Maybe it’s just because so many films ended up delayed to 2021, but this year felt almost too packed with great films. 2021 has seen everything from the quiet beauty of a simple drive inDrive My Car, to a woman getting impregnated by a car inTitane. We’ve seen the many faces people can wear in films likeRed RocketandI Care a Lot, and also that the human head can also wear many faces inMalignant. From towering blockbusters to brilliant indie gems, 2021 has been quite a year at the movies.

But especially as we round another year of a pandemic, the films of 2021 had messages that we needed to hear, messages of hope, love, finding joy in the little things in life, and appreciating those around you. The films of 2021 have been overflowing with music, absurd comedy - intentional or unintentional (Dear Evan Hansen) - and frequent reminders of just how fulfilling seeing a great movie for the first time can be. We got to fly with Neo and Trinity again inThe Matrix Resurrections, watchStephen Spielbergsomehow make his first musical withWest Side Story, and learn about the adventures of Bronco Henry inThe Power of the Dog. In the immortal words ofVin Diesel: “The movies!”

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Before we take a look at my personal favorite films of 2021, here are my runners-up in alphabetical order:

Drive My Car

The Last Duel

The Mitchells vs. the Machines

The Power of the Dog

West Side Story

And without further ado, here are my top 10 films of 2021.

RELATED:Perri’s Top 10 Movies of 2021

Jamie Dornan with Waverunners in Barb and Star Go To Vista Del Mar

10.The Souvenir Part II

Near the end ofThe Souvenir Part II, a character asks Julie (Honor Swinton Byrne), an aspiring filmmaker, about her debut film, and says, “Did you resist the urge to be obvious?” There’s nothing obvious about writer-directorJoanna Hoggmaking a sequel toThe Souvenir, an open-hearted tale of loving someone you know is wrong for you.The Souvenirwas Hogg telling the story of such a love in her own life, whileThe Souvenir Part IIbecomes her retelling the making ofThe Souvenir. By doing this, Hogg through Julie investigates why both herself and her lead character acted the way they did, why they didn’t do more, and how the truth of our own stories can change in the retelling.The Souvenir Part IIis a fascinating way to revisit this period in Hogg’s life, a nesting doll of a film that ends with one of the best final shots of a movie this year.

9.Barb & Star Go to Vista Del Mar

There is simply no good reason why it took a decade forBridesmaidswritersKristen WiigandAnnie Mumoloto get a second film made, and there’s no way we could know that this film would be the great absurd comedy we all needed in 2021.Barb & Star Go to Vista Del Maris akin toHot RodorWet Hot American Summerin its ridiculousness, as this story of two best friends (played by Wiig and Mumolo) going on vacation includes everything from a Morgan Freeman crab, Jamie Dornan singing to a seagull on a tire, and of course, Trish.Barb & Star Go to VistaDel Marwas by far the funniest film of the year, a film that would’ve been perfect to see in a packed theater with a crowd losing their minds over this insanity.

8.Summer of Soul (…or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised)

It’s impossible to talk about the best films of 2021 without talking about music. Some of the finest 2021 films were either musicals (West Side Story,Cyrano,Annette), centered in the world of music (CODA,tick, tick…BOOM!), while some of the best documentaries of the year focused on music (Tina,The Sparks Brothers). But maybe the best of any of these wasQuestlove’s directorial debutSummer of Soul, chronicling 1969’s Harlem Cultural Festival, which featured artists likeStevie Wonder, Sly and the Family Stone, andNina Simone. But what’s so impressive aboutSummer of Soulis how much Questlove is able to do at once, as he shows remarkable concert footage, explains why each of these artists was important, often getting the artist and festival goers reactions, and even finds time to explore the culture of America at that time. Questlove pulls all of this off withoutSummer of Soulever getting too stuffed, which alone is a tremendous achievement. In a year where great movies about music were everywhere,Summer of Soulstands above the rest.

7.The French Dispatch

Wes Anderson’s films are frequently about storytellers and how those stories are passed on to others, whether through the book-within-a-book nature ofThe Grand Budapest Hotelor Royal Tenenbaum’s grave at the end of the film, claiming he rescued his family from a sinking battleship. But with his tenth film,The French Dispatch of the Liberty, Kansas Evening Sun, Anderson puts us directly in the pages of the title publication, presenting the stories of an artist in jail, a series of student riots, and a kidnapping. This anthology series allows Anderson to try out new techniques and ideas, but also praise the writers that he clearly loves so much. However, it’s the film’s “The Private Dining Room of the Police Commissioner” segment that is a surprising gut punch, asJeffrey Wright’s wonderful Roebuck Wright explores the love of art and why writers do what they do. Anderson films always work thanks to their small, intimate, moving moments, and in this moment,The French Dispatchdeserves to be put amongst Anderson’s best.

6.The Green Knight

WithThe GreenKnight,David Loweryfinds a beautiful medium between retelling this classic hero’s journey and his own penchant for slow-moving stories about our own legacies. Lowery makes every step of Gawain’s (Dev Patel) quest feel integral to this character’s growth, which becomes an enthralling and deliberately paced narrative that is continuously surprising, despite being based on a centuries-old poem. But Lowery’s brilliance in retelling this story comes in the final section of the film, a visualization of the choices we make and how they affect everything that comes after. It’s a powerful conclusion that is both shocking, while also being the only way this epic tale could’ve fittingly ended.

Pigwriter/directorMichael Sarnoskiseems to know exactly what you thinkPigis going to be, and does everything he can to subvert those expectations. On paper,Pigsounds like another wildNicolas Cagefilm, as he goes on a quest to find his stolen truffle-hunting pig. It’s easy to see howPigcould’ve easily been Cage’s more preposterousJohn Wick. Yet thankfully, that’s not whatPigis at all. Instead, Sarnoski has crafted a simple and quiet film about the few things that truly matter in our lives, and the deep loves that never quite dissipate from our hearts and minds. This works because of Cage’s restraint, as he gives one of the best performances of his career, as Cage can tell us so much here without saying anything at all.Pigisn’t about revenge or insane Cage moments. It’s about appreciating what you have in the present and enjoying the small gifts that life brings your way.

Summer of Soul

4.Judas and the Black Messiah

For about ten months this year,Judas and the Black Messiahwas the undisputed #1 film on this list, and despite a Best Picture nomination, and a win forDaniel Kaluuya,Shaka King’s powerful biopic is still somehow underrated. Every choice King makes in telling the story ofFred Hampton(Kaluuya), and the man who killed him,Bill O’Neal(LakeithStanfield) is perfectly made, a brilliant handling of a biopic that somehow doesn’t feel like a biopic. King makesJudas and the Black Messiaha carefully constructed, thrilling, and heartbreaking film that is always engaging, where every action has the weight of life-or-death choices being made. King has madeThe Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Fordfor the 2020s, a staggering achievement that makes him a truly exciting director to watch.

3.C’mon C’mon

At one point inC’mon C’mon,Joaquin Phoenix’s Johnny interviews a kid about what he thinks the future will be like. The kid says that he believes that most people are kind-hearted. The films ofMike Millsare often full of those types of kind-hearted people, whether through the family dynamics Mills loves to present, or the sacrifices we make for each other. WithC’mon C’mon, Mills focuses on the bond between Johnny and his nephew Jesse (Woody Norman). There isn’t much in the way of plot in Mills latest, as we watch uncle and nephew go to different cities, interview different kids, and learn from each other, but it’s hard not to love every second spend with this pair. Even in the most mundane moments,C’mon C’monis like watching a bond that will last a lifetime starting to form.C’mon C’monis a big heart of a movie, and Mills knows just how to make this type of family relationship story sing.

2.The Worst Person in the World

LikeThe Souvenir Part II,Joachim Trier’s overwhelming third film in his Oslo Trilogy explores how the loves of our life completely evolve who we become. In the opening prologue ofThe Worst Person in the World, we see as the film’s main character Julie (the brilliantRenate Reinsve) reinvents herself multiple times, unsure that she’s making a decision in her youth that will affect the rest of her life. Trier tells Julie’s story in chapters, each one a new example of how Julie’s choices will define her - for better or for worse. Trier does this with some of the most inventive and captivating filmmaking this year, quirky, without ever being obnoxiously so. But Trier taps into the fear of growing up without entirely being sure who you want to become, or what path you want your life to take. ThroughThe Worst Person in the World, Trier shows that life is all about these reinventions, these choices, these loves, and how beautiful and scary that can make life.

1.Licorice Pizza

Even thoughLicorice Pizzais the #1 film on this list, it’s absurd that it’s still probably only at the halfway point of my ranking ofPaul Thomas Anderson’s best films. That’s not a comment on the quality of this year’s films - which has been quite good - but rather, just how impressive Anderson’s career has been. With just nine films in his filmography, Anderson has made classic after classic, but none of them has ever quite hit the same way thatLicorice Pizzadoes.

Licorice Pizzais almost like the sensibilities of Anderson’s earlier films and his newer films meeting in the middle. There’s the sprawling cast thrown into Anderson’s beloved Los Angeles, as we saw inBoogie NightsorMagnolia, but there’s also Anderson’s latter appreciation for focusing on a smaller grouping of characters, and most importantly, the bond that grows between them, as we’ve seen inPhantom Thread,Inherent Vice, andThe Master.

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But even more impressive than this meeting of styles is the amount of heart and joy that Anderson brings toLicorice Pizzathat makes this unlike any of his other films. This is a film that puts a smile on your face that never leaves until the end credits. This is almost pure bliss, as we watch Gary Valentine (Cooper Hoffman) attempt to woo Alana Kane (Alana Haim), while also trying to succeed as an actor/mattress salesman/pinball hall owner. Each new chapter ofLicorice Pizzamakes us fall in love with these two characters individually and as a team as they try to get ahead in Anderson’s L.A.

Licorice Pizzasimply is everything one could want from a movie: endlessly fun, exciting, weird, full of love for its characters, and a cast that is having a ball. Anderson has made several masterpieces already, butLicorice Pizzais like Anderson is showing us an entirely new side of what he’s capable of yet again.

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