20. Where the Wild Things Are (2009)

Based on the 1963 children’s book,Where the Wild Things Areis an experimentation of the cinematic art form. Combining animal costumes with special effects and animatronics, director Spike Jonze created a surreal and wholly unique tone in this movie adaptation.

Where the Wild Things Areexamines childhood loneliness in a warming and almost dreamlike way (that occasionally verges on the creepy), featuring so-called “Wild Things” which are strange, looming creatures on an island in the middle of the ocean.

Pre-teen Max (played by Max Records) is lonely, misunderstood, and prone to temper tantrums.

He stumbles onto the strange island after running away from home—and after “Wild Things” crown Max as their king, he comes to learn a thing or two about his life back home.

Related:The Best Movies About Self-Discovery and Finding Oneself

19. The Martian (2015)

Ridley Scott loves a good sci-fi flick… and we love the ones he makes! InThe Martian, Matt Damon stars as the lonely astronaut Mark Watney who’s accidentally left behind and stranded on Mars.

Desperately trying to reach NASA, Mark lives out his days completely isolated on Mars with barely enough supplies to live. Fortunately, he’s an expertly trained botanist, and he manages to grow potatoes using a whole lot of science—but can they sustain him?

It’s one thing to feel alone in your city or country. But an entirely separate planet? Now that really sucks!

But Mark Watney never lets his isolation defeat him, andThe Martianis an incredible film about human ingenuity and will to survive, even when alone. Good luck, Mark!

Related:The Best Desert Movies Set in Dry Wastelands

18. Christine (2016)

The painful and lonely private life of real-life news reporter Christine Chubbuck—whom her mother described as simply “not enough”—is sympathetically explored in Antonio Campos’s dramaChristine.

Despite voicing her suicidal tendencies from a lack of human connection, Christine didn’t receive much help.

Beautifully portrayed by Rebecca Hall, Christine’s battle with depression is what led to her isolated lifestyle of dedication to nothing but her work.

Christinetakes us through the buildup to her famous suicide on July 15, 1974, which took place on live TV and shook half the world.

Related:The Best Movies About Journalism and Media, Ranked

17. Gravity (2013)

Space is a beautiful but lonely place—a theme that most space movies deal with as astronauts are flung into the vast emptiness of black with little-to-no human contact. And nowhere is it more apparent than in Alfonso Cuarón’s sweeping cinematic dramaGravity.

The film only ever shows you two characters: Dr. Ryan Stone (played by Sandra Bullock) and Lieutenant Matt Kowalski (played by George Clooney). After some mechanical mishaps that damage her space shuttle, Ryan is the sole survivor left aboard the Explorer.

Unable to contact Earth, she surrenders to her fate and attempts to commit suicide. Such is the powerful nature of empty space.

Related:Great Movies With the Best Cinematography, Ranked

16. The Green Ray (1986)

Everybody across the globe has felt loneliness at some time or another. It’s a human condition unbound by borders, andThe Green Ray(originallyLe rayon vert) gives us a French depiction of it.

Éric Rohmer’s fifth addition to hisComedies and Proverbscollection is based on a novel by Jules Verne—loosely, anyway, since much of the dialogue is actually improvised.

Loneliness is commonly triggered by loss or breakups, and that’s the case here. Seeing the intimacy of friends and couples can sting even stronger during fresh heartbreak, as Delphine (Marie Rivière) discovers during her idle summer holidays.

Related:The Best Movies About Divorce and Breakups, Ranked

15. Joker (2019)

What made DC supervillain The Joker so evil? Was he simply born that way? Or did something happen to turn him into an unhinged, violent criminal? Todd Phillips suggests it was society—or, more specifically, the loneliness of today’s society—in his dramaJoker.

Clearly influenced by the legendaryTaxi Driver,Jokeris a little different to most superhero (or supervillain) movies. Phillips swaps out the spandex and special effects for gritty realism, set against the backdrop of a dingy New York-inspired Gotham City.

Joaquin Phoenix stars in this psychological thriller, where Arthur Fleck’s untreated mental illness and social alienation push him to embody his manic alter-ego: The Joker.

Related:The Best Movies About Psychopaths, Sociopaths, and Maniacs

14. Cast Away (2000)

Cast Awaydepicts an extreme and desperate sort of loneliness—the kind that literally makes you go insane.

When systems analyst Chuck Noland (played by Tom Hanks) is stranded on a desert island following a plane crash, he begins to lose his sanity in an isolated frenzy. Once the basics are covered—food, water, shelter—the next step in survival is to not lose your mind.

To try and combat this, Chuck befriends an inanimate object that comes to feel like a real person. The hand-printed volleyball with a face drawn from blood is essentially what keeps Chuck alive, forced to spend four years alone in the tropics.

Related:The Best Island Movies That Are Seriously Stunning

13. Life of Pi (2012)

When young Pi Patel comes to find he’s the sole survivor of a shipwreck, the months ahead look increasingly lonely. Stranded in the middle of the ocean on his lifeboat, Pi only has one possible friend at his disposal: a Bengal tiger (along with the odd whale and meerkat).

By befriending the great-yet-fearsome animal kingdom, Pi not only manages to ensure his survival but gets a pretty wild adventure out of it. Unfortunately for Pi, this adventure can’t bring his family back.

Suraj Sharma stars as the teenager in his startling acting debut.Life of Piis based on Yann Martel’s 2001 novel and directed by Ang Lee.

Related:The Best One-Man Movies With Only One Character

12. Shame (2011)

Shamemay make you feel a little uncomfortable at times, as it follows a sex-addicted protagonist by a director who loves lingering long takes. However, it’s worth the watch as an expertly-crafted psychological drama that exposes the dark side of one-night stands.

Brandon’s toxic lifestyle is marked by pornography and prostitution. His time is spent at the office, at the gym, in bed, or in front of a screen. Not one part of his daily routine involves joy, love, or true intimacy.

Michael Fassbender plays the New York executive with a cold air—except for when Brandon’s lonely spiral culminates in him sobbing in the rain, hinting at his (deeply buried) heart.

Related:The Best Movies With Beautiful Color Palettes (And What They Mean)

11. Lost in Translation (2003)

Bob (played by Bill Murray) is an aging movie star, alone in Tokyo. Charlotte (played by Scarlett Johansson) is a Yale graduate accompanying her photographer boyfriend, also alone in Tokyo, much like a lonely Victorian housewife stuck inside her house.

When Bob and Charlotte meet by chance, they form an unlikely bond as they join their lonesome paths together… if only for a couple of days. The two lead melancholy lives tinged with moments of warmth and humor.

A midlife crisis; lounging empty hotel rooms; a foreign city; the hustle of crowds that only amplify their feelings of loneliness. These are the makings of Sofia Coppola’s dream-like inspection of what it means to be alone in the modern age.

Related:The Best Midlife Crisis Movies

10. The Perks of Being a Wallflower (2012)

Oh, the woes of being a teenager! Although Charlie is a wallflower—someone who’s shy and awkward and living on the sidelines—he does have a handful of good friends.

Set in the 1990s,The Perks of Being a Wallflowerfollows young Charlie (played by Logan Lerman) as he breaks into the minefield that is high school. His traumatic past, quiet disposition, and lack of friends make Charlie’s adolescence a lonely one.

But he meets the beautiful Sam (played by Emma Watson) and is welcomed to the “Island of Misfit Toys.”

Based on Stephen Chbosky’s successful 1999 novel, this coming-of-age drama is as heartwarming as it is somber. Charlie narrates the story while writing to a unnamed friend about his life, which will leave you with a bittersweet taste as the credits roll.

Related:The Best Movies About Social Anxiety and Awkwardness

9. Distant (2002)

InDistant(originallyUzakin Turkish), there are tons of silent shots of lonely characters staring into space, taken by Nuri Bilge Ceylan (who also wrote and directed the film). That might sound somewhat boring, but that’s what loneliness is! It’s empty and mundane.

This minimalist Turkish drama is an award-winning arthouse gem that follows two aimless men living opposite lives, side-by-side. One is uneducated and jobless while the other is a wealthy photographer, yet both are at loose, lonely ends.

Distantis in praise of subtle acting, where Muzaffer Özdemir and Mehmet Emin Toprak put in tantalizing performances of them smoking and watching TV. The backdrops are also truly breathtaking.

Related:The Best Slice-of-Life Movies Where Nothing Really Happens

8. Requiem for a Dream (2000)

Mental illness, drug addiction, grief, insecurity… These can all be catalysts for loneliness, and they’re all suffered by the characters in Darren Aronofsky’s cult drama.Requiem of a Dreamis mad, sad, and potentially triggering, so watch with caution.

The intertwining narratives follow a lonely widow on an amphetamine diet to lose weight while her grown son is off selling and injecting heroin with his girlfriend. It’s all very grungy and depressing as it strips back Hollywood’s tendency to glamorize substance abuse.

Darren Aronofsky explores the psychology of addiction, eating disorders, psychosis, sickness, and loss, which all add up to a tormented life of isolation. The film is based on Hubert Selby Jr.’s 1978 novel.

Related:The Most Trippy Drug Movies With Psychedelic Experiences, Ranked

7. Her (2013)

An atypical love story that’s as much about loneliness as it is about romance,Heris a dreamy science fiction film directed by Spike Jonze.

Joaquin Phoenix plays Theodore Twombly: a sweet and introverted writer drifting through a futuristic Los Angeles. A hopeless romantic at heart, Theodore struggles with the fact he can’t find a true soulmate—at least, until he encounters Samantha.

As he falls in love with Samantha, his life develops a new glow. The only catch is… Samantha’s a robot. Well, not even a robot—she’s an operating system with no face or body, just a female voice.

Despite there being no physical partner,Herstill manages to embody those familiar feelings of love, longing, and heartbreak.

Related:The Best Movies About Robots and Artificial Intelligence

6. Chungking Express (1994)

John Woo, Tsui Hark, and Kar-Wai Wong are all big names in Hong Kong cinema. The latter is universally hailed for directingIn the Mood for LoveandFallen Angels, but there’s also the legendaryChungking Express.

The film is split into two stories, both about lovesick policemen. Both cops are dumped by their girlfriends and now have their eyes on the same girl, Faye (Faye Wong). Set in Kowloon, the bustling urban spaces only serve to further separate its inhabitants.

What’s interesting aboutChungking Expressis that it was intended as a small, personal movie to Kar-Wai, and yet it ended up ranking among the greatest films according to critics ofSight & Sound.

Related:The Best Chinese Movies Ever Made, Ranked

5. Taxi Driver (1976)

Taxi Driversets its loner protagonist against a grungy urban backdrop that they despise. Robert De Niro stars as the iconic anti-hero Travis Bickle, who cruises the sleazy streets of New York City as a traumatized insomniac who hates people. No surprise that he feels so alone.

After serving in the Vietnam War, Travis can’t seem to connect to the new world around him, and he loathes the shady characters he ends up driving around in his taxi. And when he does rarely connect, he does so with dangerous intensity: spying, stalking, vowing to be their savior.

Safe to say, this doesn’t exactly go well for Travis.

Related:The Best Movies Where Protagonists Have Mental Breakdowns

4. Solaris (1972)

On the one hand, you could watch the modern George Clooney version ofSolarisfrom 2002. But if you’d prefer a more cultured watch, go with the original Soviet adaptation of Stanisław Lem’s novel.

Solarisis an unsettling, melancholy, and avant-garde head-scratcher that takes place in space. A psychologist is sent to a space station to help the skeleton crew, who have fallen into emotional distress.

But this isn’t your usual space-bound cabin fever. InSolaris, the planet they land on physically triggers pain, memories, and obsessions.

Solariswas screened in the USSR for 15 consecutive years because of how good it was, landing it firmly in the field of cult cinema for the ages. It’s a lonesome, epistemological masterpiece.

Related:The Best Existential Movies About Life and Purpose

3. Into the Wild (2007)

When you first beginInto the Wild, you’ll probably feel the same urge to cut and run just like Christopher McCandless did, traveling the world and going on grand adventures.

But when you get to the end, his poignant final revelation sticks with you: “Happiness is only real when shared.”

For all his unique experiences and his connection to nature away from the materialism of consumer culture, Christopher spent the majority of his life journey alone—and, tragically, died alone, too.

Christopher’s last days in the Alaskan wilderness were riddled with hunger and loneliness.Into the Wildis based on an incredible true story, starring Emile Hirsch as the disenchanted college graduate who takes off into the unknown.

Related:The Best Movies About Going Off Grid and Self-Reliant Living

2. Three Colors: Blue (1993)

Of Krzysztof Kieślowski’s passion project—theThree Colorstrilogy—Three Colors: Blueis generally considered the best. With its solemn, ocean-blue color palette, you’ll encounter themes of grief, connection, equality, revolution, and, of course, loneliness.

When Julie (Juliette Binoche) loses her family in a car crash, her coping mechanism is to go into extreme hermit mode. She destroys her belongings, sells her home, and cuts everyone off in her life—but human connection is inevitably forced upon her.

Three Colors: RedandThree Colors: Whitealso feature in the trilogy, corresponding with the colors of the French flag. Blue represents the “liberty” part of the flag. Specifically, emotional liberty.

Related:The Best Movies About Grief and Loss, Ranked

1. Wings of Desire (1987)

We tend to think of angels as joyous beings of light, as benevolent guides who sing praises and play the harp all day. We rarely consider that angels might get lonely, too.

InWings of Desire, Wim Wenders posits that angels might also experience human feelings—and if they do, then they’re greatly burdened by the suffering they see in the world.

Not only is it hard to invisibly comfort the people of Berlin, but it’s even harder to fall in love with someone who can’t see you.

Arthouse cinema tends to love everything melancholic, meditative, and poetic. That’s all here in spades, wrapped up in themes of loneliness, makingWings of Desireone of the most thoughtful watches.

This black-and-white German drama was inspired by Berlin’s angel-themed artwork, which is reflected through its gorgeous and symbolic cinematography.

Read next:The Saddest Movies for When You Want to Cry Your Eyes Out

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