Thursday, February 18, 2010

My top-10 films of 2009

Many people have asserted that this has been a somewhat lackluster year for film, and while I have a fairly large list of movies I personally enjoyed, I can't exactly not support that sentiment. Its really strange really, because we had so many great films, including most of the 10 nominations (maybe with the exception of the might-as-well-be lifetime movie The Blindside), as well as other lesser known films such as Moon and Adventurland. Rather,I think peoples interest in film was just a little lower this year, which may sound funny given that James Cameron broke his own records with Avatar this fall. But that is exactly my point, for many people (myself not included) the major flagship for American cinema was a slightly generic 3D sci-fi epic about blue alien catpeople. And it doesn't help that many of the years supposed blockbusters like Watchmen and GI-Joe turned out to be duds or in the case of Transformers 2 and Wolverine Origins they turned out to be abominations of film.

Having said and in the spirit of the oscar season I wanted to go over what films I will always remember as being the highlights of 2009. First is my official top 10, which includes some of the nominees for best picture.

01 – The Hurt Locker – Emotionally complicated and brooding, this slow burn of a war thriller sets new expectations for the genre. A fully realized character study with something to say. Shot with confidence and skill, this movie will stand well along the likes of Platoon and Apocalypse Now .

02 - Up in the Air – Jason Reitman swings another home-run that cuts right down to the core of the human condition. A wonderful adult dramedy.

03 - District 9 – Socio-political sci-fi action thriller. Brings to mind the greatest in its genre but brings something new to the table as well. A love or hate experiment in genre perhaps, but one that I can’t stop watching.

04 - Inglorious Bastards – Tarantino’s tightest script since Pulp Fiction set in a fictitious WW2 nazi occupied France. This has the Tarantino stamp of aproval which comes with great characters and dialogue you can always depend on. Here he single handedly rewrites well documented history and basically makes an american foriegn film. Twisted take on history that makes you remember why it’s fun to go the movies.

05 - Away We Go – Best movie by Sam Mendes since American Beauty and a great coming of middle-age story about two young lovers trying to find a place they can call home. Some critics hated it, and for the life of me, I can’t see why.

06 – Up – Another home run by Pixar, a heart melting piece about aging and young ambition. Equally funny and melancholy, but nevertheless entertaining and eye catching.

07 – Where the Wild Things Are - Spike Jones turns a classic children’s book about running away from home and chilling with some furries into an art-film for kids. This movie fully realizes a fantasy that warns kids about escapism instead of encouraging it.

08 - Star Trek – One of the summers true highlights and testament to the notion that J.J. Abrams is truly a sci-fi force to be reckoned with. Humor and action briskly handed to you in equal servings makes for the ultimate popcorn movie and in mny humble star-wars biased mind it outshines/outdates all of the previous films in the well established franchise. Personally I think this movie is far more reasonable then the heavy handed and bloated Avatar.

09 - I love you Man - Somehow forgotten already, this might be the most heavily quoted movie of the year, alongside The Hangover. The ultimate bromance; Jason Seagull and Paul Rudd’s chemistry makes for a hilarious and enjoyable comedy. The third act is a little dissapointing as it really tries to force conflict on a movie that probably doesn't need it, but in the end you still come out of the film happy and wanting more. But I am not asking for a sequal as it would drain the lifeforce out of this film like an evil twin fetus.

10 – (500) Days of Summer - Both funny and painfully real, this movie is the best break-up movie since Eternal Sunshine and Zoe Deschannel and J-lett make a wonderful pair of lovers who can never seem to get comfortable. It's slightly unbeleiveable that someone like Joseph Gordon Levitt would be so insecure about women, but he playes the role well, and this is arguably Zoe's carreer defining role. This movie playes around with gender reversal as the man is seen as the heartbroke romantic, and the girl is detached and aloof.

3 comments:

  1. You know, it takes a while for me to see all the new releases. Since trips to the big screen involve babysitters it has to be something really special. My point is that I won't know for a while yet what the most special films of 2009 prove to be. I have high hopes for Richard Kelly's "The Box" and Terry Gilliam's "Imaginarium of Dr. Parnassus" but who knows. Let me throw my two cents at you for the one's you list here.

    I also enjoyed The Hurt Locker but my wife HATED it with a passion so it was frustrating to watch as she just kept asking me to turn it off! :)

    Up In The Air is at my house right now but I haven't watched it yet.

    District 9 did not feel original and innovative to me the way everyone says. It felt like it borrowed heavily from David Cronenberg's FAR superior 1986 film "The Fly" with jeff Goldblum (please seek this out immediately if you haven't seen it yet). Plus, horror or sci-fi as social commentary has ALWAYS been the point of the genre (for sci-fi in particular), what is the legacy of Star Trek if not pushing for social equality, right? I thought Distirct 9 was formulaic in terms of plot, ripped off The Fly but had some cool action sequences.

    I love Tarantino and I really wanted to love Basterds as much as everyone else. I think it will prove to be a better film with each subsequent viewing but I think it has a couple major flaws. The first is the casting of Eli Roth who takes the best cinematic build up EVER (the long Bear Jew intro) and ruins it by being a "Bahstan Yahd" frat boy douche bag when he finally arrives on screen. Eli Roth is a fun filmaker and his douche bag persona was well suited to his turn (as a douche bag) in Death Proof but he was WAY out of his league in Basterds. The other major issue I had with that movie is Landa's decision at the end to become a traitor. I felt it was entirely inconsistent with the man we'd been watching throughout the rest of the film.

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  2. Away We Go is where I disagree with you the most. I personally think that Road To Perdition, Jarhead and Revolutionary Road all run circles around Away We Go which was overly sentimental and had too very unsympathetic leads (in my opinion). Obviously I carry baggage being a young (27 year old) married parent of 2 kids but watching 2 "young people" in there mid-30's struggle with their identity, career and family just grated my nerves, I felt like "fuck you, I've been making this life work since I was 21" and just couldn't relate to them or garner any sympathy for their plight. I sort of felt like by that age, not figuring out your life has more to do with a lack of maturity than the "big bad world" we live in.

    Up is indeed the latest in a string of masterpiece's from Pixar. Those folks can do no wrong it seems!

    Haven't seen Where The Wild Things Are or Fantastic Mr. Fox yet but the prospects of two of my favorite filmakers taking on subjects I can watch with my 5 year old son is very cool to me.

    Star Trek was okay. I've never really taken sides in the Star Wars/Star Trek thing but I will tell you that I think Star Trek: The Next Generation is about as good a sci-fi series as anything I've ever watched and I feel that Wrath of Khan (Star Trek 2), whatever Star Treak 6 was called and the next generation one that had the Borg in it were much better films than this re-boot. I didn't dislike the new one but it was more of a satisfying rental than something I'd want to own.

    I Love You Man didn't really thrill me either but I find no fault in you or anyone else liking it. I love Paul Rudd and if you've read my review of The Shape of Things you'd know that already! :) I Love You Man did have a lot of good parts (I agree that the 3rd act was weak and forced) but I think Rudd's other recent comedy "Role Models" was a much funnier film!

    I haven't seen 500 Days of Summer and really had no plans to. It looked too cutesy for me. Don't get me wrong, I'm not some art movie snob that can't get into a good love story (and I've heard this one is very good). I just thought the previews looked pretty dreadful and any movie post-1989 that involves characters breaking out into song is something I shy away from.

    Cool list though man. If you were asked to do a forced ranking of your top ten movies of all time what would it look like? I know actually ranking them can be nearly impossible but what would your top 10 of all time list look like RIGHT NOW (cause I know it can fluctuate too over time as you change and you see more movies).

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  3. Oh my dear lord.. I had no idea you commented on this Brian... I feel like I let you and anyone else who may have looked at this down. ..Um.. I may do a top 10 of all time.. I have my top-5 already decided.. but the other 5 might be kind of hard to pick. Also, in case your interested, I have a youtube channel where I am much more active. I exclusively do movie reviews. Here is the link if your interested. http://www.youtube.com/user/videoclerks

    Also, I have definitely seen The Fly and Chroneneberg is one of my favorite directors in general...but for some reason the Fly references in D-9 didn't bother me or come off as "ripping off".. There was enough other things in the movie to keep me interested. Hope to see some new reviews from you again and look forward to maybe more blogs from me in the near future!

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