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Best Crime Movies With Your Parents From The 2000S With A Shocking Twist Ending

The best crime movies with your parents from the 2000s with a shocking twist ending. Includes Batman Begins, Mother, Lilya 4-ever and more — curated by Movie...

The films that work best with parents are ones that hold up across different relationships with cinema. Neither too slow nor too demanding. Just genuinely good.

The 2000s feel undervalued now. A decade of films that knew what they were doing and did it without apology.

Crime cinema at its best is a mirror — not a celebration of lawbreaking, but an examination of what drives people to it.

Batman Begins movie poster
1
2005 · ★★★½☆ 7.7/10

Driven by tragedy, billionaire Bruce Wayne dedicates his life to uncovering and defeating the corruption that plagues his home, Gotham City. Unable to work within the system, he instead creates a new identity, a symbol of fear for the criminal underworld - The Batman.

Mother movie poster
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2009 · ★★★½☆ 7.7/10

A mother lives quietly with her son. One day, a girl is brutally killed, and the boy is charged with the murder. Now, it's his mother's mission to prove him innocent.

Lilya 4-ever movie poster
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2002 · ★★★½☆ 7.6/10

In a struggling post-Soviet community, Lilya a teenage girl is abandoned when her mother moves to the United States with her boyfriend. Facing neglect and poverty, she meets Andrei, who offers her a job in Sweden, giving her hope for a better life — and a journey that will change everything.

Sin Nombre movie poster
4
2009 · ★★★½☆ 7.6/10

Sayra, a Native Honduran teenager, hungers for a better life. Her chance for one comes when she is reunited with her long-estranged father, who intends to emigrate to Mexico and then enter the United States. Sayra's life collides with a pair of Indigenous Mexican and Mestizo-Mexican gangmembers who have boarded the same USA-bound train.

American Gangster movie poster
5
2007 · ★★★½☆ 7.6/10

Loosely based on the criminal career of Frank Lucas, a gangster from La Grange, North Carolina, who smuggled heroin into the United States on American service planes returning from the Vietnam War, before being detained by a task force led by Newark Detective Richie Roberts.

These films don't romanticise crime — they examine it. The best of them leave you uncertain about who you were rooting for.

Changeling movie poster
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2008 · ★★★½☆ 7.6/10

Los Angeles, 1928. When single mother Christine Collins leaves for work, her son vanishes without a trace. Five months later, the police reunite mother and son. But when Christine suspects that the boy returned to her isn't her child, her quest for truth exposes a world of corruption.

A Prophet movie poster
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2009 · ★★★½☆ 7.6/10

Sentenced to six years in prison, Malik El Djebena is alone in the world and can neither read nor write. On his arrival at the prison, he seems younger and more brittle than the others detained there. At once he falls under the sway of a group of Corsicans who enforce their rule in the prison. As the 'missions' go by, he toughens himself and wins the confidence of the Corsican group.

Hot Fuzz movie poster
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2007 · ★★★½☆ 7.6/10

Former London constable Nicholas Angel finds it difficult to adapt to his new assignment in the sleepy British village of Sandford. Not only does he miss the excitement of the big city, but he also has a well-meaning oaf for a partner. However, when a series of grisly accidents rocks Sandford, Angel smells something rotten in the idyllic village.

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo movie poster
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2009 · ★★★½☆ 7.5/10

Swedish thriller based on Stieg Larsson's novel about a male journalist and a young female hacker. In the opening of the movie, Mikael Blomkvist, a middle-aged publisher for the magazine Millennium, loses a libel case brought by corrupt Swedish industrialist Hans-Erik Wennerström. Nevertheless, he is hired by Henrik Vanger in order to solve a cold case, the disappearance of Vanger's niece

Zodiac movie poster
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2007 · ★★★½☆ 7.5/10

Over the course of a decade, editors of the San Francisco Chronicle entice themselves in the murders of the Zodiac Killer. However, as time runs its course, interest in the case dwindles in the eyes of the professionals. The Killer stops interacting with the public. However, believing he has the answers, an amateur cartoonist from the initial sightings races against time to prevent what he believes is another murder.

A twist only works if the film has earned it. These films plant their revelations early, play fair, and still manage to blindside you.

These films work because they take their characters seriously — even the ones doing terrible things.