By Ryan Heffernan
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Everyone, at some stage of their life at least, sits with the feeling that they are a misfit, an outsider living on the periphery of normality. As such, films that focus on pariahs have a unique ability to resonate with the masses while still appealing to a specific feeling of isolation that many people feel a powerful connection to, almost as if the story and characters are touching on something they alone know in such depth and detail.
Whether these films opt to celebrate the wondrous peculiarity of being different and unique or examine social outcasts in a lens of contemplative drama, danger, tragedy, and suspense, all 10 of these pictures excel as thoughtful and engrossing stories of misfits. Sprawling across many genres, encompassing decades-old classics and modern masterpieces, the greatest films about outcasts and outsiders are among the best the medium has ever seen.
10 'Donnie Darko' (2001)
Directed by Richard Kelly

One of the defining films of the early 2000s, Donnie Darko blends sci-fi suspense with psychological thrills to deliver a winding, time-bending story of teenage torment. Donnie Darko (Jake Gyllenhaal) is an awkward high school student who finds himself entangled in a bizarre scenario when a man in a monstrous rabbit costume tells him the world will end in 28 days. The troubled teen begins carrying out fateful crimes at the behest of the mysterious entity while grappling with the mystery of a plane engine that crashed into his room.
Complemented by its moody atmosphere and Gyllenhaal’s excellent performance as the tumultuous teen, Donnie Darko winds together a thought-provoking story of tremendous intelligence, foresight, and enigmatic intrigue. Gyllenhaal imbues Donnie with a slight devilish streak, a wry and mischievous grin that suggests his outsider status might be by design.
Donnie Darko
9 'Nightcrawler' (2014)
Directed by Dan Gilroy

From one exceptional dark thriller starring Jake Gyllenhaal to another, Nightcrawler is one of the bleakest and most cynical depictions of a social outcast. He features as Lou Bloom, a sociopathic petty thief who takes up photojournalism, hunting down the most heinous and violent incidents in L.A. each night to film them and sell the footage for profit to a local news station.
Brutal, confronting, and matching the calculating chill of its cold-blooded protagonist, Nightcrawler thrives as a scorching indictment on the media, the sadistic public demand for such material, and the society that allows such practices to be profitable. Gyllenhaal’s Bloom is an unforgettable character, a remorseless loner of unhindered dedication who will do anything to get the footage he needs.
Nightcrawler
R
Crime
Drama
Thriller
- Release Date
- October 31, 2014
- Director
- Dan Gilroy
- Cast
- Jake Gyllenhaal , Michael Papajohn , Marco Rodríguez , Bill Paxton , James Huang , Kent Shocknek , Rene Russo
- Runtime
- 117 minutes
8 'Carrie' (1976)
Directed by Brian De Palma

Based on Stephen King’s 1974 novel of the same name, Carrie is one of the most famous, unnerving, and enduring horror movies that has ever been released. It focuses on Carrie White (Sissy Spacek), a bullied high school student in possession of telekinetic powers who lives under the thumb of her ultra-religious and controlling mother. Things seem to turnaround for Carrie when she is invited to the school prom by a sympathetic student, but everything soon spirals out of control with horrific consequences.
While an exceptional display of horror visuals, Carrie’s greatest asset is how it uses the idea of a high school misfit to serve as a basis for Carrie’s naïve vulnerability. Audiences can’t help but resonate with her life of exclusion and oppression, making her moments of levity incredibly powerful and her eventual turn all the more tragic. It is a brilliant, genre-focused exploration of what it is to be a teenage outsider, with the magnificence of the end result a decades-spanning and defining classic of horror cinema.
Carrie (1976)
7 'Pig' (2021)
Directed by Michael Sarnoski

Offbeat, darkly comical, and disarmingly potent, Pig coasts on a textured and understated performance from Nicolas Cage to be one of his best films. He stars as a truffle hunter, once a renowned chef, living alone in the Oregon forest who cherishes his one true companion, a foraging pig. When the pig is kidnapped, the recluse begrudgingly returns to Portland to search for the pig.
Anchored by an aching rawness, the film is a stunning exploration of loss and love, one that uses its unusual premise to hit hard at notions of human connection with profound power and surprising warmth. Cage himself is flawless as the lead, a tired and emotionally exhausted outcast who has rejected society as much as it has rejected him. His connection with his beloved pig is both tragic and beautiful.
Pig
6 'The Perks of Being a Wallflower' (2012)
Directed by Stephen Chbosky

A lot of high school dramas focus on the common experience of feeling like an outsider, occupying the space around the fun and the focus of the schoolyard, rather than being present in it. The Perks of Being a Wallflower captures this aura exceptionally, but then it also elaborates to show how rewarding and meaningful it is when one does finally find a group of people who gives them a sense of belonging.
Logan Lerman stars as Charlie, an introverted 15-year-old with a dark past who befriends two seniors in Sam (Emma Watson) and her brother Patrick (Ezra Miller). It balances its tale of friendship with the anguish and dread of being a misfit in spectacular fashion, with Stephen Chbosky directing the film with a deft touch that realizes his own novel with heart, drama, and wonderful resolve to be the ultimate tale of teenage isolation and self-discovery.
The Perks of Being a Wallflower
5 'Drive' (2011)
Directed by Nicolas Winding Refn

A hypnotic thriller of crime and quiet love, Drive has overcome its initial poor performance to endure as a spellbinding and stylistically arresting picture. Ryan Gosling stars as an unnamed stunt driver who moonlights as a getaway expert for criminals in L.A.. A lonely figure, he begins to develop a tender relationship with his neighbor and her young son, but the father’s return after being released from prison casts the driver into a deadly web of money and violence.
Against the neon-infused backdrop of Los Angeles’ seedy underbelly, Drive finds a fantastic grounding presence in Gosling’s reclusive and restrained protagonist, with the actor’s performance becoming nothing short of iconic. Further bolstered by an atmospheric serenity that clashes violently with moments of palpable intensity, Drive is a unique depiction of misfit woe and unlikely romance, but it is undeniably enrapturing.
Drive
R
Crime
Action
Drama
Thriller
- Release Date
- August 6, 2011
- Director
- Nicolas Winding Refn
- Cast
- Ryan Gosling , Carey Mulligan , Bryan Cranston , Albert Brooks , Oscar Isaac , Christina Hendricks
- Runtime
- 100
4 'Harvey' (1950)
Directed by Henry Koster

A terrific picture that is perhaps the greatest ever depiction of Jimmy Stewart’s unassuming everyman charm, Harvey is a somewhat underrated old Hollywood classic of human decency and wonder. Stewart stars as Elwood P. Dowd, a rich and bumbling drunk dismissed by his family on account of his ongoing friendship with an imaginary six-foot-tall rabbit. When his family try to admit him to a facility, however, it becomes clear that the rabbit may not be quite so imaginary.
What makes Elwood such a fantastic character is that, despite being an outcast oblivious to the slights he receives, he treats everyone he encounters with the greatest of respect. His polite and gentle demeanor is a heart-melting anchor to the story that gleefully sprawls off into situational comedy and a tender tale of child-like fantasy. Harvey has aged gracefully as an arresting tale of the importance and power of human kindness.
Harvey
Not Rated
Comedy
Fantasy
- Release Date
- December 21, 1950
- Director
- Henry Koster
- Cast
- James Stewart , Josephine Hull , Peggy Dow , Charles Drake , Cecil Kellaway , Victoria Horne , Jesse White , William H. Lynn , Wallace Ford , Nana Bryant , Grayce Mills , Clem Bevans
3 'Her' (2013)
Directed by Spike Jonze

A wonderful example of the all-too-rare marriage of science-fiction and romance, Her uses the seemingly inevitable technological advancements of the near future to deliver a profound tale of love and connection. Theodore Twombly (Joaquin Phoenix) is a lonely, heartbroken, and introverted writer who buys a new AI system to help him with his work. Enchanted by the computer’s ability to learn and evolve, Theodore gradually finds himself falling in love with it.
The social commentary of an isolated misfit finding emotional nourishment, friendship, and even love in the form of a computer is complex to say the least, but Spike Jonze grapples with all the story’s nuances with respect, acceptance, and intelligence to ensure Her thrives at every stage. Complemented by Phoenix’s brilliant and richly sympathetic portrayal of loneliness and longing, Her marks an unlikely yet exceptional highlight of romantic cinema in the 21st century.
Her (2013)
2 'Taxi Driver' (1976)
Directed by Martin Scorsese

Robert De Niro’s Travis Bickel is the quintessential cinematic misfit. A Vietnam War veteran who works as a taxi driver in New York City, Bickel holds a vindictive and volatile disdain for the world around him, one that is exacerbated by his romantic woes, a looming political campaign, and a cruel pimp’s treatment of an underage prostitute. His enraged desire for social change boils beneath the surface.
Under Martin Scorsese’s astute direction, Taxi Driver is a harrowing descent into the recesses of a twisted and disturbed man's mind, one whose disgust at the society he inhabits gradually careens into a mission. De Niro is at his extraordinary best as Bickel, making the character an embittered and unpredictable figure of tension, but also an awkward and lost soul as well. It remains one of the most confronting, considered, and nuanced depictions of a social outcast ever put to screen.
Taxi Driver
R
Psychological
Thriller
Noir
- Release Date
- February 9, 1976
- Director
- Martin Scorsese
- Cast
- Robert De Niro , Jodie Foster , Cybill Shepherd , Harvey Keitel , Leonard Harris , Peter Boyle
- Runtime
- 113 minutes
Rent on Amazon
1 'Amélie' (2001)
Directed by Jean-Pierre Jeunet

If Travis Bickel is the definition of a violent and dangerous filmic outsider, then Audrey Tautou’s Amélie is the emblematic outcast of all that is good and wholesome. The French romantic-comedy follows Amélie, an introverted and shy waitress, as she develops a taste for anonymously meddling in the lives of those around her. She conducts loving unseen deeds to help those in her community find happiness and love, but her ostracized nature hinders her when she finds a love of her own.
Enhanced by a gorgeous visual palette and an unabashed belief in the power of human decency, Amélie is an affirming masterpiece of good will and true love (and an incredibly calming movie). It finds a beautiful and heart-snatching core in the form of its quiet and reclusive protagonist, who uses her social detachment to her advantage in her pursuit to enrich the lives of those around her.
Amélie
NEXT: The Best Movies with Non-Linear Narratives, Ranked
- Movie
- Top 10
- Amelie
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