It’s time to pour some champagne into your collectible Taco Bell cup and celebrate. Godzilla Minus One is now the highest grossing live-action Japanese film in North America ever following what Deadline called “the biggest Stateside debut of a foreign film this year.” The Toho film is up to $14.36 million at the domestic box office, and over $40 million worldwide.
“I am happy that Godzilla, of all characters, has eclipsed a record that had not been broken for a long time,” director Takashi Yamazaki said in a statement. “Looking back, I think that the cast and crew were all working on the film with the same goal in mind: to make something entertaining! That is what led to such a wonderful result. I will always remember this.”
Godzilla Minus One is the best Godzilla movie in years, maybe since the original (the 97 percent “Fresh” rating on Rotten Tomatoes is honestly too low), and it should be seen on the biggest, loudest screen possible. Especially since there’s no streaming or video-on-demand premiere date yet.
But there is good news:
#GodzillaMinusOne isn’t going anywhere! In fact, the film will be playing on EVEN MORE North American screens this coming weekend—increasing to over 2,500 locations in the US & Canada starting December 8. As long as people are attending, showtimes will continue. So get your… pic.twitter.com/Ny0lFWw0O2
Nicki Minaj’s new album Pink Friday 2 is arriving on DSPs soon and she has promised that the album will take fans on a ride to “Gag City.” After teasing the allbum’s release — and its accompanying tour — for months, the album hits DSPs, including Apple Music and Spotify, on Friday, December 7.
The album will be Nicki Minaj’s fifth studio album, and it arrives five years after the release of her most recent album, Queen, in 2018. In the lead up to the album’s release, Nicki enjoyed a resurgence of popularity thanks to her placement on the Barbie soundtrack with the Aqua-sampling “Barbie World” alongside “Princess Diana” collaborator Ice Spice. Capitalizing on the attention from the new song from younger fans, she attempted to join TikTok’s “NPC” trend with hilariously disastrous results. Still, the move revealed an endearingly human side to the superstar, which she continued to cultivate with her first album single “Last Time I Saw You.”
After campaigning to appear on Drake’s new album For All The Dogs, Nicki teased the next single, “Bahm Bahm,” before revealing that Pink Friday 2 had been delayed. Just ahead of the album’s release, she dropped out of iHeartRadio’s Jingle Ball to ensure she had time to properly finish the album.
Pink Friday 2 is out 12/8 via Young Money Entertainment and Republic Records.
As Uproxx’s May 2022 cover star, Tate McRae said, “I knew that if I needed to hear these songs, as someone listening to my music, then I would want it to be as real as it gets.” In the year-plus that followed, McRae attracted more and more fans through her unflinching vulnerability, resonated far and wide with her “Greedy” single becoming her first top-10 entry on the Billboard Hot 100. It has all set the stage for Think Later, her sophomore studio album due out on Friday, December 8.
Below is what you need to know ahead of its arrival.
When Will Tate McRae’s Think Later Be On Spotify?
As is standard, Think Later is expected to hit Spotify and all DSPs tonight at 9 p.m. PT (December 7) and midnight ET (December 8).
What Is The Think Later Tracklist?
McRae’s album was executive produced by Ryan Tedder and doesn’t include any features. She confirmed all 14 tracks with an Instagram post last week, as seen below.
1. “Cut My Hair”
2. “Greedy”
3. “Run For The Hills”
4. “Hurt My Feelings”
5. “Stay Done”
6. “Grave”
7. “Exes”
8. “We’re Not Alike”
9. “Calgary”
10. “Messier”
11. “Think Later”
12. “Guilty Conscience”
13. “Want That Too”
14. “Plastic Palm Trees”
04/17/2024 — Dublin, IE @ Olympia Theatre
04/18/2024 — Dublin, IE @ Olympia Theatre
04/20/2024 — Glasgow, UK @ Glasgow Academy
04/22/2024 — London, UK @ Eventim Apollo
04/24/2024 — Manchester, UK @ O2 Apollo Manchester
04/26/2024 — Wolverhampton, UK @ The Civic At The Halls
04/28/2024 — Cologne, DE @ Palladium
04/29/2024 — Amsterdam, NL @ AFAS Live
04/30/2024 — Antwerp, BE @ Lotto Arena
05/02/2024 — Stockholm, SE @ Annexet
05/03/2024 — Oslo, NO @ Spektrum
05/04/2024 — Copenhagen, DK @ Falkonersalen
05/06/2024 — Hamburg, DE @ Sporthalle
05/07/2024 — Berlin, DE @ Verti Music Hall
05/08/2024 — Prague, CZ @ Forum Karlin
05/10/2024 — Warsaw, PL @ COS Torwar
05/12/2024 — Zurich, CH @ Halle 622
05/13/2024 — Vienna, AT @ Gasometer
05/14/2024 — Munich, DE @ Zenith
05/16/2024 — Milan, IT @ Fabrique
05/17/2024 — Paris, FR @ Zenith
05/20/2024 — Barcelona, ES @ Sant Jordi Club
05/21/2024 — Madrid, ES @ Palacio Vistalegre
05/22/2024 — Lisbon, PT @ Coliseu de Lisboa
07/05/2024 — Calgary, AB @ Hometown Show*
07/07/2024 — Woodinville, WA @ Chateau Ste Michelle
07/09/2024 — San Francisco, CA @ Bill Graham Civic Auditorium
07/11/2024 — Los Angeles, CA @ The Greek Theatre
07/14/2024 — Phoenix, AZ @ Arizona Financial Theatre
07/17/2024 — Austin, TX @ Moody Amphitheater at Waterloo Park
07/19/2024 — Houston, TX @ 713 Music Hall
07/20/2024 — Irving, TX @ The Pavilion at Toyota Music Factory
07/21/2024 — Rogers, AR @ Walmart AMP
07/24/2024 — Cincinnati, OH @ The Andrew J Brady Music Center
07/27/2024 — Toronto, ON @ Budweiser Stage
07/28/2024 — Sterling Heights, MI @ Michigan Lottery Amphitheatre
07/30/2024 — Saint Louis, MO @ Saint Louis Music Park
08/01/2024 — Minneapolis, MN @ The Armory
08/06/2024 — Nashville, TN @ Ascend Amphitheater
08/07/2024 — Indianapolis, IN @ Everwise Amphitheater at White River State Park
08/09/2024 — Boston, MA @ MGM Music Hall at Fenway
08/13/2024 — Washington, DC @ The Anthem
08/14/2024 — Philadelphia, PA @ Skyline Stage at Mann
08/16/2024 — Raleigh, NC @ Red Hat Amphitheater
08/17/2024 — Atlanta, GA @ Cadence Bank Amphitheatre at Chastain Park
08/22/2024 — New York, NY @ Madison Square Garden**
11/08/2024 — Perth, AU @ Red Hill Auditorium
11/10/2024 — Brisbane, AU @ Riverstage
11/12/2024 — Sydney, AU @ Hordern Pavilion
11/15/2024 — Adelaide, AU @ AEC Theatre
11/17/2024 — Melbourne, AU @ Margaret Court Arena
11/19/2024 — Auckland, NZ @ Spark Arena
11/21/2024 — Wellington, NZ @ TSB Arena
Nicki Minaj has been building fans’ anticipation for Pink Friday 2, the follow-up to her hit 2010 album. Given it marks Minaj’s first new full record since 2018, there are only a few more hours to go until it drops on December 8.
Here’s what to know about when the album will be on Spotify.
When Will Nicki Minaj’s Pink Friday 2 Be On Spotify?
Nicki Minaj’s Pink Friday 2 will be available to stream on Spotify right at midnight ET. For those on the West Coast, they can listen at 9 p.m. this evening. Anyone else in a different time zone around the world should calculate from there to find out when it will drop. (For example, most of Europe can hear it starting at 5 a.m. tomorrow, and so on.)
“When I look back at a lot of my music, I’m like, ‘Oh, my God, where was the me in it?’” Minaj shared during an interview with Vogue about Pink Friday 2. “So for this album, I went back to the old game plan.”
“This album is just beyond anything I could have imagined,” she also teased for fans through Twitter.
While not a ton is known about the album yet beyond that, it seems it will live up to the hype.
Below is what you need to know ahead of Think Later.
What Time Will Tate McRae’s Think Later Come Out?
Think Later is technically arriving later today (sorry). It’s due out at midnight ET on Friday, December 8, via RCA Records. Find more information here.
What Is The Tracklist?
McRae dropped the tracklist on Instagram last week, as seen below.
1. “Cut My Hair”
2. “Greedy”
3. “Run For The Hills”
4. “Hurt My Feelings”
5. “Stay Done”
6. “Grave”
7. “Exes”
8. “We’re Not Alike”
9. “Calgary”
10. “Messier”
11. “Think Later”
12. “Guilty Conscience”
13. “Want That Too”
14. “Plastic Palm Trees”
When Is The Think Later Tour?
See all of McRae’s previously announced 2024 dates below.
04/17/2024 — Dublin, IE @ Olympia Theatre
04/18/2024 — Dublin, IE @ Olympia Theatre
04/20/2024 — Glasgow, UK @ Glasgow Academy
04/22/2024 — London, UK @ Eventim Apollo
04/24/2024 — Manchester, UK @ O2 Apollo Manchester
04/26/2024 — Wolverhampton, UK @ The Civic At The Halls
04/28/2024 — Cologne, DE @ Palladium
04/29/2024 — Amsterdam, NL @ AFAS Live
04/30/2024 — Antwerp, BE @ Lotto Arena
05/02/2024 — Stockholm, SE @ Annexet
05/03/2024 — Oslo, NO @ Spektrum
05/04/2024 — Copenhagen, DK @ Falkonersalen
05/06/2024 — Hamburg, DE @ Sporthalle
05/07/2024 — Berlin, DE @ Verti Music Hall
05/08/2024 — Prague, CZ @ Forum Karlin
05/10/2024 — Warsaw, PL @ COS Torwar
05/12/2024 — Zurich, CH @ Halle 622
05/13/2024 — Vienna, AT @ Gasometer
05/14/2024 — Munich, DE @ Zenith
05/16/2024 — Milan, IT @ Fabrique
05/17/2024 — Paris, FR @ Zenith
05/20/2024 — Barcelona, ES @ Sant Jordi Club
05/21/2024 — Madrid, ES @ Palacio Vistalegre
05/22/2024 — Lisbon, PT @ Coliseu de Lisboa
07/05/2024 — Calgary, AB @ Hometown Show*
07/07/2024 — Woodinville, WA @ Chateau Ste Michelle
07/09/2024 — San Francisco, CA @ Bill Graham Civic Auditorium
07/11/2024 — Los Angeles, CA @ The Greek Theatre
07/14/2024 — Phoenix, AZ @ Arizona Financial Theatre
07/17/2024 — Austin, TX @ Moody Amphitheater at Waterloo Park
07/19/2024 — Houston, TX @ 713 Music Hall
07/20/2024 — Irving, TX @ The Pavilion at Toyota Music Factory
07/21/2024 — Rogers, AR @ Walmart AMP
07/24/2024 — Cincinnati, OH @ The Andrew J Brady Music Center
07/27/2024 — Toronto, ON @ Budweiser Stage
07/28/2024 — Sterling Heights, MI @ Michigan Lottery Amphitheatre
07/30/2024 — Saint Louis, MO @ Saint Louis Music Park
08/01/2024 — Minneapolis, MN @ The Armory
08/06/2024 — Nashville, TN @ Ascend Amphitheater
08/07/2024 — Indianapolis, IN @ Everwise Amphitheater at White River State Park
08/09/2024 — Boston, MA @ MGM Music Hall at Fenway
08/13/2024 — Washington, DC @ The Anthem
08/14/2024 — Philadelphia, PA @ Skyline Stage at Mann
08/16/2024 — Raleigh, NC @ Red Hat Amphitheater
08/17/2024 — Atlanta, GA @ Cadence Bank Amphitheatre at Chastain Park
08/22/2024 — New York, NY @ Madison Square Garden**
11/08/2024 — Perth, AU @ Red Hill Auditorium
11/10/2024 — Brisbane, AU @ Riverstage
11/12/2024 — Sydney, AU @ Hordern Pavilion
11/15/2024 — Adelaide, AU @ AEC Theatre
11/17/2024 — Melbourne, AU @ Margaret Court Arena
11/19/2024 — Auckland, NZ @ Spark Arena
11/21/2024 — Wellington, NZ @ TSB Arena
Get ready: Nicki Minaj’s long-awaited fifth studio album Pink Friday 2 is finally arriving after several months of postponements, five years removed from the release of her last album, Queen. In a new teaser for the album, Minaj promised to take her fans to “Gag City” (idk, sounds unpleasant) and they certainly seem excited about it, but when exactly should they be checking for it online?
Although many of the artists on Nicki’s level of notoriety can get away with pushing it (see: anytime Drake releases anything), it seems most likely that Nicki’s new album will hit DSPs at midnight ET on the dot. After all, she gave herself plenty of leeway to get everything mixed, mastered, and delivered to her distributors with the date change earlier this year, so someone as fastidious about her career as Ms. Minaj isn’t going to drop the ball on the 1-yard line. She even canceled a performance at the iHeartRadio Jingle Ball in Chicago — presumably to do some last-minute album prep — so it seems probable that she’s hit her deadlines.
Judging from the singles that have been released so far, including the as-yet only teased “Big Difference,” fans can likely expect a return to a more rap-focused Nicki on her new project, rather than the pop-oriented version that dominated much of the 2010s. Whether that’s a good thing probably depends on which version you like more: “Anaconda” Nicki or “Monster” Nicki.
The Boys Season 4 trailer not only set up the explosive events in the ongoing battle between Homelander (Antony Starr) and Billy Butcher (Karl Urban), but it introduced a new character to the show: Sister Sage.
In the trailer, a female voiceover can be heard giving Homelander advice on how to seduce the public.
“Rome. Greece. All democracies fail because people are f*cking stupid,” the voice says. “But if you crush the masses… Who builds your monuments? Who tongues your taint? No, the people will tear it apart themselves. You just gotta nudge ’em a little. Then you get to swoop in. Be the one saving it.”
“Like Caesar,” Homeland responds.
“Like Caesar,” the voice says as the camera reveals actress Susan Heyward. Last year, the official Twitter account for The Boys revealed that Heyward would be playing a new Supe named Sister Sage who is “already a thousand steps ahead of you.”
Meet Sage. She’s already a thousand steps ahead of you.
Considering Sister Sage is an entirely new character created specifically for the Amazon series and does not appear in the comics, there is literally in the way of information on what powers and abilities she brings to the table. But judging by her calm, confident advice to Homelander, she seems remarkably adept at manipulating events to her will. That could prove trouble for The Boys, and possibly Homelander himself.
Here’s the official synopsis for The Boys Season 4:
The world is on the brink. Victoria Neuman is closer than ever to the Oval Office and under the muscly thumb of Homelander, who is consolidating his power. Butcher, with only months to live, has lost Becca’s son as well as his job as The Boys’ leader. The rest of the team are fed up with his lies. With the stakes higher than ever, they have to find a way to work together and save the world before it’s too late.
The Boys Season 4 premieres in 2024 on Prime Video.
Taylor Swift‘s “Dear John” is (allegedly) about John Mayer. “Hey Stephen” is about Stephen Barker Liles. Is “When Emma Falls in Love” about Emma Stone? The answer is: maybe?
When Swift revealed that “When Emma Falls in Love” was one of the six “from the vault” tracks for Speak Now (Taylor’s Version), her fanbase guessed the titular Emma was Oscar-winning actress Emma Stone. They first met in 2008 and quickly developed a friendship. This week, the Person of the Year made an appearance at the premiere of Stone’s wild-looking new movie, Poor Things, which is where the actress was asked by Entertainment Tonight if Swift wrote the song about her. She replied, “You would have to ask her.” Fair enough!
Back in June, Stone talked to Vanity Fair about attending Swift’s Eras Tour. “The concert was pretty amazing,” she said. “I was lucky ’cause we’ve been friends for a really long time. I’ve known her since we were 17 and 18, so she hooked me up, which was very nice ’cause I know those tickets are impossible to get.” Stone added, “She’s a wonderful friend.” Now, please enjoy Emma Stone losing her mind to “You Belong with Me.”
Hovvdy returned today with their new single, “Bubba.” Produced by Andrew Sarlo and Ben Littlejohn, the duo’s song is a dreamy tale about wanting to offer someone a helping hand. The release also came with a music video, filmed inside of a car, as blue lighting takes over throughout.
“The song tells a story from two perspectives: the brother (Bubba) and his sister,” Charlie Martin, one half of the band, shared in a statement. “It’s about sibling-hood in the midst of really hard times and getting through it all together. I was lucky to have my older brother through all our childhood shit, and I can’t imagine how it would’ve gone without him. But still it’s tough and time flies and we grow older and process in our own ways; and this song is about how that feels.”
The band will be playing a handful of dates throughout the rest of 2023, before going to support Cold War Kids on their tour next year. More information is available through Hovvdy’s website.
Check out Hovvdy’s “Bubba” above. Below, find a complete list of the band’s upcoming tour dates.
12/06/2023 — Los Angeles, CA @ El Cid
12/12/2023 — Chicago, IL @ Lincoln Hall
12/14/2023 — Nashville, TN @ The Blue Room
12/15/2023 — Brooklyn, NY @ Public Records
01/31/2024 — San Francisco, CA @ Fillmore *
02/01/2024 — Portland, OR @ Crystal Ballroom *
02/02/2024 — Vancouver, BC @ Vogue *
02/03/2024 — Seattle, WA @ Moore Theatre *
02/05/2024 — Boise, ID @ Knitting Factory *
02/06/2024 — Bozeman, MT @ The Elm *
02/08/2024 — Aspen, CO @ Belly Up *
02/09/2024 — Denver, CO @ Gothic Theater *
02/10/2024 — Denver, CO @ Gothic Theater *
02/13/2024 — Tulsa, OK @ Cain’s Ballroom *
02/15/2024 — Dallas, TX @ House of Blues *
02/16/2024 — Houston, TX @ House of Blues *
02/17/2024 — Austin, TX @ Stubbs *
05/25/2024 — Bristol, UK @ Dot To Dot Festival
05/26/2024 — Nottingham, UK @ Dot To Dot Festival
As it turned out, 2023 was a pretty good year for movies. (Insert Larry David “pret-tay, pret-tay, pret-tay good” GIF here.) So good, in fact, that we had a difficult time choosing just ten favorites, as we’ve done most years. This year we ended up with multiple films tied for the 10th spot, so we decided to expand the list to 15. But then Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning was gonna miss the cut by one vote, so we decided to expand the list to 16 movies. After all, if Tom Cruise was willing to die for us to save movies, his 2023 summer blockbuster deserved a spot on our list. So here was are.
Here’s how the voting was tabulated (yay math!). Editors, writers, and contributors submitted lists of their favorite movies from 2023 and then we assigned points based on these rankings. (Ten points for the number one movie, nine points for the number two movie, and so on.) We added up all of those numbers to formulate a score. Ties were broken by favoring whichever movie was ranked highest on the various lists that were submitted. Confused? Perfect! This time is year is meant to be somewhat confusing for everyone.
So, without any further hoopla, here are the movies we think were the best of 2023.
16. Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning Part One
PARAMOUNT
Tom Cruise has been making Mission: Impossible movies for almost 30 years now and all they’ve ever done is rule extremely hard. Dead Reckoning — Part One is no exception. This sucker is just wall-to-wall action for almost three hours, with all-knowing artificial intelligence and car chase and train chases and exploding submarines. Hayley Atwell plays a pickpocket. Vanessa Kirby returns as the White Widow and holds a techno rave in a castle where there’s also a black market transaction taking place. Tom Cruise runs and jumps and flings himself off of and into things for our enjoyment, as always. Just a big and loud summer blockbuster in all the ways a big and loud summer blockbuster should be. There’s room for those, too. — Brian Grubb
15. Fallen Leaves
sputnik
Finnish director Aki Kaurismäki has been making dry, deeply humane movies since the 1980s and his latest is one of his best. In Helsinki, Ansa (Alma Pöysti) and Holappa (Jussi Vatanen) each live on the economic margins of an uncaring city. Over the course of the film they find and lose each other then find each other again, though whether or not they can forge a relationship deeper than chance encounters remains unclear. The leads deliver perfectly deadpan performances that never obscure their characters’ stirring hopes that, in each other, they might have found a way to end the loneliness and disappointment that’s defined their lives. (A bonus: it features the year’s best canine performance.) — Keith Phipps
14. Creed III
MGM
Nine movies into the Rocky franchise and somehow, Michael B. Jordan’s directorial debut manages to give one of the greatest sports stories on screen a thrilling refresh. Creed III turns the underdog trope that fueled its predecessors on its head, showing Adonis (Jordan) as a titan in the boxing world whose idyllic life is thrown into chaos when a familiar face from his past – a menacing and muscled Jonathan Majors — pops up with title ambitions of his own and a bitter score to settle. It’s Adonis’ fall from grace, and his gritty determination to get back into the ring, that drives the narrative to new heights as themes of family and brotherhood take priority over the brutality that happens once the bell rings. But those invested in the action of this series won’t be disappointed either. Jordan’s love of anime is infused in every punch, jab, and knockout blow of the film’s final fight – a dizzying, vicious dance peppered with slo-mo close-ups and visceral sound effects that make a case for why this might be the best boxing movie since Sylvester Stallone’s original outing. — Jessica Toomer
13. John Wick 4
Lionsgate
The John Wick universe is a complex blend of gun violence, vague religious imagery, and some of the best dog actors around, and the fourth installment brought the action to a new level by adding in a Skarsgard brother. You’d think the rogue assassin bit would be overdone by now, but Keanu Reeves managing to successfully pull off a meaningful 3-hour performance as John Wick with just 380 words is so mesmerizing that we could get another two or three movies out of this franchise with just a single paragraph go dialogue. John Wick 4 is supposed to be the final chapter in the series, but Reeves can seemingly never resist bringing his characters back, so we might see more of him soon. And we don’t ever have to talk about The Continental again. — Nina Braca
12. Saltburn
Amazon Studios
Emerald Fennell burst onto the scene with 2020’s divisive Promising Young Woman, and her follow-up, Saltburn, is a searing riff on class that feels like The Talented Mr. Ripley for sickos. Barry Keoghan stars as Oliver, an Oxford scholarship student who becomes obsessed with his handsome, rich classmate Felix (Jacob Elordi). Felix invites Oli back to his family’s estate, Saltburn, for the summer, but what he doesn’t realize is that rescinding that invitation could be dangerous. Saltburn is a mean little dark comedy that encourages the audience to root for a monstrous protagonist. Keoghan has really perfected the art of playing a wolf in sheep’s clothing in films like American Animals and The Killing of a Sacred Deer, but Oliver might be his most stellar sociopath yet. Combined with a killer soundtrack, hilarious supporting cast, and truly sumptuous visuals, Saltburn is a delicious cinematic schadenfreude. — Danielle Ryan
11. They Cloned Tyrone
Netflix / Merle Cooper
Juel Taylor’s directorial debut is a stylish genre pastiche that feels like the sharp, satirical needle hiding in the hit-and-miss haystack that was Netflix’s original content lineup in 2023. A one-pot dinner filled with mind-bending sci-fi, Blaxpoitation references, Nancy Drew homages, and 70s-era funk, Taylor lets his tale of a Black neighborhood under siege simmer in its opening half. We meet John Boyega’s drug-dealing anti-hero Fontaine under the most unusual of circumstances – just before he’s killed in a drive-by and thrust into a Groundhog Day-style time-loop. To get to the bottom of the secret government conspiracy responsible, he reluctantly recruits a quick-witted pimp named Slick Charles (Jamie Foxx at this comedic best) and his streetwise employee Yo-Yo (Teyonah Parris serving up a surprise breakout performance). The trio’s chemistry sells all of the wild, riotous action to come as they Scooby Doo gang their way through tainted fried chicken recipes, grape drink communions, and toxic hair relaxers in an effort to free their community and define their identity on their terms. — Jessica Toomer
10. Beau Is Afraid
A24 Films
Beau is Afraid is a grand horrific adventure, filtered through the twisted mind of writer and director Ari Aster. Joaquin Phoenix stars as Beau, whose journey home after his mother’s death is as epic as the mythical Odysseus, traversing a dystopian city, a sickly sweet suburbia, a magical forest, and more in the name of getting back to his mother dearest (Patti LuPone). Beau’s somewhat Oedipal odyssey forces the mild-mannered, cowardly man to confront his greatest fears both literal and metaphorical in some strange ways (seriously, there’s a giant penis monster in an attic), and it’s the kind of surrealist nightmare many horror fans could only dream of. The less you know about Beau is Afraid before going in, the better, because there’s no movie as unique or surprising this year. — Danielle Ryan
9. Bottoms
MGM
Bottoms is two things at once, which is a fun little trick. One on hand, it’s a fun and sweet little coming-of-age comedy about two teenage girls who kind of accidentally start a fight club as a ploy to get the attention of the cheerleaders they have crushes on. On the other hand, it’s also just delightfully weird, with football players in cages and battle royales and Marshawn Lynch as a profane teacher who sometimes reads adult magazines in class. The main thing Bottoms is, though, is a blast, from beginning to end. Ayo Edebiri is an absolute star, and the creative team of Rachel Sennott (who plays the other lead) and Emma Seligman (who directs) ain’t exactly slouches either. — Brian Grubb
8. Past Lives
A24
Past Lives has the best ending for a movie this year. The rest of the film isn’t so shabby, either. Celine Song’s stunning directorial debut follows Nora Moon (played as an adult by an Oscar-worthy Greta Lee) and Hae Sung (Teo Yoo), two childhood sweethearts who lose touch when her family moves to North America. Years go by, and after spurts of on- and off-again communication, Hae Sung travels to New York City to meet Nora — and her husband, Arthur (John Magaro). A lesser film would have turned Hae Sung or Arthur into a villain for keeping Nora away from who she’s “supposed” to be with, but Song’s script is more complex — which is to say, more human — than that. “I didn’t know that liking your husband would hurt this much,” Hae Sung tells Nora following a night out with both of them. By the final scene, you’ll be crying along with Nora. — Josh Kurp
7. No Hard Feelings
Sony Pictures
Sure, Jennifer Lawrence has those Oscar movies under her belt, but is this my favorite JLaw movie? It’s a pretty close call. In this profanely delightful little ditty, she pulls out every available stop for laughs (with an Eastern Promises-style nude scene and everything) and truly looked like she was having the time of her life as a fail-hard character who agrees to boink an unsociable 19-year-old in exchange for a car. Surely, that’s a more enjoyable movie to film than a Battle Royale-esque franchise or the most gut-wrenching Winter’s Bone scene (no contest). What’s even better is that No Hard Feelings actually transforms into a sweet movie without turning saccharine (that Hall & Oates piano scene, dang), but the movie wisely never downshifts on the raunch factor. Long live the filthy movies. — Kimberly Ricci
6. The Holdovers
Focus Features
The other night I had dinner with a friend who saw The Holdovers and it quickly became one of their favorite movies of the year. What’s interesting is he said he was shocked by how good it is, even though he went in expecting it to be good. I asked if he was shocked by the actual plot. He said no, it’s about what he expected – the only contributor to his shock being how much better the movie was than even his already high expectations. Alexander Payne is extremely good at making “hangout” movies. This time, about a teacher (Paul Giamatti); a charming, yet sarcastic and forlorn student (Dominic Sessa); and the head cook at the school (Da’Vine Joy Randolph, who may very well be on her way to an Oscar) all trapped together during the holiday break with nowhere to go.
Payne’s last collaboration with Paul Giamatti, Sideways, is also low on plot and very high on character. Think about how many times you might watch a first act of a movie, fall in love with the dialogue and the characters, and just want to spend time with them … then the plot kicks in and everything that was great starts to fall apart. Payne is a master of creating characters and dialogue that just keeps us invested in them. Notably, his prior film before The Holdovers, Downsizing, was very heavy on plot and it’s his most poorly reviewed film. When you ask him, he poo-poos the idea The Holdovers is a return to basics for him, but even if he doesn’t feel that way, it doesn’t change the fact that it is a return to basics for him with just a stellar cast of people I wish we could spend a couple more hours with – or, frankly, an entire holiday season with. — Mike Ryan
5. Spider-Man: Across The Spider-Verse
sony
Comic book movies and TV shows are showing the strains of their ceaseless expansion as we sit through increasingly familiar stories, CG cityscapes, and alien worlds. Too much of a good thing, not enough great things. But Spider-Man: Across The Spider-Verseis a great thing. Heartful in its efforts to tell the story of the continuing adventures of Miles Morales as he navigates life as a hero absent the friends he made in the first film, Across The Spider-Verse truly explodes the idea of what a comic book movie can be. This is thanks to the boundlessly exuberant and adventurous way it both constructs and captures its world(s) during this jaunt through the multiverse, perfectly amalgamating the best parts of movies, animation/anime, video games, comic books, and art. — Jason Tabrys
4. Killers of the Flower Moon
Apple TV
David Grann’s 2017 book Killers of the Flower Moon revisited the essentially forgotten story of the Osage Murders in which sixty or so members of Osage tribe in Oklahoma were murdered by those seeking to take over the mineral rights that had made them rich when oil was found on what was thought to be worthless land that they owned. Martin Scorsese’s adaptation doesn’t merely dust off the story, it treats it as an epic tale of the prejudice and injustice we try to cover up when telling the American story. Bringing together Scorsese’s two most famous leading men, the film stars Robert De Niro as local baron William Hale and Leonardo DiCaprio as his craven, none-too-bright nephew Ernest. More than holding her own, Lily Gladstone provides the soulful counterweight to the amorality of those who see her and those like her less as humans than resources to be exploited and discarded when used up. — Keith Phipps
3. May December
Netflix
It’s interesting May December very well might wind up being Todd Haynes’ most watched and most lauded film. (Though, it’s hard to quantify. Carol will make more money at the box office but, at least anecdotally, everyone seems to be watching May December now that it’s on Netflix.) Also interesting is the amount of people under the age of 30 who have no idea May December is not only loosely based on the life story of Mary Kay Letourneau and Vili Fualaau, but who have no idea who Letourneau even is – a name that was impossible to avoid if you were a sentient being during the 1990s. Natalie Portman plays a mediocre actor named Elizabeth who is staying with Julianne Moore’s Gracie in an effort to study her for an upcoming role. Of course, this is still a Todd Haynes film so a lot of, let’s say, interesting and weird things happen during this stay. Most notable, the relationship between Elizabeth and Gracie’s husband, Joe (Charles Melton, who seems like he’s the current frontrunner for a Best Supporting Actor Oscar). Oh, and somehow this is a comedy. And I truly believe that Todd Haynes is the only director on this planet who could have successfully made this into a comedy. Or, for that matter, made this at all. — Mike Ryan
2. Oppenheimer
Universal
Unfolding across two timelines at once—this is a Christopher Nolan movie, after all—this biopic of J. Robert Oppenheimer (Cillian Murphy) fully captures the burden shouldered by a brilliant man who carried nothing less than the fate of the world on his shoulders. As head of the Manhattan Project he brings a terrible weapon of destruction into the world, fully aware of the immediate consequences and the possibility that they’ll expand to global proportions. In its aftermath he sees his reputation and accomplishments smeared as a matter of political expediency. In lockstep with Murphy’s eerie, magnetic performance, Nolan’s film treats history as a series of events colliding in increasing intensity, creating aftershocks we still feel today and threats that can be forgotten but never escaped. — Keith Phipps
1. Barbie
Warner Bros.
Greta Gerwig’s Barbiewas the best thing to happen to the color pink since the introduction of Wednesdays. For a while, the color’s reputation was tainted by a bunch of Victoria’s Secret executives, and then taken over by the pop-rock singer of the same name, but this year Pink literally went with everything, thanks to Barbie. It’s no surprise that a movie that dominated the cultural conversation is the number one pick of the year, though it is a huge relief that a movie so hyped-up and heavily marketed was actually a surprisingly introspective take on the effects the patriarchy has on everyone (with dazzling disco moves choreographed to a bespoke song). Margot Robbie’s portrayal of the slightly naive stereotypical Barbie trying to understand the “Real World” of Los Angeles is a realistic callback to whenever the first time you felt crushed under various social pressures. Welcome to the real world! It’s hard out there, even for a fake doll. Throw in Billie Eilish’s melancholic tear-jerker “What Was I Made For?” and an intentionally butchered pronunciation of The Godfather and the movie was bound to be an instant classic. And you, too, have the power to take your Birkenstocks out of the closet in 2024. — Nina Braca
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