Headlines

WW2 Movie With 93% On Rotten Tomatoes Named The Best Movie Of The Decade So Far

Share with:


Loading

WW2 Movie With 93% On Rotten Tomatoes Named The Best Movie Of The Decade So Far

4

By Dan Zinski

Published 2 days ago

Follow

Like

Thread11

Link copied to clipboard

Related

George MacKay as William Schofield in 1917 and Cillian Murphy as Oppenheimer in Oppenheimer

10 Best War Movies Released Within The Past 10 Years

Daniel Craig in Casino Royale

The Longest-Running Movie Franchise Of All-Time Isn’t James Bond, Beating 007 By A Whole 8 Years

Henry-Cavill's-Voltron-Live-Action-Movie-Gets-Major-Filming-&-Release-Update-

5 Times Henry Cavill Deserved Better

Sign in to your ScreenRant account

A man in a Nazi uniform looks around inside an opulent room in a scene from Zone of Interest
Image by Yailin Chacon

 Generate a summary of this story

World War 2 movie with a 93% fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes has been named the best film of the decade so far. The century’s greatest military conflict had barely begun before Hollywood started making films about it, some of them propagantistic in nature, others more interested in real human drama.

✕Remove Ads

Acclaim was heaped upon some of these movies right away, as in the cases of Casablanca and The Best Years Of Our Lives. But the war would continue to fascinate moviemakers and their audiences long after the last shot was fired, as evidenced by Steven Spielberg’s pair of all-time-great war epics, Schindler’s List and Saving Private Ryan.

The immensity of World War 2 as a historical event indeed guarantees the film world’s ongoing interest. In recent years, the torch has been carried by movies like BlitzGreyhoundOperation Mincemeat and, of course, 2023’s blockbuster Oscar-winner Oppenheimer.

The Zone Of Interest Is The Best Film Of The 2020s So Far

The World War 2 Movie Was Directed By Jonathan Glazer

Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer biopic may have won Best Picture at the Oscars, but the best film of the decade so far, at least according to one new poll, is The Zone of Interest. Directed by Jonathan Glazer, the movie stands at 93% on Rotten Tomatoes, and won its own Oscar for Best International Feature.

Zone of Interest grossed $52 million worldwide.

The New York Times’ new list of the best films of the 2000s is predictably weighted toward titles released in the century’s first two decades, but The Zone of Interest did make it into the rundown at #12, the highest finish for a movie from the 2020s.

✕Remove Ads

Our Take On The Zone Of Interest Being Named Best Film Of The 2020s

This Time It Beat Oppenheimer

Collage of Rudolf Hoss (Christian Friedel) in The Zone of Interest.
Custom Image by Zach Moser

Nolan’s blockbuster biopic may have beaten out Glazer’s art-house drama on Oscar night, but two years on, The Zone of Interest is seen as the better film, at least according to those who voted in the New York Times’ poll. Oppenheimer did make the list, landing at #65, far behind the #12 finish posted by Glazer’s movie.

It’s yet to be seen if either Oppenheimer or Zone of Interest will be enshrined alongside the likes of CasablancaFrom Here To EternitySchindler’s List and Saving Private Ryan as an all-time classic World War 2 movie. But, at least for now, the latter seems headed swiftly in that direction, while Oppenheimer’s critical reputation may already be waning somewhat.

George MacKay as William Schofield in 1917 and Cillian Murphy as Oppenheimer in Oppenheimer

Related

10 Best War Movies Released Within The Past 10 Years

War movies endure because of their timeless themes and messages, and some of the best of the past decade have taken unique approaches to the genre.

1

There is little doubt Zone of Interest belongs in the conversation for best movie of the decade so far, if not the century. Glazer’s haunting look at the Holocaust is among the most powerful dramas of the past 25 years, its 93% RT fresh rating serving as evidence of its acclaim.

✕Remove Ads

Zone of Interest and Oppenheimer being rated so highly in the esteem of critics is just more proof that World War 2 remains fruitful ground for cinematic storytellers looking to depict human tragedy and triumph.

Source: New York Times

Share with:


Verified by MonsterInsights