Skip to main content
  • TotalFilm
  • Edge
  • Newsarama
  • Retrogamer
GamesRadar+ GamesRadar+
US EditionUS CA EditionCanada UK EditionUK AU EditionAustralia
Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • More
    • PS5
    • Xbox Series X
    • Nintendo Switch
    • Nintendo Switch 2
    • PC
    • Platforms
    • Tabletop Gaming
    • Comics
    • Toys & Collectibles
    • Newsarama
    • Retro Gamer
    • Newsletters
    • About us
    • Features
Trending
  • Best Netflix Movies
  • Movie Release Dates
  • Best movies on Disney Plus
  • Best Netflix Shows
Don't miss these
Black Panther, Iron Man, Vision, War Machine, and Black Widow at the Berlin airport in Captain America: Civil War - part of our guide on how to watch the Marvel movies in order
Superhero Movies How to watch the Marvel movies in order (release and chronological order)
Mass Effect 2 - Garrus
Adventure Games The 25 best video game stories of all-time
Dune
Movies Movie release dates 2026: Every major film coming to cinemas and streaming
Cillian Murphy as Tommy in Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man.
Movies The 25 best movies on Netflix to watch right now
Dune 2
Movies Upcoming movies: The most exciting new movies coming in 2026 and beyond
(L to R) Steven Yeun as Detective Mike Ro, Matt Damon as Lieutenant Dane Dumars, Ben Affleck as Detective Sergeant J.D. Byrne, and Kyle Chandler as DEA Agent Mateo 'Matty' Nix in The Rip.
Action Movies The 25 best Netflix action movies to watch right now
One Piece
Netflix The 25 best shows on Netflix to watch in 2026
The Lion King is undoubtedly one of the best movies on Disney Plus
Movies The 30 best movies on Disney Plus to watch right now
Omni-Man putting his hand on Invincible's shoulder in Invincible season 4 trailer
TV The best new TV shows to watch in 2026
Daredevil: Born Again
Superhero Movies Upcoming Marvel movies and shows for 2026 and beyond
best Xbox One games
Games The best Xbox One games of all time
Marlon Brando as Vito Corleone in The Godfather.
Streaming Services The 20 best movies on Paramount Plus to watch right now
How to watch the Star Wars movies in order
Star Wars Movies How to watch the Star Wars movies in order (release and chronological)
Walton Goggins as the Ghoul in Fallout season 2
TV The 25 best shows on Amazon Prime Video to watch right now
Best anime movies: Chihiro and No-Face sitting in a train carriage during Spirited Away.
Anime Movies The 30 best anime movies to watch right now
  1. Entertainment
  2. Movies

Total Film magazine presents its top 20 films of 2018

Features
By Total Film published 18 December 2018

Total Film magazine reveals its favourite films of the year, from Avengers: Infinity War to Hereditary

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

  • Facebook
  • X
  • Pinterest
  • Flipboard
  • Email
Share this article
Join the conversation
Follow us
Add us as a preferred source on Google
Get the GamesRadar+ Newsletter

Bringing all the latest movie news, features, and reviews to your inbox


By submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.

You are now subscribed

Your newsletter sign-up was successful


An account already exists for this email address, please log in.
Subscribe to our newsletter

10. The Shape of Water

“It’s a musical-thriller melodrama-love story between a woman and an amphibian man, as directed by Douglas Sirk and Stanley Donen,” said Guillermo del Toro of his passion project that would go on to win the Best Picture and Best Director Oscars. Only del Toro could have so effectively gelled such a seemingly unwieldy mash-up of tones and genres into the year’s unlikeliest romantic fantasy. Much of the magic was generated through the relationship between Sally Hawkins’ mute cleaner and the amphibious humanoid creature (Doug Jones) being studied at the secret government facility she works at. But every character was treated with empathy in a film tender and tense, brutal and magical. A masterclass making the unique universal.

9. A Quiet Place

John Krasinski proved he was more than the likeable everydude from The Office with this directorial effort – not his first, but by far his most impactful. The catchy elevator-pitch concept – humanity is all but wiped out by sound-seeking creatures – was given heart and heft in Krasinski’s assured hands. He also delivered a fine lead performance, starring with real-life wife Emily Blunt as parents of a family eking out a near-wordless existence in a remote house. The suspenseful set-pieces were seat-edge stuff, but it was the family relationships that stuck long after the credits. Millicent Simmonds shone as deaf daughter Regan, battling both the creatures and a gnawing guilt stemming from a family tragedy. A Quiet Place is a film worth shouting about.

Read more: Shh! Don’t tell anyone but A Quiet Place 2 release date just got announced

You may like
  • Year in Review: The Best of 2025 main listing image for Best Movies of 2025 featuring images from Weapons, Superman, Sinners, and The Long Walk The 25 Best Movies of 2025
  • Best superhero movies: close-up images of Captain America, Batman, and Wonder Woman. The 25 best superhero movies of all time
  • Superman kisses Lois Lane in James Gunn's Superman The 20 best movies on HBO Max to watch right now

8. Black Panther

This may have been the year of Avengers: Infinity War, but Black Panther was a cultural event that even Thanos couldn’t match. The first Marvel Studios movie to feature a primarily African-American cast, it proved that not only could greater representation sell tickets, but that the result is better films for everyone. Following the death of his father, the newly crowned king T’Challa returns home to face a dangerous challenger to the throne, while wrestling with the need to keep the technologically advanced African nation of Wakanda hidden from the rest of the world. As T’Challa, Chadwick Boseman exuded dignity, while Danai Gurira’s Okoye was this year’s standout scene-stealer. But it was Michael B. Jordan’s Killmonger who gave the film its fire, the exiled mercenary the embodiment of generations of righteous fury.

Read more: Black Panther ending explained - everything you need to know after watching

7. Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

Martin McDonagh’s savagely funny, emotionally raw drama was one of the big winners at this year’s Oscars, with both Frances McDormand and Sam Rockwell picking up golden baldies for career-best performances. It should have won more. McDormand stunned as grieving mother Mildred Hayes who, frustrated by the failure of local police to find her daughter’s killers, shames them into action by erecting three scathing billboards. McDonagh’s scintillating script was the acclaimed playwright at his biting best, locating moments of heart-rending humanity in a story with no easy answers, and refusing to put terminally flawed characters in neat moral boxes. A profane, profound and poetic film about revenge, redemption and everything in between, it’s McDonagh’s masterpiece.

6. Lady Bird

An ode to ’90s teenage angst, Greta Gerwig’s clever, sweet bildungsroman sidestepped bromide for authenticity and all the feels – whatever your generation. The titular, self-named high-schooler (Saoirse Ronan) feels trapped by her Sacramento life, yearning for big romance with nice theatre geek Danny (Lucas Hedges) or pretentious hottie Kyle (Timothée Chalamet) while raging at her work-worn mum (Laurie Metcalf). There was no reinvention of the wheel here, but that sharp, knowing script gave parents and teens wonderful moments, while hazy cinematography painted the Californian capital as a diamond in the rough, and a well-developed sense of nostalgia and hindsight made Lady Bird’s eventual college epiphany both bittersweet and instantly recognisable. Hella smart.

Sign up for the Total Film Newsletter

Bringing all the latest movie news, features, and reviews to your inbox

By submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.

5. Roma

Alfonso Cuarón mined his own childhood for Roma – the Mexican director’s finest film yet (and that’s saying something when Children of Men, Gravity and Y Tu Mamá También are on your CV). Set in 1971, it’s a deceptively simple story focused on the live-in maid of a middle-class Mexican family that unfolds against the backdrop of the Corpus Christi Massacre. Shot in evocative black-and-white by Cuarón himself when regular DoP Emmanuel Lubezki proved unavailable, it was a work of great empathy and humanity, each lyrically staged chapter possessing the beguiling quality of a vividly remembered dream. But its neo-realist aspirations weren’t token; Cleo (terrific first-timer Yalitza Aparicio) may be one of the family, but the stark class divide is never forgotten.

4. Mission: Impossible – Fallout

As far as impossible missions go, making the best entry six films into a franchise is right up there with Ethan Hunt’s toughest assignments. But it’s something that director Christopher McQuarrie and star/producer/stuntman Tom Cruise pulled off with aplomb. “The last movie was kind of more about laughs, and I wanted to do something that had a little more heart,” said McQ pre-release. The fact that Fallout managed to get under Ethan’s skin while also throwing him face and ankle first into the most visceral stunts, scrapes and vehicular mayhem since Mad Max: Fury Road made this 2018’s finest action film. Throw in a spot-on ensemble – including a perfectly utilised Henry Cavill – and you have a damn-near perfect cinema experience. Mission: accomplished.

3. Phantom Thread

A (meticulously timed) decade on from There Will Be Blood, Paul Thomas Anderson and Daniel Day-Lewis struck oil again. This was another tale of an obsessive man with dubious people skills, but cut from a different cloth. Not as dark, sombre or gaslight-y as its trailer hinted, Phantom Thread mounts an unpredictable, perversely sweet-centred battle of wills between immovable couturier Reynolds Woodcock (Day-Lewis) and his new muse Alma (Vicky Krieps), who turns out to be an unstoppable force. 

You may like
  • Year in Review: The Best of 2025 main listing image for Best Movies of 2025 featuring images from Weapons, Superman, Sinners, and The Long Walk The 25 Best Movies of 2025
  • Best superhero movies: close-up images of Captain America, Batman, and Wonder Woman. The 25 best superhero movies of all time
  • Superman kisses Lois Lane in James Gunn's Superman The 20 best movies on HBO Max to watch right now

Both Day-Lewis (in his reported final role) and Lesley Manville (as Woodcock’s fierce sister-enabler) bagged Oscar noms, but the wily, vital Krieps was equally deserving. Phantom Thread ultimately won Best Costume Design; Anderson’s film properly walks the (cat)walk, exquisite in every detail and a perfect fit for its players – not least composer Jonny Greenwood, whose swoony score complements the romantic vibes like oil (not butter) on asparagus.

2. Hereditary

Inspired by such horror masterpieces as The Innocents, Don’t Look Now, and The Shining, writer/director Ari Aster’s slow-burn, dread-soaked debut saw us meet a family at a time of grief – grandma has just passed away – and then slide slooowly into ever-deeper darkness until all light is extinguished. It proved a deeply disturbing experience, brilliantly acted by Toni Collette as traumatised mum Annie, Gabriel Byrne as dad Steve, and Alex Wolff and Milly Shapiro as the deeply messed-up kids, whose very DNA is possessed by demons.

Like Jennifer Kent’s haunting 2014 horror The Babadook, Hereditary deals with grief, mental illness and familial dysfunction; and like Sir Stanley’s aforementioned masterpiece, Aster’s film is meticulously composed, framed and paced, erecting its unshakeable terror one (Ku)brick at a time. “My prime aim was to upset the audience in a very deep way,” said Aster. “I’ve been shocked by how warmly the film has been received!”

Read more: Intelligent, emotional, and terrifying, Hereditary is near-perfect horror. With a little more restraint, it would have been flawless

1. Avengers: Infinity War

It started with a distress call. It ended with defeat, disintegration and a distraught Cap gasping, “Oh God.” Our thoughts exactly. The biggest film of 2018 – with more than $2 billion in the bank – was also the boldest and, yes, the best. The secret of its mega-success? To quote a certain purple madman, it kept everything perfectly balanced. The script juggled the sprawl of superheroes and sub-plots so effortlessly, you never stopped to wonder how many Post-Its must have been involved. Every woman, man, and raccoon in the cast knew when to steal – and when to cede – the spotlight. 

And the direction maintained an Infinity Gauntlet-like grip on tone, flipping smoothly and repeatedly between spectacle, silliness (“Why is Gamora?”), shock (that Hulk-busting opener), and horror (that half-of-everything-busting closer). One masterstroke? Making us weep for fallen heroes... who already have sequels slated. Another? Leaving us cliffhanging, yet fully satisfied: no doubt about it, this was The Empire Strikes Back in spandex.

Read more: What does the Avengers: Infinity War ending mean? And 9 other questions we have

  • 1
  • 2

Current page: Page 2

Prev Page Page 1
Total Film

The Total Film team are made up of the finest minds in all of film journalism. They are: Editor Jane Crowther, Deputy Editor Matt Maytum, Reviews Ed Matthew Leyland, News Editor Jordan Farley, and Online Editor Emily Murray. Expect exclusive news, reviews, features, and more from the team behind the smarter movie magazine. 

Read more
Year in Review: The Best of 2025 main listing image for Best Movies of 2025 featuring images from Weapons, Superman, Sinners, and The Long Walk
The 25 Best Movies of 2025
 
 
Best superhero movies: close-up images of Captain America, Batman, and Wonder Woman.
The 25 best superhero movies of all time
 
 
Superman kisses Lois Lane in James Gunn's Superman
The 20 best movies on HBO Max to watch right now
 
 
Marlon Brando as Vito Corleone in The Godfather.
The 20 best movies on Paramount Plus to watch right now
 
 
Cillian Murphy as Tommy in Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man.
The 25 best movies on Netflix to watch right now
 
 
Dune
Movie release dates 2026: Every major film coming to cinemas and streaming
 
 
Latest in Movies
An apparently dead person wearing a matted fur bunny suit
Severance star Adam Scott's new horror movie Hokum just got an intensely creepy first trailer
 
 
Don Lee in The Gangster, The Cop, The Devil
James Wan is set to direct his first movie since the Aquaman sequel, and it's a remake of a hit Korean crime thriller
 
 
Kate Winslet at the 2023 BAFTA Television Awards
Lord of the Rings: The Hunt for Gollum casts Kate Winslet as female lead
 
 
Grogu saluting in The Mandalorian and Grogu
New Mandalorian and Grogu TV spot doesn't give much away about the movie, but it does show Baby Yoda sneezing everywhere
 
 
Mark Hamill, Carrie Fisher, and Harrison Ford in Star Wars: A New Hope
Star Wars fans are discussing why two major characters barely interacted, but I think it makes total sense
 
 
Ghostface in Scream 7
Scream 7's Ghostface star doesn't know who she kills in the new sequel: "I'm going to leave that up to the audience"
 
 
Latest in Features
In Pokemon Pokopia, the transformed Ditto trainer takes a selfie looking aghast in front of a glowing piece of land where a relic is buried
I've spent 20 hours in Pokemon Pokopia obsessing over its mysterious world and what it hides beneath the surface
 
 
BG3
The future of RPGs is isometric
 
 
Photo of a Mario nendoroid figure holding a microSD Express card with a Turtle Beach Switch 2 case in the background.
These Mario Day-inspired Switch 2 accessories will power up your console more than a super star
 
 
Underside of Alienware 16 Area-51 gaming laptop with glass viewing window and RGB fans
We could get a shock when 2026 gaming laptop prices are unveiled, here's what you need to know about buying this year
 
 
Emily Rudd as Nami and Iñaki Godoy as Monkey D. Luffy in Netflix's One Piece
One Piece season 2 ending explained: Who is Mr. Zero? Who dies? Will there be a season 3?
 
 
In Hitman World of Assassination, Agent 47 sits at the departure gate in an airport during the loading screen
After weeks spent locked into Hitman's Freelancer mode, I realize there's one vital thing 007 First Light needs to learn
 
 
LATEST ARTICLES
  1. Steam logo from Valve
    1
    Valve says "more games are finding success" on Steam than ever, and nearly 6,000 made over $100,000 last year
  2. 2
    Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man director explains how the Netflix movie differs from the show:
  3. 3
    Dispatch leads faced down publishers telling them single-player narrative games were "niche, or worse, dead"
  4. 4
    Xbox lead thinks "we have been in a golden age for indies" since 2008, and it's "a fantastic time to be a developer" if you ignore all the smoke
  5. 5
    The Future Games Show returns this week - here's how to watch

GamesRadar+ is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

Add as a preferred source on Google Add as a preferred source on Google
  • Terms and conditions
  • Contact Future's experts
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies policy
  • Accessibility statement
  • Careers
  • About us
  • Advertise with us
  • Review guidelines
  • Write for us
  • Accessibility Statement

© Future US, Inc. Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street, New York, NY 10036.

Please login or signup to comment

Please wait...