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By all appearances, Eliza and Louis have a charming marriage. They’re casual and good-humored in the morning and full of passion in the evening. So when Eliza finds a love note addressed to her husband one day, naturally, she freaks out. She enlists the help of her eccentric family and sets off to Manhattan, where they all try to get to the bottom of the affair; what follows is an endearingly awkward adventure around town.

Though the film often meanders both in plot and dialogue, the expert ensemble keeps things compelling with their convincing chemistry and wry, visual humor. Coupled with lush images of ‘90s New York and brilliantly droll writing, The Daytrippers is a joyride of a film, as unassuming as it is enthralling.

Starring

Campbell Scott, Douglas McGrath, Hope Davis, Liev Schreiber, Marcia Gay Harden, Parker Posey, Paul Herman, Stanley Tucci

Genre

Comedy, Drama, Family, Mystery

Best for moods

Easy, Funny, Grown-up Comedy

Directed By

Greg Mottola

It’s very interesting, if not startling, to see an earnest movie made about the white upper class these days. Metropolitan is one such film, and even though it was released in the ’90s, it still stands the test of time precisely because it neither judges nor defends the group of WASPs it follows. It simply shows them in all their elegance and sophistication, as well as their insulation and irony. 

Metropolitan takes place in the upper crust of New York debutante society, during Christmas vacation, where soirees are rampant and afterparties even more so. The young-adult leads who navigate the scene in their expensive clothes and self-important aura recall a Scott Fitzgerald novel, or if you like, Gossip Girl episode. But instead of falling into tragedies, these characters just end up in silly but relatable mishaps and misunderstandings: they’re just kids after all. And as high and mighty as they may seem, whiling away in tall Park Avenue apartments, they’re still prone to the universal pains that haunt and shape teenagers. Expect to see heartbreak, jealousy, and longing even among the brightest and wealthiest of New York. 

Starring

Taylor Nichols

Genre

Comedy, Drama, Romance

Best for moods

Character-driven, Smart, Without plot

Directed By

Whit Stillman

Survivors are often painted in a brave light; they’re applauded for their resilience and toughness, and in the case of school shootings, many of them are also expected to take up arms and fight the good fight. While this is of course laudable, many survivors are simply trying to get by. Unable to process trauma and inexplicable loss, they become withdrawn, depressed, and reckless—not exactly noteworthy traits, but understandable and equally deserving of empathy.

The Fallout shifts the focus on this side of survival by following Vada in the aftermath of a school shooting. Unlike her peers, she fails to cope positively and becomes increasingly self-destructive. But it’s through this unsentimental portrayal that The Fallout achieves a frankness and rawness that few films like it have. 

Starring

John Ortiz, Maddie Ziegler, Shailene Woodley

Genre

Drama

Best for moods

Character-driven, Depressing, Discussion-sparking, Intense, Suspenseful

Directed By

Female director, Megan Park

Having an ordinary life isn’t a bad thing, but it can feel like a huge disappointment, hearing of other people and characters having extraordinary lives. However, when Harvey Pekar started writing down that ordinary life, his life became… still quite ordinary, but at least with an outlet through his autobiographical comic book American Splendor. That being said, his biopic isn’t quite ordinary, transforming Pekar’s eccentric musings into fourth-wall-breaking comic book panels, vignettes, and documentary-esque work, shifting between Pekar animated, acted by Paul Giamatti, and voiced occasionally by Pekar himself. And like his work, American Splendor resonates with the ordinary viewer, who, like him, just wants to try to make the best of life. It’s pretty cool for someone that called himself a nobody.

Starring

Donal Logue, Earl Billings, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, Hope Davis, James Urbaniak, Josh Hutcherson, Maggie Moore, Molly Shannon, Paul Giamatti

Genre

Comedy, Drama

Best for moods

Funny, Grown-up Comedy, Raw, Slice-of-Life, True-story-based, Well-acted

Directed By

Female director, Robert Pulcini, Shari Springer Berman

Given the name, Revanche seemed to be a revenge thriller, and to a certain degree, that’s correct, but the way writer-director Götz Spielmann frames the plot makes it feel much more like a naturalistic character study of the way love and violence walks hand-in-hand, leading to a tragedy that shifts its thrill each time ex-con Alex is forced to make a change. It’s a surprising portrait. It’s one that is tense with permeating silence and no added score, with the camera still and lingering by the door. It’s slow, unfolding within the mundane. And it’s existential, with the way these characters actively try to change their fate, but only lead into even more difficult issues. Revanche is a refreshing take of the titular theme.

Starring

Johannes Krisch

Genre

Crime, Drama, Romance

Best for moods

Challenging, Character-driven, Depressing, Discussion-sparking, Intense, Raw, Slow, Thought-provoking, Well-acted

Directed By

Götz Spielmann

Sometimes, in life, we’re forced to be with people we don’t immediately get along with, like in the classroom, the workplace, or, if you’re unlucky, in a jail cell. Down by Law is black-and-white drama focused on three men in a jail cell, two of them outright hating each other, but not as much as they hate their third fellow foreign inmate for being so smiley all the time. It’s a funny adventure, made more funny as they snipe at each other, but even if the two Americans supposedly hate each other, it’s still a charming friendship that we can’t help but root for, one made simple and straightforwardly by director Jim Jarmusch.

Starring

Ellen Barkin, Tom Waits

Genre

Comedy, Crime, Drama

Best for moods

Character-driven, Easy, Funny, Raw, Slice-of-Life, Warm, Well-acted

Directed By

Jim Jarmusch

With a driver protagonist, trying to reintegrate with the rougher parts of his home city, forming a connection with a woman way out of his league, Soho-based Mona Lisa has spawned comparisons to the New York-classic Taxi Driver (1976), but this British neo-noir has a completely different tone and spirit, with a completely different conclusion. Mona Lisa has, of course, Nat King Cole crooning the similarly named tune, and as George gets enamored with Simone, both roles played fantastically by Bob Hoskins and Cathy Tyson respectively, they both keep their cards to their chest, as if similar to the famous painted smile. The ending may be a tad abrupt, but Mona Lisa has a lot of compassion and hope for these two trying to make a better life for themselves, a lot more than expected from the genre.

Starring

Bob Hoskins, Cathy Tyson, Jack Purvis, Kenny Baker, Michael Caine, Robbie Coltrane

Genre

Crime, Drama, Romance, Thriller

Best for moods

Character-driven, Emotional, Gripping, Raw, Slow, Sweet, Thought-provoking

Directed By

Neil Jordan

Whether due to poverty, personal choice, or simply knowing no other way, there are people living by the river, forgoing the comforts and the cages of modern urban living. Not many films depict these communities, but seven years after Hurricane Katrina, Beasts of the Southern Wild shares a rare depiction of their lives in the outskirts. It’s a bit meandering, but it’s unique, with a folkloric feel, as the young heroine Hushpuppy full of awe towards the natural world their Cajun community is bound to, while also with a curiosity towards her missing mother and an awareness of how precarious their lives are that slowly grows through the film. Beasts of the Southern Wild is a surprising debut of a community rarely depicted.

Starring

Array

Genre

Drama, Fantasy

Best for moods

Challenging, Character-driven, Discussion-sparking, Emotional, Slice-of-Life, Thought-provoking, Warm, Well-acted

Directed By

Benh Zeitlin

Sometimes, all you need to make a good movie is to get two vastly different characters and force them to stay together. It’s probably why Kiss of the Spider Woman was made in the first place– the novel dumps hardened, self-sacrificial activist Valentin and flamboyant gay man Molina in a jail cell. But rather than depict Molina and Valentin just talking, the film visually recreates the stories they tell to each other as films-within-a-film. Molina’s fictional love stories are given all the glamor and drama of classic 60s romances, and Valentin’s life story depicted with a straightforward, gritty realism that matches the hard experiences he had. So as they tell their stories and challenge each other with their respective approaches to life, director Héctor Babenco ensures that as the two finally feel heard by each other, the audience, too, can easily empathize with the perspectives they take. It also ensures that the plot twist holds a strong punch. Though its escapist approach may suggest otherwise, Kiss of the Spider Woman realistically explores the way storytelling has always meant freedom.

Starring

Sônia Braga, William Hurt

Genre

Drama

Best for moods

Character-driven, Emotional, Lovely, Original, Tear-jerker, Thought-provoking

Directed By

Héctor Babenco

Despite the title and the premise, The Naked Kiss is actually less raunchy than it sounds. Sure, it does have themes that seem more explicit than what’s expected from older classic films, but writer-director Samuel Fuller considers these themes with the weight it deserves, directly challenging the way the men of the town would scorn Kelly’s wares at the same time they’re taking a taste, and at the same time they’re willing to look away from the unpleasant truths lurking in the suburbs because of money. With memorable shots and a surprising song number halfway, The Naked Kiss plays with expectations for an earnest belief in change.

Starring

Array

Genre

Crime, Drama

Best for moods

Challenging, Dark, Intense, Thought-provoking

Directed By

Samuel Fuller

A unique movie about a near-future society obsessed with couples; viewing couples as the norm, as opposed to single people who are viewed as unproductive and undesirable. In that way, the film shows David (Colin Farrell), a newly single person who is transferred to the Hotel, a place where single people have just 45 days to find a suitable mate, and if they fail, they would be transformed into animals of their choice. While the film’s original premise may not be everyone’s cup of tea, The Lobster will prove a goldmine for people who are into a Kafkaesque, absurdist mentality, or anyone looking for an idea-driven experience.

Starring

Ariane Labed, Ashley Jensen, Ben Whishaw, Colin Farrell, Jessica Barden, John C. Reilly, Léa Seydoux, Michael Smiley, Olivia Colman, Rachel Weisz, Roger Ashton-Griffiths, Sean Duggan

Genre

Comedy, Drama, Romance

Best for moods

Mind-blowing, Smart, Thought-provoking, Weird

Directed By

Giorgos Lanthimos, Yorgos Lanthimos

A fast-paced thriller, and “actually dangerous” movie as envisioned by its directors, Good Time is about a bank robbery gone wrong and one brother trying to get his other brother out of jail in its aftermath. It’s a deep and fast dive into New York’s criminal underworld that will not give you the time to catch a single full breath. The rhythm here is, without exaggeration, unlike anything I’ve seen before. It’s anxiety-inducing and very… primal. Incredible work featuring a career-pivoting performance from Robert Pattinson as the loose criminal that will do literally anything in the pursuit of seeing his brother free.

Starring

Barkhad Abdi, Benny Safdie, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Robert Clohessy, Robert Pattinson

Genre

Crime, Drama, Thriller

Best for moods

A-list actors, Intense, Mind-blowing, Thrilling

Directed By

Ben Safdie, Benny Safdie, Josh Safdie, Joshua Safdie

Sometimes you can just tell a movie means way too much to the people who made it. That makes me want to watch it more than once, which is what I wanted to do with The Tale. But while I think it’s such an amazing movie and everyone should watch it, I don’t think I can stomach a second watch.. It is based on the director/writer Jennifer Fox’s own story – recounting her first sexual experience at a very young age. It’s about the stories we tell ourselves to deal with trauma, and in that sense, and with utmost honesty, it invites grief and closure for similar experiences. A powerful movie led by a powerful performance by Laura Dern as Jennifer.

Starring

Common, Ellen Burstyn, Gretchen Koerner, Jason Ritter, Jodi Long, Laura Dern, Tina Parker

Genre

Drama, Mystery, TV Movie

Best for moods

Challenging, Dramatic, Emotional, Touching, True-story-based

Directed By

Female director, Jennifer Fox

Forlorn longing envelops Days of Being Wild, where the act of dreaming is as valuable as its actual fulfillment. “You’ll see me tonight in your dreams,” Yuddy tells Su Li-zhen on their first meeting, and indeed, this line of dialogue sets the film’s main contradiction: would you rather trap yourself in the trance-like beauty of dreams or face the unpleasant possibilities of reality? Wong Kar-wai’s characters each have their own answers, with varying subplots intersecting through the consequences of their decisions. In the end, happiness comes in unexpected ways, granted only to those brave enough to wake up and dream again.

Starring

Andy Lau, Andy Lau Tak-Wah, Carina Lau, Carina Lau Kar-Ling, Leslie Cheung, Maggie Cheung, Rebecca Pan, Tony Leung Chiu-Wai

Genre

Crime, Drama, Romance

Best for moods

Dramatic, Emotional, Lovely, Romantic, Thought-provoking, Weird

Directed By

Kar-Wai Wong, Wong Kar-wai

A very intelligent and nuanced movie that relentlessly asks unpleasant questions. It’s a story about a woman seeking freedom by turning away from her own family and finding something she did not expect. The main character of the movie, Martha, is taken in by a cult and the movie depicts how this experience shapes and warps her life, thoughts, and actions. The time she spent with the cult ultimately also shapes her own personality, which raises questions about her identity and the place she now fits in. Every actor is well cast, and especially Elizabeth Olsen (playing Martha) puts on a stand-out performance, which proves that she is an actor to watch out for in the years to come.

Starring

Brady Corbet, Christopher Abbott, Elizabeth Olsen, Hugh Dancy, John Hawkes, Julia Garner, Louisa Krause, Maria Dizzia, Sarah Paulson

Genre

Drama, Mystery, Thriller

Best for moods

Challenging, Dark, Mind-blowing, Thrilling, Weird, Well-acted

Directed By

Sean Durkin

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