The following is an overview of the events of2011 in film, including the highest-grossing films, film festivals, award ceremonies and a list of films released and notable deaths. More filmsequels were released in 2011 than any other year before it, with 27 sequels released.[1]
Richard Brody ofThe New Yorker observed that the best films of 2011 "exalt the metaphysical, the fantastical, the transformative, the fourth-wall-breaking, or simply the impossible, and—remarkably—do so ... These films depart from 'reality' ... not in order to forget the irrefutable but in order to face it, to think about it, to act on it more freely".[2] Film critic and filmmaker Scout Tafoya ofRogerEbert.com considers the year of 2011 as the best year for cinema, countering the notion of1939 being film's best year overall, citing examples such asDrive,The Tree of Life,Once Upon a Time in Anatolia,Keyhole,Contagion,The Adventures of Tintin, andSherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows. He stated that "2011 housed not just some of the greatest art films of our age, but a revolution in the language of blockbuster filmmaking. One big-budget action film after another used digital cameras to show the world behind explosions in starker, stranger light, while constructing a backbone of classical ideas and images."[3]
2011 was the first year to have three films cross the billion-dollar milestone,[5] surpassing theprevious year's record of two films[6] and also the first time when at least 10 films grossed more than $500 million worldwide (in 11th and 12th place,Puss in Boots andSherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows also earned over $500 million making it twelve films to do so)
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2 grossed $1,342,511,219, becoming the third-highest-grossing film of all time during its theatrical run, the highest-grossing film in theHarry Potter franchise, the highest grossingWarner Bros film and the highest grossing book adaptation and the highest of 2011 worldwide.
In the US and Canada, it set single-day and opening-weekend records, with $91,071,119 and $169,189,427, respectively. In addition, the film set a worldwide opening-weekend record with $483,189,427.
Transformers: Dark of the Moon grossed $1,123,794,079 and is currently the highest-grossing in thefranchise. It also held the record as the highest-grossing film worldwide ever distributed only byParamount for 11 years until it was surpassed byTop Gun: Maverick in 2022.