And thus 2012 ends, and thus studios chum the waters with Oscar-bait. Some of the recent releases have been great (Zero Dark Thirty), some weird (Holy Motors), some are for your parents (Lincoln), and some are just plain sadistic (Les Misérables). But while 2012’s been full of solid movies—The Master, Argo, Magic Mike, Looper—there are always too many that are forgotten too quickly. Here are the best of those, which—if their box office receipts are any indication—you didn’t see. But hey, it’s okay! Don’t worry! I’m not mad at you! We can fix this! It’s not too late. 8. Indie Game: The Movie (iTunes, Amazon, Netflix Instant, Steam, and

indiegamethemovie.com) James Swirsky and Lisanne Pajot’s Kickstarter-funded documentary follows the awkward brainiacs behind indie games Braid, Super Meat Boy, and Fez.

Insightful and honest, it’s a look at the side of gaming that can be lost in the white

noise of Mass Effect and Modern Warfare—a place where passionate, exhausted

kids build intensely personal works of art that also happen to be incredibly fun to

play. Sad fact! Movies based on videogames are always terrible. Better fact! Between

2007’s The King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters and Indie Game: The Movie, it’s looking

like movies about videogames can be pretty fantastic.

7. Robot & Frank (DVD, Blu-ray, iTunes, and Amazon on February 12) In the near future, grumpy old man Frank (Frank Langella) is a doddering, forgetful, former cat burglar—and he’s forced by his son (James Marsden) to get a friendly robot to help him out around the house. Frank’s daughter (Liv Tyler) is morally opposed to the robot, the local librarian (Susan Sarandon) thinks it’s cute, and Frank can’t stand the thing as it cleans his house, makes him eat healthy, and threatens to give enemas. Until, that is, Frank realizes he can dupe the robot into helping him pull off one last

heist. What results is a sort of sci-fi Odd Couple—it’s funny, sweet, and melancholy, and it features a lot of Frank Langella swearing at a robot, which I think we can all agree is the only thing any movie really needs.

6. Haywire (DVD, Blu-ray, iTunes, Amazon, and Netflix Instant) Steven

Soderbergh’s action flick landed with a sickening thud at the box office, which is terrible because it is amazing. Former MMA fighter Gina Carano plays a black ops agent who beats the holy hell out of some entitled jerks who set her up (the entitled jerks, in no particular order: Ewan McGregor, Michael Fassbender, Michael Douglas, Antonio Banderas). It’s incredibly stylish and incredibly fun, and it might even change your life—by which I mean there’s a decent chance that, regardless of your gender or sexual orientation, you will fall in deeply, irredeemably in love with Carano.

5. Miami Connection (DVD, Blu-ray, drafthousefilms.com, and VHS—yep, VHS) If you’re going to be all uptight about it, fine: Miami Connection is from 1987. But considering it wasn’t until 2012 that Drafthouse Films made it widely available, I’m putting it on here and there’s nothing you can do to stop

me. Cheaply made in the ’80s by “philosopher/author/inspirational speaker” Grandmaster Y.K. Kim (who also stars), Miami Connection tells the story of Dragon Sound—Florida’s hottest synth rock band, the members of which all happen to be college students, BFFs, orphans, and black belts. When they aren’t rockin’ clubs with songs about how awesome their friendship is (“Friends”) or how much they hate ninjas (“Against the Ninja”), Dragon Sound backs up their lyrics—with their fists. Turns out Miami’s under siege from cocaine-dealing ninjas… and Dragon Sound is the only band radical enough to bring them to justice. Sounds insane, right? Yes, it does. Please note: This movie is 800 percent more insane than it sounds.

4. The Raid: Redemption (DVD, Blu-ray, iTunes, and Amazon) This is a kung fu flick from Indonesia. So in Indonesia, apparently? They do not mess around. The Raid makes just about every other recent action movie (except Haywire!) look amateurish and terrible. People saw The Expendables 2 instead of this—a fact that our grandchildren will study as one of our generation’s greatest missteps.

3. Safety Not Guaranteed (DVD, Blu-ray, iTunes, and Amazon) The romantic comedy genre has a bad reputation… for a reason. But here’s one of the exceptions that proves the rule! A Sundance-approved indie flick inspired by a YTMND.com meme (stick with me, here), Safety Not Guaranteed follows a reporter (Aubrey Plaza) who’s assigned to write about a rural kook (Mark Duplass) who claims he wants someone to go back in time with him. In the time machine he’s building. Which he swears works. Charming, original, and affecting, this thing… man. So good! You should’ve seen it!

2. Killing Them Softly (It might still be in a few theaters! Maybe? Probably not.) Remember what I said about Haywire’s box office being a sickening thud? Okay, imagine that, but louder. Brad Pitt stars in this adaptation of George V. Higgins’ 1974 crime novel—but writer/director Andrew Dominik transports Higgins’ story about a

bunch of crooks screwing each other over to post-Katrina New Orleans, just as the

financial crisis is hitting. Intense, blunt, and the sort of funny that makes you laugh and then hate yourself for it, Killing Them Softly is a hell of a thing—and a cynical, much-needed counterpoint to the empty promises of an election year.

1. The Queen of Versailles (DVD, Blu-ray, Amazon, and iTunes) Speaking of the good ol’ U.S. of A., The Queen of Versailles is as great of a film about America as one could hope for—even though it’s actually about the billionaire Siegel family, who live like royalty thanks to patriarch David’s obscenely profitable timeshare empire. David’s chipper trophy wife, Jackie, and her slew of spoiled children run around

Florida being filthy rich, jaw-droppingly out of touch, and generally infuriating. (As

Versailles begins, the Siegels are building an even bigger, tackier mansion than the one they already live in—the new monstrosity will be the largest private home in the entire country.) And then? Well, then the financial crisis hits. Director Lauren Greenfield keeps her camera rolling as the Siegels are forced to fire their staff, learn to cook for themselves, send their kids to (gasp!) public schools, and struggle to pay their most basic bills. As a riveting—and surprisingly sympathetic—portrait of a remarkable family, Queen of Versailles is amazing. As a film about what happened

when America’s bubble burst, it’s more relevant—and more scary—than anything

else that came out this year.