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'Glass'

Samuel L. Jackson, James McAvoy and Bruce Willis in ‘Glass.’

Jessica Kourkounis/Universal Pictures

With ‘Trap’ in theaters, The Hollywood Reporter ranks his filmography. Are twists in store?

There is no filmmaker like M. Night Shyamalan. Whatever you may feel about the director’s work, you’d be hard-pressed to call him unoriginal. He is entirely his own and, through that facet, has built a filmography that challenges our contemporary considerations of tone, performance and narrative. While it’s all too easy to get hung up on the so-called twists in his work, the beauty of Shyamalan is the ability to subvert expectations and tell stories his way. While he’s had a few missteps along the way, as filmmakers who take risks and bold swings so often do, Shyamalan is one of the few filmmakers who can lure audiences through name alone. There’s always a window for discussion provided, ensuring that even if his films are derided, they won’t be forgotten.

In honor of Shyamalan’s latest release, Trap (and news of another, Caddo Lake, on the way), we count down his filmography — omitting his hard-to-find early works Praying with Anger (1992) and Wide Awake (1998), which feel like experiments before Shyamalan truly found his voice and made a name for himself with The Sixth Sense. Though I can’t promise you a twist at the end as we count down to Shyamalan’s best film, it’s the journey that makes it all worthwhile.

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