The 1996 BAM Awards

Introduction

As those who are my friends on Facebook, or follow me on Twitter know, in December I am gearing up for my annual film awards (The BAM Awards), and that only partially explains my recent reposting of all past winners.

Since these are picks made by one person, the nominating process is even more important. Aside from the the past years, the full slate of nominees from all years past was not public knowledge.

This is because the first time I did them, in 1996, I created them by myself, for myself. At the time, I knew a lot less about how these decisions are made, campaigning, the year-end barrage of contenders and the like, such that the releasing of the Academy Award nominees was more frustrating than it could be otherwise. Rather than just bemoan it I decided to create an award slate based on what I had seen.

Back then I was ticket-stub pack rat, at the time it was the only way I had to track anything. So I created the list, picked winners and printed it out. The fact that I stuck with hard copies and no back-up created issues later. However, it was just for me at the time.

I called them the BAM Awards because I needed a name. I suppose I came up with Bernardo Academy of Movies because I was being reactionary to The Academy. How one man by himself can be an Academy I didn’t fully consider. I thought it was kind of a silly name, even at the time, so eventually it just became the BAM Awards.

Slowly, the awards widened: soon I emailed a select group of friends (that created eventual storage issues), a few years ago when I was on the Site That Must Not Be Named I decided to really take it public. I didn’t think about it ahead of time, it just occurred to me roundabout late November of ’09 that I could.

The publication was an exciting and unnerving process, regardless of how many or how few people would actually care to see them. While there are a two categories (which I now and again consider ending, and have skipped on occasion) which are negative, it is a positive emotion that brings me to these announcements. I want to at the end of the year share what I thought and why, and all winner announcements come with some explanation, and I do belabor them and struggle with them.

So it is heartening that last year, for the first time, the actual honorees, be they nominees or winners, on occasion acknowledged it. Now that may seem like a self-aggrandizing statement, but what I liked was knowing the news reached them, and other people, and they were pleased to hear it. The design of these awards are to cement what performances, works and films most affected me, I make no bones about that, and sharing that felt like a gamble, but it’s been rewarding for that and many other reason.

Of course, if you see a film missing from any year you may inquire, and there is room for intelligent discourse, but the above statements are true: trolling or disrespectful comments aimed at those chosen won’t be tolerated. Your own awards are just a blog post away.

I apologize for even needing to insert that statement but I did have cause to make similar points last year. Anyway, with how much I enjoyed last year’s and how much I’m looking forward to this year’s awards, I thought it’d be a good idea to put all I have out there in a “reverse” countdown, a count -up if you will.

So here goes…

1996

As I have mentioned in that past, as the years moved on I tried to back track to my year of birth, and before I shared them I made changes, but since then I’ve taken the approach that it’s really a yearbook. I’m capturing my own personal zeitgeist.

So in the first few years there’s some muddling between how it was in the year of and how it was in the years after, but it’s mostly identical, about 90% plus for this year, they get more immutable as the years pass.

Some general observations here:

-One thing I’ve always had a tendency to do is include comedic performances, see Carrey, Williams, Hawn, Alda, and all but one of the Supporting Actress nominees.

-With behind-the-scenes positions I’ve gone back and forth between wanting to learn the name of every person under consideration and just judging the work and finding the name later. Most of this year I’ve done the latter.

-Any newer award, it would seem, adds a category to to try and stand apart; I added three. I’ve done more of this as the years have passed but the first was adding a category for young actors. This has since expanded.

-I’ve altered the order I’ve written these in. This is presented “as is.”

Winners are in BOLD and pictured.

Best Picture

Mulholland Falls (1996, MGM)

Bound
Everyone Says I Love You
Freeway
Harriet the Spy
Mulholland Falls

Best Director

https://themovierat.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/ltamahori.jpg?w=400&h=267

Woody Allen Everyone Says I Love You
Ben Stiller The Cable Guy
Matthew Bright Freeway
Francis Ford Coppola Jack
Lee Tamahori Mulholland Falls

Best Actor

Mulholland Falls (1996, MGM)

Nick Nolte Mulholland Falls
Jim Carrey The Cable Guy
Kiefer Sutherland Freeway
Robin Williams Jack
Mel Gibson Ransom

Best Actress

Freeway (1996, Republic Pictures)

Reese Witherspoon Freeway
Michelle Trachtenberg Harriet the Spy
Goldie Hawn The First Wives Club
Carla Gugino Jaded
Sonia Braga Tieta do Agreste

Best Supporting Actor

Mulholland Falls (1996, MGM))

Tony Shaloub Big Night
Chazz Palminteri Mulholland Falls
Alan Alda Everyone Says I Love You
Gregory Smith Harriet the Spy
John Leguizamo Romeo + Juliet

Best Supporting Actress

Mulholland Falls (1996, MGM)

Diane Keaton The First Wives Club
Bette Middler The First Wives Club
Natasha Lyonne Everyone Says I Love You
Melanie Griffith Mulholland Falls
Marília Pêra Tieta do Agreste

Best Original Screenplay

https://themovierat.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/tout_le_monde_dit_i_love_you_everyone_says_i_love_you_1997_reference.jpg?w=600&h=401

The Kids in the Hall: Brain Candy
Everyone Says I Love You
Freeway
The Cable Guy
Mulholland Falls

Best Adapted Screenplay

Harriet the Spy (1996, Nickelodeon/Paramount)

Mystery Science Theatre 3000: The Movie
Harriet the Spy
Mondo
A Midsummer-Night’s Dream
Tieta do Agreste

Best Cinematography

Romeo + Juliet (1996, 20th Century Fox)

Eric Guichard Mondo
Edgar Moura Tieta do Agreste
Donald McAlpine Romeo + Juliet
Ian Wilson A Midsummer-Night’s Dream
Haskell Wexler Mulholland Falls

Best Score

Howard Shore and Adam Schlesinger That Thing You Do!
Caetano Veloso Tieta do Agreste
Jamshied Sharifi Harriet the Spy
John Ottman The Cable Guy
Dick Hyman Everyone Says I Love You

Best Visual Effects

Independence Day (1996, 20th Century Fox)

Independence Day
Mars Attacks!
Mondo

Best Performance by a Child Actor

Harriet the Spy (1996, Nickelodeon/Paramount)

Michelle Trachtenberg Harriet the Spy
Gregory Smith Harriet the Spy
Adam Zolotin Jack
Mario Yedidia Jack
Brawley Nolte Ransom

Most Overrated

Fargo (1996, Miramax)

The English Patient
Fargo
One Fine Day
Independence Day
Romeo + Juliet

Most Underrated Film

Harriet the Spy (1996, Nickelodeon/Paramount)

Mulholland Falls
Harriet the Spy
Jack
The Cable Guy
Mars Attacks!

Worst Film

Fever Lake (1996)

Fargo
The English Patient
Kazaam
Fever Lake
Girl 6

Best Cast

Mulholland Falls (1996, MGM)

Jack
Harriet the Spy
Everyone Says I Love You
Mulholland Falls

Freeway

NOMINATIONS

Harriet the Spy- 9
Mulholland Falls- 9
Everyone Says I Love You- 7
Jack-6
Freeway- 6
The Cable Guy- 5
Tieta do Agreste- 5
Mondo- 3
The First Wives Club- 3
Romeo + Juliet- 3
A Midsummer-Night’s Dream- 2
Independence Day- 2
Mars Attacks!- 2
The English Patient-2
Fargo- 2
Bound, Jaded, Diabolique, Kids in the Hall: Brain Candy, Mystery Science Theatre 3000: The Movie, That Thing You Do!, One Fine Day, Kazaam, Fever Lake, Girl 6, Bastard Out of Carolina-1

Mini-Review Round-Up February 2012

I had quite a review drought to end 2011 so I think the remedy for this kind of post would be to have the post be cumulative monthly. Therefore, after each qualifying film a short write-up will be added to the monthly post. The mini-reviews will be used to discuss Netflix and other home video screenings. Theatrical releases, regardless of how they are seen whether in an auditorium or on VOD, will get full reviews.

For a guide to what scores mean go here.

Texas Killing Fields

Sam Worthington and Jeffrey Dean Morgan in Texas Killing Fields (Anchor Bay Films)

This was a film I’d hoped to see when I went up to New York for a little over a day in the fall but little did I know it was only doing a one-week engagement in theatres there, which ended the day before I went, so I did not get a legitimate chance to see it last year therefore it counts towards this year. What’s interesting about the film is that it’s not so much a whodunit as a cat-and-mouse game between law enforcement and known local unsavory elements. It’s a rather interestingly rendered tale that kept me engaged and doesn’t live down to critical bashing or up to my take on its trailer. It also has some pretty good performances by Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Sam Worthington, Jessica Chastain in perhaps her least seen and most differentiated performance from her breakout year and Chloë Grace Moretz who is building herself quite a résumé, one which by the time she comes of age will likely be incomparable. Her plotline is well-rendered albeit somewhat predictable. The film also has the first legitimate Best Song contender of the year (maybe more than one) in the end credits.

6/10

Prairie Love

Prairie Love (Film Movement)

Yeah, I know that as I write this it’s March but I saw this film in February and needed some time to think it over.

This is the first film I got as a member of the Film Movement Movie of the Month Club. One thing I love about this club is that each DVD has a selected short film on it. The other is that on the inside cover you get a statement from both the company about why it was selected and the director has a statement as well. The comments from Film Movement are the most intriguing and they are how I couch this mini-review, essentially you don’t get backstory on the two leads or that much explication of why what occurs within the narrative occurs.

In a vacuum I’m fine with both. It becomes a question to the individual viewer if you want or need more. The situation and through-line are good and looking back in hindsight maybe a tag or frame would’ve made it better for me but with the approach it did take it didn’t quite work for me. However, it did make me think on it, reflect and I appreciate the aspect and feel the direction was clear but it ends up being similar to NEDs in a way, I feel there was a clear vision and it was achieved but it didn’t quite click for me. I did like that the first selection I got was thought-provoking and does have me considering revisiting it.

5/10

Oscar Nominees, Comparisons and Predictions

Academy Awards (AMPAS)

Below you will find not only the list of Academy Award Nominees but also how frequently they matched my own nominations what I would like to win and what I expect will win. More commentary will follow as we approach the awards, likely in my live blog of the festivities.

Best Motion Picture of the Year
Nominees:

The Artist
The Descendants
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
The Help
Hugo
Midnight in Paris
Moneyball
The Tree of Life
War Horse

Nominees in Common with BAM Awards: 3
My Pick: Hugo
Likely Winner: The Artist

Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role
Nominees:

Demián Bichir for A Better Life
George Clooney for The Descendants
Jean Dujardin for The Artist
Gary Oldman for Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
Brad Pitt for Moneyball

Nominees in Common with BAM Awards: 1 (2 if you count Brad Pitt for a different film)
My Pick: Jean Dujardin The Artist
Likely Winner: George Clooney The Descendants

Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role
Nominees:

Glenn Close for Albert Nobbs
Viola Davis for The Help
Rooney Mara for The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
Meryl Streep for The Iron Lady
Michelle Williams for My Week with Marilyn

Nominees in Common with BAM Awards: 0
My Pick: Viola Davis The Help
Likely Winner: Viola Davis The Help

Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role

Nominees:

Kenneth Branagh for My Week with Marilyn
Jonah Hill for Moneyball
Nick Nolte for Warrior
Christopher Plummer for Beginners
Max von Sydow for Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close

Nominees in Common with BAM Awards: 1
My Pick: Christopher Plummer The Beginners
Likely Winner: Christopher Plummer The Beginners

Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role
Nominees:

Bérénice Bejo for The Artist
Jessica Chastain for The Help
Melissa McCarthy for Bridesmaids
Janet McTeer for Albert Nobbs
Octavia Spencer for The Help

Nominees in Common with BAM Awards: 1
My Pick: Octavia Spencer The Help
Likely Winner: Octavia Spencer The Help

Best Achievement in Directing
Nominees:

Woody Allen for Midnight in Paris
Michel Hazanavicius for The Artist
Terrence Malick for The Tree of Life
Alexander Payne for The Descendants
Martin Scorsese for Hugo

Nominees in Common with BAM Awards
: 1
My Pick: Martin Scorsese Hugo
Likely Winner: Michel Hazanavicius The Artist

Best Writing, Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen
Nominees:

The Artist: Michel Hazanavicius
Bridesmaids: Kristen Wiig, Annie Mumolo
Margin Call: J.C. Chandor
Midnight in Paris: Woody Allen
A Separation: Asghar Farhadi

Nominees in Common with with BAM Awards: 1
My Pick: Midnight in Paris: Woody Allen
Likely Winner: The Artist: Michel Hazanavicius

Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material Previously Produced or Published
Nominees:

The Descendants: Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon, Jim Rash
Hugo: John Logan
The Ides of March: George Clooney, Grant Heslov, Beau Willimon
Moneyball: Steven Zaillian, Aaron Sorkin, Stan Chervin
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy: Bridget O’Connor, Peter Straughan

Nominees in Common with BAM Awards: 1
My Pick: Hugo: John Logan
Likely Winner: The Descendants: Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon, Jim Rash

I do not have a Best Animated Feature category nor have I seen the Foreign Film entries so I will show you those nominees without any attempted soothsaying:

Best Animated Feature Film of the Year
Nominees:

A Cat in Paris
Chico & Rita
Kung Fu Panda 2
Puss in Boots
Rango

Best Foreign Language Film of the Year
Nominees:

Bullhead: Michael R. Roskam (Belgium)
Footnote: Joseph Cedar (Israel)
In Darkness: Agnieszka Holland (Poland)
Monsieur Lazhar: Philippe Falardeau (Canada)
A Separation: Asghar Farhadi (Iran)

Best Achievement in Cinematography
Nominees:

The Artist: Guillaume Schiffman
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo: Jeff Cronenweth
Hugo: Robert Richardson
The Tree of Life: Emmanuel Lubezki
War Horse: Janusz Kaminski

Nominees in Common with BAM Awards: 2
My Pick: Robert Richardson Hugo
Likely Winner: Emmanuel Lubezki The Tree of Life

Best Achievement in Editing
Nominees:

The Artist: Anne-Sophie Bion, Michel Hazanavicius
The Descendants: Kevin Tent
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo: Angus Wall, Kirk Baxter
Moneyball: Christopher Tellefsen
Hugo: Thelma Schoonmaker

Nominees in Common with BAM Awards: 1
My Pick: Hugo: Thelma Schoonmaker
Likely Winner: The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo: Angus Wall, Kirk Baxter

Best Achievement in Art Direction
Nominees:

The Artist: Laurence Bennett, Gregory S. Hooper
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2: Stuart Craig, Stephenie McMillan
Hugo: Dante Ferretti, Francesca Lo Schiavo
Midnight in Paris: Anne Seibel, Hélène Dubreuil
War Horse: Rick Carter, Lee Sandales

Nominees in Common with BAM Awards
: 1
My Pick: Hugo: Dante Ferretti, Francesca Lo Schiavo
Likely Winner: Hugo: Dante Ferretti, Francesca Lo Schiavo

Best Achievement in Costume Design
Nominees:

Anonymous: Lisy Christl
The Artist: Mark Bridges
Hugo: Sandy Powell
Jane Eyre: Michael O’Connor
W.E.: Arianne Phillips

Nominees in Common with BAM Awards: 1
My Pick: Hugo: Sandy Powell
Likely Winner: Hugo: Sandy Powell

Best Achievement in Makeup
Nominees:

Albert Nobbs
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2
The Iron Lady

Nominees in Common with BAM Awards: 1
My Pick: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2
Likely Winner: Albert Nobbs

Best Achievement in Music Written for Motion Pictures, Original Score
Nominees:

The Adventures of Tintin: John Williams
The Artist: Ludovic Bource
Hugo: Howard Shore
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy: Alberto Iglesias
War Horse: John Williams

Nominees in Common with BAM Awards: 1
My Pick: Hugo: Howard Shore
Likely Winner: The Artist: Ludovic Bource

Best Achievement in Music Written for Motion Pictures, Original Song
Nominees:

The Muppets: Bret McKenzie (“Man or Muppet”)
Rio: Sergio Mendes, Carlinhos Brown, Siedah Garrett (“Real in Rio”)

Nominees in Common with BAM Awards: 0
My Pick: Rio: Sergio Mendes, Carlinhos Brown, Siedah Garrett (“Real in Rio”)
Likely Winner: The Muppets: Bret McKenzie (“Man or Muppet”)

In the BAM Awards I combined the sound categories therefore I will list the nominees below and my predictions will follow them:

Best Achievement in Sound Mixing
Nominees:

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
Hugo
Moneyball
Transformers: Dark of the Moon
War Horse

Best Achievement in Sound Editing
Nominees:

Drive
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
Hugo
Transformers: Dark of the Moon
War Horse


Nominees in Common with BAM Awards
: 1
My Pick: Hugo
Likely Winner: Transformers: Dark of the Moon

Best Achievement in Visual Effects
Nominees:

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2
Hugo
Real Steel
Rise of the Planet of the Apes
Transformers: Dark of the Moon

Nominees in Common with BAM Awards: 3
My Pick: Real Steel
Likely Winner: Rise of the Planet of the Apes

I thought I would’ve seen a nominated doc but I did not so I will not prognosticate there or in shorts but I will see those before the show.

Best Documentary, Features
Nominees:

Hell and Back Again
If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front
Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory
Pina
Undefeated

Nominees in Common with BAM Awards: 0

Best Documentary, Short Subjects
Nominees:

The Barber of Birmingham: Foot Soldier of the Civil Rights Movement
God Is the Bigger Elvis
Incident in New Baghdad
Saving Face
The Tsunami and the Cherry Blossom

Best Short Film, Animated
Nominees:

Dimanche : Patrick Doyon
The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore: William Joyce, Brandon Oldenburg
La Luna: Enrico Casarosa
A Morning Stroll: Grant Orchard, Sue Goffe
Wild Life: Amanda Forbis, Wendy Tilby

Best Short Film, Live Action
Nominees:

Pentecost: Peter McDonald
Raju: Max Zähle, Stefan Gieren
The Shore: Terry George
Time Freak: Andrew Bowler, Gigi Causey
Tuba Atlantic: Hallvar Witzø

2011 BAM Award Winners

First, my apologies for this post coming out so late after the announcements and another apology for the fact that this is essentially a post for self-edification. Basically, I do not recall an occasion in the 16 years I’ve presented these awards wherein I didn’t do a rundown like this compiling the nominations. The list of the number of nominations and wins is at the bottom. Essentially what I like to see is a long list with many parentheses because it indicates good compartmentalization in my view as I never tally nominations and winners beforehand. I like the symmetry the top two films this year share.

Part of the delay was that deliberations this year were quite exhaustive. Therefore I think in 2012 I will have a shortlist date of December 27th (which was an old cut-off date) wherein I’ll trim down the selections. Clearly anything seen after the cutoff still qualifies and are very much in play, in fact, two films seen on the very last days of the year, The Darkest Hour and Rammbock, featured rather heavily here and in my Top 10 Horror Movies of 2011 list.

Also, for more details about why certain films won certain awards please check the original awards posts for film, acting and behind the scenes categories.

Winners are in BOLD.

Best Picture

The First Beautiful Thing
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2
Hugo
In a Better World
Super 8
Terri
Toast
The Tree of Life
War Horse
Winter in Wartime

Best Director

J.J. Abrams Super 8
S.J. Clarkson Toast
Martin Koolhoven Winter in Wartime
Paolo Virzì The First Beautiful Thing
Martin Scorsese Hugo

Best Actress

Bérénice Bejo The Artist
Elizabeth Olsen Martha Marcy May Marlene
Carey Mulligan Drive
Micaela Ramazzotti The First Beautiful Thing
Jeong-hin Yin Poetry

Best Actor

Matt Damon We Bought a Zoo
Jean Dujardin The Artist
Wagner Moura Tropa de Elite 2
Brad Pitt The Tree of Life

David Rasch Olhos Azuis

Michael Shannon Take Shelter



Best Supporting Actress

Anjelica Huston 50/50


Claudia Pandolfi The First Beautiful Thing
Sarah Paulson Martha Marcy May Marlene
Stefania Sandrelli The First Beautiful Thing
Octavia Spencer The Help


Best Supporting Actor

Ben Kingsley Hugo

Christopher Plummer Beginners
John C. Reilly Terri
Alan Rickman Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2
Irandhir Santos Tropa de Elite 2

Best Cinematography

Larry Fong Super 8
Eduardo Serra Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2

Stephanie Anne Weber-Biron Heartbeats

Robert Richardson Hugo
Janusz Kaminski War Horse

Best Makeup


Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2
Super 8

Tucker & Dale vs. Evil

Rammbock
Winter in Wartime

Most Overrated Picture

13 Assassins
Attack the Block
Certified Copy
Cold Fish
Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark
I Saw the Devil
Martha Marcy May Marlene

Melancholia
Trollhunter
Unknown

Worst Picture

11-11-11
Annelise: The Exorcist Tapes
Children of the Corn: Genesis
Creature
The Darkest Hour
Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark
Final Destination 5
The Thing

The Three Musketeers
The Wrong Ferrari

Most Underrated Picture

Battle: Los Angeles
Bereavement
Fireflies in the Garden
The Hole
Justin Bieber: Never Say Never
Red State
The Sitter
The Ward
Toast
Winter in Wartime

Best Original Screenplay

J.J. Abrams Super 8


Michel Hazanavicius The Artist
Benjamin Hessler Rammbock
Stevan Mena Bereavement
Paolo Virzì and Francesco Bruni and Francesco Piccolo The First Beautiful Thing

Best Adapted Screenplay

Marti Noxon and Tom Holland Fright Night
Steve Kloves and JK Rowling Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2

John Logan and Brian Selznick Hugo
Lee Hall and Nigel Slater 
Toast

Mieke de Jong, Martin Koolhoven, Paul Jan Nelissen and Jan Terlouw Winter in Wartime

Best Editing

Job ter Berg Winter in Wartime
Mary Ann Brandon and Mary Jo Markey Super 8

Mark Day Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2

Thelma Schoonmaker Hugo

Hank Corwin, Jay Rabinowitz, Daniel Rezende, Billy Weber and Mark Yoshikawa The Tree of Life


Best Score



Stevan Mena Bereavement
Alexandre Desplat Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2
Howard Shore Hugo
Michael Giacchino Super 8

Jónsi We Bought a Zoo

Best Sound Editing/Mixing

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2
Hugo
Super 8


Real Steel


X-Men: First Class

Best Visual Effects

The Adventures of Tintin
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2
Hugo

Super 8


Real Steel

Best Cast

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2
Hugo
Super 8

Toast



War Horse


Best Youth Ensemble

Chinmai Chandrashuh, Vedant Desai, Devji Handa, Rohan Grover, Naman Jain, Ifran Khan, Aarav Khanna, Shriya Sharma and Sanath Menon Chillar Party
Ellie Darcey-Alden, Ariella Paradise, Benedict Clarke, Alfie McIlwain, Rohan Gotobed, Arthur Bowen, Daphne de Beisetgui, Will Dunn, Jade Gordon, Bertie Gilbert, Helena Barlow and Ryan Turner Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2
Asa Butterfield, Chloë Grace Moretz, Gulliver Mcgrath, Shaun Aylward and Ed Sanders Hugo
Laramie Eppler, Tye Sheridan and Hunter McCracken The Tree of Life
Joel Courtney, Ryan Lee, Riley Griffiths, Gabriel Basso, Zach Mills, Elle Fanning Super 8

Best Performance by a Child Actress in a Leading Role

Elle Fanning Super 8
Bailee Madison Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark
Chloë Grace Moretz Hugo
AnnaSophia Robb Soul Surfer
Saoirse Ronan Hanna

Best Performance by a Child Actor in a Leading Role

Cayden Boyd Fireflies in the Garden
Asa Butterfield Hugo
Joel Courtney Super 8
Dakota Goyo Real Steel
William Jøhnk Nielsen In a Better World
Hunter McCracken The Tree of Life

Best Performance by a Child Actress in a Supporting Role


Landry Bender The Sitter

Celine Buckens War Horse
Olivia Crocicchia Terri
Elle Fanning We Bought a Zoo
Joey King Battle: Los Angeles

Best Performance by a Child Actor in a Supporting Role

Chase Ellison Fireflies in the Garden
Colin Ford We Bought a Zoo
Ryan Lee Super 8
Bill Milner X-Men: First Class
Bridger Zadina Terri

Best Art Direction

Anonymous

Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame
Hugo

Winter in Wartime

X-Men: First Class

Best Costumes


Drive

Hugo

Super 8
Terri

Toast

Best Foreign Film

The First Beautiful Thing

In a Better World

Olhos Azuis

In Their Sleep
Incendies
Rammbock
A Screaming Man
The Skin I Live In
Tropa de Elite 2
Winter in Wartime

Best Documentary

Bill Cunningham New York
Buck

Life in a Day
Justin Bieber: Never Say Never

Senna

Best Song

“Chatte Batte” Chillar Party
“Exploded Diaper” Löded Diper Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules
“I Want Candy” Cody Simpson Hop
“Born to be Somebody” Justin Bieber Justin Bieber: Never Say Never
“Pictures in My Head” The Muppets

“Let Me Take You to Rio (Blu’s Arrival)” Ester Dean & Carlinhos Brown Rio

The Robert Downey, Jr. Award for Entertainer of the Year

Andy Serkis

The Ingmar Bergman Lifetime Achievement Award

Steven Spielberg

Special Jury Prize(s)

The Confession

The Harry Potter Franchise

Nominees

Hugo– 15 Nominations (6 Wins)
Super 8– 15 Nominations (6 wins)
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2– 11 Nominations (2 Wins)
The First Beautiful Thing– 7 Nominations (1 Win)
Winter in Wartime– 7 Nominations
Toast– 6 Nominations (1 Win)
The Tree of Life– 5 Nominations (1 Win)
Terri– 5 Nominations
We Bought a Zoo– 4 Nominations (1 Win)
War Horse– 4 Nominations
Martha Marcy May Marlene, Justin Bieber: Never Say Never, Real Steel– 3 Nominations (1 Win)
The Artist, Tropa de Elite 2, Rammbock, Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark, Bereavement, Fireflies in the Garden, X-Men: First Class – 3 Nominations
In a Better World, Drive, Olhos Azuis, Battle: Los Angeles, The Sitter, Chillar Party – 2 Nominations
The First Beautiful Thing– 7 Nominations (1 Win)
Take Shelter, 50/50, Tucker & Dale vs. Evil, Attack the Block, The Darkest Hour, Senna – 1 Nomination (1 Win)
Poetry, The Help, Beginners, Heartbeats, 13 Assassins, Certified Copy, Cold Fish, I Saw the Devil, Melancholia, Trollhunter, Unknown, 11-11-11, Anneliese: The Exorcist Tapes, Children of the Corn: Genesis, Creature, Final Destination 5, The Thing, Three Musketeers, The Wrong Ferrari, The Hole, Red State, The Ward, Fright Night, The Adventures of Tintin, Soul Surfer, Hanna, Anonymous, Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame, In Their Sleep, Incendies, A Screaming Man, The Skin I Live In, Bill Cunningham New York, Buck, Life in a Day, Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules, Hop, The Muppets and Rio– 1 Nomination

2011 BAM Awards Special Jury Prizes

Special Jury Prizes are typically something done at film festivals and are ways for the jury to honor a film that they feel accomplished something unique but that doesn’t quite fit into a category per se.

The Confession

The Confession (NFTS)

This year there are two Special Jury Prizes the first goes to the Oscar Nominated short film The Confession. This was my favorite of the shorts I saw at that screening and moreover one of the best shorts I’d seen. I was moved to tears in short and I don’t know if that’s ever happened for me before. Therefore in order to recognize its greatness and draw more attention to short films I award one special Jury Prize to The Confession

If you are interested you can see a trailer and/or purchase the film on iTunes.

The Harry Potter Franchise

Emma Watson, Rupert Grint and Daniel Radcliffe in Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone (Warner Bros.)

I’m certainly not the only one honoring the entirety of the franchise I know the BAFTAs are and a few other shows may be as well all I know is there’s no guarantee that there’ll be a film, any film, ever. Then to release eight in 10 years and have them all be as great as if they’ve been is something else. A tremendous debt is owed to JK Rowling that’s for sure but there are hundreds and likely thousands who worked to make this series happen. There were three directors and only one screenwriter. The cast was always evolving as the books deemed they must, characters came and went and sadly Richard Harris left us and the films too soon but Michael Gambon is as good a replacement as anyone can ask for. In childish fanboy glee I proclaimed it the best franchise ever after its close find me another film series that goes this strong for eight films I’ll eat my hat as well as my words but I think it unlikely to happen. Though Harry Potter films always were kind of like the Susan Lucci of my awards they did get their wins too and the series was and is all about being cumulative and the lack of an appearance on the Best Picture list is no black mark against it. It’s already been going strong for 10 years and will continue to for many, many years to come. Congratulations to all those who helped make it happen and thank you.

2011 BAM Award Winners- Film Categories

Best Picture

Hugo (Paramount)

The First Beautiful Thing
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2
Hugo
In a Better World
Super 8
Terri
Toast
The Tree of Life
War Horse
Winter in Wartime

After all the awards came out one was likely to know it’d come down to two films: Hugo and Super 8. And that’s how it’ll be in the list also. I’ll discuss each of them more in those lists. Here there’s not much to say save for the fact that I love the nominating process much more than this one. I just want to state that since it’s just me the nominations are really where it’s at and where it most matters. There’s invariably a favorite in every category but with other awards that kind of seems devalued by cliché and prognostication. I hope that through my verbosity I can pay tribute a second time to those films and artists I most enjoyed through the year.

Best Foreign Film

The First Beautiful Thing (Palisades Tartan)

The First Beautiful Thing

In a Better World

Olhos Azuis

In Their Sleep
Incendies
Rammbock
A Screaming Man
The Skin I Live In
Tropa de Elite 2
Winter in Wartime

It was a better year than expected for foreign films. When I tallied them up I was surprised how many I had to choose from. Moreover, I was surprised by how many landed both in the Best Picture field and here. There are films I saw on this list by many means and the winner (pictured) was one of the most moving and engaging cinematic experiences I had all year.

There’s also two films I got in Brazil. Note to film buffs: if you’re willing to dedicate a computer to playing foreign-region DVDs you can get anything! I mentioned in the other post that fans of zombie and/or virus movies should see Rammbock.

It didn’t seem like it at the time but foreign films were pretty good this year, no 1987 but good.

Best Documentary



Senna (Producers Distribution Agency)


Bill Cunningham New York
Buck

Life in a Day
Justin Bieber: Never Say Never
Senna

This was another tough one. These are all great. Three are available on instant right now and they’re all pretty different. Ultimately, it’s hard to top something like Senna.

I don’t think I have cried that much since the first time I saw It’s a Wonderful Life and in this story I knew the exact outcome, moreover I think I may be as torn about revisiting this one as I am that one. Truly impressive.

Most Overrated Picture

Attack the Block (Screen Gems)

13 Assassins
Attack the Block
Certified Copy
Cold Fish
Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark
I Saw the Devil
Martha Marcy May Marlene

Melancholia
Trollhunter
Unknown

Since I am but one man then I can hand this award out. Were it a group it may seem a bit silly. We’re all human expectations play into it for few are the films we hear nothing about. Example: I knew there was some buzz about Hugo. However, beyond the New York Film Festival screening, I did not read any of the early reviews. I didn’t go in with things to look out for such aspects I knew that were disliked or divisive. With many of these films I consciously tried to avoid learning details to not start forming opinions what I did know were basic plot elements and what the general reaction was. Ask me about a film in particular I can tell you what I knew beforehand.

Now to be specific to Attack the Block. I had heard about it. I’d heard great things. I knew what the basic premise was. It never screened around me. So it was vague. I hadn’t seen a trailer. I knew what the cast was but not much more. Eventually, I used Redbox to get it, in fact, I opened an account for it. I had expectations but they were vague. Since people compare them anyway let’s compare it to Super 8, my expectations of Super 8 were vague too. I wanted to see it since the teaser came out more than a year before its release. The one with the container and the banging alien. Then the Super Bowl ad came and I had no more idea of what it was supposed to be except pretty cool looking. Here’s where people start filling in blanks and start over-emphasizing the alien but I digress.

I was even more of a blank slate for this film the worst sinking fear that I had was that it was going to be just OK and then I didn’t even like it. I kept telling my head to “shut up” and essentially was wiping the slate clean over and over giving it chance after chance and I just didn’t like it.

Yes, in essence something being overrated is a personal thing not a film thing but we’ve all said “I couldn’t get into it,” before. I “couldn’t get into it” is like “meh” or “take it or leave it” to me. The film in my estimation went from having some good ideas and promise in the beginning to get more and more annoying. Whether the hoods or the victim almost no one didn’t rub me the wrong way, the effects are cool-looking but a little underwhelming, the acting is inconsistent at best. A few have their flashes but the natural feel can render better results with a more engaging storyline. If the social commentary tried to hit me over the head again I’d have filed a restraining order. I get that the characters are simple and lack subtlety but that doesn’t mean the script has to.

Anyway, is it one of the worst of the year? Not by any means. Was I shocked I disliked it? Yes, and angry and disappointed too. I know I’m in a minority here and I don’t care. I get the appeal of all the other films but they just don’t work for me after certain point in this one I literally could not care less what happened. Sorry.

Worst Picture

The Darkest Hour (Summit)

11-11-11
Annelise: The Exorcist Tapes
Children of the Corn: Genesis
Creature
The Darkest Hour
Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark
Final Destination 5
The Thing

The Three Musketeers
The Wrong Ferrari

I will try to keep this brief. There is a title on this list which is the most commented review I’ve posted. Yet until New Year’s Eve I was prepared to incur even more wrath by giving it this dubious distinction. I have no problem with people disagreeing with me if they can phrase their view in an intelligent and coherent way. I will grant that I was incendiary with my review (again the dangers of writing to close to a viewing), however, the thrust of these comments inferred that because I didn’t like the film I was either deficient mentally or somehow lacking fluency in the English language. Anyway, the point of this aside is that I regret the tone of my review of The Wrong Ferrari but do not in any way recant my opinion that it’s a film I dislike greatly.

However, and I forget if I intimate as much in the replies, I do recognize that there is an attempt to do something there, therefore Happy New Year to the fans of this film: It’s not the worst of the year it’s merely on the list. Oh, and if you want to complain about this post or my inclusion of it here too feel free but one of my myriad New Year’s resolutions is to not discuss The Wrong Ferrari anymore.

The Darkest Hour is another film I didn’t expect to see, which is fine many of my favorites of the year were viewed that way and viewing them was memorable for it regardless of how good the movie was. I saw the trailer a few times and thought it looked silly and bad I’ll admit but I’ve also seen trailers of films I thought would be bad and liked and even loved the movies. Trailers are long-form commercials. There is an art to them but that does not make them art nor does it make them an accurate representation of what the film is for many reasons. So the trailer was silly. So what? Despite my reservations I never could’ve expected what unfolded.

I tweeted after seeing this that it was one of the most aggressively stupid movies I’d ever seen and that I stand by and what I mean by that is that there’s so much that makes you shake you head or roll your eyes and it just refuses to stop for 100 minutes or so. The blocking, yes the blocking, the actually positioning and movement of the actors is some of the worst I’ve ever seen. That’s something you can usually count on not being a concern. It’s hard to watch in and of itself. The dialogue when not trite is trying too hard to be funny and witty but it’s abysmal. The film also panders to racist stereotypes about the lawlessness of modern Russia to avoid the need to create any sort of plausibility in the real aspects of the plot. This scoffing, half-assed attempt at tongue-in-cheek social commentary is an affront to writing and people with any intelligence whatsoever. When the dialogue is not bad inherently it is superfluous, which is worse.

Due to the fact that the dark is dangerous the characters are frequently indoors or scenes are in the daytime so there is nowhere near enough dark in The Darkest Hour. The characters all at one point or another display typical idiotic, unrealistic actions that happen only in films and not in real crisis. Practically every performance is flat and without dimension and devoid or real emotion. Characterization is simplistic and insipid.

The effects are fine but the concept is so facile and with stakes theoretically so high it seems so unimportant. Tonality and pace have no presence here. Add to this that a man who has won Best Director and Best Picture in the past added his name to this film (granted in a “Presents” kind of way) it’s even more perplexing and infuriating.

This I can watch but the Night Watch Trilogy remains unfinished? Give me a break.

Ladies and Gentlemen the Worst Film of 2011: The Darkest Hour.


Most Underrated Picture

Toast (Emerging Pictures)

Battle: Los Angeles
Bereavement
Fireflies in the Garden
The Hole
Justin Bieber: Never Say Never
Red State
The Sitter
The Ward
Toast
Winter in Wartime

I decided that all (with Documentary being the exception) film categories should have equal numbers of nominees. So if there are 10 Best Picture candidates other fields should strive for that. This was a hard choice. I literally physically changed the poster above once and another time in my head. I will in brief explain why these films I feel are underrated.

Battle: Los Angeles it seems got a lot of hate just for being what it is nothing more and nothing less which makes no sense to me.

Bereavement literally has not been seen by enough people. It’s release was severely limited and I’m guessing the DVD sales aren’t that high.

Fireflies in the Garden nearly wins this prize. Not only was it in the can for three years and then not released very widely but then it also got a pretty good thumping from critics as well. None of those things sit well with me in regards to this film.

The Hole being Joe Dante’s film never really got distributed here. It may have just been picked up but I got an import from Amazon. The only reason it wasn’t picked up is because no one wanted to chance it because it’s pretty darn good.

Red State I firmly believe that if someone just either watches this film not knowing anything about it or if someone entirely different made it, it would’ve gotten better reviews. Kevin Smith doesn’t bother me at all. Ever. Even if he did I think I’d really think Red State is pretty damn good. I always strive to separate artist and art at all costs.

The Sitter is included just because of how much I liked it. I can see how you wouldn’t like it but am bemused by all the “Worst of 2011” talk. My reaction to those is “Fine you didn’t like it but watch more movies. That stuff on Netflix you don’t want to see. A lot of times I watch it and it’s worse.”

The Ward Here’s the opposite of a bad reputation harming a director. It’s not Halloween, or The Fog or another of his classics but it’s a damn good John Carpenter movie I find.

Winter in Wartime points out the imperfections of the Foreign Language Oscar race. It was the Dutch submission in 2008 and never saw a US distribution deal until now and that too was on not nearly enough screens. While there are things that are markedly European about it, it’s the kind of story anyone can enjoy and it even has a British character so there’s even some English for the xenophobes.

Now, at a time I tinkered with the idea of making the nominating process a mathematical equation. An example: IMDb score x 10 + Rotten Tomatoes + Metacritic divided by 3 = Aggregate score. Then compare that to my score x 10 and the highest differentials would be nominated. I would then scrap the numbers and pick a winner. Obviously that’d be too annoying to do. The idea kind of struck me when I went on the IMDb and saw Never Say Never‘s score. It got respectable numbers from Metacritic but has a 1.5 at the IMDb. Clearly people who hadn’t seen it and voted just because they hate Justin Bieber. I’m sure there are other instances but it seems like this was the one time I noticed rampant abuse of the implicit honor system under which the IMDb operates: see the movie, then vote. A majority of those who saw it were inclined to like it so this had to be just blind voting.

As for the winner:

Had it not been for my local non-profit art house participating in something called From Britain with Love I never would’ve seen Toast. Due to the fact that they did participate I was lucky enough to see it twice. I saw it well ahead of the US limited release and again during its one week run or so in this country. It was just about as good each time and much like the way at times in sports one needs to re-examine MVP criteria here it seems underrated can be viewed a few ways. Some past winners did get wide releases but weren’t really appreciated. To make this decision I asked myself “Which film of these is the one most deserving of attention that didn’t get it?” and there you have your winner: Toast. The answer when asked that way was easy.

2011 BAM Award Winners- Crew Categories

First, while I think that this “trifurcated” method of presenting winners is the way to go the nomenclature is something that may change. I considered “Above the Line” and “Below the Line” but that’s far too industry a term and furthermore it skews the breakdown of awards presented per post. Having said all that not all the categories in this post are crew per se, maybe behind the scenes is better but I’ll think over in the year to come. In any case here are the awards for non-actors.

Best Director

Martin Scorsese in Hugo (Paramount)

J.J. Abrams Super 8
S.J. Clarkson Toast
Martin Koolhoven Winter in Wartime
Paolo Virzì The First Beautiful Thing
Martin Scorsese Hugo

I will grant you that I read more about Scorsese’s process for Hugo than the other directors thanks to the film companion book written by the author of the novel. However, I also knew the book and got a sense when reading it that it might be a stronger piece cinematically than it was in text. After all it is an illustrated novel. It’s a novel wherein Selznick omitted words when he felt illustrating portions would be better. It’s also a case of knowing and understanding a vision and seeing a vision are two different things. This film was on the radar earlier for me than for most. All I learned about it heightened my anticipation, yet I never expected box-office results (which it sadly hasn’t really seen) or critical acclaim (which its gotten in spades) and the last thing I expected was for my lofty expectations to be far exceeded. I could ramble about why I love Scorsese’s process for making this film but anyone who knows anything about him knows his passion and knowledge and how he tries, when applicable, to imbue that to those he works with. All these directors had a great vision for their films, all succeeded to ridiculous heights. Scorsese just does so in a whole other stratosphere and on many, many levels and in different ways than in films past.

Best Cinematography

Asa Butterfield and Chloë Grace Moretz in Hugo (Paramount)

Larry Fong Super 8
Eduardo Serra Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2

Stephanie Anne Weber-Biron Heartbeats

Robert Richardson Hugo
Janusz Kaminski War Horse

This category is usually, and especially this year, just flat-out unfair. Minus the being undead part I feel like little Gage Creed in Pet Sematary shouting my protestations, “No fair! No fair!” Each one of these films is beautiful to look at and exemplifies flawless technique but also motifs that I am enamored of. Larry Fong takes Abrams’ penchant for lens flare and places it in as naturalistic a context as possible, Serra who works best when moving the camera frequently scarcely stops in this last chapter of an epic series, Weber-Biron’s work in Heartbeats is a staggering display of composition and luscious saturation, Kaminski, ever the chameleon like his frequent director Spielberg, brings landscapes not only to life but emblazons them with surreal beauty; and those are the runners up. Like Gage said “No fair!”

Here’s the best case for why 3D can work and why Hugo is enhanced by it. Aside from the technical aspect where every single shot of the film was shot in 3D, whereas even “real” 3D films have some post-conversion element. Shots were composed, framed, lit and even cut together with that effect in mind. And it’s not a shock and awe effect they seek but an invitation, an envelopment.

I frequently mention (whenever it’s the case) how I didn’t want a movie to end. I have never in my adult life felt like I was in the film. I had that feeling at times watching Hugo. It’s a 3D about creating a space and the feeling of room and a real view on an imagined world rather than explosions and chases. It’s about inviting the viewer closer to an intimate tale, involving the audience more than before and the main component to that is the photography.

Best Makeup

Tyler Labine & Alan Tudyk in Tucker & Dale vs. Evil (Magnet Releasing)


Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2
Super 8

Tucker & Dale vs. Evil

Rammbock
Winter in Wartime

This one is always tough. Substandard makeup work is always easier to spot. Natural makeup work is easy to take for granted and effects makeup is easy to over-value. More axioms are possible but that’s the bottom line so typically what I seek is something unique in the mix with standard work, which is the case for most of these nominees. The most versatile though is the cross-section in Tucker & Dale vs. Evil you have college kids (standard) the backwoods characters unfairly looked-down-upon (a bit more unkempt) then your effects (blood & gore) all done brilliantly.

Best Original Screenplay

JJ Abrams on the set of Super 8 (LA Times)

J.J. Abrams Super 8


Michel Hazanvicius The Artist
Benjamin Hessler Rammbock
Stevan Mena Bereavement
Paolo Virzì and Francesco Bruni and Francesco Piccolo The First Beautiful Thing

“Bad things happen, but you can still live.”

That’s the line that sends Super 8 above and beyond the other worthy candidates. One sentence comprised of eight words gives two characters (one not of this world, one a boy forced to grow up too fast) the strength to move on. There are other examples in this film where sparse, terse statements say so much: “I am in him as he is in me…” and so on.

Not to go overlooked without additional praise are the other writers here: Michel Hanzavicius not only wrote a great script for a mostly silent film but also used sound and dialogue on a few occasions in such a brilliant way emphasizing how important they are by not wasting them on trivialities. Benjamin Hessler in an hour of screen time accomplishes so much it’s awe-inspiring. Watch Rammbock. The First Beautiful Thing builds character and manipulates time magnificently. Bereavement is the best horror film I’ve seen in a decade concept and script are the cornerstone to that.

Best Adapted Screenplay

Martin Scorsese shows and illustration from the book to Asa Butterfield and Chloe Grace Moretz (Paramount)

Marti Noxon and Tom Holland Fright Night
Steve Kloves and JK Rowling Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2

John Logan and Brian Selznick Hugo
Lee Hall and Nigel Slater 
Toast

Mieke de Jong, Martin Koolhoven, Paul Jan Nelissen and Jan Terlouw Winter in Wartime

Similar to the other screenwriting category a lot of praise to go around here: Fright Night had some of the smartest, funniest dialogue of the year. Lee Hall’s sensitivty and talents know no bounds. Winter in Wartime is a grossly overlooked and underrated film that will please fans of many genres. Lastly, I don’t think I’ve ever not nominated Steven Kloves for a Harry Potter film but that does not diminish his contribution to the series or these nominations. Changing directors was something the series could survive but not screenwriter. Had he not been a mainstay it would’ve been very different.

As for the winner as many have noted, and I picked up on a few of these as well, there are marked differences between Hugo as a book and a movie that go well beyond just the title. All of these changes enhance the film. They make the story work better on film. They were made with the medium in which they were telling the story in mind and they worked brilliantly.

Best Editing

The Tree of Life (Fox Searchlight)

Job ter Berg Winter in Wartime
Mary Ann Brandon and Mary Jo Markey Super 8

Mark Day Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2

Thelma Schoonmaker Hugo

Hank Corwin, Jay Rabinowitz, Daniel Rezende, Billy Weber and Mark Yoshikawa The Tree of Life


It is often said that all films are made three times. The first is the script, the second is principal photography and the third is in the editing room. Never has a film being made in the edit been more clear than in The Tree of Life. I’d love to see the original script and the supposed 4-hour cut but everything you think of this film whether you love it as I do or you hate it comes down to the editing. Even the cinematography which would be brilliant regardless is better because of the way the images splice together. Perfect frame to perfect frame, disconnected thought to disconnected thought. It like every film is a puzzle. In this one you can place the pieces together how you please and tell people what you see. Not the other way around.

Best Score



Stevan Mena Bereavement
Alexandre Desplat Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2
Howard Shore Hugo
Michael Giacchino Super 8

Jónsi We Bought a Zoo

With these categories not much needs saying. These scores are all great. This clip and the way it plays with the ending are what clinches it for Super 8.

Best Sound Editing/Mixing

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2
Hugo
Super 8


Real Steel


X-Men: First Class

I rarely get actively excited about sound design though it does interest me. I took a sound class and did a lot of very hard work in it and learned a hell of a lot but the bottom line as this sequence and the film progresses the fades, levels, cuts and creation of these sounds, whether it be a compartment door slamming into the ground, an explosion or Cooper’s (the alien) roar it all fascinated and inspired me and made me pay attention, immediately on first viewing.

Best Visual Effects

The Adventures of Tintin
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2
Hugo

Super 8


Real Steel

The real litmus test for special effects is not thinking “Oh, those effects are really good” but rather not thinking about them at all then realize what they were, now that’s impressive. Even more impressive when you learn about what was done to create them. The video above is a quick illustration of what went into Real Steel. The only film wherein I didn’t think about effects until after I’d seen it.

Best Art Direction

Asa Butterfield and Ben Kingsley in Hugo (Paramount)

Anonymous

Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame
Hugo

Winter in Wartime

X-Men: First Class

Art Direction frequently goes hand in hand with cinematography in Hugo more so than most. In a situation where you’re bringing an audience into a world attention to detail is of paramount importance the sets and their dressings become like a character.

Best Costumes

Sacha Baron Cohen, Chloë Grace Moretz and Asa Butterfield in Hugo (Paramount)


Drive

Hugo

Super 8
Terri

Toast

I don’t care for the period bias that exists in costuming therefore I make sure to pay extra attention in modern/present day films to see if something catches my eye and a few nominees reflect that. What works best in Hugo has nothing to do with the fact that there’s an attempt to capture a time or a place but rather to create looks emblematic of character as frequently the actor has but one look through a majority of the movie. For the Station Master there was created a uniform as idiosyncratic as he is, for Hugo an outfit that at one time might’ve been his best but is now tattered and ratty and his only one similarly for Isabelle she is better dressed but always recognizable and so on. Adding to the 3D element all the decisions made here and in Art Direction also take texture into consideration: tweeds, wool and other fabrics with character are chosen.

Best Song

Justin Bieber in Justin Bieber: Never Say Never (Paramount)

“Chatte Batte” Chillar Party
“Exploded Diaper” Löded Diper Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules
“I Want Candy” Cody Simpson Hop
Born to be Somebody” Justin Bieber Justin Bieber: Never Say Never
“Pictures in My Head” The Muppets

“Let Me Take You to Rio (Blu’s Arrival)” Ester Dean & Carlinhos Brown Rio

If you look at past winners in this category you’ll see diversity. Here there is too: Chatte Batte is a sung in voice-over theme song from a Bollywood kids’ comedy. I have a weakness for Bollywood due to a college course so I really should see more. One of the BAM Awards past quirks was that a Bollywood film Lagaan was up for Best Picture and nothing else.

Second, is essentially a rock song but it’s also a jokey kind of song which is one of the highlights of Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules. Jokey and Rock combos also have precedent amongst past winners.

Hop isn’t all that great but it features a pretty good cover of “I Want Candy” and that song lifts the film some when used. Covers also have precedent hence I usually remove the Original from the category name.

The Muppets could’ve easily had a few nominees and I didn’t expect that when the process started and now is as good a time as any to say “Yes, I do surprise myself sometimes and I’m not 100% sure of every single nominee before I start.” With The Muppets it was a case of the first impression not being as strong but the songs stuck after a while.

So why Justin Bieber‘s song? As a recent Twitter conversation made me realize songs in films in general are less thought about and less integral than they ever have been. Another issue is how does one judge the pedigree of the “Original” song or song in this case. Now whether or not the song was really written for the film is a dicey and difficult thing to prove, which is why I ceased to care about that so much. Therefore it’s really about a song debuting in the film or a well done cover.

If one looks at past Original Song Oscar winners you can see they used to be far more iconic and in the middle of the picture than recently; a past example being “Let the River Run” by Carly Simon in Working Girl. Aside from seeing more movies, which after a record-setting year would be hard to do, there’s little I can do to affect the field. Songs don’t play as much of a role so how good a song is a huge criteria. I like all these songs. That’s simple.

The bigger criteria is the influence they have on the overall film. That is clear to see in Muppets where it sets the nostalgic, quasi-melancholy tone before the reunion and in Rio where it’s a joyous celebration of locale. That puts those above songs from Hop and Diary of a Wimpy Kid because those songs merely accompany incidents and don’t shed light on any of the story.

However, as I wrote in my initial review of Never Say Never the story of the documentary is not only Bieber’s but also that of his fanbase who more so than with any other artist propelled him from anonymity to viral sensation to global superstar faster than had ever before been seen. The lyrics of the song by Diane Warren are ostensibly about him but could apply to anyone. Also, while this song plays over the credits it’s accompanied by footage which brings the story full circle and thus music matches the imagery and enhances the end of the film, which depending on execution can be its most important moment. So whether it was “slapped on” in actuality or not it doesn’t feel like it is and is a coda to the film that matches the emotion of the piece so well. You can dismiss it as excuse to get another single for him on iTunes and to tie into the movie but it works aesthetically in my estimation so that’s what matters since marketing is a fact of life. Aesthetics and marketing are more closely tied in film than in any other artform.

Also, the fact that “Never Say Never” spawned a movie and in that movie would be another worthy original song is pretty surreal if you think about it. In a way that fact reflects the film and the story in general.

2011 BAM Award Winners- Acting Categories

Best Cast

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2

Hugo
Super 8

Toast



War Horse


Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2 (Warner Bros.)

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2 (Warner Bros.)

First, in last year’s awards I had a split between Best Cast and Youth Ensemble. This year I do as well. This year I came up with a much simpler explanation to answer the inevitable question: “How can that be?” The simplest way to explain it would be sports and from there if you need to I think you can find similar comparisons. Best Cast is the best team overall which takes into account depth and how skilled your star players are and whatnot. Youth Ensemble is a section of the cast judged individually on its own merits. Therefore one team can be considered the best while another has the best defense or bullpen any specialized section you prefer fits.

So the Best Cast from top to bottom is that of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2 not to get anal retentive about documenting rounds and cut downs but this cast literally inundated the last few rounds of the Supporting Actor and Actress race. However, as you will see, just as the last film was a showcase for Radcliffe, Watson and Grint this one was essentially about one man more than any other.

However, that didn’t preclude this film from having the highest incidence of one-scene wonders in the series. Nearly countless are the tense, brilliant and all too fleeting appearances in this film. Some appear in the series for the first time but all appear in the series for the last time and that and many more are the reason Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2 earns this trophy ahead of the other very worthy assemblages of talent.

Best Actress

Elizabeth Olsen and Sarah Paulson in Martha Marcy May Marlene (Fox Searchlight)

Bérénice Bejo The Artist

Elizabeth Olsen Martha Marcy May Marlene

Carey Mulligan Drive

Micaela Ramazzotti The First Beautiful Thing

Jeong-hin Yin Poetry


Quite simply you had storytellers this year. These ladies all helped make their films but one did so more than any other and that is Elizabeth Olsen. She tells the story of this film with her face and her expressions perhaps even more so than with what she says or does. I’m not waxing poetic with that statement it’s quite simply true. In a narrative that’s intricately structured and is not told chronologically for it to even have a chance to work she had to be this brilliant and what’s more amazing is that she is.

Best Actor

Michael Shannon in Take Shelter (Sony Pictures Classics)

Matt Damon We Bought a Zoo

Jean Dujardin The Artist

Wagner Moura Tropa de Elite 2
Brad Pitt The Tree of Life


David Rasch Olhos Azuis


Michael Shannon Take Shelter

One need not look much further than the write-up of Take Shelter in my Best Films of 2011 list to see why Shannon won. Allow me to further state that when terms like mesmerizing, magnetic and electric come to mind then it’s a no-brainer. A man teetering on the edge of sanity who is unsure of reality is a role that many could take over-the-top or make mawkish. The more Shannon doubts himself and fears for himself the more we do and that is quite a feat.

Best Supporting Actress

Anjelica Huston in 50/50 (Summit)

Anjelica Huston 50/50

Claudia Pandolfi The First Beautiful Thing

Sarah Paulson Martha Marcy May Marlene

Stefania Sandrelli The First Beautiful Thing

Octavia Spencer The Help


There were two performances this year wherein impact truly far outweighed screen-time. The first was Bill Milner’s appearance in X- Men: First Class as Young Erik which earned him a nomination also but the other is the honoree here. Anjelica Huston appears in 50/50 sporadically but each time she arrives she in her tension and emotion that she’s trying to contain adds to the gravitas of a film that is trying to be as light as it can which is delicate when cancer is involved. It would be easy to turn an over-protective and overly-worried mother into a cliché but she finds a depth to this person that helps ground the film. It was a pleasant surprise to see her on the screen for the first time in I don’t know how long but it was more pleasing to see her in such great form.

Best Supporting Actor

Alan Rickman in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2 (Warner Bros.)

Ben Kingsley Hugo

Christopher Plummer Beginners

John C. Reilly Terri

Alan Rickman Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2
Irandhir Santos Tropa de Elite 2

I am not one for bestowing an annual honor upon someone in lieu of an honorary achievement. Much like the first part of the conclusion was a showcase for the ability of the heroic triad’s acting chops here it is Alan Rickman who muscles through and makes his presence felt more than any other. While it’s true that in my estimation the achievement of Rickman to play scenes wherein many interpretations could be drawn and things were vaguely foreshadowed for eight films is without precedent. The only viable comparison is that Olivia Williams in The Sixth Sense had to play all her scenes with Bruce Willis such that they worked two different ways, once when the audience was fooled and again when all was known. Now imagine doing that eight times. That’s what Rickman did but he did so more brilliantly and evoking more emotion in this one than in any other film prior. Therefore while it is the last of the Potter films this is most certainly an earned achievement.

Best Youth Ensemble

Zach Mills, Elle Fanning, Riley Griffiths, Ryan Lee, Joel Courtney and Gabriel Basso in Super 8 (Paramount)

Chinmai Chandrashuh, Vedant Desai, Devji Handa, Rohan Grover, Naman Jain, Ifran Khan, Aarav Khanna, Shriya Sharma and Sanath Menon Chillar Party

Ellie Darcey-Alden, Ariella Paradise, Benedict Clarke, Alfie McIlwain, Rohan Gotobed, Arthur Bowen, Daphne de Beisetgui, Will Dunn, Jade Gordon, Bertie Gilbert, Helena Barlow and Ryan Turner Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2
Asa Butterfield, Chloë Grace Moretz, Gulliver Mcgrath, Shaun Aylward and Ed Sanders Hugo

Laramie Eppler, Tye Sheridan and Hunter McCracken The Tree of Life

Joel Courtney, Ryan Lee, Riley Griffiths, Gabriel Basso, Zach Mills, Elle Fanning Super 8

Writing a review close to the viewing of a film can be a blessing or a curse. Some films take digesting. For example, I needed to see Artificial Intelligence: A. I. three times in a weekend before I knew what my read was and I could start to vocalize my opinion properly. The inverse would be that you can instantly come out with a proclamation that you need to verify upon revisiting the film or that you eventually do not feel as strongly about as you did initially.

Such is not the case with Super 8 and its core players. I believe in the initial review I wrote something to the effect of that this is the best, most talented and most naturally amicable core of young actors I’d seen since Stand by Me and each subsequent viewing of the film has not shaken that belief instead it has solidified it. For those keeping track Stand by Me and Super 8 are separated by 25 years so when a new film earns that kind of comparison it’s well on its way to becoming a classic in due course whether it is hailed with the confusing “instant classic” label or not.

The brilliant and naturalistic nature of this ensemble’s work is sealed in the clandestine diner conversation wherein in several topics are discussed at once, put-downs are exchanged and conversation flows so naturally it feels almost as if it’s real life and not a film.

Certainly all these actors all have big futures but what they create here together is something truly special which they are blessed to have experienced and to recreate anything like in another project would be near miraculous.

As a footnote, when assembling the youth categories this year I was again thankful for The White Ribbon because had it not been for that film and its incredible nucleus, and cast as a whole, the epiphany of parity in the acting awards for youths and of age performers would not have occurred to me for some time.

Best Performance by a Child Actress in a Leading Role

Elle Fanning in Super 8 (Paramount)

Elle Fanning Super 8
Bailee Madison Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark

Chloë Grace Moretz Hugo

AnnaSophia Robb Soul Surfer

Saoirse Ronan Hanna

When I decided to work towards parity in these categories last year it was on the fly. I realized one or two really deserving performers and performances would be left out of the process merely based on the fact that their role was too small. Due to the fact that it was unexpected the best I was able to do at the time was to split the categories into male/female regardless of the size of the role. As I started collecting data for 2011 I started to stratify information. Thus, I gauged whether I could deem a youth participation as a lead or co-lead or purely supporting. Even giving myself this leeway I was concerned that there would be insufficient candidates in the female categories.

If you check the BAM Considerations you’ll see that not unlike adult parts there is more demand for young men than young ladies in film. It’s an age old issue wherein the supply and demand is disproportionate. I was aware of this fact, however, I held my breath and hoped this disparity would not affect the field. It surely didn’t.

While the number of eligible leads was low the quality was high. Furthermore, when dividing the cast into youth and adult the equation of lead and supporting can change. It also made me realize it’s not only screen-time that makes a lead.

Elle Fanning’s impact in Super 8 is massive. She is the girl in the boys’ club, she is the love interest not only that she is sought after by more than one of the guys so her disappearance has less negative impact on her lead status than most. She’s wise beyond her years, jaded, she plays older, she plays a great zombie and a brilliant “unfilmed” scene wherein you see how and why the boys fall in love with her. A lot of the film hinges on her and she more than holds up her own she helps carry it.

Best Performance by a Child Actor in a Leading Role

Joel Courtney in Super 8 (Paramount)

Cayden Boyd Fireflies in the Garden

Asa Butterfield Hugo

Joel Courtney Super 8

Dakota Goyo Real Steel

William Jøhnk Nielsen In a Better World

Hunter McCracken The Tree of Life

There was no category I dreaded deciding, whether for nominations or for a winner, more than this one. As I was whittling down the field I looked at the last 10 that I had and literally could’ve nominated them all. Again it seems like serendipity that in the first year I expand the acting categories all the fields are very strong. This is likely the strongest I’ve seen. Had I not split by gender and type of role it would’ve been incredibly unfair.

To give all these lead their due allow me to quickly comment on them: Hunter McCracken and Cayden Boyd are in similar situations in that their performances are long removed from the releases of their respective films. Boyd’s film was in the can, McCracken’s was in the edit. Hopefully Boyd transitions to older roles well as he has the talent and has reached that age and hopefully McCracken gets new opportunities should he want them after the long edit process in The Tree of Life. William Jøhnk Nielsen has perhaps the most impressive “simmer” of these actors. He has a lot of anger and frustration to play and he has to work up to a boil frequently. It’s a different kind of emotion than most of these actors had to work which is why this is one of the few categories I decided to expand this category to six nominees, which was unprecedented until this year in three instances.

Dakota Goyo was a great surprise in Real Steel not so much in the fact that he was able to steal scenes but in as much as he did it in almost every way possible. He had slightly less screen-time than Hugh Jackman I think but both in significance and performance made himself of equal importance. He added comedy, drama and heart, ultimately humanizing a film which wanted you to look past it facade.

Asa Butterfield had the unenviable task of playing a character I had expectations for in a story I knew. Even based on his previous two lead performances in The Boy in the Striped Pajamas and Nanny McPhee Returns I was amazed by him here despite the fact that I expected greatness. With his being cast in Ender’s Game on the heels of Hugo there’s a chance he’ll put together and unapproachable record as a young actor and proceed from there.

As I stated prior though this isn’t a cumulative award. The ensemble work in Super 8 is brilliant as stated above but they also split off and the common factor in the smaller groups is Joe Lamb plus one or a few of his friends, or his dad and Joe Lamb is Joel Courtney and vice versa. Joel not only worked with various scene partner permutations but with various notes and emotions. If you think of a kind of conversation a kid can hold in a film he likely had one and it was apt to be one of the best examples of the year: the diner speculation, the late night talk with Alice, the fight with his father, the fake movie dialogue, etc. Not only is he natural in all these situations but effective and makes the movie work.

This is a film about kids, Joe specifically, that is told through the guise of a sci-fi tale and for it to work the performance has to be strong. The performance is brilliant therefore the film achieves greatness.

Best Performance by a Child Actress in a Supporting Role

Elle Fanning in We Bought a Zoo (20th Century Fox)


Landry Bender The Sitter


Celine Buckens War Horse

Olivia Crocicchia Terri
Elle Fanning We Bought a Zoo

Joey King Battle: Los Angeles

Giving someone two nominations let alone two wins is not a decision that should be taken lightly. However, it is also not a reason to begrudge someone an awards they clearly deserve. It’s also not something you should do simply because a performer does the opposite of what you expect. Yet when the performer not only earns it and plays that opposite character just as well if not better than it has been earned no matter how that may be interpreted. She is funny, genuine, sweet and garners your sympathy in very little screen time here. A well-deserved double.

Best Performance by a Child Actor in a Supporting Role

Ryan Lee in Super 8 (Paramount)

Chase Ellison Fireflies in the Garden

Colin Ford We Bought a Zoo

Ryan Lee Super 8
Bill Milner X-Men: First Class

Bridger Zadina Terri

“Excuse me, could we have another order of fries, my friend here is fat?”

As strange as it may sound this was likely the pivotal line in making up my mind of a few things: first, that my associating Super 8 and Stand by Me was not, is not and will never be insane so far as the interaction of the cast and second that Ryan Lee flat out knows what’s funny, understands comedic timing and how to deliver a line such that he achieves the most impact. It may be an innate knowledge but it’s knowledge nonetheless. Just think of some the best punchlines of the film:

“I made those M-80s myself…Yeah, that’s right!”

“Wait…What?”

“There’s no talking in the silent reading area, it’s for silent reading.”

“I hope my electronic football is in there.”

However funny these are or are not to you may vary but if you’ve seen the film you know they are much funnier in context and due to the delivery than they are just on the page. So that plus the fact that out of everyone of Joe’s friends Lee hangs in there longest are why he wins. Comedy is hard at any age but when it’s easy for someone that’s special.

The Best Films of 2011 #15-11

As the number of films I watch has grown so has the number of films I rank among my best of the year. Essentially what matters to me is not so much the number of films included amogst the best of the year but rather the proportion. When I started these picks as a teenager I’d pretty much only be guaranteed a Saturday matinee at the local UA so that amounted to about 52 films a year. Meaning the five Best Picture nominees were equivalent to the top 10%. It’s not a bad rule of thumb. Granted only picking 10 Best Picture nominees of about 222 films deemed eligible equals about 4.5% of the total films I viewed. Therefore it’s not much of a stretch to take my Best List which goes beyond just the nominees from 15 to 25. In fact, I just had to pick the first few that came to mind. Some that wouldn’t show up on another list I did because 30 would be easily achievable.

Without much further ado here is the continuation of my Best Films countdown, you can find the beginning here:

15. Midnight in Paris

Owen Wilson and Rachel McAdams in Midnight in Paris (Sony Pictures Classics)

This film in my mind doesn’t mark a renaissance for Woody Allen. I never declared him creatively dead so he had nothing to rebirth from necessarily. Each trip into an Allen film is an uneasy balance for viewers. We want “old, funny” Woody in a new way but those films of which we think are nearly, if not more than, 40 years old at this point. Things have changed and so has Woody. He always does, that’s the thing. So while this hearkens back to some of his more inventive works and comments openly on a man caught in the past; he’s also playing with new techniques in a new city. Allen has always been unafraid but he’s in a full on experimental mode. He’s not just playing with new techniques, he’s playing with house money, and after all he’s done, why shouldn’t he? You may not like some of his films but any director who always gives you cause to discuss his work, perhaps even heatedly, is worth noting.

14. Crazy, Stupid, Love

Ryan Gosling and Steve Carell in Crazy, Stupid, Love (Warner Bros.)

In the previous list section there I discuss Bereavement which is likely my favorite horror film since the release of Frailty. This is a film I have not yet seen a second time so whether I like it more than such-and-such is difficult to say but what I can say is what class I believe it’s in and that’s the likes of Love Actually, French Kiss and maybe, maybe When Harry Met Sally… It’s equal parts funny and insightful, it’s all heartfelt and it weaves love plots deftly when most would be clunky. Too many missed this film, see it now.

13. Win Win

Alex Shaffer and Paul Giamatti in Win Win (Fox Searchlight)

This is the kind of film that you hope and pray will stick in people’s minds as the year goes on as it deserves to land on lists of this type regardless of release date. I’m glad to see it along with some of the performances have been recognized. Win Win in a lot of ways flies in the face of conventions of escalating incidents, constantly raising stakes and climax. Not to say it doesn’t have these things but it plays them differently. It deals in reality and subtext. It has palpable drama and humor but doesn’t always feel the need to remind you of it but you feel it, always.

12. Take Shelter

Michael Shannon in Take Shelter (Sony Pictures Classics)

To see how I feel this film qualifies as a horror film please see my Horror Film list (to be posted).

Take Shelter is a great film. In a few regards it’s the best kind. It features a powerhouse performance by Michael Shannon one that needs to be as great as it is in order to drive the story. If you believe him as an actor there’s a chance you believe maybe what he sees is in fact real and not delusion despite evidence to the contrary. If you believe him, or at least that he believes it, you fear for him and for his family and not just by proxy either. Another way in which this film is great is that it can be interpreted in a few ways and regardless of which path you choose as your own its great either way, the view is just a little bit different on that road is all.

11. X-Men: First Class

Michael Fassbender in X-Men: First Class (20th Century Fox)

Were I one for quotas I may have pre-designated this year as one which would need to have a superhero film representative. However, I didn’t hold my breath for any of them and came away blown away by this one. The one most near and dear to my heart that I needed to succeed to continue to have faith, or optimism, in those with powers on the big screen. I discussed much of what love about this film in my review so suffice it to say that X-Men clearly did not get here because I needed a superhero film and conversely it’s not a slight that it ends up at number 11. Precisely the reason I started to make lists to accompany my awards is because it would allow me to echo or restate my affections for certain film regardless of how they fall down the ladder when separated by an iota or two from one another.

The Best Films of 2011 #20-16

As the number of films I watch has grown so has the number of films I rank among my best of the year. Essentially what matters to me is not so much the number of films included amogst the best of the year but rather the proportion. When I started these picks as a teenager I’d pretty much only be guaranteed a Saturday matinee at the local UA so that amounted to about 52 films a year. Meaning the five Best Picture nominees were equivalent to the top 10%. It’s not a bad rule of thumb. Granted only picking 10 Best Picture nominees of about 222 films deemed eligible equals about 4.5% of the total films I viewed. Therefore it’s not much of a stretch to take my Best List which goes beyond just the nominees from 15 to 25. In fact, I just had to pick the first few that came to mind. Some that wouldn’t show up on another list I did because 30 would be easily achievable.

Without much further ado here is the continuation of my Best Films countdown (for the beginning go here):

20. Tropa de Elite 2: O Inimigo Agora e Outro (Elite Squad 2)

Wagner Moura in Tropa de Elite 2: O Inimigo Agora e Outro (New Video)

This is the rare case of a sequel not just being better than the original but worlds better. I stated ten times better in social media and that seems about right when you think about it. Despite the fact that voice over is as present in the version as in the original it’s still a more visually rendered divisive, unsolvable puzzle than the first one is. The acting is spectacular earning a lead actor nomination for Wagner Moura (who may or may not be the next Robocop) and a Supporting nod for Irandhir Santos, whose character is fascinating. He begins the film seeming like his character is just a platform on which to discuss some sociological factoids but then he becomes very involved in the story not only as a political opponent of the Elite Squad of police but a man trying to help the city but is also married to Wagner’s ex-wife and they tussle for his son’s affection. It gets immensely more personal than the film before it did while still telling a big tale of systematic corruption wherein one band of crooks supplants another for control of Rio, brilliantly rendered and important. It’s a brave film for Brazil to make and even a braver one to submit to the Academy and on top of that it’s great.

19. Bereavement

Spencer List in Bereavement (Crimson Films)

Usually it’s not until after a seeing a film that you start to think grandiose and perhaps hyperbolic thoughts about it. With Bereavement those thoughts started during my first viewing and they were re-affirmed upon a nearly complete second viewing (my friends weren’t in the mood for such a tale). Perhaps what’s most unique about my experience with Bereavement is that I didn’t go into it knowing it was a prequel and that had no adverse affect on my viewing, as it should not. The score by writer/director Stevan Mena underscores the tension of the film and is potentially iconic given time and the same can be said for the dialogueless performance of Spencer List. Alexandra Daddario plays a horror heroine to utter perfection it might be possible to backtrack a decade or more to find a more charismatic, talented and likable genre lead in the ingenue mold. It’s the kind of film that really sneaks up on you. It implies greater atrocities than it shows and as time goes by I can only hope its fanbase will grow.

18. Incendies

Lubna Azabal in Incendies (Sony Pictures)

If ever there was a film that’s a testament to sticking it out this is it. That’s not to say I ever disliked this film at any point during it or that I came close to stopping it. However, it’s not until after the midway point and actually closer to the end that this film goes from good to very good and then great. The narrative unravels itself slowly, It travels through time and place. It is seeking answers which are hard to find and that no one will give willingly due to the implications therein. When answers do come the affect is great and when the last peace falls you may not even be certain what just happened. When you do finally close the circle you will be left gobsmacked. It’s a tale as old as time updated with new players and modern implications about a family that grows more pained as it gets closer and has to leave home to discover their mother but can only do so after she has passed. It’s a film about specific locales and conflicts with a global reach.

17. A Screaming Man

Youssouf Djaoro in A Screaming Man (Film Movement)

I am one who can be swayed but a very restrained and minimalist tale. This is a perfect example of that. Here you have the very simple story of a man who works tending to a pool in a posh hotel in the central African nation of Chad. Since he used to be a swimmer the pool is his life. He says as much. As civil war encroaches on the routine of his life and tears his family asunder he tries to keep control of things. You never learn too much about the conflict. War is war. Civilizations get caught it in it whether in the crossfire of by some form of collateral damage. Events are at times implied and others commented upon, facial reactions are restrained or non-existent but it gets you. I was brought to tears by this film. When it ended with a gorgeously languid fade to black I was completely gutted and left wanting another scene for more closure but knew another scene would not be right. The film had ended and we the audience like our protagonist would have to live with what had transpired.

16. Fireflies in the Garden

Hayden Panetierre and Cayden Boyd in Fireflies in the Garden (Senator Entertainment Co.)

In the linked article I discuss the only real issue this movie presented me which was one of casting more than anything else. That issue is exacerbated to an extent by the unusual family dynamic wherein an aunt and her nephew are very close in age and then we’re also playing in two different time planes. However, those things happen and that’s the part of this movie I love. Aside from the persistent use of flashback its one of the more emotionally wrenching films of the year. Now granted it’s not the only time I cried three times watching a film this year, so that barometer isn’t what it once was but it’s the fact that it so carefully mixes melodramatic traits and pulls back with just enough restraint when necessary to make it identifiable. The film is a family drama that is essentially about letting go of past pains and hurts that families can cause one another and while any story of this nature will have its histrionic set pieces, this one more than most, it’s with clarity and conviction that the details can be overcome and the emotional truth of the piece can drive home to any audience member, which is to say I never dealt with anything like what occurs in this movie but there’s a universality to it at its core that made it a beautiful and wonderful experience where I related to many of the dramas and characters involved in them.