100 Best Foreign Movies on Kanopy Right Now

100 Best Foreign Movies on Kanopy Right Now

November 25, 2024

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The best thing about a library is access. Like a library, Kanopy provides access to plenty of classic films that you would otherwise not be able to see, but unlike other streaming sites, Kanopy provides that access for free with your library card or university log-in.

But another great thing about Kanopy is that its selection isn’t just limited to Old Hollywood films– Kanopy also includes plenty of foreign films in their library as well. We’ve previously listed the 100 best movies on the platform, but if you’re looking to jump out of your comfort zone, here’s the same list without any film made in the English language.

31. C.R.A.Z.Y. (2005)

7.4

Country

Canada, France, Morocco

Director

Jean-Marc Vallée

Actors

Alex Gravel, Anik Vermette, Aziz Hattab, Claude Gagnon

Moods

Original

C.R.A.Z.Y. is crazy good, so to speak. A portrait of a French-Canadian family in 70’s Quebec that will knock your socks right off, it’s the story of a boy struggling with his identity and his relationship with his father. Featuring a killer soundtrack (including but not limited to Bowie, Pink Floyd, Rolling Stones), it received Best Canadian Film in 2005 at Toronto International Film Festival. There are many things I would like to say about C.R.A.Z.Y. but I fear it’s one of those films you enjoy best when you go into them not knowing much.

32. Beanpole (2019)

7.4

Country

Russia, United States of America

Director

Kantemir Balagov

Actors

Alyona Kuchkova, Andrey Bykov, Galina Mochalova, Igor Shirokov

Moods

Depressing, Dramatic, Intense

This heartbreaking Russian drama takes place in Leningrad six months after the end of the war. A boy is asked to do an impression of an animal, any animal, but the boy stands still. “Just do a dog then”, one person says, to which another remarks “he’s never seen one, they’ve all been eaten.”

In this bleak context, two friends meet again and try to restart their lives. Masha is a soldier who has just come back from the war in Berlin, and Iya, a tall woman nicknamed “Beanpole”, is a nurse who suffers from PTSD episodes that freeze her body. Both characters, so brilliantly acted, personify the thin line between desperation and hopefulness in this difficult but incredibly well-made drama.

33. 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.

34. 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.

35. The Cave of the Yellow Dog (2005)

7.3

Country

d, Germany, Mongolia

Director

Byambasuren Davaa, Female director

Actors

Babbayar Batchuluun, Batchuluun Urjindorj, Buyandulam Daramdadi, Nansal Batchuluun

Moods

Lighthearted, Lovely, Slow

Vivid, sweeping landscapes surround the simple beauty of a Mongolian family navigating the pressures of globalization while still practicing their traditional nomadic lifestyle. Ostensibly it’s about the charming, captivating relationship that forms between a young girl, Nansal, and a dog that she finds. However, the magic of this slow, enthralling film is that it captures the brilliance of familial relationships and power of culture and stories through this simple backdrop. And it is a simple film; everything you can learn from this film comes through its gentle storytelling that invites you to recognize the beauty and profundity that exists in everyday lives.

36. November (2017)

7.3

Country

Estonia, Netherlands, Poland

Director

Rainer Sarnet

Actors

Arvo Kukumägi, Dieter Laser, Ester Kuntu, Heino Kalm

Moods

Challenging, Dark, Dramatic

There’s plenty of things happening in folk horror film November. With devils snatching livestock, magical automatons called kratts, and trying to trick the Plague while in the form of a pig, love surely can’t bloom strong in these circumstances. And this would be correct, but the way this tragic romance unfolds is through eerie, yet captivating, black-and-white dream sequences made up bits and pieces of Estonian folklore, and the film shines best when focused on these sequences. The love triangle will be familiar, but the approach, the offbeat humor, and the raw practical effects would be bewitching until the end.

37. He Loves Me… He Loves Me Not (2002)

7.3

Country

France

Director

Female director, Laetitia Colombani

Actors

Audrey Tautou, Clément Sibony, Élodie Navarre, Eric Savin

Moods

Character-driven, Dark, Dramatic

With plenty of old men having extramarital affairs, taking advantage of younger women and leaving them forlorn in love, it can feel deceptively easy to take sides in the first forty minutes of He Loves Me… He Loves Me Not. Who wouldn’t side with Angélique, especially with the innocent, childlike face of Audrey Tautou? And yet, when the twist occurs, the film fills the gaps in totally unexpected ways, gradually escalating to a terrible and sad conclusion about this seemingly romantic girl. It’s hard to further talk about He Loves Me… He Loves Me Not without getting into spoiler territory, so if this is the first time you’ve heard of the movie, go and watch it without any context.

38. The President (2014)

7.3

Country

France, Georgia, Germany

Director

Mohsen Makhmalbaf

Actors

Dachi Orvelashvili, Ia Sukhitashvili, Lasha Ramishvili, Misha Gomiashvili

Moods

Challenging, Dark, Depressing

When the country rises in rebellion against your dictatorial rule, we imagine that could be quite difficult. But it makes for a striking movie in 2014’s The President. Never naming an actual country, but based generally on real world revolutions, the film plucks a dictator and his grandson into the poverty that his regime has inflicted upon its people, and in turn, was inflicted back onto them and their cronies, in a cycle of revenge that doesn’t seem to end, and that won’t ever end, if someone’s starving. It’s not a film with an easy-to-match metaphor, but The President nonetheless is a striking portrait of a city violently changing hands.

39. Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress (2002)

7.2

Country

China, France

Director

Dai Sijie

Actors

Chen Kun, Cong Zhijun, Wang Shuangbao, Ye Liu

Moods

Raw, Slice-of-Life, Sweet

When plucked out of your life into somewhere new, it can be a good change… Depending on where you’re going. For two city boys moving to labor on rural farmlands, it probably would have been a terrible one if it wasn’t for Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress. Balzac is one of the many Western authors whose books they aren’t allowed to read, and the Little Seamstress is a beautiful girl that they befriend through said books, so it’s an interesting take on a young adult, coming-of-age romance, as the books they read end up inspiring the said Seamstress to seek out a new life. There is a bit of a Western bias in this film– after all, they do promote Western authors here– but Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress contemplates the changes that have occurred to the countryside, being originally idealized and considered more virtuous, only to be completely changed for water dams.

40. Girlhood

7.1

Country

France

Director

Céline Sciamma, Female director

Actors

Assa Sylla, Cyril Mendy, Damien Chapelle, Djibril Gueye

Moods

Character-driven, Depressing, Dramatic

An electrifying portrayal of a girl growing up in a poor Paris suburb. This coming-of-age story follows Marieme, a girl struggling in high-school who learns that she will be rerouted out of academia and onto a track where she will learn a trade. Frustrated by the news and fearful of an abusive elder brother, she finds solace in a gang of girls from her neighborhood. Initially she decides against joining them but does so at the prospect of pursuing a crush. Her new friends take her into the center of Paris and to a more violent and crime-driven lifestyle. An undeniably grim movie, Girlhood compensates with an amazing character study – themes of identity and adolescent need for belonging are at the center of a type of a story that rarely ever gets any attention.

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