40 movies that will make you question reality
There is a world of cinematic storytelling, where borders we call reality are constantly smeared. These psychological thrillers distort the mind and surrealist fantasies twist time and space offering each movie its view of human existence.
Get ready to think differently with these 40 films as they take you on a ride questioning everything from the real to the imaginary!
Here are 40 reality-bending movies
40) The Perfection
The Perfection starring Allison Williams as Charlotte, is the story of a cellist who gives up her musical career for her mother. Years later when she rejoins the music industry she finds herself replaced by another artist.
The story revolves around a twisted, manipulative, and unsettling turn of events where Charlotte tries to win her spot back, through any means possible.
It gives an insight into how the constant demand for perfection pushes a person to the brink of madness and makes them perform inhumane deeds.
39) The Invitation
Directed by Karyn Kusama, this thriller has a cultish theme. It is a story of two divorced couples overcome by past trauma, meeting at a dinner party and reconnecting.
It is bound to leave you wondering how the cult culture is so rooted in society.
38) Taxi Driver
Featuring Robert De Niro, Taxi Driver is a classic psychological thriller. The movie follows the life of Travis Bickle, an ex-marine, who works as a Taxi Driver in New York. The movie shows how loneliness, insomnia, and constant exposure to the dark side of the world can leave one desensitized.
The iconic line “You talkin’ to me,’ which has now become a trademark in the history of cinema, has originated from this movie.
37) Gone Girl
Gone Girl was released in 2014. It features Ben Affleck as a husband looking for his missing wife. People start suspecting Nick (Ben Affleck) to be the reason behind the disappearance of his wife.
Under careful scrutiny of the police, Nick is desperately trying to prove his innocence. With a mind-blowing plot twist, this movie will leave you wondering whether we truly ever get to know the people we live with.
36) American Psycho
When talking about movies that make people question reality, one simply cannot miss the classic American Psycho. It is the story of Patrick Bateman's character, a successful banker who is living a dual life. But is he really?
This movie, with the superb acting of Christian Bale, will make you question your actions and consciousness.
35) The Woman in the Window
The Woman in the Window is the story of a woman, Ana, who has agoraphobia, the fear of being in places where you can’t escape. Ana works as a child psychologist and lives alone. Additionally, she is also a heavy drinker.
The movie starts when a new family moves across her house. The family has a son, Ethan, who Ana fears is being abused. She tries to save him to the best of her abilities, but every time she makes a move, she is left questioning her perception of reality.
The movie is filled with a lot of twists and turns that will leave the viewer on the edge of their seat and a must-watch.
34) Don’t Worry Darling
Don’t Worry Darling was a highly anticipated release as it has Florence Pugh and One Direction’s singer, Harry Styles, in the lead role.
It is the story of a couple, living in a town, where everything is perfect. Too perfect to be true. With themes of escapism and power play, this movie will leave you wondering whether things around you are true or a simulated reality.
33) Rebecca
Rebecca is a movie, set on a novel by the same, written by Daphne Du Maurier. It is the story of a woman who while traveling in Monte Carlo, meets a rich widower, Maxim De Winter. The two get married and move to his estate in Manderley.
As the days pass, the new bride starts feeling overshadowed by Maxim’s ex-wife Rebecca, and as the truth regarding Rebecca’s death starts coming out, the story takes a twisted turn.
32) Tenet
Christopher Nolan is known for directing movies that mesmerize a person. From Inception to Interstellar, his movies are a product of cinematic genius.
Tenet is the story of an organization working to prevent World War III. With themes of time traveling and manipulation, it's a plot that makes you question whether we are just a tiny part of the massive epic.
31) Split
It is a movie based on the psychological condition of Dissociative Identity Disorder. It is the story of Kevin who has 23 personalities, each personality with different characteristics and abilities.
With chilling twists, this is a story that leaves you questioning the human psyche and the potential it possesses.
30) Adrift
Adrift is the story of a couple, who get stranded in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. Undergoing dehydration and isolation with a shortage of food supplies, it's a story where memories and mirages kick in when our survival is at stake.
Under the notion of “You have to lose yourself to find yourself,” it's a romantic story with a striking end.
29) Life of Pi
Life of Pi is a classic tale of a young boy on an immigration story from India to Mexico with only animals to keep him company. Survival and spirituality together intertwine to give a surreal experience to the audience.
Winning several Oscars, this is a movie with a great script and an even better direction.
28) Orphan
It is the story of a 9-year-old orphan girl who is adopted by a family who lost their young child recently. As time passes, the young girl starts displaying odd reactions and severe aggressive tendencies.
In a chill-inducing twist, it is found that the girl is a 33-year-old woman suffering from a disorder. The dangerous yet thrilling film keeps the viewers on their feet.
27) Primal Fear
Primal Fear is a movie based on a legal case where a young man is accused of the murder of an archbishop. The boy blames the archbishop for abusing him.
But as the investigations continue and revelations are made, one ends up questioning their judgment. Considered one of the best thrillers, it's a story portraying in its rawest form, just how dark the human psyche can be.
26) Night Crawler
Night Crawler is a story centered around the themes of ambitiousness and ethics. It is the story of a journalist who in his drive of delivering the perfect footage of crimes, starts committing them. The movie shows how career advancements can require a man to blur the lines between what is wrong and what is right.
With its famous line “If it bleeds, it leads,” this movie is bound to leave one wondering about the rights and wrongs of life and just when they cross the lines with each other.
25) Hereditary
If you believe in occult practices and the supernatural, this is a film for you. It revolves around a family who is dealing with the loss of their mother and is forced to uncover dark secrets about her involvement in a cult.
With family secrets and mental illnesses, triggered by grief, this is a story that blends reality and the supernatural. Moreover, adorned with jump scares, it is bound to leave you questioning the hereafter.
24) The Skin I Live In
A highly disturbing film, The Skin I Live In, is the story of a plastic surgeon who sets out to create perfect skin that can never be destroyed, not even by forces of nature. As the plot progresses, the audience is given insight into the past of the plastic surgeon.
His wife was killed and he is set on the path of redeeming her by changing the identity of the son of her assailant. This movie raises questions about trauma, obsession, revenge, and just how easy it can be to change a person’s entire identity.
23) The Sixth Sense
A name well-known in the category of thrillers is that of M. Night Shyamalan. With thrilling scripts and detail-oriented cinematography, The Sixth Sense is the story of a child psychologist, Dr. Malcom, and his patient, a young boy named Cole.
Cole has a secret which he confides in Dr. Malcolm: “I see dead people.”
The plot converges with its twists and turns and ends up with a plot twist so bone-chilling that you will be left wondering about it for days.
22) Black Swan
Black Swan is a psychological thriller about the duality of the human mind. It shows how we all have the good and the bad in us. It is based on the story of a ballerina chosen for the iconic Swan Lake performance.
Desperate to fulfill her role, she is forced to confront the black and the white swan within her. It is a story that highlights how paranoia can make a person’s life, a living hell.
21) A Beautiful Mind
Based on the real-life story of the Nobel Prize Winner, John Nash, A Beautiful Mind is a story about how the mind becomes our biggest enemy.
This movie will give you a jerking realization about what is real and what the mind manifests. Even brilliant minds are highly susceptible to the brain’s deception. This is a movie made with finesse cinematography and excellent performance that will leave you wondering just how real the world around you is.
20) Mother!
Mother! is an uneasy existential horror, creation, and destruction directed by Darren Aronofsky and stars Jennifer Lawrence and Javier Bardem. It's a love story about an isolated couple residing in a secluded house whose lives start to spiral out of control as uninvited visitors begin to arrive.
Mother! is fairly packed with allegory. Probing into the nature of art, religion, and human treatment of Earth within an impossibly mysterious story; it sends its viewers out there wondering at the deepest metaphysical realms. Polarizing audiences while brazen storytelling is something not to be forgotten.
19) Shutter Island
Shutter Island is a psychological thriller where the viewer cannot sit back on the couch. It is a film directed by Martin Scorsese, which is based on Dennis Lehane's novel of the same name and tells the story of U.S. Marshal Teddy Daniels, who was charged with the task of inquiring into the disappearance of one of the patients of a secluded psychiatric hospital known as Ashecliffe Hospital.
Peeling off the story brings nasty truths to him and makes him question his sanity. It has an eerie atmosphere pervading it along with some intense performances creating mystery.
The twist ending reveals that Daniels himself happens to be a patient who suffers from guilt and mental breakdown. Shutter Island disturbs one's perception of reality and the dependability of memories.
18) Inception
Inception is a puzzle film by Christopher Nolan where the audience enters a dream world into which one's subconscious is manipulated. A team of specialists spearheaded by Leonardo DiCaprio is entrusted with the job of planting an idea in the subconscious.
Dream-within-a-dream layers of this film make it impossible to define the truth between reality and illusion. Not even the super-classic spinning top finishing scene leaves it clear whether what is present before us is Cobb's reality or merely one of his dreams.
Inception does not make for your run-of-the-mill heist film; it is a meditation on guilt, memory, and the labyrinth of the mind.
17) Vanilla Sky
While it has elements of the original Spanish film, Vanilla Sky is a thought-provoking cinema on dreaming and identity by Cameron Crowe.
However, a fragmented reality, fantasy, and dream world often leave the viewer with much to interpret in terms of what happened to David. The movie transcends at times into philosophical interludes on regret, love, and the price of vanity.
One of the hauntingly beautiful aspects of this film is the way the music imbues the images with a surreal, dreamlike quality. The ending is ambiguous enough that everybody gets to decide that David is in some kind of lucid dream or something much worse.
16) The Matrix
In sci-fi film history, the Wachowskis' The Matrix changed every tactic towards simulated reality. Keanu Reeves stars as Neo, a computer hacker who discovers that his world is a constructed illusion by computers, controlled by machines.
From its special effects—"bullet time"—to musing on choice, reality, and free will, it is embedded in contemporary culture.
The movie presses one to think otherwise about the "reality" that has been perceived and one's placement in the grand scheme of society.
15) Donnie Darko
The cult classic for stories that are not expected is Richard Kelly's Donnie Darko. Jake Gyllenhaal gracefully portrays the dilemma-ridden teenager Donnie in this thought-provoking movie.
Under his lead, Frank—one mysterious figure in the rabbit costume—is a guide who drives this film to connect the concepts of mental health, time travel, and existent dread in such a way that the viewer ends up questioning the nature of fate and free will.
14) Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
A lovely poetic film on love, memory, and loss, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, directed by Michel Gondry, succeeds in the hands of Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet, who play Joel and Clementine-a couple who undergo a procedure to erase memories of their relationship.
The non-linear story takes the viewers on a very surreal journey through Joel's mind as he wrestles over whether to let go of their shared moments. The film is a masterful creation due to innovative visual effects, great performances, and a poignant screenplay by Charlie Kaufman.
The most compelling question that stokes curiosity arises in the debate over whether agonized memories should be kept or not—and the question goes through the minds of all those who are up against the challenges of love and heartbreak.
13) Interstellar
Christopher Nolan's Interstellar is science fiction and like other films with a concept of emotional storytelling. Matthew McConaughey plays Cooper, a former pilot who has joined a mission to find a new habitable planet for Earth; it has been threatened. Interstellar takes the viewer on a ride of time relativity, black holes, and human persistence.
Because Kip Thorne, a theoretical physicist, worked closely with the filmmakers in ensuring scientifically accurate visualization of phenomena such as wormholes, the film leaves only that climax—it has an emotionally high climax, with love portrayed as a dimension transcending time and space.
12) Fight Club
A thought-provoking exploration of identity and consumerism and seething impatience with society at large, David Fincher's Fight Club is an adaptation of Chuck Palahniuk's novel which stars Edward Norton and Brad Pitt as the narrator, and Tyler Durden.
Although it is controversial in its violence, Fight Club is truly a cultural phenomenon that challenges the perception of self and reality, hence as polarizing as it is influential.
11) The Game
Once again, David Fincher scores with The Game. This is a psychological thriller with Michael Douglas playing the part of Nicholas Van Orton, the son of a wealthy businessman, whose life gets completely turned upside down after playing a secret game.
The very storyline of the film will pull you into a spider web of paranoid deception and existential questioning: as long as control over his elegantly done life and end is seen through the lost filter of the game, Nicholas loses himself. It is a film that tensed up the pace and left the viewer questioning what he or she has just seen.
So many ideas about trust, identity, and the need for human connection lie there, enveloped within the mind-bending plot that keeps you glued until the last frame.
10) The Others
The Others, Alejandro Amenábar's gothic horror film, is welded with psychological tension and the supernatural. In this film, an array of suspenseful gothic atmosphere and nice shadowy cinematography has kept this viewer on the edge and truly engaged as Nicole Kidman takes on the role of Grace, who, with her two light-sensitive children, is a devout mother living in a secluded mansion.
As creepy events begin to unfold, Grace suspects evil spirits may surround her children, but she finds out a disturbing truth.
9) Big Fish
Big Fish, the quirky yet emotionally high-stake story by the imaginative tongue of the famed director Tim Burton, aims at reconciling reality with the imagination. Ewan McGregor and Albert Finney play the same character, Edward Bloom, at different stages of life, recounting incredible tales about his exploits.
His estranged son has grown up to be skeptical of these tales and decides to untangle the man and separate fantasy from fact. The movie is a reflection on storytelling and memory and the way we tend to manipulate our narratives.
8) The Tree of Life
Terrence Malick's The Tree of Life has been described as visually stunning when it comes to the story of the origin, purpose, and fragility of life.
Telling a story of family struggles in 1950s Texas that precedes the cosmic evolution of the universe, it's Brad Pitt, Jessica Chastain, and Sean Penn star in this movie as it communicates philosophical meditations on love, loss, and spirituality. Swirling galaxies may stretch to fragile family moments, inviting audiences to reflect on the interconnections between the micro and the macro. It is a cinematic experience that resonates with themes of existential wonder and personal introspection.
7) The Village
The Village is the title of another thriller by M. Night Shyamalan, an auteur of movies like Signs and The Sixth Sense thrillers that explore complex ideas in remote communities governed by strict rules and beset on all sides by mysterious creatures.
But this riveting film makes a sharp turn when it becomes clear that this entire village is a modern-day experiment, shielding its inhabitants from all the dangers of the outside world. The allegory Joaquin Phoenix, Bryce Dallas Howard, and Adrien Brody shine speaking from a psychological standpoint.
In this regard, the hallmark twist of the film Shyamalan invokes challenges the viewers to face these limits of lengths that we take to sustain innocence and whether ignorance is bliss.
6) Perfect Blue
Satoshi Kon's Perfect Blue is a psycho-animated thriller that digs into problems involving identity, celebrity culture, and the dark side of fame. The pop idol Mima Kiyoukawa turns herself into an actress while lost in a vagueness of reality when pursued by her stalker, online impersonator, and poor mental health.
The film is portrayed in a non-linear style with dreamy visuals; viewers have to look into the broken mind of Mima Kiyoukawa to find out what is real.
Perfect Blue is often looked at as one of the influences behind films such as Black Swan and Requiem for a Dream, therefore placing Perfect Blue as one of the most pioneering works, which continues to echo in a study on the dilemmas of celebrity.
5) The Truman Show
This movie is a satirical masterpiece by Peter Weir, which brings home how limited reality and surveillance are as ethics. In the movie, Jim Carrey leads as Truman Burbank, a person living his life without ever knowing a secret about his life.
Truman Burbank later gets entangled in various inconsistencies in his seemingly perfect world and goes on to investigate the truth. The movie was both a funny and haunting comedy of unsettling truths, really warning on the related evils of free will versus ideological confluence, authenticity, and media manipulation.
4) The Signal
The Signal is a mind-bending sci-fi thriller that blurs lines to distinguish reality from illusion. Three students, Nic, Jonah, and Haley, are on a road trip to hunt for a hacker when they mysteriously get trapped in a high-tech government facility.
As Nic unravels the strange series of events surrounding them, he unmasks what is happening in a shockingly revealing twist that transforms their entire experience. It artfully plays out control, perception, and the unknown, leaving audiences begging for the nature of reality.
3) Primer
Shane Carruth's Primer is singular. The movie follows two engineers who accidentally create a time machine and then unravel everything in their lives as they exploit it. Full of dense dialogue and complex plot lines, Primer needs multiple viewings to fully understand.
One of the film's stars—Carruth—explores the paradoxes and the repercussions of time tampering. Little production was needed for this cult classic built on intellectual depth and authenticity. Primer goes on a cerebral journey that will have viewers questioning the scientific discovery's ethical limit.
2) The Fountain
Director Darren Aronofsky's breathtaking images in The Fountain are a reflection of love, death, and eternal life. Below are three connected characters with varying timelines, from Hugh Jackman, a conquistador in the 16th century, to a scientist in the present to a future space traveler, and linking everything in this situation is trying to save the woman he loves, Rachel Weisz.
The non-linearly formatted narrative, philosophical scope, and sublime visuals—nothing incompetent of what minimal CGI has ever been able to supply—make something both claustrophobically intimate and cosmically oblative.
1) Dark City
Dark City is Alex Proyas' neo-noir science fiction classic questioning reality and identity. John Murdoch is a mysterious man with amnesia, living in a city controlled by mysterious beings called the Strangers, who distort time and memory. Even the German Expressionist elements creating the visuals of the film are haunting.
The movie carries philosophical underpinnings related to issues of individuality and free will, forcing the viewer to consider how much of their individuality is constructed or demanded by external forces. Besides The Matrix, Dark City is alone as a cult classic for its bold imagination and confident dystopian vision.
After watching the films on this list, audiences are likely to feel a sense of bewilderment, and philosophical wonder. These movies challenge perceptions of reality, identity, and existence, often leaving viewers to question the nature of their own lives. Expect to walk away with more questions than answers, as they cleverly blur the lines between what’s real and what’s imagined!