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Saturday, January 19, 2008
Wednesday, January 16, 2008
Movies Of The Year: 2007 (Part Two)
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Still, if this year is anything like years past, we haven't seen the best of the 2007 films yet. When I wrote the 2006 list last year, I'd yet to see a whopping 11 of my current Top 15 films of that year. With highly anticipated 2007 films by Hou Hsiao-hsein, Wong Kar-wai, Jia Zhang-ke, Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Bela Tarr and other End Of Cinema favorites yet to be released in this country, as well as such well-regarded films as 4 Months, 3 Weeks, 2 Days, Silent Light and Persepolis by filmmakers I'm unfamiliar with, there's no reason to expect this list to be anything close to final.
But it's that time of the year, and list we must. Of course, because we here at The End take a long and broad view of history and the world, only films that have 2007 as their year of release on imdb are eligible for the 2007 list. This tends to create a comparability problem when looking at the lists of other folks, who believe that films only exist when they happen to show up wherever they live. Thus, any number of 2006 films show up on other people's lists that won't make it on to mine (at least eight of the Indiewire Critics Poll Top 20 aren't 2007 by my reckoning, for example). With this list, therefore, I'll be integrating films from 2006 or earlier that premiered in the US in 2007. For The Big List, however, only the actual 2007 films will be listed. The previous years' film titles will be italicized below.
So, with Olivier Messaien's Quartet For The End Of Time on the soundtrack (thanks to Alex Ross) and fueled by a not inconsiderable amount of Diet Coke, here are the Movies Of The Year for 2007.
41. Beowulf
40. Spiderman 3
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38. Spielberg On Spielberg
37. Transformers
36. 300
35. Harry Potter And The Order Of The Phoenix
34. The Bourne Ultimatum
33. Bienvenue a Cannes
32. Hot Rod
31. Michael Clayton
30. Hot Fuzz
29. Superbad
28. Knocked Up
27. Lars And The Real Girl
26. Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World's End
25. Tears Of The Black Tiger
24. Stardust
23. Eastern Promises
22. Paris, je t'aime
21. Paprika
20. Sunshine
19. The Host
18. Juno
17. Waitress
16. The Simpsons Movie
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14. The Darjeeling Limited - Wes Anderson's slightest film to date, the story of three brothers trying to reinvent their family and themselves on a train journey across India. It has all the good and bad elements of Anderson's style, including some of his best straight-ahead compositions (the ones with the camera facing perpendicular to a rectangular object like a wall or train while the characters either look straight ahead or move sideways as the camera tracks with them, often in slow-motion) and a vibrant use of color (including the blues and yellows he also used well in The Life Aquatic). Still, the movie doesn't seem to explore any new territory for Anderson, and it ever really reaches the poignancy or oblique emotional power of his earlier films. And the film also, embarrassingly, falls into the imperialistic (if not exactly racist) trap of having rich white men begin their spiritual awakening through the death of one of the local brown people. Still, Anderson's films I don't think are designed to be fully appreciated on first viewing. Of all his films, only Rushmore did I love immediately. There's something about the intricacy of his design, and the subtlety of his film's emotional shifts that demand repeated showings to be grasped in their entirety.
13. Zodiac - David Fincher's procedural about the unresolved hunt for the eponymous serial killer is the critical dark horse of the year, to the point that it's becoming overrated. The ensemble cast is terrific, led by Jake Gyllenhaal and Robert Downey, Jr, and the digital cinematography by Harris Savides is a benchmark for that emerging medium. But there's something missing from the film for me. I feel like it works better in the abstract (cool! a film about the search for a killer where everyone goes nuts because they can never find him. Obsession! Madness! Woohoo!) that it does on the screen. This is, no doubt, related to the fact that for much of the film, it plays out like a conventional thriller and not the experiment it tends to get described and remembered as. I'm thinking not so much of the reenactments of the actual murders (which would be unnecessary if the point of the film was the investigators and not the killer) but of the way the film resolves itself, specifically Gyllenhaal's trip to a suspect's basement, with all its creepy killer-in-the-dark vibe that feels much more like Silence Of The Lambs than it really should.
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11. Once - The indie film sensation of the year, like Zodiac, suffers from overrated syndrome, but getting past the hype, there's a charming little romantic musical about marginal people trying and failing to connect. Shot in an only occasionally obnoxious handheld digital style, the film revels in the procedure of musical performance. Like another filmmaker on this list, Tsai Ming-liang, director John Carney allows the audience the pleasure of watching people do stuff, and there are few things that fascinate me as much as watching people play music. Glen Hansard and especially Marketa Irglová are very good at the acting part of their jobs, and while their music isn't nearly as outstanding as the thousands of people who've bought the soundtrack seem to think it is, it is perfectly fine and fits the story and these characters very well.
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9. Rescue Dawn - Werner Herzog's remake of his own documentary about the true story of an American pilot shot down on his first mission in Vietnam who escapes from a Laotian POW camp and has to fight his way through the jungle has terrific performances from Christian Bale (with a wild accent), Steve Zahn (not being funny) and Jeremy Davies (who played my most reviled character in Saving Private Ryan, a war film much inferior to this one). The best work on the film though, continuing a trend from this year, is by cinematographer Peter Zeitlinger, who manages to make the jungle as beautiful as it is terrible, visually demonstrating one of Herzog's most persistent themes. It's perhaps the most conventional of any Herzog I've seen, with a straightforward narrative, a happy ending and celebration of mainstream virtue and entirely lacking any tortured yet strangely heroic insanity, but that's OK. Not every film can have Klaus Kinski.
8. I Don't Want To Sleep Alone - Another director stepping towards conventionality is Tsai Ming-liang, with this film about a homeless man (Tsai regular Lee Kang-sheng playing the character he often plays in Tsai's films) who gets involved in a love triangle with the man who nurses him back to health after a severe beating and a waitress at a local coffee shop. All the characters live on the edge of society, the waitress living with her mom in a shell of a building about to be sold out from under them and spending much of the day caring for her comatose brother (interestingly also played by Lee, don't know what to make of that yet), the man who finds Lee squats in one abandoned building while working to pump a lake of water out of another, and Lee himself, a Taiwanese main in Malaysia unable to speak the language (I don't think he says a word the entire film). Globalization is the ostensible political subject of the film, though it doesn't appear to necessarily be for or against it. More interesting, to me and, I suspect, to Tsai, is observing people in process. Much of the film is taken up with the small details of taking care of Lee Kang-sheng in each of his roles. While not as obsessed with seemingly mundane activity as Tsai's Goodbye Dragon Inn, there's still ample opportunity to get bored out of your skull if you're not in the right frame of mind. Though there are some comic moments, the film is never as funny as the intricate and unexpected What Time Is It There?. What the film does have that those lack, is a pair of sublime images revolving around water (Tsai's favorite motif). They aren't as shocking or transcendent as those in the next two films on the list, but they are as beautiful as anything in film this year.
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6. Ratatouille - Director Brad Bird's best film to date, and certainly the best Pixar movie, if not the best Disney-related film since Sleeping Beauty, this story of a rat who wants to be a chef gets to the core of what it means to be an artist. Even more surprising is that in its perfect final 20 minutes or so, it gets to the core of what it means to be a critic and consumer of art. Apparently alone among mainstream American animators, Bird treats his films as films, and the camera moves as if it were actually filming actual space, gliding up down and around like the great crane shots of Orson Welles, Max Ophuls or Paul Thomas Anderson (to make some ambitious, not entirely absurd comparisons). The animation is as stunning as you expect from Pixar, being both realistic and stylized at the same time. The film's been criticized for the weakness of the main human character, the incompetent chef Linguini that the rat Remy controls like a puppet. I don't get it though. Isn't he supposed to be weak? He's having his movements controlled by a rat!
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4. There Will Be Blood - The next three films are doubtless the top 3 American films of 2007, and that isn't likely to change, though the order may very well (I've only seen each of them once, for one thing). Paul Thomas Anderson's epic set in turn of the century California integrates his own obsessions with family and disastrous fathers into a grand narrative of the conflict and connections between peculiarly American versions of Wild West capitalism and evangelical Protestantism. Anderson's direction, however, is more restrained than in any film since Hard Eight. Though there are still some fine tracking shots, they aren't nearly as flashy as in Boogie Nights, and the film never attempts the fevered intercutting or musicality of Magnolia or Punch-Drunk Love. Not that there isn't music: the score by Radiohead's Jonny Greenwood stands out as the year's best, though on first viewing it doesn't appear as vital to the film as the pop scores in Anderson's last three films (one sequence excepted). Daniel Day-Lewis channels John Huston (whose Noah Cross in Chinatown is a clear template both as a character and a voice) in a literally volcanic performance that slowly builds to an eruption in the film's closing sequences that either sends the film over the top into masterpiece territory or destroys the whole drama of the picture, depending on the viewer. I'm solidly in the masterpiece camp. There are few things more virtuous in a film than having the guts to blow the whole thing up from the inside.
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1. The Wind That Shakes The Barley - Ken Loach's masterful story of the Irish Revolution and subsequent Civil War was my #1 film of 2006 and I still think it's better than any film I've seen in 2007 as well. But that may very well change. It usually does.
In addition to the ones cited in the intro that have yet to get a US release, here's some more films I haven't seen:
Across the Universe
After The Wedding
American Gangster
The Assassination Of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford
Atonement
Away From Her
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Before The Devil Knows You're Dead
Black Book
Black Snake Moan
Charlie Wilson's War
Control
Gone Baby Gone
Helvetica
Into The Wild
The King Of Kong
The Lives Of Others
Margot At The Wedding
The Namesake
No End In Sight
Offside
The Savages
Sweeney Todd
3:10 To Yuma
12:08 East Of Bucharest
28 Weeks Later
La vie en rose
Walk Hard
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