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100 Best Movies of 2010, Ranked by Tomatometer

100 Best Movies of 2010, Ranked by Tomatometer

(Photo by Fox Searchlight/ Courtesy Everett Collection. BLACK SWAN.)

2010 included unforgettable award-winning movies, iconic animation, visual effects delights, gritty action, and unconventional comedy in its motion picture roster. The list of 100 best movies of 2010 are ranked by Tomatometer, including Certified Fresh movies, Fresh movies with at least 20 reviews and a 60%+ Popcornmeter, and audience picks: Rotten movies with 60%+ Popcornmeter score and 20,000+ user reviews! This means that, unfortunately, some popular movies like The Twilight Saga: Eclipse, TRON: Legacy, and Jackass 3D won’t make the cut. (Tyler Lorenz)

#1

Poetry

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 100%
Popcornmeter icon 86%

#1

Critics Consensus: Poetry is an absorbing, poignant drama because it offers no easy answers to its complex central conflict.
Synopsis: Kind-hearted Mija (Yun Jung-hee) is tasked with raising her troubled teenage grandson, Jong-wook, while her daughter works in far-off Busan. [More]


Directed By:

Lee Chang-dong

#2

How to Train Your Dragon

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 99%
Popcornmeter icon 91%

#2

Critics Consensus: Boasting dazzling animation, a script with surprising dramatic depth, and thrilling 3-D sequences, How to Train Your Dragon soars.
Synopsis: A misfit Viking teenager sees a chance to change the course of his clan’s future when he befriends an injured [More]

#3

Toy Story 3

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 98%
Popcornmeter icon 90%

#3

Critics Consensus: Deftly blending comedy, adventure, and honest emotion, Toy Story 3 is a rare second sequel that really works.
Synopsis: With their beloved Andy preparing to leave for college, Woody (Tom Hanks), Buzz Lightyear (Tim Allen), Jessie (Joan Cusack), and [More]


Directed By:

Lee Unkrich

#4

The Social Network

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 96%
Popcornmeter icon 87%

#4

Critics Consensus: Impeccably scripted, beautifully directed, and filled with fine performances, The Social Network is a riveting, ambitious example of modern filmmaking at its finest.
Synopsis: In 2003, Harvard undergrad and computer genius Mark Zuckerberg (Jesse Eisenberg) begins work on a new concept that eventually turns [More]


Directed By:

David Fincher

#5

True Grit

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 95%
Popcornmeter icon 85%

#5

Critics Consensus: Girded by strong performances from Jeff Bridges, Matt Damon, and newcomer Hailee Steinfeld, and lifted by some of the Coens’ most finely tuned, unaffected work, True Grit is a worthy companion to the Charles Portis book.
Synopsis: After an outlaw named Tom Chaney (Josh Brolin) murders her father, feisty 14-year-old farm girl Mattie Ross (Hailee Steinfeld) hires [More]


Directed By:

Joel Coen, Ethan Coen

#6

13 Assassins

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 95%
Popcornmeter icon 88%

#6

Critics Consensus: Takashi Miike’s electric remake of Eiichi Kudo’s 1963 period action film is a wild spectacle executed with killer, dizzying panache.
Synopsis: In this remake of a 1963 film based on historical events, Shinzaemon Shimada leads a team of assassins in 19th-century [More]


Directed By:

Takashi Miike

#7

The King’s Speech

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 94%
Popcornmeter icon 92%

#7

Critics Consensus: Colin Firth gives a masterful performance in The King’s Speech, a predictable but stylishly produced and rousing period drama.
Synopsis: England’s Prince Albert (Colin Firth) must ascend the throne as King George VI, but he has a speech impediment. Knowing [More]


Directed By:

Tom Hooper

#8

Winter’s Bone

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 94%
Popcornmeter icon 76%

#8

Critics Consensus: Bleak, haunting, and yet still somehow hopeful, Winter’s Bone is writer-director Debra Granik’s best work yet — and it boasts an incredible, starmaking performance from Jennifer Lawrence.
Synopsis: Faced with an unresponsive mother and a criminal father, Ozark teenager Ree Dolly (Jennifer Lawrence) does what she can to [More]


Directed By:

Debra Granik

#9

Animal Kingdom

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 94%
Popcornmeter icon 83%

#9

Critics Consensus: With confident pacing, a smart script, and a top-notch cast, Animal Kingdom represents the best the Australian film industry has to offer.
Synopsis: In this gritty Australian crime drama, young Joshua J Cody (James Frecheville) is taken in by his extended family after [More]


Directed By:

David Michôd

#10

127 Hours

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 93%
Popcornmeter icon 85%

#10

Critics Consensus: As gut-wrenching as it is inspirational, 127 Hours unites one of Danny Boyle’s most beautifully exuberant directorial efforts with a terrific performance from James Franco.
Synopsis: While exploring a remote canyon in Utah, mountaineer and adventurer Aron Ralston (James Franco) becomes trapped when a boulder falls [More]


Directed By:

Danny Boyle

#11

The Kids Are All Right

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 93%
Popcornmeter icon 74%

#11

Critics Consensus: Worthwhile as both a well-acted ensemble piece and as a smart, warm statement on family values, The Kids Are All Right is remarkable.
Synopsis: Lesbian couple Jules (Julianne Moore) and Nic (Annette Bening) have been together for almost 20 years and have two teenage [More]


Directed By:

Lisa Cholodenko

#12

Another Year

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 93%
Popcornmeter icon 74%

#12

Critics Consensus: Characterized by strong performances and the director’s trademark feel for the nuances of everyday life, Another Year marks another solid entry in Mike Leigh’s career of kitchen-sink English drama.
Synopsis: Tom (Jim Broadbent) and Gerri (Ruth Sheen) are an older couple who have been happily married for a long time, [More]


Directed By:

Mike Leigh

#13

Carlos

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 93%
Popcornmeter icon 85%

#13

Critics Consensus: Despite its hefty running time, Carlos moves along briskly, thanks to an engaging story, exotic locales, and a breakout performance by Edgar Ramirez.
Synopsis: Young Venezuelan Marxist Ilich Ramirez Sanchez (Edgar Ramírez) is recruited by the leader of a Palestinian terrorist organization (Christoph Bach) [More]


Directed By:

Olivier Assayas

#14

The Town

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 92%
Popcornmeter icon 85%

#14

Critics Consensus: Tense, smartly written, and wonderfully cast, The Town proves that Ben Affleck has rediscovered his muse — and that he’s a director to be reckoned with.
Synopsis: Doug MacRay (Ben Affleck) leads a band of ruthless bank robbers and has no real attachments except for James (Jeremy [More]


Directed By:

Ben Affleck

#15

The Fighter

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 91%
Popcornmeter icon 89%

#15

Critics Consensus: Led by a trio of captivating performances from Mark Wahlberg, Christian Bale, and Amy Adams, The Fighter is a solidly entertaining, albeit predictable, entry in the boxing drama genre.
Synopsis: For Micky Ward (Mark Wahlberg), boxing is a family affair. His tough-as-nails mother is his manager. His half-brother, Dicky (Christian [More]


Directed By:

David O. Russell

#16

Incendies

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 91%
Popcornmeter icon 92%

#16

Critics Consensus: It’s messy, overlong, and a touch melodramatic, but those flaws pale before Incendies‘ impressive acting and devastating emotional impact.
Synopsis: Nawal (Lubna Azabal), a dying Middle Eastern woman living in Montreal, leaves separate letters to her twin children to be [More]


Directed By:

Denis Villeneuve

#17

Point Blank

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 91%
Popcornmeter icon 77%

#17

Critics Consensus: No consensus yet.
Synopsis: A man (Gilles Lellouche) finds himself pitted against rival gangsters and trigger-happy police in a deadly race to save the [More]


Directed By:

Fred Cavayé

#18

Elite Squad 2

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 91%
Popcornmeter icon 91%

#18

Critics Consensus: Elite Squad: The Enemy Within is a bleak, violent descent into the Brazilian underbelly, ripping into the favelas with unstoppable and kinetic force.
Synopsis: Dirty cops and corrupt, powerful politicians threaten Nascimento (Wagner Moura). [More]


Directed By:

José Padilha

#19

Crazy Heart

(2009)

Tomatometer icon 90%
Popcornmeter icon 76%

#19

Critics Consensus: Thanks to a captivating performance from Jeff Bridges, Crazy Heart transcends its overly familiar origins and finds new meaning in an old story.
Synopsis: With too many years of hazy days and boozy nights,former country-music legend Bad Blake (Jeff Bridges) is reduced to playing [More]


Directed By:

Scott Cooper

#20

The Illusionist

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 90%
Popcornmeter icon 79%

#20

Critics Consensus: An engrossing love letter to fans of adult animation, The Illusionist offers a fine antidote to garish mainstream fare.
Synopsis: Magic tricks can’t compete with rock ‘n’ roll in the 1950s, so a French illusionist (Jean-Claude Donda) finds himself touring [More]


Directed By:

Sylvain Chomet

#21
Critics Consensus: Languorous and deeply enigmatic, Palme d’Or winner Uncle Boonmee represents an original take on the ghosts that haunt us.
Synopsis: Afflicted with kidney disease, Uncle Boonmee (Thanapat Saisaymar) is preparing himself for death. He has assembled his relatives in the [More]

#22

Tangled

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 89%
Popcornmeter icon 87%

#22

Critics Consensus: While far from Disney’s greatest film, Tangled is a visually stunning, thoroughly entertaining addition to the studio’s classic animated canon.
Synopsis: When the kingdom’s most-wanted bandit, Flynn Rider (Zachary Levi), hides in a convenient tower, he immediately becomes a captive of [More]


Directed By:

Nathan Greno, Byron Howard

#23

Certified Copy

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 89%
Popcornmeter icon 70%

#23

Critics Consensus: The main stars are absolutely perfect in this absorbing, existential drama that dissects human relationships.
Synopsis: While touring Tuscany, Italy, promoting his new book, English author James (William Shimell) meets French store owner Elle (Juliette Binoche), [More]


Directed By:

Abbas Kiarostami

#24

The Trip

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 89%
Popcornmeter icon 70%

#24

Critics Consensus: Amiable, funny and sometimes insightful, The Trip works as both a showcase for the enduring chemistry between stars Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon and an unexpected perusal of men entering mid-life crises.
Synopsis: Food critic Steve Coogan and traveling companion Rob Brydon trade delicious barbs and clever remarks as they tour various eateries [More]


Directed By:

Michael Winterbottom

#25
#25

Critics Consensus: Rare Exports is an unexpectedly delightful crossbreed of deadpan comedy and Christmas horror.
Synopsis: A young boy named Pietari (Onni Tommila) and his friend Juuso (Ilmari Järvenpää) think a secret mountain drilling project near [More]


Directed By:

Jalmari Helander

(Photo by Universal/ Courtesy Everett Collection. DESPICABLE ME.)

The King’s Speech, a biopic of King George VI, had an outstanding year at the 83rd Academy Awards, garnering 3 wins for Best Picture, Best Directing (Tom Hooper), and Best Lead Actor (Colin Firth). The film was lauded by multiple speech organizations for addressing the social stigma of speech impediments, and the challenges and expectations associated with overcoming them. Natalie Portman’s performance in Darren Aronofsky’s psychological ballet thriller Black Swan earned her a Best Lead Actress award. Portman trained for six months with a New York City Ballet alum to achieve the appropriate physique and technique for her role.

David O. Russell’s MMA drama The Fighter grabbed two Oscars this season: Best Supporting Actor for Christian Bale, and Best Supporting Actress for Melissa Leo. Christian Bale would go on to be nominated for three more Acting Oscars for American Hustle (2014), The Big Short (2016), and Vice (2019). Melissa Leo was nominated one time previously, for Best Lead Actress in Frozen River (2009).

Aaron Sorkin won Best Adapted Screenplay for The Social Network. The dramatized history of the founding of Facebook was based on Ben Mezrich’s book “The Accidental Billionaires: The Founding of Facebook, a Tale of Sex, Money, Genius, and Betrayal”. The Social Network also won Best Film Editing, and Best Original Score for the composition by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross of Nine Inch Nails fame.

A few more Oscar winners of note: Christopher Nolan’s Inception won Cinematography and Best Visual Effects. Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland won Best Art Direction and Best Costume Design, while Joe Johnston’s The Wolfman took home Best Makeup. And, Pixar’s Toy Story 3 won Best Animated Feature Film, as well as Best Original Song for “We Belong Together” by Randy Newman.

While Toy Story 3 was the awards season darling in 2010, it was flanked by several other beloved animated pictures. DreamWorks Animation’s How to Train Your Dragon introduced us to our human and dragon hero duo, Hiccup and Toothless, and their adventures defending the Isle of Berk. The original movie would receive two sequel movies and several streaming television spinoffs.

Walt Disney Animation Studios through their hat into the ring with a CGI adaption of the Rapunzel fairy tale in Tangled. It was the 8th highest grossing film of the year worldwide and received an Oscar nomination for Best Original Song via Alan Menken’s “I See the Light”.

Animation studio Illumination burst onto the scene in a big way with Despicable Me. The movie introduced us to Gru, his three adoptive daughters Margo, Edith, and Agnes, and… The Minions. And pop culture will never be the same. The 2010 picture is followed by three mainline sequels and two Minions spinoff films.

Finally, perhaps more of a cult favorite in comparison to its animation peers, DreamWorks’s Megamind enjoyed its own share of success, landing #17 at the box office this year. It received respectable reviews from critics and found its own fandom in the youth of 2010.

#26

Let Me In

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 88%
Popcornmeter icon 76%

#26

Critics Consensus: Similar to the original in all the right ways — but with enough changes to stand on its own — Let Me In is the rare Hollywood remake that doesn’t add insult to inspiration.
Synopsis: Bullied at school, neglected at home and incredibly lonely, 12-year-old Owen (Kodi Smit-McPhee) spends his days plotting revenge on his [More]


Directed By:

Matt Reeves

#27

Submarine

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 88%
Popcornmeter icon 82%

#27

Critics Consensus: Funny, stylish, and ringing with adolescent truth, Submarine marks Richard Ayoade as a talent to watch.
Synopsis: Oliver (Craig Roberts) is a Welsh teen who has some things on his mind. First is losing his virginity before [More]


Directed By:

Richard Ayoade

#28

Carancho

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 88%
Popcornmeter icon 73%

#28

Critics Consensus: Carancho is a fast-paced noirish thriller that cuts deep, cementing filmmaker Pablo Trapero as a household name in Argentina.
Synopsis: The shady past of an ambulance-chasing lawyer (Ricardo Darín) threatens his unlikely romance with an idealistic doctor (Martina Gusmán). [More]


Directed By:

Pablo Trapero

#29

A Screaming Man

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 88%
Popcornmeter icon 62%

#29

Critics Consensus: A Screaming Man deftly uses its personal look at a family dynamic to offer pointed political observations, confirming writer-director Mahamat-Saleh Haroun as a major talent.
Synopsis: Aging Adam Ousmane (Youssouf Djaoro), who was once an up-and-coming Chadian swimmer, now manages the pool at a prestigious local [More]


Directed By:

Mahamat-Saleh Haroun

#30

Inception

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 87%
Popcornmeter icon 91%

#30

Critics Consensus: Smart, innovative, and thrilling, Inception is that rare summer blockbuster that succeeds viscerally as well as intellectually.
Synopsis: Dom Cobb (Leonardo DiCaprio) is a thief with the rare ability to enter people’s dreams and steal their secrets from [More]


Directed By:

Christopher Nolan

#31

Blue Valentine

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 87%
Popcornmeter icon 77%

#31

Critics Consensus: This emotionally gripping examination of a marriage on the rocks isn’t always easy to watch, but Michelle Williams and Ryan Gosling give performances of unusual depth and power.
Synopsis: Dean (Ryan Gosling) and Cindy (Michelle Williams) live a quiet life in a modest neighborhood. To the casual observer, everything [More]


Directed By:

Derek Cianfrance

#32

Unstoppable

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 87%
Popcornmeter icon 72%

#32

Critics Consensus: As fast, loud, and relentless as the train at the center of the story, Unstoppable is perfect popcorn entertainment — and director Tony Scott’s best movie in years.
Synopsis: When a massive, unmanned locomotive roars out of control, the threat is more ominous than just a derailment. The train [More]


Directed By:

Tony Scott

#33

Buried

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 87%
Popcornmeter icon 65%

#33

Critics Consensus: Wringing a seemingly impossible amount of gripping drama out of its claustrophobic premise, Buried is a nerve-wracking showcase for Ryan Reynolds’ talent.
Synopsis: A civilian truck driver in Iraq, Paul Conroy (Ryan Reynolds) falls victim to a band of insurgents. An unknown length [More]


Directed By:

Rodrigo Cortés

#34

Even the Rain

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 87%
Popcornmeter icon 85%

#34

Critics Consensus: No consensus yet.
Synopsis: Bolivian film extras launch a protest against the privatization of their water supply, which parallels the Spanish conquest and exploitation [More]


Directed By:

Icíar Bollaín

#35

Viva Riva!

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 87%
Popcornmeter icon 50%

#35

Critics Consensus: Vibrant and violent, Viva Riva is a stylish, fast-paced crime drama.
Synopsis: With the Democratic Republic of Congo suffering from a gasoline shortage, criminal Riva (Patsha Bay) comes back home with gasoline [More]


Directed By:

Djo Munga

#36

Rabbit Hole

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 86%
Popcornmeter icon 72%

#36

Critics Consensus: It’s often painful to watch, but Rabbit Hole‘s finely written script and convincing performances make it worth the effort.
Synopsis: Eight months after the accidental death of their 4-year-old son, Howie (Aaron Eckhart) and Becca (Nicole Kidman) are trying to [More]


Directed By:

John Cameron Mitchell

#37

Beginners

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 86%
Popcornmeter icon 77%

#37

Critics Consensus: Wearing its twee heart on its sleeve, Beginners explores the depths of modern, multi-generational romance with wit and depth.
Synopsis: After his mother dies, Oliver (Ewan McGregor) is stunned when his father, Hal (Christopher Plummer), recently diagnosed with terminal cancer, [More]


Directed By:

Mike Mills

#38

Meek’s Cutoff

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 86%
Popcornmeter icon 53%

#38

Critics Consensus: Moving at a contemplative speed unseen in most westerns, Meek’s Cutoff is an effective, intense journey of terror and survival in the untamed frontier.
Synopsis: During the 1840s, six settlers and their guide are caught in a dangerous situation: They are lost, food and water [More]


Directed By:

Kelly Reichardt

#39

Tucker & Dale vs Evil

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 86%
Popcornmeter icon 85%

#39

Critics Consensus: Like the best horror/comedies, Tucker & Dale vs. Evil mines its central crazy joke for some incredible scares, laughs, and — believe it or not — heart.
Synopsis: Two scruffy pals’ (Tyler Labine, Alan Tudyk) backwoods vacation takes a bloody turn when ignorant college students mistake them for [More]


Directed By:

Eli Craig

#40

Mysteries of Lisbon

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 85%
Popcornmeter icon 70%

#40

Critics Consensus: Mysteries of Lisbon achieves an epic heft through an unhurried pace and lush photography, its beguiling episodes culminating in an impressive whole that justifies a lengthy runtime.
Synopsis: A 19th-century Portuguese man recalls his youth in a church-run orphanage. [More]


Directed By:

Raúl Ruiz

#41

Black Swan

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 85%
Popcornmeter icon 84%

#41

Critics Consensus: Bracingly intense, passionate, and wildly melodramatic, Black Swan glides on Darren Aronofsky’s bold direction — and a bravura performance from Natalie Portman.
Synopsis: Nina (Natalie Portman) is a ballerina whose passion for the dance rules every facet of her life. When the company’s [More]


Directed By:

Darren Aronofsky

#42

Easy A

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 85%
Popcornmeter icon 77%

#42

Critics Consensus: It owes a huge debt to older (and better) teen comedies, but Easy A proves a smart, witty showcase for its irresistibly charming star, Emma Stone.
Synopsis: Prompted by her popular best friend to spill details of her boring weekend, Olive, a clean-cut teen, decides to spice [More]


Directed By:

Will Gluck

#43

Please Give

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 85%
Popcornmeter icon 64%

#43

Critics Consensus: Nicole Holofcener’s newest might seem slight in places, but its rendering of complex characters in a conflicted economic landscape is varied, natural, and touching all the same.
Synopsis: Kate (Catherine Keener) and her husband Alex (Oliver Platt) are wealthy New Yorkers who prowl estate sales and make a [More]


Directed By:

Nicole Holofcener

#44
#44

Critics Consensus: No consensus yet.
Synopsis: During the French Wars of Religion, heiress Marie (Mélanie Thierry) finds that her father, the Marquis de Mézières (Judith Chemla), [More]


Directed By:

Bertrand Tavernier

#45
#45

Critics Consensus: It’s sentimental and treacly, but that’s not enough to prevent My Afternoons with Margueritte from being truly affecting.
Synopsis: In a film based on Marie-Sabine Roger’s book, Margueritte (Gisèle Casadesus) is a 95-year-old woman whose greatest joy in life [More]


Directed By:

Jean Becker

#46

Happy, Happy

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 85%
Popcornmeter icon 60%

#46

Critics Consensus: No consensus yet.
Synopsis: Though contentedly married to her loveless high-school sweetheart, a cheerful housewife (Agnes Kittelsen) lands in hot water when a risque [More]


Directed By:

Anne Sewitsky

#47

The Ghost Writer

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 84%
Popcornmeter icon 70%

#47

Critics Consensus: While it may lack the revelatory punch of Polanski’s finest films, Ghost Writer benefits from stylish direction, a tense screenplay, and a strong central performance from Ewan McGregor.
Synopsis: When a successful ghostwriter, The Ghost (Ewan McGregor), agrees to finish the memoirs of Adam Long (Pierce Brosnan), England’s former [More]


Directed By:

Roman Polanski

#48

Potiche

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 84%
Popcornmeter icon 61%

#48

Critics Consensus: No consensus yet.
Synopsis: In 1977 France, tightfisted factory owner Robert Pujol (Fabrice Luchini) is so shocked when his workers strike for higher wages [More]


Directed By:

François Ozon

#49
#49

Critics Consensus: Its script may not be as dazzling as its eye-popping visuals, but Scott Pilgrim vs. the World is fast, funny, and inventive.
Synopsis: As bass guitarist for a garage-rock band, Scott Pilgrim (Michael Cera) has never had trouble getting a girlfriend; usually, the [More]


Directed By:

Edgar Wright

#50

Trollhunter

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 83%
Popcornmeter icon 72%

#50

Critics Consensus: Trollhunter is a mockumentary with an appropriate level of creeping dread, but one that also benefits from generous helpings of dry wit.
Synopsis: While investigating reports of illegal poaching, three student filmmakers encounter a man (Otto Jespersen) who slays trolls for the Norwegian [More]


Directed By:

André Øvredal

(Photo by Paramount/ Courtesy Everett Collection. TRUE GRIT.)

With so many high-rated animated films and Oscar winners securing space on the list, let’s talk about the blockbuster films of the year: heavy-hitters in both the box office and reviews. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1 kicked off the grand finale for the iconic wizarding saga. It landed #3 at the worldwide box office this year, while Part 2 would go on to take #1 at the box office a year later. Iron Man 2 premiered in 2010 with much anticipation from fans following the success of the first Iron Man film two years earlier. It introduced Don Cheadle’s James Rhodes as Tony Stark’s super-suited partner War Machine, and its post-credits scene heralded the arrival of the mighty Thor in 2011, with a tease of his hammer Mjolnir buried in a crater in New Mexico.

Taking the action to slightly more realistic proportions is 2010’s The Karate Kid. A tangential sequel to the original 1984 film starring Ralph Macchio and Pat Morita, in this film teenager Dre Parker (Jaden Smith) moves from Detroit to Beijing, where he learns self-defense kung fu from Mr. Han (Jackie Chan). Ralph Macchio and Jackie Chan returned in Karate Kid: Legends, a sequel in which the two masters converge to mentor a new disciple.

The action gets grittier in 2010. Perhaps most appropriately in the Coen brothers’ True Grit. In this grim Western, at 14-year-old girl seeks the help of a U.S. Marshal to track and kill the outlaw who murdered her father. The film received glowing reviews and 10 Oscar nominations, but unfortunately took home no gold. In the gruesome samurai action drama 13 Assassins directed by Takashi Miike, a team of assassins plot to overthrow a lord who seeks to consolidate power within the Shogunate. It received the Best Film award at the Yokohama Film Festival. While beloved by genre film fans, the film and its director are known for their extreme portrayals of violence and sex. Viewer discretion advised!

In the tense crime thriller The Town, Ben Affleck plays a bank robber who falls in love with a victim after a heist. Their mission to rob Fenway Park in Boston is compromised when his partners begin to doubt his allegiance to them. Ben Affleck received positive reviews for both his acting and directing in this tense, well-written drama. It was named one of the Top Ten Films of 2010 by the National Board of Review.

In Point Blank, a hospital worker is caught in a desperate situation when gangsters kidnap his wife and command him to kill one of his patients. Things become even more difficult when he becomes caught between his blackmailers and the police pursuing him. The film’s popularity lead to it being remade in South Korea, Bangladesh, the United States, and India.

In Red, Bruce Willis puts his action hero persona back on as a retired CIA black ops agent who gets his team back together to stop an assassin coming after him. It received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy, and a sequel, Red 2, in 2013.

Danny Trejo shines in the cartoonishly violent and sexy action extravaganza Machete. Directed by Robert Rodriguez of Spy Kids, Sin City, and El Mariachi fame, Machete was developed off a fake trailer featured in Grindhouse (2007). Machete’s popularity would earn it a sequel called Machete Kills in 2013.

#51

The Way

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 82%
Popcornmeter icon 83%

#51

Critics Consensus: It may be a little too deliberately paced for more impatient viewers, but The Way is a worthy effort from writer/director Emilio Estevez, balancing heartfelt emotion with clear-eyed drama that resists cheap sentiment.
Synopsis: An American father travels to France to claim the body of his estranged son, who was killed on the trek [More]


Directed By:

Emilio Estevez

#52

I Saw the Devil

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 82%
Popcornmeter icon 87%

#52

Critics Consensus: Never flinching during its descent into depravity, I Saw the Devil is a pulverizing thriller that will give bloody satisfaction to audiences who like their revenge served with fiery rage.
Synopsis: On a dark road, taxi driver Kyung-chul (Choi Min-sik) comes across a scared female motorist stranded in a broken-down vehicle. [More]


Directed By:

Kim Jee-woon

#53

Life, Above All

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 82%
Popcornmeter icon 82%

#53

Critics Consensus: No consensus yet.
Synopsis: A 12-year-old girl (Khomotso Manyaka) fights prejudice when her family is ostracized by a South African community. [More]


Directed By:

Oliver Schmitz

#54

Outrage

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 82%
Popcornmeter icon 65%

#54

Critics Consensus: Outrage packs enough violent impact to satisfy – even if fans of writer-director Takeshi Kitano will find themselves familiar with many of its ingredients.
Synopsis: After his men go too far in their confrontation with a rival gang, a yakuza henchman (Beat Takeshi) gets caught [More]


Directed By:

Takeshi Kitano

#55

Despicable Me

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 80%
Popcornmeter icon 83%

#55

Critics Consensus: Borrowing heavily (and intelligently) from Pixar and Looney Tunes, Despicable Me is a surprisingly thoughtful, family-friendly treat with a few surprises of its own.
Synopsis: Supervillain Gru, a man who delights in all things wicked, hatches a plan to steal the moon. Surrounded by an [More]


Directed By:

Chris Renaud, Pierre Coffin

#56

Cyrus

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 80%
Popcornmeter icon 53%

#56

Critics Consensus: While it may strike some viewers as slight, Cyrus is a successful hybrid of mainstream production values and the mumblecore ideals of directors Jay and Mark Duplass.
Synopsis: Seven years after his divorce, John (John C. Reilly) has given up hope that he will find love again. Then [More]


Directed By:

Jay Duplass, Mark Duplass

#57

Made in Dagenham

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 80%
Popcornmeter icon 75%

#57

Critics Consensus: Organized around a terrific performance by Sally Hawkins, Made in Dagenham is a stirring call for pay equity replete with heart and wit.
Synopsis: Rita O’Grady (Sally Hawkins) works for the Ford Motor Co. plant in Dagenham, England. Despite performing the specialized task of [More]


Directed By:

Nigel Cole

#58

Tiny Furniture

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 80%
Popcornmeter icon 54%

#58

Critics Consensus: Agonizingly funny, Tiny Furniture marks an observant study of a failure to launch and an auspicious debut for writer-director Lena Dunham.
Synopsis: After graduating from film school, Aura (Lena Dunham) returns to New York to live with her photographer mother, Siri (Laurie [More]


Directed By:

Lena Dunham

#59

Night Catches Us

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 79%
Popcornmeter icon 66%

#59

Critics Consensus: A bold, original debut, Night Catches Us personalizes a tumultuous period in American history thanks to strong performances from Anthony Mackie and Kerry Washington.
Synopsis: When ex-Black Panther Marcus (Anthony Mackie) returns to Philadelphia for the funeral of his father, he knows it’s not going [More]


Directed By:

Tanya Hamilton

#60
Critics Consensus: Somber and sweet, The Myth of the American Sleepover authentically evokes adolescence — and all of the awkwardness and heartbreak that comes with it.
Synopsis: Four young people search for love and adventure on the last weekend of the summer. [More]


Directed By:

David Robert Mitchell

#61

The Other Guys

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 79%
Popcornmeter icon 60%

#61

Critics Consensus: A clever parody of cop-buddy action-comedies, The Other Guys delivers several impressive action set pieces and lots of big laughs, thanks to the assured comic chemistry between Will Ferrell and Mark Wahlberg.
Synopsis: Unlike their heroic counterparts on the force, desk-bound NYPD detectives Gamble and Hoitz garner no headlines as they work day [More]


Directed By:

Adam McKay

#62

Trust

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 79%
Popcornmeter icon 65%

#62

Critics Consensus: Director David Schwimmer gets some gut-wrenching performances out of his actors but he still lacks the chops to fully ratchet up story tension.
Synopsis: A man (Clive Owen) has difficulty coping with the knowledge that his 14-year-daughter (Liana Liberato) was assaulted by a sexual [More]


Directed By:

David Schwimmer

#63

How I Ended This Summer

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 79%
Popcornmeter icon 67%

#63

Critics Consensus: No consensus yet.
Synopsis: Two men at a remote Arctic base begin mistrusting each other after an important radio message. [More]


Directed By:

Aleksei Popogrebsky

#64

Kick-Ass

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 78%
Popcornmeter icon 81%

#64

Critics Consensus: Not for the faint of heart, Kick-Ass takes the comic adaptation genre to new levels of visual style, bloody violence, and gleeful profanity.
Synopsis: Using his love for comics as inspiration, teenager Dave Lizewski (Aaron Johnson) decides to reinvent himself as a superhero — [More]


Directed By:

Matthew Vaughn

#65

Fair Game

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 78%
Popcornmeter icon 65%

#65

Critics Consensus: It struggles with the balance between fact-based biopic and taut political thriller, but Fair Game brims with righteous anger — and benefits from superb performances by Naomi Watts and Sean Penn.
Synopsis: Wife and mother Valerie Plame (Naomi Watts) has a double life as a CIA operative, hiding her vocation from family [More]


Directed By:

Doug Liman

#66

Cold Weather

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 78%
Popcornmeter icon 52%

#66

Critics Consensus: For viewers who manage to stay invested in its occasionally aimless story, Cold Weather proves a surprisingly sophisticated blend of mumblecore and indie noir.
Synopsis: Armed with a few clues and an in-depth knowledge of Sherlock Holmes lore, an ice-factory worker (Cris Lankenau) leads his [More]


Directed By:

Aaron Katz

#67
Critics Consensus: It can’t help but feel like the prelude it is, but Deathly Hallows: Part I is a beautifully filmed, emotionally satisfying penultimate installment for the Harry Potter series.
Synopsis: Without the guidance and protection of their professors, Harry (Daniel Radcliffe), Ron (Rupert Grint) and Hermione (Emma Watson) begin a [More]


Directed By:

David Yates

#68

The Debt

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 77%
Popcornmeter icon 66%

#68

Critics Consensus: Its time-shifting narrative creates distracting casting problems, but ultimately, The Debt is a smart, well-acted entry in a genre that could use more like it.
Synopsis: In 1965, young Mossad agent Rachel Singer (Jessica Chastain) and two comrades (Sam Worthington, Marton Csokas) are involved in a [More]


Directed By:

John Madden

#69

Barney’s Version

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 77%
Popcornmeter icon 78%

#69

Critics Consensus: With a magnificent performance by Paul Giamatti, Barney’s Version offers much comedy and insight to the complexities of modern romance.
Synopsis: Toward the end of his life, Barney Panofsky (Paul Giamatti) looks back on his triumphs and tragedies, beginning with an [More]


Directed By:

Richard J. Lewis

#70

In a Better World

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 77%
Popcornmeter icon 86%

#70

Critics Consensus: In a Better World is a sumptuous melodrama that tackles some rather difficult existential and human themes.
Synopsis: Anton (Mikael Persbrandt) is a doctor who travels frequently between his home in Denmark and a refugee camp in Africa. [More]


Directed By:

Susanne Bier

#71

Greenberg

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 76%
Popcornmeter icon 42%

#71

Critics Consensus: Greenberg‘s title character is harder to like than most, but Ben Stiller’s nuanced performance and a darkly funny script help take the misanthropic edge off.
Synopsis: Roger Greenberg (Ben Stiller), a failed musician now making a living as a carpenter in New York, returns to Los [More]


Directed By:

Noah Baumbach

#72

Piranha

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 75%
Popcornmeter icon 45%

#72

Critics Consensus: Playing exactly to expectations for a movie about killer fish run amok, Piranha 3-D dishes out gore, guffaws and gratuitous nudity with equal glee.
Synopsis: Spring break turns gory when an underground tremor releases hundreds of prehistoric, carnivorous fish into Lake Victoria, a popular waterside [More]


Directed By:

Alexandre Aja

#73

Nanny McPhee Returns

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 75%
Popcornmeter icon 55%

#73

Critics Consensus: Emma Thompson’s second labor of love with the Nanny McPhee character actually improves on the first, delivering charming family fare with an excellent cast.
Synopsis: Enigmatic Nanny McPhee (Emma Thompson) arrives on the doorstep of a harried mother, Isabel Green (Maggie Gyllenhaal), who is trying [More]


Directed By:

Susanna White

#74

The Whistleblower

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 75%
Popcornmeter icon 71%

#74

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

#75

Stake Land

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 75%
Popcornmeter icon 62%

#75

Critics Consensus: Though the genre is well worn at this point, director Jim Mickle focuses on strong characterization and eerie atmosphere to craft an effective apocalyptic vampire chiller that also manages to pack a mean punch.
Synopsis: After a plague turns America into a realm of vampires, a hunter (Nick Damici) of the depraved creatures travels cross-country [More]


Directed By:

Jim Mickle

(Photo by Pixar/ Courtesy Everett Collection. TOY STORY 3.)

If some of the action movies in 2010 were quirky, the comedies were quirkier. Scott Pilgrim vs. the World is a favorite of comic book nerds everywhere. Based on the graphic novel by Bryan Lee O’Malley and directed by Edgar Wright, this zany action-VFX-romantic comedy cyclone sees Scott Pilgrim (Michael Cera) face down his dream girl Ramona Flowers’s seven evil exes to win the right to date her. The film features an all-star ensemble cast including Kieran Culkin, Brie Larson, Aubrey Plaza, Chris Evans, and many more. Most of that cast would reunite in 2023 to reprise their roles in a popular animated series, Scott Pilgrim Takes Off.

In the same comic vein, Kick-Ass hit theaters this year. Based on the 2008 graphic novel of the same name, Kick-Ass stars Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Chloë Grace Moretz as ordinary young people who take justice into their own hands as vigilantes dressed as superheroes. It’s blend of action and humor secured it a sequel, Kick-Ass 2, in 2013.

Tucker and Dave vs. Evil turned the horror comedy genre on its ear by making its alleged “killers” the protagonists. Tucker and Dale (played by Tyler Labine and Alan Tudyk) are two kindhearted hillbillies who find themselves in quandary when a group of vacationing college students mistake them for murderers, leading to their own reckless behavior and undoing. Much more than just a silly premise, this movie won the Audience Award at SXSW Film Festival and Best Screenplay at the Fangoria Chainsaw Awards.

The Trip, starring Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon is a refreshingly unique movie about friendship, peppered with witty observational humor that only Coogan and Brydon are capable of. The two comedians’ charms drew three sequels: The Trip to Italy (2014), The Trip to Spain (2017, and The Trip to Greece (2020).

#76

Heartbeats

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 74%
Popcornmeter icon 71%

#76

Critics Consensus: An art film to the max, Heartbeats intriguing and appealing premise is sometimes buried by director Xavier Dolan’s filmmaking flourishes.
Synopsis: Francis (Xavier Dolan) is a young gay man, Marie (Monia Chokri) is a young straight woman and the two of [More]


Directed By:

Xavier Dolan

#77

Mozart’s Sister

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 74%
Popcornmeter icon 54%

#77

Critics Consensus: No consensus yet.
Synopsis: Nannerl Mozart, Wolfgang’s older sister, was a musical prodigy until her brother’s talent overshadowed her own abilities as a composer [More]


Directed By:

René Féret

#78

The Way Back

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 73%
Popcornmeter icon 72%

#78

Critics Consensus: It isn’t as emotionally involving as it should be, but this Peter Weir epic offers sweeping ambition and strong performances to go with its grand visual spectacle.
Synopsis: Denounced by his wife as a possible spy in 1939, Janusz (Jim Sturgess) finds himself in a remote Siberian labor [More]


Directed By:

Peter Weir

#79

Everything Must Go

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 73%
Popcornmeter icon 52%

#79

Critics Consensus: It may not improve on the Raymond Carver short story that inspired it, but Everything Must Go resists cliche and boasts a pair of magnetic performances from the perfectly cast Ferrell and Wallace.
Synopsis: Longtime salesman Nick Halsey (Will Ferrell) has seen better days. No longer at the top of his game, Nick, an [More]


Directed By:

Dan Rush

#80

Iron Man 2

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 72%
Popcornmeter icon 71%

#80

Critics Consensus: It isn’t quite the breath of fresh air that Iron Man was, but this sequel comes close with solid performances and an action-packed plot.
Synopsis: With the world now aware that he is Iron Man, billionaire inventor Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr.) faces pressure from [More]


Directed By:

Jon Favreau

#81

Red

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 72%
Popcornmeter icon 72%

#81

Critics Consensus: It may not be the killer thrill ride you’d expect from an action movie with a cast of this caliber, but Red still thoroughly outshines most of its big-budget counterparts with its wit and style.
Synopsis: After surviving an assault from a squad of hit men, retired CIA agent Frank Moses (Bruce Willis) reassembles his old [More]


Directed By:

Robert Schwentke

#82

Get Him to the Greek

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 72%
Popcornmeter icon 62%

#82

Critics Consensus: Thanks to a suitably raunchy script and a pair of winning performances from Jonah Hill and Russell Brand, Get Him to the Greek is one of the year’s funniest comedies.
Synopsis: An ambitious executive at a record company, Aaron Green (Jonah Hill) gets what looks like an easy assignment: He must [More]


Directed By:

Nicholas Stoller

#83

Sarah’s Key

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 72%
Popcornmeter icon 82%

#83

Critics Consensus: Sarah’s Key is an absorbing, impeccably-acted Holocaust drama with minor plot issues.
Synopsis: An account of research by a journalist (Kristin Scott Thomas) into a shameful incident in French history intertwines with a [More]


Directed By:

Gilles Paquet-Brenner

#84

The Tree

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 72%
Popcornmeter icon 53%

#84

Critics Consensus: Though it leans rather heavily on its central metaphor, The Tree is a moving and ultimately hopeful meditation on grief with shades of magical realism.
Synopsis: Simone believes her dead father talks to her through a fig tree and won’t allow it to be cut down. [More]


Directed By:

Julie Bertuccelli

#85

The Names of Love

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 72%
Popcornmeter icon 79%

#85

Critics Consensus: No consensus yet.
Synopsis: A sheltered scientist (Jacques Gamblin) and a sexy political activist (Sara Forestier) have a May-December romance. [More]


Directed By:

Michel Leclerc

#86

Somewhere

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 71%
Popcornmeter icon 48%

#86

Critics Consensus: It covers familiar territory for Sofia Coppola, but Somewhere remains a hypnotic, seductively pensive meditation on the nature of celebrity, anchored by charming performances from Stephen Dorff and Elle Fanning.
Synopsis: While recuperating from an injury at Beverly Hills’ famed Chateau Marmont, bad-boy actor Johnny Marco (Stephen Dorff) receives a visit [More]


Directed By:

Sofia Coppola

#87

Ramona and Beezus

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 71%
Popcornmeter icon 71%

#87

Critics Consensus: If Ramona and Beezus fails to capture the essence of its classic source material, it’s sunny, sweet, and wholesome.
Synopsis: Ramona Quimby (Joey King) is a plucky youngster with an irrepressible sense of fun and mischief — a fact that [More]

#88

Machete

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 70%
Popcornmeter icon 63%

#88

Critics Consensus: Machete is messy, violent, shallow, and tasteless — and that’s precisely the point of one of the summer’s most cartoonishly enjoyable films.
Synopsis: After nearly being killed during a violent fight with a powerful drug lord, a former Mexican Federale known as Machete [More]

#89

Megamind

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 73%
Popcornmeter icon 72%

#89

Critics Consensus: It regurgitates plot points from earlier animated efforts, and isn’t quite as funny as it should be, but a top-shelf voice cast and strong visuals help make Megamind a pleasant, if unspectacular, diversion.
Synopsis: Though he is the most-brilliant supervillain the world has known, Megamind (Will Ferrell) is the least-successful. Thwarted time and again [More]


Directed By:

Tom McGrath

#90

Never Let Me Go

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 71%
Popcornmeter icon 70%

#90

Critics Consensus: With Never Let Me Go, Mark Romanek has delivered a graceful adaptation that captures the spirit of the Ishiguro novel — which will be precisely the problem for some viewers.
Synopsis: Friends Kathy (Carey Mulligan), Tommy (Andrew Garfield) and Ruth (Keira Knightley) grow up together at a seemingly idyllic boarding school [More]


Directed By:

Mark Romanek

#91

Ondine

(2009)

Tomatometer icon 70%
Popcornmeter icon 60%

#91

Critics Consensus: Flawed but charming, Ondine reaffirms writer-director Neil Jordan’s gift for myth, magic, and wonder.
Synopsis: Fisherman Syracuse (Colin Farrell), a recovering alcoholic, lives with his daughter, Annie (Alison Barry), in a small village on the [More]


Directed By:

Neil Jordan

#92

Shutter Island

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 69%
Popcornmeter icon 77%

#92

Critics Consensus: It may not rank with Scorsese’s best work, but Shutter Island‘s gleefully unapologetic genre thrills represent the director at his most unrestrained.
Synopsis: The implausible escape of a brilliant murderess brings U.S. Marshal Teddy Daniels (Leonardo DiCaprio) and his new partner (Mark Ruffalo) [More]


Directed By:

Martin Scorsese

#93
#93

Critics Consensus: Noomi Rapace and Michael Nyqvist remain extraordinarily well-suited to their roles, but the second installment in Stieg Larsson’s Millennium Trilogy doesn’t pack quite as much punch as the first.
Synopsis: Lisbeth, a computer hacker, goes on the run after being accused of three murders. It is up to journalist Mikael [More]


Directed By:

Daniel Alfredson

#94

The Karate Kid

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 67%
Popcornmeter icon 67%

#94

Critics Consensus: It may not be as powerful as the 1984 edition, but the 2010 Karate Kid delivers a surprisingly satisfying update on the original.
Synopsis: When his mother’s career results in a move to China, 12-year-old Dre Parker finds that he is a stranger in [More]


Directed By:

Harald Zwart

#95

Conviction

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 67%
Popcornmeter icon 71%

#95

Critics Consensus: Less compelling — and more manipulative — than it should be, Conviction benefits from its compelling true story and a pair of solid performances from Swank and Rockwell.
Synopsis: When her older brother Kenny (Sam Rockwell) is convicted of murder and sentenced to life in 1983, Betty Anne Waters [More]


Directed By:

Tony Goldwyn

#96

Secretariat

(2010)

Tomatometer icon 64%
Popcornmeter icon 76%

#96

Critics Consensus: Rousing, heartwarming, and squarely traditional, Secretariat offers exactly what you’d expect from an inspirational Disney drama — no more, and no less.
Synopsis: Despite her lack of experience, housewife and mother Penny Chenery (Diane Lane) agrees to take over management of the family [More]


Directed By:

Randall Wallace

#97
Critics Consensus: Terry Gilliam remains as indulgent as ever, but The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus represents a return to the intoxicatingly imaginative, darkly beautiful power of his earlier work, with fine performances to match all the visual spectacle.
Synopsis: Dr. Parnassus (Christopher Plummer), the leader of a traveling show, has a dark secret. Thousands of years ago he traded [More]


Directed By:

Terry Gilliam

#98

Harry Brown

(2009)

Tomatometer icon 63%
Popcornmeter icon 75%

#98

Critics Consensus: Its lurid violence may put off some viewers, but Harry Brown is a vigilante thriller that carries an emotional as well as a physical punch, thanks to a gripping performance from Michael Caine in the title role.
Synopsis: A retired soldier and widower (Michael Caine) doles out his own brand of justice after young hoodlums murder his best [More]


Directed By:

Daniel Barber

#99
#99

Critics Consensus: It’s amiable, and it does a surprisingly good job of sidestepping psych ward comedy cliches, but given its talented cast and directors, It’s Kind of a Funny Story should be more than just mildly entertaining.
Synopsis: Stressed by adolescence, 16-year-old Craig Gilner (Keir Gilchrist) checks himself into a mental-health clinic. Unfortunately, the youth wing is closed, [More]


Directed By:

Anna Boden, Ryan Fleck

#100
Critics Consensus: Slow and mostly devoid of the stellar chemistry between its two leads, The Girl Who Kicked The Hornet’s Nest is a disappointingly uneven conclusion to the Millennium trilogy.
Synopsis: Hospitalized Lisbeth (Noomi Rapace) awaits her murder trial, while Mikael (Michael Nyqvist) tries to establish her innocence. [More]


Directed By:

Daniel Alfredson

(Photo by wb/ Courtesy Everett Collection. INCEPTION.)

Let’s talk coming-of-age movies: Easy A, starring Emma Stone, Penn Badgley, and Amanda Bynes, is a modern teen rom-com take on the classic novel “The Scarlet Letter” by Nathaniel Hawthorne. When Olive Penderghast (Stone) lies to her friend about losing her virginity, she becomes stigmatized by her high school classmates. Upon learning she can use this false rumor for her own gain, she allows boys in her class to claim they slept with her, in exchange for gift cards, leading to plenty of comedy and social enlightenment. Emma Stone won Best Comedic Performance at the MTV Movie Awards and Choice Movie Actress: Romantic Comedy at the Teen Choice Awards, perhaps heralding the Oscar accolades she would earn later in her career.

Winter’s Bone is a less conventional coming-of-age film. Ree Dolly (played by Jennifer Lawrence) is an teen girl who must track down her father in the Ozarks to save her family from poverty. Jennifer Lawrence was nominated for the Best Actress Oscar for this role. The film also won the Grand Jury Prize: Dramatic Film at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival.

A lesser known gem of a coming-of-age movie is The Myth of the American Sleepover. Four teens seek out love and adventure on the last week of summer vacation. Its director, David Robert Mitchell, would go on to direct the horror cult favorite It Follows and the mystery thriller Under the Silver Lake.

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