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A_van_t_garde

Harvey (1950) and Being There (1979). Both very great movies with similar themes.


Dan_IAm

Harvey is such a great movie.


kentuckydango

Being There is a great pick. Would also suggest Personal Shopper, 3 Women (maybe a little more on the surreal side) and Long Days Journey Into Night (really really good, starts off slow but known for the hour long single take that makes up the second half of the film).


jrob321

I like to watch...


margoseptember

also bi gans other film Kaili Blues, even better than long days imo


Msdamgoode

Took me a good minute to realize you weren’t referring to Sidney Lumet’s film of the O’Neill play, “Long Days Journey into Night”… Obviously, I was seriously confused! No magical realism, but it does make me want to hunt down a copy. Jason Robards & Katherine Hepburn were fantastic in it. Haven’t seen the 2018 film, though I do remember reading about that take.


jotaemei

_Being There_ arrived on the Criterion Channel a few days ago.


clemenbroog

The Spirit of the Beehive


theconk

Yes! Just watched this and loved it and was making sure someone had included it


theriverjordan

La Chimera and Happy as Lazzaro


astralrig96

came to say this, lazzaro is a must and the recent la chimera was also amazing


LiquidComedian

Happy as a lizzo


Strangewhine88

Julietta of the Spirits. Wings of Desire The Milagro Beanfield War Kiss of the Spiderwoman


peacefinder

Ooooh I hadn’t considered *Wings of Desire* in that context but of course it is.


Strangewhine88

Inverse magic realism if you will.


SnooGoats7476

I always felt that Night of the Hunter had this vibe Another good one I think is Spirit of the Beehive


GreenpointKuma

The Taste of Tea (2004) Shiki-jitsu (2000) Wings of Desire (1987) Last Year at Marienbad (1961) Pretty much all of Apichatpong Weerasethakul (Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives, Syndromes and a Century, Cemetery of Splendour, so on) Certified Copy (2010) Cure (1997)


BigWinnie7171

A Matter of Life and Death I'd say


North_Library3206

Probably a lot of Powell+Pressburger films would fit into this category


BigWinnie7171

I've only seen A Matter of Life and Death from them. Gotta check out more!


Babylil22

Came here to say this!


Feral-Pickle

Good thinking on that one


newfarmer

Like Water For Chocolate


bunnypunk_1298

Petit Maman!!


murmur1983

Stalker Long Day’s Journey into Night (2018) Cure Marketa Lazarova 3 Women Amarcord Wild Strawberries Beauty and the Beast (1946) Walkabout


Cheerio231

Which *A Long Day's Journey Into Night* are you referring to - the 2018 one or the 1962 one?


murmur1983

I’m referring to the 2018 one. I didn’t even know about the 1962 one until you brought it up!


Cheerio231

Thanks for clarifying!


murmur1983

You’re welcome!


russianwojak

Synecdoche, New York. gives off the feeling that something is wrong but you cant quite put youre finger on it at points. super underrated and a personal favourite. no criterion yet though :(


allisthomlombert

If ever a movie deserved to be in the collection it’s this one imo


Kidspud

It's like a magical evil, or nightmare.


russianwojak

def nightmare. but its subtle and slow.


a-system-of-cells

Barton Fink Enemy


Signifi-gunt

Barton Fink, great shout. Definitely fits the bill.


MediocreForm4387

A Serious Man as well


rabbitsagainstmagic

Not in the collection (sadly) but “Beasts of the Southern Wild” is the most magical realist film of modern times. Also “Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths”. Both excellent movies.


BlueLarkspur_1929

Big Fish and Amelie.


photog_in_nc

Buñuel’s The Exterminating Angels is worth a mention. It sometimes gets lumped in with Magical Realism, although perhaps doesn’t meet a strict definition and is more surrealism.


Intelligent_Air7276

Georges Franju's Eyes Without a Face (1960).


Cerenkovradiation

[I am a cyborg but that's okay](https://m.imdb.com/title/tt0497137/)


ssj4majuub

some offbeat picks Tigers Are Not Afraid It's Such A Beautiful Day Beau is Afraid Three Thousand Years of Longing Marcel the Shell with Shoes On Nowhere (1997) Repo Man We're All Going to the World's Fair (kinda) Ponyo Invention for Destruction Palm Springs (2020) The One I Love (2014) The Endless (2017) An Evening with Beverly Luff Linn Mullholland Drive A Ghost Story


PalpitationOk5726

Pan's Labyrinth.


itna-lairepmi-reklaw

Ah yes, Pan’s Labyrinth, where nothing overtly supernatural happens :P


PalpitationOk5726

Google magical realism and then come back to delete your comment.


itna-lairepmi-reklaw

Read the OP’s request and then delete yours? Lol


Chop1n

Even by a strict definition of magical realism, no. Pan's Labyrinth has a connection to the real world, but it's far more about its own fantasy world than it is about the real world. Magical realism is by definition primarily focused on the real world, and especially everyday life.


HAL_237

Suddenly, Last Summer


Jaltcoh

After Hours


EverythingIsOishii

Tarkovsky’s Stalker. Parts of Mirror, too.


OpticalAdjudicator

The Fisher King


Gates_wupatki_zion

Pan’s Labyrinth when it comes to magical realism, hands down this is the epitome.  The Seventh Seal is maybe a bit too obvious?  Still very good.  The Great Beauty might be what you are looking for, Italian subtitles and maybe more surrealist than magical realism, but close enough.  It’s one of my favorites of all time. Finally, there is always AntiChrist which -- is a tough watch, but definitely has elements of that, it is graphic with a capital G though.


tripleheliotrope

Asako I & II by Ryusuke Hamaguchi. His latest film Evil Does Not Exist (should be playing in LA and New York now) fits a little with this too, it has a fable like feel, but a lot darker than Asako.


MonkeyPunx

Marcel: The shell with shoes on Full-on magical premise, but the movie takes it completely at face value, and runs with the idea as if you're watching a documentary. There's very few things like it, and depending on your experiences in life, can absolutely emotionally destroy you.


Medical_Carpenter553

The Exterminating Angel is a good one. The Prestige kind of straddles that line. It has one particular “magical” element, but passes it off as science rather than magic, but I think it could still qualify


Same-Importance1511

Anything by Nic Roeg.


Willing_Resident7594

uncut gems


aidanm018

Fanny and Alexander has ghosts in it, I’d say that’s pretty supernatural but I think I get the vibe ur after and I love movies like that too. I’d say the assassination of Jesse James by the coward Robert ford, there’s a ghostly quality to it and deals with ideas of fatalism likes something’s predetermined everything


MavMIIKE

Sorry to Bother You I feel like everything Boots Riley makes has exactly what you are looking for


BlackPantherDies

The Maiden


itna-lairepmi-reklaw

Werckmeister Harmonies feels like it could be an adaptation of a few sentences of Garcia-Marquez’s Autumn of the Patriarch


Jamminnav

Hugo (2011) Big Fish (2003) Secondhand Lions (2003)


ScreenPuzzleheaded48

Came here to say Big Fish 🥹🥹


globular916

I like Alice Rohrwacher's stuff. She came on the scene a few years ago with *Happy as Lazzaro,* which marries the matter of fact documentary view of the Taviani brothers with a gentle fabulistic spirit. Her most recent films *La pupille* and *La Chimera* (starring an impressively scuzzy Josh O'Connor) carry in this very individual vision. Rohrwacher's movies are reminiscent of Emir Kustarica's similar blend of superstition, fairytale, fable and brutal reality. *In The Time of The Gypsies* was what brought him to international acclaim, and I think his *Underground* got him a Palme d'Or. Perhaps the acme of this kind of cinema are Bela Tárr and Agnes Hravanitsky's movies, *Sátántango, Werckmeister Harmonies* and *The Turin Horse.* Turin Horse is almost Beckett's *Endgame* transposed to the Hungarian plain.


trippyhop

Eve’s Bayou


jesse_k

Arizona Dream Zero Effect Lovers of the Arctic Circle


drneilpretenamen

Miracle in Milan is more overt with its magical realism, but considering it’s from the director of Bicycle Thieves, it’s a fascinating watch.


Ajurieu

Had to scroll too far down to find this.


wariowaregoat

True Stories


ItIsShrek

Minari, A Serious Man, Lost in Translation, The Big Lebowski, From Up on Poppy Hill, Big Fish all give me a sense of magical realism. In a different direction - the Final Destination movies are also kind of this. There's always the implication of Death being an entity, but it's never explicitly shown and especially in the first couple movies the most supernatural thing that happens are the visions - which some people claim to have IRL anyway.


Tegwiin151

Mermaid (Rusalka) by Anna Melikyan from 2007. It's a Russian reimagining of The Little Mermaid with a hint of Amelie. The director put it on Vimeo free to watch too: https://vimeo.com/166428042


BezSeratonina

The Tin Drum


tier2redpowergod

Based on the list you provided I think you’re talking about metaphysical themes, which means a keyword to look for when searching for these movies will be “philosophy”


phisheclover

LA CHIMERA


AlikeWolf

Whisper of the Heart


pickybear

The Worst Person in the World is 👌👌


guaranajapa

The 2021 film?


Jaltcoh

Yes


PapaYoppa

Could The Northman count?


vibraltu

The Northman does have a kinda unsettled atmosphere. Also got The Green Knight from around the same recent-ish time... But hey, by this point we're talking more "myth" genre than "magic realism".


johnny____utah

A couple Michael Cera films: Youth in Revolt Crystal Fairy & the Magical Cactus


funnyname-n1

We're All Christs


rha409

The Natural has something going on.


TheHouseofJack

Antonia's Line


Ok-Pea-6213

Love Serenade.


skatecloud1

Wonder if Perfect Days might fit that. A meditative view on regular daily life and routines. Though it arguably isn't all a magical outlook either


reterical

Thank you for including True Detective! Lovecraftian, cosmic horror percolated throughout that season like some sulphuric swamp. Bubbling under the surface until the tension breaks and the King in Yellow manifests in a royal redneck rage. I recently rewatched it and it holds up just as well as it did a decade(!) ago.


reterical

Fargo Season 2 had a lot of that subdued supernatural to it. The Terror (AMC) is also a masterclass of magical realism.


nanojansky

*Duvidha*, Mani Kaul.


Embarrassed_Use_9130

Sisters with Transistors It’s a whimsical, genuinely magical documentary. There’s something abt that film, dude. Gives me chills thinking about it.


Lazy-Photograph-317

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button


Jackson_Celery

The Inhabitant 2022


Jackson_Celery

Angel-A


Superflumina

Drowning by Numbers


darkcity1999

Like Water for Chocolate


Chop1n

Does True Detective really count? I don't remember any magical element at all--just a sort of underlying sense of wonder and mysticism. A little Deus Ex Machina, perhaps, but the magic has to be diagetic to qualify as magical realism.


bluehawk232

Think when it was airing people were hoping it would go in a Lovecraftian direction but it didn't


Kidspud

I think it was left ambiguous. There was something about the final showdown that left me thinking it was implied, but it's been a long time since I've watched (maybe it was simply that a messed-up dude was that big/strong). At the very least, it leaned heavily on symbolism with all of the religious practices intertwined.


Chop1n

You should watch it again--I think it's one of the best series of the century, and I enjoy it more with each viewing. My takeaway was that the evil in the hearts of men is so horrific as to evoke the supernatural, but need not violate any laws of material reality to do so. Cohle is consumed and tormented by this realization, but in the end, he seems to take solace in the counter realization he, as a flesh-and-blood human being, is also capable of triumphing over such evil. This perspective was very much informed by my own encounters with the pessimistic works of Schopenhauer and Ligotti, but since Cohle is a card-carrying pessimist and renders one of the handful of pop cultural references to philosophical pessimism ever uttered, I think it agrees with the ethos of the show.


Kidspud

I think that's a great explanation of the show and 100% valid. It's the theory I lean towards as well, just because so much of the cruelty is grounded in the hearts of men: the entitlement, the hypocrisy, and the pure sadism. I'd put it about 75% towards your theory, and 25% towards supernatural interplay--3/4 is pretty good, but still with a wide berth for uncertainty.


Int_peacemaker35

Wings of Desire


Jethole

Stoker


somewordthing

[To Sleep with Anger: You Never Know What’s in the Heart](https://www.criterion.com/current/posts/6216-to-sleep-with-anger-you-never-know-whats-in-the-heart) Oh, look what site that's on.


unstuckcraw

Silent Light is a good one. If you like the work of Terrance Malick, this could be up your alley. Also, wow Mennonite communities in Mexico, who knew?


rkgk13

I know it is a "Children's Film" but A Little Princess (1995) by Alfonso Cuaron fits the bill, and is a beautiful film. Also, this movie is heartbreaking, but El Norte (1983) is wonderful and fits the bill too.


EthanMarsOragami

"Underground" (1995)


DharmaBumz1

A few people in the thread mentioned Happy as Lazarro and I just want to echo that - brilliant film and fits the request very well imo.


Vivid-Lake

Like Water for Chocolate (1992), The Red Shoes (1948), Lost Horizon (1937), and Wild Strawberries (1957).


jay_shuai

The Blue Light (1932) if u can handle watching Leni Riefenstahl.


psychanoia

“el norte”!


ZBLVM

The Legend of the Holy Drinker, Eyes Wide Shut, Mulholland Drive, Inland Empire


cherken4

Great beauty


abenf

Is that what magical realism is? I always thought it was stories like 100 Years of Solitude where actual magic/fantastical shit is injected into realism. For that genre I like: Some Guillermo Del Toro movies, I think especially Cronos (1993) and Pinocchio (2022). Some Coen Bros. movies, specifically Raising Arizona (1986) and O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2001) with cases to be made for Barton Fink (1991) and No Country for Old Men (2007) (are the villains supernatural?). Amarcord (1974). Babe: Pig in the City (1998). Love Lies Bleeding (2024). The Ninth Gate (1999). Paddington 2 (2018). The Fall (2008) (sort of). Kiki’s Delivery Service (1998) (not really, but vibes).


darkbatcrusader

You're right about what Magic Realism actually technically denotes. The "realism" part isn't necessarily meant to mean ambiguous as to whether it's "fantastical", or covert (it can be and often is!), it just means it's a straight up, matter-of-fact component and is grounded in a narrative context of realistic and mundane human conditions. OP's description isn't a catch-all for all of the genre, even if I think I know what they're looking for (surrealist-bent, visual metaphors, heavy mood). Like, I wouldn't call True Detective Magic Realism, but it is Southern Gothic, which *can* also involve Magic Realism. Genre is fluid af anyway, these things blend together. Cool selection you got there though! Recently saw Love Lies Bleeding and loved it.


just2good

We Go Way Back by Lynn Shelton (RIP QUEEN)


grantradke1982

"The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" Not a perfect movie or anything, but I love the journey he takes living his unique existence. It's like he's living in the normal world but also outside of it, able to see the world in a different way than everybody else. This is David Fincher doing a fantasy movie and I love it!


godlessheathen420

Bridge to Terabithia.


23rst

Stalker


CursedPangolin

Haven't seen Yi Yi on here but I'd argue that it fits pretty neatly


SokkaHaikuBot

^[Sokka-Haiku](https://www.reddit.com/r/SokkaHaikuBot/comments/15kyv9r/what_is_a_sokka_haiku/) ^by ^CursedPangolin: *Haven't seen Yi Yi* *On here but I'd argue that* *It fits pretty neatly* --- ^Remember ^that ^one ^time ^Sokka ^accidentally ^used ^an ^extra ^syllable ^in ^that ^Haiku ^Battle ^in ^Ba ^Sing ^Se? ^That ^was ^a ^Sokka ^Haiku ^and ^you ^just ^made ^one.


LiquidComedian

Panic at hanging rock


Awkward-Lynx

Youth Without Youth (2007)


soobawls

The Science of Sleep Being John Malkovich I’m Thinking of Ending Things Paprika (most films by Gondry or Kaufman tbh)


Nimanzer

Embrace of the Serpent


Low-Regular1572

Buñuel's filmography! I'm also a huge fan of magical realism and I seek it in movies, but it's easier to find books in this genre.


ariadis27

Sympathy for Lady Vengeance


seanbeansnumber3fan

The Fisher King


Jacoblaloyd

I think The Fits is a very underrated/underseen example of this! I've been building a list on letterboxd for years, that I think is exactly what you're talking about. Moments of Magical Realism https://boxd.it/2puL6


Davidudeman

The Prestige!!! the use of Tesla’s technology is really cool in a magic setting


tinfoyle

The Jeff Nichols movie Take Shelter has some of the vibes of True Detective season 1. Great movie on its own and Michael Shannon is amazing in it and generally has this very ambiguous tone that by the end had me wondering about the forces at work, if any, as much as the characters.


RRLSonglian

Petit Maman


LauraPalmersMom430

- Kajillionaire - Memoria - The Swimmer


CultureDTCTV

Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives (2010) Burning (2018) Stalker (1979) The Seventh Seal (1957) Lost Highway (1997) Paprika (2006) Spirited Away (2001) Videodrome (1983) Kaili Blues (2018) Not a film but Twin Peaks definitely


TimidKitten1981

_ Lovers of the Artic Circle (1998) by Julio Médem _ The Sacrifice (1986) by Andrei Tarkovsky _ Heaven Before I Die (1997) by Izidore Musallam _ Cold Dog Soup (1990) by Alan Metter _ Black Swan (2010) by Darren Aronofsky


Sebasapolo1

El Norte (1983)


peacefinder

*Stardust* (2007) *MirrorMask* (2005) Or really any other project involving Neil Gaiman. (*American Gods*, *Good Omems*…)


No-Bumblebee4615

Caché though it’s left up to interpretation.


Viv-2020

'Midnight in Paris' (2011)


worstpopcorn

Sorry To Bother You