The 50 best movies of 2023 in the US – 50 to 41 | Film

rewrite this content and keep HTML tags 50Spider-Man: Across the Spider-VerseThe animated sequel offers a dazzling and inventive adventure that provides an antidote to superhero fatigue. Read the full review49AnselmWim Wenders delivers a striking look at the work of German artist Anselm Kiefer in a stunning and superbly controlled documentary. Read the full review48Are You There God? It’s Me, MargaretJudy Blume’s timeless novel gets a smart and sensitive adaptation with a standout performance from Rachel McAdams as a mother trying to deal with her daughter’s journey into adulthood. Read the full reviewRachel McAdams and Abby Ryder in Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret. Photograph: Dana Hawley / Courtesy of Lionsgate UK47American FictionJeffrey Wright gives a career-best performance as a writer struggling with the backwards demands of the publishing world in writer-director Cord Jefferson’s incisive debut. Read the full review46How to Blow Up a PipelineA group of activists plot to destroy an oil pipeline in Daniel Goldhaber’s explosively entertaining eco-thriller. Read the full reviewExplosively entertaining … Ariela Barer in How to Blow Up a Pipeline. Photograph: Neon45The BeastsMiddle-class incomers to a remote village in Spain’s “wild west” expose fear, resentment and nationalism in Rodrigo Sorogoyen’s disturbing true-crime drama. Read the full review44War PonyThe tenderness, wisdom and instinct to survive of two teenage Native Americans is beautifully observed in actor turned director Riley Keough’s debut feature. Read the full reviewAwe-inspiring … Nam June Paik: Moon Is the Oldest TV. Photograph: Sundance Institute43Nam June Paik: Moon Is the Oldest TVDocumentary about the awe-inspiring vocation of the Korean avant garde disruptor, who foresaw the internet and meme culture’s importance in the 1970s. Read the full review42Orlando, My Political BiographyPaul B Preciado’s unusual and inventive documentary uses the work of Virginia Woolf to present the stories of 26 trans and non-binary people.Complicated national loyalties … The Future Tense. Photograph: PR undefined41The Future TenseSemi-dramatised essay film by Joe Lawlor and Christine Molloy explores complicated national loyalties alongside those of an extraordinary rebel. Read the full review

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