10 Movies Like ‘The Favourite’

The Favourite (2018)
The Favourite (2018)

Here are Cinephile Corner’s 10 recommendations for movies like The Favourite:

Saltburn

Saltburn (2023)

Emerald Fennell‘s sophomore movie, Saltburn, emerges from the rubble of her polarizing debut, Promising Young Woman, with a cast that elevates the material despite its endlessly convoluted and plainly put narrative. This comedy-drama-thriller hybrid film weaves a perplexing tale of obsession, deception, and tragedy within the confines of the aristocratic Catton family’s titular estate.

Read our full review of Saltburn

The Last Duel

The Last Duel (2021)

Ridley Scott’s The Last Duel is a medieval epic that trades grand battles for something far more harrowing—a Rashomon-style retelling of a brutal assault, where perspective shapes the truth. The film, based on true events, unfolds through three distinct narratives, each offering a different account of the same crime. With a stellar cast led by Matt Damon, Adam Driver, and Jodie Comer, the movie is as much a historical drama as it is a sobering commentary on power, justice, and gender dynamics.

Read our full review of The Last Duel

Babylon

Babylon (2022)

Damien Chazelle announces himself as the antichrist with Babylon – a film focused on the fake it til you make it side of the industry, and Chazelle might just be faking it after all. I’ll be tossing and turning in my head for months about whether he deserves the ending that he presents, because he’s having his cake and eating it to with that final montage, but at least along the way he also throws it up and laughs at you for thinking he’d do anything else. I love it.

Read our full review of Babylon

Poor Things

Poor Things (2023)

At the heart of Poor Things is Emma Stone‘s exceptionally dedicated performance, making a compelling case for her second Oscar for Best Actress. Her willingness to embrace daring characters and collaborate with auteurs like Yorgos Lanthimos reinforces her status as one of the industry’s leading performers.

Read our full review of Poor Things

The Grand Budapest Hotel

The Grand Budapest Hotel (2014)

The Grand Budapest Hotel stands as one of the most ambitious and widely celebrated films in Wes Anderson’s career—a visual symphony of symmetry, color, and control. It marked a turning point for Anderson, both critically and stylistically, encapsulating nearly two decades of his evolving artistry into one meticulously crafted package. While it’s easy to see why The Grand Budapest Hotel has been called the quintessential Wes Anderson movie, there’s something about its ornate façade and heavily curated design that, for some viewers, keeps it just out of emotional reach.

Read our full review of The Grand Budapest Hotel

Anora

Anora (2024)

Anora is a film that announces Sean Baker as one of cinema’s pinnacle filmmakers. It’s a starry movie that puts you through the ringer and makes you feel just about every emotion possible. It’s grandiose filmmaking at a very high degree of execution. Baker likes to explore similar themes and character types with each of his films, and he’s never been so clear as to why he finds these particular stories so fascinating.

Read our full review of Anora

Parasite

Parasite (2019)

Every few years, I revisit Parasite and find myself wondering if I’ve been underrating it. It’s a movie that feels so omnipresent in conversations about the best movies of the 21st century that it’s easy to take its greatness for granted. But every rewatch reminds me exactly why Bong Joon-ho’s international juggernaut remains one of the most important films of the last decade—both as a razor-sharp thriller and a scathing critique of class dynamics that continues to feel disturbingly relevant.

Read our full review of Parasite

One Battle After Another

One Battle After Another (2025)

Paul Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another is a movie of firsts that never feels tentative. It is his first modern-set feature since Punch-Drunk Love, his first collaboration with Leonardo DiCaprio, and his first film of this scale, reportedly in the $130 to $175 million range. What is not new is the command. From the first explosion to the last chase, this is PTA in full control, turning a feverish political thriller into one of 2025’s most purely thrilling big-screen experiences.

Read our full review of One Battle After Another

The Substance

The Substance (2024)

A vaguely named, neon green liquid is at the center of The Substance, the sophomore effort from director Coralie Fargeat following her successful debut Revenge (2017). The titular substance is capable of delivering happiness to those desiring to look younger and more attractive. Accompanied by a strict list of rules involving when to take the substance and how to maintain the younger self the injection inevitably births, the chances of a user mishandling such a lethal experimental drug is absurdly high.

Read our full review of The Substance

Bugonia

Bugonia (2025)

Whether Bugonia “counts” as an alien film is part of the gag, and I will not spoil that. What matters is that Yorgos Lanthimos uses the premise to pry at paranoia, credulity, and the way hurt curdles into certainty. The first half plays a little too straight, the second half finally swings. I liked this space for him more than his recent detours, even if the result lands in the middle of the pack.

Read our full review of Bugonia


READ MORE: The Favourite (2018), Yorgos Lanthimos, Movies Like Poor Things

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