Skip to main content

The 5 best dramas ever made

A great dramatic movie can come in any package. What defines a drama is not as clear-cut as the definition for something like comedy or horror. Great dramas do have a few elements that unite them, though. They have great, thoroughly drawn-out characters, and they often involve situations that are grounded in some form of reality.

Great dramas also feature sharp scripts and great directing, even when that directing isn’t as flashy as some of what you might see in a great action movie. Above all else, these drama movies are dramatic without being saccharine or schmaltzy. They create real stakes and then execute them beautifully. Of course, it goes without saying that this list left plenty of great dramas out, as any list with only five entries will.

Recommended Videos

Ikiru (1952)

Ikiru
143m
Genre
Drama
Stars
Takashi Shimura, Haruo Tanaka, Nobuo Kaneko
Directed by
Akira Kurosawa
Watch on HBO Max
Akira Kurosawa made a number of great samurai epics, but Ikiru showed that the Japanese master was also adept at quieter dramas. This movie follows a mid-level bureaucrat who discovers that he is dying, and realizes that he hasn’t made much of his life. It’s a movie that, on paper, could seem trite or basic, but Kurosawa and the cast he assembles make Ikiru an emotional, meaningful drama from the second it starts. 
Ikiru (1952) by Akira Kurosawa - Official Trailer

Citizen Kane (1941)

Citizen Kane
119m
Genre
Mystery, Drama
Stars
Orson Welles, Joseph Cotten, Dorothy Comingore
Directed by
Orson Welles
Watch on HBO Max
Widely regarded as one of the great movies of all time, and for good reason, Citizen Kane is really about how impossible it is to ever understand the movie. Although the driving narrative behind the film is a reporter attempting to investigate the meaning behind a media magnate’s last words, what Kane is really about is what America does to a person’s soul. Featuring an incredible script and the kind of cinematography that still feels modern today, Kane remains one of the pinnacles of the golden age of Hollywood.
Citizen Kane (1941) Official Trailer #1 - Orson Welles Movie

Casablanca (1942)

Casablanca
102m
Genre
Drama, Romance
Stars
Humphrey Bogart, Ingrid Bergman, Paul Henreid
Directed by
Michael Curtiz
Watch on HBO Max
Perhaps the pinnacle of what we mean when we describe “Old Hollywood,” Casablanca is a World War II throwback that is still both stirring and emotional. Following an American in Morocco who is reunited with a lost love and ultimately sacrifices his happiness for the good of the Allied forces, what’s amazing about Casablanca is how small its scale is. The movie is about huge ideas of sacrifice and duty, but the story it tells is told on a few, mostly indoor sets, and it’s all the better for it. 
Casablanca (1942) Official Trailer - Humphrey Bogart, Ingrid Bergman Movie HD

Portrait of a Lady on Fire (2019)

Portrait of a Lady on Fire
120m
Genre
Drama, Romance
Stars
Noémie Merlant, Adèle Haenel, Luàna Bajrami
Directed by
Céline Sciamma
Watch on Hulu

It’s only three years old, but Portrait of a Lady On Fire has more than earned its spot on this list. The movie tells the story of two women living in relative isolation as one attempts to paint the other’s portrait, the movie is about the tender love and bond that forms between them. It’s a love story and a quietly revolutionary one that creates a deep yearning in the viewer for the kind of deep, real love that this movie centers on.

Portrait of a Lady on Fire [Official Trailer] – In Theaters December 6, 2019

The Godfather Part II (1974)

The Godfather Part II
202m
Genre
Drama, Crime
Stars
Al Pacino, Robert Duvall, Diane Keaton
Directed by
Francis Ford Coppola
Watch on Amazon

The first Godfather is great, of course, but its sequel is Francis Ford Coppola operating at the very peak of his powers. The movie’s narrative is split between Michael Corleone navigating his control of the mafia in the present and his father, Vito Corleone, arriving in America decades earlier. That split narrative builds beautiful parallels and shows us the way that American rot has always incentivized crime, especially among those who are marginalized.

The Godfather: Part II (1974) Trailer #1 | Movieclips Classic Trailers
Movie images and data from:
Joe Allen
Joe Allen is a freelance writer at Digital Trends, where he covers Movies and TV. He frequently writes streaming…
Topics
5 great Oscar-winning war movies you should stream right now
Jeremy Renner runs from an explosion in The Hurt Locker.

The Oscars come but once a year, and whether you love them or hate them, they provide a great opportunity to look back at film history. The Oscars are often best known for getting things wrong, and they do that plenty. Sometimes, though, the Oscars actually nail it, even if it's not in Best Picture.

War movies are often popular Oscar fare, and while not all war movies are good, we've pulled together five war movies that won Oscars and are worth your attention.

Read more
7 best drama TV shows of the 2020s so far, ranked
Adam Scott holding a red ball in "Severance" season 2.

Audiences continue to live in the Golden Age of Television, as they have been treated to some of the best drama shows in history. Whether they're sci-fi mysteries like Severance or grounded, character-driven pieces like Succession, the stories shown on TV have kept viewers hooked to their screens and tuning in for more.

Though the decade is only half over, the television industry has already produced more of the best drama shows of the 2020s.
7. The White Lotus (2021-present)

Read more
10 best sci-fi remakes ever, ranked
Donald Sutherland stares ambiguously in a still from the 1978 movie Invasion of the Body Snatchers

Science fiction is a genre with a history as long as movies themselves. That means that, while plenty of great original ideas are still being produced in the genre every year, there are also plenty of sci-fi remakes that take old stories and update them.
While some sci-fi remakes are better left unmentioned (Total Recall, anyone?), plenty of sci-fi remakes justify their existence. We've pulled together a list of 10 of the best sci-fi remakes ever, some of which come from beloved franchises. These movies manage to take the core idea of the movie they're based on and do something genuinely innovative with it. Without further ado, here they are.
10. Rise of the Planet of the Apes (2011)
Rise of the Planet of the Apes - Official Trailer (HD)

The second Planet of the Apes trilogy proved that this is one of the most interesting sci-fi franchises in the history of Hollywood. Unfortunately, Rise of the Planet of the Apes is the worst movie of this new trilogy, but its retelling of the story of Caesar, the ape who led an ape uprising, is moving nonetheless.
The movie's failures have much more to do with its human cast and the machinations that lead to the apes gaining intelligence. Andy Serkis is, as ever, incredible as Caesar, and the biggest miracle of the movie is that you wind up caring for Caesar more than any of the people he hangs around with.
You can watch Rise of the Planet of the Apes on Max. 
9. The Invisible Man (2020)
The Invisible Man (2020) | Elisabeth Moss's Terrifying Home Assault
A smart reinterpretation of a core sci-fi text, The Invisible Man tells the story of a woman who is stalked by her wealthy scientist ex, who uses technology to make himself invisible.
The movie features a harrowing central performance from Elisabeth Moss, and it works in part because it spends much of its time showing us the way everyone in this woman's life starts to believe that she's losing it. The Invisible Man has a fairly off-the-wall premise, but you can't knock the movie's hugely impressive execution.
You can watch The Invisible Man on Amazon Prime Video.
8. War of the Worlds (2005)
War of the Worlds (2005) Teaser Trailer

Read more