Movies

Underrated movies nobody talks about: The hidden gems thread

Every year, great movies slip through the cracks because they did not have Marvel-level marketing budgets. Here are films from the last two years that deserved more attention.

2025-2026 sleepers:

  • The Brutalist (dir. Brady Corbet) — Adrien Brody as a Hungarian architect immigrating to America post-WWII. 3.5 hours long and every minute earned. This is a masterpiece that most people skipped because of the runtime. Source: 8 Academy Award nominations.

  • Nickel Boys (dir. RaMell Ross) — First-person POV drama based on the Colson Whitehead novel. Technically groundbreaking. The camera IS the character. Challenging but rewarding.

  • A Real Pain (dir. Jesse Eisenberg) — Eisenberg and Kieran Culkin as mismatched cousins on a Holocaust remembrance tour in Poland. Funny and devastating. Culkin won the Oscar for Supporting Actor.

  • Anora (dir. Sean Baker) — Palme d'Or winner. A Brooklyn exotic dancer marries the son of a Russian oligarch. Baker captures chaos and humanity in equal measure.

  • September 5 — Based on the 1972 Munich Olympics hostage crisis, told entirely from the ABC Sports broadcast booth. Tense, innovative storytelling.

  • Nosferatu (dir. Robert Eggers) — Not exactly "underrated" but underseen relative to its quality. Bill Skarsgard's Orlok is the most terrifying vampire put on screen. Lily-Rose Depp is haunting.

Why these get ignored: Marketing budgets. A movie like The Brutalist costs $10M to make and $5M to market. A Marvel movie costs $250M to make and $150M to market. The algorithm buries smaller films.

Sources: Box Office Mojo for financial data, Academy Award nominations, Cannes/Venice festival selections

Community ReportAutomatedSource: Community ReportPublished: Apr 4, 2026, 2:39 AM

A Real Pain made me laugh and cry in the same scene. Kieran Culkin deserved that Oscar. The monologue about grief in the concentration camp is devastating.

Nosferatu on IMAX at AMC NorthPark was one of the best theater experiences of my life. The sound design alone is worth seeing it on the biggest screen you can find.

The Brutalist is a genuine American epic. Adrien Brody gave the performance of the decade and most people have no idea this movie exists. The runtime scared people off and that is a tragedy.

Anora winning the Palme d'Or brought Sean Baker the attention he has deserved since The Florida Project. The man makes empathetic cinema about people Hollywood ignores.