Tuesday, March 03, 2009

Movie Roundup: Schizopolis vs. Reservoir Dogs Edition, Part One

I wrote this for another website a couple days ago, but it took a lot of work so I'm going to post it here as well. Apologies if you've already read it.




That pretty much sums up this movie: Steven Soderbergh filming himself masturbating (he does this three or four times over the course of the film.

It does have a clever idea, when he and his movie wife speak to each other in phrases implying the genericity of everyday communication:



It's a good premise, one that was used to hilarious purposes by a Chicago theatre troupe as heard a few weeks ago on This American Life. I can reasonably assume that they got the idea from Soderbergh, and credit him for a bit of originality here, but then I remembered this movie:





which uses the concept for hilarious purposes. And, of course this movie:





which uses it to make a political argument, while also being hilarious.

To what end does Soderbergh approach the issue of middle class miscommunication?

Political?



Nah, I don't think that hoary standup comedy classic mattress tags counts.

Political/Economic?



Nah, that's kind of racist

Sexual?



Heh, it's funny because she's fat.

Sexual/Political?



Ha! That Diane Feinstein is quite manly.

A biting satire of office life?



Meh, maybe. But that whole plotline disappears in the last two thirds of the film. Instead we get Soderbergh turning into a womanizing dentist who gets slapped with a sexual harassment suit. Followed by a shift in emphasis to his wife, where we pointlessly replay much of the rest of the film (the parts that had somewhat cleverly been disguised behind the generic statements, now even that critique is rendered moot as all the dialogue is literalized). And then, the scenes are replayed again, with Soderbergh as three characters, each speaking a different language based on lame cultural stereotypes!



Worker-Soderbergh speaks in Japanese.



Womanizing Soderbergh speaks Italian (complete with tracksuit!)



Sensitive coffeshop Soderbergh speaks French (and wears black!)

This is then abandoned and various other plot threads (the gigolo exterminator, the lame Scientology parody, the office job) are tied together in a fake assassination. Why? Probably just to set up this joke:



It did provide the one time I laughed during the whole film, so that's something.


To sum up:


because the whole thing is a lot of Benny Hill-level comedy


that isn't the least bit funny. And isn't interesting either because it's completely





Yup, that pretty much sums it up.




I don't think so Steve.



Nope, once was more than enough.






(it's funny because he's not wearing any pants! get it?!)

Saturday, February 28, 2009

Sita Streams The Blues



Sita Sings the Blues is now streaming online in anticipation of its public television debut next week. There are apparently higher quality streams and even DVDs in the works in the near future, according to director Nina Paley's blog, but I'm just happy to have the chance to watch it again in any format. You won't find a better movie to watch this week until The Maltese Falcon Wednesday night.

Saturday, February 21, 2009

Oscarfever! '09!

After my poor performance with last year's predictions, I'm going to have to win my theatre's Oscar pool this year or no one will cheat by copying my ballots anymore. First is who I would give the award to, then who I think will win. The Oscar nominees can be found all over the place, the nominees for my awards can be found here.

Best Picture:

The End: WALL-E
Oscar: Slumdog Millionaire

Best Director:

The End: Andrew Stanton, WALL-E
Oscar: Danny Boyle, Slumdog Millionaire

Actor:

The End: Benicio Del Toro, Che
Oscar: Mickey Rourke, The Wrestler

Actress:

The End: Sally Hawkins, Happy Go Lucky
Oscar: Kate Winslet, The Reader

Supporting Actor:

The End: Heath Ledger, The Dark Knight
Oscar: Heath Ledger, The Dark Knight

Supporting Actress:

The End: Rosemarie DeWitt, Rachel Getting Married
Oscar: Penelope Cruz, Vicky Cristina Barcelona

Original Screenplay:

The End: Nina Paley, Sita Sings The Blues
Oscar: Dustin Lance Black, Milk

Adapted Screenplay:

The End: Wong Kar-wai, Ashes Of Time Redux
Oscar: Simon Beaufoy, Slumdog Millionaire

Foreign Language Film:

The End: Waltz With Bashir
Oscar: Waltz With Bashir

Documentary Feature:

The End: Waltz With Bashir
Oscar: Man On Wire

Animated Feature:

The End: WALL-E
Oscar: WALL-E

Film Editing:

The End: WALL-E
Oscar: Slumdog Millionaire

Cinematography:

The End: Danielle Feinberg and Jeremy Lasky, WALL-E
Oscar: Anthony Dod Mantle, Slumdog Millionaire

Art Direction:

The End: WALL-E
Oscar: The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button

Costume Design:

The End: Rachel Getting Married
Oscar: The Duchess

Make-Up:

The End: Hellboy II: The Golden Army
Oscar: The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button

Sound:

The End: WALL-E
Oscar: WALL-E

Sound Effects Editing:

The End: WALL-E
Oscar: WALL-E

Visual Effects:

The End: Speed Racer
Oscar: The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button

Original Score:

The End: Thomas Newman, WALL-E
Oscar: Slumdog Millionaire

Original Song:

The End: "Down To Earth", Peter Gabriel, WALL-E
Oscar: "Down To Earth", Peter Gabriel, WALL-E

Live-Action Short:

The End: NA
Oscar: New Boy

Animated Short:

The End: Presto
Oscar: Presto

Documentary Short:

The End: NA
Oscar: The Witness - From The Balcony Of Room 306

Soundtrack:

The End: Gonzo: the Life And Work Of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Sita Sings the Copyright Blues


Speaking of Adaptations, The Art Of The Title Sequence, as linked to by the essential Movie City News, is the latest site to pick up on the ongoing Free Sita! campaign being led by director Nina Paley, whose Sita Sings The Blues (my #2 movie of 2008) remains undistributed because she never cleared the rights for the 80+ year old songs she used in her film. In addition to the interview with her, they also posted a package of stills and illustrations for the film, along with its trailer. So here's some pictures:







Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Metro Classics Returns!!



Just finalized is our schedule for this Spring. The theme this time is adaptations. We've got nine movies based on three different media (literature, drama, film/television), further subdivided into three different genres (adventure, sci-fi, musical).

Here's the lineup:

Mar. 04 - The Maltese Falcon
Mar. 11 - Barbarella
Mar. 18 - Gentlemen Prefer Blondes
Mar. 25 - My Own Private Idaho
Apr. 01 - Forbidden Planet
Apr. 08 - Kiss Me Kate
Apr. 15 - A Fistful Of Dollars
Apr. 22 - The Fly
Apr. 29 - Pennies From Heaven

Movie Roundup: Pitchers And Catchers Edition

Position players have already begun reporting to Spring Training and this is the best time of year to be a Mariners fan. There's a new MLB Network this year, which I'm kind of getting into (the '95 M's are only the #6 comeback of all-time? Nonsense!). Here's what I've watched over the last couple of weeks:

Hilary Hahn: A Portrait - It's not really a movie, more like an hour long documentary that appears to have been done by some German TV station (or as a promotion by her record company). There's a little bit of biographical information (she gives a a nice tour of the music school she spent 15 years growing up at, we see her packing her luggage) but mostly it's only interesting for her performances: Most of a Korngold Violin Concerto, a rehearsal of a Mozart Sonata for Piano and Violin, a really cool performance at a bar that's experimenting with classical music concerts in a club setting. Even better was the concert we went to last week (my first real classical concert). She was fantastic playing a program built around folk-influenced classical stuff (Charles Ives, Brahms's Hungarian Dances, Bartók's Romanian Dances) mixed with some show-offy virtuoso solo violin pieces by Ysaÿe. the #36 film of 2007.

The Age Of The Medici - Roberto Rossellini's three-part film for Italian television, it runs about four hours in total and chronicles life in 1400s Florence at the time of Cosimo de Medici (powerful banker) and Leon Batista Alberti (architect and art theorist). It's really unlike anything I've ever seen before. Imagine Robert Bresson directing those historical recreation TV series for The History Channel, only less flashy. The dialogue (and acting) is entirely without psychology (these are historical figures, not characters) and it's never less than fascinating. The recreations aren't particularly realistic (lots of painted backdrops and such) and the dialogue is poorly dubbed regardless of what language you watch it in (I chose English because that's apparently what the actors were using), but none of that really matters. The film sucks you in with an non-stop onslaught of information: historical facts of political maneuvers, details of life in the Middle Ages, philosophical arguments about art, politics, religion etc. For a history geek like me, it's irresistible. The #6 film of 1973.

The Black Hole - Watched this a lot as a kid, but didn't really remember much. Some trippy special effects, goofy (and scary) robots, a killer ending (Maximillian Schell trapped in his evil robot ruling over Hell!, oh yeah) and hey, it's Robert Forster from Jackie Brown! The #18 film of 1979.

The Black Cauldron - Another one I hadn't seen since I was a kid, and it wasn't as good as I remembered. The animation's pretty cool (looks a lot like a more awesome version of classic 80s arcade game Dragon's Lair at times), but the characters are pretty bad (a pig? really?). Disney cut a bunch out of it to get it down to a PG rating, which is really weird, but the more violent version probably wouldn't be any better, just more jarring with the silly kid elements. The #31 film of 1985.

One Million BC - The more I see Victor Mature, the more I think he looks exactly like Chris Noth (the guy from Law & Order and Sex And The City). Anyway, here he's a caveman who gets kicked out of one warlike tribe and joins another, more pacifist group, which he teaches to fight and romances their hottest woman and ends up unifying the two tribes, or something like that. It's pretty terrible, but with some cool giant lizard and volcano special effects. The #17 film of 1940.

Friday Night Lights - We've been watching the TV series, which is pretty good (we're about halfway through Season One) and decided to check out the film. The main difference between the two is that the TV show has characters and the film has character types. We do get a lot of pretty shots of West Texas and its football stadiums though, and the ending ranks up there with The Bad News Bears as one of the great sports movie endings of all time. Director Peter Berg's frenetic style keeps everything constantly moving in the Michael Bay style: fast cuts, lots of camera movements, no real rhyme or reason to any of it beyond the conveyance of mood. And that's what the film provides: a sense of Texas football and an inkling of what the people who obsess about it (players and fans) are like. Essentially, it's the opposite of Rossellini's history films. The #24 film of 2004.

Simon Of The Desert - This was either going to be part of a three-part omnibus film, or the producer just ran out of money before the end (depends on which special feature on the Criterion disc you believe), but it runs only about 40 minutes, which ends up (miraculously enough) being just about the perfect length. It's Luis Buñuel's film about a Christian ascetic who lives on a pillar and is tempted by the Devil in the form of Sylvia Pinal (the star of Viridiana). Funny and weird, the length gives it the feel of a really great episode of The Twilight Zone, which is kind of what Buñuel is at his best (and I mean that as a compliment). The #7 film of 1965.

The Time Machine - The Birds's Rod Taylor stars as H. G. Wells's time-traveling hero in this decent enough George Pal film. Fed up with the capitalism of life in the 1900s (his friends are only curious about the commercial possibilities of his invention), Taylor travels far into the future and discovers a post-apocalyptic world where pretty blond and pastel people are feed to underground-dwelling blue monsters. Yvette Mimieux (who was interestingly also in The Black Hole) plays the prettiest blonde, whom Taylor attempts to rescue while teaching her society the merits of Victorian civilization (books, fire, concern for your own life and death, etc). Looking past the camp elements (and Taylor's always horrific acting) there's some truly funny and even poignant moments. The #19 film of 1960.

The Taking Of Power By Louis XIV- From the same period and style as his Medici film, but unfortunately only 90 minutes long is this Roberto Rossellini film about, well, how Louis XIV took power (the secret: fashion!). Similarly devoid of psychology, the film is a bit flashier thanks to a few sweeping camera movements. The plot is really simple, but nonetheless it's a lot of fun for any Dumas fan, noticing characters from The Three Musketeers (D'Artagnan! Louise de Valliere!) that would quite possibly mystify anyone who isn't familiar with them. The #12 film of 1966.

Voyage To Italy - I've been hearing for years about this as Roberto Rossellini's masterpiece, and having finally seen it, it did not disappoint. George Sanders and Ingrid Bergman (both great, as they always are) travel to Naples to settle an uncle's estate and discover that despite being married for eight years, they really don't like each other that much. They split up for a few days: she tours museums and ruins (in the film's most documentary, and also most moving, scenes, perhaps prefiguring the cinematic direction Rossellini would take with his history films fifteen years later) while he tries to hook up with younger women. It's an incredibly rich film based on an extremely simple premise: raising (and leaving unsettled) issues about art and life, the past and the present, the individual and the community, aging and love, business and family and even the British Protestant versus the Mediterranean Catholic view of work and the world. I can't wait to watch it again. The #3 film of 1954.

Tuesday, February 03, 2009

Movies Of The Year: 2008 (Part Two)


Finally, here is my end of the year list for 2008. This list is for comparative purposes, so I've included (and italicized) all those films from earlier years that made it to US theatres for the first time in 2008. My actual 2008 list (to be found at The Big List) will only include those films that imdb lists as 2008 films. That list will continue to be updated as I catch up with films I still haven't seen (Milk, Synecdoche New York) and get to films that haven't been released here yet (Three Monkeys, Red Cliff). Next week, I hope to have a third Movies Of the Year 2008 post that will actually include some comments on some of these movies (a novel concept around here lately, I know). That said, here's the list:

1. WALL-E
2. Sita Sings The Blues
3. 4 Months, 3 Weeks, and 2 Days
4. Still Life
5. Waltz With Bashir
6. Flight Of The Red Balloon
7. Sparrow
8. Ashes Of Time Redux
9. Happy Go Lucky
10. Paranoid Park
11. Mad Detective
12. Rachel Getting Married
13. My Blueberry Nights
14. Chop Shop
15. Cloverfield
16. The Equation Of Love And Death
17. In Bruges
18. Let The Right One In
19. Che
20. Wonderful Town
21. Forgetting Sarah Marshall
22. The Girl Who Leapt Through Time
23. Boarding Gate
24. The Fall
25. Hellboy II


26. Slumdog Millionaire
27. Iron Man
28. Bigger, Stronger, Faster*
29. Vicky Cristina Barcelona
30. Roman Polanski: Wanted & Desired
31. The Happening
32. The Dark Knight
33. Speed Racer
34. Redbelt
35. Gonzo: The Life And Work Of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson
36. Recount
37. Encounters At the End Of The World
38. Good Cats
39. Sukiyaki Western Django
40. The Rest Is Silence
41. Pineapple Express
42. Man On Wire
43. Zack And Miri Make A Porno
44. Tropic Thunder
45. Miss Pettigrew Lives For A Day
46. Kung Fu Panda
47. Baby Mama
48. Australia
49. Nick And Norah's Infinite Playlist
50. The Forbidden Kingdom
51. Gran Torino
52. Burn After Reading
53. The Order Of Myths
54. Of Time And The City
55. Snow Angels
56. W.
57. Thou Shalt Not: Sex, Sin and Censorship in Pre-Code Hollywood
58. Indiana Jones And The Kingdom Of The Crystal Skull
59. Frost/Nixon
60. Valkyrie
61. Mongol
62. The Incredible Hulk
63. Quantum Of Solace
64. The Mummy 3

Movies Of the Year Award Nominations: 2008

Kicking off The End Of Cinema's 2008 Year-End festivities (the latest year-end on the internet!), here are the nominees for our annual awards. The winners will be reveal at the end of the month, along with my annual Oscar predictions. As always, only films I've seen that have an imdb date of 2008 are eligible, regardless of when they happened to get released at a theatre near me.

Best Picture:

1. Ashes Of Time Redux
2. Sita Sings The Blues
3. Sparrow
4. WALL-E
5. Waltz With Bashir

Best Director:

1. Wong Kar-wai, Ashes Of Time Redux
2. Nina Paley, Sita Sings The Blues
3. Johnnie To, Sparrow
4. Andrew Stanton, WALL-E
5. Ari Folman, Waltz With Bashir

Actor:

1. Benicio Del Toro, Che
2. Clint Eastwood, Gran Torino
3. Colin Ferrell, In Bruges
4. Chiwetel Ejiofor, Redbelt
5. Ben Burtt, WALL-E

Actress:

1. Frances McDormand, Burn After Reading
2. Xun Zhou, The Equation Of Love And Death
2. Sally Hawkins, Happy Go Lucky
4. Lina Leandersson, Let The Right One In
5. Anne Hathaway, Rachel Getting Married

Supporting Actor:

1. Heath Ledger, The Dark Knight
2. Eddie Marsan, Happy Go Lucky
3. Bill irwin, Rachel Getting Married
4. Robert Downey Jr, Tropic Thunder
5. Javier Bardem, Vicky Cristina Barcelona

Supporting Actress:

1. Brigitte Lin, Ashes Of Time Redux
2. Gwynneth Paltrow, Iron Man
3. Rosemarie DeWitt, Rachel Getting Married
4. Kelly Lin, Sparrow
5. Penelope Cruz, Vicky Cristina Barcelona

Original Screenplay:

1. Mike Leigh, Happy Go Lucky
2. Nina Paley, Sita Sings The Blues
3. Kin Chung Chan and Chi Keung Fung, Sparrow
4. Andrew Stanton, Jim Reardon and Pete Docter, WALL-E
5. Ari Folman, Waltz With Bashir

Adapted Screenplay:

1. Wong Kar-wai, Ashes Of Time Redux
2. Peter Buchman and Benjamen van der Veen, Che
3. Guillermo Del Toro, Hellboy II: The Golden Army
4. John Ajvide Lindqvist, Let The Right One In
5. Simon Beaufoy, Slumdog Millionaire

Foreign Language Film:

1. Ashes Of Time Redux
2. The Equation Of Love And Death
3. Let the Right One In
4. Sparrow
5. Waltz With Bashir

Documentary Feature:

1. Bigger, Stronger, Faster*
2. Gonzo: the Lufe And Work Of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson
3. Man On Wire
4. Waltz With Bashir
5. Roman Polanski: Wanted & Desired

Animated Feature:

1. Kung Fu Panda
2. Sita Sings The Blues
3. Speed Racer
4. WALL-E
5. Waltz With Bashir

Film Editing:

1. Hellboy II: The Golden Army
2. Sparrow
3. Speed Racer
4. WALL-E
5. Waltz With Bashir

Cinematography:

1. Christopher Doyle, Ashes Of Time Redux
2. Steven Soderbergh, Che
3. Siu-keung Cheng, Sparrow
4. Javier Aguirresarobe, Vicky Cristina Barcelona
5. Danielle Feinberg and Jeremy Lasky, WALL-E

Art Direction:

1. Che
2. Hellboy II: The Golden Army
3. Sita Sings The Blues
4. Vicky Cristina Barcelona
5. WALL-E

Costume Design:

1. Ashes Of Time Redux
2. Che
3. Hellboy II: The Golden Army
4. Rachel Getting Married
5. Vicky Cristina Barcelona

Make-Up:

1. Ashes Of Time Redux
2. The Dark Knight
3. Hellboy II: The Golden Army

Sound:

1. Cloverfield
2. Hellboy II
3. Rachel Getting Married
4. Speed Racer
5. WALL-E

Sound Effects Editing:

1. Che
2. Cloverfield
3. Hellboy II
4. Speed Racer
5. WALL-E

Visual Effects:

1. Cloverfield
2. The Dark Knight
3. Hellboy II
4. Iron Man
5. Speed Racer

Original Score:

1. Frankie Chan and Roel A. García, Ashes Of Time Redux
2. A. R. Rahman, Slumdog Millionaire
3. Xavier Jamaux and Fred Avril, Sparrow
4. Thomas Newman, WALL-E
5. Max Richter, Waltz With Bashir

Original Song:

1. "Dracula's Lament", Jason Segal, Forgetting Sarah Marshall
2. "Jai Ho", A. R. Ragman and Gulzar, Slumdog Millionaire
3. "Down To Earth", Peter Gabriel, WALL-E

Soundtrack:

1. Gonzo: the Life And Work Of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson
2. Rachel Getting Married
3. Sita Sings The Blues
4. Slumdog Millionaire
5. WALL-E

Monday, February 02, 2009

Movie Roundup: Groundhog Day Edition


I plan to have a formal Best of 2008 List up either tonight or tomorrow, depending on how ambitious I am (and I want to read David Bordwell's essay on Slumdog Millionaire before I make a final decision about it). Until then, here's the roundup of what I've watched in the last few weeks and where they place on their respective years:

Snow Angels: 48, 2007
Gran Torino: 2008
Anchors Aweigh: 16, 1945
Niagara: 20, 1953
Cloverfield: 2008
The Fall: 23, 2006
Che: 2008
Bigger, Stronger, Faster*: 2008
Hellboy II: 2008
Manhatta: 4, 1921
Chop Shop: 10, 2007
The Girl Who Leapt Through Time: 20, 2006
Frost/Nixon: 2008
The Far Horizons: 34, 1955
Slumdog Millionaire: 2008
4 Months, 3 Weeks, and 2 Days: 5, 2007
The Order Of Myths: 2008
Redbelt: 2008
The Mist: 16, 2007
Vicy Cristina Barcelona: 2008
Kung Fu Panda: 2008
Ladies Of Leisure: 9, 1930

Also, we're getting close to having the next Metro Classics series fully booked. This time we're doing adaptations, with three films from each of three different media in three different genres: action movies, musicals and science fiction movies based on plays, film/television and books.

Monday, January 26, 2009

Movies Of The 70s


I'm getting close to a Best Of 2008 list, hopefully I'll have caught up with enough movies by next week to post it. In the meantime, here's my Top 50 films of the 1970s:

1. Annie Hall
2. Days Of Heaven
3. Manhattan
4. Two-Lane Blacktop
5. Jaws
6. Apocalypse Now
7. F For Fake
8. The Godfather Part II
9. Celine And Julie Go Boating
10. McCabe & Mrs. Miller
11. Chinatown
12. The Godfather
13. Taxi Driver
14. Star Wars
15. Monty Python And The Holy Grail
16. The 36th Chamber Of Shaolin
17. Alien
18. Mean Streets
19. Aguirre: The Wrath Of God
20. The Life Of Brian
21. Patton
22. A Clockwork Orange
23. Nashville
24. The Passenger
25. Sleeper


26. The Last Waltz
27. The Long Goodbye
28. The Outlaw Josey Wales
29. Badlands
30. The Conformist
31. The Texas Chain Saw Massacre
32. Lancelot du Lac
33. Barry Lyndon
34. Close Encounters Of The Third Kind
35. Solaris
36. Woodstock
37. Don't Look Now
38. Enter The Dragon
39. The Discreet Charm Of The Bourgeoisie
40. American Graffiti
41. Tout va bien
42. New York, New York
43. The Conversation
44. Animal House
45. Love And Death
46. Cabaret
47. MASH
48. Picnic At Hanging Rock
49. Nosferatu, The Vampyre
50. Pat Garrett & Billy The Kid

Monday, January 12, 2009

Hall Of Famer Of The Day



Congratulations to Rickey Henderson on his election to the Hall Of Fame. It's too bad his induction will be marred by the further cheapening of the Hall with the election of Jim Rice.

Friday, January 09, 2009

Endy Awards Index

This is an index of the second wave of Endy Awards, written starting in 2013 and jumping around through the decades, presented in order of award year:

1932 Endy Awards
1933 Endy Awards
1934 Endy Awards
1939 Endy Awards

1957 Endy Awards
1964 Endy Awards
1984 Endy Awards

1993 Endy Awards
1994 Endy Awards
1995 Endy Awards
1996 Endy Awards
1997 Endy Awards
1998 Endy Awards
1999 Endy Awards

2000 Endy Awards
2001 Endy Awards
2002 Endy Awards
2003 Endy Awards
2004 Endy Awards
2005 Endy Awards
2006 Endy Awards
2007 Endy Awards
2008 Endy Awards
2009 Endy Awards

2010 Endy Awards


This is an index of all the old Movies of the Year Awards (the Endys) I've handed out most of which were written in 2008.  They cover all the years for which I wrote Movies of the Year posts. This stuff is old and almost entirely out of date, indexed here because I have an indexing problem.

Movies of the Year Awards: 1946
Movies of the Year Awards: 1947
Movies of the Year Awards: 1948
Movies of the Year Awards: 1949
Movies of the Year Awards: 1950
Movies of the Year Awards: 1951
Movies of the Year Awards: 1952
Movies of the Year Awards: 1953
Movies of the Year Awards: 1954
Movies of the Year Awards: 1955
Movies of the Year Awards: 1956
Movies of the Year Awards: 1957
Movies of the Year Awards: 1958
Movies of the Year Awards: 1959
Movies of the Year Awards: 1960
Movies of the Year Awards: 1961
Movies of the Year Awards: 1962
Movies of the Year Awards: 1963
Movies of the Year Awards: 1964
Movies of the Year Awards: 1965
Movies of the Year Awards: 1966
Movies of the Year Awards: 1967
Movies of the Year Awards: 1968
Movies of the Year Awards: 1969
Movies of the Year Awards: 1970
Movies of the Year Awards: 1971
Movies of the Year Awards: 1972
Movies of the Year Awards: 1973
Movies of the Year Awards: 1974
Movies of the Year Awards: 1975
Movies of the Year Awards: 1976
Movies of the Year Awards: 1977
Movies of the Year Awards: 1978
Movies of the Year Awards: 1979
Movies of the Year Awards: 1980
Movies of the Year Awards: 1981
Movies of the Year Awards: 1982
Movies of the Year Awards: 1983
Movies of the Year Awards: 1984
Movies of the Year Awards: 1985
Movies of the Year Awards: 1986
Movies of the Year Awards: 1987
Movies of the Year Awards: 1988
Movies of the Year Awards: 1989
Movies of the Year Awards: 1990
Movies of the Year Awards: 1991
Movies of the Year Awards: 1992
Movies of the Year Awards: 1993
Movies of the Year Awards: 1994
Movies of the Year Awards: 1995
Movies of the Year Awards: 1996
Movies of the Year Awards: 1997
Movies of the Year Awards: 1998
Movies of the Year Awards: 1999
Movies of the Year Awards: 2000
Movies of the Year Awards: 2001
Movies of the Year Awards: 2002
Movies of the Year Awards: 2003
Movies of the Year Awards: 2004
Movies of the Year Awards: 2005
Movies of the Year Awards: 2006
Movies of the Year Awards: 2007
Movies of the Year Awards: 2008 Nominations
Movies of the Year Awards: 2008
Movies of the Year Awards: 2009 Nominations
Movies of the Year Awards: 2009
Movies of the Year Awards: 2010 Nominations
Movies of the Year Awards: 2010
Endy Award Winners: 2011

Tuesday, January 06, 2009

Movie Roundup: Holiday Hangover Edition

I had planned to return to some kind of normal posting schedule this week, but I'm still too fuzzy-headed from the holidays to form thoughts at even my level of coherence. Instead, I'll just toss out one of this quick roundups. Most of the films I've been watching are from 2008 and 1945, so I'll be able to go write about them in the next few weeks (my plan is to do 1945 next week). Anyway, here's what I've seen and where they rank for their respective years.

High Society: 18, 1956
Caesar and Cleopatra: 18, 1945
Valkyrie: 2008
Australia: 2008
In Bruges: 2008
Fallen Angel: 9, 1945
That's Entertainment! Part II: 10, 1976
The Picture Of Dorian Gray: 11, 1945
That's Dancing!: 21, 1985
The Barkleys Of Broadway: 18, 1949
Million Dollar Mermaid: 22, 1952
Leave Her To Heaven: 6, 1945
Paranoid Park: 8, 2007
Mongol: 46, 2007

One thing I have managed to do is pick up Hilary Hahn tickets for next month. Here's something to help pass the time until then:

Monday, December 29, 2008

Movies Of The Year: 2008 (Part One)

No, I still haven't seen any of the big ones from this year (though I hope to watch Australia finally tonight. Instead, here's the list of the best movies I saw for the first time in 2008. I don't know how it measures up to previous years (see the 2006 and 2007 lists), but there were a lot of great films regardless. Here's the Top 70:


1. I Am Cuba
2. Sans soleil
3. Johnny Guitar
4. Early Summer
5. The Gang's All here
6. The Passenger
7. Lola
8. Tabu: A Story Of The South Seas
9. Park Row
10. Come Drink With Me
11. Unfaithfully Yours
12. Don't Look Now
13. Shanghai Express
14. The Color Of Pomegranates
15. Tokyo Chorus
16. The Atomic Cafe
17. Howl's Moving Castle
18. Unbreakable
19. Flight Of The Red Balloon
20. Texas Chain-Saw Massacre
21. Popeye
22. The Wind Will Carry Us
23. Passion
24. A Story Of Floating Weeds
25. Wee Willie Winkie


26. Blissfully Yours
27. Earth
28. The End Of Summer
29. Thieves' Highway
30. Jason And The Argonauts
31. Advise And Consent
32. I Was Born But . . .
33. Muhammed Ali: The Greatest
34. Passing Fancy
35. Our Daily Bread
36. My Blueberry Nights
37. Yang Kwei-fei
38. Stolen Kisses
39. A Man Escaped
40. All Aboout Lily Chou-Chou
41. The Thing
42. A Letter To Three Wives
43. Heroes Of The East
44. Fantastic Planet
45. Wonderful Town
46. Eagle Shooting Heroes
47. The Naked Prey
48. Bunny Lake Is Missing
49. Russian Ark
50. Signs


51. Steamboat Round The bend
52. Wings
53. Haxan
54. Crossfire
55. Last Hurrah For Chivalry
56. Nightfall
57. Syndromes And A Century
58. The Iron Horse
59. Purple Rain
60. Bob le flambeur
61. The Village
62. Mysterious Island
63. Boarding Gate
64. The Saddest Music In The World
65. The Threepenny Opera
66. Rififi
67. Slap Shot
68. Legendary Weapons Of China
69. Jezebel
70. Encounters At The End Of The World

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Movie Roundup: Snowed In Edition


I've been trapped in the house with a shockingly small amount of Diet Coke for most of the last week. But I'll be working for most of the rest of the year, regardless of the weather. Ideally, this would be the time when I'd be posting my best of 2008 list. Unfortunately, I've managed to see hardly any of the big end of the year movies (Milk, Slumdog Millionaire, Australia, Marley & Me, etc), so a list at this point would be pretty pointless. Look for that sometime around Oscar season.

In the meantime, here's what I've seen over the last several weeks, and where they rank on their respective Movies Of The Year lists.

Muhammed Ali, The Greatest: 6, 1969
The Haunting: 14, 1963
Mystery Of The Wax Museum: 12, 1933
Ashes Of Time Redux: 2008
Bluebeard's Eighth Wife: 7, 1938
Zack And Miri Make A Porno: 2008
The Small Back Room: 10, 1949
Russian Ark: 9, 2002
The Thing: 11, 1982
Quantum Of Solace: 2008
Fight Back To School: 25, 1991
Encounters At the End Of the World: 13, 2007
Popeye: 8, 1980
Slap Shot: 6, 1977
Baby Mama: 2008
Unbreakable: 9, 2000
Shipmates Forever: 13, 1935
Signs: 10, 2002
The Village: 14, 2004
Lady In the Water: 20, 2006
Man On Wire: 2008
Gonzo: The Life And Work Of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson: 2008
The TV Set: 41, 2006
The Ten: 34, 2007
Boarding Gate: 12, 2007
The Atomic Cafe: 5, 1982
Platinum Blonde: 16, 1931

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Movies Of The 80s


I've spent the last week complaining about snow-related inconveniences while listening to a whole lot of Hilary Hahn. So here's a list of my Top 50 films of the 1980s.

1. Do The Right Thing
2. Ran
3. Sans soleil
4. Stranger Than Paradise
5. The Empire Strikes Back
6. Fitzcarraldo
7. The Raiders Of The Lost Ark
8. The Princess Bride
9. Amadeus
10. Ghostbusters
11. Dangerous Liaisons
12. Hannah And Her Sisters
13. The Shining
14. The Right Stuff
15. The Purple Rose Of Cairo
16. Henry V
17. Bull Durham
18. Zelig
19. Pennies From Heaven
20. The Road Warrior
21. Broadcast News
22. The Mission
23. This Is Spinal Tap
24. Passion
25. Airplane!


26. Platoon
27. The Last Temptation Of Christ
28. Out Of Africa
29. Die Hard
30. Empire Of The Sun
31. Das Boot
32. The Big Red One
33. The Verdict
34. Heaven's Gate
35. Aliens
36. Full Metal Jacket
37. Crimes And Misdemeanors
38. Blade Runner
39. The Killer
40. Police Story
41. Once Upon A Time In America
42. Raising Arizona
43. Glory
44. Salvador
45. Eight Men Out
46. Reds
47. Caddyshack
48. Heathers
49. When Harry Met Sally. . .
50. ET: The Extra-Terrestrial

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Music Of The Year: 2008


I don't listen to a lot of music, certainly not relative to how many movies I watch. But I've bought thirteen albums from 2008, and listened to eleven of them enough to give them a ranking (apologies to Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks and David Byrne & Brian Eno).

1. Hilary Hahn - Schoenberg & Sibelius: Violin Concertos
2. The Magnetic Fields - Distortion
3. Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!!
4. Thomas Newman - WALL-E Soundtrack
5. Bob Dylan - Bootleg Series 8: Tell Tale Signs
6. Annette Hanshaw - Sita Sings The Blues Soundtrack
7. Melody Gardot - Worrisome Heart
8. Guns N' Roses - Chinese Democracy
9. Neil Diamond - Home Before Dark
10. Noah And The Whale - Peaceful, The World Lays Me Down
11. Weezer - The Red Album

Monday, December 08, 2008

Movies Of The 90s


The Top 50 Films from 1990-1999:

1. Chungking Express
2. The Big Lebowski
3. Miller's Crossing
4. Unforgiven
5. Boogie Nights
6. Trainspotting
7. Dead Man
8. Three Colors: Blue
9. LA Story
10. Rushmore
11. The Thin Red Line
12. Eyes Wide Shut
13. Slacker
14. Pulp Fiction
15. The Last Of The Mohicans
16. The Double Life Of Veronique
17. Hard-Boiled
18. Dazed And Confused
19. Fallen Angels
20. Satantango
21. Goodfellas
22. Days Of Being Wild
23. The English Patient
24. Magnolia
25. Big Night


26. Reservoir Dogs
27. Barton Fink
28. True Romance
29. Glengarry Glen Ross
30. Searching For Bobby Fischer
31. Taste Of Cherry
32. Three Colors: Red
33. Kicking And Screaming
34. Six Degrees Of Separation
35. The Matrix
36. Les amants du Pont-Neuf
37. Lost Highway
38. The Wind Will Carry Us
39. Bottle Rocket
40. Seven
41. Drunken Master II
42. Pi
43. Happy Together
44. Heat
45. Fight Club
46. Goodbye South, Goodbye
47. Dreams
48. Starship Troopers
49. Metropolitan
50. April Story