Updated as of January 17: It's not a "Best" List because I haven't seen nearly all the films released in 2014. Nor has any critic. So "grain-of-salt" it, people, please. Below are the movies -- mostly the small ones, along with a few bigger ones that, in my view, actually deserve their status -- that you really ought to catch in some form or other, from streaming to DVD to a possible theatrical encounter. I begin with probably the smallest film of all, which is also among the very best of this year. (Click on each title link, and it should open up into my post on the film.)
Now, there are 68 movies in all. That's hardly a ten-best list, but it does represent the films I think are worth mentioning again and definitely worth your checking out. Some appear here because they are the kind of small independent movies -- docs or narratives -- that many will not have even heard of, and yet they are so good that they must be pointed out. A few of these are genre films -- the terrific little thriller Not Safe for Work and the loony-tunes funny Stretch -- that never even received a theatrical release (that I could discover) but went straight to streaming and are such good examples of their genres that they ought to be seen and enjoyed. Others -- Boyhood (below), Nightcrawler, Winter Sleep (above), Force Majeure and Snowpiercer -- have already been cited by many critics, and now I must cite them, too.
You may notice that certain popular or much acclaimed films (Foxcatcher, Whiplash, Leviathan, The Imitation Game or The Theory of Everything) are not listed. These are perfectly good movies but are nowhere near the best or most interesting of my movie-going year. I have now seen both Selma (a little too close to history-as-feel-good-schlock for my taste) and Into the Woods (much better than its original Broadway version: one of Sondheim's lesser scores, but as used smartly here, it provides a chance for actors to sing well and give meaning to the story much better than did the stage version). Mr Turner and American Sniper still remain unseen; I'll probably wait for their Blu-ray incarnation. And there's one film, The Bag Man (a still is shown below) that is simply so much better than its crap reviews would indicate that I just had to include it. (Reach Me is another good example of our current negative-critical-mass-thinking about a very enjoyable film that I came close to including, too.)
THE LIST
Magical Universe
Key of Life
*Pictures of Superheroes
*The History of Future Folk
Lucky Bastard
Child's Pose
*Dean Spanley
The Bag Man
Particle Fever
Rob the Mob
Afflicted
Locke
Southern Baptist Sissies
Young Detective Dee: Rise of the Sea Dragon
The Selfish Giant
Trust Me
God's Pocket
A Short History of Decay
Frequencies
The Players
AGNES VARDA: From Here to There
Master of the Universe
Dormant Beauty
A Coffee in Berlin
Romeo and Juliet
Third Person
Code Black
Snowpiercer
The Internet's Own Boy
After the Dark
The Last Days
*20 Cigarettes
Magic in the Moonlight
Boyhood
Honour
A Five-Star Life
A Master Builder
The Dog
Second Opinion: Laetrile at Sloan-Kettering
The Den
Rocks in My Pockets
Wetlands
Pay 2 Play
Bird People
Art and Craft
Pride
Diplomacy
Rudderless
Eternity
Force Majeure
Begin Again
Viva la Libertà
Nightcrawler
The Circle
Gore Vidal: The United States of Amnesia
Not Safe for Work
The Babadook
LFO: The Movie
Miss Julie
The Foxy Merkins
Stretch
The Joe Show
Winter Sleep
*Satellite
Two Days, One Night
*The Jewel
A Most Violent Year
**The Grand Budapest Hotel
Note: an important film just opened this week that is almost certain to make my best-of-year for 2015. As it is a small independent movie and will probably disappear without much of a trace, I suggest that you try to see it ASAP, if possible. If not, watch for the eventual DVD/streaming release.