It’s the hap-happiest season of all! Yes, holiday, but also: Awards. And though I believe our liberation lies in divesting from Hollywood systems of power—starting with their awards as the measure of a film’s quality—this is the time of year when critics get all the screeners for every movie, all the screenplays, vinyls of the best scores and soundtracks, and other fun paraphernalia. It’s a movie-lover’s dream. (Follow BGW on IG so you can see when I post all of my film goodies!)
As a cinephile and an awards voter, I take the job seriously; I watch and consider every movie. I read the screenplays. I attend the Q&As with cast and crew here in Hollywood. I read the books they’re based on. Every year, I send off my ballot, knowing that the final awards nominations will be absolutely eye-roll inducing or infuriating —Emilia Perez when I Saw the TV Glow is RIGHT THERE?!!—but, alas.
These nominations are a constant reminder that Hollywood systems of power have an agenda that is never in the best interests of marginalized people. They invisibilize or prop up stories of us based on the lens through which they want us to be seen, for their benefit. That’s why you’ll never see award show predictions here at Black Girl Watching. It doesn’t serve us to think about movies and TV from their frame of worthiness. But achievements in film and TV should absolutely be celebrated. So here’s my celebration of the 28 best movies of 2024!
ANCESTORS TALKIN:
The Piano Lesson: There’s a moment in this beautiful film from first-time director and nepo baby Malcolm Washington, where a preacher, played by Corey Hawkins, has come to the limits of what his organized religion can accomplish. He implores Danielle Deadwyler’s Berniece to call on her ancestors for help defeating the ghost of their family’s enslaver who is haunting them. In yet another stunning turn from the criminally underrated Deadwyler, Berniece calls on the ancestors and they come. This film, based on August Wilson’s play of the same name, is not just an achievement in filmmaking, but a reminder that our ancestors have been through what we’re going through and even worse; they have wisdom and tools and protection to share with us. We just have to ask.
Watch The Piano Lesson on Netflix.
Dahomey: French-Senagalese writer-director Mati Diop is back with my absolute favorite film of the year. With Dahomey, Diop documents the theft and plunder by the French of thousands of artifacts from the Kingdom of Dahomey and its recent return of 26 artifacts to the present-day country of Benin. In her brilliance, Diop doesn’t shoot Dahomey like a typical documentary; she shoots it like a narrative film and even gives voice to the stolen artifacts that are returning home to a changed world after more than a century. This blurring of documentary and reimagination creates space for healing, giving the ancestors back the voice that was stolen from them and putting them in conversation with their present-day descendants who are still battling the effects of white supremacist colonization to this day.
Watch Dahomey FOR FREE for 30 days on MUBI.
Moana 2: In this Disney sequel, wayfinder Moana is tasked with reuniting all of the people of the Pacific Islands for their own survival. To do so, she must enlist the help of her last wayfinding ancestor to defeat a terrible god who has intentionally divided the people. I love when kids’ movies subtly address colonization and teach children that ancestors never leave us and want to help us. And the music slaps!
Moana 2 is the number one movie in the world, three weeks in a row! Catch it in theaters or eventually on Disney+.
ART AS A HEALING AGENT
Sing, Sing: My favorite film from TIFF ‘23 finally made its way to screens this year, dramatizing the true stories of incarcerated people (many who played themselves in the film) healing through an arts program at the infamous New York prison Sing Sing. The program, Rehabilitation Through the Arts (RTA) is an actual program that has helped incarcerated people work through emotional distress, pain and anger by performing in plays for fellow incarcerated people and has been credited with lowering recidivism rates once the actors are released from prison. Starring Colman Domingo and formerly incarcerated Clarence Maclin playing a version of himself in his debut scene-stealing film role, Sing Sing is a powerful argument for abolition and a must-see film.
Sing Sing is out of theaters and not yet available on streaming, but will likely be on Max with other A24 movies soon.
Daughters: Another heartbreaking film on the horrors of the prison system is the Netflix documentary Daughters. This film follows young Black girls whose fathers are incarcerated over the course of their lives and shows the devastating impact their absence has on the girls. But one organization puts on a Daddy-Daughter Dance at a D.C. prison to reunite the incarcerated fathers with their girls in an afternoon of healing. The best film out of the 2024 Sundance Film Festival, Daughters will absolutely break your heart and ignite a passion for abolition.
Watch Daughters on Netflix now.
Exhibiting Forgiveness: Painter Titus Kaphar tells a version of his own life story in his debut film as writer-director. Played by Andre Holland, a Black painter who uses his artwork to process his painful childhood has his emerging success nearly derailed when his abusive father reappears looking for forgiveness. *Spoiler* I really dislike when Black women are discarded in fictionalized stories for the purposes of a man’s growth and development—especially when things happened differently in real life! Justice for Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor! Still there are many beautiful things to love about the film—the paintings most of all.
Exhibiting Forgiveness is available to rent or buy.
Fancy Dance: Fancy Dance is one of the last films I saw of the 2023 season, and it was one of the best, in no small part, thanks to Lily Gladstone. Her powerful performance as a grieving sister and aunt trying her best to take care of her niece while she searches for her missing sister with Child Protective Services, white family members and the FBI breathing down her back was stellar. It is Killers of the Flower Moon in the present day if its director Martin Scorsese had stepped aside and let an Indigenous woman writer-director tell an Indigenous story. It’s the best work of Gladstone’s career, telling an Indigenous story by Indigenous people and using Indigenous dance as a spiritual healing agent.
Watch Fancy Dance on Apple TV+.
I Saw the TV Glow: This film!! One of my favorites coming out of the Sundance Film Festival by trans writer-director Jane Schoenbrun and starring Ian Foreman and Justice Smith in particularly thoughtful and effective performances, actually shows the audience what it’s like to experience the gender dysphoria that so many young trans people feel before transitioning. Using a ‘90s Buffy the Vampire Slayer-type of show, The Pink Opaque, as a catalyst, two kids start questioning their identity and reality, and take different paths when they learn the answer.
Put down Emilia Perez and watch I Saw the TV Glow, on Max.
Bob Marley: One Love: I love Bob Marley’s music and Rastafari message of global Black liberation. This film captures the essence of Marley’s story and lets us relieve the glory of his music—though I have not forgotten what the film’s star Kingsley Ben-Adir said about Black Americans.
Watch Bob Marley: One Love on MGM+ and Paramount+.
FIGHTING FASCISM:
No Other Land: This may be the best film of the year that will not get mainstream distribution. Palestinian and Israeli filmmakers came together to tell the story of Israeli apartheid, genocide, torture, and abuse of Palestinians in the West Bank—before October 7, 2023, and beyond it—and the enduring Palestinian resistance. It’s hard to watch. It’s devastating. It’s necessary. And it’s the truth. Which is why mainstream platforms don’t want you to see it—especially as they continue to manufacture consent for the ongoing genocide of Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank. I was fortunate to see this film at the Toronto International Film Festival this year, where Free Gaza protests took place in front of the U.S. Embassy near the festival.
No Other Land is currently unavailable to stream as it awaits U.S. distribution.
Wicked: I never cared about the retelling of the Wicked Witch of the West until this moment when she was portrayed by a Black woman. Now, with that context, the story of an outcast who comes to understand her own power in order to fight back against an evil fascist regime has so much more significance. Still, I’ve seen enough misreadings of this film that I will have to do a deep dive on the meaning of Wicked in the next newsletter. But in summary, Wicked ingeniously shows how to fight fascism: You align with the most marginalized and oppressed. You reject “representation” in the fascist regime and instead tell the truth loudly. And you do it even if you have to do it alone; even at the risk of your demonization and ostracization . There is no negotiating with fascists or trying to “change it from the inside.” There’s only defying fascists and refusing their empty promises of power when we know our collective power is so much stronger and will last.
Just like a great musical—every song is a banger, I haven’t stopped singing them! And all of the performances, from Cynthia to Ari to Jonathan Bailey as a Fiyero, are pitch perfect. My only quibble is with the lighting in Fiyero’s “Dancing Through Life” number. Why is it backlit like that??? Otherwise, the 2h40m fly by. 9.9/10. Though I haven’t forgotten what Cynthia Erivo said about Black Americans either.
Watch Wicked in theaters now.
Union: This documentary shows how mistreated Amazon workers in a New York warehouse unionized their workforce against one of the wealthiest and most powerful men in the world—Jeff Bezos—and his cronies. It’s both inspiring for what’s possible when workers of the world unite, and heartbreaking when major issues interfere with unity.
The Wild Robot: I cannot say enough about this lusciously animated film: The decadent score by Kris Bowers; the heartfelt performance by Lupita Nyong’o; the original song “Kiss the Sky” that plays over the most emotionally resonate montage in the film; the story of a robot who chooses to override her programming to help a baby bird in need and who teaches all of the other animals to override their programming too, in order to form a conscious community that can survive together. The way things are is not the way things have to be! I love how radical children’s storytelling can be and I hope the kids—and adults!—who watch this film carry the message of what’s possible into their own communities in real life.
The Wild Robot is now available to rent.
Mufasa: The Lion King: I see what you did there, Barry Jenkins! Many have been critical of the auteur’s decision to cash out with a Disney bag by directing the live action Mufasa: The Lion King. Even Jenkins has been on the defense ever since his participation was announced. Let’s face it: Mufasa is an obvious, corporate IP money grab. Literally no one asked for this live-action prequel or for Lin Manuel Miranda’s uninspired retread of The Lion King’s most iconic songs. Still, I see what Jenkins tried to do with it. First: the visual effects are incredible; there were so many luminous shots and camera angles that immersed the audience in the feeling of being chased, of falling over cliffs, of being washed away by a raging river.
The Moonlight director is also known for examining Black masculinity in his works, and Mufasa is no exception. Played by Aaron Pierre and Kelvin Harrison, Jr., Mufasa and Taka (who will become Scar) show how masculinity can be strengthened for the good of everyone when socially “feminine” traits are adopted, and how masculinity can devolve into a toxic, deadly force when these attributes are rejected in favor of competition, dominance and submission. And I’m all for a story about how snow-white lions, “the Outsiders,” are colonizing and genociding the African prides and only Mufasa uniting all of the (presumably “Insider”) Africans can fight these literal white devils. I see you, Barry! Ultimately, and unfortunately, Jenkins was hamstrung by the literal title and premise of the story: no matter how socialist the efforts are, in a Disney movie, someone still has to be king. But, A for effort!
Watch Mufasa: The Lion King in theaters on Friday, December 20.
OVERCOMING GRIEF:
Hard Truths: In this searing drama, Marianne Jean-Baptiste plays a woman on the edge; a pulsing ball of rage and slight who sees danger and insult everywhere she looks. Though at times comical, Hard Truths never laughs at its main character, but unfolds her, allowing her humanity and deep grief to seep through her rough edges until a final moment of gushing release. A favorite of mine from the Toronto International Film Festival, Hard Truths and Jean-Baptiste provide a raw portrait of depression unlike any I’ve ever seen and dares us not to look away.
Watch Hard Truths in Theaters.
Megan Thee Stallion: In Her Words: Get ready to bawl your eyes out. This documentary is the chart-topping rapper’s opportunity to tell her own story of grief and trauma after being shot by Tory Lanez and betrayed by her best friend in the wake of the back-to-back deaths of her mother and grandmother. It is a lesson in the misogynoir Black women face even within our own community—let alone outside of it. It is a triumphant reclaiming of truth and a testimony of surviving and thriving, with stunning and compassionate directing by Nneka Onuorah.
Watch Megan Thee Stallion: In Her Words on Prime Video.
Mother, Mother: I don’t want to spoil this beautiful abolitionist dream of a film, so I’ll just say that two grieving mothers teach each other about accountability, community and healing in the most gorgeous way. This film by Somali-Canadian writer-director K'naan Warsame in his debut, is abolition in action. It is another possible world. It shows that even in our grief, our rage, our despair, we can still choose a path of healing and wholeness that is the exact opposite of what we’ve been taught to believe is justice.
Mother, Mother is still seeking U.S. distribution and is unavailable to stream.
Memoir of a Snail: This is a stop-motion animated film, but it is NOT for children, I repeat, do not sit your children in front of this hilariously heartbreaking grown-up animated film!! Memoir of a snail follows the story of a young girl whose mother introduced her to a snail obsession before passing away. Snails are her only comfort as she manages grief after grief throughout her life. This surprisingly funny film will break your heart and put it back together again.
Memoir of a Snail is available to rent.
SUPPORTING WOMEN’S WRONGS:
Anora: This sex-worker Cinderella story has topped my list ever since I saw it at the Toronto International Film Festival in September. With a dash of The Hangover, this modern-day Pretty Woman embodies for me what my favorite sex worker educator Raquel Savage always says: “Sex work is not ‘empowering;’ sex work (like any other job) is work.” And no matter how well we can sell our skills and labor in exchange for money, the billionaires, the oligarchs—they are the ones who are ultimately in control. The only thing “wrong” that Anora does is put her faith in the American-Russo dream of dancing your way into exorbitant wealth. The greatest lesson of the film is that the wealthy will always have class solidarity; the only way we can survive them —and win—is if we have class solidarity too.
Anora is now available to rent.
Babygirl: Nicole Kidman is back in her self-destructive, rich white woman bag with Babygirl, where she plays a sexually frustrated high-powered tech founder married to Antonio Banderas with two daughters at home. When an intern who’s into the BDSM fantasies she craves starts working at her firm, she risks everything to explore everything with him that her husband refuses to do. It seems unhinged that she would throw her life and everything she’s worked for away for some 20-year-old intern, but *MILD SPOILER,* once she reveals she’s not had an orgasm in 16 years of marriage with Antonio Banderas, her acting a bit unhinged makes total sense. And because this is not a Tyler Perry Production, Nicole’s character will not be punished (by men or women) for her explorations of sexuality and pleasure past 50. Line of the year: “If I want to be humiliated, I’ll pay someone to do it for me.” 10s across the board for Nicole!
Watch Babygirl in theaters now and coming soon to Apple TV+.
Challengers: This Zendaya-led film is what NeNe Leakes would call “Pure innocent fun.” It follows Z and two white boys in their tennis-obsessed love triangle from high school through adulthood. And while I do think Z’s costars have more interesting story arcs and character development and she serves more as the tennis ball tossed between them or the net keeping the boys apart, (I realllllllly don’t like that!) the filmmaking, the cinematography, the camera angles, the fashion, the direction and the pulsing ‘80s techno music all made for a fun time at the movies.
Watch Challengers on MGM+.
She Taught Love: I am usually against Black women teaching men anything—and especially not while in the throes of terminal cancer!!!—but Arsèma Thomas (Queen Charlotte) is such a gem in the starring role as Mali and seeing this film on the big screen proves that even more. The camera loves that face! And the writer-star Darrell Britt-Gibson is charming as her exhausting love interest, so I have to support Mali’s choice to spend precious, precious time teaching a grown man things he should take it upon himself to know, and root for her happiness. (Thomas’ line-reading of “Get the f*** off my steps!” in the break-up scene lives in my mind anyway.) Celebrate this film’s gorgeous cinematography and subversive ending and cast Arsèma as the lead in everything, on IMAX next time!
Watch She Taught Love on Hulu.
The Last Showgirl: Pamela Anderson’s comeback movie is right up my alley. Anderson plays a Las Vegas showgirl whose decades-long career in the same show is coming to an end with only two weeks’ notice. Confronted with the reality that she might not have anything to show for her career, and due to ageism, has no way to pivot into a new one, Anderson’s showgirl defiantly rejects the idea that she has to defend her choices—even when it hurts people she loves. She loved being a showgirl for the time she got to do it, and isn’t that what life is about? For someone who has felt the urge to defend my choice to pursue a fickle art over financial stability, this film is a balm.
Watch The Last Showgirl in Theaters now.
TWISTED COMING OF AGE
Inside Out 2: Another animated banger made the list of my favorites this year and it’s no surprise that the story of a 13-year-old girl trying to manage her changing emotions had me absolutely verklempt. Riley is, by all accounts, being raised in a healthy, loving household, and she is still riddled with anxiety and struggling to build a strong sense of self. Just imagine what kids in less stable homes are going through! This film and its predecessor offer the audience the language to express emotions in a healthy way—even in the most stressful situations. We need more films that are this instructive while still being incredibly entertaining.
My Old Ass: This film will hit millennials particularly in the gut. Aubrey Plaza stars as a 39-year-old on a mushroom trip who finds herself face to face with her 18-year-old self during her last summer before college, when everything was easy and beautiful and fun; her last moment of joy before everything changes forever. This tear-jerker comedy will have you questioning your whole life and (hopefully) finding peace with the person you’ve become anyway.
Watch My Old Ass now on Prime Video.
Nickel Boys: Debut director RaMell Ross makes one of the most visually compelling films of the year with this adaptation of Colson Whitehead’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel. Nickel Boys is the traumatic story of two young boys in the South who are imprisoned in a juvenille “reform school” that is simply a stand-in for a plantation. They have no way of using the law to liberate them from their indefinite sentence, no way of escape—except, perhaps, aging out or death. As you can imagine, this is an extremely heavy film whose first-person filmmaking puts the audience directly into the shoes of the main characters as they try to survive horrendous child abuse. While I’m not sure Black American audiences specifically need this experience in empathetic filmmaking—we already know or can imagine these kinds of horrors—I still see its value.
When I spoke to the director at a talk-back, he was sharing his perspective that the theology of Christianity has permeated the way we tell stories on screen, with the camera operating as the distant Christian God, looking down, over, above and through us on earth. Even when a story is told from a particular character’s point of view, even with the most extreme close-ups on that character and also their perspective, the camera is still just a bit removed from the character, making the audience a bit removed. When the camera is a stand-in for the main character, as we experience in Nickel Boys, it’s a one-of-a-kind style that my friend Charles thought was more in line with the Buddhist ideology of Metta, a loving-kindness meditation wherein you become the other as the audience becomes the main character in Nickel Boys. This Metta filmmaking is an incredible and effective achievement that has more than earned its effusive praise—and while I’ll only ever watch it once, I’ll be thinking about it for a long time.
Nickel Boys is now in theaters.
UNEXPECTED SPORTS BIOPICS:
The Fire Inside: Ryan Destiny, the star that you are! The glamorous R&B artist completely disappears into the role of Claressa Shields, the real-life young, impoverished boxer from Flint, Michigan, who goes on to win the first Olympic gold medal in women’s boxing. But unlike the typical sports biopic, The Fire Inside continues Shields’ story, sharing her struggle for racial and gender equality in the sport when even gold medals prove not to be enough. Brian Tyree Henry infuses heart into the role of Shields’ loving but frustrated childhood coach who can only take her but so far. While I would’ve loved for Shields’ mother to have a more developed role, the chemistry between Destiny and Tyree Henry create a compelling watch that proves why the actors themselves and the people they portray deserve the big screen.
Watch The Fire Inside in theaters on December 25.
Unstoppable: Jharrel Jerome shines in the true story of wrestling sensation Anthony Robles, the champion from Arizona who was born with one leg. Despite egregious ableism both inside his family and out in the world, Anthony excels beyond all expectations, and as usual, Jerome rises to the occasion. I hate to use the word “inspiring” because so many stories of disabled people overcoming unnecessarily ableist obstacles are described that way and used to bludgeon other disabled people who aren’t able to overcome. But Anthony’s determination to reach his wrestling goals does change the trajectory of so many people’s lives around him—including his mother Judy, played to effect by Jennifer Lopez. In a meaty supporting role, JLo’s Judy learns from her son how to stand up to her abusive husband and to fight for the life she deserves. You’ll cheer the way a sports movie compels you to cheer for the hero, and Unstoppable truly gives us an incredible hero; but I hope it also makes us think about the ways abled people make disabled people’s lives harder for our own comfort, and get busy doing something about that instead of just celebrating the people who are exceptional enough to overcome.
Watch Unstoppable on Prime Video on January 16, 2025.
I hope you enjoy these films as much as I do!
Stay watchin’,
Brooke