Leaving aside the avant-garde, there've been plenty of movies that re-orient how we think about narrative. Here are seven of my favorites from our waning decade:
Scene from Donnie Darko where we are first introduced to Frank.
Directed by Richard Kelly. Starring Jake Gyllenhaal, Drew Barrymore, Patrick Swayze, Jena Malone, Noah Wyle and Maggie Gyllenhaal.
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All of Richard Kelly's films have the starting assumption that you've read as much Stephen Hawking as he has and can fill in the narrative gaps accordingly. The original version of "Donnie Darko" is pretty incomprehensible, David Lynch in the suburbs, but sucked you in stylistically even if you couldn't put together the pieces.
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"Primer" (2004)
Shane Carruth's bold opening salvo (his only film to date) is unlike anything I've ever seen. It's a movie shot for $7,000, the same budget, inflation-unadjusted, as Robert Rodriguez's 1993 "El Mariachi," but used for way more aesthetically impressive results. It's about Texan engineers inventing a time-travel machine that works -- so successfully, in fact, that the movie, without giving a hint of what it's doing, simply adopts the branching timelines and alternate universes opened up once the engineers step inside "The Box".
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