Last week, my ranking of 100 favourite movies I’ve seen in the last decade began with 40 films that ranged from screwball comedies to spectacle-fuelled blockbusters, from gritty crime thrillers to artistic animations, from gory horrors to melodramatic epics…
This week, my typically eclectic selection continues with the next 30 picks.

#60The Nice Guys 8th from 2016 (previously 11th) Convoluted criminality is rendered hilarious in Shane Black’s spiritual sequel to Kiss Kiss Bang Bang. More… |
#59Arrival 7th from 2016 (previously 6th) An intelligent, adult drama about humanity, which also happens to be a science-fiction mystery. More… |
#58His Girl Friday 6th from 2010 (previously 7th) Sharp, fast, intelligent, hilariously funny — they don’t make films like this anymore. More… |
#57The Story of Film: An Odyssey 8th from 2015 (previously 21st) Mark Cousins’ history of the movies wasn’t to all tastes, but I found all 15 hours to be fascinating and enlightening. More… |
#56The Night of the Hunter 7th from 2013 (previously 7th) Charles Laughton’s only film as director is a masterpiece of dread, fear, cruelty, and near-peerless beauty. More… |
#55M 5th from 2010 (previously unranked) Fritz Lang’s proto-noir serial killer procedural still has the power to thrill and chill. More… |
#54Inglourious Basterds 3rd from 2009 (previously 1st) Killin’ Natzis, Tarantino style. History re-rendered in terms of pure cinema. More… |
#53In Bruges 2nd from 2009 (previously 2nd) “There’s never been a classic movie made in Bruges, until now.” More… |
#52Byzantium 7th from 2015 (previously 5th) These vampires aren’t glamorous or sparkly, but damaged and discarded in a seedy seaside town of tarnished charms. More… |
#51How to Train Your Dragon 8th from 2011 (previously unranked) Glorious animation, with soaring flight sequences and an emotive connection to its characters, both human and dragon. More… |
#50Dredd 6th from 2013 (previously 6th) Sharp, efficient sci-fi action with impressive gun battles, dry humour, and Karl Urban nailing the title character. More… |
#49Steve Jobs 6th from 2016 (previously 3rd) A gripping character drama with a surprising corporate thriller vibe, magnificently written by Aaron Sorkin. More… |
#48Lupin the Third: The Castle of Cagliostro 7th from 2011 (previously 4th) Described by no less than Steven Spielberg as “one of the greatest adventure movies of all time”. More… |
#47The Shining 8th from 2014 (previously 3rd) Eliciting dread and almost-primal fear, it’s the most excruciatingly and exquisitely unsettling film I’ve ever seen. More… |
#46X-Men: Days of Future Past 7th from 2014 (previously 9th) Surprisingly deep characterisation rubs shoulders with witty and inventive action in this all-eras X-Men team-up. More… |
#45Predestination 5th from 2016 (previously 5th) Thought-provoking science-fiction in this time travel mystery that tackles issues of gender and identity — how timely. More… |
#44The Revenant 4th from 2016 (previously 4th) Starring Emmanuel Lubezki’s cinematography, this gruelling survival Western is primarily told with visuals and so becomes a work of pure cinema. More… |
#43Oldboy 6th from 2014 (previously 7th) Mixing a straightforward revenge thriller with weird, almost surrealistic touches, Oldboy is kinda crazy, kinda disturbed, but kinda brilliant because of it. More… |
#42Hanna 5th from 2013 (previously 5th) A teen coming-of-age movie… with hard-hitting action sequences, surreal imagery, long single takes, beautiful cinematography, and a pulsating Chemical Brothers soundtrack. More… |
#41Stardust 5th from 2008 (previously 4th) A truly magical film, packed with wit, action, delicious villains, a star-studded cast, a stirring score, and genuinely special effects. More… |
#40North by Northwest 4th from 2013 (previously 4th) Almost everything you could want from a movie: pure tension, action, humour; a mystery, a thriller; a dash of romance. Unadulterated entertainment. More… |
#39The Three Musketeers 6th from 2011 (previously unranked) Sword fights galore in this riot of swashbuckling fun, with a lightness of touch that makes for pure entertainment. More… |
#38The Grand Budapest Hotel 6th from 2015 (previously 10th) A film full of delights, from the hilarious performances, to the clever dialogue, to the inventive design, to the controlled camerawork. More… |
#37Mad Max 2 5th from 2015 (previously 2nd) Post-apocalyptic Australian Western that climaxes with a balls-to-the-wall multi-vehicle chase, one of the greatest action sequences ever filmed. More… |
#36Sicario 3rd from 2016 (previously 1st) A dark and morally questionable thriller, incredibly shot by Roger Deakins, artfully helmed by perhaps the best director currently working, Denis Villeneuve. More… |
#35Rise of the Planet of the Apes 3rd from 2012 (previously 7th) An intelligent science-inspired drama that just happens to link up to a big studio sci-fi/action series. More… |
#34Dawn of the Planet of the Apes 5th from 2014 (previously 4th) The sequel to the prequel to the Planet of the Apes presents a fully-realised ape society and a story of interspecies relations that reflects our own times. More… |
#33Django Unchained 3rd from 2013 (previously 2nd) Tarantino’s Spaghetti Western homage is an entertaining, occasionally thought-provoking, rewarding, and thoroughly cinematic experience. More… |
#32The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford — 2nd from 2013 (previously 3rd) One of the most underrated films of the ’00s, Andrew Dominik’s historically accurate movie is a considered, immersive, complex, intimate, epic Western. More… |
#31Mad Max: Fury Road 4th from 2015 (previously 6th) Action filmmaking elevated to a genuine art form, but alongside the mind-boggling stunts there’s a surprising richness of theme and character. More… |

Next Sunday: the penultimate 20.












































After a decades-long diversion into children’s movies like
I say that, but the finished film is visually stunning on two levels: cinematography and editing. It was shot by John Seale, and Miller had him amp up the saturation. The point was to do the opposite of most post-apocalyptic blockbusters, which are normally desaturated to heck, and it indeed creates something strikingly different. Conversely, Miller has intimated the ideal version of the movie is in black and white with no dialogue, just the score — completely visually-focused storytelling. I have a feeling he’s right, or that it would at least work well. Some nuance would be lost, but all the major plot points and character arcs would be followable.
but all are deftly executed. That it doesn’t expound on these at length, or linger on their detail, means you have to pay attention to get the most out of that side of the film. I guess some would counter that with, “you have to look hard because you’re reading something that isn’t there,” but I refute that. That it doesn’t spell everything out at length, or hammer home its points and themes heavy-handedly, is a good thing.
(Ooh, that turned a bit philosophical, didn’t it?)
The third (and, for 30 years, final) Mad Max movie sees the titular post-apocalyptic drifter (Mel Gibson) rock up at last-outpost-of-humanity Bartertown in search of his pilfered car and camels. Max finds himself dragged before the town’s ruler, Aunty (Tina Turner), who has a job for him: kill the mutinous overseer of the city’s power supply, Master Blaster. As payment, she’ll arrange for the return of his belongings. The only conditions are he can’t reveal Aunty has employed him, and he has to do it in a fair fight in the town’s arena of combative justice — the Thunderdome. And then the story goes beyond that, funnily enough.
I didn’t even notice the change in level until I read those comments afterwards. The film still reaches a 15 certificate in the UK, so clearly it isn’t toned down that much. And the lack of visible blood doesn’t mean it lacks creativity: Roger Ebert
that have been forced to coexist because neither was enough to sustain an entire feature, but at least neither part feels unduly padded, meaning the narrative keeps on rolling. It doesn’t hit the same heights as the exceptional Mad Max 2 — especially with a climax that invites a direct comparison, and is good but not as good — but, as a post-apocalyptic action-adventure movie in its own right, it’s a good film.
Roaming the outback of a gasoline-desperate post-apocalyptic Australia, “Mad” Max Rockatansky (Mel Gibson) comes across a commune-like oil refinery, whose inhabitants are under siege by a brutally violent gang. Max strikes a bargain: he’ll help them escape with their oil, in exchange for a tank full for himself.
The most memorable part, however, is the climax. They escape the oil refinery, Max driving the tanker — fitted out with weaponry and defences — and the gang give chase. An almighty action sequence follows, a speeding battle through the outback. It feels wrong to just call it “an action sequence”, like that’s selling it short. You get the sense that this is why the movie exists; that co-writer/director George Miller’s goal with the entire rest of the film has been to get us to this point. It’s not just “the climax”, it’s “the third act”, and it’s stunning — the choreography of it, the editing, the stunts, as dozens of vehicles chase each other, people run around on top of them, jump between them… I don’t think it’s hyperbolic to say it must be one of the greatest action sequences ever committed to film. One of the reasons