Graham Fuller's Top 10 Films of 2022

Great films are being made but fewer than ever in Hollywood

Empires rise and fall; every dog has its day. The increased awareness of and need for diverse voices – together with the series-driven streaming revolution – has made Hollywood less relevant now than it has been at any time since the industry colonised Southern California's orange groves. Even stars have become an endangered species.

I enjoyed Licorice Pizza, The Fabelmans, and Bullet Train (until its awful last scene), but the films listed below speak with an urgency avoided by American mainstream movies with their escapist imperative – She Said being a grave, classy exception. Though Petrov's Flu slipped under the radar in the UK, Kirill Serebrennikov’s phantasmagorical evocation of ghost-ridden post-Soviet Russia – based on a 2016 novel but invoking Gogol, Dostoevsky, and Bulgakov – felt to me like the epicentre of everything, cinema included.

Aftersun announced the arrival of a filmmaker, Charlotte Wells, whose spare style serves the kind of volcanic emotions that erupt without warning over the course of a life. It was revelatory. So was Earwig's long day's train journey into night – a sequence I can't get out of my head.

1. Petrov's Flu

2. Aftersun

3. Three Minutes: A Lengthening

4. Nitram

5. Corsage

6. A Chiara

7. Hive

8. Earwig

9. Living

10. Benediction

Add comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.
'Petrov's Flu' felt like the epicentre of everything, cinema included

rating

0

explore topics

share this article

more film

Joachim Lang's docudrama focuses on Goebbels as master of fake news
The BFI has unearthed an unsettling 1977 thriller starring Tom Conti and Gay Hamilton
Estranged folk duo reunites in a classy British comedy drama
Marianne Elliott brings Raynor Winn's memoir to the big screen
Living off grid might be the meaning of happiness
Tender close-up on young love, grief and growing-up in Iceland
Eye-popping Cold War sci-fi epics from East Germany, superbly remastered and annotated
Artful direction and vivid detail of rural life from Wei Liang Chiang
Benicio del Toro's megalomaniac tycoon heads a star-studded cast
Tom Cruise's eighth M:I film shows symptoms of battle fatigue
A comedy about youth TV putting trends above truth
A wise-beyond-her-years teen discovers male limitations in a deft indie drama