Top 10 of the Year
1. Oppenheimer | Christopher Nolan |
2. Poor Things | Yorgos Lanthimos |
3. Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse | Joaquim Dos, Santos Kemp Powers, Justin K. Thompson |
4. Asteroid City | Wes Anderson |
5. John Wick: Chapter 4 | Chad Stahelski |
6. The Zone of Interest | Jonathan Glazer |
7. The Killer | David Fincher |
8. Killers of the Flower Moon | Martin Scorsese |
9. Beau is Afraid | Ari Aster |
10. Saltburn | Emerald Fennell |
Best Film – Oppenheimer
After briefly faltering in 2020 with Tenet, Christopher Nolan delivers another masterpiece in a similar vein to Dunkirk, intensively studying two alternate sides of World War II with magnificent pacing. If Dunkirk constructed a pure exercise in visual storytelling by stripping back dialogue and applying an intensive focus to a pivotal point of history, Oppenheimer conducts a dense character study of substantial psychological weight across multiple decades, interrogating the guilt of a scientist whose intelligence and ambition destroyed the lives of millions. The formal structure is an intricate as ever, intertwining two distinct perspectives that bounce back and forth between the Manhattan Project, Robert Oppenheimer’s 1954 security hearing, and Lewis Strauss’ 1959 Senate hearing confirmation, and yet a sense of dramatic urgency persists throughout. Nolan’s usual mastery over establishing shots is present, but for the first time in his career, close-ups are also used with a shallow focus to reveal the haunted terror in Cillian Murphy’s glassy blue eyes. The 2020s have had few true masterpieces so far, but it shouldn’t be a surprise that a Nolan film belongs among them.

Most Underrated – Beau is Afraid
Neither this nor John Wick: Chapter 4 appeared on the TSPDT top 50 films of 2023 list, but at least Chad Stahelski’s film was enthusiastically greeted by the critics and is justly recognised as the best in the series. On the other hand, Beau is Afraid polarised audiences and critics alike with a 63 on Metacritic, and is widely considered a disappointing follow-up to Ari Aster’s tremendous one-two punch of Hereditary and Midsommar. The reason for its divisiveness is clear, given that its lengthy odyssey into one man’s Freudian shame keeps its audience at an inscrutable distance. With some hindsight though, a re-evaluation will be inevitable. Aster’s swerve away from straight horror and into psychological comedy-drama will seem less jarring, and more like an extension of his storytelling interests – isolated protagonists trapped in absurd worlds that follow their own bizarre set of rules.

Most Overrated – Anatomy of a Fall
Justine Triet’s courtroom drama is the #5 film of 2023 according to TSPDT and won the Palme d’Or, but falls outside my top 10. The strength of its screenplay and acting is undeniable, conducting a chilling autopsy of a broken marriage after the husband was discovered dead outside his French chalet. There is not so much to admire here from a formal standpoint though. Anatomy of a Fall joins the list of Palme d’Or winners more praised for their engaging intellectual substance than their cinematic craft.

Best Directorial Debut – Reptile
For the record, I’m not counting any of the directors who worked on Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse, as it is the rare film to crack a year’s top 10 that isn’t particularly director-driven. Meanwhile, Grant Singer displays a great deal of potential in his crime thriller Reptile, following in the footsteps of David Fincher on both a visual and narrative level. He is methodical in his editing, unfolding a lethal conspiracy stretching across the real estate industry and police force with careful, deliberate pacing, and sinking us into an unsettling atmosphere with beautiful golden lighting.

Gem to Spotlight – The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar and Three More
In a year that saw Wes Anderson come out with the extraordinarily self-aware Asteroid City, it is easy to miss the anthology of short films he released on Netflix, each adapting short stories from Roald Dahl. They all work in magnificent formal harmony together, using a rotating troupe of actors to narrate and play multiple roles as if reading tales from a storybook. The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar is the longest and the best of the four, but The Swan, The Rat Catcher, and Poison are also excellent treatises on outsiders being driven from society, strengthened by the classic Anderson style of pastels and dioramas.

Best Male Performance – Cillian Murphy in Oppenheimer
Cillian Murphy gives one of the best performances of the decade in Oppenheimer, earning Christopher Nolan’s close-ups that stare right into his glassy blue eyes stretched wide open with the guilt of knowing what he has done, and what he is about to do. His performance is incredibly studied, adopting the physicist’s deep voice and clipped intonations in his speech, and ageing from an idealistic student into a middle-aged man stalked by regret. Murphy has been acting in Nolan films since Batman Begins in 2005, but mainly in supporting roles, so it is about time he is given a role substantial enough to show off his incredible talent.
After Murphy, Robert Downey Jr. is the Salieri to Oppenheimer’s Mozart, revealing a petty man torn apart by contempt and envy. In an ensemble loaded with big names and completely dominated by Murphy, Downey Jr. remarkably makes a significant impact, becoming the vessel upon which much of the narrative hinges.

Joaquin Phoenix packs on a great deal of weight in Beau is Afraid, but the way he carries it is feeble and lethargic. He is anxiety and self-loathing distilled in human form, desperately desiring the approval of his mother yet constantly falling short. His performances makes for a fascinating contrast to the next best performance of the year too – Michael Fassbender in The Killer. Both characters are caught up in chaotic circumstances far beyond their control, and yet Fassbender hides his concern behind a cool, stoic façade, trying to convince himself that everything is under control. It is a welcome return to more arthouse fare after a four-year hiatus and an extended diversion to mainstream movies.

Much like Murphy, Barry Keoghan is another talent whose time spent in supporting roles has prepared him to lead an entire film. His acting in Saltburn goes beyond those shocking scenes that were passed around on social media. He conceals Oliver Quick’s true nature behind cold enigmatic eyes, and makes for an unfathomably unreliable narrator. Thanks to his impeccable comic timing, buoyant slapstick, and purposefully overwrought line deliveries, Mark Ruffalo also gives one of the best performances of the year as rakish cad Duncan Wedderburn in Poor Things, while Robert de Niro rounds up the list with an incredible return to form playing William Hale in Killers of the Flower Moon.

Best Female Performance – Emma Stone in Poor Things
Standing at the top of the women’s category this year is a huge performance from Emma Stone in Poor Things that quite easily ranks among her very best. While she has explored Yorgos Lanthimos’ eccentric black wit before in The Favourite, her evolution from incoherent infancy to young adulthood as Bella Baxter is an entirely different beast, awkwardly spinning in uncoordinated motions and later dealing out eloquent dismissals of high society. The slapstick is a new addition to repertoire as well, embodying a being of pure impulse who pursues whatever momentary sensory pleasures come her way.

Lily Gladstone has put together a solid resume in her collaborations with Kelly Reichhardt, and so it is very satisfying to see her reach another level as the unfalteringly resilient Mollie Kyle in Killers of the Flower Moon, beating out acting titans Robert de Niro and Leonardo DiCaprio with the best performance of the film. She is softly spoken, resilient, and intellectual, but also trusting to a fault.
Between the two big films that Sandra Hüller was in this year, Anatomy of a Fall and The Zone of Interest, the former features the showier, more talkative role, while the latter poses a trickier challenge in its quiet, subdued nuances. Hedwig Höss will go down as one of the great cinema villains of this decade for everything she represents – vanity, apathy, spoiled privilege, and a soullessness that bears absolutely no guilt over the source of her wealth.
Asteroid City features a number of solid performances in its enormous ensemble, but it is Scarlett Johansson who stands out in the most substantial role of Midge Campbell — or Mercedes Ford depending on which way you look at her character. Lastly, Natalie Portman slides in for her psychologically rich performance in May December, playing a method actor who loses herself in the identity of the manipulative predator she is researching, while revealing the absolute artifice of her own apparent empathy.

Best Cinematography – Poor Things
Film | Cinematographer |
1. Poor Things | Robbie Ryan |
2. Asteroid City | Robert Yeoman |
3. John Wick: Chapter 4 | Dan Laustsen |
4. The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar and Three More | Robert Yeoman |
6. El Conde | Edward Lachman |
7. The Zone of Interest | Łukasz Żal |
8. The Killer | Erik Messerschmidt |
9. Oppenheimer | Hoyte van Hoytema |
10. Killers of the Flower Moon | Rodrigo Prieto |
11. Saltburn | Linus Sandgren |

Best Editing – Oppenheimer
Film | Editor |
1. Oppenheimer | Jennifer Lame |
2. Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse | Michael Andrews |
3. John Wick: Chapter 4 | Nathan Orloff |
4. The Killer | Kirk Baxter |
5. The Zone of Interest | Paul Watts |
5. Killers of the Flower Moon | Thelma Schoonmaker |
6. Beau is Afraid | Lucian Johnston |
7. Saltburn | Victoria Boydell |
8. El Conde | Sofía Subercaseaux |

Best Screenplay – Oppenheimer
Film | Screenwriter |
1. Oppenheimer | Christopher Nolan |
2. Poor Things | Tony McNamara |
3. Beau is Afraid | Ari Aster |
4. Asteroid City | Wes Anderson |
5. The Killer | Andrew Kevin Walker |
6. May December | Samy Burch |
7. Killers of the Flower Moon | Eric Roth, Martin Scorsese |
8. Fallen Leaves | Aki Kaurismäki |
9. Saltburn | Emerald Fennell |

Best Original Music Score – Oppenheimer
Film | Composer |
1. Oppenheimer | Ludwig Göransson |
2. Poor Things | Jerskin Fendrixistor |
3. Killers of the Flower Moon | Robbie Robertson |
4. Beau is Afraid | Bobby Krlic |
5. John Wick: Chapter 4 | Tyler Bates, Joel J. Richard |
6. Saltburn | Anthony Willis |
7. Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse | Daniel Pemberton |
8. May December | Marcelo Zarvos |
9. Asteroid City | Alexandre Desplat |
10. The Killer | Trent Reznor, Atticus Ross |
Year Breakdown
Even with the Actors and Directors Guild strikes pushing some big films into the following year, 2023 saw a giant comeback for cinema, with two full masterpieces sitting at the top and one huge cultural event defining the summer season of moviegoing. Barbenheimer emerged as an unlikely pairing of two big blockbusters with the only thing in common being their release date – July 21st. Audiences flocked to theatres and records were broken, seeing Barbie become the highest grossing film of the year and Oppenheimer claiming third place (the less said about The Super Mario Bros. Movie in second the better).
Both films met at the intersection of critical and audience acclaim, affirming the two directors as a pair of unstoppable, dominant forces in the film industry – even if Christopher Nolan’s cinematic achievement far outweighs Greta Gerwig’s. Oppenheimer swept awards season and rightfully walked away with Best Picture at the Oscars, giving Nolan a fantastic comeback after Tenet. A little further down the box office list, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 and Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse were also notable financial successes, keeping comic book movies afloat next to some pretty major flops.

Speaking of which, the quality of animations this year can’t go ignored either. Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse is a surprisingly avant-garde experiment in visual style from Sony Pictures, while Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem followed in its creative footsteps, and Hayao Miyazaki came out of retirement (again) to direct The Boy and the Heron – all films worthy of the year’s top 10, or at the very least its fringe.



Along with Nolan and Miyazaki, the old guard of directors came out in full force this year. Scorsese doesn’t show signs of slowing down in his old age, and though he is much younger, neither does Wes Anderson who released two major projects in 2023. Asteroid City is the greater success, but his anthology of Roald Dahl short films marks a strange curiosity in this era of streaming, making the most of Netflix’s flexible business model by experimenting with the very format of cinema itself. It is difficult to classify this as either a movie or a miniseries, but it is undoubtedly a collective work of cinematic art. David Fincher meanwhile not only released a marvellous hitman film, but also indirectly proved his continued influence in films like Boston Strangler and Reptile that emulate his ambient atmospheres, and others like BlackBerry and Oppenheimer that follow in the footsteps of The Social Network.


2023 also bore witness to the continued ascension of a younger filmmaking generation, featuring the talents of Ari Aster, Emerald Fennell, and Chad Stahelski who brought the John Wick series to soaring new heights in Chapter 4. With Poor Things, Yorgos Lanthimos has officially graduated this class and taken his place next to the modern masters of the artform, now laying claim to two masterpieces under his belt and a solid depth to his filmography.


Over at Cannes Film Festival, an impressive array of films made the debut including Killers of the Flower Moon, The Zone of Interest, Fallen Leaves, May December, and Asteroid City, so Anatomy of a Fall clinching the Palme d’Or this year is a little disappointing. Justine Triet’s screenplay is extremely admirable, and her direction even stands out in parts, but as a visual and formal artist her work does not warrant a great deal of praise.




Film Archives
Film | Director | Grade |
A Haunting in Venice | Kenneth Branagh | R |
Afire | Christian Petzold | R |
All of Us Strangers | Andrew Haigh | R |
American Fiction | Cord Jefferson | R |
Anatomy of a Fall | Justine Triet | R |
Asteroid City | Wes Anderson | MS |
Barbie | Greta Gerwig | R |
Beau is Afraid | Ari Aster | MS |
BlackBerry | Matt Johnson | R |
Boston Strangler | Matt Ruskin | R |
Bottoms | Emma Seligman | R |
Dream Scenario | Kristoffer Borgli | R |
Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves | Jonathan Goldstein, John Francis Daley | R |
El Conde | Pablo Larraín | HR/MS |
Evil Dead Rise | Lee Cronin | R |
Extraction 2 | Sam Hargrave | R |
Fair Play | Chloe Domont | R |
Fallen Leaves | Aki Kaurismäki | HR |
Ferrari | Michael Mann | R |
Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 | James Gunn | R |
Infinity Pool | Brandon Cronenberg | R/HR |
John Wick: Chapter 4 | Chad Stahelski | MS |
Killers of the Flower Moon | Martin Scorsese | MS |
Knock at the Cabin | M. Night Shyamalan | R |
Maestro | Bradley Cooper | R/HR |
May December | Todd Haynes | HR |
Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning | Christopher McQuarrie | R |
Napoleon | Ridley Scott | R |
Nimona | Nick Bruno, Troy Quane | R |
Nyad | Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi, Jimmy Chin | R |
Oppenheimer | Christopher Nolan | MP |
Past Lives | Celine Song | R |
Poor Things | Yorgos Lanthimos | MP |
Priscilla | Sofia Coppola | R/HR |
Reptile | Grant Singer | R |
Saltburn | Emerald Fennell | HR/MS |
Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse | Joaquim Dos, Santos Kemp Powers, Justin K. Thompson | MS/MP |
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem | Jeff Rowe, Kyler Spears | R/HR |
The Boy and the Heron | Hayao Miyazaki | R/HR |
The Creator | Gareth Edwards | R |
The Holdovers | Alexander Payne | R |
The Iron Claw | Sean Durkin | R |
The Killer | David Fincher | MS |
The New Boy | Warwick Thornton | R |
The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar and Three More | Wes Anderson | HR |
The Zone of Interest | Jonathan Glazer | MS |
Wonka | Paul King | R |

What made you archive Reptile, Bottoms & Wonka? I’m pretty sure Cinema Archives/Drake have seen all 3 and all of them missed. I can’t speak for Reptile & Bottoms personally because I haven’t seen them but Wonka was certainly a disappointing experience. It is very light with very little stakes and the images from it aren’t that great either. But I certainly liked Chalamet’s and Hugh Grant’s performances and thought they were the best things in it.
Being light with low stakes sounds more like a description than a criticism to me, and I disagree on Wonka’s visuals even if they don’t totally blow you away. I’ve written more on all three here:
https://scenebygreen.com/2023/12/07/bottoms-2023/
https://scenebygreen.com/2023/12/31/wonka-2023/
https://scenebygreen.com/2024/03/18/reptile-2023/
Have you seen Kitty Green’s The Royal Hotel (2023)? The director of The Assistant (2019).
No, I haven’t seen The Assistant either – though I probably should try to catch up on that at some point.