While it might be alarming to look back on 2006 and realize it was now 17 years ago, at least many of the great films released that year have aged very gracefully. It was a year that saw many great films released on an international scale, with a surprising number of non-English-language movies crossing over to English-speaking countries and having appeal outside where they were made.

Some have even argued that the Best International Feature Film category for the Oscars that year housed better films than the ones that were up for Best Picture. As such, what follows is a ranking of all the best movies from 2006, highlighting both English-language titles and non-English-language titles. Given the strength of the year, some films have missed the cut, with the movies below truly being the best of the best of a great year.

12 'Babel'

Directed by Alejandro González Iñárritu

a man crying as he talking on the phone
Image via Paramount Pictures

Drama movies don't get much heavier than Babel, which skillfully balances several heavy-going storylines all featuring different characters connected to a single tragedy. It's an example of a film that fits into a fairly niche genre known as hyperlink cinema, with Robert Altman often pulling off this kind of movie (interweaving characters and storylines with a wide scope), and Alejandro González Iñárritu himself doing it pre-Babel, with Amores Perros (2000) and 21 Grams (2003).

Babel succeeds in being moving and honest while exploring some heavy thematic content, and featuring great performances from an understandably large cast that includes Brad Pitt, Cate Blanchett, Gael García Bernal, and Rinko Kikuchi. Those after something feel-good might want to give Babel a pass (or wait until they feel up to it), but anyone looking for a compelling drama with plenty of ambition should find it to be a rewarding watch.

Babel
R
Where to Watch

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Release Date
September 8, 2006
Director
Alejandro González Iñárritu
Cast
Brad Pitt , Cate Blanchett , Mohamed Akhzam , Peter Wight , Harriet Walter , Trevor Martin
Runtime
143
Main Genre
Drama

11 'This Is England'

Directed by Shane Meadows

This Is England is a critically acclaimed British coming-of-age movie, but it also feels underrated in many ways, or at least deserving of more recognition than it tends to get nowadays. It follows a young boy living a difficult life in England during the 1980s, and what happens when he falls in with a gang of skinheads, which naturally takes This Is England into crime genre territory.

It’s brutally honest about the sort of lifestyle it depicts, showing what happens when a young and vulnerable person falls in with the wrong crowd and runs the risk of such people shaping the rest of their life. It can be a tough movie to watch at times, owing to how unflinching it gets, but This Is England is undeniably powerful and superbly gripping as a crime/drama/coming-of-age film.Rent on Amazon

10 'The Host'

Directed by Bong Joon-ho

People flee from a monster
Image via Chungeorahm Film

Though Bong Joon-ho's profile was raised considerably when Parasite (2019) became the first non-English-language movie to win Best Picture at the Oscars, he'd been consistently building up a strong fanbase throughout the 2000s and 2010s. 2006's The Host was significant in this regard, being one of his first films to gain considerable attention outside just South Korea.

It's easy to see why, because The Host is very entertaining and surprisingly accessible, even for those who might usually be turned off by subtitles. It follows a group of family members putting their lives in danger to rescue their daughter, who was captured by a horrifying monster that mysteriously appeared one day, attacked various people, then left with the young girl. It's emotional, exciting, action-packed, and surprisingly funny in parts, too, being a rollercoaster of a movie that ranks as one of Bong Joon-ho's best.

The Host (2006)
R
Drama
Horror
Sci-Fi

Release Date
July 27, 2006
Director
Bong Joon-ho
Cast
Song Kang-ho , Byun Hee-bong , Park Hae-il , Bae Doona , Go Ah-sung
Runtime
119 Minutes

Watch on Hulu

9 'Casino Royale'

Directed by Martin Campbell

Daniel Craig playing a game at the casino in 'Casino Royale'
Image via Sony Pictures

Casino Royale isn't just one of the best James Bond movies of all time; it's arguably among the greatest action movies of all time, too. It re-energized the series, taking things in a decidedly less campy direction, with the film earning considerable praise for its intense action sequences and a storyline that felt more grounded than usual.

It was the first of five James Bond movies Daniel Craig starred in, and served as an effective reboot/origin story for the series' protagonist. In many ways, it felt like James Bond for a new generation, all the while keeping the core elements of the series intact, ensuring it was a surprise hit that got people the most excited they'd been about 007 in years… just make sure you don’t get it confused with the 1967 comedy of the same name.

Casino Royale
PG-13
Action
Adventure
Crime
Thriller
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Release Date
November 14, 2006
Director
Martin Campbell
Cast
Daniel Craig , Eva Green , Mads Mikkelsen , judi dench , Jeffrey Wright , Giancarlo Giannini
Runtime
144

8 'Paprika'

Directed by Satoshi Kon

Paprika
Image via Sony Pictures Entertainment Japan

Ranking right up there with the greatest anime movies of all time, Paprika is a wonderfully wild, visually creative, and endlessly inventive assault on the senses. Its plot revolves around a machine that lets therapists enter the minds of their patients to view their dreams, and what happens when this device is stolen by someone who may want it for nefarious means.

When a movie looks and sounds the way Paprika does, mere words can only do so much when attempting to describe how it feels to watch. Those who are okay with a fairly intricate (and fast-paced) story should watch it, regardless of how much they usually enjoy anime. It's honestly that good, and is far from the kind of anime movie that might be seen as "just" for anime fans.

Paprika
R
Anime
Drama Fantasy

Release Date
June 22, 2007
Director
Satoshi Kon
Cast
Megumi Hayashibara , Tōru Emori , Katsunosuke Hori , Tôru Furuya , Koichi Yamadera , Akio Otsuka , Hideyuki Tanaka , Satomi Kôrogi
Runtime
90 Minutes

Watch on Tubi

7 'United 93'

Directed by Paul Greengrass

united 93 terrorist holds a bomb
Image via Universal Pictures

United 93 is an intense historical drama/thriller film that aims to present what happened on the titular flight on the morning of September 11, 2001. It takes place in real-time and shows how the passengers of the flight managed to take control of the airplane after it was hijacked, ultimately ensuring that the plane didn't hit its target (likely the U.S. Capitol) and instead crashed in a field in Pennsylvania.

It's remarkable how authentic and harrowing United 93 feels, as a film, as for better or worse, it does succeed in making you feel like you're on the plane, watching events unfold. Its challenging story and inevitable conclusion make it a difficult viewing experience, but it's a very powerful film that pays tribute to a group of people who gave their lives to thwart a terrorist plot that could have ended up being far deadlier.

United 93
R
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Release Date
April 28, 2006
Director
Paul Greengrass
Cast
J.J. Johnson , Gary Commock , Polly Adams , Opal Alladin , Starla Benford , Trish Gates
Runtime
93
Main Genre
Action

6 'The Lives of Others'

Directed by Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck

Ulrich Mühe with headphones on in 'The Lives of Others'
Via: Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures

Winning the Academy Award for Best International Feature Film, The Lives of Others is easily one of 2006's best movies. The film's plot revolves around surveillance and deals with voyeurism (Alfred Hitchcock probably would've loved it), centering on a member of the secret police in East Berlin before the Berlin Wall fell, and the way he gets wrapped up in the lives of a couple he's tasked with listening in on.

Even though it might be regarded as the second-best non-English-language film of 2006 nowadays (a certain soon-to-be-mentioned fantasy movie probably takes the top spot), The Lives of Others is still fantastic, and proves to be an emotional and gripping watch. It's a slow-burn thriller done right, keeping things quiet but always engrossing, all the while building up to a superb conclusion.

The Lives of Others (2006)
R
Drama
Mystery
Thriller

Release Date
March 30, 2007
Director
Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck
Cast
Ulrich Mühe , Martina Gedeck , Sebastian Koch , Ulrich Tukur
Runtime
137 minutes

Rent on Apple TV

5 'Borat'

Directed by Larry Charles

Sacha Baron Cohen in Borat (2006)
Image via 20th Century Fox

Time will tell if Sacha Baron Cohen ever stars in and/or writes a movie better than the amazingly titled Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan. It's unlikely, but when your best movie is a work of satire as good as this, maybe that's easy to come to terms with.

He plays the titular Borat, a journalist from Kazakhstan who travels to the U.S., uncovering both the wonders and the horrors of life there during the early 21st century. It can be shocking, low-brow, and fairly crude, but it's also remarkably clever, with Sacha Baron Cohen's commitment to the role (thereby convincing people he was a real journalist from Kazakhstan) allowing him to shed light on genuine problematic attitudes surrounding race and prejudice in the U.S.

Borat
R

Release Date
November 3, 2006
Director
Larry Charles
Cast
Sacha Baron Cohen , Ken Davitian , Luenell , Pamela Anderson , Bob Barr , Mitchell Falk
Runtime
84 minutes
Main Genre
Comedy

Rent on Apple TV

4 'The Departed'

Directed by Martin Scorsese

Matt Damon as Colin Sullivan talking to Jack Nicholson as Frank Costello in a movie theater in The Departed
Image via Warner Bros.

Martin Scorsese is responsible for directing some of the greatest crime movies of all time, with The Departed being his most successful, at least as far as the Oscars are concerned. It's the only Scorsese movie to have won Best Picture, and though most fans wouldn't call it their personal favorite, it's likely most can agree that The Departed is still pretty great.

It's a remake of 2002's Infernal Affairs, transporting its story about undercover criminals and undercover cops from Hong Kong to Boston, and adding a good deal of material in the process (it's about 50 minutes longer than the fast-paced original). With a great cast filled with actors who don't mind chewing the scenery, The Departed has a high level of energy, plenty of shocking plot twists, and is overall an engaging watch from beginning to blood-drenched end.

The Departed
R
Crime
Drama
Thriller
Where to Watch

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Release Date
October 5, 2006
Director
Martin Scorsese
Runtime
150 mins

3 'Little Miss Sunshine'

Directed by Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris

Steve Carell and Toni Collette in Little Miss Sunshine

Little Miss Sunshine represents the road movie at its best, while also being a heartwarming and emotional comedy/family drama. It follows an eccentric family going on a long road trip to California so their youngest can perform in a beauty pageant. Along the way, things rarely seem to go to plan, resulting in various chaotic moments - some funny, yet some tragic.

It's amazing how well the film balances its emotional material with its humor, and similarly impressive is the cast that Little Miss Sunshine managed to assemble. Greg Kinnear, Toni Collette, Steve Carell, Paul Dano, and Alan Arkin all give some of the best performances of their career, enabling Little Miss Sunshine to be the kind of dramedy that really sticks with you long after watching.

Little Miss Sunshine
R
Comedy
Drama
Indie
Where to Watch

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Release Date
July 26, 2006
Runtime
101

2 'Children of Men'

Directed by Alfonso Cuarón

'Children of Men' (2006)

When Children of Men was released, it imagined a future that was still 20+ years away, with the film taking place in 2027. While the 2020s have been challenging, they at least don't seem quite as bad as what this sci-fi thriller predicted, because in this movie, the world's shown to be falling apart, largely because the whole human race has become infertile.

Things kick into high gear when its protagonist is tasked with protecting a young woman who's miraculously become pregnant, and needs to be taken to a safe location. Children of Men is among the greatest sci-fi films released in the past couple of decades, offering a tense story, breathtaking action (boasting some cinematography that has to be seen to be believed), and a scarily convincing look at a dystopian world.

Children of Men
R
Action
Drama
Sci-Fi
Thriller
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Release Date
September 19, 2006
Director
Alfonso Cuarón
Cast
Juan Gabriel Yacuzzi , Mishal Husain , Rob Curling , Jon Chevalier , Rita Davies , Kim Fenton
Runtime
109 minutes

1 'Pan's Labyrinth'

Directed by Guillermo del Toro

The Pale Man with his eyes up in 'Pan's Labyrinth.'
Image via Warner Bros. Pictures

Guillermo del Toro is the master of making dark fairytale movies, with Pan's Labyrinth still standing to this day as the high point of his remarkable filmmaking career. It takes place in Spain during the 1940s, centering on a young girl who retreats into a fantasy realm to escape the hardships of her life with an uncaring and dominant stepfather.

Both its fantasy sequences and its "real world" scenes are equally gripping, ensuring Pan's Labyrinth works as an emotional drama and an imaginative (yet dark) fantasy film. There's nothing else quite like Pan's Labyrinth, standing out as both a work of fantasy and as a war film. In essence, it's a perfectly crafted movie, feels impossible to fault, and can justifiably be considered the best film released in 2006.

Pan's Labyrinth
R
Drama
Fantasy
War
Where to Watch

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Release Date
August 25, 2006
Cast
Ivana Baquero , Sergi López , Maribel Verdú , Doug Jones , Ariadna Gil , Álex Angulo
Runtime
112 minutes

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