Entertainment
The Best Films of the Last Decade
Award Winners, Critics’ Darlings, and Fan Favorites.
Let’s be honest—picking the best films from the last ten years is kind of like trying to choose your favorite song from Beyoncé’s discography. Tough. But between the Oscars, Golden Globes, Cannes, critics’ circles, and audiences voting with their wallets (and hearts), a handful of films really stood out.
Here’s a rundown of some of the most iconic and celebrated movies from the past decade—whether they made us cry, cheer, or just sit in stunned silence when the credits rolled.
1. Everything Everywhere All At Once (2022)
Big Wins: 7 Oscars, including Best Picture, Director, Actress, and both Supporting roles
Why It Stands Out: This multiverse-hopping, genre-bending rollercoaster of a film somehow managed to be hilarious, heartbreaking, and existential—all at once. Michelle Yeoh became the first Asian woman to win Best Actress, and the Daniels (directors Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert) delivered a film unlike anything we’ve seen before.
2. Parasite (2019)
Big Wins: Palme d’Or at Cannes, 4 Oscars including Best Picture (the first non-English language film to win)
Why It Stands Out: Bong Joon-ho’s genre-defying thriller about class disparity was both a cinematic masterclass and a biting social commentary. It stunned the Academy—and the world—by sweeping major awards and smashing subtitles stigma in the process.
3. Nomadland (2020)
Big Wins: Best Picture, Director, and Actress at the Oscars
Why It Stands Out: Chloé Zhao’s meditative portrait of modern American nomads was quiet, powerful, and deeply human. Frances McDormand turned in another flawless performance, and Zhao became just the second woman ever to win Best Director.
4. La La Land (2016)
Big Wins: 6 Oscars, including Best Director and Actress (not Best Picture though—remember that infamous envelope moment?)
Why It Stands Out: Love it or not, Damien Chazelle’s throwback musical made a huge cultural splash. The music, the colors, the chemistry between Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling—it was pure Hollywood magic with a bittersweet twist.
5. Get Out (2017)
Big Wins: Best Original Screenplay at the Oscars, multiple critics awards
Why It Stands Out: Jordan Peele flipped the horror genre on its head with a razor-sharp social thriller that became an instant classic. It was smart, scary, and sparked a wave of socially-conscious genre filmmaking.
6. The Power of the Dog (2021)
Big Wins: Best Director at the Oscars, huge festival buzz
Why It Stands Out: Jane Campion’s slow-burn Western delivered haunting performances (especially from Benedict Cumberbatch) and eerie, lingering tension. It wasn’t for everyone, but critics were over the moon.
7. Mad Max: Fury Road (2015)
Big Wins: 6 Oscars (mostly technical), massive fan acclaim
Why It Stands Out: George Miller brought back Mad Max and somehow made it feel totally fresh. With minimal dialogue and maximum chaos, this adrenaline shot of a movie redefined what action can look like. And Charlize Theron’s Furiosa? Instant icon.
8. Moonlight (2016)
Big Wins: Best Picture (yes, really), Supporting Actor, and Adapted Screenplay
Why It Stands Out: Intimate, poetic, and deeply moving, Moonlight was a quiet revolution. It told a coming-of-age story we don’t often see on screen and did it with grace, beauty, and vulnerability.
9. Barbie (2023)
Big Wins: Golden Globe for Cinematic and Box Office Achievement, massive critical and commercial success
Why It Stands Out: Greta Gerwig’s neon-pink feminist blockbuster became a full-on cultural event. It had heart, humor, existential angst—and a killer soundtrack. Plus, it showed that mainstream films can still have something meaningful to say.
10. Oppenheimer (2023)
Big Wins: 7 Oscars, including Best Picture, Director, and Actor
Why It Stands Out: Christopher Nolan finally nabbed his Best Director Oscar with this epic biopic about the father of the atomic bomb. It was a dense, cerebral film, but also a box office juggernaut—rare air for a three-hour drama with zero superheroes.
Honorable Mentions (Because We Couldn’t Just Pick Ten)
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The Irishman (2019) – Scorsese’s gangster elegy
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Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse (2018) – groundbreaking animation
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The Shape of Water (2017) – romantic, weird, and wonderfully Guillermo del Toro
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Dune (2021) – an epic return to cerebral sci-fi
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Lady Bird (2017) – Gerwig’s heartfelt, hilarious directorial debut
Whether you’re into artsy indies, crowd-pleasing spectacles, or something in between, the past decade served up a goldmine of cinema. So if you’re looking for something to watch (or rewatch), you really can’t go wrong with any of these.
Entertainment
A New Easter Audio Epic Brings the Story of Jesus to Life
Faith-based storytelling is getting a cinematic new treatment this Easter season with The Christ, a four-part audio drama designed to immerse listeners in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus through performance, sound, and music.
Set to debut during Holy Week, The Christ aims to deliver the emotional scale of a feature film in audio form, taking listeners from the manger to the resurrection in a dramatic retelling of one of history’s most enduring stories. Produced by Faith Podcast Network, the series is positioned as a powerful listening experience for those looking to reflect on the Easter season in a fresh and meaningful way.
At a time when audiences are increasingly turning to podcasts and audio storytelling for inspiration, The Christ stands out for its ambition. The series combines cinematic sound design, a top quality cast, and a spiritually grounded approach to bring the Gospel narrative into an intimate format that can be experienced anywhere.
The cast includes Tom Pelphrey as Jesus, David Oyelowo as Pontius Pilate, Paul Walter Hauser as John the Baptist, Courtney Hope as Mary, Mike Falkow as Lucifer, Patricia Heaton as host, and John Rhys-Davies as narrator.
According to the producers, the goal is not simply to retell a familiar story, but to place listeners inside it, allowing them to experience its humanity, sacrifice, and hope in a more immediate way. With more than 100 characters and a richly layered production style, the project is designed to appeal both to longtime believers and to listeners encountering the story in this format for the first time.
As Easter approaches, The Christ offers a new way to engage with the season’s central message, through a medium that feels both personal and expansive. For listeners seeking something spiritually resonant, dramatic, and accessible, this audio epic may become a compelling addition to their Holy Week experience.
Entertainment
Holiday Movies To Watch Out For This Season
Holiday movie season is here, which means cozy nights in, big screen outings, and a crowded slate of premieres. To keep it simple, here are five standout picks that feel worth your time, including a Hallmark highlight, a new Christmas themed theatrical release, and one very important classic that still sparks debate.
1. Christmas Above the Clouds
(Hallmark Channel / Hallmark+)
This one belongs at the top of your list. Erin Krakow stars as Ella Neezer, a high powered executive who tries to dodge the holidays on an international flight, only to end up seated near an old flame and nudged along by a trio of unexpected “guides” at 30,000 feet. It is a playful nod to A Christmas Carol, with glossy visuals, a great cast, sharp banter, and Hallmark’s signature cozy payoff.
Save it for a night when the tree is lit, the snacks are lined up, and you want dependable, feel good romance.
2. Oh. What. Fun.
(Prime Video)
Michelle Pfeiffer leads this smart, soul warming holiday dramedy about a meticulous Christmas planner whose carefully choreographed traditions finally snap. A spur of the moment escape forces her family, and her, to rethink what “home for the holidays” really means.
It is witty, grown up, and heartfelt without being syrupy. Ideal for an adults only movie night with real food, real conversation, and a movie that actually has something to say.
3. A Merry Little Ex Mas
(Netflix)
For messy, modern, crowd pleasing chaos, this one delivers. A divorcing couple teams up for one last “perfect Christmas” under the same roof, surrounded by kids, relatives, new partners, and a house full of unresolved feelings.
Expect bright visuals, fast dialogue, romantic tension, and a reassuringly soft landing. This is a strong pick for group viewing when you want laughs, low stakes drama, and plenty of festive atmosphere.
4. A Snowy Christmas Miracle
(In Theaters, Early December)
If you want a Christmas themed trip to the cinema, keep an eye out for this theatrical release. A Snowy Christmas Miracle leans into everything people love on the big screen at this time of year: small town charm, twinkling lights, a community in trouble, and an unexpected act of generosity that pulls everyone together just as the snow starts to fall.
Make it an evening: tickets, hot chocolate afterward, maybe a walk past the neighborhood lights. Simple, sentimental, and ready to become a new tradition.
5. Die Hard
(Streaming / On Demand)
If your household holiday debate starts with “Is Die Hard a Christmas movie,” here is your answer: put it on the list. Set during a Christmas Eve office party that goes violently sideways, Die Hard delivers sharp writing, iconic action, a perfectly weary Bruce Willis, and one of cinema’s great villains in Alan Rickman. The holiday backdrop is not just decoration, it is baked into the mood, the music, and the stakes.
Call it the ultimate Christmas action movie, queue it up after the cozy pick, and let it balance out all that seasonal sweetness with broken glass, walkie talkies, and improvised heroics.
How To Use This Shortlist
Start with Christmas Above the Clouds as your guaranteed cozy win. Add one streaming pick that fits your mood, grab A Snowy Christmas Miracle for a night at the theater, and lock in Die Hard as your late night classic. Mix in your own forever favorites (Home Alone, A Christmas Story, Elf, etc) and you have a watch list that feels intentional, fun, and easy to enjoy all season.
Entertainment
End-of-Summer Movies: What to Watch as the Season Winds Down
Are people coming back to theaters? The signs look good.
After a few choppy years, moviegoing is finding its rhythm again. Surveys and industry reports point to a clear rebound. Roughly seven in ten Americans went to a movie in 2023 and 2024, a big jump from the early post-pandemic period. The share of frequent moviegoers has about doubled since 2021, and most people say they plan to go as often or more this year. Premium formats are booming, with IMAX reporting record box office this summer and strong year-over-year growth. Forecasts for 2025 call for another step up in global box office, with the U.S. tracking higher than last year. Canada is seeing the same energy, with about six in ten people saying they saw at least one film in theaters in 2024 and the strongest turnout among under-35s. Theater subscriptions are growing, too. AMC’s A-List is approaching the one million member mark, a good signal that regular moviegoing is back in the routine.
Bottom line. People are putting the big screen back into their week and they are choosing higher quality screens, better sound, and reserved seats when they do. That makes late summer a great time to pick an End of Summer Movie (or two) and make a night of it.
End of Summer Movies to put on your list:
Splitsville (Comedy)
A friendship between two couples gets messy when a newly separated friend tests the boundaries of his pals’ open marriage. Starring Dakota Johnson, Adria Arjona, Kyle Marvin, and Michael Angelo Covino, Splitsville opened in limited release in late August and expands wider in early September.
The Conjuring: Last Rites (Horror)
The mainline Conjuring saga reaches its finale. If you want a packed house and jump-out-of-your-seat energy, opening-weekend horror delivers. U.S. release is early September.
Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale (Drama)
The Crawleys return for a final big-screen chapter set in the early 1930s. Expect elegant scandal, shifting fortunes, and a graceful goodbye for a beloved ensemble. In theaters mid-September.
Spinal Tap II: The End Continues (Comedy and Music)
The loudest band returns for one last concert documentary that promises familiar mayhem, new riffs, and plenty of deadpan. Theatrical release is mid-September.
The Long Walk (Thriller and Horror)
Francis Lawrence adapts Stephen King’s dystopian gauntlet about a deadly endurance contest. Lean, tense, and tailor made for post-summer chills. In theaters mid-September.
Him (Sports Horror)
From Jordan Peele’s Monkeypaw, a young football phenom trains with a legendary quarterback and finds something much darker under the surface. U.S. release is late September.
A Big Bold Beautiful Journey (Romance and Fantasy)
Kogonada pairs Margot Robbie and Colin Farrell in a tender, high-concept story about second chances and the paths we do not take. In theaters late September.
Holdovers worth catching
If you missed the late August openers, Darren Aronofsky’s New York crime caper Caught Stealing and Jay Roach’s marital melee The Roses are still playing and make a sharp double-feature.
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