Which are your favorite non-English movies, series etc?
If not favorite, ones that touched you in some way.
I'll start by mentioning some movies from my mother tongue(Malayalam of Kerala, India):
- Mumbai Police
A crime thriller (Came out almost 2 decades ago n was very striking for the time) - KammaraSambhavam
Political/Historic satire/drama (The main actor has some cases on him, but the movie is quite good) - Kathavasheshan
- Devasuram
Conservative sigma male upper class Kerala dude getting character development. I really liked how the transformation happened in it - Maheshinte Parthikaaram (Mahesh's Revenge)
Not an action movie.
From my country, but not in my mother tongue:
- Super Deluxe - A Tamil movie that I recently watched, quite unique
- Enthiran (Robot), a Tamil movie
Has over the top stuff, but is fun to watch - Viduthalai(Liberation), another Tamil movie
- Agent Vinod - A Hindi spy-comedy movie
The anime that I like are Hunter x Hunter, Parasyte, Samurai Flamenco, Gintama.
Dark (German/Netflix)
Best show, period. I was happy that finally there is a story thought out from start to finish, is smart and does not hold your hand. I should rewatch it soon.
I dont remember another tv show where we watched 10 hours of recap/explanation/theory videos on youtube before each new season.
Amazing show and my favourite part is not even how brilliant the storyline is, but the god tier casting of different aged actors for the same characters.
Agreed. Some of that casting was SO spot on (Jonah in particular)
I wanna add to that Who Am I
It's a movie made by the same people
If you liked the mystery of Dark and are looking for something to scratch that itch you'll love it.
Thank you. Will check it out!
Hands down.
Shaolin Soccer for sure
Yes!
Brotherhood of the Wolf Kung Fu Hustle Shaolin Soccer
Punctuation helps.
Looked fine when I posted it. It had line breaks. Weird.
Double space + linebreak
for this and double linebreak
For a paragraph.
Doesn't help that thunder seems to eat a trailing space when you linebreak.
I'm on Connect. Not sure I've noticed this before. Lol
Brotherhood of the wolf is excellent!
I enjoyed Dark(German), Deutschland 83(German), and Gomorrah(Italian)
I liked the idea of Dark, I just disliked having to pull up a convoluted family tree hastily constructed from Reddit so that I could work out who was screwing who whilst visiting themselves.
Deutschland 83! Loved it. I'll add Babylon Berlin.
Oh nice I'll have to check that one out
City of God, (Portuguese/Brazil) One of my all time favorite movies period. Gangster/Crime lord style movie about kids running the Favelas in Rio
Elite Squad 1 and 2 also (Portuguese/Brazilian) Top notch Cop/shoot out movie really reinvigorated the Sicario and John Wick style films.
Oldboy (Korean) The WTF twist is an early stand out of what the amazing Korean producers are now famously known for.
City of god was a great movie
Reminder that city of God and elite squad are based on historical facts.
I put lunchbox in my watch list, it's the one that's pg and available where I live. I'm not up to these animations lately, though I saw Akira in the 90s and loved it.
Series:
Movies:
I know I've watched a lot more foreign films recently that I liked than this, but I'm having a hard time recalling any that stand out. Here's still a few I felt like mentioning:
Classics: Pan's Labyrinth, Run Lola Run, Seven Samurai.
A few you might not have heard of:
I had totally forgotten about 1899. I think it had as much potential as Dark, just didn't have a great first season. And the multiple languages was an interesting concept.
Life Is Beautiful
Pan’s Labyrinth is a rare modern fairytale, in the old sense of the word, not the Disney sense.
City of Lost Children, and to a slightly lesser extent, Delicatessen and Amelie, all directed by Jean-Pierre Jeunet.
I've yet to see worldbuilding as effortless as it is in the first two movies.
Drop you in blind, explain nothing, get very weird, and tell a fantastic story.
Yeah, these guys are great. I love seeing some of the same faces in completely different roles)
Some great favorites of mine that I haven't seen mentioned here yet:
Lupin and Ragnarok were pretty cool
I second Extraordinary Attorney Woo, what a wholesome and heart-warming show!!
There's no streaming service in my country with these titles except lupin 🙃
Streaming sucks, but not as much as plain old air tv 🤷♂️
If you have Netflix, you have access to Ragnarok too I think
Oh true, the service I used to find what service has movies doesn't cover Netflix apparently. What do you guys use?
Lots of info here about something to use that always has everything available.
Oh yeah the high seas is always an option, but as my family goes it's not convenient
I loved bron|broen (remade by Americans as the bridge, but that's bound to be lame in comparison). Great detective show set in Denmark and Sweden (? It's been ages, don't judge me). This is reasonably old tv series. Some great demonstrations of neurodivergence from (what feels like) a previous decade
Also Rain was a great Scandinavian sci-fi series (Netflix?)
+1 Bron/Broen. I am a big fan of Scandinavian series, and can also recommend:
Train to Busan is without a doubt the best zombie movie I have ever seen.
There are many good thriller/horror movies in spanish.
Shutter is also a great Thai horror movie.
From my country Murderess (Φόνισσα - Greek) from last year is pretty impactful.
Have you watched "Historias para no dormir"? It was series of Spanish horror movies, I think four or five. My favorite from that series was "La habitación del niño" such a good story! I am a horror buff and it is always refreshing to watch something that surprises me in a good way.
Oh I hadn't heard of those, added to the watch list
I guess you are talking about the tv series? Because that was, indeed, kind of not so good. I watched a couple of episodes.
The movies, at least for me, were good in a general sense but La habitación del niño was great in my opinion.
Im Westen nichts Neues (All Quiet on the Western Front). A movie about WWI from the German perspective. While not 100% accurate, it does a great job of showing the harrowing trench warfare, the propaganda, and the out-of-touch militarism in the higher ranks. I highly recommend it.
A much older one: Le Grand Vadrouille (The Great Escape). A French WWII comedy about a few British pilots that need to escape occupied France. There is a little bit of English but it's predominantly French in language. While not all movies from that age have stood the test of time (e.g. Les Gendarmes are quite racist), this one does a decent job!
Cinema Paradiso
For a serious drama: Jean de Florette and Manon des Sources, a shockingly good pair of French films that start when an idealistic city dweller moves out to the countryside to start farming on some valuable land that the locals would rather went to them.
Much less seriously: Le Concert. A French comedy-drama about a Russian conductor forced out of his prestigious role after a falling out with the Soviet leadership, who many years later gets an opportunity to re-form his orchestra out of a rag-tag group who haven't played in years, and travel with them to Paris to give the eponymous concert, performing the same piece that he was conducting at the moment a KGB agent stormed in to strip him of his title. There are some more layers to it that give the movie some brilliant genuine heart, in addition to the hilarious hijinks of the premise.
I'll just add an extra one that doesn't really fit, but is kinda close. Death and the Maiden, by Ariel Dorfman. Doesn't fit both because it's a play rather than a movie or TV show, and because it might be originally English (I'm honestly not sure and have seen contrary answers about it—even in my copy of the play itself it's unclear, with references to the "world premiere" in England being after it "was staged and opened in...Chile"). But regardless of the original language, it's very much not from an anglo perspective, being written by a Chilean and set in post-Pinochet Chile (technically, it's described as being potentially any country post dictatorship, but it's primarily written for Chile). It's about a husband who accidentally welcomes into their home a man whom his wife swears was her warden and rapist while she was imprisoned by the dictatorial regime, and the play is all centred around "is she right, and will her husband believe her?"
Thanks for reminding me about Manon Des Sources. I remember being totally captivated by it but can't remember any details!
Putting the word of a stranger before his wife's..... I don't think this aged well.
I can see why you'd say that, but I don't agree. The whole point of the story is the moral ambiguity, we were never supposed to unambiguously side with the husband, but decided for ourselves who to believe. So our conclusions might change with time, but the play's relevance has only grown.
RRR the movie is so good
The Handmaiden by Park Chan-wook is fantastic for movies.
For books, Roadside Picnic by Boris and Arkady Strugatsky, and the movie adaptation Stalker by Tarkovsky, are sci-fi classics.
Human Acts is another amazing book, this time from Han Kang.
Persepolis, the tragic animated story of how Iran transformes from a modern and rich country to a religious dictatorship
RRR, this shit has everything. Great fights, cool story, great landscapes from all over India, amazing VFX and art direction. Great musical interludes too. Absolutely recommended.
Came to say this. The movie also won an Oscar for best original song.
I loved Drive My Car. Incredible soundtrack, well paced, and incredibly moving.
Does Pan's Labyrinth count?
Why wouldn't it?
Trois Colours ( Three Colors) Blue White Red
Great films. Wikipedia info
Joyeux Noel. It’s a French/German/English language film about the Christmas Truce during WW1. Very moving film in my opinion.
I agree!
Lots of classic films are not English, e.g. Seventh Seal.
Portuguese Dragon Ball Z ranks up there.
Pridyider, the Filipino movie about a haunted fridge. Haven't been able to find a copy of it in years unfortunately.
Not Turkish, but Hot Skull was a great watch. At the risk of speaking on behalf of Turks, I think that the premises run deep into the culture.
For Korean media:
TV shows:
Movies:
Suspect X
I found these through now defunct/gone bad sites, but Fei Ren Zai (非人哉) and All Saints Street (万圣街). Both series are animated adaptations of webcomics from the same guy.
Both have similar premises but are vastly different. Fei Ren Zai is a slice of life about mythological creatures, deities, and other such creatures from Chinese mythology living in modern day, done in short skits, pretty much being animated versions of the 4 panel comics the webcomic series is.
All Saints Street follows something similar, except for the fact that it's western creatures (vampires, devils, angels, mummies, zombies, werewolves) living in modern times and doesn't really have that 4 panel comic style Fei Ren Zai has. It follows a demon named Neil Bowman who moves from Hell (Australia if I remember correctly) to live with a vampire friend of his and ends up in the first few episodes (maybe around 10 or less if I'm not wrong?) living with a vampire, mummy, werewolf, and his landlord, an angel and eventually his younger sister. All under a single roof. It's available on Crunchyroll with a Japanese dub, but I personally don't like it. Especially since I really love the use of vocaloid for the original Chinese dub theme song and love the Chinese voices (props to the voice actors).
Also, France's Code Lyoko is an absolute favorite of mine because of how awesome I thought it was growing up and how I still think it's awesome. Mid-2000s cartoon where a group of 2D animated students at an academy must sneak off to go to a 3D CGI virtual world made possible by a radioactive material powered supercomputer that has a deadly computer virus like villainous thing housed inside the virtual world, trying to take out the kids so it can probably take over and get rid of all humans. If you don't wanna be confused on episode 1, as you're thrown in with no explanation, I recommend the episodes X.A.N.A. Awakens part 1 & 2.
When it comes to Christmas movies my most favorite ones are:
Cure (1997) is an absolutely mesmerizing film
Classic French thriller.
"Wages Of Fear." Four men, two trucks, a desert, and five tons of unstable dynamite. They need to get the explosives to a uncontrolled oil well fire. They've got nothign to lose...
I really liked Vidocq, and the Brotherhood of the wolf.
Pretty intense but I thought the Seediq Bale films were really good.
Lammbock
Back then (early to mid-2000s) it was considered the most popular German stoner movie (at least among my social group back then).
A tanú (The Witness) - Hungarian comedy of communism
Hana-bi by Takeshi Kitano
The Wave (about a landslide in a fjord) is one of my favorite disaster movies.
The Quake (the sequel) is almost as good.
One more mention for Dark, absolutely the best thing on Netflix IMO.
Others:
So many more, but this list is getting too long!