Wednesday, October 05, 2005

Movies Of The Year: 1988

1988's an off-year, no really great movies, though there are some very good ones.


50. Police Academy 5: Assignment: Miami Beach
49. My Stepmother Is An Alien
48. Caddyshack II
47. Action Jackson
46. The Dead Pool
45. Cocktail
44. Short Circuit 2
43. Rambo III
42. Crocodile Dundee II
41. Red Heat
40. Big Business
39. The Great Outdoors
38. The Presidio
37. Funny Farm
36. Beaches
35. The Seventh Sign
34. Biloxi Blues
33. Twins
32. Working Girl
31. Shoot To Kill
30. Mississippi Burning
29. Big
28. Scrooged
27. Young Guns
26. Hairspray
25. License To Drive
24. Alien Nation
23. Gorillas In The Mist
22. Coming To America
21. Talk Radio
20. The Accused
19. Frantic
18. The Adventures Of Baron Munchausen
17. Rain Man
16. The Thin Blue Line

15. Midnight Run - A good, if overrated movie. Frankly, I've always found it a little boring. A good performance by DeNiro, but Charles Grodin gets on my nerves.

14. Who Framed Roger Rabbitt - Warner Brothers cartoons were always better than Disney. It's a shame they don't make shorts like that anymore. The second best Robert Zemekis movie, after Back To The Future.

13. Akira - A good, very influential anime, but I've never loved it as much as a lot of other people do. I find it unmemorable. It's a lot like Blade Runner in that it looks great, I can respect it, I can hardly remember anything about it and what I can remember, frustrates me.

12. Willow - It's a Ron Howard movie. That means it's good, but not particularly great. All his movies are like that. I haven't seen this in years, so I imagine the effects are pretty dated. But there's a great performance by Val Kilmer and some cool action sequences.

11. Dirty Rotten Scoundrels - Very simple con artist comedy highlighted by great performances by Steve Martin, Michael Caine and Glenne Headly. Another movie that seems to have grown overrated over time simply by virtue of not having any really big flaws.

10. The Milagro Beanfield War - A remember watching a Siskel & Ebert episode when I was a kid and seeing this movie reviewed. I remember quite clearly that it looked like a very serious, dark, boring drama. For that reason, I avoided watching it for years and years. One day, forced to watch it, I discovered that I was remembering a different movie all together. This is a very bright, even whimsical little gem of a movie. I've only seen 3 of the 7 movies Robert Redford has directed (Quiz Show and Ordinary People are the others) but they're all great.

9. A Fish Called Wanda - I have no idea why this gets the raves it does. Sure, its funny, but not hysterically so. Yeah, the performances are all pretty good, but that isn't exactly a surprise coming from this cast. It's a good movie, that's for sure. But one of the best comedies of all-time? No way. Inexplicably the recipient of a Best Director Oscar nomination for Charles Crichton, who directed his first movie in 1944.

8. Stand And Deliever - The best of the great teachers genre of movies, generally an unremarkable group. A great performance by Edward James Olmos, a great actor who seems to have trouble finding great roles. He's been really good on the new Battlestar Galactica series.

7. Beetlejuice - I imagine the special effects and scenery chewing by Michael Keaton and Catherine O'Hara don't really stand up over time, but Winona Ryder's performance is iconic. This film is one of the few times Geena Davis doesn't really annoy me. I can't believe people think she should play the President. Alec Baldwin also stars and is alright.

6. The Naked Gun: From The Files Of Police Squad - Without a doubt the funniest movie of the year, Wanda fans regardless. Creepy seeing OJ Simpson in a movie. It's not as good as Airplane! or Hot Shots, but still a classic.

5. Eight Men Out - The second best baseball movie of the year, but one of the best of all-time nonetheless. More historically accurate than most movies, it's a little sappy in that it makes you think these players were treated unfairly, a very debatable claim. It would have been nice for Sayles to dramatize the 'they got what they deserved" side of the issue, at least a little. Maybe something from Christy Mathewson (the great and universally respected Hall Of Fame former pitcher who was one of the reporters who suspected the fix) or Eddie Collins, arguably the greatest second baseman of all-time and one of the clean Sox, he's depicted as nothing but a jerk in the movie. Anyway, the period detail is outstanding, and the cast is great. John Cusak really stands out, but David Strathairn, Christopher Lloyd, Michael Rooker, DB Sweeney, John Mahoney, Charlie Sheen, Studs Terkel, John Sayles, and Michael Lerner.

4. Die Hard - Without a doubt one of the best action movies of all-time. There's a reason why movies are still defined in reference to it. Classic performances from Alan Rickman and Bruce Willis. I never did get why he didn't put his shoes on right away though. great string of movies for John McTiernan: Predator, Die Hard, Hunt For Red October. Then he did Medicine Man and totally fell apart.

3. The Last Temptation Of Christ - The movie that the philistine right thinks The Passion Of the Christ is. This is a sincerely devout and thought provoking film that deserved absolutely none of the criticism it received from moronic religious groups that didn't even bother to watch the movie or the book it's based on before protesting it. Willem Defoe is great in the lead role. Harry dean Stanton is a terrific John the Baptist. the weird cast also includes Barbara Hershey as Mary Magdalene, David Bowie as Pontius Pilate, John Lurie as James, Irvin Kershner as Zebedee and Ileana Douglas as an extra. The problem for me is Harvey Keitel. As much as I like him and think he's a great actor, I simply can't by him as a believable Judas. It's the one flaw that keeps this from being a true classic. Scorsese's movie makes you think, Gibson's makes you feel nauseous (unless you get a masochistic thrill out of it).

2. Bull Durham - The best baseball movie ever may not even be about baseball at all. Or rather, it's definitely about baseball, but it's about life also. But baseball's about life too, so this is the movie that most accurately captures baseball in its totality. Which makes it the best baseball movie of all-time. Classic performances from the three leads, which made all three of them stars. Infinitely rewatchable.

1. Dangerous Liaisons - 1988 was apparently a good year for movies about sex. This one is also highlighted by three terrific performances and a remarkably funny script. In addition to John Malkovich, Glenn Close and Michelle Pfeiffer's great lead performances, Keanu Reeves is remarkable appropriate in his role, Swoozie Kurtz is pretty good and Uma Thurman is quite memorable. My favorite of the three versions of the story I've seen, it's the one that best gets the balance of vicious comedy and sincere drama. Valmont is too serious and Cruel Intentions too campy, this one gets it just right. A great looking movie, and I don't just mean the actresses. I had a theory for awhile that Glenn Close's character isn't just pure evil, but is also a proto-feminist hero, her motivation stems from her desire to get revenge on all the men who have wronged her. I don't know if I totally believe that, and it certainly isn't necessary to enjoy the movie.


Not a lot of great Unseen movie this year, as far as I know:

As Tears Go By
Hotel Terminus
The Big Blue
Grave Of The Fireflies
My Neighbor Totoro
Bloodsport
They Live
The Unbearable Lightness Of Being
Tequila Sunrise
Dead Ringers
Earth Girls Are Easy
The Accidental Tourist
Women On The Verge Of A Nervous Breakdown
Mystic Pizza
Colors
Tucker: The Man And His Dream
DOA
Running On Empty
Another Woman
Bright Lights, Big City
Torch Song Trilogy
Young Einstein
I'm Gonna Get You Sucka
Tetsuo: The Ironman

4 comments:

  1. What a putrid year for movies.

    Your authority on this year is undermined by the fact that you've yet to see:
    They Live
    Dead Ringers
    Women On The Verge Of A Nervous Breakdown
    Tetsuo: The Ironman

    Best Bad Movie of 1988: License to Drive, probably.

    Worst Bad Movie of 1988: Rain Man (sorry, Big).

    Love these posts, keep it up.

    ReplyDelete
  2. That's the thing with movies: there's always more to see, therefore every list is necessarily incomplete. That's why I list films I haven't seen at the end of every year. Dead Ringers and Women On the Verge are on the list. I'm mildly interested in They Live and don't really know anything about Tetsuo

    Thanks for reading, glad you like it.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Nice you lists are perfect for our movie night we have every week. We have to pick one for 88 this week and this list helped a lot. We watched mannequin last week so I think liscense to drive would be in the same vein. Thanks again.

    ReplyDelete
  4. You can't go wrong with License To Drive.

    ReplyDelete