Every year, we critics are asked to come up with these best-of-the-year lists, and I’m willing to bet every single critic out there feels a wave of odd ambivalence. Coming up with these lists is a critic’s greatest pleasure, as it gives us a chance to talk about the movies we loved once again. Ranking the lists is a critic’s most agonizing job, as it forces us to marginalize some films over others. What’s more, every single one of us critics undoubtedly feels unqualified to truly make a definitive list, as, well, no matter how vigilant we are, we do miss some movies.
So know this about my own list: I have been unable to see some pretty serious contenders, among them: The Wolf of Wall Street , Short Term 12 , Stories We Tell , the Paradise trilogy, The Square , God Loves Uganda , Blackfish , Enough Said , The Past , and All is Lost .
That said, 2013 was still a pretty amazing year for great films, and it’s pretty impossible to winnow a list of the greatest down to just 10. Indeed, unlike other years, I can openly say that any one of the films in 2013’s top 10 could easily and without argument take the #1 spot . Seriously. Take the whole top-10 this year as a giant #1. They are all equal.
There were awesome indie dramas, some impressive popcorn flicks, great works from recognizable filmmakers, and a few surprises. With such an embarrassing richness of material, I trust you’ll forgive my need to list numerous runner-ups that could all have easily made their way into the top ten. Numbers 16 – 11 are also some of the best films of the year, and it pained me to rank them so low. But if Gravity is only at 15 on my list, admire that there were perhaps 14 films this year that were as good of not better than it.
Witney Seibold is a featured contributor on the CraveOnline Film Channel , and co-host of The B-Movies Podcast . You can read his weekly articles Trolling , Free Film School and The Series Project , and follow him on “Twitter” at @WitneySeibold , where he is slowly losing his mind.
Witney Seibold Picks the 10 Best Films of 2013
Numbers 16, 15, 14, 13, 12, and 11...
16) The most fun I had at a movie this year was unexpectedly Roland Emmerich's proudly cheesy action thriller White House Down . 15) There were several excellent “celebrities in peril” movies this year. I didn't see All is Lost, but I did see the Best Picture Oscar shoo-in Gravity , as well as the comparably terse Captain Phillips . 14) The Place Beyond the Pines was and intense and contemplative intergenerational tale. 13) Part realism, part Huck Finn, Mud was a fascinating crime drama. 12) I wish I could go more into detail about the complexities and heartbreak of Her . 11) And who can forget the hard, hard rock of Metallica: Through the Never , one of the better concert films?
10. American Hustle
David O. Russell's firecracker of a movie, all about a real-life scandal from the 1970s, is sublimely enjoyable and – get this – genuinely lighthearted. Simultaneously a stirring crime caper, a twisted con, a comedy of manners, and an in-depth character piece, American Hustle pops like a champagne cork. It also features some of the best performances of the year, most notable from Jennifer Lawrence as a complex floozy, and Christian Bale as a charming sad sack.
9. Before Midnight
The third Richard Linklater film about the romantic conversations and arguments between a familiar and seemingly fated couple (played by Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy), Before Midnight finally shows cracks in the idylls these two laid down all those years ago in Before Sunrise . Linklater has an ear for conversation, and he has been working with these actors for 20 years now, so Before Midnight , while calm and unflaggingly natural, feels like a magnum opus in many ways.
8. Frances Ha
Greta Gerwig plays, and helped co-write, the title character of Noah Baumbach's quarter-life-crisis film. She is a character you may not want to love, but kind of do anyway just for her tenacity and good humor. Frances is 27, and she's finally growing up, trying to move past the couch-surfing years and into... well she doesn't really know what. It's about responsibility, yes, but it's also about how your college friendships must eventually turn into adult friendships.
7. Spring Breakers
No one does hopeless filth like Harmony Korine, and his latest – despite its neon-pink, ultra-slick party aesthetic – is still plenty filthy. While the film is largely about crime and hedonism, it can also be seen as an essay on how young people are encouraged by pop culture to think of crime and hedonism – and all of life – as an unending Spring Break beer party. James Franco gives one of the best performances of the year as Alien, a demon with cornrows.
6. The Spectacular Now
Kind of the opposite of Spring Breakers , in that it's a film about teens learning to be mature. While it's most certainly a sweet, honest, and stirring romance, James Ponsoldt's movie is a coming-of-age tale in a much more important way. It's not just about early love and sex, but about how those things force us to grow up and actually, y'know, begin sympathizing with people. This is a film that is sensitive to teenagers, allowing them to feel, to screw up, to have flaws and addictions, all without punishing them or judging them.
5. Blue is the Warmest Color
Ecstatic, romantic, sexy, moving, and utterly gorgeous, Abdellatif Kechiche's three-hour French lesbian drama is pretty much a litany of every single conflict that can arise in a new relationship – all told with a casual, realistic naturalness rarely seen on the big screen. It's about growing up, it;s about sexual release, it's about finding your vocation in life, it's about living with someone, it's about breaking up. The length of the film allows it to breathe and meander, very much the way life does.
4. Upstream Color
Totally surreal and wonderfully original, Shane Carruth's Upstream Color is a psychedelic sci-fi odyssey that plays like a romance. Or perhaps it's a romance with psychedelic elements. The story is essentially a love tale between two bitter and damaged people who were brought together by a bizarre identity theft experiment that involves rare blue flowers, forcibly ingested worms, psychic links to piglets, and Walden . Upstream Color is striking in the most important possible ways, refreshingly oblique, and the work of an auteur.
3. The Act of Killing
The premise: Documentarian Joshua Oppenheimer approached Anwar Congo, a chief executioner in the Indonesian genocide of the 1960s, and asked him to recreate, on film, his memories of his experiences. Congo doesn't seem to feel anything but pride in his work, and the good-ol'-boys attitude surrounding he and other executioners is compelling and devastating. This film will destroy you. The act of killing may be a natural part of us. Or maybe regret is lurking in there somewhere.
2. Inside Llewyn Davis
While just as weird and as fatalistic as all their other films, The Coen Bros. have managed to make a film that is grounded and earthy, all about a put-upon human rather than a quirky weirdo. It's odd and absurd, but still moving. It just feels right. The music is dead-on, natch, and the period detail makes the Boho world of the 1960s feel lived-in rather than affected. Inside Llewyn Davis may be The Coens' best film, although I'll have to let it stir for a few years to be sure.
1. To the Wonder
Although not as aspirational or as great as 2011's The Tree of Life , this “lesser” Terrence Malick movie is still profoundly moving, grandly meditative, and still touches on the filmmakers' usual interests in an engaging and thoughtful manner. It's a love story of sorts, and a tale of faith, and how those things can wash in and out of our lives in a patterns as reliable as the tides. The film is abstract and slow-moving, but that's what gets me going. It was a tough decision, but I put To the Wonder on the top of my list.