Top 15 Films of 2009

In 2012, I meant to post any and all older lists and awards. A few of them fell through the cracks. This is one of them. This was the first Best of List I created, be kind. And also be mindful that the commentary remains mostly unchanged; time and distance can remold how we see films. This was a snapshot of my thoughts and feelings on the given titles, and year as a whole in late-December/early January as 2009 became 2010

15. Partly Cloudy

partly-cloudy1


Short films matter too and if you showed up late to watch Up. Then you missed this absolutely delightful short which is the best that Pixar has produced to date. It’s a new take on the stork delivering babies tale and can be seen here.


14. The Haunting in Connecticut

The Haunting in Connecticut (2009, Lionsgate)


It was a horrendous year for the horror genre, no pun intended. It was full of remakes and hokey stories trying to pass for quality. While this story was based on a real life tale, in part, it certainly departed after a while and created its own world and it was rather effective indeed.

13. The Hangover

the-hangover-01


Without question the funniest movie this year had to offer and was a serious threat to crack the top ten. This like most comedies will grow over time and after repeated viewing. It was certainly no accident that this film dominated the box office in the summer months as it came along at precisely the right time with the right kind of crazy, hilarious story starring a great trio of comedic actors.

12. Star Trek

star-trek-2009-sample-003

Film, when it is a quality piece of work, will live with you after you have completed experiencing it. Whereas even a bad book can occupy your mind at idle times, film persists through quality. This mind-play can explain the ascendancy of Star Trek which was initially scored a 9 but it has been begging to be viewed again.

11. Avatar


James-Cameron-s-Avatar-avatar-from-20th-century-fox-9222207-1024-576

It was extraordinarily difficult to keep Avatar out of the best films of the year, according to the BAM Awards, due to the overall experience of the film. However, when boiling it down the visceral impact had to be weighed heavily and while an engaging and emotional experience it is not as moving experience an experience as some of the top ten. There is a lot to love, even adore, about it and a few things to sigh over as you will see in the review.

10. Before Tomorrow

Before Tomorrow (2008)


A journey to a different world right on our very planet where we join the story of an Inuit family and tribe in its third and final installment. Fantastic cinematography and editing take us into the neo-realistic and minimalist tale of simple beauty.

9. Whatever Works

whatever_works01


This was probably Woody Allen’s funniest and most over-looked film since 1996’s Everyone Says I Love You. His dialogue has never been crisper and more intelligent and yet at the same time it manages to be hilarious and moving. The film even incorporates some of the irreverence his work in the ’70s did.

8. Up

pixar-up-house


A great Pixar film and a risk-taking one as well. It is difficult to suddenly turn a film into an action story, even if it can be anticipated, after a moving and humorous half-hour or so but that’s what this film does and not only is it more effective than most action films but it also keeps its previous thread going and ties it up neatly at the end.

7. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (2009)


This is without question the best Harry Potter film to date. It’s arguably the least faithful adaptation, however, faithfulness of adaptation and excellence of film more often than not aren’t mutually exclusive terms. This is a great film and at the risk of repetition, if you want the book read the book and don’t go to the multiplex.

6. Is Anybody There?

Is Anybody There? (2008, BBC Films)

The period of a film is rarely incorporated in such a seamless fashion as in this film. It tells the tale of a lonely boy, Edward, who grows up in an old folks’ home run by his parents in 1980s. He is quite imaginative and that is highlighted by the fact that the most technologically advanced thing in the house is a television with rabbit ears. This fact gives him quiet alone-time to create on his own entertainment and makes an old magician all the more fascinating to him. Due to that very simplicity it is allowed to relate to a modern audience and audiences of all ages.

5. A Single Man

a_single_man04


To not give too much away this tale is a tragedy but it’s not a self-conscious one in that it’s bloody, it’s one to us, the audience, who are allowed to witness this man’s life, the workings of his mind and the pains of his heart. The tale only encompasses one day yet we learn so much. He, like many a man, dwells on his past. It is a tightly-knit intimate story of love, loss and trying to move on. It’s a coil that is not fully unwound when the projector stops but continues to spring after viewing.

4. Lymelife


lymelife-acting

The suburban sketch of the year and free of the self-consciousness, pedantic commentary and pretentiousness that most have. The characters just are what they are and we learn about them and their situation, why they are where they are and where they might be going. It’s a film that respects its audience greatly and allows them to decide exactly what they think happened at the end.

3. Inglourious Basterds

Inglourious Basterds (2009, The Weinstein Company)


Quentin Tarantino at his best, a brazen show of bravado; a funny, touching, sanguine and political show. A slow burn from the man coming off Death Proof and the Kill Bill movies that offers action as well as political commentary along with his best dialogue to date and tremendous performances by the cast.

2. My One and Only


My One and Only (2009, Gray Pictures, LLC)

A family drama hits the road and becomes all the better for it, while it is ultimately funny it is a classic dysfunctional family tale where, of course, love still persists and the way it’s shown is strange. The characters are well-drawn and it goes against expectations.

1. Where the Wild Things Are

Where the Wild Things Are (2009)


The most complete cinematic experience of the year beginning to end. A funny, whimsical, insightful, layered, toe-tapping, tear-jerker; a combination of terms so rarley seen together it has to be the best.

Updates: December 6th, 2013

This update is going to be slightly different than ones in the past. It will not only provide links to what’s been updated today but also discuss completed, ongoing, and upcoming posts.

Past and Present

Firstly, of course, the November list of the BAM Award Considerations is closed and the December list has opened up.

My films viewed list is almost up-to-date and nearly at 500 features.

The Contender for Favorite Older Films First Viewed in 2013 list gained only one title, but it’s an interesting one.

Two new titles added for Jury Award Consideration.

On My Radar a few titles added, but more crossed off.

Forthcoming

Next, considering I wrote many pieces last year on the Foreign Language Film race at the Oscar (How the Foreign Language Film Submission Process Could Change and The Problem with Limiting Foreign Film Submissions – Part one and Two and The Oscars Should Change Its Best Foreign Language Film Processes most notably) I am returning with a five-part series that examines more nuanced, often overlooked issues with the process starting next Wednesday!

Also forthcoming is a look at some past BAM Best Picture Winners and well as old winners explications, nominees/winners lists and Best of the Year lists I didn’t yet post.

That’s all I can guarantee right now. However, I do intend to draft new Pages so keep your eyes on the menu bar and The Holiday Viewing Log should return next week too. Here’s last year’s.

The next update will be on the 15th. Short break but there’s lots going on towards the end of the year so I don’t want to push it off as I did this time.

Thanks for reading all!

2010 BAM Award Nominees and Winners

Last year in the lead up to the 2012 BAM Award Nominations I re-posted many nominees and winners of the previous BAM awards. While I did post a list of nominees, I did not post a list of winners. This was one I didn’t get to in time owing to some formatting changes I made. Below you will find the nominees and a winner listed below almost exactly as appeared on my MySpace blog and/or The Site That must Not Be Named the aforementioned follow-ups didn’t occur.

The Following are the BAM Award nominations and winners; for insight on why each category went the way it did please stay tuned. They reflect my opinion alone and are based solely on the films I was able to see during the course of the past calendar year. Due to the fact that year end releases are difficult, at times impossible, to see before the New Year comes there will be some older titles in the list. For a full explanation of this policy against the tyranny of release dates please go here.

Best Picture


City Island

The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader

The Ghost Writer

Inception

Kick-Ass

Machete

My Soul to Take

Scott Pilgrim vs. the World

Waiting for ‘Superman’

The White Ribbon

Winner: Inception

Best Director

Michael Apted The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader

Raymond De Felitta City Island

Michael Haneke The White Ribbon

Christopher Nolan Inception

Roman Polanski The Ghost Writer

Winner:
Christopher Nolan, Inception

Best Actress

Leonie Benesch The White Ribbon

Paola Mendoza Entre Nos

Catalina Saavedra The Maid

Emma Stone Easy A
Tilda Swinton I Am Love

Winner: Emma Stone, Easy A

Best Actor

Patrick Fabian The Last Exorcism

Christian Friedle The White Ribbon
Andy Garcia City Island

Bill Nighy Wild Target
Kodi Smit-McPhee Let Me In

Winner:
Bill Nighy, Wild Target

Best Supporting Actress

Annette Bening The Kids Are All Right

Helena Bonham Carter Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1

Ursina Lardi The White Ribbon

Susanne Lothar The White Ribbon

Barbara Hershey Black Swan

Winner: Susanne Lothar, The White Ribbon

Best Supporting Actor

Rainer Bock The White Ribbon

Andrew Garfield The Social Network

Burghart Klaussner The White Ribbon

Will Poulter The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader

Paul Reubens Life During Wartime

Winner: Will Poulter, The Chronicles of Narnia:The Voyage of the Dawn Treader

Best Cinematography

Christian Berger The White Ribbon

Christopher Doyle Ondine
Pawel Edelman The Ghost Writer

Greig Frasier Let Me In
Wally Pfister Inception

Winner: Christian Berger, The White Ribbon

Best Makeup

Alex Berecca, et al. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1

SabrinaBeaufort-Langridge, et al. The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader

Krystal Kershaw, et al. The Last Exorcism

Jennifer McDaniel, et al. Let Me In

Waldemar Pokromski The White Ribbon

Winner: Waldemar Pokromski, The White Ribbon

Most Overrated Picture

The Social Network

The Kids Are All Right

Black Swan

Toy Story 3

Tron: Legacy

Winner/Loser: The Social Network

Worst Picture

Legion

Step-Up 3D

Alice in Wonderland

Resident Evil: Afterlife

Paranormal Activity 2

Winner/Loser: Paranormal Activity 2

Most Underrated Picture

The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader

Entre Nos

The Last Airbender

My Soul to Take

Twelve

Winner: The Last Airbender

Best Original Screenplay

Raymond De Felitta City Island

Michael Haneke The White Ribbon

Gloria La Morte and Paola Mendoza Entre Nos

Christopher Nolan Inception

Bert V.Royal Easy A

Winner: Christopher Nolan, Inception

Adapted Screenplay

Michael Bacall & Edgar Wright [Bryan Lee O’Malley] Scott Pilgrim vs. the World

Jane Goldman & Matthew Vaughn [Mark Millar and John Romita, Jr.] Kick-Ass

Tony Grisoni [David Peace] Red Riding: In the Year of Our Lord 1983

Roman Polanski & Robert Harris [Robert Harris] The Ghost Writer

Christopher Markus & Stephen McFeely and Michael Petroni [C.S. Lewis] The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader

Winner: Christopher Markus & Stephen McFeely and Michael Petroni [C.S. Lewis] The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader

Best Editing

Mark Day Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1

Robert Duffy & Chris Labenzon Unstoppable

Rick Shaine The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader
Minka Willi The White Ribbon

Trevor Waite Red Riding: In the Year of Our Lord 1983

Winner: Trevor Waite Red Riding: In the Year of Our Lord 1983

Best Score

David Arnold The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader

Dickon Hinchliffe Red Riding: In the Year of Our Lord 1980

Barrington Pheloung Red Riding: In the Year of Our Lord 1983

Kjartan Sveinsson Ondine

Hans Zimmer Inception

Winner: David Arnold, The Chronicles of Narnia the Voyage of the Dawn Treader

Best Sound Editing/Mixing

The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1

The White Ribbon

My Soul to Take

Inception

Winner: The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader

Best Visual Effects

The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1

Inception

Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief

Tron: Legacy

Winner: The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader

Best Cast

Georgie Henley, Skandar Keynes, Ben Barnes, Will Poulter, Anna Popplewell, William Moseley, Simon Pegg and Tilda Swinton in The Chronicles of Narnia: The
Voyage of the Dawn Treader

Ewan MacGregor, Olivia Williams, Kim Cattrall, Pierce Brosnan and James Belushi in The Ghost Writer


Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, Rupert Grint, Ralph Fiennes, Alan Rickman, Michael Gambon, Bill Nighy, Rhys Ifans, Helena Boham Carter, Julie Walters, Jason Isaacs and Brendan Gleeson in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1
Christian Friedle, Leonie Benesch, Ernst Jacobi, Ulrich Tukur, Ursina Lardi, Fion Mutert, Michael Kranz, Burghart Klaussner, Maria-Victoria Dragus, Leonard Proxauf, Thibault Sérié, Josef Bierbichler, Enno Trebs, Theo Trebs, Janina Fautz, Rainer Bock, Susanne Lothar, Roxane Duran, Miljan Chatelain, Freddy Grahl, Branko Samarovski and Detlev Buck in The White Ribbon
Jennifer Lawrence, Isaiah Stone, Ashlee Thompson, Shelly Waggener, Valerie Richards and John Hawkes in Winter’s Bone

Winner: The White Ribbon

Best Youth Ensemble

Jean-Carl Boucher, Gabriel Maillé, Dany Bouchard, Léo Caron and Élizabeth Adam in 1981
Zachary Gordon, Robert Capron, Chloe Grace Moretz, Karan Brar, Grayson Russell, Owen Best and Alex Ferris in Diary of a Wimpy Kid
Oscar Steer, Asa Butterfield, Lil Woods, Eros Vlahos and Rosie-Taylor Ritson in Nanny McPhee Returns
Maxime Godart, Vincent Claude, Charles Vaillant, Victor Carles, Benjamin Averty, Germaine Petit Damico, Damian Ferdel, Virgil Tirard and Elise Heusch in Le Petit Nicolas
Fion Mutert, Maria-Victoria Dragus, Leonard Proxauf, Thibault Sérié, Enno Trebs, Theo Trebs, Miljan Chatelain, Freddy Grahl and Aaron Denkel in The White Ribbon

Winner: Nanny McPhee Returns

Best Performance by a Child Actor in a Supporting Role

Billy Unger You Again

Maria-Victoria Dragus The White Ribbon

Thibault Sérié The White Ribbon
Janina Fautz The White Ribbon

Will Poulter The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader

Winner: Janina Fautz, The White Ribbon

Best Performance by a Child Actor in a Leading Role

Kodi-Smit McPhee Let Me In

Chloe Grace Moretz Let Me In

Zachary Gordon Diary of a Wimpy Kid

Callan McAuliffe Flipped

Leonard Proxauf The White Ribbon

Winner: Kodi Smit-McPhee Let Me In



Best Art Direction

The Ghost Writer

The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1

Inception

Let Me In

Winner: Let Me In

Best Costumes

The White Ribbon

Let Me In

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1

The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader

1981

Winner: The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader

Best Foreign Film

The White Ribbon

Entre Nos

The Maid

Le Petit Nicolas

1981

Winner: The White Ribbon

Best Documentary

Prodigal Sons

Killing Kasztner

Waiting for ‘Superman’

Best Worst Movie

The Art of the Steal

Winner: Waiting for ‘Superman’

Best Original Song

“Never Say Never” Justin Bieber (feat. Jaden Smith) from The Karate Kid

”I Remain” Alanis Morissette from Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time

“Garbage Truck” Sex Bob-Omb from Scott Pilgrim vs. the World

”There’s a Place For Us” Carrie Underwood from The Chronicles of Narnia: Voyage of the Dawn Treader

“Despicable Me” Pharrell Williams from Despicable Me

Winner: “Never Say Never” Justin Bieber (feat. Jaden Smith) from The Karate Kid

Robert Downey, Jr. Award for Entertainer of the Year
Chloe Grace Moretz

The Ingmar Bergman Lifetime Achievement Award

Dario Argento

Special Jury Prize

The Complete Metropolis

Nominations

The White Ribbon– 21 (6 wins)

The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader– 15 (6 wins)

Inception (3 wins), Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1– 8

Let Me In– 7 (2wins)

The Ghost Writer– 6

City Island, Entre Nos– 4
My Soul to Take, Scott Pilgrim vs. the World, Red Riding: In the Year of Our Lord 1983 (1 win), 1981– 3

Kick-Ass, Waiting for ‘Superman’ (1 win), The Maid, Easy A (1 win), The Last Exorcism, The Kids Are All
Right
, Black Swan, The Social Network (1 win), Ondine, Tron: Legacy, Le Petit Nicolas, Diary of a Wimpy Kid– 2

Machete, I am Love, Wild Target (1 win), Toy Story 3, Legion, Step-Up 3D, 
Alice in Wonderland, Resident Evil: Afterlife, Paranormal Activity 2 (1 Win), The Last Airbender (1 Win), Twelve, Unstoppable, Red Riding: In the Year of Our Lord 1980, Percy Jackson & The Olympians: The Lightning Thief, Winter’s Bone, Nanny McPhee Returns (1 Win), Best Worst Movie, The Art of the Steal, Prodigal Sons, Killing Kasztner, The Karate Kid (1 Win), Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time, Despicable Me, You Again, Flipped – 1

2013 BAM Award Considerations – December

Last year I had one massive running list and it became very cumbersome to add to, and to read I’m sure. By creating a new post monthly, and creating massive combo files offline, it should make the process easier for me and more user-friendly for you, the esteemed reader. Enjoy.

Eligible Titles

The Wall
Maniac
Only God Forgives
Extraction
Blackfish
Headlong*
The Kings of Summer
In the House
Berberian Sound Studio
Spring Breakers
Homefront
The Playroom
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug
Out of the Furnace
The Broken Circle Breakdown
Electrick Children
Frances Ha
Europa Report
Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues
I Killed My Mother
The Short Game
The Hunt
Saving Mr.Banks
Stuck in Love

*Special Awards Only

Best Picture

Maniac
The Kings of Summer
The Broken Circle Breakdown
The Hunt
Saving Mr. Banks

Best Foreign Film

The Wall
The Broken Circle Breakdown
I Killed My Mother
The Hunt

Best Documentary

Last year this was an omitted category, due mostly to the fact that too few total candidates existed to make the slate feel legitimate. I will hope to be able to rectify that this year.

Blackfish
The Short Game

Most Overlooked Film

As intimated in my Most Underrated announcement this year, I’ve decided to make a change here. Rather than get caught up in me vs. the world nonsense and what a film’s rating is on an aggregate site, the IMDb or anywhere else, I want to champion smaller, lesser-known films. In 2011 with the selection of Toast this move was really in the offing. The nominees from this past year echo that fact. So here, regardless of how well-received something is by those who’ve seen it, I’ll be championing indies and foreign films, and the occasional financial flop from a bigger entity.

In the House
The Playroom
Europa Report
I Killed My Mother
The Hunt

Best Director

Maniac
The Kings of Summer
The Broken Circle Breakdown
I Killed My Mother
The Hunt
Saving Mr. Banks

Best Actress

Martina Gedeck The Wall
Nora Arnezeder Maniac
Kristin Scott Thomas In the House
Veerle Baetens The Broken Circle Breakdown
Julia Garner Electrick Children
Christina Applegate Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues
Anne Dorval I Killed My Mother
Emma Thompson Saving Mr. Banks

Best Actor

Elijah Wood Maniac
Fabrice Luchini In the House
Christian Bale Out of the Furnace
Johan Heldenbergh The Broken Circle Breakdown
Rory Culkin Electrick Children
Will Ferrell Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues
Xavier Dolan I Killed My Mother
Mads Mikkelsen The Hunt
Tom Hanks Saving Mr. Banks

Best Supporting Actress

Emmanuelle Seigner In the House
Molly Parker The Playroom
Meagan Good Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues
Jeniffer Connelly Stuck in Love

Best Supporting Actor

Nick Offerman The Kings of Summer
Ernst Umhauer In the House
James Franco Spring Breakers
James Franco Homefront
John Hawkes The Playroom
Casey Affleck Out of the Furnace
Liam Aiken Electrick Children
Steve Carell Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues
Thomas Bo Larsen The Hunt
Logan Lerman Stuck in Love

Best Performance by a Young Actress in a Leading Role

Izabela Vidovic Homefront
Annika Wandderkopp The Hunt

Best Performance by a Young Actor in a Leading Role

Nick Robinson The Kings of Summer
Jonathan McClendon The Playroom
Nat Wolff Stuck in Love

Best Performance by a Young Actress in a Supporting Role

Alexandra Doke The Playroom
Nell Cattrysse The Broken Circle Breakdown
Annie Rose Buckley Saving Mr. Banks

Best Performance by a Young Actor in a Supporting Role

Ty Simpkins Extraction
Ian Veteto The Playroom
John Bell The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug
Jonah Nelson Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues
Lasse Fogelstrøm The Hunt

Best Cast

Maniac
In the House
The Playroom
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug
Out of the Furnace
The Broken Circle Breakdown
Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues
The Hunt
Saving Mr. Banks

Best Youth Ensemble

The Playroom
The Hunt

Best Original Screenplay

The Wall
Only God Forgives
The Kings of Summer
Extraction
In the House
The Playroom
Europa Report
Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues
I Killed My Mother
The Hunt
Saving Mr. Banks

Best Adapted Screenplay

Maniac
Homefront
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug
The Broken Circle Breakdown

Best Score

Maniac
In the House
Spring Breakers
Berberian Sound Studio
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug
Out of the Furnace
The Broken Circle Breakdown
I Killed My Mother
The Hunt
The Short Game
Saving Mr. Banks

Best Editing

Maniac
The Kings of Summer
Extraction
In the House
Spring Breaker
Berberian Sound Studio
The Playroom
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug
The Broken Circle Breakdown
Europa Report
Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues
I Killed My Mother
The Hunt
Saving Mr. Banks

Best Sound Editing/Mixing

Maniac
Berberian Sound Studio
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug
I Killed My Mother
The Hunt

Best Cinematography

Maniac
Only God Forgives
The Wall
In the House
Spring Breakers
Berberian Sound Studio
Out of the Furnace
The Broken Circle Breakdown
Frances Ha
The Hunt
Saving Mr. Banks

Best Art Direction

Only God Forgives
Maniac
The Kings of Summer
Extraction
In the House
Berberian Sound Studio
The Playroom
The Broken Circle Breakdown
Saving Mr. Banks

Best Costume Design

The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug
Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues
Saving Mr. Banks

Best Makeup

Maniac
Only God Forgives
Spring Breakers
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug
The Broken Circle Breakdown
Saving Mr. Banks

Best Visual Effects

The Wall
Maniac
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug

Best (Original) Song

The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug
The Broken Circle Breakdown
Electrick Children
The Short Game

Year-End Dash: The World’s End

The tremendously fun thing in retrospect about the first two installments of the now-referred-to-as The Cornetto Trilogy (Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz being the first two) is not just the fact that they start fairly parodist but metamorphose to the parodied (sub)genre rather brilliantly. That and upon re-viewing the films you can see how brilliantly it all holds up together. I didn’t get to see this film until now so obviously I don’t have the benefit of a revisit yet, but there are some odd things in good ways and not-so-good ways about this film. The humor, the performances and the kinetic editing are there. Gary (Simon Pegg’s) character has an arc setting up for him right away, and that’s also good. I’ve commented this year on how I like a weird sequel and the thing is you never know what to expect with this combination of stars and director so it’s not like expectation is a huge stumbling block.

There’s good and apparent commentary on lots of things like nostalgia, aging, alcoholism, technology and the eternal “At what price progress?” questions; however, the fenestration which matters less here than in prior films is where it gets muddy. Things are found out and some pieces are picked up nicely and some pay-offs are brilliant, but some of the necessary exposition is rushed and doesn’t quite compute. There’s something newer in the offing and how omnipresent the parody element is here is a bit lost on me. However, what they’re creating in the end, is always new and there’s a point where I felt I was chasing it a bit too much; not such that I didn’t get it or like it, but that I felt I could’ve absorbed and liked it more with a bit more time in acts two and three.

6/10

Year-End Dash: The Book Thief

In the interest of full disclosure, I’ve not read The Book Thief. Now usually the read/unread status of book only bears mentioning when I have read it and am insulating myself from either some comments on fanboy-dom or adding a grain of salt. Here I mention it because this seems as if it was a tricky adaptation to pull of. I say that because there are some rather literary traits to the story that are far easier to execute in prose than onscreen. However, the film while not avoiding missteps in the adaptation of said traits does put it forth immediately. While that same approach is part of what gets in the way of the final impact of the film there is much felt throughout that is worth noting, and, ultimately recommending.

First and most noteworthy in the story are the five principal figures. I used that diction specifically to discuss both character and performance. For the engaging part of The Book Thief is the humanity it finds and expresses in its characters. Its signature piece of dialogue alludes to to that underlying truth. The zeitgeist in World War II films is to explore the gray area. Not that this film is specifically gray, but it does go somewhere many films don’t which is to deal with Germans who didn’t quite follow the party line in a number of small and significant ways.

To bring those thoughts and emotions to life, and to show them truly (even to show them in a conflicted manner and still engender empathy) is the grand task of this fine cast. Perhaps it’s symbolically apropos that they each call a different nation home and portray German characters (US, Canada, Australia, England and Germany respectively). Taking that fact into consideration they also blend seamlessly well with one another and handle the anglicized German dialect they’re given superbly. Sophie Nélisse in my estimation had her breakout role with Monsieur Lazhar; here however her role is larger still, more dialogue-driven and in accented English such that her feat is perhaps even more impressive and she’s well on her way to becoming a household name. Geoffrey Rush and Emily Watson play two diametrically opposed types and parents, but the end result and the emotions the engender and exude in the end must be the same making their characters fairly ideal dramatic foils if those inhabiting the roles deliver, which they do. Ben Schnetzer as Max has the task of being sickly much of the time, believably and naturally poetic and philosophical in the face of, and in tandem with his emotions. His performance is such that his presence lingers even when his image does not grace the screen. Last but not least there’s Nico Liersch who stands out as the revelation of this film for his well-rounded and sensitive portrayal of Rudy a character who pines for Liesel from the moment he is introduced but never comes across as a doormat in that or any other situation, as characters with that affectation can at times.

The Book Thief does eventually come through with very moving moments, and while doing so in a very populist manner does cause people to think and reflect on the varied reactions and actions of people during that era in history.

7/10

Year-End Dash 2013

It’s that time of year again wherein I will be on full-on blitz to try and cram as many eligible viewings at the end of the year as I possibly can. Anything I see from here until 12/31 will have at least some mention here be it a short “capsule” review or a link to a fuller post. This post will update daily.

Enjoy the dash. Lists and awards to follow.

More specifically:

The shortlists will be announced on 12/24/2013 but viewings from that day to 12/31 are still eligible.

Nominees will be announced on 1/2/2014.

Winners on 1/9/2014.

To see what my ratings mean go here.

    Late November

11/29

The Book Thief

The Book Thief (2013, 20th Century Fox)

I rated this film 7/10. For a full review go here.

The World’s End

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I rated this film 6/10. For a full review please go here.

Philomena

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This film came as a great surprise and, once again, is a case of knowing very little about it going in. Based on the commercials you knew the basic premise: an elderly woman seeks to discover the fate of the child she put up for adoption 50 years prior. It plays it up like it’s going to be all giggles and a heartwarming “human interest story” as Steve Coogan’s character would’ve derisively put it at the beginning of the film. But much like that journalist we are treated to, yes, some laughs, quite a few surprises (both good an bad) and some tears. The film has some touches to it like its montages of home video that foreshadow the child’s life being learned about and the weaving through time Philomena’s memory occasionally does. Judi Dench is positively marvelous, as is Steve Coogan who plays against type and wore many hats to help make this film happen.

9/10

Frozen

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I actually saw this film for the first time before this post went up. I saw it a second time during the Year-End Dash therefore I just wanted that noted and to state that Frozen is, no matter how you slice it, one of the best Disney films in years. I will elaborate more further down the line.

10/10

    December

12/1

The Wall

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If you’ll forgive the simplistic analogy the way I can best express my feelings and thoughts about this film are via comparison to an analogous title. This film tells the tale of a woman going on a vacation in an alpine cabin who suddenly finds herself surrounded and isolated by an invisible barrier, a wall. In that regard it reminds me of Stephen King’s Under the Dome, more so the book than what I saw of the series. Therefore, it’s a tale not so much about the how and why but what occurs under the “dome,” or inside the wall while it’s up. There’s much exploratory voice over, nearly incessant amounts and not much by way of findings in the report that is being written; subtly surreal additions and interactions with new animals that through a lot of inner-monologue reveal less than something like Bestiaire. A well-acted and shot narrative, but not a very compelling one.

5/10

12/2

Maniac

Maniac (2012, IFC Midnight)

This is another case of my having seen a remake prior to the original. I attempted to watch the original once but Netflix had a very weird audio glitch that made it impossible to progress past the thirty minute mark. In that version I was marginally engaged at that point and things were starting to pick up. Here the film dives in headfirst taking much POV, a lot of talking to himself. This in a similar but far more intriguing and artfully shot way we’re in the mind of this madman. That and due to the way Elijah Wood portrays Frank there’s a disconcerting sense of understanding if not empathy that makes it a far more engaging tale. The score is a hypnotic as the images are lush and the film has a fairly good thrust as it scales through anonymous victims building a protagonist slowly on the side.

9/10

Only God Forgives

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The fairly quick reaction here is that after many months and many reactions heard I was glad to come in fairly down the middle on this film. I understand but don’t agree with the frustrated, negative reviews, and if I take a look at the good ones I’m sure I’d center myself anew. This is a film that is unquestionably beautifully shot, and based on Drive unquestionably Winding Refn just not in as engaging and universally palatable way. One needs to be prepared for the violence, but I didn’t find it to be excessively out of place based on the narrative.

6/10

12/3

The Kings of Summer

The Kings of Summer (2012, CBS Films)

The Kings of Summer has within it some of the funniest scenes I’ve seen all year, but also within it there is some great truth. In a new wave we’re seeing of insightful coming-of-age-dramas, or at least the element in films; this is a parents on the side story. What’s refreshing is that in a film where the kids voluntarily run off for a better part of the summer the parent-child conflicts are fairly normal and the exploration of character is first and foremost in the lead characters (excellently played by Nick Robinson, Gabriel Basso and Moises Arias) and their dynamic. It’s a very related unsentimental film that is very much worth discovering.

8/10

Headlong (a.k.a Corps perdu)

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Typically in January when the release calendar is light of things really worth taking too long and hard a look at I get to browsing the IMDb for upcoming releases from the previous year’s standouts. That’s how I came to learn of the existence of this short film which stars Young Actor nominee Jelle Florizoone and co-stars Thomas Coumans, who worked with him in North Sea Texas.

Now being a short of about 17 minute I don’t want to discuss it too closely, but I can share two thoughts; one of my own and one from the film’s director. My biggest takeaway from Headlong is that it’s a lovely portrait not just of a fleeting encounter, but also of how a souvenir earns significance in a person’s life. The second is from the film’s director, Lukas Dhont, in an interview:

The main thing I tried was to make a film that could be interpreted as a love story but just as easily as something else. This tension between characters and openness in interpretation is the thing I’m still most happy with. I don’t really like gay shorts that evolve just around the gay eroticism.

Headlong is included on this DVD collection.

8/10

Blackfish

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I heard of this film quite some time ago as it featured prominently on My Radar. I recorded the CNN airing a while ago but was reticent to watch it. In the end I’m glad I did. There are a few graphic and disturbing images but the takeaway from the film is far more profound than that. The scariest, most stomach-turning thing is the pervasiveness of lies documented that Sea World spews as facts. Lies that I as a child believed to be true and still recalled learning there. What this film shows is not only that these massive mammals are smarter and more complex that we can yet understand, but also that there are dangers inherent to the people who attempt to keep them in captivity as glorified circus performers.

9/10

12/4

Extracted

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This is a film with a lot of good ideas aside from just the basic premise of being able to access people’s memories. The issues are mainly that all the kinks aren’t ironed out yet and the film’s reach exceeds its grasp in terms of production value. I staunchly avoid discussing budget most of the time. Budget does not dictate quality, unless you’re doing something outside the reality of your allowance. This film falls into that realm on occasion but it is clever and resourceful enough most of the time to avoid those issues, it’s really the finer points being corrected that would’ve brought it up some. It’s an entertaining enough watch, but doesn’t follow through on its promise.

5/10

12/5

In The House

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This film deals with a fascinating premise of what occurs when a high school student is seemingly drawing from real-life experience about his insinuating himself in another family, and what his French teacher, a frustrated writer, does or does not do to encourage his talent. I sat with this film for a while because I knew I greatly enjoyed it. I loved it for most of the way through, however, I didn’t know how much I liked it in the end mostly because of how it concluded. A lot of that decision to me boiled down to how well I felt the film followed its self-prescribed rule about endings. I concluded that I think it did well. Essentially, you have to keep in mind that there’s a very self-aware narrative being told. There are times when the story may seem a little lost, but, of course, Germain, the teacher, says that very thing to Claude often. And who is molding the narrative ultimately but him? Sure, we’re not always witnessing a dramatization of his writing, but it tends to revolve around him, and he is manipulating those around him in one way or another. The film writes Claude intelligently and he’s acted deftly by Ernst Umhauer such that he’s an interesting character, one that you could at least understand may have a way of wrapping people around his finger, even if you don’t particularly care for him you’re engaged.

On the strength of a majority of the film, and my reconsideration of the end I give it 8/10; your take may have you rate it higher or lower, but it is worth seeing and judging for yourself.

12/7

Homefront

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It’s rather poetic justice that in a year when the old guard of the action film, namely Stallone and Schwarzenegger, would have some hard times opening films like they once did; or just providing serviceable action vehicles, that it would be Jason Statham in a script adapted by Stallone that would be in a film I could really get behind. It’s almost a symbolic passing of the torch. Statham has been around for a bit, and I’ve been tough on him; action stars need not be thespians but the films I’d seen were also not that great. This one, if you can get past a silly wig and a fairly clichéd set-up, delivers the goods. There’s of course the family man angle that helps give it some emotional pull. The fact that young Izabela Vidovic is fantastic and that Statham interacts well with her helps. However, another boon is that the inciting incident leads the aggrieved sister to call on her brother Gator (James Franco) who becomes the antagonist. He’s a really great in this film because there are a few facets to him, and his performance is magnetic, locked-in. All the build, even things that don’t seem like they’ll matter, follow through and the finale is really exciting. I tweeted that it may make a Statham fan of me, see his unseen projects, and just maybe revisit some. The first may happen if he has more upcoming like this because this movie really works and put him in a position to succeed.

8/10

12/9

Spring Breakers

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I first mentioned Spring Breakers on my site when I wrote a post about a Facebook actor game I partook in. This was my selection as a film of James Franco’s I’d not seen but wanted to I believe. And sure enough when the Dash started it was a fairly high priority.

Oddly enough after so long, and hearing so many things and, I was pleased by the film in some ways and terribly annoyed by it in other ways. Most were ways in which I was not expecting. Sure enough it’s not completely exploitative and devoid of any content. However, there’s a tremendous miscalculation inasmuch as it feels like that without fragmenting scenes, excess of montage and repetitive dialogue either spoken onscreen and in voice over, there would not be a feature film here. However, even omitting that and taking the film as is making more aesthetic statements than societal ones. The score and the montage do have an effect of washing over you, which would be nice if not for the incessant earworms: “This is not what I signed up for.” “I want to go home.” “Look at all my shit!” “Spring break fo’ever.”

4/10

12/10

Berberian Sound Studio

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I can’t say that there’s not a spark of creativity and ingenuity in the concept of this film and with some of the shots. There is a metamorphosis, however, it’s one you have to wait for and sit through many of the same kinds of scenes over and over again. In fact, I’m surprised I even saw it because I had quite nearly given up on the film. Even granting it that, after so much ennui, that payoff, too, failed, and angered me. It’s a film that quite honestly barely ever progresses past its initial concept, and when it does, does too little with it.

3/10

12/11

Side Effects

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This film plays the part of a thriller well and even includes some intriguing professional ethics conundrums. It’s well acted and well-shot. Where it implodes for me, at least in the largest and most disastrous way, is in the motivation of one of the characters. The plot that’s weaved is a bit hard to swallow to begin with, assuming you stick it out past that point, the film delves into the why such an orchestration occurs and comes up with an idea so sophomoric that it reads like something rejected as a mid-’90s Joe Eszterhas/Sharon Stone project.

5/10

Broken

Broken (2012, Film Movement)

On this day I also revisited Broken. You can see my thoughts on it here.

12/13

The Playroom

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I will say that this is a film that requires just a touch of stick-to-it-ness. It builds a worlds of these siblings first, one where their parents seem to be at least on the periphery, if not absent altogether. It fractures chronology and starts the kids making up a story that you know will reflect on their life just not how. Then the parents are introduced, how they interact with the kids, then what’s beneath the facade it takes a bit. However, the film would have lesser or no impact, and would be cheap, underdeveloped melodrama otherwise.

The performances by parents and kids alike are quite strong and its a great chamber drama worth searching out.

8/10

The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug

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When I discussed The Hobbit last year I spent a few too many words on the High Frame Rate because it was new. This time around suffice it to say I found the experience a bit better, however, still awkward at times. I don’t know if skipping on IMAX and sitting closer to the screen played a factor but it may have.

There’s an impressive thing that this one does is that even at quite close to three hours it does leave you wanting to continue. Sure, that has to do with where the “cliff” drops off, but no one was happy when The Devil Inside ended (save for the fact that it was finally over). There’s less filler here, which the first had a bit of but this one is unquestionably better, even to someone like myself who happened to like the first one just fine, and who still hasn’t read the book.

9/10

12/14

The Short Game

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Netflix has been making waves this year in good ways, after a string of PR nightmares with its core services. Its role as distributor of original content to streaming platforms, first in television-formats, has been groundbreaking. However, it’s also dipping its toes in the film world picking up a few documentaries. This one debuted in theaters first and is now available to stream.

Perhaps what’s most important in a sports documentary centered on prodigious young athletes is having an interesting cross-section of personalities. Even if one is not familiar with, or a big fan of, a sport (golf, in this case) narrative and cinematic conventions and approaches should keep you engaged. The editing and scoring of this film, as well as the structural approach to the tournament that serves as the climax, is great. What keeps you interested and involved in the build-up is that while they all have golf in common they’re still kids at the core of it and quite different: Jed (A Filipino boy with autism), Alexa (a wunderkind who lives with her dad), Amari (A girl emulating Tiger Woods), Kuang (a Chinese boy who happened on the game by chance as an infant), Allan (A whiz kid who’s Anna Kournikova’s younger brother), Augustin (An intellectual French player of literary pedigree) Zama (A South African boy growing up in a different world than his father seeking a breakthrough) Sky (A Texan girl with a large stuffed bunny collection).

Combining all that, the unexpected twists and turns golf can take, and the volatility of a child’s emotions makes it an engaging, funny, suspenseful and at time even moving film.

10/10

Out of the Furnace

This is a film that almost seems as if it was adhering to some edict that it needed to run two-hours in length in order to be taken “seriously.” When taking a narrative as straight forward as this one waters it down tremendously. The interstitial montages only build so much ambiance and character, and the over-inclusion of fact and de-minimization of mystery makes it an exercise in the obvious. Some really good scoring, moments of empathy don’t pull it through.

4/10

12/15

The Broken Circle Breakdown

The Broken Circle Breakdown (2012, Tribeca Film)

There has been the occasional resurgence of bluegrass music into popular culture via cinema over the past decade or so. Many of those instances, while they are films where I’ve heard the music, they are movies I did not happen to see.

Perhaps what’s most interesting here is that The Broken Circle Breakdown is a film that’s not even ostensibly about the music. The music is there, it plays a role, it functions as a part of the characters, it underscores the emotions of the story (usually counter-intuitively) but it’s only a musical quantitatively. The film is a fractured chronology of a couple’s relationship. It begins in a present where their six-year-old is battling cancer. The film then backtracks, and goes back and forth to tell the story of these two and where they head as new challenges face them.

The toe-tapping heart of the film is its pair portrayed by Veerle Baetens and Johan Heldenbergh. Through their earnest performances, and the music, you’re left on a tightrope walking through the end of this sad tail without spinning completely into despair yet completely absorbed within it.

9/10

12/16

Frances Ha

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What you have here is a tale of female arrested development wherein the protagonist Frances (Greta Gerwig) watches the world (i.e. her friends) grow up and move on around her, and she has to shape up or ship out in order to not be left miserable and alone. Shot in black-and-white, located in and around New York, save for some of her aimless soul-searching; it tries to hearken to Woody Allen in the ’70s but forgets to include the comedy, acerbic wit or insight. The protagonist isn’t even as dubiously engaging as an obviously-flawed Allen creation, merely annoying.

Mind you I’ve seen an even more immature man-child in The Almost Man. However, Henrik needs to be beaten over the head less often before snapping out of his fantasy life and starting his soul-searching and latter-life maturation; with Frances she’s not humorous, engagingly rendering, intriguingly portrayed or more complex, yet she takes more prodding and is more bothersome. “You’re bullshit,” Frances’ bestie snaps at her. Indeed she is, and it takes her far too long to agree and get her shit together, and even if that was excusable it’s not an engaging watch before then.

2/10

Electrick Children

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Certainly when the premise of a film is such as this: a Mormon girl listens to a cassette tape with forbidden rock music and has an immaculate conception; you’re wandering into a tale that will likely not tell its tale, or resolve itself conventionally. That would all be fine if there wasn’t a preponderance of coincidence later on that made it seem as if there would be a tidied, more clear conclusion.

Instead what you have is a journey that is is not completely devoid of enjoyment for the open-minded viewer but rather one that just feels like a beginning;it doesn’t feel like an opening ending but rather a not-quite-complete tale that reaches what it considers its ending a bit too easily.

5/10

Rest of December

Europa Report

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Found footage as a technique is one that has been talked about ad nauseum, by myself included. Usually, it is the shortcomings that make us take more notice. However, we should not turn a blind eye to those films that do implement the technique well. This is one of those films. This is a film that has minimalist chills and scares that isn’t the slickest space-bound story this year, but has its strong points, moments of terror, moments of character and a very good ensemble at its disposal. It also takes a sci-fi tale just slightly beyond the current limits of science, but not that far into the distant future.

8/10

Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues

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Anchorman 2 has been perhaps one of the more unrealistically anticipated sequels in recent years. What I mean by that, and I don’t claim to be not among them; is that over the years the reputation of Anchorman grew such that perhaps the bar started being raised a bit much.

My own experience with the first Anchorman was not love-at-first-sight. Sure, I laughed. I laughed a lot. However, I felt that the feminist theme while appreciated was handled clumsily and overtly. Yes, it’s a silly movie but the rest of it felt far more assured. My appreciation of it grew over time.

Fast-forward to this Anchorman and one thing that stood out before I saw it was the extra running time. Then you see Judd Apatow’s name attached and you wonder if it might be tremendously bloated. At nearly two hours as opposed to just scraping past 90 minutes last time. I don’t think it did feel extraneous, just a touch too much perhaps. I also think the commentary on corporate synergy and news media, while very on the head is more neatly folded in. Thankfully, there were also many new gags, and a lot more weirdness, as the riffs on the old jokes that worked because they were new didn’t really hit it.

To be brief, I didn’t expect a second coming of Ron Burgundy, he’s a character so perfectly buffoonish you can’t manufacture the surprise of first meeting him all over again; but I did think I’d be glad to see him again in a new story. I was and the fact that this story had point to make loudly that had more do with the modern day than the era it was set in is fine by me too.

8/10

I Killed My Mother

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At long last Xavier Dolan’s debut feature came to the US this year. While you can take your pick between either of his first two films, I preferred this one. As someone who does like to dabble in a bit of auteurist critique I would’ve preferred to have seen this film before Heartbeats. There is a bit of Dolan’s visual flair and editing sensibility on display, and a certain lack of orthodoxy in his approach, at least to start that tells and introspective, interesting tale of a combative mother-son relationship that avoid facile resolutions, or even conflicts; and furthermore doesn’t make either really in a hero mold but rather antagonistic to one another.

8/10

The Hunt

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Mad Mikkelsen plays a kindergarten teach who has been falsely accused via misunderstanding (when you watch you’ll quickly see how) of molesting a student. That’s established early on. There’s not cat-and-mouse mystery about that much because that’s not the point. The film’s really about the snowball effect of a misunderstood notion being repeated, how assumptions are made, hysteria spreads and a witch-hunt begins, and how it affects all those involved.

Mikkelsen turns in a marvelous performance (not that he’s alone in that regard) and the film ends on the right note, as opposed to one that might feel untrue. It’s chillingly, unnervingly realistic portrait of how such a thing can escalate, even without any basis in fact, and takes a naturalistic progression.

10/10

Saving Mr. Banks

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Saving Mr. Banks does have its surprises in it, especially if you look closely enough. First of all, without getting too spoiler-y I do not think it paints an overly generous picture of Walt Disney. Sure, it’s a Disney film about the man himself, in part, and one of the studio’s classic films, so it may not be the most impartial but there are certain plot points that come up that you would’ve expected would be sanitized that aren’t quite as much as expected.

Perhaps the film’s most surprising aspect is really its bifurcated structure splitting its time between the story meetings between P.L. Travers and the Disney staff and reminiscences of her childhood.

The film tells the Travers’ story, and it’s one that’s a harrowing, tragic one that is rather un-Disney-like. In light of that, and Disney’s persistence and insistence, it’s not a wonder she’s a stickler even with a personal connection notwithstanding. The film avoids Disney understanding her in the end, and in some ways I think too avoids portraying Travers as being at peace with her decision, but rather willing to move on.

8/10

Stuck in Love

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While the cast is talented and the characters are ultimately likable Stuck in Love unfortunately relies a bit too much on convenient plot devices. The kids have been raised to be writers and they all succeed at exceedingly early ages and with seeming ease. The conflicts are there and the characters arcs are there, but the big moments are bit too simply achieved, that and there was a generalized sense of predictability. Despite the characters’ quirks nothing too surprising occurs. Lastly, on the production end the selection of source music is rather invasive, annoying and a bit too on the head more than once.

5/10

Thankful for World Cinema: The Color of the Chameleon (2012)

Introduction

For an introduction to the concept of Thankful for World Cinema please go here.

The Color of the Chameleon (2012)

At the crossroads of science and alchemy is cinema, amongst other things. What I mean by that is that as much as we may try to define rules there are always exceptions and things that challenge our notions. The particular reason this comes to mind when discussing The Color of the Chameleon is because of the way, much like the animal its title is inspired by, changes its complexion at varied points in the narrative.

The film begins with a scene establishing some of the basics wherein a Mother (Svetlana Yancheva) is talking to a headmaster concerned about her son Batko (played in his younger incarnation by Dennis Andreev) specifically about his obsession with onanism. This is a theme that ties much of the seemingly disconnected pastiche together, as foreshadowing and inference indicate this habit may have had something to do with his being unfit for military service. Following that we meet with him in college and see him recruited to the secret police by an agent (Roussy Chanev) and the thrust of the film, such as it is, is introduced.

About midway through is when the film makes an interesting structural and tonal change. There comes a turning point wherein you see a now-mature Batko (Ruscen Vidinliev) in a series of interrogations that are very funny but don’t seemingly connect. The closest kin to such a sequence I thought of is a “Bad audition montage.” However, this is more extended, and while you do have to wait for it, there is later follow-through and narrative impact from this sequence.

The structural oddities are always introduced with flair and style such that even if you’re not quite on board with the new direction the film has taken you will be entertained along the way. However, I would suggest your bearing with it and keeping everything in mind as seemingly small elements influence later jokes and stylistic choices. There is a visual transformation late in the tale that’s making commentary more so than any dialogue in the film. However, when thought of in conjunction with lines previously uttered underscores the absurdist, farcical critiques of communism, secret police, transition to democracy and politics in general. Criticisms that while being very specific to the Bulgarian experience can also be ascribed and understood by those in other nations.

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When Batko’s seemingly convoluted plan comes to fruition the film, despite its jumps in style and time, which are brave and commended; really does click in the end. Anything seemingly out of place is well incorporated including the aforementioned late-film stylistic departure. Aside from visuals there are also genre conventions that are familiar to many viewers borrowed and incorporated here in unique and quirky ways that add to the beauteous, hilarious chaos.

Perhaps the best part of this film is that it doesn’t just come up with a way of making some very scary mechanisms like totalitarian communism and secret police bodies farcically inept, but also uses the personality of the protagonist to help subvert these entities which is humorously adding salt to the wound. In this regard a lot of the first half of the story in essence functions like a heist film in hindsight as the mechanics and tactics of surveillance are learned and we later on see them implemented in a twisted way.

There needs to be grounding and a center to a film attempting things as zany such as these. The interviewees and peripheral characters aside from delivering laughs also lend an air of believability to the tale based on how they react to given situations. However, the tone of the film with regards to the actors’ interpretation all starts with the lead. Ruscen Vindiliev may have differing overtones but his motivations and convictions always remain the same. For as manic as in his need for acceptance, individuation and revenge as he becomes there is always a quite, intense diligence of seeking to accomplish the task before him and find some cursory acceptance and peace. Even when playing all ends to the middle there is a cool veneer that helps make the outlandish plausible and he helps communicate a clarity of motivations that makes the tones make sense, and make him an identifiable lead even if his methods may get Machiavellian.

Out of all the films I’ve viewed this month to fit in this theme, quite a few have been different than what the average viewer may be used to. However, the biggest break from the humdrum I found was The Color of the Chameleon. It’s a film you should be on the look out for and view if you should have the chance.

7/10

Thankful for World Cinema: Child’s Pose (2013)

Introduction

For an introduction to the concept of Thankful for World Cinema please go here.

Child’s Pose (2013)

As Thankful for World Cinema comes to a close I must say it had a bit of a different focus than I initially anticipated it to have. I say that as a very good thing indeed. I had a bunch of posts lined up that have not yet debuted on this site though they had previously appeared on The Site That Must Not Be Named. They have now shuffled off to further down the line and maybe they will appear next year. The reason for this is that I was able to track down and view not only many contemporary foreign films I wanted to see, but many that are Oscar contenders for their respective nations.

Aside from that honor for Romania Child’s Pose also boasts the Golden Bear from the 2013 Berlinale making it a top-prize winner from one of the small handful of the most influential film festivals in the world. When pairing that with some reviews I’d seen that makes it perhaps one of the more anticipated viewings I had in this block.

Child’s Pose takes a few minutes at the start to introduce Cornelia (Luminita Gheorghiu) talking to her sister (Natasa Raab) , lamenting the way her son, Barbu (Bogdan Dumitrache), has been treating her and indicating some of her overbearing nature. The inciting incident is when she learns her son has been involved in an car accident where he has killed a child crossing a street. Prior to having met Barbu there’s an indicator and we then proceed to see how she interacts with him, her husband, the police and the victim’s family.

What’s impressive throughout the course of the film is that aside from the beginning where she is being established and getting some reasonable advice from her sister, there really isn’t vocalized judgment of Cornelia, but rather an understanding both of her and all characters involved that allows the drama to unfold in a very palpable way throughout ever ascending to the film’s finale.

In my Twitter reaction, which is admittedly usually more of a knee-jerk, I advised perspective viewers of this film to hold on. It’s not that the film is ever slow or disengaging but the dramatic engine does take a bit of time revving up, but when it does in three consecutive dialogue-driven setpieces with a witness to the crime, Barbu’s wife, Carmen (Ilinca Goia), and lastly with the victim’s family the full gamut of the situation is examined; as well as the multiple facets of her character with nearly Bergmanesque precision. It also bears mentioning going in that you’re in for a character study and not a procedural thriller and thus you’ll be far less ambivalent about how things play out.

Luminita Gheorghiu in this film delivers one of the powerhouse performances of the year, which perhaps more than anything underscores my lament of not yet having caught up with the Romanian New Wave going on at current, as she features in many of the notable titles in the past few years.

Another joy to discover in this film is when a strong supporting performance comes to the fore later in the game and makes a strong statement, and Ilinca Goia in her extended scene does just that.

Child’s Pose is a morality play unconcerned about legalistic outcomes but rather about how different people with disparate agendas behave to escape culpability or deal with the gravity of what they’ve done. It’s about Cornelia, yes, as she is insistent most everything concerns her in one way or another, but in their struggles to state their case and separate themselves it does manage to be about the other characters and the situation as well.

8/10