The top 5 best Hollywood movies are written bellow,
Edge of Tomorrow' (2014)
This greatly underappreciated sci-fi Groundhog Day features a gaming idea that will attract to both Tom Cruise fans and detractors: What if an entire film was committed to repeatedly murdering T.C.? The small action hero is at his finest as Cage, a military public relations executive who dies while fighting deadly, spider-like aliens — only to be sent back to the beginning of that same day each time. Doug Limon, the director of The Bourne
Identity, brilliantly bends and twists that great notion to its breaking point,
discovering apparently unlimited possibilities on how Cage may mess up. But the
MVP award goes to Emily Blunt, who plays a tough-as-nails soldier who has to
educate this adorable jerk how to be a true warrior.
They're
like Nick and Nora in a future world invaded by monstrous extraterrestrial
creatures.
Midnight Special' (2016)
With just this poignant narrative about a strange child as
well as the father who will go to any extent to protect him, producer Jeff
Nichols (Loving) pays homage to Spielberg's Seventies and Eighties
masterpieces. Alton Meyer is a peculiar boy with a proclivity for tuning into
frequencies that human ears cannot detect (such as security agency satellites)
and the ability to accomplish remarkable things with his eyes.
Clearly, this makes
him a target for both religious cults and government spies. As we travel with
our perplexed on-the-run hero, we discover that Midnight Special is about our
earthly concerns rather than extraterrestrial invasion. It's a remarkable illustration
of how to utilize adult-friendly sci-fi to expose the human condition rather
than just thrilling and entertaining.
The World's End' (2013)
They hear you will never go back again... particularly if
your hometown has been overrun by a malevolent, not-of-this-Earth power. A
brilliant riff on childhood, increasing apart, and Influx of the Body
Snatchers-style sci-fi/horror
movies,writer-director Edgar Wright mixes up a
slew of genre factors with deftness and turns the most boy assumption ever – dudes
remaking a famed pub crawl from their undergraduate studies – into the least
sir jokes ever. All of this, plus a robot battle in the restroom. What more do
you require?
Her' (2013)
Which one of us could not be smitten by Scarlett Johansson's
beautiful voice and pleasant personality as represented in Her - even if she is
simply a software that runs? Spike Jonze's post-postmodern love story smells of
every other romantic love story's trademarks – excitement, insecurity, adultery
– and that's what makes movie so captivating.
Joaquin Phoenix's
character falls in love with his PDA in such an adorable, all-too-human way
that it feels genuine (and foreboding), though it's his determination to make
his hopeless strange obsession work that makes the picture heartbreaking. She,
too, is but an operating system.
Arrival' (2016)
Tithe
aliens have arrived... but are they friends or foes? Denis Villeneuve's serious
sci-fi movie, that balances the rational and the emotive as smoothly as those
intergalactic spaceships floating just above Earth's surface, is powered by
that essential issue. Amy Adams is a linguist who is still mourning for her
late daughter when extraterrestrials emerge throughout the globe, communicating
in a complicated language that only she can decipher — that is, if she can
prevent fearful superpowers from declaring war on our guests first. From the
exquisite alien look to the screenplay's lyrical logical jumble, Arrival
foregoes the genre's pulpier impulses in favor of a realistic portrayal of
mankind facing its fate - leading to a mindbender and tearjerker conclusion.