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  1. 1 day ago · We’re ranking director Denis Villeneuve‘s movies, all critical and audience favorites, including Dune, Blade Runner 2049, Sicario, Arrival, and now his undertaking of adapting Frank...

    • August 32nd Earth
    • Polytechnique
    • Maelstrom
    • Prisoners
    • Dune
    • Sicario
    • Enemy
    • Blade Runner 2049
    • Incendies
    • Arrival

    As Denis Villeneuve's debut feature film, August 32nd on Earth was a promising look at what would become Villeneuve’s artistic signature: moving portrayals of human frailty and unforgettable visuals. The short, French-language drama (alternatively titled Un 32 août sur terre) follows photo model Simone, who decides to conceive a child with her best...

    Denis Villeneuve’s controversial third feature, Polytechnique, is a profoundly upsetting dramatization of the 1989 École Polytechnique massacre. The film is often described as the French-Canadian response to Gus Van Sant’s Elephant, which was inspired by the Columbine shooting of 1999. However, where Elephant mimics the nationwide feeling of helple...

    While audiences today have Guillermo del Toro’s The Shape of Water to thank for mysterious, sentient sea creatures, Villeneuve’s 2000 film Maelstrom gifted viewers the first-ever romantic drama narrated by a talking fish. It stars Marie-Josee Croze as Bibi Champagne, a depressed businesswoman who falls in love with the son of a Norwegian fishmonger...

    Villeneuve’s introduction to Hollywood and English-language films came in the shape of Prisoners, which focuses on the theme of cyclical violence the director so frequently explores. Even with an exponentially larger budget than his early films (most of which probably went to hiring Hugh Jackman), Prisoners doesn’t neglect Villeneuve’s commitment t...

    In many ways, Dune is arguably Villeneuve's most impressive cinematic achievement. While many of his other films are more cohesive, well-rounded stories, his take on Frank Herbert's quasi-biblical science-fiction tome does something that many filmmakers had long assumed to be impossible – successfully bring the story of Paul Atreides and the Planet...

    In a film review of Sicario for the New York Times, A.O. Scott writes, “Plenty of directors make violent movies. Denis Villeneuve makes movies about violence, which is not quite the same thing.” In Sicario, Villeneuve visits the United States-Mexico border to showcase some of the world’s most senseless, brutal acts of violence. The film tells the s...

    A bold adaption of Jose Saramago’s award-winning novella The Double, Denis Villeneuve once described Enemy as “practice” for Prisoners, which was released the same year. Though Enemy originated after a night out drinking with the film’s star, Jake Gyllenhaal, it’s more than just a side project – it’s one of Villeneuve’s most horrifying films to dat...

    Denis Villeneuve’s first foray into true blockbuster filmmaking, Blade Runner 2049 is the director’s take on a sequel to Ridley Scott’s original 1982 Blade Runner. In Blade Runner 2049, the exact future Blade Runner projected is less than two years away. Officer K (Ryan Gosling) is a new blade runner for the LAPD who uncovers a secret with the pote...

    Incendies takes place in the Middle Eastand is based on Wajdi Mouawad’s play by the same name and concerns Canadian twins who travel to their mother’s native country in the middle of a bloody civil war in an attempt to uncover secrets from her past. After their mother’s death, twins Jeanne and Simon must go on a kind of “scavenger hunt” based on he...

    A poetic exploration of empathy and communication, Arrival is Denis Villeneuve’s best film to date. Based on the 1998 short story Story of Your Life by Ted Chiang, the film follows a linguist (Amy Adams) enlisted by the United States Army to attempt communication with extraterrestrial aliens who have arrived on Earth, in the hope that they will mak...

    • Chase Hutchinson
    • Movie Reviews Editor
    • 'Arrival' (2016) However much Dune is an impressive achievement, the top spot in Villenevue’s filmography could only have been Arrival. A science fiction film that flaunts convention to tell a story about connection with what draws us together even amid great strife, it is the best work of not just the director but of cinema broadly in the 21st century.
    • 'Dune: Part Two' (2024) Though the prior film was itself a remarkable work, Dune: Part Two expands on everything that was being set up there in incredible fashion.
    • 'Dune' (2021) About as perfect of an adaptation of author Frank Herbert’s world as one could hope to get, Dune is a remarkable piece of work that is awe-inspiring in its vision.
    • 'Blade Runner 2049' (2017) To be honest, it surprised even me how high this film ended up being on my list. When it first came out in 2017, Blade Runner 2049 left me with mixed feelings.
    • Marshall Shaffer
    • Sicario. No Denis Villeneuve film manages to encapsulate the fullness of his talents quite like "Sicario." He's as comfortable working with the grand landscapes of the US-Mexico border as he is with tight close-ups of star Emily Blunt, whose audience avatar Kate Macer must relay mountains of information through only the smallest facial contortions.
    • Arrival. A quick glance at Denis Villeneuve's films would not necessarily create the impression that he's a humanist director. But even so, he certainly wears the hat convincingly in "Arrival," a film so full of well-earned empathy that it's almost overwhelming to take in.
    • Dune. The sci-fi epic "Dune" follows the ascendance of Paul Atreides (played here by Timothée Chalamet) in assuming a position of leadership over a divided, dangerous galaxy.
    • Dune: Part Two. The majesty of Denis Villeneuve's massive-scale filmmaking is on full display in "Dune: Part Two." Freed from the burden of having to prove the need for continued investment in the franchise (and to redeem the misbegotten first attempt by David Lynch), the director is free to push the mythology and mysticism even further.
  2. Mar 6, 2024 · A freelance film critic ranks all 11 films by the Canadian director, from his debut August 32nd on Earth to his sci-fi epic Dune. See how Villeneuve's style, themes, and ambition evolved over his career.

  3. Feb 29, 2024 · Every Denis Villeneuve Movie Ranked, from ‘Arrival’ to ‘Dune’. From dream-like French-Canadian indies to "Dune: Part Two," Villeneuve's films reveal a man who's always been haunted by a...

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  5. Mar 7, 2024 · A comprehensive list of the Canadian director's 11 feature films, from his debut Maelström to his latest Dune: Part Two. See how critics and audiences rated his works in various genres, from surrealism to sci-fi.