20. Bogancloch
The hermit as artist, the life as the art.
Where to watch: Prime Video, BFI Player, YouTube (to rent)
Directed remotely, and you can feel the encroaching threat in every last one of its urgent and immediate frames.
Where to watch: on DVD, Prime Video, Curzon Home Cinema, YouTube (to rent)
18. 28 Years Later
The centrepiece of my ever-upcoming Brexit At The Movies season.
Where to watch: on DVD, NOW (to stream from Jan 1), Prime Video, YouTube (to rent)
17. Sorry, Baby
Screenwriting as tightrope-walking, while juggling. But eventually you find your feet.
Where to watch: on MUBI (to stream), Prime Video, Curzon Home Cinema, BFI Player (to rent)
16. The Librarians
From the frontlines of the culture war; sometimes this stuff has to be documented and seen to be truly believed.
Where to watch: on BBC iPlayer (to stream), Prime Video, YouTube (to rent)
Après Godard, Godard. (Though it's not him.)
Where to watch: on MUBI (to stream), Prime Video (to rent)
Mythmaking, and then some.
Where to watch: Prime Video (to stream)
13. Thudarum
A tantalising premise, thunderously executed: why bother putting Liam Neeson in The Naked Gun, when you could put him in Dude, Where's My Car?
Where to watch: Currently unavailable for UK home viewing (which seems regrettable)
The year's best comic-book movie. Pop art that genuinely pops.
Where to watch: Currently unavailable for UK home viewing
If we are to make movies about musicians, make them as involving, curious and complicated as this. (The soundtrack plays itself.)
Where to watch: NOW (to stream), Prime Video, YouTube (to rent)
10. Black Bag
Slow Horses for neatfreaks.
Where to watch: on DVD, NOW (to stream), Prime Video, YouTube (to rent)
Take it from a creative who knows: this is why you take the fuckers out while you can.
Where to watch: in selected cinemas
8. Roofman
In another, brighter universe, a hit as big as A Minecraft Movie.
Where to watch: in selected cinemas, on DVD (from Jan 19), Prime Video, YouTube (to rent)
7. Sinners
Enjoyable as a horror movie, a musical and as textured period drama; truly fascinating as a reflection on what it means for a Black creative to be working within white-owned American structures. No-one can say they didn't get their money's worth.
Where to watch: on DVD, NOW (to stream), Prime Video, YouTube (to rent)
6. Misericordia
Deviation as creative strategy. And as pleasure principle.
Where to watch: on DVD, Prime Video, BFI Player, YouTube (to rent)
5. Holloway
An emptied-out space, stirringly filled by women with so much going on inside.
Where to watch: Currently unavailable for UK home viewing
4. Homebound
For going so sensitively, and movingly, after such hard truths. The second half is where the movies begin to try and process the various tragedies of the Covid era.
Where to watch: Netflix
3. Hard Truths
Everybody's unhappy nowadays. (Again: file under Brexit At The Movies.)
Where to watch: on DVD, Netflix (to stream), Prime Video, Curzon Home Cinema, YouTube (to rent)
And the Book says: we may be through with the past, but the past isn't through with us.
Where to watch: in selected cinemas, on DVD (from January 26), Prime Video, YouTube (to rent)
1. Blue Moon [above]
How the art gets made, why it depends on the artist, and what it does to the artist. An entire demimonde, poured into a semi-forgotten man's shotglass.
Where to watch: in selected cinemas, Prime Video (to rent)






