12 Excellent Movies Where Not Much Happens

  • Tim Molloy
  • .May 03, 2025
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Here are 12 excellent movies where not much happens. Or does it?

There aren't a lot of car chases, murders, sex scenes, or explosions, but lives are quietly changed.

Lost in Translation (2003)

Seductive Movies
Focus Features - Credit: C/O

Newlywed Charlotte (Scarlett Johansson) and burned-out married actor Bob (Bill Murray) meet at a Tokyo hotel, talk, and sing some karaoke. Everything is melancholy and luminously beautiful.

We keep thinking maybe they'll leave their spouses — and yet we're somehow grateful when they don't. Sofia Coppola's Lost in Translation is a celebration of small, intense interactions we'll never recapture, and maybe shouldn't.

At the end, Bob finds Charlotte in a crowd. They look in each other's eyes, embrace, and he whispers something we can't hear. They kiss in a way that feels not at all sexual. They're friends.

The Power of the Dog (2021)

Netflix

Jane Campion's drama looked like a likely Best Picture winner in 2022 before CODA scored the honor in an unusual, Covid-tainted year.

It is, on its surface, a slow, ponderous story about a widow (Kirsten Dunst), her kindly suitor and eventual husband (Jesse Plemons), her effeminate, intellectual son, (Kodi Smit-McPhee) and her brutal brother-in-law (Benedict Cumberbatch).

For most of the movie, we think we're watching a sensitive Western, perhaps with a revisionist take on the very 2020s theme of "toxic masculinity." But by the end, we realize it's been a different kind of movie all along — and a more ruthless one than we realized. It makes a hard, shrewd shift in genre, and we respect it.

Dazed and Confused (1993)

Gramercy Pictures - Credit: C/O

The ultimate hangout movie, Dazed and Confused follows a group of high schoolers on graduation night as they cruise around and make plans to go to a party at the Moontower. There's some fighting and bullying and flirting, and some mailboxes get battered. Football star Randall "Pink" Floyd (Jason London) has to decide whether to sign a pledge. not to do drugs.

And that's it. No one dies, nothing explodes, no one pulls off the heist of the century. And yet it's a pure joy, helped launch the careers of Ben Affleck, Parker Posey, and Matthew McConaughey, and is the best hangout movie ever. Quentin Tarantino has called his favorite movie of the 90s.

Dazed and Confused is one of several deceptively simple Richard Linklater movies, where very normal days and nights turn out to be the most memorable of our lives.

And, since we mentioned Tarantino...

Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (2019)

Sony Pictures Releasing

A slice of life story about real-life actress Sharon Tate (Margot Robbie), her burnout actor neighbor Rick Dalton (Leonardo DiCaprio), and Dalton's pal-stuntman-assistant Cliff Booth (Brad Pitt).

The film takes us on a pleasant meander through three days of their lives — at one point we join Sharon on a solo trip to the movies — but writer-director Quentin Tarantino knows he doesn't need to do much to move the plot along...

... Because we're on the edge of our seats the entire time, thinking about the hellish thing we know happened to the real Sharon Tate. Waiting for it to happen onscreen. Horrified.

There are little smatterings of violence before the big finale as Cliff fights both Bruce Lee (Mike Moh) and Tex Watson (Austin Butler).

And when the grim ending comes... it turns out to be not what we expected.

Perfect Days (2023)

Koji Yakusho and Arisa Nakano in Perfect Days. DCM

The newest film on our list, Perfect Days follows a Tokyo bathroom custodian named Hirayama (K?ji Yakusho) as he goes about his simple days, fueled by mix tapes, good books, and his love of photography.

It's a curious, transfixing film about making the most of a seemingly simple existence. People enter his life who seem poised to change it dramatically, but he takes comfort in his routines.

Its excellent movie credentials include premiering at the the 76th Cannes Film Festival, where it competed for the Palme d'Or and won the Prize of the Ecumenical Jury and the Best Actor Award for Yakusho. It was also nominated for the Best International Feature Film at the 96th Academy Awards,.

Before Sunset (2004)

Movies Where Not Much Happens
Warner Independent Pictures

Another Linklater movie, and the sequel to his lovely Before Sunrise, which could also be on this list. Jesse and Celine (Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy, who co-write the movie with Linklater and Kim Krizan) reunite in Paris, nearly a decade after the night they spent together in Vienna in Before Sunrise.

Jesse has written a book about that night, and he and Celina reminisce about what could have been and what can never be. Or can it?

The biggest event in Before Sunset comes at the very end, when instead of doing something, Jesse doesn't do something — and it changes his and Celine's lives. It also sets up the third film in the series, the beguiling Before Midnight.

Last Days of Disco (1999)

Gramercy Pictures

Writer-director Whit Stillman has said that during the tough days of filming his 1994 Barcelona, a rare moment of joy came while shooting a disco scene. He wondered why he couldn't just make a whole movie of young women loving the nightlife and dancing. So he made Last Days of Disco.

Chloe Sevigny and Kate Beckinsale star as aspiring book editors who eke out small salaries while looking for love or connection or something on dance floors and the sexy banquettes at their edges. At least one character considers them overprivileged and insipid, and the big climax is a debate about Lady and the Tramp.

But there's a lot happening in the subtext, including a richly detailed, nearly invisible subplot about tax fraud. And — much more importantly, from the movie's perspective — people find real meaning in the most seemingly superficial of settings. This might be your humble correspondent's favorite movie — and it's one of the most seductive movies we've ever seen.

The Brutalist (2024)

Brutalist Judy Becker
A24

The newest film on this list, and a leading Oscar contender, Brady Corbet's The Brutalist moves as a patient, often hypnotic pace, inviting you to enjoy and appreciate its anthemic score, nuanced performances, and the brutally beautiful architecture of protagonist László Tóth (Adrien Brody).

It unfolds over 3 hours and 35 minutes that do not fly by: One of its leads, Felicity Jones as Erzsébet Tóth — doesn't really show up until after the midpoint intermission. Strikingly, for a movie with plenty of time, The Brutalist never over-explains, often waiting until years after events in the film to have occurred before the characters discuss them at any length.

Arguably the most devastating moment in the film — it occurs between László and his benefactor/antagonist Harrison Lee Van Buren Sr. (Guy Pearce) — unfolds with such understatement that you may not immediately understand the trauma unfolding unless you catch the sound of an unbuckling belt.

Contempt (1963)

Marceau-Cocinor 

French writer Paul (Michel Piccoli) is enlisted to work with Fritz Lang (played by the real Fritz Lang) on an adaptation of The Iliad.

When Paul and his wife Camille (Brigitte Bardot) are invited to the home of cocky American producer Jeremy Proko (Jack Palance), Proko's car only has room for one passenger. And so begins a period of intense agony for Paul.

It's all very slow — yet you wish it were even slower. Jean-Luc Godard's Contempt is one of the most gorgeous movies ever made. The visuals are sumptuous, including of Casa Malaparte, the seaside home on Capri, Italy where key scenes occur. And "Camille's Theme," by Georges Delerue, is so stirring that Martin Scorsese borrowed it for Casino.

Contempt has two very violent deaths, but they're almost an afterthought. The emotional carnage comes first.

La Piscine (1969)

Société Nouvelle de Cinématographie

TimeOut perfectly describes this one as "a deliciously languid, slinkily unsettling affair."

Director Jacques Deray spends lots of time on the uncluttered elegance of la piscine of the title (la piscine is French for "the swimming pool") and the magnetism of its four central inhabitants, played by Alain Delon, Romy Schneider, Maurice Ronet, and Jane Birkin.

There's lust and jealousy, sure, though we're never sure how seriously to take it all until, about midway through the film, someone commits a rompishly casual murder. When it happens, you're almost sad to see the movie take a break from shots of people just lying around.

The Father (2020)

UCG Distribution

The setup for Florian Zeller's magnificent debut is so simple it barely seems sufficient for a movie: A daughter (Olivia Colman) is trying to move her dementia-struck father (Anthony Hopkins) from his flat and into a nursing home.

But the scenes that result are both aching and mesmerizing. Zeller designed the film, he told MovieMaker, "to make the audience feel as if they were going through a labyrinth." He envelops the audience in Anthony's confusion by moving the proportions of the apartment, changing the locations of items, and even changing the colors of a wall.

We see and feel a man losing his mind, and the film makes us share in his alternating peace and terror. Zeller was so certain that Hopkins was the only actor for the job that he named his main character Anthony and wrote the script for the Silence of the Lambs Oscar winner without ever having met him.

All worked out: Hopkins won his second Best Actor Oscar for The Father, one of the most excellent movies of recent years.

Jeanne Dielman, 23 quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles (1975)

Olympic Films

The gold standard of movies where not much happens, Jeanne Dielman follows a widowed housewife (Delphine Seyrig) as she goes about her domestic routines over three days: cooking, cleaning, taking care of her son, and having sex with a different client each afternoon.

Yes, she has sex three times, and there is one pointed act of violence, which may sound like a lot is happening. But consider that the movie is three hours and twenty minutes long. At one point it devotes four minutes to a static shot of Jeanne making veal cutlets.

Released when writer-director Chantal Akerman was just 25, Jeanne Dielman initially drew a mixed response, but steadily gained respect. In 2020, the Sight + Sound poll named it the greatest movie ever made. It replaced Vertigo at the top of the list.

Liked This Gallery of 12 Excellent Movies Where Not Much Happens?

Sony Pictures Classics

You might also enjoy this list of 10 Great Documentaries About Making Movies That You Can Stream Now.

Main image: Brigitte Bardot in Contempt. Marceau-Cocinor 

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