The Verge’s favorite books from 2024

Verge FavoritesOur staff writes about the best books they read over the course of the year.When it comes to entertainment and education, we can choose from podcasts, videos, games, live performances, or books, one of the oldest and still most popular ways to learn something new or escape (at least temporarily) from today’s troubled world. We asked the staff of The Verge what their favorite reads were in 2024. Their answers ranged from fantasy and science fiction to histories of engineering and clothing to autobiographies, insights on body image, and more.Read on, and see if there’s anything here that you want to check out during the holidays.Barbara Krasnoff, reviews editorWhen recommending novels, I usually try to go with those that come from independent presses or that aren’t on anyone’s bestseller list because there are so many books and authors that don’t get the attention they deserve. However, this year, I’ve gone against my usual habit and chosen two books that are popular and publicized retakes of well-known tales, simply because I could not put either down.James is an incredibly intelligent and insightful retelling of Mark Twain’s Adventures of Huckleberry Finn from the point of view of the boy’s companion, the enslaved man named Jim. And The Bright Sword is a fantastic (in both senses of the word) retelling of the mythos of King Arthur that takes place just after Arthur’s death, from the viewpoint of a neglected young man who defies the class system to become a knight. Both books are not only extraordinarily well written but also bring new and unexpected insights into tales that have been so microscopically examined over the years that you’d think there was nothing new to add. But in the case of both of these books, you’d be wrong. A skillful retelling of Mark Twain’s Adventures of Huckleberry Finn from the point of view of the enslaved man Jim.A fantastic (in both senses of the word) retelling of the mythos of King Arthur that takes place just after Arthur’s death.Kara Verlaney, managing editor Like most millennials, I grew up on a steady diet of daytime Food Network shows when I stayed home from school. Barefoot Contessa was always my number one. There was some form of procedural satisfaction about watching as this grandmotherly hostess spent hours, seemingly effortlessly, preparing a meal for a 20-person gathering, only to wistfully sigh, smile, and never enjoy the fruits of her own labor. So when I heard the Barefoot Contessa Ina Garten was writing a memoir, I knew I was already bought in. I’ll put it plainly: this book is perplexing. From her previous stint as a US nuclear budget analyst to learning how to fly planes to five entire chapters about how she wanted to decorate her Paris apartment, it’s a memoir that will have you constantly asking yourself, “Is this lady for real?” (There is a lot of “quiet money” as an explanation for her various achievements.) It’s a trip!I listened to the audiobook (she narrates), and hearing her lilting, peaceful voice talk about her rough childhood, relationship with her fan-favorite investment banker husband Jeffrey, and her (at the time) radical decision to not have children reminded me that we’re all human and all experience life’s trials. Ina just has the unique ability to make it all look like luck. A memoir of a fascinating life by the host of Barefoot Contessa. Andrew Liszewski, senior reporterBill Hammack is a professor of engineering who is better known as “engineerguy” on YouTube, where, for years, he’s shared compelling videos breaking down the complex engineering of seemingly simple items we often take for granted. Think diapers, soda cans, and duct tape. His book, The Things We Make, does the same thing but provides more in-depth looks at the engineering behind ancient marvels like medieval cathedrals. It’s worth a read just to learn how the microwave was created and eventually found its way into the average home. Bill Hammack provides in-depth looks at the engineering behind ancient marvels like medieval cathedrals. Kristen Radtke, creative directorThis deranged collection of linked stories is so preposterously good that I’ve read lines from it out loud to friends at dinner parties, on the subway, and once, in a public sauna. In this viscerally uncomfortable, laugh-out-loud, straight-up gorgeous book, Tulathimutte scrapes bare the corners of the internet and (forgive me) the contours of the human heart so piercingly that reading it is like a long-range emotional endurance exercise. I can’t stop thinking about it or talking about it. Disclosure: the author is my friend, but that doesn’t mean he’s not a genius. Buy a copy for yourself and for your weirdest, smartest pal. A preposterously good collection of linked stories.Allison Johnson, reviewerThis will surprise nobody: Midnight in Chernobyl is not an uplifting read. But it is meticulously well reported and an incredibly comprehensive look at the Chernobyl disaster, from the inception of the nuclear power plant to the aftermath visited on generations of people affected by its explosion. It’s all very matter-of-fact but recounts the events before, during, and after the disaster with remarkable humanity and places it all in the broader context of Soviet corruption without ever feeling like a history textbook. It is a thick book, and I could not put it down.On a lighter note, I also picked up St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves, an older collection of short stories from Karen Russell. The way she can just punch you in the guts with a sentence is unfair. The stories mostly feature kids in those awkward middle school-ish / early teen years, and they’re a little (or a lot) surreal. There’s a sleepaway camp for kids with sleeping disorders, a seaside formation of giant conch shells that might be haunted, and the titular home for girls raised by wolves, which is what it says on the tin. It makes you remember how hard it is to be growing up and more than once cracked my heart right open. A meticulously well reported and incredibly comprehensive look at the Chernobyl disaster.Stories that feature kids in those awkward middle school-ish / early teen years and which are a little (or a lot) surreal.Victoria Song, senior reviewerI read a lot of books this year, but these three stuck out because they made me think a lot about perspective. Notes on an Execution is the story of a serial killer on death row, narrated by both himself and three women whose lives he upended: his mother, his wife’s sister, and the detective chasing him down. The Travelling Cat Chronicles is told from the point of view of Nana, a sassy stray cat, as he accompanies his adopted human Satoru across Japan, trying to figure out why Satoru needs to rehome him. (Warning: you might want a tissue box if you’re a cat owner.) Meanwhile, The Memory Police is a dystopian story of a small island in which the government can make certain people’s memories of objects and things disappear at will — and one person’s choice to hide a friend who can still remember things they shouldn’t. (Its vibe is like The Giver by Lois Lowry, but make it Japanese.)  They’re all different books, but I’ve been thinking about them all year because they deftly dig into why we make the choices we do — and how those choices are viewed and felt by the people around us. Each book made me look in the mirror and think about the sort of person I am and who I want to be. I think that’s the best kind of fiction, really. The story of a serial killer on death row, narrated by both himself and three women whose lives he upended. Told from the point of view of Nana, a sassy stray cat, as he accompanies his adopted human Satoru across Japan.A dystopian story of a small island in which the government can make certain people’s memories of objects and things disappear at will.Kate Cox, senior producerMy only regret about reading The Steerswoman (and its three sequels) this year is that I did not read it 30 years ago — this book would absolutely have become a formative part of my personal adolescent canon.The best way I can describe the Steerswomen is as a wandering order of largely female natural philosophers. They observe, deduce, test, and share knowledge in a slow-motion, preindustrial world, and the way Kirstein lays out her prose and her characters encourages the same in the reader. Several times during the series, I formed conclusions that were not borne out by the evidence and had to discard them — and did not mind doing so because that was just… part of the process. I read a lot of genre fiction, and I love a slow burn, so The Steerswoman fits the brief. But also I admire Kirstein’s respect for the intelligence and wit of both her characters and her readers; she brings you along on the journey and trusts you to understand the people you’re journeying with. Despite starting the series 35 years ago, she’s still slowly adding to it, and to say I am looking forward to a fifth installment in coming years is a massive understatement. I will preorder and devour it when another book comes along. A wandering order of largely female natural philosophers observe, deduce, test, and share knowledge in a slow-motion, preindustrial world.Mia Sato, features reporter Look, I love clothes. I research them, I buy them, I even make them. Fashion is an essential part of how we express ourselves and our ideas (if you don’t trust me, ask Steve Jobs). But the journey of how our fashion gets to us is purposely opaque, because the truth is far more upsetting than many of us are ready for — especially in this era of ultrafast, dirt-cheap clothing.Sofi Thanhauser’s 2022 book is a pickax to this wall of secrecy. She traces the hidden history and costs of five types of textiles — linen, cotton, silk, synthetics, and wool — in this deeply reported work. Thanhauser travels to locales like China to learn from the last producer of ancient silk; to the North Carolina town where textile mill workers staged large-scale strikes in the 1920s; and to Northern England, where conservation groups are protecting local sheep biodiversity. This book isn’t just for fashion people (though they should be the first to read it); it’s for anyone curious about the labor that goes into the luxuries they take for granted. You will never look at a T-shirt the same way again. Traces the hidden history and costs of five types of textiles — linen, cotton, silk, synthetics, and wool — in this deeply reported work.Cath Virginia, senior designerAs someone who is, more often than not, the fattest person in the room, it’s no surprise that I have struggled a lot with my body image and self-worth. That, on top of the guilt over feeling bad about feeling bad, ends up compounding like the interest on my student loans (and because “body positivity” feels like a pipe dream to a girl whose mind is riddled with body dysmorphic brain worms). Enter Jessi Kneeland, a former personal trainer turned body image coach, whose central thesis revolves around the notion that our body image issues are always a symptom of a larger and more complicated internal conflict. Through this, they share insight on how to identify the true source of a person’s body image issues as well as clearly outlined steps on what to do about it. “Life-changing” is an understatement.Ta-Nehisi Coates’ latest book is an exploration of the concept of storytelling, told through a series of essays centered around three different locations. Dakar, Senegal, a historic site of the transatlantic slave trade; Columbia, South Carolina, where a school teacher fights an attempted banning of Coates’ own book; and finally, Palestine, where he spends a few days in May 2023 observing the stark contrasts between life in Gaza and Israel. It left me with a sense of optimism (or maybe blind faith?) that despite how hopeless the present moment can feel, our collective imaginations are ever shifting toward something better than before. A former personal trainer turned body image coach explains the notion that our body image issues are always a symptom of a larger and more complicated internal conflict. An exploration of the concept of storytelling, told through a series of essays centered around three different locations: Dakar, Senegal; Columbia, South Carolina; and Palestine.

The Best New Netflix Christmas Movie Isn’t What You’d Think

It is currently Christmas Eve Eve, and family may already be starting to arrive for the holiday. As much as we’d all like to believe that family get-togethers over the holidays are all baking cookies and singing Christmas carols, there is certainly going to be enough downtime where you’re going to want to throw on a movie at some point. And with Netflix being the most common streaming service of choice, you have some options.

However, I’m going to recommend one Netflix Christmas movie more than others, and no, it’s not Hot Frosty or any of the ones starring Lindsay Lohan. It’s PG-13 so you’ll want to send the younger kids to bed as it does get uh, pretty violent. It’s Carry-On, currently the #1 movie on Netflix and for good reason, it’s excellent.

We are of course stretching the bounds of what a Christmas movie technically is here, but Carry-On is a Christmas movie in the same sense that Die Hard is a Christmas movie, the subject of eternal debate. Believe me, I am not saying that Carry-On is as good as Die Hard, it isn’t, nor is star Taron Egerton as good as Bruce Willis, he isn’t. But this is a very watchable, surprisingly good thriller that takes place over Christmas Eve, with a TSA agent being blackmailed on the busiest day of the year to let some sort of extremely dangerous package through security.

Carry-OnNetflix
In truth, Netflix does not have that many good Christmas movies. A lot of the classics are on other streaming services and its Christmas library is mostly full of a bunch of Hallmark-original type “girl returns to her small hometown and finds love” movies. They’re…not great, though of course there remains a huge market for that kind of thing. But Carry-On is both new and also something that your family probably has not watched yet, given that it’s so new. Again, I’ll caution about some violence here, as it stretches its PG-13 rating a bit in that direction. But no nudity, no f-bombs.

Carry-On has been sitting on top of Netflix’s Top 10 list for quite some time now, raising questions about a possible sequel. It does not exactly seem designed for one, but hey, I guess Die Hard wasn’t either. That said, the name might make much sense as how many action thriller plotlines can you design around the concept of a dangerous carry-on bag.

Watch this with the family. Well, some of the family. Teens and parents and grandparents alike have a good shot of liking it.
Follow me on Twitter, YouTube, Bluesky and Instagram.

Pick up my sci-fi novels the Herokiller series and The Earthborn Trilogy.

Blake Lively’s ‘Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants’ co-stars support her after Justin Baldoni claims

Blake Lively’s sisters have her back.

“Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants” stars America Ferrera, Amber Tamblyn and Alexis Bledel released a statement on Sunday supporting Lively, 37, after she accused her “It Ends With Us” co-star Justin Baldoni of sexual harassment and mounting a smear campaign against her.

Alexis Bledel, Amber Tamblyn, America Ferrera and Blake Lively. Marion Curtis/StarPix for Warner Bros / Shutterstock

“As Blake’s friends and sisters for over 20 years, we stand with her in solidarity as she fights back against the reported campaign waged to destroy her reputation,” began the joint statement.

“Throughout the filming of ‘It Ends With Us,’ we saw her summon the courage to ask for a safe workplace for herself and colleagues on set, and we are appalled to read the evidence of a premeditated and vindictive effort that ensued to discredit her voice,” Lively’s “Sisterhood” co-stars continued. “Most upsetting is the unabashed exploitation of domestic violence survivors’ stories to silence a woman who asked for safety. The hypocrisy is astounding.”

Statement from America Ferrera, Amber Tamblyn and Alexis Bledel. Instagram/amberrosetamblyn

Explore More

Statement from America Ferrera, Amber Tamblyn and Alexis Bledel. Instagram/amberrosetamblyn

The trio went on, “We are struck by the reality that even if a woman is as strong, celebrated and resourced as our friend Blake, she can face forceful retaliation for daring to ask for a safe working environment. We are inspired by our sister’s courage to stand up for herself and others.”

Blake Lively, America Ferrera, Amber Tamblyn and Alexis Bledel in “Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants.” Warner Brothers/courtesy Everett Collection

The message was signed by Ferrera, 40, Tamblyn, 41, and Bledel, 43. The post was shared on Ferrera and Tamblyn’s Instagram pages. Bledel does not have an Instagram account.

The three actresses worked with Lively on the 2005 film about four best friends who all fit into the same pair of jeans. They also starred in the 2008 sequel.

Amber Tamblyn, Blake Lively, America Ferrera, Alexis Bledel.

On Friday, Lively filed a complaint in California with claims of Baldoni’s alleged misconduct on the set of the film. Baldoni, 40, directed the film, while Lively served as one of the producers.

Lively alleged that “things got so bad during filming, there was an all-hands-on-deck meeting to address what she claims was a hostile work environment.”

Justin Baldoni and Blake Lively filming “It Ends With Us.” Christopher Peterson / SplashNews.com

As part of the tense sit-down, Lively and her husband, Ryan Reynolds, who attended the meeting, demanded there would be “no more showing nude videos or images of women to Lively, no more mention of Baldoni’s alleged previous ‘pornography addiction,’ and no more discussions about sexual conquests in front of Lively.”

They further stipulated that Baldoni “should not make inquiries about Lively’s weight” and make “no further mention of her dead father.”

Justin Baldoni on “Today.” Nathan Congleton/NBC via Getty Images

Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni in “It Ends With Us.” ©Sony Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection

The complaint also claimed that Baldoni and his allies “engaged in a ‘social manipulation’ campaign to ‘destroy’ her reputation.”

As evidence, the “Gossip Girl” alum included texts from Baldoni’s publicist to a studio publicist saying the actor “wants to feel like [Ms. Lively] can be buried.”

Blake Lively at the “It Ends With Us” premiere in New York on Aug. 6. Erik Pendzich/Shutterstock

Baldoni has been dropped by his talent agency WME in the wake of Lively’s complaint.

In a statement to The Post, Baldoni’s lawyer, Bryan Freedman, said, “It is shameful that Ms. Lively and her representatives would make such serious and categorically false accusations against Mr. Baldoni, Wayfarer Studios and its representatives, as yet another desperate attempt to ‘fix’ her negative reputation.”

When “It Ends With Us” came out in August, rumors swirled of a feud between Lively and Baldoni, who refused to appear together to promote the flick.

Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni in “It Ends With Us.” Sony Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection

Lively also suffered a barrage of bad publicity upon the movie’s release. She was criticized for how she promoted the domestic violence theme of the film and was even dubbed a “mean girl” after a journalist’s old interview with the actress went viral on social media.

After filling the complaint against Baldoni, Lively received support from Colleen Hoover, who wrote the romance novel that the film is based on.

Blake Lively at the UK premiere of “It Ends With Us” on Aug. 8. Scott A Garfitt/Invision/AP

“You have been nothing but honest, kind, supportive and patient since the day we met,” Hoover, 45, wrote in a message to Lively on Instagram.

“Thank you for being exactly the human that you are. Never change. Never wilt,” the author added.

Lively’s sister, actress Robyn Lively, has also publicly supported her. “FINALLY justice for my sister @blakelively,” Robyn, 52, posted on her Instagram Story Saturday.

Blake’s brother-in-law and Robyn’s husband, actor Bart Johnson, also posted about the lawsuit.

“Her complaints were filed during the filming. On record. Long before the public conflict. The cast unfollowed him for a reason,” Johnson, 54, alleged in the comments section of the New York Times’ Instagram on Saturday. “Read this article before spiting [sic] ignorance.”

Nearly 90,000 visitors attend Hyderabad Book Fair 2024 in a day

Hyderabad: Nearly 90,000 visitors attended the 37th Hyderabad Book Fair at NTR Stadium on Sunday, December 22 nearly doubling the usual daily footfall. The fair running until December 29 from 12 noon to 9 pm features over 330 stalls with a diverse selection of books ranging from classics to the latest releases catering to all age groups. Around 210 publishers and suppliers from across the country, including prominent names like Telugu Academy, Navchethana, Nava Telangana, Navodaya, Emesco, Telugu Books, Sage, Penguin, and the Human Rights Forum, are offering their latest titles and editions at discounted prices. In addition to the book displays, the fair also hosts literary events including guest sessions with renowned authors and poets, debates, book launches, and cultural performances. Revanth Reddy highlights importance of reading books at Hyderabad Book Fair Speaking at the inauguration of the book fair in Hyderabad, CM Revanth Reddy highlighted how the increase in the use of technological knowledge and digital media is reducing the importance of books and book reading. “Organizing such a big Hyderabad Book Fair will inspire the next generation to read books. We can give a good message to future generations by studying history.” “The state government is committed to promoting the Book Fair,” added Reddy. “The new generation knows only Google. Reading the books, written by Historians, will help the readers to know the unsung heroes. We will know only when historians write about those who died in the struggle,” concluded Revanth.

Ogeechee Tech’s President’s List and Honor List for 2024 Fall Semester

The hard work and determination of a number of Ogeechee Technical College students was demonstrated recently as they were named to the College’s President’s List and Honor list for the 2024 Fall Semester. Students must be enrolled full-time (12 or more credit hours) to be considered for inclusion in the President’s or Honor Roll lists.

The following 140 Ogeechee Technical College students were listed on the President’s List (achieved a 4.0 Grade Point Average) for the Fall Semester:

Lily AllenAlexis AndrewsCallee AutryMarcie AycockAshton BanksEben BanksNatalie BassCallie BealWanda BlackPhoebe BranchKaleb BurnettEllie Grace CanterPrecious CarswellAlexis CarterKinlee CarterTaylor ChadwellKenneth CheekMadeline CliftonTanner CollinsNicole CostleyMaura CothernJonathan CovingtonGeorgia CraneLauren CriderSusanna DorhamZachary DoyleMagaly EnriquezQuenstaysha EverettTyrique FannChad FeasterLogan FlandersAshley FordHadalee GarvinAnalizeth Gonzalez-VenturMorgan Green

Patrick GrumbarDanny HammondAnnalise HansonGabrielle HardawayJustin HardyPria HarmonSophie HayesJackson HeathJose Hernandez-MartiSpencer HinsonPrescott HopeJustin HowellRobert JacksonLillian JarrielAssata JohnsonDavid JohnsonJamia JohnsonJustus JonesRyan JonesDaysia JordanMitra KavoosiAmie KeenAbraham KeterJaylen LanierMadison LanierAlyssa LawsonGeorgia LedfordWilliam LenoxKensley LittleLizbeth LopezJoshua MabryDario MancillasCole MarinoErin MartinCristian Mata

Emma MathisMakayla McAlpinAva McNallyHannah McQueenBrittany MeadowsJael MeythalerMadison MilesTaylor MillerVictoria MillerVictoria MockDaniela Moreno AnguloJoleigh NeaseMadison NewtonSamantha NiggCharles OglesbyAshlyn PageJacob ParkerJose ParraSonya PenningtonAddison PlattCalli PriceElizabeth Rector-HagerAustin RedmanGiovani Reyes GonzalezTabitha ReynoldsLauren RhoneyMadeline RickardJasmine RobinsonJackson RushingEvamarie SackAlexis SchwartzShelbi ShelarRickayla SlaterAleah Smith Rhema Smith

Zachary SmithSierra SpellFaith StewartGenevieve StokesJasper StoneBranden SwabyAlexus TannerBeatriz Tapia-CastañoAbigail TapleyDavid TaylorAbbi ThomasBrannen ThompsonDixie ThrasherEmily UtreraJoseph VanhornGabriella VanikElizabeth Vasquez HernandNayeli Ventura-MiguelDana VoBenjamin WarrenKatelyn WatersMichael WatersMakayla WebbAnnetta WellsJanice WestAden WhitleyMarissa WilcoxNoah WilkesHanna WilliamsAshton WilliamsonNatalie WillisZachary WoodsJose YanezTyler ZeiglerEmile Zimmerman

In addition, these 177 students were named to Ogeechee Tech’s Honor List (achieved a 3.5-3.99 Grade Point Average) for the Fall Semester:

Audrey AbercrombieKadie AguileraMirrissa ArdolinoBritton BaggarlyLiani BarnwellKelsey BeardenAlyssa BeasleyDeja BeasleyKayla BellRylan BlackCourtney BoswellJohn BraggKendall BraggThomas BrooksDustin BrousseauLogan BrownKelsey BrundageBreanna BryanMisty BurnsedGage CaldwellLeonel Cerro-MontoyaJulie CliffordDebra CliftonJames CliftonTaylor CliftonHeather CollinsJake CollinsMary ConnerGabrielle CravenArianna CrumpackerJulian CutterDylan D’alessioMarley DavisAvery DemetreeMichael DollarMackenzie DowellNicolas DudleyTanner DunlavyMatthew DurrenceDana DychesHailey DychesHannah EdmundIthai EsquivelAudrey Fail

Daniel FergusonAnne FoderaChristopher ForemanAdeline GaloJennifer GaskillKatrina GaskinRobert GayJeremiah GilmoreRaylee GladdenStephanie GranstromCharlotte GreenVictoria GreenbaumMeagan GreenwayJordan GreshamAlaye GriffinCynthia GuerraJoseph HallTremal HallCaitlyn HammockCadence HankinsSydney HerrinMckayla HewlingsGarrett HickmanToni HillShelby HodgesKeenan HoechtEmelia HoldenWarren HollandKaleb HollyBradley HoopesJohnathan HostiNnenna IkeQuincy JacksonRatajasha JacobsMason JohnsLaportia JohnsonNathan JohnsonAlyshia JonesBennett JonesNyia JonesRyan KennedyIsaiah KeyPeyton KirbyGauge Kirkland

Madison KirklandBrooklyn KramerDavid LaGuardiaJoey LaferteHannah LariscyKhadaliah LeeSophia LewisAlyssa LongfellowAlyssa LongfellowJoshua LorelloCorey LoveBrianna LucasJackson MallardTyler MarinoKanava MartinKristerfer MartinLyhan Martinez-RodrigCorey MathewsonNicholas MayMikayla McDonoughRachel McIntoshJesse McLendonMarlene MejoradoLuis MelendezRebecca MeredithBrittany MilteerNoah MontgomeryJaidyn MoodyShelby MoodyCaleb MorganPaul MorganSierra NapierTaylor NelsonEduardo NunezAbby OliverChristopher OrtegaTeresa PhamTotenna PitonIsabella PollockKenrickea PollockThomas PoteetTara ReimuthGladys ReyesAngela Rice

Cody RichardsonJoshua RichardsonKaitlyn RichardsonRyan RichardsonAujhanna RiggsMaggie RobersonJa’Nyah RobinsonDanisa RossTiffany RuffinMacy RushAdelind SandersBradley SappCatherine SchroederAmanda ScottCarson SmithCourtney SmithJordyn SmithGavin SmitheyAbigail SosaTasia StargelJacey StewartJemiah StewartMegan StewartNyla StewartCarolyn StocktonLucy StutevilleHannah SwintAbigail TaylorHaley TaylorErmelinda Torres-RodrigueCain TurnerGift Udoro BugnaHannah Van MeterMarrionnee WadeMa’rionna WalkerJohn WallaceLataznia WashingtonKelsie WhiteAnna WilliamsSarah WilsonViviana WisdomDeacon WoodcockAnthony WuYuxin WuChristopher Zipperer
Advertisements

The 10 Best Films of 2024

Roe McDermott selects her top ten movies of 2024.
1. The Zone Of Interest
Jonathan Glazer’s The Zone Of Interest is a chilling meditation on the banality of evil, a haunting exploration of the Holocaust from an unsettlingly intimate perspective. Based on Martin Amis’ novel, the film focuses on Rudolf Höss (Christian Friedel), the commandant of Auschwitz, and his family, who live in a dream home just yards from the horrors of the concentration camp. Glazer’s bold decision to depict this story through the lens of the perpetrators, rather than the victims, creates a dissonance that is both unnerving and thought-provoking.
The film’s cold, meticulous framing mirrors the emotional distance of the Höss family, who continue their bourgeois, seemingly normal lives while genocide unfolds just beyond their walls. Through sound and visual cues, Glazer draws a powerful contrast between the domestic comforts of the Höss home and the atrocities just outside.
The subtle, horrifying detail – the children playing with stolen gold teeth, a Jewish victim’s lipstick purloined and used, the family’s casual proximity to murder – are made all the more disturbing by the sterilised way they are portrayed in Glazer’s unforgettable film.
2. All Of Us Strangers
Advertisement

Andrew Haigh’s All Of Us Strangers weaves a haunting, otherworldly atmosphere from its opening moments, where golden light pours through the windows of an eerie, almost desolate apartment building. The building feels untethered from time, inhabited by only two residents – Adam (Andrew Scott) and Harry (Paul Mescal) – setting the stage for a tale where the supernatural is palpable, yet intimately human.
Haigh’s trademark exploration of relationships and intimacy takes a fantastical turn as Adam, a screenwriter struggling with grief, begins revisiting the house of his deceased parents, who have mysteriously returned to the age they were when they died. Based loosely on Taichi Yamada’s 1987 novel Strangers, the film is a delicate meditation on loss, generational trauma, and the longing for connection.
The performances are extraordinary, and Haigh’s careful direction and minimalistic approach make All Of Us Strangers an emotionally rich exploration of love, grief and the need for closure.
All Of Us Strangers
3. Poor Things
Yorgos Lanthimos’ Poor Things is a deliriously bizarre odyssey that blends the grotesque with the whimsical, marking the director’s most thrilling and audacious work to date. Set in Victorian London, the film centres on Bella Baxter (Emma Stone), a young woman brought back to life by a mad scientist, Dr. Godwin Baxter (Willem Dafoe).
Advertisement

Initially behaving like a toddler, Bella embarks on a journey of self-discovery and sexual liberation, navigating a world of eccentric characters and absurd situations, from passionate affairs to an eye-opening world tour. The film is a visual feast, with cinematography by Robbie Ryan that transforms from grainy black-and-white to lush colour, symbolising Bella’s growth. Lanthimos’ signature style – depicting extreme behaviours in pristine settings – is on full display, creating a world where decorum and chaos collide.
The screenplay, adapted by Tony McNamara, crackles with sharp, rhythmic dialogue, reflecting Bella’s intellectual blossoming as she breaks free from patriarchal control. Exquisite costume and production design further enrich the film’s surreal world, making Poor Things a visually stunning exploration of identity, freedom and transformation.
4. The Substance
A daring, audacious and darkly funny exploration of misogyny and ageism against women, Coralie Fargeat’s body horror The Substance stars Demi Moore, in a role that references her own struggles with having her age and appearance decimated by the media over her career.
Moore plays Elisabeth Sparkle, a Hollywood actress-turned-aerobics workout host, who is breathtakingly beautiful – but she’s over 50, which to network managers, makes her irrelevant.
Elisabeth fears fading into obscurity and takes some desperate measures in the form of The Substance, a neon-green, injectable body enhancement programme that births a more perfect version of herself – ie. younger, tauter and slimmer. The two must trade off every week, but when the young replacement Sue (Maragaret Qualley) starts rebelling, things go disgustingly, horrifically wrong.
The rivalry between Elisabeth and Sue has echoes of Showgirls, and there’s a camp, late ’80s flair to the styling, which is all neon spandex and coiffed hair. And the body horror is wonderfully, outrageously grotesque, with grisly violence, and an audacious final act that is monstrous and hilarious in equal measure.
Advertisement

5. I Saw The TV Glow
Queer filmmaker Jane Schoenbrun directs this incredible film that exists between reality, dreams and nightmares, using ’90s nostalgia to capture the struggle of two characters desperately trying to survive Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell-era American suburbia. While holding a powerful trans allegory, all fans of cinema should appreciate the beauty, artistry and deep emotion of I Saw The TV Glow.
Students Maddy and Owen feel unable to find recognition in the people around them, and instead gravitate towards Pink Opaque, a kitschy and unnerving TV show in the vein of Buffy, Goosebumps and Are You Afraid Of The Dark? Shot in flared neon where pauses are long, fantastical imagery flashes, details are slightly off and TV static sometimes radiates from Maddy and Owen’s bodies, I Saw The TV Glow sinks its teeth into your subconscious.
Haunting, beautiful, audacious and utterly intoxicating, I Saw The TV Glow will suck you right in.
I Saw The TV Glow
6. Anora
Advertisement

Sean Baker’s Anora is a spirited, emotional rollercoaster that captures the gritty heart of New York City, blending comedy with the raw edges of tragedy in a way only he can. At first glance, the film plays out like an uproarious screwball comedy, filled with vibrant set-pieces and wise-cracking characters.
But beneath its playful surface lies a chilling examination of survival, class and exploitation. Mikey Madison stars as Ani (short for Anora), a Russian-American escort who navigates her life with resilience and humour. Initially, she’s content with her transactional relationships, until she meets Ivan (Mark Eydelshteyn), the charming motormouth son of a Russian oligarch. Their whirlwind romance, full of extravagant shopping sprees and lavish parties, eventually turns darker when Ivan’s family forces their marriage into jeopardy.
Baker’s expert direction and exquisite casting shine, especially with Madison’s commanding performance. She brings Ani to life with a mix of toughness and vulnerability, embodying the complexity of a woman who refuses to be a victim. Anora is both thrilling and heartbreaking, a film that hums with the energy of life, while never ignoring the profound sadness lurking beneath.
7. KNEECAP
I’m quite sure that we’ve never before seen a film inspired by Northern Ireland’s Identity and Language Act 2022, but Rich Peppiatt’s fictionalised biopic Kneecap takes this legislation and creates a kinetic, outrageous, hedonistic exploration of language, identity and political complexity.
Naoise Ó Cairealláin and Liam Óg Ó Hannaidh play Móglaí Bap and Mo Chara, two small-time drug dealers in post-ceasefire Belfast, who join forces with a local Irish teacher (JJ Ó Dochartaigh) and start performing together. Their gigs are, at first, embarrassingly small. But as their raps about drugs, sex and the police spread, fans start turning up to the increasingly raucous shows, chanting in Irish about the society around them. The film is layered with complexity about everyday life for the Ceasefire Babies of West Belfast.
While Móglaí Bap and Mo Chara throw around phrases like “intergenerational trauma” cynically to score ADHD medication, the ripples of past violence are felt in the daily tensions, confrontations and purposelessness of young people. These narrative threads and hard realities are intriguingly dropped into the self-mythologising narrative, which moves at a breakneck pace.
Advertisement

Watch, laugh, enjoy, rewind, repeat – and try to keep up. Kneecap are going places, and won’t slow down for you.
KNEECAP
8. Don’t Forget To Remember
The pain, power and possibility of forgetting is explored in Ross Killeen’s beautiful new film, Don’t Forget To Remember, which explores the relationship between artist Abestos and his mother Helena, who has Alzheimer’s.
Abestos admits that his role as an artist means he both experiences his mother’s forgetting while also observing it, processing her condition and their switched role of carer/cared-for through his art – which thankfully, is still a source of connection for mother and son.
Abestos also complicates our understanding of her forgetting by noting its small, strange beauty at times, and how it allows Helena to be free from a lot of her old trauma and anxiety. This isn’t presented as, or expected to be, a consolation, of course, but highlights Abestos’ ability to see both the mother he always knew, and her new way of existing, and the difference in those identities. Abestos’ art evokes these ideas, as the artist creates intricate collages to show the nature of memory.
Advertisement

A stunning film. Go, watch, and call your Mam.
9. Conclave
Conclave, directed by Edward Berger, is a gripping and smart political drama set within the Vatican’s sacred walls, where the College of Cardinals convenes to select the next Pope. The film pulses with electricity, fuelled by razor-sharp dialogue, strong performances, and a plot full of unexpected twists that keep the audience on edge.
While exploring the intricacies of this ancient, mysterious process, Conclave delves into the universal themes of ambition, manipulation, and the internal struggles between tradition and progress that resonate far beyond the Vatican. Ralph Fiennes shines as Cardinal Lawrence, the Dean presiding over the election, grappling with his doubts and the heavy responsibility thrust upon him.
The diverse cast, including Stanley Tucci as the liberal Cardinal Bellini, John Lithgow as a scheming candidate, and Lucian Msamati as an African bishop with a hidden past, create a compelling ensemble, where every character’s ambitions, weaknesses and secrets come to the forefront.
Conclave is a thrilling and provocative film that pulls you into its labyrinth of intrigue, and leaves you reflecting on the nature of power and faith long after the credits roll.
10. That They May Face The Rising Sun
Advertisement

Pat Collins is one of Ireland’s most prolific and thoughtful directors, having made over 30 films in the past two decades. His work is known for its meditative tone and invitation to the viewer to slow down, pay attention, and relish the beauty of everyday details – making him the ideal director to adapt John McGahern’s 2002 novel, That They May Face The Rising Sun.
Barry Ward and Anna Bederke play Joe, a writer, and Anna, an artist. Having left London five years previously, they live a life of quiet contentment in ’80s Ireland, appreciating the beauty of their surroundings. But in the lives of the older neighbours around them, there are struggles and conflicts, mainly caused by poverty, loneliness and generational traumas.
The sense of time passing is shown in Collin’s delicate pacing; Anna’s learning of disappearing skills such as weaving and separating wool; and how older neighbours such as the volatile Patrick (Lalor Roddy) struggle against how the world is changing around him – and perhaps leaving him behind. Beautifully paced and performed, this gentle but thought-provoking film has real depth.
That They May Face The Rising Sun

Advertisement

Egypt travel agents pick Saudi firms for Hajj services

Worshippers walk around the Kaaba, Islam’s holiest shrine, at the Grand Mosque in Saudi Arabia’s holy city of Mecca.
Image Credit: AFP file

Dubai: The Egyptian Travel Agents Associations has officially chosen Saudi companies to handle the services for Egyptian pilgrims during the 1446 Hajj season as part of its efforts to finalise arrangements well in advance.

This is the first time such a process has been implemented in the history of Hajj tourism for Egypt.

Get exclusive content with Gulf News WhatsApp channel

Egypt had announced a tender to select a Saudi tourism company to oversee Hajj services for Egyptian tourists, with a detailed set of financial and technical criteria. These standards were designed to address issues from previous seasons and ensure the highest level of service for pilgrims, guaranteeing a successful pilgrimage.

Twenty-two prominent Saudi companies specializing in Hajj services submitted bids. The chamber received sealed technical and financial proposals from 13 companies. After reviewing all submissions, seven companies were disqualified based on strict technical and financial criteria set by the chamber.

Also read

Saudi Arabia: Here’re the authorised schedules for worshippers to visit Al Rawda Al Sharifa

How to drink Zamzam water with reverence and respect: Guide to proper etiquette

Saudi Arabia expects visitors to Al Rawda Al Sharifa in Medina to reach 15 million by year-end

Saudi Arabia: Workers entitled to wages in lieu of unused leave

The selection process narrowed down to five companies that met the necessary standards. The chamber held two weeks of detailed meetings with representatives from these companies to discuss all financial and technical aspects, ensuring compliance with the established guidelines.

For the first time in the history of Hajj tourism, two Saudi companies were chosen to provide services for Egyptian pilgrims this season: Al Rajhi Services for Pilgrims and Mashariq Al Masiyah Services. The contracts were signed, securing the provision of top-tier services for Hajj tourists this year.

This decision aims to encourage competition, improve service delivery, and ensure a successful Hajj season.

9 movie scenes I couldn’t stop thinking about in 2024

Some scenes just stay with you. Clockwise from left, I Saw the TV Glow, My Old Ass, Trap, Tuesday.

A24/Screenshot by NPR; Marni Grossman/Amazon Content Services; Warner Bros. Pictures; A24

A24/Screenshot by NPR; Marni Grossman/Amazon Content Services; Warner Bros. Pictures; A24

As a critic, I’m sometimes asked about my note-taking habits: Do you take a lot of notes? (Almost always; my memory can get fuzzy fast.) How do you do this in a dark theater? (Absolutely no phone screens! I scribble furiously with a pen and paper and hope for the best.) What do you usually take notes about? To that last question, it truly varies, but I can say that I’m consistently being pulled in by words, spoken and unspoken. The profound, the funny, the relatable, the subtext-laden; the lines that reveal some kind of truth about the world on screen and thus the world we’re existing in now. When I think of some of my most memorable film-going experiences of 2024 – a great year for movies! – these are some of the moments and performances that have moved me, and stuck even many months later.
Sponsor Message

 “I’m a little sick of the fluff.” — Girls State

Emily Worthmore, one of the candidates for governor at Girls State, poses with friends.

Apple TV+

Apple TV+

Gendered inequities become glaringly obvious very quickly in Jesse Moss and Amanda McBaine’s fascinating documentary about the long-running high school program known as Girls State. Like many before them, the ambitious civic-minded teens profiled here set out to build their own government from the ground up. But the film was shot in 2022, the first time the Missouri chapter hosted both the girls and boys programs on the same campus at the same time, and the girls spend much of their time observing how much attention is paid to the enforcement of dress codes and how little is given to discussing more substantial and urgent political issues. (Meanwhile, there’s ample evidence the boys’ ambitions are taken far more seriously. Among their advantages: being “sworn in” to “office” by the state governor.) In one scene some of the girls commiserate over their disappointment with the tenor of the program, with one of them calling it out as distracting “fluff.” The moment speaks to the obstacles that still persist for women in politics and is a sobering depiction of young hopefuls getting an early taste of political disillusionment. “I’m sorry. I’m sorry about before. I’m sorry about that before.” — I Saw the TV Glow

Owen (Justice Smith) panics at a child’s birthday party at the end of I Saw the TV Glow.

A24/Screenshot by NPR

A24/Screenshot by NPR

The final lines of Jane Schoenbrun’s challenging and mesmerizing transgender allegory are a wallop of a denouement, proffering both sadness and hope. The sadness comes from everything we’ve learned about the meek protagonist Owen (Justice Smith) to this point – how, out of paralyzing fear, they’ve made a deliberate choice to deny their true self, and live a depressing and unfulfilling life. Now working at the kind of job that can only be described as the stuff of nightmares – a Chuck E. Cheese-like amusement center – the crushing weight of their denial finally hits, and sends them into a panic attack in the middle of a child’s birthday celebration.