
January 8, 2025

WRITTEN BY: ADRIANO
Another year has come to an end, and 2024, like most years, has been a year of highs and lows when it comes to cinema. For those who don’t ardently follow such things, I imagine many are trying to figure out what movies are worth catching up on, especially since awards season has thrown a bunch of movie titles at you. I’m assuming, more likely than not, you’ve seen the big blockbusters like Dune: Part Two and Wicked, and maybe you've even caught some buzzy hits like Longlegs and Challengers. As we speak, many of you are probably trying to get caught up on awards hopefuls like Anora and The Brutalist. However, I'd be remiss if I didn't mention some films that, in my opinion, are easily amongst the year's best offerings while flying completely below the radar. So, here are ten underappreciated films from 2024 that everyone should watch.

HOW TO HAVE SEX
I saw How to Have Sex for the first time at TIFF 2023, and it has remained in my head ever since. I'm genuinely at a loss for words that it's Molly Manning Walker’s directorial debut, but that has made me excited for whatever she does next. Following three teenage girls on a week-long summer vacation to Malia, Greece, the film focuses primarily on Tara, played spectacularly by Mia McKenna-Bruce, as she seeks to lose her virginity. While the film begins as a somewhat familiar, albeit energetic, coming-of-age party film, it evolves into something much more profound, becoming a seething indictment on hook-up and party culture and how it pertains to women and consent. It's the kind of film I'd show my kids when they become teenagers, not just because it's so good, but because of how important it could be in shaping their minds on the subject.

I SAW THE TV GLOW
After their surreal previous film, We're All Going to the World's Fair, I was pretty intrigued by whatever writer-director Jane Schoenbrun cooked up next. I Saw the TV Glow validated that excitement big time, making them the upcoming filmmaker I'm most excited for. Something about Schoenbrun's way of exploring themes of finding individual freedom, especially for queer and trans people, via entertainment, esoteric horror, and colourful imagery that crawls under your skin is simply mesmerizing (not to mention the performances Schoenbrun got out of Justice Smith and Brigette Lundy-Paine). However, the best part of it is that, even once the credits rolled, it felt like it still hadn't ended, as the movie kept me pondering every scene and detail long after I left the theatre. Now, I'm not going to pretend I Saw the TV Glow is a film for everybody, but I still believe it's a film everyone should seek out and experience at least once.

HIS THREE DAUGHTERS
The power a good writer-director can capture in a single room for almost an entire movie’s runtime is something that I'll never understand. In Azazel Jacob's chamber piece His Three Daughters, we follow three adult sisters who resolve their broken relationship as their father is about to die. The biggest sell of this movie has been the central performances from Carrie Coon, Elizabeth Olsen, and most notably, Natasha Lyonne. All three of them feel as lived in as possible, with every grievance and past trauma feeling very authentic. His Three Daughters shines as a devastating yet strangely endearing film of familial baggage and what grief can bring out of people. Simply put, it's a worthwhile tearjerker that should leave a long-lasting impact on any viewer.

DÌDI
I might as well throw another great coming-of-age movie in the mix with Dìdi. In the feature directorial debut of Sean Wang, Dìdi is about a 13-year-old Taiwanese-American kid named Chris, played amazingly by Izaac Wang, in the final month of summer vacation before beginning high school. The kicker: the film takes place in 2008, meaning the rise of the digital era plays a major role. As someone who came of age in this era, I can speak to the film's unflinching authenticity, from the performance of the entire ensemble of kids to the way they speak. Plus, the embarrassing and emotional beats the kids go through all felt very familiar, for better and for worse. However, the film's secret weapon lies in Joan Chen, who gives one of the year's best performances as the protagonist’s struggling mother. If you grew up in the 00s, you'll find something really special here, but even if you didn't, it's still a funny and heartwarming coming-of-age film.

HUNDREDS OF BEAVERS
A common accusation I hear whenever I speak ill of a superhero slopfest is that I "don't like fun." Thankfully, Hundreds of Beavers is here to prove that I do, in fact, love fun because it’s just a total blast. Directed by Mike Cheslik for just $150,000, the film follows a 19th-century applejack salesman who suddenly must survive a hoard of conniving, human-sized beavers. This movie is essentially a feature-length, live-action Looney Tunes cartoon, featuring slapstick that harkens back to the era of Charlie Chaplin and loads of laughter from its wild visual gags. The gags themselves genuinely make me wonder how they made this film with such a tiny budget. There is nothing about Hundreds of Beavers that is necessarily profound; it's just a sincerely silly movie that sucks you in with its pure mayhem.

KILL
Speaking of pure fun, let's talk about Kill. Directed by Nikhil Nagesh Bhat, the film follows two commandos who are aboard a train that's been hijacked by bandits. Also, the two commandos seek revenge and justice after the bandits kill the girlfriend of one of the commandos. While there is an effective emotional throughline with the murder that really sets the plot in motion, if you're like me and just a kneejerk sucker for well-executed, hyper-gory hand-to-hand combat, this is the film for you. I was lucky enough to see this for the first time with a Midnight Madness crowd at TIFF, which was exciting enough as is, but subsequent viewings of the film have only affirmed just how radically exciting Kill is.

SASQUATCH SUNSET
No dialogue, just grunts and bodily fluids being chucked everywhere. That's Sasquatch Sunset for you. A bizarre film across the board, it tells the story of a family of sasquatches who venture across the wilderness. That's the essential plot of the film, but the movie offers much more under the surface. Directed by Nathan and David Zellner, Sasquatch Sunset gives us some incredible performance work from Jesse Eisenberg, Christophe Zajac-Denek, Nathan Zellner, and especially Riley Keough as they demonstrate absurd levels of humanity despite being trapped under several layers of prosthetics. But the thing about this film that is really special is its ability to give us a lovely tale of finding a connection to each other and to the earth. It shows that even at its most ridiculous and in the face of heavy hardships, life has a way of turning things around. Trust me when I say this one will make you laugh and possibly even cry.

SNACK SHACK
A running theme in this article seems to be that of the coming-of-age genre because I really want to talk about just how much I adored Snack Shack. Set in the 90s, the film follows two teenage boys who start running a concession stand at the local pool. Writer-director Adam Carter Rehmeier has stated that this film is semi-autobiographical, based on experiences from his own childhood, and that level of authenticity is apparent in nearly every scene. The movie has a lot of heart and plenty of laughs, and even at the film's most familiar beats, Snack Shack is just charming all the way through. A big part of that charm are the excellent lead performances from Connor Sherry and Gabriel LaBelle. There are not many people I wouldn't recommend this to. It's just too likable.

THE ORDER
If it was still the 90s, The Order would've been huge. A thriller about an FBI agent trying to take down a white supremacist terrorist group? It has everything a movie-goer would love… and it was just ignored. It has all the pulse-pounding thrills you'd want from an effective true-crime action-thriller, with great cinematography, engrossing storytelling, and an all-around amazing ensemble, including one of my favourite performances from Jude Law. It may seem like a tough watch due to its subject matter, but director Justin Kurzel crafted a timely yet enthralling film that can satisfy any audience.

THE SHADOW STRAYS
Whenever I hear that we don't get original, high-concept, action films anymore, I roll my eyes hard because they do exist, you just have to look deeper. For example, The Shadow Strays, a martial arts film by acclaimed director Timo Tjahjanto, is about a female ninja who sets out to rescue a child from human traffickers. I mean, what about that concept doesn't sound enticing? I'll admit, when I saw the film at a Midnight Madness screening on the 10th day of TIFF, I was tired and considered leaving before the film began. And then 15 minutes in, ninjas were shooting and slicing people up in stylized and gory ways, so I decided to stick around. Totally worth it. An unrelenting blast from start to finish with plenty of heart, it ends on a sequel set-up, which I usually get annoyed at; however, this time? I welcome it.