My top Five of the year (based on how much I liked watching them) in no particular order are:
Hacksaw Ridge
Moana
The Magnificent Seven
Finding Dory
The Nice Guys
I don't buy into the "serious drama/Oscar contender" crap and never really have. Not to say I wont watch those movies, but I see movies to unwind and have a good time, not to see a serious drama piece about a love triangle during the building of the Hoover dam or some $h!t like that. If it's a drama with an interesting plot (Sully,Manchester By The Sea) I'll watch it, but just because it's got a lot of Oscar buzz does not necessarily mean it's a good movie.
It's like when people add Woody Allen movies to the "best of [year]" lists. I've seen 'Cafe Society' listed several times on best of 2016 lists and I can not believe it! 'Cafe Society' was just one more example of a boring, rehashed Woody Allen plot. Just because it's a Woody Allen movie does not mean it should get an instant seal of approval of being a great picture. Woody Allen is the most overrated writer/director (outside of Spike Lee) in the history of cinema and yet his movies (which never make money at the box office) routinely are in consideration for Oscar contention. Don't get me wrong, the man's written and directed a handful of good films (Annie Hall, The Purple Rose of Cairo, Hannah and Her Sister's, Radio Days, Midnight in Paris), but for every good movie he's written/directed, there are 3 to 4 bad ones, yet he never gets recognized for these films being boring or downright awful. They just pat him on the back (like when your kid brings you a finger painting that you say is amazing but everyone else looks at as pedestrian, even by kindergartner standards) and tell him good job and nominate him for some awards. It's pathetic really.