FilmBest of 2024

The 50 best films of 2024: No 30 to No 21

We continue our countdown of our favourite movies released in Ireland this year

Seydou Sarr in Io Capitano
Seydou Sarr in Io Capitano


30

Io Capitano

Directed by Matteo Garrone. The most swashbuckling of the current wave of dramas depicting the global migrant crisis features two spirited teenage cousins who leave their Senegalese village to set out on a perilous voyage for Italy. Read the full review.

29

Kneecap

Kneecap: Liam Óg Ó hAnnaidh, Naoise Ó Cairealláin and JJ Ó Dochartaigh
Kneecap: Liam Óg Ó hAnnaidh, Naoise Ó Cairealláin and JJ Ó Dochartaigh

Directed by Rich Peppiatt. Summer Holiday. A Hard Day’s Night. Catch Them If You Can. Slade in Flame. The Belfast rap outfit’s fictionalised biopic is a welcome addition to the rock-flick canon. A possible Oscar nominee. Read the full review.

28

Green Border

Directed by Agnieszka Holland. This muscular, urgent dramatisation of the recent refugee crisis follows a Syrian couple and their three children as they wander between Poland and Belarus in the ill-defined zone of the title. Read the full review.

27

Occupied City

Directed by Steve McQueen. Never mind the film-maker’s disappointing Blitz. His study of Amsterdam during the second World War is an austere marvel. Worth girding loins for all four hours. Read the full review.

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26

Orlando: My Political Biography

Directed by Paul B Preciado The film-maker, writer and philosopher invites a diverse group of more than 20 nonbinary and trans people to audition and play Orlando. Each performer grafts their experiences on to Virginia Woolf’s story of courtly romance and unrequited love, making for an astonishingly rich seam of ideas. Read the full review.

25

The Order

Directed by Justin Kurzel. Arriving on St Stephen’s Day, the Australian film-maker’s latest stars Jude Law as an FBI agent investigating a real-life white supremacist in 1980s Washington state. Tough thriller of the old school.

24

Sugarcane

Directed by Julian Brave NoiseCat and Emily Kassie. This gripping documentary account of the abuse of First Nations children at Catholic residential schools in Canada is an early Oscar favourite. Read the full review.

23

The Wild Robot

The Wild Robot: A fantastic family film starring Lupita Nyong’o and Pedro Pascal
The Wild Robot: A fantastic family film starring Lupita Nyong’o and Pedro Pascal

Directed by Chris Sanders. Properly moving, endlessly funny animation about a robot raising a goose on a remote island after stamping its mum dead. Best mainstream studio cartoon in an age. Read the full review.

22

Starve Acre

Directed by Daniel Kokotajlo. A couple living in the Yorkshire Dales lose their young, troubled son. The grief curdles into something more sinister. With a hare. Read the full review.

21

Heretic

Directed by Scott Beck and Bryan Woods. Give Hugh Grant all the prizes. His fecund late period continues with this turn as a sinister recluse entertaining two initially unsuspecting Mormon missionaries. Read the full review.