IFC Films, the company behind some of the most fiercely independent and unique movies out there, is celebrating 25 years!
To get in on the party we’re all partnering with our friends at Fandango at Home and putting up a sale featuring nearly 40 of IFC’s most celebrated films, including new horror classic The Babadook, Speak No Evil (recently remade with James McAvoy), Werewolves Within (the sole Certified Fresh video game movie), and Armando Iannucci black comedy In the Loop.
Also in the mix: Fan favorite David Dastmalchian-starring Late Night with the Devil, Kristen Stewart drama Personal Shopper, Greta Gerwig and Noah Baumbach’s Frances Ha, and some of the latest works from esteemed and legendary directors like Gaspar Noe (Enter the Void), Paul Verhoeven (Benedetta), and Lars von Trier (The House That Jack Built).
#1
Adjusted Score: 102647%
Critics Consensus: As ambitious and provocative as its subject, The Disappearance of Shere Hite is a fascinating glimpse of a remarkable life.
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#2
Adjusted Score: 105673%
Critics Consensus: A union to cherish between a writer-director and star working at peak power, Things to Come offers quietly profound observations on life, love, and the irrevocable passage of time.
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#3
Adjusted Score: 104800%
Critics Consensus: A small film that elicits a huge emotional response, Ghostlight is a deeply moving and superbly acted meditation on grief.
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#4
Adjusted Score: 109848%
Critics Consensus: The Babadook relies on real horror rather than cheap jump scares — and boasts a heartfelt, genuinely moving story to boot.
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#5
Adjusted Score: 109690%
Critics Consensus: Delightfully dark, Late Night with the Devil proves possession horror isn’t played out — and serves as an outstanding showcase for David Dastmalchian.
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#6
Adjusted Score: 108734%
Critics Consensus: With intelligence as sharp as its humor, BlackBerry takes a terrifically entertaining look at the rise and fall of a generation-defining gadget.
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#7
Adjusted Score: 104560%
Critics Consensus: Another profoundly affecting work from the Dardenne brothers, Two Days, One Night delivers its timely message with honesty and clear-eyed compassion.
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#8
Adjusted Score: 102293%
Critics Consensus: A hard-hitting horror film whose surface-level frights are just as engaging as its thematic concerns, When Evil Lurks marks a viscerally unsettling addition to the possession horror canon.
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#9
Adjusted Score: 98015%
Critics Consensus: Smart, dynamic, and fast-paced, Saloum mixes tones and genres into a tart, smoothly blended treat.
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#10
Adjusted Score: 102030%
Critics Consensus: An elegant and spooky ghost story punctuated with clever jolts, Oddity hews to the fundamentals of fright and achieves shout-inducing results.
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#11
Adjusted Score: 105941%
Critics Consensus: Wildlife‘s portrait of a family in crisis is beautifully composed by director Paul Dano — and brought brilliantly to life by a career-best performance from Carey Mulligan.
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#12
Adjusted Score: 101003%
Critics Consensus: In the Loop is an uncommonly funny political satire that blends Dr. Strangelove with Spinal Tap for the Iraq war era.
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#13
Adjusted Score: 99853%
Critics Consensus: A message movie in a hard horror shell, Hatching perches between beauty and revulsion — and establishes director Hanna Bergholm as a bright new talent.
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#14
Adjusted Score: 101077%
Critics Consensus: Certain Women further demonstrates writer-director Kelly Reichardt’s gift for telling the stories of ordinary people with uncommon empathy and skill.
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#15
Adjusted Score: 100944%
Critics Consensus: Audiences will need to tolerate a certain amount of narrative drift, but thanks to sensitive direction from Noah Baumbach and an endearing performance from Greta Gerwig, Frances Ha makes it easy to forgive.
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#16
Adjusted Score: 100463%
Critics Consensus: I, Daniel Blake marks yet another well-told chapter in director Ken Loach’s powerfully populist filmography.
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#17
Adjusted Score: 94065%
Critics Consensus: Stopmotion takes the conflict between art and artist to chilling, visually thrilling extremes, distinguished by director Robert Morgan’s excellent effects work.
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#18
Adjusted Score: 93925%
Critics Consensus: More visually impressive than narratively engaging, Vesper rewards patient viewers with immersive world-building and intelligent ideas.
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#19
Adjusted Score: 91990%
Critics Consensus: Beautifully filmed and powerfully acted, Walking Out effectively balances tense father-son drama against an affecting wilderness survival story.
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#20
Adjusted Score: 96776%
Critics Consensus: Undine draws on folklore for a dark fantasy whose murky storytelling is often offset by the enchanting romance at its core.
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#21
Adjusted Score: 97365%
Critics Consensus: Raw, honest, powerfully acted, and deliciously intense, Blue Is the Warmest Color offers some of modern cinema’s most elegantly composed, emotionally absorbing drama.
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#22
Adjusted Score: 95855%
Critics Consensus: Although its story may lack surprises, Watcher benefits from director Chloe Okuno’s chilling grip on the material — and Maika Monroe’s terrific work in the leading role.
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#23
Adjusted Score: 94429%
Critics Consensus: Effective space alien horror with a Soviet-era twist, Sputnik proves there are still some scary good sci-fi thrillers left in the galaxy.
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#24
Adjusted Score: 95353%
Critics Consensus: The Truth may not stand with Hirokazu Kore-eda’s best work, but it finds the writer-director revisiting familiar themes with a typically sensitive touch.
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#25
Adjusted Score: 94501%
Critics Consensus: Let the Sunshine In pairs a powerful performance from Juliette Binoche with a layered drama that presents director Claire Denis at her most assured.
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#26
Adjusted Score: 93034%
Critics Consensus: Werewolves Within is the rare horror comedy that offers equal helpings of either genre — and adds up to a whole lot of fun in the bargain.
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#27
Adjusted Score: 91681%
Critics Consensus: Ghost Stories offers a well-crafted, skillfully told horror anthology that cleverly toys with genre tropes while adding a few devilishly frightful twists.
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#28
Adjusted Score: 93838%
Critics Consensus: Precariously walking a tightrope of varying genres and tones, Benedetta provokes salient questions about sexual freedom and its relationship to faith.
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#29
Adjusted Score: 88977%
Critics Consensus: A social satire with razor-sharp teeth, Speak No Evil offers a darkly delicious treat for fans of misanthropic thrillers.
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#30
Adjusted Score: 88273%
Critics Consensus: The Trip to Spain offers more of the same scenery, food, and conversation that filled Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon’s first two Trips — which is to say, more of a good thing.
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#31
Adjusted Score: 85064%
Critics Consensus: Greener Grass is far from the first comedy to skewer suburbia — but it might be among the most bizarre and surreally distinctive.
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#32
Adjusted Score: 94118%
Critics Consensus: Personal Shopper attempts a tricky series of potentially jarring tonal shifts with varying results, bolstered by a performance from Kristen Stewart that’s impossible to ignore.
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#33
Adjusted Score: 81405%
Critics Consensus: Baskin complements its gory thrills with heavy atmosphere and deliberate pacing, adding up to a horror outing that plays with the mind as enthusiastically as it ruins the appetite.
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#34
Adjusted Score: 83389%
Critics Consensus: The movie’s curiously bland compared to the remarkable real-life story it dramatizes, but Sally Hawkins’ performance saves The Lost King from feeling like a royal disappointment.
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#35
Adjusted Score: 77427%
Critics Consensus: Thanks to a committed, powerhouse performance by Bryan Cranston, Wakefield is a fascinating character study of a decidedly unpleasant character.
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#36
Adjusted Score: 58373%
Critics Consensus: No consensus yet.
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#37
Adjusted Score: 80225%
Critics Consensus: The Clovehitch Killer patiently dials up the tension with a story that makes up for a lack of surprises with strong performances and a chilling wit.
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#38
Adjusted Score: 76292%
Critics Consensus: Grimy and psychedelic, Enter the Void ushers audiences through an out-of-body experience with the eye for extremity and technical wizardry that Gaspar Noé fans have come to expect.
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#39
Adjusted Score: 75749%
Critics Consensus: Viceroy’s House brings a balanced perspective to its worthy, historically grounded story while taking care to enliven the details with absorbing drama.
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#40
Adjusted Score: 67139%
Critics Consensus: The House That Jack Built presents writer-director Lars von Trier at his most proudly uncompromising: hard to ignore, and for many viewers, just as difficult to digest.
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