The senior US critic for Screen International, Tim has written for the magazine since 2005. Based in Los Angeles, he also contributes to New Republic, Rolling Stone, Backstage and Popular Mechanics.

tim greierson

More Screen critics’ top films of 2015

Top Five

  1. Anomalisa
    Dirs
    Charlie Kaufman, Duke Johnson

    Like Wes Anderson, Charlie Kaufman makes films with such a delicate, intricate eye that they transform ordinary life into something extraordinary. So it’s no surprise that, as with Anderson, Kaufman’s strongest work finds him eschewing live action for the handmade beauty of stop-motion animation. Anomalisa takes as its subject the crushing normalcy of corporate life, following the fragile love affair between a motivational speaker and a bashful office worker. The inventiveness of Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind is on full display, but this nervous romance feels even more resigned and melancholy about the chronic dissatisfaction that’s inseparable from being a thinking, feeling person.

    CONTACT Hanway Films jls@hanwayfilms.com

  2. Experimenter
    Dir Michael Almereyda
    CONTACT Bleiberg Entertainment sales@bleibergent.com

  3. The Lobster
    Dir
    Yorgos Lanthimos
    CONTACT Protagonist Pictures vanessa@protagonistpictures.com

  4. Cemetery Of Splendour
    Dir
    Apichatpong Weerasethakul
    CONTACT The Match Factory info@matchfactory.de

  5. The End Of The Tour
    Dir James Ponsoldt
    CONTACT Fortitude International  info@fortitudeint.com

Best Documentary

terror

(T)error
Dirs
Lyric R Cabral, David Felix Sutcliffe

If Citizenfour wasn’t despairing enough, (T)error drives home the madness of the US’s War on Terror. This twisty investigative exposé chronicles an FBI informant assigned to befriend a militant Muslim. The deeper (T)error digs, the more insidious the findings, and the less secure you feel.

CONTACT Ro*co Films  annie@rocofilms.com

Best UK Film

the lobster

The Lobster
Dir
Yorgos Lanthimos

Love is a many-splendoured thing — except in the hands of Lanthimos, who has fashioned a wickedly dark look at a society in which single people have to find mates lest they be turned into animals. The Lobsteringeniously takes aim at the ways societal conformity around relationships keep us from happiness.

CONTACT Protagonist Pictures vanessa@protagonistpictures.com

Undiscovered Gem

The Devil's Candy

The Devil’s Candy
Dir
Sean Byrne

Byrne follows up his cult horror The Loved Ones with this richer, more emotional thriller about an artist who moves into a home that once housed a psychopath. Think The Shining set in the wide-open stretches of Texas.

CONTACT HanWay Films info@hanwayfilms.com

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