50 Best Foreign Movies on Spectrum on Demand Right Now

50 Best Foreign Movies on Spectrum on Demand Right Now

December 16, 2024

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With their history providing internet, mobile, and cable television, it might not be surprising that Spectrum went into streaming with Spectrum on Demand. It’s a handy add-on, especially for viewers already paying for internet or cable, and while their library might not be as extensive as the biggest streaming sites, Spectrum on Demand still holds plenty of great movies. Some of these films are underrated, hidden gems that come from all over the world that may not shoot up the top of the algorithm, but are worth a watch, all the same. So for Spectrum subscribers wanting to take a glimpse outside their usual watchlist, without having to jump ship to another site, here’s some of the best foreign films Spectrum has to offer in their on-demand library.

21. Leviathan (2014)

7.6

Country

Russia

Director

Andrey Zvyagintsev

Actors

Aleksei Zharkov, Aleksey Pavlov, Aleksey Rozin, Aleksey Serebryakov

Moods

Challenging, Character-driven, Depressing

With laws, education, and modern day systems, it seems like the modern man has some means for recourse, at least more than the average person centuries ago. However, despite this, injustices still remain. Leviathan depicts Kolya, a modern day Job, set out to keep his land from the clutches of a corrupt mayor. It’s bleak and depressing, somewhat neorealistic as Kolya goes through various hardships due to political greed, but there’s some wry sense of humor, one that bitterly points out how much hasn’t changed since biblical times. While it’s quite long, Leviathan is likely to move most viewers to tears, and maybe to shots of vodka, due to its depiction of the everyday man.

22. The Good Boss (2022)

7.5

Country

Spain

Director

Fernando León de Aranoa

Actors

Almudena Amor, Celso Bugallo, Daniel Chamorro, Fernando Albizu

Moods

Funny, Grown-up Comedy, Lighthearted

In this office comedy of errors, Javier Bardem plays Blanco, the titular boss, but whether he is actually good is what the movie wryly examines.

As head of a small manufacturing company, Blanco treats his employees intimately, going so far as make their problems his own. He believes this is why his company is nominated for an excellence certification, but as he waits for the possible award, cracks start to appear in his “work is family” facade as everything that could go wrong, starts going wrong. The Good Boss is an anxiety fest for Blanco to be sure, but a winning tragicomedy for us all.

23. Monsieur Lazhar (2012)

7.4

Country

Canada

Director

Philippe Falardeau

Actors

André Robitaille, Brigitte Poupart, Daniel Gadouas, Danielle Proulx

Moods

Depressing, Dramatic

After the sudden death of a teacher, 55-year-old Algerian immigrant Bachir Lazhar is hired at an elementary school in Montreal. Struggling with a cultural gap between himself and his students at first, he helps them to deal with the situation, revealing his own tragic past. A strong portrait without any weird sentimentality. 11-year-old actress Sophie Nélisse makes her brilliant debut.

24. We Are the Best! (2013)

7.3

Country

Denmark, Sweden

Director

Lukas Moodysson

Actors

Ann-Sofie Rase, David Dencik, Emrik Ekholm, Felix Sandman

Moods

Feel-Good, Sweet, Uplifting

We Are the Best! is one movie that may be overlooked largely by viewers, though it perfectly captures counterculture, and relates to the misfit young and old. The movie is an adaptation of Moodysson’s wife Coco’s graphic novel “Never Goodnight”. Set in Stockholm, Sweden in 1982, Klara (Mira Grosin) and her best friend Bobo (Mira Barkhammar) are junior high teenage girls who believe in their heart that punk rock is alive and well. With both of their home lives not so pleasant, the girls spend their time at the local youth center while taking up the time slot in the band room to get revenge on the local metal band. That’s when they find themselves starting a punk band without even knowing how to play an instrument. We Are the Best! is a fun and deeply sincere exploration of adventure, friendship, love, and betrayal in adolescence.

25. The Devil’s Backbone (2001)

7.3

Country

France, Mexico, Spain

Director

Guillermo del Toro

Actors

Adrian Lamana, Berta Ojea, Daniel Esparza, Eduardo Noriega

Moods

Intense

Pan’s Labyrinth is often considered director Guillermo Del Toro’s best film, and rightfully so. But if you’re looking for a straight-up ghost story, this is the film that gets the job done. Everything about this film is sad and beautiful and unnerving, from the setting (an orphanage during the Spanish Civil War) to the atmospheric visuals.

26. When Evil Lurks (2023)

7.2

Country

Argentina, United States of America

Director

Demián Rugna

Actors

Demián Salomón, Diego Sampayo, Emilio Vodanovich, Ezequiel Rodríguez

Moods

Dark, Gripping, Intense

Many films that deal with the advent of some sort of apocalypse usually hit the ground running, but When Evil Lurks also keeps its sense of panic and paranoia right up to its bitter end. Even during moments of downtime—as this small group of “survivors” tries to keep moving—there is an overwhelming sense that they’re only delaying their inevitable suffering, or that evil has existed long before  any of them. There are passing mentions of this demonic presence having originated in the city, and how it manages to infiltrate the lives of those on the outskirts through modern things like electricity and gunfire. It’s an intriguing angle that gives possession a new texture: these demons aren’t just randomly manifesting, but invading and occupying.

And when the violence kicks in, When Evil Lurks really doesn’t spare its characters, as shown by some pretty gnarly practical effects and vicious sound design. The constant escalation of the demonic threat can feel contrived at times—as the rules of how things operate in this world keep on being added or modified, at a rate that can be hard to process—but the anguish it leaves its characters in is suffocating all the same. There may not appear to be a moral at the end of all this, but it evokes a sense of hopelessness better than many other films.

27. 20,000 Species of Bees (2023)

7.2

Country

Spain

Director

Estibaliz Urresola Solaguren, Female director

Actors

Ane Gabarain, Itziar Lazkano, Martxelo Rubio, Miguel Garcés

Moods

Discussion-sparking, Lovely, Touching

As far as LGBTQIA+ stories go, 20,000 Species of Bees isn’t the best at talking about its themes of identity and acceptance in a way that doesn’t come off as clunky. But even with its on-the-nose dialogue and inconsequential subplots, director Estibaliz Urresola Solaguren gives everything the warmth and the softness it needs to feel sincere despite everything. And no matter what, the film is always drawn back to the lead performance by Sofía Otero, who provides such a vivid image of this young trans girl’s interior life that the world around her character begins to feel either more suffocating or more beautiful to behold.

28. Elle (2016)

7.1

Country

Belgium, France, Germany

Director

Paul Verhoeven

Actors

Alice Isaaz, Anne Consigny, Anne Loiret, Arthur Mazet

Moods

Challenging, Character-driven, Depressing

Arch-provocateur Paul Verhoeven received widespread acclaim for his assured and darkly funny adaptation of Philippe Dijan’s award-winning novel, his first film in the French language. 

It’s a controversial revenge thriller about a domineering businesswoman who is raped in her home by a masked man. Refusing to let the attack affect her life, she refuses to report the incident and tracks down the assailant herself.

Verhoeven directs the material with confidence and a troubling lightness of touch, while fearless Isabelle Huppert gives one of the best performances of her long and illustrious career. Some people found Elle empowering while others felt it perpetuated misogynistic attitudes. Either way, it makes for a passionate post-viewing discussion.

29. Esteros (2016)

7.0

Country

Argentina

Director

Papu Curotto

Actors

Blas Finardi Niz, Esteban Masturini, Felipe Titto, Ignacio Rogers

Moods

Romantic

Esteros revolves around the childhood friends Matías and Jerónimo, who reach adolescence and experience sexual attraction to each other before being separated by circumstance. When they meet again ten years later, they explore their long-repressed feelings for each other. 

This moving and emotionally satisfying love story is shot against the backdrop of the Argentinian countryside whose glories are beautifully captured throughout the movie. The performance of the two leads is excellent and the chemistry between them is almost palpable. 

30. The Village (2023)

6.7

Country

Japan

Director

Michihito Fujii

Actors

Arata Furuta, Daiken Okudaira, Hana Kino, Haru Kuroki

Moods

Dark, Depressing, Slow

Yu Katayama lives in a remote village with a garbage disposal business that’s slowly turning into a landfill. When his childhood friend Misaki Nakai returns to the village, she encourages Yu to make a better life for himself despite his mother’s gambling and the village ostracizing him. The Village is a slow-burning film interested in Yu’s struggles as an outcast and in discussing the takeover of small villages for capitalistic industrial motives. The film is shot beautifully with dark, brooding visuals and lingering shots of Yu’s quiet intensity throughout the film. Unfortunately, secondary characters are not fully developed outside of their interactions with Yu, causing the film to feel flat outside of pivotal moments. An evocative idea with parts more memorable than the whole.

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