10. Elena – Dir. Andrei Zvyagintsev (Russia)
Of my theatrical releases, two of these made waves in 2011 on the festival circuit, such as Russian auteur Andrei Zvyagintsev’s third film, Elena (the 2012 Los Angeles film festival screened his neglected 2007 sophomore feature The Banishment, for which I felt extremely thankful to have had the opportunity to experience—and with his trio of films, you can note this director as one of the most exciting names working in cinema). With a score by Philip Glass and a noir tinged tale concerning class issues and inheritance, his third feature is a beautifully calibrated take on icy issues of the heart.
9. Middle of Nowhere – Dir. Ava DuVernay (US)
8. Sound of My Voice – Dir. Zal Batmanglij (US)
Zal Batmanglij’s stupendous debut feature, Sound of My Voice, which premiered at Sundance 2011 (his next feature, The East, premieres next month at Sundance 2013), does wonders with a limited budget and a creepy performance from Brit Marling (they wrote the film together). Provoking, intense, with a great soundtrack and engrossing performances, this is exactly the type of cinema largely absent from the American film scene.
7. Moonrise Kingdom – Dir. Wes Anderson (US)
Wes Anderson doesn’t so much reinvent himself but finally branches out in new directions with this immensely rewarding film about adolescence and the nostalgia of falling in love. While a large part of the success of the film is balanced on two very endearing performances from its young leads, Jared Gilman and Kara Hayward, Anderson fleshes out his universe with appealing supporting performances from Bruce Willis, Tilda Swinton, Ed Norton, Frances McDormand, and Bill Murray. The film is a magical ode to childhoods filled with records, romantic runaway adventures, and those pulp fiction paperbacks of yore.
6. Compliance – Dir. Craig Zobel (US)