Just one other such example of this, The Zero Theorem, 2013, by Terry Gilliam, which is also excellent, generated these reviews from Rotten Tomatoes:
Two other films which are near perfect, each in their own way, both gleaned from my favourite film blog: John Llewellyn Probert's House of Mortal Cinema
Edgar Wright's latest is a superb ghost story, Last Night in Soho, 2021
Stunning, and certainly one which admirers of Kubrick may enjoy, Spencer, 2021 can be read in a number of ways. I'll leave it to Mr Probert to provide one of many such lenses:
https://johnlprobert.blogspot.com/2021/12/top-ten-films-of-2021.html
A film where image, music and especially Kristen Stewart's performance combine to provide moments of near cinematic genius, and possibly the only movie with aspirations for Oscar time to ever grace this site. Pablo Larrain's SPENCER plunges us into Great British Horror country from the off - that soggy, gloomy, stately setting of country houses that were home to so many mad scientists, sadists and satanists back in the 1970s. In fact the film SPENCER reminded me of a lot was dear old Norman J Warren's SATAN'S SLAVE, with our innocent and unsuspecting victim being prepared for sacrifice by a bunch of eccentrics, right down to her being weighed near the start ("for fun") by Timothy Spall in the Michael Gough (or possibly even Sheila Keith) role. "I'm lost," says Kristen Stewart's Diana at the very beginning as she's trying to find her way, alone and unaided, to her destination, giving the increasingly strange goings-on she finds herself involved in something of a CARNIVAL OF SOULS vibe.