Director: David O. Russell
The gold standard of 21st-century dramedy. A family of lovable failures—a suicidal Proust scholar, a silent Nietzsche-reading teen, a motivational-speaker fraud, a heroin-snorting grandpa—cram into a yellow VW bus to drive a little girl to a child beauty pageant. Every beat is both hysterically awkward and painfully honest. The climactic pageant number, where Olive performs a stripper routine to “Super Freak” while her family storms the stage in her defense, is the genre’s perfect thesis: We are broken, we are ridiculous, and we will fight for each other anyway. best dramedy movies
Most teen movies choose: raunchy comedy or weepy melodrama. This one chooses both, and nails it. Hailee Steinfeld’s Nadine is the dramedy heroine we deserve: deeply self-absorbed, profoundly lonely, and genuinely hilarious in her misery. When her only friend starts dating her older brother, her spiral includes a panic-text to her crush (“I want to die. But also I want to finish my homework.”) and a raw kitchen-table breakdown with her mom. It’s the rare film that respects adolescent pain as real pain, while never losing sight of how absurd that pain can look from two inches away. Director: David O
Directors: Valerie Faris & Jonathan Dayton Every beat is both hysterically awkward and painfully honest