Movies are often praised as the art form that best mimics true life. Films like Noah Baumbach's Marriage Story or John Cassavetes' A Woman Under the Influence have proven this sentiment with moving depictions of believable people dealing with situations firmly established in reality. While these films are wonderful and necessary works of art, cinema often shows its greatest artistic strengths in being surreal depictions of a visionary's imagination.

Movies of this nature have an exhilarating lawlessness in their style of storytelling that makes way for experiences that are hyper-emotive. They don't come at the audience with logic and facts as much as they focus solely on their feelings with these strange worlds that could only exist in the human mind or the silver screen. Here are some movies that are beautiful works of weird cinema.

Updated on September 13th, 2023 by Federico Furzan: This article has been updated with additional content to keep the discussion fresh and relevant with even more information and new entries.

15 The Happiness of the Katakuris (2001)

Family members in The Happiness of the Katakuris
Shochiku

A filmmaker who has always excelled in crafting exceptionally bizarre films is Japanese director Takashi Miike. With a wide range of strange and hyper-violent films that have wowed and disgusted audiences alike, he has established himself as a unique voice in international cinema. Despite being known for weird viewing experiences, his 2001 film The Happiness of the Katakuris is on another level of abnormal.

The movie tells the story of a tight-knit family who have bought a mountainside inn with hopes of it being the beginning of a new, successful life. When guests start mysteriously dying, the family must hide the bodies to ensure the inn is a success. It's a plot description that honestly does not do the film any justice since it does not prepare the viewer for the supernatural family film that will spontaneously shift from a musical to a stop-motion film and back again. It has a never-ending commitment to its lighthearted optimism despite its grim circumstances. A one-of-a-kind cult film that viewers are sure to never forget.

14 Repo Man (1984)

Estevez Repo Man
Universal Pictures

When it comes to cult hits that forge their unique path, there is no movie quite like Alex Cox's Repo Man. It follows the story of a lazy punk teen who loses his job, but soon finds a new path as a car repossession agent. Things get interesting when he goes after a high bounty for a missing car with an extraterrestrial connection that leads to a weird adventure of pop-culture fun.

Non-stop one-liners, a killer score, and a perfectly in-your-face anti-capitalist bent make this one of the most impressive debut films of all time. Many are bound to misunderstand and hate the film, yet plenty of others will immediately adore it for being original and hilarious. It's a movie like no other, full of neon-punk rebelliousness and pop-culture swagger that make for a wholly original viewing experience.

13 Branded to Kill (1967)

Branded to kill 1967
Nikkatsu

A commonly depicted atypical profession in movies is the hitman. These guns-for-hire can be shown by a wide variety of people, from the cool and capable John Wick to terrifying killers like Anton Chigurh. Less common is an absurdist hitman film, but that's exactly what Seijun Suzuki made with his weird and hilarious Branded to Kill.

The movie is about a yakuza hitman who loves the smell of steamed rice and seeks to rise to the top spot in the hitman rankings. After messing up an important hit and killing the wrong man, he must now fight for his life as he is hunted by the top hitman in the business. Suzuki masterfully presents all of this in incredible absurdity that fulfills his trademark efforts to put fun before logic while still ending on a thoughtful note. A film with a lawless nature that has set it apart as a truly original masterwork sure to delight and baffle any audience.

12 Swiss Army Man (2016)

Dano Radcliffe Swiss Army Man 2016
A24

It goes without saying, but life is weird. We all experience a plethora of strange encounters and feelings that are both humorous and tragic, yet we refuse to talk about the full breadth of these experiences as plainly as we should out of fear of being rejected, thus pushing us further into loneliness. This exact predicament is explored brilliantly in Daniel Kwan and Daniel Sheinert's Swiss Army Man.

It's a wonderfully strange premise of a man stranded in the wilderness who finds a corpse that is somehow capable of many bizarre uses that ultimately save him. The film goes much deeper than just a humorous survival story and tackles the uncomfortable thoughts and feelings we all have and the loneliness that breeds. It's a masterpiece of weirdness that foreshadowed the future success of the Daniels with their exceptional film Everything Everywhere All at Once, which also used humor and drama to explore deeper aspects of the human experience.

11 Begotten (1989)

Begotten film still
World Artists Home Video

What do you get when a movie has characters named God Killing Himself, Mother Earth, and Son of Earth-Flesh on Bone? The film starts as a deity disembowels itself for a few minutes in gritty footage that will probably force you to reevaluate your decision to watch the film.

Begotten is an experimental surreal film about the fall of man and religious values, the myths of religious beliefs, and our relationship with the place we were born in. It’s violent and disgusting, but it calls for so much interpretation that you can’t help but feel it’s relevant if you draw a story from it. No dialogue, haunting and gritty cinematography, and lots of unnerving imagery scarred audiences forever in 1989 when it had a limited release.

Related: Best Movies About Time Travel

10 Lost Highway (1997)

Robert Blake in Lost Highway
October Films / Ciby 2000

No filmmaker has ever excelled at their brand of weird the way David Lynch has. A true artist of cinema, Lynch's career is full of one-of-a-kind films that each bear his signature sense of dreamy wonder and nightmarish uncertainty. One of his less talked about films that is just as fascinating as his most famous work is the ever-mysterious Lost Highway.

One of his more obtuse films, which is saying something for the guy who refuses to explain his work to anyone, Lost Highway is a paranoid dream that seems to reach for themes of toxic masculinity and loose identity. No clear reading seems possible from the film, and that only serves to make it all the more captivating. It's frightening, surreal, and perfectly Lynchian that stands shoulder to shoulder with his greatest films.

9 Juliet of the Spirits (1965)

Federico Fellini's film Juliet of the Spirits
Cineriz / Inter France Distribution

Cinema maestro Federico Fellini is a master of strange movies. Known for his obsession with dreams and memories, much of his work often depicted surreal occurrences that bend viewers' understanding of reality to express the inexpressible. His more unorthodox tendencies only become more untethered as he grew older, best expressed in his self-deprecating nightmare Juliet of the Spirits.

The film tells the story of Juliet, played by Fellini's exceptionally talented wife Giulietta Masina, who has a special sensitivity to the other side resulting in her hearing voices that try to help guide her through life. It plays on many ideas of infidelity and religious guilt and is the closest Fellini ever got to making a full-on horror film. Another wonderful dream from the master of the subconscious that any film lover should be happy to witness.

8 Beau is Afraid (2023)

beau is afraid dream sequence
A24

Of the many exciting rising talents of contemporary cinema, Ari Aster is one of the boldest and most distinct. Starting strong with his debut horror film Hereditary and following up with the incredibly strange Midsommar, Aster has made a name for himself as a disturbed visionary. His most recent film continues to prove this while also being his most bizarre work yet.

Described by Aster as a nightmare comedy, Beau is Afraid tells the story of Beau Wassermann. Poor Beau is an anxious mama's boy who's afraid of everything, with the chaotic world we see him living in acting as a pure manifestation of his inner turmoil. It's very funny and also quite frightening to see such a vision come to life with such artistic purity. There's no film quite like it, and it feels like a miracle that was allowed to be made in today's franchise-obsessed world.

7 Greener Grass (2019)

Greener Grass cast
IFC Midnight

Greener Grass is the weirdest and funniest film you never saw. You will have a blast with Jocelyn DeBoer and Dawn Luebbe’s film about soccer moms clashing in surreal suburbia. All the adults have braces, drive golf carts, and perform in some sort of permanently hypocritical attitude.

One of the friendlier films on the list, Greener Grass is interesting because it doesn’t sacrifice its authenticity for explaining what it’s about by exposing itself to answers. Don’t be afraid to give this one a watch. You’ll laugh plenty, even if sometimes you don’t know exactly what you’re laughing about.

6 House (1977)

House 1977 Nobuhiko Obayashi
Toho 

There is no horror movie like Nobuhiko Obayahi's House. The film about a group of seven friends visiting an aunt is a supernatural tale that feels like it's being told by a child who is making it up on the spot, which might have some truth to it since Obayashi's 11-year-old daughter was a co-writer on the film. It's zany, spooky, and just plain incredible for how inventive it is.

Even with such a hilarious ride, it still has a deeper message to share beneath the ridiculousness of the carnivorous piano and dancing skeletons about the effect World War II had on Japan. Many allusions are made to the atomic bomb and the lives lost in the war. It speaks of the way younger people are unable to fully grasp those tragedies while still being victims of those circumstances, just indirectly. A true gem of a film that viewers will always be shocked to witness.

Related: House: Japanese Horror Gets Weird and Metaphorical in Hausu

5 Beyond the Black Rainbow (2010)

Beyond the black rainbow child
Mongrel Media

Beyond the Black Rainbow has a story that, considering other films on the list, could be considered a traditional one. It tells the story of a girl with enough ESP powers to be a threat to the institution that’s keeping her locked up. The thing is Beyond the Black Rainbow is a Panos Cosmatos joint, and we all know how that specific filmmaker likes to spice things up by depicting impossible and mind-bending worlds where mankind performs under his rules.

The production design, the score, and the bleak futuristic style of the story make it a perfect pick for this exciting list of weird films. If you’re into edibles while watching films, you might want to skip them for Beyond the Black Rainbow.

4 The Holy Mountain (1973)

The Holy Mountain jodorowsky
ABKCO Films

Everything you think a movie can and cannot do will disintegrate almost immediately when you watch Alejandro Jodorowsky's The Holy Mountain. The plot can best be summarized as a group of people who are traveling to a mountain in the hopes of finding spiritual enlightenment and immortality, but everything that happens in the film is so much more.

The anarchic masterpiece is a film that stands on its own as a spiritual journey unlike anything you ever have or will see at the movies. It's not a film for the faint of heart as its weirdness will undoubtedly be extremely off-putting to most viewers, but for those who have a taste for strange and bold movies, this is the holy grail. A unique experience that's likely never to be repeated.

3 Holy Motors (2012)

Denis Lavant in Holy Motors
Les Films du Losange / Arsenal Filmverleih

Leos Carax’s Holy Motors made everyone scratch their heads in 2012 when it was widely released, and it touched a nerve about creativity that few films can. It’s a film about show business, but it’s all seen through the eyes of Mr. Oscar.

He's a performer who travels through Paris in a series of vignettes where he plays different characters in surreal fantasy that has no explanation at all. Carax’s film is conceptually interesting, but it’s Denis Lavant’s performance that will trap you from the very first second and force you to engage with his character’s bizarre journey.

2 Eraserhead (1977)

Jack Nance as Henry Spencer in Eraserhead
Libra Films

It’s only accurate that we add another one of David Lynch’s films to a list of weird films. And in this case, we’ve decided to go for the obvious one. Eraserhead depicts the story of Henry, a mysterious man with a cool hairdo who’s forced to marry a girl he dated because he got her pregnant. In any other scenario, this would be a regular family drama, only nothing is regular in Lynch’s visions.

Eraserhead takes place in a nightmare-like universe where twisted dream sequences may help you interpret the themes in the film. Just remember, any explanation you get is correct, as Lynch is a surrealist filmmaker who indulges in seeing his audience confused and looking for possible explanations. If you think Eraserhead doesn’t sound weird, just wait until you see Henry’s newborn child.

1 Time Bandits (1981)

David Rappaport as Randall in Time Bandits
HandMade Films / Avco Embassy Pictures

One man responsible for some of the greatest weird films is British director Terry Gilliam. Whether it's his work with the incredible comedy troupe Monty Python or his wild imaginings, Gilliam has made a reputation as one of cinema's great visionaries. One film of his that showcases all of his unique sensibilities is his time-traveling, fairy-tale, dream film Time Bandits.

It's the story of a young boy and history buff named Kevin, who has an unexpected visit from a group of dwarves that have stolen a map that will allow them to travel through the holes in time to steal its treasures. The entire thing is crafted to feel like every childhood dream and nightmare you've ever experienced, and it succeeds as a magical adventure like no other. A hilarious and strange experience, typical of Gilliam's wonderful style.