Note: This essay reflects on the film Sicario and its place within the cinema of the 2010s. It is written in the spirit of cultural criticism rather than formal film scholarship. My aim is not to produce a definitive ranking of the decade’s films, but to articulate why Sicario stands out as a particularly revealing work about power, violence, and the uneasy moral landscape of contemporary geopolitics.
The film’s depiction of the U.S.–Mexico borderlands and the covert war against drug cartels resonated strongly with me because it refuses many of the narrative comforts typical of American action cinema. Instead of heroic triumphs or clear moral resolutions, Sicario presents a world in which institutional power often operates through ambiguous methods and morally troubling compromises.
In that sense the film belongs to a small tradition of American cinema willing to look directly at the realities of U.S. involvement in Latin America. An earlier example is Salvador, which similarly attempted to depict American policy in the region without the usual patriotic framing.
Readers who disagree with the claim that Sicario is the greatest film of the 2010s are very much invited to do so. Film arguments are part of the pleasure of cinephile culture. The claim here is intentionally bold because bold claims tend to produce interesting conversations.
At the very least, the border extraction sequence alone earns Sicario a place among the most unforgettable cinematic moments of the past decade.
I first watched Sicario on Netflix.
Which is not the way great films are supposed to enter one’s life. Great films are meant to arrive in dark theaters, on enormous screens, in the company of strangers who feel the tension at the same moment you do. Netflix, by contrast, offers films casually, like items on a digital buffet.
But sometimes a movie survives even that.
Sicario does.
Within half an hour it becomes clear that the film is operating at a different frequency from most thrillers. The dialogue is spare. The pacing is deliberate. The camera lingers on landscapes and silences. Something about the atmosphere suggests that the story is heading somewhere morally uncomfortable.
Then comes the border crossing.
The Extraction
The convoy moves slowly toward the border crossing at Juárez.
The mission seems straightforward: extract a prisoner from Mexico and return him to the United States. The vehicles move through traffic in tight formation. Nothing dramatic is happening yet.
And yet everything feels wrong.
Cars begin to surround the convoy. Drivers stare from their windshields. Traffic slows to a crawl. The camera—guided by the extraordinary eye of Roger Deakins—cuts between glances, mirrors, steering wheels, hands resting near weapons.
The tension builds with almost mathematical precision.
What makes the scene so powerful is not the violence itself but the certainty of its arrival. Everyone in the vehicles understands what is about to happen. The operators watch the surrounding cars with an eerie calm, as if they are simply waiting for a timer to run out.
Disaster is not possible.
It is inevitable.
When the gunfire finally erupts it is sudden, efficient, and disturbingly professional. The scene ends almost as quickly as it began.
By the time the convoy crosses back into the United States, the viewer understands that the film is not interested in the usual heroics of the crime thriller. It is interested in something darker.
The Line Between Law and Power
Part of what makes Sicario extraordinary is the way it gradually dissolves the moral categories the audience expects.
Emily Blunt’s character, FBI agent Kate Macer, begins the film believing she is participating in a legitimate law enforcement operation.
Kate Macer
But as the mission unfolds, she begins to realize that the institutions she represents are operating according to rules that have very little to do with the law.
The key figure in this realization is the relaxed, almost cheerful CIA operative played by Josh Brolin.
Matt Graver
Graver is one of the film’s most fascinating characters because he openly blurs the lines between legality and strategy. He treats the war against the cartels not as a legal battle but as a geopolitical game in which certain rules simply no longer apply.
He jokes. He smiles. He reassures Kate that everything is under control.
And yet the deeper the operation goes, the clearer it becomes that the “control” he represents has very little to do with justice.
Alejandro
If Matt Graver represents the pragmatic face of American power, Alejandro represents something older and more elemental.
Alejandro Gillick
Alejandro is not a police officer or a soldier in any conventional sense. He is a weapon deployed inside the machinery of the state.
His presence reveals the film’s central truth: the war on drugs, as depicted here, is not really about drugs. It is about power, revenge, and the maintenance of geopolitical equilibrium through violence.
The final dinner-table scene—quiet, controlled, almost polite—delivers one of the most chilling moments in modern cinema.
Alejandro does not rage.
He simply completes the task.
A Film Without Illusions
The reason Sicario stands above most films of the 2010s is that it refuses to decorate its subject with comforting illusions.
American cinema has often struggled to portray U.S. foreign policy in Latin America with any degree of honesty. Films frequently soften the narrative with patriotic framing or moral reassurance.
Sicario does the opposite.
In that sense it belongs to a small tradition of films willing to examine American power without the usual gloss. One earlier example is
Salvador.
Like Salvador, Sicario presents U.S. involvement in the politics and violence of the region not as a heroic intervention but as a complicated and morally ambiguous system of influence.
The film does not sermonize about this reality.
It simply shows it.
The Craft
What elevates the film from strong political thriller to masterpiece is its extraordinary craftsmanship.
Director Denis Villeneuve constructs the story with remarkable restraint. Exposition is minimal. Dialogue is sparse. Much of the narrative unfolds through mood and implication rather than explanation.
Roger Deakins’ cinematography turns the borderlands into a stark visual landscape of highways, deserts, and shadowy tunnels.
And the score by Jóhann Jóhannsson provides the film’s subterranean heartbeat—deep, rumbling tones that feel less like music than like distant artillery beneath the earth.
Together these elements create an atmosphere that is almost hypnotic.
The Film of the Decade
Every decade produces films that entertain, and a smaller number that capture the psychological mood of their time.
Sicario belongs to the second category.
The 2010s were a decade in which institutions increasingly appeared opaque, power operated through indirect mechanisms, and the line between legality and strategy often seemed disturbingly thin.
Sicario does not attempt to solve these problems.
It simply looks at them without flinching.
And that honesty may be precisely why it stands as the greatest film of its decade.