What are some of your favorites?
Hold me closer, tiny dancer.
If only they were all this good.
Alfonso Cuarons film is a sweet, funny, and sad coming-of-age movie.
That limited, specific geography is key to the movie’s brisk, efficient, and nerve-jangling effectiveness.
Not bad for a gassy ogre.
A goofy stoner classic.
It doesnt hurt that the movie is pretty damn funny.
For that offbeat premise, the movie can be surprisingly moving.
Samuel L. Jackson is fabulous as his extremely brittle counterpart.
The ultimate in spelunking horror.
And inspire a two-decades-later sequel.
The movie won four Academy Awards, including for lead Hilary Swank.
A prisoner transport goes down on a desolate planet full of creatures that feed after dark.
And an eclipse is coming.
Fortunately for the survivors, convict Vin Diesel also works better with the lights out.
Is it his best performance?
Probably not, but he’s memorably over-the-top as thoroughly corrupt cop Alonzo Harris.
An affair with town doctor Nathan Fillion might be just the thing.
All that aside, its a cute, funny, and sometimes surprisingly astute take on high-school awkwardness.
Its 2004 sequel was even better.
And yet still some audiences came away thinking that Christian Bales Patrick Bateman was a cool guy.
The movie that cemented director Sofia Coppolas spot in the filmmaker pantheon.
Where to stream:Freevee
A.I.
Star Keisha Castle-Hughes became the youngest nominee for a Best Actress Oscar for her open, genuine performance.
Still: its beautiful, exciting, and often moving.
Its brutal, tense, and uncompromisingeven if it doesnt always make perfect sense.
This might be my favorite Hayao Miyazaki movie, but I say that a lot.
The box office hit kicked off a franchise thats still going strong.
Theres something very cool about that, whether you love the finished product or not.
Where to stream:Max, Disney+