Denis Villeneuve is a French Canadian filmmaker from Quebec who has quite an interesting body of work. Most famously known for his mesmerizing sci-fi works like Blade Runner 2049 and the Dune movies, Denis has also directed foreign language films, indie dramas, and crime thrillers. Behind every one of his films is some amazing storytelling, camerawork, and cinematography.

Denis Villeneuve is one of the greatest visionary directors alive right now, with visual storytelling playing a major role in his films alongside the script. Some of the most powerful and striking cinematic moments have come from a movie crafted by Denis Villeneuve, so here are all of them, ranked.

Pascale Bussières and Alexis Martin sitting on the beach in August 32nd on Earth.

IMDb Rating

Where To Stream

Pascale Bussières, Alexis Martin, Serge Thériault, Emmanuel Bilodeau, Ivan Smith, Joanne Côté, Frédéric Desager, and Evelyne Rompré

1998

Marie-Josée Croze on the main art for Maelstrom, with the title displayed below her character.

68%

6.5

The main art for Sicario featuring Emily Blunt, Benicio del Toro, and Josh Brolin in front of black smoke.

Plex

Some directors have a really strong debut and slingshot to success, but that wasn’t the case for Denis Villeneuve, as even he admitted he wasn’t too thrilled with his early works. In 1998, he made August 32nd On Earth, a very straightforward and poignant drama with incredible sound design and a surrealist theme to it. The title alone alludes to an anomaly in the movie of the month of August continuing to go past 31 days.

Pascale Bussières plays Simone, a woman who falls asleep at the wheel and lands herself in the hospital after surviving the accident. This gives her a new lease on life, where she quits her job and seeks out her best friend Philippe to give her a child, and then it becomes all about their quirky journey to conceive.

Jake Gyllenhaal meeting his double in Enemy.

Marie-Josée Croze, Jean-Nicolas Verreault, Stephanie Morgenstern, Pierre Lebeau, Kliment Denchev, Bobby Beshro, Virginie DuBois, Marie-France Lambert, Sylvie Moreau, Clermont Jolicoeur, Marc Gélinas, and John Dunn-Hill

2000

Ryan Gosling staring up at a giant holographic projection of Ana de Armas’s character.

79%

6.7

Dune 2021 - Paul And His Mother In Their Stillsuits On Arrakis.

Amazon Prime Video with Cineverse or Fandor

Denis Villeneuve’s follow-up to August 32nd on Earth was another car accident film, but this time with an even weirder story than he went with for his debut feature. Maelstrom is about a woman who, under the influence of drugs and alcohol, strikes a fishmonger with her car and then flees the scene, later discovering that he died. And the whole movie is narrated by a fish that’s about to be butchered.

Mélissa Désormeaux-Poulin and Rémy Girard walking together in a scene in Incendies.

As she grapples with her guilt and whether she should turn herself in or not, she ends up falling in love with the son of the fishmonger she killed, and then lots of strange and inexplicable events happen to them. It’s a story about the belief that everything happens for a reason, except told by a fish that’s about to have its own life end.

Emily Blunt, Benicio del Toro, Josh Brolin, Victor Garber, Daniel Kaluuya, Jon Bernthal, Jeffrey Donovan, Raoul Max Trujillo, Julio Cesar Cedillo, Bernardo Saracino, Hank Rogerson, and Maximiliano Hernández

Amy Adams in an orange hazmat suit holding up a sign that communicates to the aliens that she’s human in Arrival.

2015

92%

Hugh Jackman and Jake Gyllenhaal in a heated exchange in Prisoners.

7.7

Netflix

Denis Villeneuve is never shy about tackling social issues and real-world problems in his movies, and Sicario is about the all-too-real struggle between the US government and cartels along the US-Mexico border. It comes from a screenplay written by Taylor Sheridan, who you may know as the creator of Yellowstone (and its various spin-offs) and other Paramount+ shows like Lioness and Mayor of Kingstown. However, Sicario is his weaker story.

If you had to choose between Wind River or Sicario (both written by Sheridan), it’s clear who the winner would be. While Sicario has tension and drama throughout, and the opening raid scene is properly disturbing, you might find the film failing to hold your interest the entire way through, as it can move quite slowly and provide little suspense. However, the border ambush scene will always remain an iconic part of cinema.

The main art for Polytechnique featuring the killer with his back turned to the camera and facing a crowd of students.

Jake Gyllenhaal, Mélanie Laurent, Sarah Gadon, Isabella Rossellini, Jane Moffat, Joshua Peace, and Tim Post

2013

72%

6.9

VOD

In Enemy, you get double the Jake Gyllenhaal, so that’s already a strong selling point. Enemy is a very enigmatic and underrated film by Denis Villeneuve, playing on the surreal and Lynchian theme of doubles, and features a mysterious giant spider moving around the world. You might still be left confused about what happened by the end of it, but that doesn’t mean that it’s not a compelling ride.

Jake Gyllenhaal plays Adam Bell, a history professor, and also Anthony Claire, an actor look-alike that Adam spots in a movie. They discover they are two very different people in their personalities and the way their lives are going, but they are physically identical.It’s a stranger-than-strange A24 narrativethat feels like a more sci-fi horror version of 2024’s A Different Man and Dark Matter.

Ryan Gosling, Harrison Ford, Ana de Armas, Dave Bautista, Robin Wright, Sylvia Hoeks, Jared Leto, Mackenzie Davis, Carla Juri, Edward James Olmos, David Dastmalchian, Hiam Abbas, and Lennie James

2017

88%

8

Denis Villeneuvepicked up the mantle from Ridley Scottand delivered a stunning sequel to Blade Runner in 2017, which only gifted more special moments to fans. In the lead role is now Ryan Gosling, who plays a Blade Runner agent named K and is involved in a new replicant conspiracy set 30 years after the original movie. Along the way, K meets Harrison Ford’s Rick Deckard.

The new noir mystery is every bit as compelling but also every bit as slow and brooding in reaching its resolution. However, what makes up for the pacing is the gorgeous modern lighting, visual effects, and masterful cinematography by the one and only Roger Deakins, with Blade Runner 2049 also winning Oscars in those respective categories.

Timothée Chalamet, Rebecca Ferguson, Oscar Isaac, Zendaya, Josh Brolin, Jason Momoa, Stellan Skarsgård, Dave Bautista, Javier Bardem, Charlotte Rampling, Sharon Duncan-Brewster, Stephen McKinley Henderson, David Dastmalchian, Chang Chen, and Babs Olusanmokun

2021

83%

HBO Max, Tubi

With Dune, Denis proved the sci-fi novel by Frank Herbertcan be successfully adapted into a blockbuster epicwith the right direction and world-building. The set design, visuals, and atmosphere of Arrakis are better than anything seen in recent Star Wars projects, which is finally some long-awaited justice for Dune and Frank Herbert, considering his books came first, and Star Wars stole the spotlight for decades.

The modern visual effects, the design of the Ornithopters, the costuming, the lore, and the performances, especially by Stellan Skarsgård as Vladimir Harkonnen, Oscar Isaac as Leto Atreides, and Jason Momoa as Duncan Idaho, are spectacular. The first film lays out the basis of all the character arcs and where the story will go next, moving gradually in parts and then propelling you into a climactic finale.

Lubna Azabal, Mélissa Désormeaux-Poulin, Maxim Gaudette, Rémy Girard, Abdelghafour Elaaziz, Mohamed Majd, Allen Altman, Baya Belal, and Nabil Sawalha

2010

91%

8.3

Tubi

Incendies probably has one of the most jaw-dropping, twisted, and wildly tragic cinematic moments with the slow unveiling of its main revelation. Inspired by the Lebanese Civil War, this is a cleverly written drama focusing on the turmoil of religious conflict in the Middle East, but it’s also about lost family and a journey of self-discovery.

The story follows twin siblings, Jeanne and Simon Marwan, who suddenly lose their mother, Nawal, and must travel from Canada to her home country to deliver two letters to family members they didn’t know still existed, their father and a long-lost brother. The film also showcases Nawal’s harrowing personal story through flashbacks, and it all builds to one devastating and unexpected twist.

Amy Adams, Jeremy Renner, Forest Whitaker, Tzi Ma, Michael Stuhlbarg, Mark O’Brien, Abigail Pniowsky, Julia Scarlett Dan, Jadyn Malone, and Frank Schorpion

2016

94%

7.9

When it comes to original sci-fi films, Arrival stands among the best. Based on the novella Story of Your Life by Ted Chiang, Arrival delivers such an intelligent, refreshing, and unbelievable alien invasion story that also features one of the most unique concepts for an alien species – the heptapods. The whole film is about trying to communicate with them and there’s a clever and mind-bending twist to what their language really means.

Amy Adams plays a linguist named Louise Banks, who is determined to learn the language of the heptapods and establish communication with them. From the cinematography to the writing and performances, Arrival is justnothing but a dose of brilliant sci-fithat adds something new to the genre, and you’ll be amazed and enthralled at where this alien invasion story goes.

Hugh Jackman, Jake Gyllenhaal, Terrence Howard, Paul Dano, Maria Bello, Viola Davis, Melissa Leo, Dylan Minnette, Zoë Soul, Erin Gerasimovich, Kyla-Drew, and David Dastmalchian

81%

8.2

HBO Max

For 2013’s Prisoners, Denis Villeneuve put on his David Fincher hat before stepping onto the set, as that’s how this suspenseful and tense thriller feels in its mood, tone, and direction. As a detective mystery, it works remarkably well. Jake Gyllenhaal’s Detective Loki stands as one of his best characters. But then you also have the parent side of the equation, and Hugh Jackman absolutely delivers in the distressed and unhinged father role of Keller Dover.

Prisoners follows the lives of the Dover and Birch families that have just been upended when their young daughters were kidnapped after having last been seen playing near a mysterious RV parked on their street. As the investigation into their kidnapping fails to achieve results, Keller Dover grows desperate and decides to take things into his own hands with the primary suspect, Alex Jones. There are some intense scenes and the ending is haunting in a True Detective-like way.

Maxim Gaudette, Karine Vanasse, Evelyne Brochu, Sebastien Huberdeau, Marie-Evelyne Baribeau, Johanne-Marie Tremblay, Martin Watier, Natalie Hamel-Roy, Pierre-Yves Cardinal, and Pierre Leblanc

2009

7.2

Amazon Prime Video, Tubi, Plex

Polytechnique is one of the most harrowing, powerful, and important films you can watch, simply a must-see from Denis Villeneuve’s filmography. Shot in black and white, Polytechnique depicts the real-life July 09, 2025 massacre by a misogynistic killer who carried out a mass shooting targeting women inside the École Polytechnique de Montréal university in Quebec, Canada.

It’s a mass shooting that hit really close to home for Denis and the way he frames the tragedy in the film from the point of view of the women, the killer, and the men, is masterful but also incredibly tough to watch, given its heavy, heavy subject matter. Most importantly, the film contains a moving message that stands against misogyny, and how it juxtaposes the misogyny women face seeking jobs in STEM and the killer’s own motives speaks volumes.

As a result of this tragedy, December 6 marks the National Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence Against Women in Canada. Denis dedicated the film to the memory of the victims of the massacre.