could stick The Vault in, but it's pretty unwieldy. All said and done, this is a supernatural crime horror thriller, better known as one of those supe-cri-ho-thros you're always hearing about. James Franco headlines The Vault as the assistant manager of a bank that gets knocked over by a group of petty thieves. The twist is, the bank is haunted. When Franco leads this heist gang down into the underground vault, they get more than money. They get ghosts.

You won't be rocking back and forth in terror from The Vault, although it does have its chilling moments. You won't end up rooting for the thieves, like Don't Breathe, although it does open them up to empathy eventually. And you definitely won't be chuckling at James Franco's silly antics, because he's a stone-faced, mustachioed man on a mission once things really get rolling. What The Vault lacks in such departments as characterization, script, and suspense, it more than makes up for in ghosts. Bunches of ghosts. If you love ghosts, you'll easily tolerate The Vault.


SUPER DARK TIMES ( 2017)



This coming-of-age story has all the staples of the genre — high school friends, teenage drama, house parties, and pubescent angst. But for two best friends, a traumatic experience may be too much for them to reconcile.

In his feature-length debut, director Kevin Phillips has crafted a tight, unique teenage thriller. The rich atmosphere and superb performances from a relatively unknown cast add weight to an already heavy script that deals with issues that are, unfortunately, extremely topical. Even though the setting is different — the '90s — the subject matter of Super Dark Times would work just as well set in the modern day.

This isn't an easy movie to watch. Although other films may be more gratuitously violent, Super Dark Times doesn't offer a hint of escapism in its few, swift brutal moments. This is a story that (until the end, at least), could happen in any neighborhood in the country. If you're looking for lighthearted viewing, you'd be better off queuing up something else. But if you want to experience a superb film with a painful message that may be hard to swallow, you could do worse than Super Dark Times.


BO BURNHAM:WHAT (2013)




It'd be a stretch to call what Bo Burnham does on a stage "stand-up comedy." It's more like a one-man show starring a 20-year-old on the verge of a mental breakdown, but with jokes. Yet somehow, there's genius in the madness. Using everything from musical numbers to choreographed skits to poetry readings, Burnham uses his stage time to deliver an irreverent, unforgettable experience.

And while Burnham's other special on Netflix, 2016's Make Happy, is probably a more polished show, his 2013 special what. is nothing short of raw, pitch-perfect insanity. Even if stand-up comedy isn't usually your thing, you'll have a hard time getting through what. without cracking a smile at the very least. There's a battle between two halves of a brain, a story about frogs, and a humble song from the perspective of God, and that's just the beginning. Fair warning though: It can get pretty raunchy, so make sure you put grandma to bed before you queue it up.


HE NEVER DIED (2015)



Every now and then, a truly inspired story shows up out of nowhere, then disappears again because the studio didn't have enough of a budget to market it. That had to have been what happened with He Never Died, because there's no other reason it isn't more well known than it is.

In this low-key, darkly funny supernatural movie, Jack is a private man with simple pleasures. He likes to sleep. He likes to play bingo with old people. He likes vegetables. And yet somehow, he keeps getting drawn into situations where his only option is to brutally murder people.

As the movie plays out, it's slowly revealed that there's a lot more to Jack than meets the eye. By the time he's pulling bullets out of his forehead with tweezers, you're trying to figure out not only who he is, but also what he is. Was he really in the Bible? What's with the cannibal thing? Is bingo really that exciting? These are just a few of the fun questions you'll ask yourself as you watch He Never Died. Anchored by an awesome, deadpan performance from lead Henry Rollins, this is definitely a movie worth checking out.


TOAST OF LONDON (2012)



Netflix ships in a lot of TV shows from around the world, exposing audiences to material they'd never find flipping through a cable lineup. One such show is English cult favorite Toast of London. Matt Berry, the spectacularly voiced star of beloved Britcoms like The IT Crowd and Garth Marenghi's Darkplace co-created and stars as Steven Toast, a London-based stage actor who thinks he's a legend but in reality is forever teetering on the brink of obscurity and oblivion. 

That reality is also rather surreal: Toast of London follows Toast as he stars in critically savaged stage productions, tries to get the attention of his shifty agent, waxes nostalgic about acting triumphs of the past with his flatmate, sleeps with the wife of his personal and professional nemesis Ray Purchase, and makes ends meet doing voiceover work for an odious and hostile producer with the wonderful name of Clem Fandango. As if that wasn't enough, each episode's chaotic absurdity gets cut with melancholy musical numbers expressing Toast's self-doubt and loneliness.


MINDHORN (2016)



In this wry and silly comedy, Julian Barratt, best known for starring in the delightfully weird British series The Mighty Boosh, plays Richard Thorncroft, an actor best known for a sci-fi cop drama from the '80s called Mindhorn, in which he played an investigator who could solve mysteries with the aid of a cybernetic eye. Flash-forward 25 years to the Isle of Man, near where Mindhorn was shot, as police pursue Melly (Russell Tovey), an escaped mental patient wanted for murder. He's willing to cooperate, but only if he can deal with Mindhorn... a fictional character. 

Richard, however, is more than willing to help out police by heading back to the Isle of Man (where his co-star and former lover still lives with their daughter), despite having no actual police skills but really looking to step out of his sad, post-fame existence. There are few funnier places than that spot in the human psyche where delusion meets arrogance, and that is the area where Mindhorn comfortably resides.


LEGEND OF THE NAGA PEARLS (2017)



Over the last decade or so, the Chinese film industry has exploded, producing big movies on par with Hollywood blockbusters. And as the Western canon provides a rich history of fantasy — e.g., The Lord of the Rings, Game of Thrones, The Chronicles of Narnia — so too does China with Novoland, a sprawling, 30-book series written by multiple authors that concerns a made-up, quasi-medieval and magical universe. Legend of the Naga Pearls marks Novoland's auspicious U.S. streaming debut, which Netflix acquired to expose to a much larger audience than it reached when it played in four American theaters in 2017.

The story is set in the mythical city of Uranapolis, where ho-hum humans and the angel-like Winged Tribe lived side-by-side, but with some hostility. A war between the races led to the dominance of the humans and the Winged Tribe losing its flying abilities. The movie picks up with Xue Lie (Simon Lam), an angry and possibly evil descendant of the most royal of the Winged Tribe, going on an adventure to locate the fabled Naga Pearls, which would destroy the humans once and for all. Those pearls, however, accidentally wind up in the possession of a human prince, constable, and thief, and they do everything they can to keep them out of Xue Lie's hands, a process which involves epic battles and dazzling fight and flight sequences.


INTO THE FOREST (2015)



Here's a compelling, and at times unsettling, movie that never quite goes where the viewer thinks it's going... while always providing a shred of hope that things might go well for its characters, even when the situation gets really dicey (and the movie gets ever darker).

We come in on two young women, Nell (Ellen Page) and Eva (Evan Rachel Wood), who live in a stately, window-covered home with their father (Callum Keith Rennie) in a beautiful, remote part of a forest. There's a far-reaching collapse of the national grid, but Nell and Ellen continue to live their lives as best they can. But then the blackout continues, time passes agonizingly, the food and supply reserves dwindle, and some truly horrific things happen as Nell and Eva, far from civilization, wonder if society has completely collapsed — and fight for the lives they once took for granted. Eventually, they can't wait around anymore and must fend for themselves by heading... into the forest.


THE CURIOUS CREATION OF CHRISTINE MCCONELL (2018)



Curious Creations is itself a curious creation. It's a showcase for Christine McConnell, an Instagram sensation who constructs hilariously elaborate and impressive cakes, bakery sculptures, and crafts, often with a goth or horror bent. But there's a lot more to the show than making a tea set out of chocolate or cookie Ouija board —it's also darkly hilarious sitcom. It takes place in a fictionalized McConnell's idyllic home... which she shares with puppet creatures. Among them are Rose, a trash-eating talking raccoon with a fork for a hand that McConnell proudly brought back from the dead; Rankle, a mummified cat straight out of ancient Egypt;, and Edgar, a werewolf who almost killed the mail carrier. Other characters pop in, too, like a cousin who tries to burn the whole place down and kill everyone inside, an axe-loving suitor named Norman (as in Bates), and a friendly ghost that lives in her home's mirrors. It's the Addams Family meets The Muppet Show meets Cake Wars you never knew you wanted.


THE LOBSTER (2015)




You've never seen anything like The Lobster. It's a dystopian story, or possibly utopian story, but it doesn't seem to be set in the future... only its version of modern-day life is somewhat askew. In this world, society is so committed to pairing people that those who go too long being single are transformed into animals. These are the stakes facing David (Colin Farrell), who goes to live at a hotel/camp that pairs up lonely hearts before their final 45-day single period ends. (David's dog companion, for example, used to be his brother.) If they have trouble finding a mate (who must have a distinguishing characteristic in common, such as a limp or a lisp), they can buy extra time by going out into the woods to hunt down those who choose to remain unattached (and must subsequently live off the grid). 

David eventually joins up with one of these militant singles collectives and falls in love with another "loner" (Rachel Weisz), but ironically, it's against the rules of the singles group for them to be together. As if all of this wasn't weird enough, the surreal storytelling is taken up a notch by the characters' tendency to speak in stilted, almost rehearsed tones. It all careens toward an ambiguous climax that speaks to the the wild things people will do to find love — and keep it.


HELL OR HIGH WATER (2016)



Hell or High Water takes old fashioned Western movie tropes — outlaws, stoic sheriffs, the need for justice — and sets them in the present day. The result: a story where the bad guys have their understandable reasons for being bad, and the audience may not even want the "good guys" to win. The true villain of Hell or High Water is the economy. 

Facing bank foreclosure on their birthright — the West Texas ranch that's been in the family for years— brothers Toby and Tanner Howard (Chris Pine and Ben Foster) hatch a plot to get the money to save it. They hit up the very same bank's branches in distant, dusty towns and steal the money they need to essentially pay the bank back its own money. Toby, a divorced dad, is a somewhat reluctant robber, while Tanner is bit of a wild card, an ex-con who seems to delight in the excitement (and violence) of their scheme. 

Jeff Bridges, more grizzled and drawling than ever, plays the brilliant Texas Ranger on their case, a guy just trying to do his job. Audiences will find themselves rooting for the boys to get away with their noble Robin Hoodery... but also rooting for the sheriff because he's a sharp and decent man (and because he's played by Jeff Bridges).


BREATH (2017)



Surf movies aren't so much about surfing so much as they are about culture and atmosphere — the people who travel around the world to find the best spots to catch tasty waves, and what it feels like to be out there on the ocean in the early morning hours, at one with nature and one's board. Breath is that kind of movie, a visceral, inviting film that will probably make viewers want to take up surfing as soon as possible.

Breath stars Simon Baker, best known as the pretty-boy star of the CBS crime drama The Mentalist, as Sando, an old hippie surf guru. He mentors two enthusiastic teenage surf newbies in straight-laced Pikelet (Samson Coulter) and bad boy Loonie (Ben Spence). The film is set in Western Australia in the '70s, and Baker also directed and co-wrote the movie, which explores what it means to be a surfer.


BRICK (2005)



Years before he wrote and directed the innovative sci-fi gem Looper (no relation) and an obscure little space movie called Star Wars: The Last Jedi, filmmaker Rian Johnson released Brick, a throwback to gritty, ambient, stylish, and stylized crime noir pictures of the mid-20th century. The main difference: This here detective story is set at a suburban California high school. Imagine a very dark (the titular brick is a load of heroin) slow-burning Veronica Mars, and you've got a good idea of what Brick is like.

Recently dumped teen Brendan (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) must unravel a set of vague clues to locate his missing ex-girlfriend that involves a mysterious car, a mysterious cigarette, a weird party, and some guys Brendan definitely shouldn't mess with. It plays like an old mystery novel, but amazingly it's also difficult to predict where it's headed, let alone how it ends. (And unlike every other teen movie ever made, not everybody is guaranteed a happy ending.)


BILLY ELLIOT (2000)



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It's the premise of lots of movies — protagonist rises out of bleak circumstances when they exhibit a remarkable talent. But Billy Elliot is different from those other movies because it isn't once treacly or mawkish, and committed first to the authenticity of the setting. Billy Elliot takes place in the coal miner's strike in northeastern England in the mid-1980s, a bleak and poverty-stricken time. From here, Jamie Bell's Billy discovers a a way out — he's a tremendously talented dancer, and an irascible teacher played by Julie Walters wants to help him develop his gifts. (And those are not approved by his family, owing to class, gender, time period, and expense, among other things.)

Billy Elliot has got one of the best dance sequences ever committed to film, as Bell exuberantly bounces through the streets of Newcastle to the tune of the Jam's hard-charging "A Town Called Malice." That scene alone makes this movie, in all honesty, a feel-good romp.


MISSISSIPPI GRIND ( 2015)



In between filming huge blockbusters like Deadpool and The Hitman's Bodyguard, Ryan Reynolds finds the time to make the occasional quirky indie movie — like this one. Mississippi Grind is a disarming comedy/drama about a grizzled, degenerate gambler (Ben Medelsohn) and the young charmer (Reynolds) with whom he embarks on a road trip full of partying and gambling until they make it to a high-stakes poker game in New Orleans.

There's great chemistry between the two leads, playing near-polar opposites: Mendelsohn's Gerry is a likable loser whose life is a perpetual mess due to his habits (and the actor wears all that experience like a costume), while Reynolds' affable Curtis is seemingly just along for the sake of fun and adventure. Mississippi Grind is ultimately a compellingly realistic movie about gambling, as it captures both the highest highs of a good luck streak turned financially fruitful... as well as the gut-wrenching agony of losing everything in an instant.


WINTER'S BONE (2010)



Not long before Jennifer Lawrence launched into superstardom with The Hunger Games, portraying a young woman whose ability to make do in the wilderness will serve her well, she played a character as no-nonsense, survival-minded, and in touch with the land as Katniss Everdeen. Rural teenager Ree Dolly literally has to save her family and her home. Her dad cooks meth, but has skipped bail and disappeared, and it's up to her to hunt him down in the mountainous, forested Ozark region and get him to turn himself in, or it'll mean Ree and her whole family will lose their home. 

Feeling like a visceral, American-style Greek tragedy, Ree must travel the spread-out backwoods and pry information out of people who don't want to give it to her (they're all hostile for her not keeping her mouth shut and siding with the authorities rather than her people) while the clock ticks and the stress and doom loom large. It's a bleak, fascinating movie about a culture not often depicted onscreen, and Lawrence proves she's a talent for the ages.



JUNEBURG (2005)



There are lots of movies about small town life, and movies about families where each member is trapped in a certain role forever. Junebug explores those topics, but knows that family is complicated and subtle — in other words, it's realistic. The North Carolina family at the center of Junebug isn't dumb; they don't talk much to each other, but still communicate volumes about their own frustrations about life.

Chicago art dealer Madeline (Embeth Davidtz) marries George (Alessandro Nivola), but his family doesn't attend the wedding. When Madeline goes to sign a folk artist who lives near George's family, they pop in for a visit. George's relatives are recognizable archetypes to anyone with a family: never-wrong matriarch Peg (Celia Weston), stoic and withholding dad Eugene (Scott Wilson), and brother Johnny (Ben McKenzie), a gruff guy bristling under the pressures of adulthood. His high school sweetheart-turned-wife Ashley (Amy Adams) is nine months pregnant. Adams steals the movie as Ashley — sweet, kind, genuinely interested in others — but Adams resists the easy route to play her character as a simpleton (she got her first Academy Award nomination in the process). The family's problems aren't and won't be easily solved, but hey, there's progress.


PENELOPE(2006)



Remember that old episode of The Twilight Zone, about the woman who thinks she's ugly because she doesn't have the same pig-like nose as the rest of the world? Okay, now imagine that as a quirky romantic comedy injected with some class satire, and a message about how looks ideally don't matter in affairs of the heart. With a nod to her Addams Family past, Christina Ricci portrays Penelope Wilhern, a twentysomething in a line of independently wealthy socialites. And just as many royal houses of Europe are afflicted by some kind of physical abnormality due to generations of shallow gene-pooling, the Wilherns face a similar fate: She has a little piggy nose. 

That nose will become "normal" only when she breaks her family's curse and finds true love with someone of "her own kind." A tabloid hires a sleazy guy named Max (James McAvoy) to pretend to be interested in Penelope so he can take a picture of the reclusive heiress. You can probably guess what happens between Max and Penelope, but that's just one part of her journey to decide to live her life — curse or no curse, pig nose or otherwise.



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