1. "Cold in July" (2014)
Guns are fired; the past dredged up; secrets unfold like a poker game with the highest stakes. Michael C. Hall dons a mullet and a southern accent, breaking his Dexter mold.
2. "Christine" (2016)
Hall plays George, the anchorman and Christine's quasi-romantic interest. George is suave, ambitious, and the apple of the news director's eye. Christine, in contrast, struggles with depression and isolation.
1970s' aesthetic with the grittiness of real-life agony. No dramatic flair, just raw human experience.
3. "Kill Your Darlings" (2013)
Hall takes on the role of David Kammerer, Lucien Carr's older, obsessed lover. Kammerer's murder, and how Carr gets Ginsberg to help him, forms the crux of the plot. Hall's Kammerer is neither simple nor likable, but he's real—desperately romantic and unsettlingly possessive.
4. "The Trouble with Bliss" (2011)
The plot tiptoes around awkward encounters and uncomfortable realizations. Less about events, more about moments, the film explores the meandering nature of life. Hall's performance adds shades to a character who could easily be dismissed as a loser.
5. "Gamer" (2009)
Imagine a world where gamers can control actual humans in a real-life shooting game. Castle is the puppet master, controlling everything and everyone, including Kable, the main protagonist. It's a neon-lit, violence-ridden spectacle, not so much a plot to follow but a chaotic maze to escape.
6. "Peep World" (2010)
The plot twist? One sibling publishes a novel that's too revealing about family secrets. No skeletons in the closet; they're all laid out on the dinner table.
7. "Paycheck" (2003)
Hall's role? An FBI agent, part of the apparatus chasing down Jennings. In essence, it's a classic Philip K. Dick scenario: technology and memory manipulation, told in a rapid-fire narrative style.
8. "In the Shadow of the Moon" (2019)
The story isn't so much about the chase as it is about the unfolding enigma: the murderer seems to know the future.
9. "After Adderall" (2016)
When James Franco makes a movie adaptation and takes liberties with the story, things get... complicated. With Hall in the driving seat, the plot navigates through the messy terrains of storytelling in the public eye.