Tuesday, August 23, 2022

I Speak in Movies: Top 10 Movies of 2021


*A quick note: without going to movie theaters in 2020, I found it hard to stream movies. I love and missed going to the theater. Because of this, there is there is no top ten list for 2020. That being said, there were a couple of movies that I watched during this hiatus that I really loved. A short top 3 off the top of my head: (3) Palm Springs (2020) - lighthearted and moving (2) Cabaret (1972) - perfect movie for the Trump Era (1) The Last Picture Show (1971) - what an incredible movie. Anyways, to my three readers: please enjoy.

 10 - Nightmare Alley - I haven’t really enjoyed a ton of Guillermo Del Toro movies. Even though the Shape of Water and won an Oscar for Best Picture, I have to say I much preferred this movie. I know that this is a remake of a 1947 movie, and it feels like it in many ways it’s a movie of a different time. Nightmare Alley is less about immediate jump scares or contrived thrills; rather, like any noir at its best, it builds a mood. To highlight one particular aspect of the visual language of Nightmare Alley, the use of Chiaroscuro lighting—the contrast of light and darkness in each scene—creates this sense of dread. These people live in a world of shadow where almost any source of light seems unwelcome. Whether it's lightning in the night sky, a man blocking the sun with his hands as its rays fight through the clouds to illuminate the world, or the glow of a carnival at night, Del Toro stages scenes so we are aware of where the light is and where it isn’t. Del Toro suggests the natural state of this world is blackness, nothingness. These characters seem more comfortable inhabiting that darkness.  They are carnies who live in a world in which it is better to hide in the shadows, so they can create the illusion of the metaphysical among a superstitious citizenry yearning for some kind of comfort in the darkness of a spiritually empty world. Is this movie a little too long? Perhaps, but it really worked for me. I was riveted by this movie which simultaneously builds this sense of motion and destiny, or perhaps natural law, while asserting that there is simply more nothingness behind the darkness that we see. 


9 - Belfast - I have spent a lot of time writing these reviews at this point and, sadly, this is a passion not a job. I am going to shorten these reviews just so I can actually finish making this list. Belfast takes place in Northern Ireland during The Troubles in 1969. It’s filmed in black and white and seems visually inspired by one of my favorite movies of 2018, “Roma”. Writer and director Kenneth Branagh based this movie on his own childhood and you can feel the love he has for these people and that place during a troubling period in Ireland’s national history. When I was taking my education classes in college, I remember writing a research paper and reading a book about raising children in war torn countries around the world. Ultimately one of the conclusions of this study was that children persevere in all conditions but one commonality makes it more likely: the caring and love of a parent. This movie embodies that philosophy. Bragnagh, like many great actors who tap into their experiences to find truth, repeats this process as a director. His story and the exceptional work of his actors make you fall in love with Buddy and his family. This is a beautiful, tenderly crafted film with great performances. 


8 - CODA - I was happy when CODA one best picture. Was it my favorite movie of the year? Probably not. But I thought I really enjoyed it. Initially it seemed be painfully cliché at times: the high school bullies, the teacher who sees something special in his student, etc. I do understand those criticisms, but what the critics of this film leave out is how specific this story and film was. This is a story about a child of deaf adults (C.O.D.A) who has a gifted singing voice, yet is tied down to family fishing business in Gloucester, Massachusetts. For all the people that say that this movie is cliché, find me a story as specific as that. I will grant though that there are cliché moments, but who cares when they work so well? I was moved watching this movie. I think one fun part of this year’s movies is that they all excel in such uniquely different film techniques from one another. The use of sound and silence in this movie is particularly moving. Troy Kotsur, the best supporting actor winner, won his award in these silent film moments. His expressions tell us what we need to know about the journey of this family. I haven’t known many deaf people in my life, and not deeply for that matter, and there were many “huh” moments where I learned about what someone’s else’s life might be like other than my own. Not to go too deeply into American politics, but there was a moment earlier this year where Vice President Harris was mocked and criticized for describing what she was wearing during her introduction to supporters of the Americans with Disabilities Act. How can you possibly mock the Vice President for this inclusivity after you’ve seen this movie? I digress, but that’s the power of movies like CODA. I’m obviously not the first to say this, but they are both universal stories — a child trying to find their place in the world outside the family home — and extremely specific. I dare you to watch this movie and not be moved by the end. 


7- Dune - Dune is a visual masterpiece. I was elated that I was able to see it on IMAX and not on my TV. After a year of sitting home and feeling uninspired to watch movies on my couch, I loved getting to the theater and watching this one. I haven’t read Dune but watching it was reminiscent of opening up Harry Potter for the first time. It’s a world I wanted to stay in and understand. Not only were we introduced to the rules of this universe but also its worlds. From the lush greens and blues of Caladan to the sandy monochromatic grimness of Arrakeen, Denis Villeneuve world builds in a concise way, which I haven’t seen since Interstellar. Months later there are still images that flash into my mind as I write this: Zendaya’s eyes in a Sergio Leone-like close-up; Oscar Isaac’s character, Leto, and his dying breath; a mosquito sized assassination device. But it’s the surprise aerial raid of Arrakeen that I remember most vividly. As a young person, I remember watching on television the United States’ bombardment of Iraq and Afghanistan. I hadn’t really ever known my country to be at war in a foreign nation until I watched flares of light captured across a dark sky over an illuminated city. When I watched Dune, my mind called back to what had been forgotten images. I am curious and excited to see what this series can pull off. I’m in. Please don’t blow it Denis. 


6 - Worst Person in the World - I loved Worst Person in the World. It has so much humanity in it. Having lived in Boston for much of my twenties and early thirties before abandoning that life for a move to the suburbs, I felt this movie in my core. Unlike a lot of movies coming out of Hollywood, director Joachim Trier creates such a realistic world that I felt like I was neighbors with Julie in Oslo, Norway as she grew into adulthood. This was a world I innately understood, and a time in one’s life I just finished living. Julie, played beautifully by Renate Reinsve, embodied the contradictions and uncertainties of figuring out what kind of person you want to strive to be once on your own. She was wonderfully indecisive and decisive; profoundly moral and immoral; romantic and logical; stable but a mess. There are some exceptional scenes. Personal favorites include: Julie running through the streets of Oslo, her first night with Eivind, her reintroduction to Aksel. She was such a powerfully sculpted character that it was hard not to be charmed by this story of a person trying to find her way in the world.


5 - The Suicide Squad - After years of entertainment, I am reaching critical mass with superhero fatigue. Most of the work released — mostly on Disney Plus — appears to be hastily made and too formulaic. Yet, there are still a few very good movies a year, like Spiderman: No Way Home and The Batman. Then there are movies that use genre and say something deeper about the human condition. It sounds absurd to say this about a movie like The Suicide Squad, but it does just that. 


If I were to rank my favorite superhero movies, this would easily be within my top 3, perhaps #2 right behind Logan (a mostly beloved movie that is still vastly under appreciated. Has there been a better criticism of America’s immigration policies on film this decade?).


So why the love for The Suicide Squad? Sure it has Director James Gunn’s now trademark irreverent humor. And It works well here. As he did with Guardians, the action and emotional moments of the movie are integrated with songs from popular and some lesser known artists in ways that uplift and stir emotional responses. There are visual flourishes like the fight seen through the eyes of Harley Quinn; what would have been a blood fest becomes what amounts to a choreographed dance among flowers.  


While I love all the above elements of the movie, because if they didn’t work the movie itself wouldn’t work, it’s what James Gunn is trying to say about American society that elevates this movie from a good genre movie to a great movie. Ultimately, this is a movie that levels harsh criticism against American foreign policy in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. In a universe where Superman exists, the central plot of this movie is to have antihero mercenaries cover up the crimes of American imperialism in a Latin American country. We haven’t quite seen a setting like this in superhero movies. Over the course of the movie, we find out the United States has been covertly supporting the Corto Maltese dictatorship against the will of the people. Geeking out as a history teacher here: I think most Americans would be shocked by the actions of their government in Central or Latin American countries, like in Panama, Guatemala, or Chile just to name a few. Having read some of the CIA declassified documents with my U.S. History classes, it is quite grim. As the Suicide Squad brings these kinds of developments to light — the kinds of developments ignored by popular American memory —  there are few key moments that stand out to me in this film, which moved me. 


There is one moment when the Suicide Squad is in a van, as Jessie Reyez’s “Sola” plays on the radio. Gunn’s team uses slow motion to show the Suicide Squad observing the local population enjoying nightlife on the Corto Maltese streets. This moment is key because the audience adopts the eye of the Suicide Squad as we see the humanity in a foreign country that many Americans would deem “third world” or “shithole countries” as President Trump was known to say. The script deftly punctuates this point when hordes of rats destroy Starro the Conqueror and we are reminded: “Rats are the lowliest and most despised of all creatures, my love. But they have purpose. So do we all.” I know this is ultimately is a trite philosophy, but one I still find meaningful, as its applied to the Suicide Squad but moreso to the nations in the shadow of American Empire. 


Even take Starro the Conqueror. In conversation I’ve heard a lot of people scoff at the idea of a kaiju as the big bad in a superhero movie, but take a moment to consider Starro’s primary form of treachery. It’s a monster of cultural hegemony. Starro, the creation of the American military establishment, generally doesn’t destroy the bodies of its victims, rather Starro releases little starfish that ultimately hold the P.O.V. of the monster itself. At its core Starro’s purpose is that of neocolonialism, the same kind held by American foreign policy hawks who want the United States to spread its values to foreign nations in its quest for power. Ultimately, the hero turn for the Suicide Squad is when they fight back against their nation’s covert military establishment and their own self interest in order to destroy America’s interventionist position in Court Maltese. In contrast to so many superhero movies that have deliberately lean away from questions like “what about civilian casualties” through various plot devices, like fighting on airport tarmacs, or in abandoned neighborhoods, or simply using special robots to lift up a whole city toward safety, the Suicide Squad, the American military establishment, and domestic forces within Corto Maltese leave behind a trail of destruction, for which the local population will have to deal with as the eye of empire and “the heroes” move on. Peacemaker, one of the movie's “heroes”, tells the squad, “I cherish peace with all my heart. I don’t care how many men, women, and children I need to kill to get it.” Yet we find out it's not peace that’s desired. It’s unfettered power. Ultimately though, all these messages would be meaningless if this movie wasn’t fun, and it is. I highly recommend it if you missed it in theaters. 


4 - The Last Duel - My top 10 for 2021 has to be one of my favorite lists in a while. Or perhaps my memory is skewed since I really didn’t have a 2020 in theaters (the last movie I saw was Birds of Prey, the Harley Quinn movie). While I am generally tired of historic movies being filmed in sepia tones — was there no color in the past? — I loved the Last Duel. In their first collaboration since Good Will Hunting, Ben Affleck and Matt Damon wrote a brilliant script, along with co-writer Nicole Holofcener. This story takes place in 14th century France focusing on mainly three characters played by Matt Damon, Adam Driver, and Jodie Comer. At the center of this story is the rape of Marguerite de Carrouges. Like Kurosawa’s Rashomon, the audience is told three different points of view of the same events. 


This structure atunes us to the smallest details of each scene. I haven’t had the chance to re-watch this movie but I would be curious to see how many of these small details are the same and how many are different. During each telling the audience questions what they are seeing. What does that smile mean? Is it different than the one we saw earlier in the film? Is the scar of Jean de Carrouges face changing in each telling? (Brilliantly, yes it is).

By the movie’s end, we are left questioning whether or not we should actually even be asking these types of questions. Deftly, Affleck, Damon, and Holofcener leave us with the rawest, most brutal answer to a court case that captured the attention of 14th century France. 


Another strength of this script is that I was really impressed how faithful it was to the past being the past. While this movie undoubtedly has modern day themes in a post #metoo world, I really enjoyed how the script highlighted how we are fundamentally the same people but our world’s were vastly different. For about two and a half hours we were living in a world based around historic French customs, values, and legal statues. While this may not sound appealing to some people, I personally found land disputes and legal avenues in 1386 France fascinating. 


By the time we reach the movie’s end, also the movie’s beginning — perhaps a nod to history not being linear but rather circular — we are rooting for certain characters whose interests do not align with our own, yet we both want the same thing. The momentum building toward the movie’s ending is downright brilliant in its intensity. Simply, what a movie. 


3 - Red Rocket - I love this movie. Sean Baker is on the shortlist for my must-watch-directors. Unlike Nomadland, a movie where poverty feels like a Hollywood term paper, Baker’s camera finds parts of America that the rest of the population ignores, or rather places we didn’t even expect existed. Instead of a big name like Frances McDormand, Red Rocket stars a down and out MTV celebrity, Simon Rex. You may get it by now: I don’t like the 2020 Best Picture winner Nomadland. But this isn’t simply a vehicle to say that. Rather I think these choices highlight what makes Sean Baker one of my favorite filmmakers. He finds magic in the deserts, in the swamps, and in the forgotten while not sacrificing the melancholy around those locations. Realism today is so valued that other filmmakers willingly choose to mute our world of its natural color. Like Walt Disney, in some ways a subject of his last movie, The Florida Project, Bakers finds, perhaps conjures up, beauty in places where there outwardly seems to be none. 


His camera captures a rich palette of color in the foreground of the industrial oil fields of Texas, an otherwise monochromatic world. There’s an absurdity to the visuals. It’s a bright yellow and pink donut shop in an environment that seems to suck whatever color is left out of the ground like its fracking overlords. Or it might be a man sitting in a dark room against a black table rolling American flag colored joints in the glow of a TV displaying the bright red MAGA hat of a billionaire who knows or cares little for these peoples’ struggles.


Red Rocket is defined by these contrasts. I don't know any of these actors or if they were even actors in the first place (my guess is it’s a mix) but there’s a shared visual language in these casting choices too. Bree Elrod (Lexi), Ethan Darbone (Lonnie), Brenda Deiss (Lil) all outwardly wear the dejectedness and abuse they have experienced in life; yet, by the movie’s end we recognize and appreciate their strength. While Simon Rex’s Mikey is this sympathetic, kinetic force of nature hoping to break out of this little town, we turn against him. In the film’s starkest and most inspired moment, the incredible Suzanna Son (Strawberry) plays the piano and sings NSync's “Bye, Bye, Bye”, and we realize the tragedy unfolding: in Mikey’s singular quest to go back to Los Angeles, he fails to appreciate what we have come to learn. Mikey’s greatest sin is that he doesn’t have the eye that we have. We see the beauty around Mikey — of Strawberry, of his wife, her family, and their support network — because Baker’s lens has trained us to do so. Without this gift, Mikey unknowingly endangers everyone around him in his monomaniacal quest to escape. 


2 - Cyrano -  The second time I watched Cyrano I was on an airplane flying to London. I thought to myself surely I will not enjoy it as much as I did on the big screen. To the film’s credit, I was equally moved by the movie’s end on both viewings. Similar to CODA, Belfast, Worst Person in the World, I was greatly moved by what essentially amounts to a deeply personal character study. Because of Steve Martin’s film, I vaguely knew the contours of Cyrano’s story before walking into it, but, man, this really delivered. 


This movie stands on the shoulders of Peter Dinklage. I know I am at the point where I should no longer use the Oscars as a measuring stick of greatness, but I really do not understand how the magnum opus of his wonderful career wasn’t more appreciated. He sang, he danced, he fought, he made us feel his unrequited love for Roxanne. Peter Dinklage’s wife, Erica Schmidt, was so brilliant in writing this role for Dinklage. In the traditional telling of this story, Cyrano de Bergerac loves Roxanne but his love remains unrequited because of his giant nose. Yet in this version, rather than being a degreed removed from the story knowing that an actor can take off a prosthetic nose, we know Dinklage and Schmidt live this reality. It is a truth that echoes in every scene. It’s an incredibly moving story, and I understand now why it's been so popular since the end of the nineteenth century. 


The second star of this movie is director Joe Wright. I perhaps loved Darkest Hour more than most people, but man I feel like Wright is a vastly underrated director. I’d love to see him get a Villeneuve budget, for example. First, Sicily was a great setting for this movie. It was a beautiful backdrop to every scene enhanced by the brightness of Massimo Cantini Parrini and Jacqueline Durran’s costumes. I like that Wright was faithful to the past while also having a certain indifference to it too. Rather than being tied down to typical mostly white leads in historic movies, this was a diverse cast with some great supporting performances. Because of this choice to not be tied down to the source material, we got some great performances from Black actors, namely Bashir Salahuddin and Kelvin Harrison Jr. Both of these actors were among my favorites in the film behind Dinklage. Lastly, man, Joe Wright can move a camera and set up shots for himself with each cut. I rank the tracking shot in Atonement at Dunkirk and the use of the god-eye’s view of a bombed battlefield in Darkest Hour, which was edited into a dead human eye, among my personal favorites. Both are examples of brilliant flourishes in otherwise grounded movies. Within the structure of a musical like Cyrano though, here Wright places and then moves the camera with confidence and purpose. It enabled him to swing big on a talent that had mostly been restrained in some of his more well known movies. When the camera is still and when it moves, we are able to equally view the depth of these characters and the vastness of the romantic world in which they live (here’s one example for your viewing enjoyment: “I’d Give Anything”).


The third and last star of this movie is Aaron and Bryce Dessner of the National, who composed the music for Cyrano. I loved the music of this movie. “Wherever I Fall” has to be one of the great movie songs of the year. It was an incredibly powerful song whose themes transcend the movie. Since I last watched Cyrano, it has been a joy to listen to the music without Wright’s visuals. 


2021 was the year of the musical for me, as two rank among my favorite films of the year.


1 - In the Heights - I’m really disappointed this movie didn’t do better at the box office. I’m not sure if this is the first movie I saw back in theaters since they shut down in 2020, but, man, this movie recaptured that magical feeling that seeing a movie in theaters creates. In the Heights declares from its “Once Upon a Time” opening that this is a fairy tale, and it lives up to those ambitions. There is an energy and brightness to this movie that is uplifting compared to so many of its darker contemporaries. The music has a kinetic energy that is grounded in the community of Washington Heights, a neighborhood in New York City. The songs are seamlessly built with the sounds of the city, whether its cutting to a spraying hose or the ring of a cash register, there is a beautiful medley of noise enriching this community. The music is so damn alive.


At its core, this movie is about the dreams of immigrants and the sacrifices they made or will make to build a home in the United States. Abuela Claudia, the heart of this Latin American community, says at one point in the movie that there are “little details that tell the world we are not invisible,” which is in many embodies of this script and the direction of John Chu. As we are introduced to each character and their personal journeys, like any great movie hometown, we grow to see the magic of Washington Heights through the little details. 


This movie in some ways is a distant spiritual cousin of Gangs of New York, showing the tides that shape New York City. I have a very unscientific test that involves race and identity in movies. The test is this: will this movie teach a boomer something about racism in our country that they do not already know? I think there’s a shocking amount of movies that do not pass this test. For In the Heights, the answer is definitively yes. While this movie has so much to say about immigration and xenophobia in the United States, these messages land particularly hard because we care so much about our lead characters. All the performances were exceptional, but it’s worth noting that I was really in awe of the two leads Anthony Ramos and Melissa Barrera, who give so much heart to their characters Usnavi and Vanessa. In one of my favorite scenes, Usnavi and Vanessa communicate with each other between the door of a convenience store refrigerator, and it's near impossible not to root for those two to be together. It’s a wonderful scene among many great ones.


As the story progresses, there is a palpable heat that builds, reminiscent of Do the Right Thing. This eventually climaxes with the power going out in the city. From this point on, the heart of the movie comes to the center of the film. Following the incredible song “Paciencia y Fe” where 65-year-old Olga Merediz leads us through different train cars representative of Abuela Claudia’s immigrant journey from Cuba, we see how much foreign born people have overcome to improve the American body. There are so many efforts made to deprive this country of the very people that make it better. While the city roasts in 100 degree weather, most poignantly in the song “Esa Bandera” there is an obviously metaphorical refrain among some of the characters “we are powerless” that ultimately gets overpowered by the collective strength of the community. I challenge moviegoers to find a 2021 movie that was as uplifting as this one. I will fondly look back at this film experience as the one that recreated that pre-pandemic glory of seeing a movie: it’s stylistic, the music is great, and it's joyous.







Sunday, February 9, 2020

I Speak in Movies: Top 10 Movies of 2019

Back for today only. Here's my Top 10 Movies of 2019. Curious to hear your thoughts. Oscar Picks to follow.
*excuse any grammatical mistakes or content mistakes. didn't feel like proofreading.
10 (tied) - Avengers: Endgame - I don’t know if I can necessarily call this a top 10 movie of the year because so many of my favorite movies of the year are deeply personal films. I am still grappling with Disney the corporation and how their movies are increasingly feeling like big budget, crowdsourced spectacles. All this being said, Marvel ended Phase 3 perfectly (sorry - I don’t count Spiderman as Phase 3). My appreciation of this movie grew after the release of the Rise of Skywalker too, a movie that virtually ruined its two predecessors. It could have been so easy to get this wrong, and I didn’t quite appreciate that in the moment. This was a fun movie, visually spectacular, and moving at many points. I don’t expect myself to tweet Robert Downey Jr. “I love you three thousand” any time soon, but I particularly liked how they ended Steve Rogers’ story. It was also generally a great experience watching this with an invested crowd. People began cheering, for instance, when Captain America picked up Thor’s hammer. What can I say - it was fun.
10 (tied) - The Farewell - This movie begins what I felt like was a good year for small, independent, personal films. The Farewell was genuinely moving and I felt like I glimpsed into a world I really hadn’t seen before. This reminds me of one of the dumbest comments on movies this year, a la Stephen King tweet: “That said I would never consider diversity in matters of art. Only quality. It seems to me that to do otherwise would be wrong.” I recognize that in making these lists, unlike Stephen King, that my unique perspective perhaps obscures my ability to truly evaluate quality. Moviegoing is a deeply personal experience, and I cannot remove who I am from the experience. As I have gotten older and have tended to watch more movies representative of experiences not like my own, I hope to continue to grow my capacity for empathy. Director Lulu Wang made an incredible movie, which explored the divisions that exist among a family culturally changing, and a love which holds those who are different together. Shuzhen Zhao as Nai Nai gave one of the best performances of the year. I was deeply invested in her character and felt Wang’s love of her grandmother in each scene. This movie was at once a new experience and one that I also intimately understood.
9 - Parasite - I recognize this is low for what many say is the best movie of the year. I also admit that psychological thrillers are a hard genre for me to enjoy. This movie is tense, disturbing, and profound. This movie had some of the most stressful scenes of the year. If this is your kind of excitement, I highly recommend it. Bong Joon-ho’s movie feels particularly inspiring in the opening and closing scenes on the streets of South Korea, and within the subterranean apartment. This is undoubtedly a great movie and one in which I need to explore more deeply.
8 - The Irishman - I tend to agree with many people who would have shortened this movie just slightly. The de-aging technology didn’t bother me as much as it did other people. This was my most highly anticipated movie of the year, and the performances definitely lived up to those expectations. Scorsese instantly recalls his greatest work with a meditative tracking shot through a nursing home to start the film. As many have noted, Pesci and Pacino were both phenomenal, and I wasn’t sure they had that sort of range anymore. DeNiro in the last third of The Irishman, however, once again proves he’s the greatest living actor. He captures Frank as a broken man, who recognizes this, and accepts the encroachment of death. While many of these people will continue to make more films, it feels like an iconic goodbye for that generation.
7 - Dolemite is My Name - In sticking with the theme of comebacks, Eddie Murphy’s turn as Rudy Ray Moore was spectacular. It was tough to imagine him with the same kinetic energy he brought to so many 80s films, but this energy propels Dolemite to greatness. This movie is at once an ode to an eccentric visionary filmmaker and the star who plays him. It was hilarious and moving. The cast was incredible. In particular, Wesley Snipes and Da’Vine Joy Randolph brought so much life to this film. I did not know who Rudy Ray Moore was before this film, but I found myself quoting his jokes after watching it. This is a minor tribute to the staying power of his vision.
6 - Little Women - Again to wade into the debates of this coming Oscar season, it’s absurd that Greta Gerwig is not nominated for Best Director with Little Women. This movie is so clearly inspired by her vision and a great companion piece to Ladybird. Is there a better current director-actor combination than Gerwig-Ronan? I am not familiar with the source material, but this era of 1850s-1860s America felt so alive. I often wonder if we were to glimpse into the past, how much of ourselves would we recognize in those people. Little Women deftly explored the relationship between our common humanity, time, and culture in ways that many works haven’t done before. As much as I hate the idea of that little weasel Timothee Chalamet, he was one of a few standouts, another being Florence Pugh. Laura Dern also turns in her best work of the year, much better than what she did in Marriage Story - a movie I largely passed on because it felt too much like a Hollywood divorce and Baumbach seems like a creep (sorry Greta).
5 - 1917 - People aren’t wrong when they say the story is pretty barebones but this movie is a technical masterpiece. It has so much visual excitement and each set piece brought with it new dangers and beauty. Thomas Newman’s score coupled with Roger Deakins’ cinematography made this a truly thrilling movie. I know there’s a long and ongoing debate about a movie’s role in glorifying war, but this is one that straddles that line carefully. I am looking forward to seeing this movie again because it was it was an experience that felt unique.
4 - Knives Out - I really watched this movie the wrong way. I saw it after school on a Friday, watched the first 15 minutes, fell asleep, and woke up for the end. I, therefore, got most of the mystery set-up and then the all answers while cutting out the fun. I eventually went back to see it as buzz continued to steadily grow. And the second time: I loved Knives Out. It’s so original and I was shocked by how politically and culturally relevant it feels. Ana de Armas with Daniel Craig’s assistance was moving as the film’s hero, and kudos to the rest of the cast for capturing the insidiousness of today’s everyday villain. This is a whodunit but it has some of the best commentary on race, immigration, class, and wealth in the United States. I am being deliberately vague so as not to spoil it, but I highly recommend giving it a watch if you haven’t already.
3 - Waves - I had no idea what this movie was about and I recommend everyone to go into it the same way (if possible). Even while watching it, I really wasn’t sure what sort of movie I was watching. I had a sense of what is was saying and condemning but that really didn’t come into frame until the movie’s second half. There were so many great performances. Sterling K. Brown’s performance was incredibly powerful and moved me more than any other this year. I also don’t think I’ve seen Kelvin Harrison Jr or Taylor Russell before, but wow. Again I am being purposefully vague when describing this movie, but you should expect something that is as intense and as disturbing as any movie I’ve seen this year (thinking about you @Uncut Gems), while also being simultaneously heartbreaking and inspiring.
2 - Honey Boy - This movie! It’s great. I can’t believe how little traction its gotten in the mainstream conversation. It’s this bizarre story based on the life of Shia Labeouf and the trauma he experienced at the hands of his father while child acting. Labeouf also plays his abusive father while child actor Noah Jupe and Lucas Hedges play him. It seems like an absurd premise. Boo-hoo stories about child actors generally garner little sympathy from me. And you’d expect the description above to be some egotistical exhibition- the kind that Shia Labeouf seems to be known for. All this being said, this was a deeply moving movie. It was beautifully filmed by director Alma Har’el, wonderfully scored, and well-acted. It appears to be a deeply personal exploration of Labeouf’s broken relationship with his family and himself. It also reframed the image of Labeouf in a way that I found to be profound. There is definitely a meta-exploration of the ways in which being an artist shapes someone and how that intersects with fame. Yet, this film engages you with the central character, and pushes you to empathize deeply with someone (in ways that were reminiscent of Roma).
1 - Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood - This is a tough mini-review to write. I saved this description for last and I probably have more to say about this film than any other. First, I am not one of Tarantino’s biggest fans. I think he’s a great director who makes extremely engaging films, but I often question the nihilism within them. Second, I recognize this might not be your your movie. Tarantino has an incredible ability to slow down movies (which may lose you) but to keep even the simplest of ideas thrilling. Third, it is also hard to dismiss everything I knew about Tarantino’s life from the final product of this movie. And lastly, I have long claimed to hate Oscar bait: movies about movies and Hollywood. Yet, here I am praising Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood. I love this movie for a variety of reasons and probably saw it in theaters 4 to 5 times. It’s a thorough exploration of the relationship between illusions and reality; what we become invested in and what we do not. Tarantino has always been masterful in this sense: he compels us to become invested in his movies yet we’re always aware that Tarantino is there (whether it’s from his acting appearances, jarring visual titles from scene to scene, or the presence of a narrator). Here he’s introduces us to this fictional world of Rick Dalton and Cliff Booth against the backdrop of this seemingly real story of Sharon Tate and Charlie Manson. You can sense the ticking of this time bomb, the infamous murders about to happen. Tarantino makes you feel for Sharon Tate in ways that the headlines and the myth of Sharon Tate and Charlie Manson do not. Like many, I loved the scene on the night of the murders where LA’s signs are lighting up while the Rolling Stone’s “Out of Time” plays throughout. It's a moving portrayal of those final moments of an imagined Hollywood. This was an ending I was dreading, knowing that Tarantino generally spares no violence. While we are building to this moment, meanwhile, Tarantino continues to blend perceived reality with perceived fiction with DiCaprio’s character, Rick Dalton. We are watching him make a TV show western and are pulled out of the scene by production assistants walking down set stairs and pulled back into it with cowboy boots walking up the same stairs. We are aware of up to four people layering into the same roles and legends: Dalton, Booth, DiCaprio, Pitt. This all culminates with an ending that is somehow cathartic, joyous, and incredibly sad. This is by a long shot my favorite Tarantino movie, and my favorite movie of the year.

I Speak in Movies: Top 10 Movies of 2018

Green Book is dumb. Here are my top 10 movies of the year.
1 - Roma
2 - Annihilation
3 - BlacKkKlansman
4 - Mission Impossible Fallout
5 - Cold War
6 - If Beale Street Could Talk
7 - Blockers
8 - A Star is Born
9 - Black Panther
10 - Colette

Sunday, March 4, 2018

I Speak in Movies: Top 10 Movies of 2017

In keeping with a tradition. Here's my favorite movies of 2017 - 2018. Overall I saw about 35 movies that were released from February to February. It's worth mentioning I missed a few that were well-reviewed. I wrote this in about 20 minutes, so excuse any errors. I may go back and edit at some point. Here are my top 10 movies of the year and my Oscar hopefuls.
10 - (tie) I, Tonya - The only reason this movie makes the list is Margot Robbie’s performance as Tonya Harding when she lands the triple axel and is sentenced in court.
10 - (tie) Wonder Woman - Well-acted, powerful story, and a unique superhero character. Gal Gadot was excellent. Loved the No Man’s Land scene and the ensuing dance.
9 - Baby Driver - Great looking movie paced with exciting action sequences and accompanying music.
8 - Coco - Pixar is like Steven Spielberg. We take for granted how consistently great their movies are. Amazing digital world and a moving story of family and loss.
7 - Blade Runner 2049 - Yes! The visuals for this movie are stunning. Best of the year. I need to see this one again. Denis Villeneuve is an incredible director.
6 - Wind River - An underrated movie. It is haunting and makes powerful statements about reservation life and resilience.
5 - Call Me By Your Name - Chalamet & Hammer were unbelievable, the former better than the latter. A great story about love and heartbreak. The last third of the movie really drives the entire film home.
4 - Darkest Hour - Probably the history teacher in me here, but this movie was so powerful. Like Dunkirk, I was so impressed with how much tension could be built when I knew the historical result. Director Joe Wright is being overlooked too. My favorite shot of the year is in Darkest Hour when Wright transitions from an eyeball to a battlefield.
3 - Lady Bird - This movie could have ended with the airport scene and I would have been satisfied. It solidified itself as my favorite when it transitions to its new environment. Is there a movie that has better captured what its like to figure out who you are in those high school/college years? I don’t think so. Ronan and Metcalf’s complicated relationship was perfect for so many reasons.
2 - Hostiles - There are problems with this movie but I appreciate its ambitiousness. I am also partial to westerns. Wes Studi, Adam Beach and Christian Bale were so good in this movie. I also have never seen a movie that captures the terror of what it must have felt like for individuals—Native and non-Native—living on the Plains in the late 1800s. This is a movie that really considers the nature of US expansion west. The end is so damn powerful.

1 - Florida Project - I loved this movie. The performances were spectacular. This movie somehow captures the magic and strength of children being raised in loving but horrible environments. Director Sean Baker and Willem Dafoe deserve Oscars for this movie.

If I picked the winners…. (reminder: these are not predictions)
Visual Effects - Blade Runner 2049
Original Song - “Mystery of Love” Sufjan Stevens
Original Score - The Shape of Water
Film Editing - Dunkirk
Cinematography - Blade Runner 2049
Original Screenplay - Lady Bird
Adapted Screenplay - Logan
Animated Feature - Coco
Director - Guillermo del Toro, Shape of Water
Supporting Actress - Laurie Metcalf, Lady Bird
Supporting Actor - Willem Dafoe, Florida Project
Lead Actress - Saoirse Ronan, Lady Bird
Lead Actor - Timothee Chalamet
Best Picture - Lady Bird

Sunday, February 26, 2017

I Speak in Movies: Top 10 Movies of 2016

In 2012 I started ranking my top ten movies of the year. After five years, I am continuing this tradition for my very small audience of readers and myself. These blog entries also are a personal landmark for the passage of time. I spend hundreds of hours each year watching old movies and new ones, and this is the only set of reviews I have to show for it. If you are reading this, there are some unconventional recommendations. Maybe you have seen these films or will see them in the future. Either way, I love talking about movies and welcome all disagreements. Although these movies are ranked 1-10, 2016 was one of the best years for movies in awhile. Every film I listed this year I loved, which I cannot say for past years. If we spend any time talking in the next few months, it's likely I'll make some veiled reference to one of these movies in 2017. Hence, "I Speak in Movies". 

10 
Queen of Katwe

"Queen of Katwe" is a Disney movie, starring Madina Nalwanga, David Oyelowo, and Lupita Nyong'o, about a young girl in Uganda who takes up the game of chess. One of the opening chess sequences in this movie shows Coach, played by Oyelowo, describing how with some thinking and a plan, a small pawn can someday become a queen. Thus, this story unfolds for Nalwanga's character Phiona Mutesi. This movie is filmed with bright colors, highlighting the beauty of the close knit community Mutesi lives in and not its poverty. As Mutesi struggles to become a chess champion, Director Mira Nair leaves us contemplating one's chances in life just by virtue of whom you are born to or where you are born. Oyelowo's performance is excellent as a man who realizes the structural injustices his community members face while still promoting a narrative of resistance to his chess team. This is a Disney feel good movie at its finest. 

9
The Lobster

Watching "The Lobster" is a strange, strange experience. In this dystopian world, Colin Farrell's character is sent to an asylum to fall in love or be turned into an animal after 45 days. The plot is clearly absurd but is designed in such a way that it forces viewers to contemplate the many types of love in our own world, and the pressures to be in love. Like many indie movies, there are a lot of unspoken feelings here. It's tough to say that any of the performances were excellent because the tone of the movie is so flat and often times uncomfortable. However, once Collin Farrell and Rachel Weisz characters team up, it's tough not rooting for them. Although this movie is brutally critical and skeptical of love, it also highlights the sacrifices, rooted in love, one makes for his or her partner. If you can sit through this movie the first time, it's worth a second viewing and heavy analysis. 

8
Moonlight 

Is there another movie like "Moonlight" out there? I can't think of any. "Moonlight" is a film made into three parts focusing on a character named Chiron as a boy, teenager, and man. What makes this movie unlike most is its setting--a poor neighborhood in the often glamorously depicted Miami--and the exploration of homosexuality within this context. There are characters who are drug users and drug dealers, and characters who do terrible things to others in this movie, and yet Director Barry Jenkins tactfully and subtly gives us a context for understanding--not necessarily acceptance--but understanding. Naomi Harris and Mahershala Ali deservedly received Oscar nominations for their work in "Moonlight". After seeing this movie and the delightful "Hidden Figures", I also expect a healthy acting career for Janelle Monáe. In a year which movie romances will inevitability be overshadowed by Oscar frontrunner "La La Land", the romance between Kevin and Chiron is unquestionably the one I rooted for the most. Roger Ebert, one of my intellectual heroes, once said of movies:

We all are born with a certain package. We are who we are: where we were born, who we were born as, how we were raised. We're kind of stuck inside that person, and the purpose of civilization and growth is to be able to reach out and empathize a little bit with other people. And for me, the movies are like a machine that generates empathy. It lets you understand a little bit more about different hopes, aspirations, dreams and fears. It helps us to identify with the people who are sharing this journey with us. 

As a straight, white, middle-class male, I can unequivocally say that "Moonlight" does just that.

7
Allied

"Allied" is one of those movies where I think people made assumptions about what it was, and decided to not see it or like it upon its release. I admit another Brad Pitt double-agent spy movie seemed unoriginal. There was rich irony though in Brad Pitt making a serious "Mr. and Mrs. Smith" with his rumored mistress. That being said, when I finally saw "Allied" I knew almost instantly this was much better than his Angelina Jolie rom-com from years earlier. "Allied" begins in perhaps the most famous movie setting of all, Casablanca. Its exciting in the early going thinking about how Pitt and Cotillard's assassins live in the same city as Rick and Ilsa. I loved the dynamics between Pitt and Cotillard in this movie, especially the first two acts. From the outset, you wonder what is real in their relationship and what is deception. As their romance develops, you stop caring and start rooting for them. Robert Zemeckis is genius in these early scenes establishing this dynamic, because when the story eventually leaves Casablanca to a domestic yet war-torn London, the core message of the movie begins to take shape: war is hell. "Allied" doesn't do this through violence like "Saving Private Ryan" [I purposely did not mention Hacksaw Ridge here. See below.] but, rather, by showing us how World War II destroyed the lives of husbands and wives, parents and children, and homes. 

6
La La Land 

It hurts me to put "La La Land" this high because I think it's going to rack up too many awards during tonight's show. This is your classic movie about show business which will be overrated by the old, stodgy Academy voters. If there is a movie about movies or the artistic process, that film is almost surely going to be overrated--looking at you "The Artist" and "Birdman". Yet, despite my sullen acceptance that I will probably be watching "La La Land" bank awards tonight, it hurts me to say I really enjoyed this movie. While the songs and dancing don't match with all-time great musicals, I do enjoy the callbacks to the classics like "Singin' in the Rain". Director Damien Chazelle's vision for this movie is also appropriately lighthearted and happy, as this movie is about love and dreams. No spoilers here: the end of this movie sealed it for me as one of the year's best. It had the courage to do something that only old movies would think of doing. See it if you haven't.  

5
Fences

"Fences" is so well-written and well-acted that it's undeniably a powerhouse. The performances of Denzel Washington and Viola Davis illuminate not only a story of family, strength, and heartbreak, but also the damage institutional racism wreaked on African American people in the early twentieth century. Denzel Washington plays the metaphorical sun in this family story, Troy Maxson, father of Cory and husband of Rose. Troy brightens the world of his family, yet when that light fades, particularly when he starts drinking, Troy's darkness is overwhelming. Just when you think Denzel has reached the peak of any performance that could possibly be delivered, Viola Davis surpasses his intensity in some of the most moving family dynamics I have witnessed on screen. For a film that never really leaves the Maxson's backyard, it's one of the most suspenseful movies of the year as well. Although the love between the characters is evident, I was never quite sure what kind of pain they might inflict on each other. August Wilson's brilliant script still shines in Denzel Washington's adaptation today. 

4
Arrival

Once my list hits "Arrival" at number four, my top movie rankings could essentially be interchangeable. "Arrival" was a deeply moving and thoughtful movie about grief, love, communication, and humanity. I was not really sure what to expect but I found the first five minutes of "Arrival" to be deeply moving. These opening scenes set the movie up as a story about grief, but Director Denis Villeneuve cleverly plays with our expectations of "Arrival" as a movie about grief and transforms into a movie about how we accept pain because love makes it worth it. If I had my choice at the Oscars tonight, Amy Adams would win best actress. Like Casey Affleck in "Manchester by the Sea", Amy Adams delivers during her moments of silence as much as scenes where she speaks. After "Prisoners" and "Sicario", Denis Villeneuve launches himself as a must-see director whenever his next film comes out. Oh yeah and this movie is about aliens too.  

3
Manchester by the Sea 

I've never watched a movie like "Manchester by the Sea" which captures what it's like growing up in middle-class, white America. When 16 year-old Patrick's father dies he leaves his son in the care of his brother Lee, a reclusive janitor in Quincy. Lee is thrust into the role of guardian which he is unprepared for and unwilling to accept. Patrick's life is based around his need for car rides, normally provided by one's parents, but now filled by Lee. Lee meanwhile is sucked into this world of hockey, high school dating, band practice, and all the other extracurricular activities Patrick is involved in. While this movie is about grief, Director Kenneth Lonergan avoids common tropes of independent films by instilling an undercurrent of hope in this movie. Casey Affleck, Lucas Hedges, and Michelle Williams are all great in "Manchester by the Sea". If Denzel does not win best actor, I hope it's Casey Affleck. It's usually the understated type of performance that is ignored but should not be. These are people wrecked by tragedy but constantly trying to heal and not let one another down. This movie packs a punch - get ready for it if you see it.  

2
Lion

Pay attention to the opening sequence in "Lion". The first images the audience is shown is aerial views of an unrecognizable place. I didn't understand it and these scenes seemed lazy to me. Yet, as the story unfolded I realized that Director Garth Davis created this opening sequence in order to mirror Google Maps, the device Saroo used to try and track down his parents. It is many ways symbolic of how perfectly Davis and his cast constructed "Lion". Sunny Pawar, young Saroo, stole this show as we watch him journey from India to Australia. Unlike many films "Lion" does not pull any punches. Saroo, as a college graduate played by Dev Patel, understands that in many ways the misfortunes of his youth led to the privilege he had in adulthood. Davis and his team clearly indicate to their audience, like "Queen of Katwe", that there is great injustice in this world just by virtue of where or to whom you are born. As an adult, when Saroo tries to find his family in India, he remembers how hard his mother worked, how poor his neighborhood was, and how much his family cared about him. For all he knew, his family must have assumed he was dead or trafficked by sexual predators. When Nicole Kidman and David Wenham's characters make young Saroo a part of their family, we feel as if we understand their pain later as adults trying to reach their adopted children. Saroo, like his adopted brother, hurts his parents, not out of spite but out of love. The same is true for his college girlfriend, the only person he has opened up to about his past. "Lion" is at times a haunting film but always powerful. "Lion" visually transported me to an India I did not quite understand. This is a tearjerker but an uplifting story about family and love. 

1
Silence

It's hard for me to separate a movie and view it individually from a director's body of work. Similarly to how I praised "Boyhood" a few years ago as an ultimate Linklater film, "Silence" is perhaps Martin Scorsese's most personal film. As a young man Martin Scorsese attended seminary school to become a priest but was kicked out for violating the school's code. Since that time, Martin Scorsese has made movies that explore the depths of his faith. Yet none are quite like "Silence". This film focuses on 17th century Spanish priests who travel to Nagasaki, Japan in order to save their spiritual mentor and missionary Father Ferreira, played by Liam Neeson, whose wife's death cannot be separated from this performance.

As the two priests played by Adam Driver and Andrew Garfield arrive in Japan they witness the horrors and persecution Japanese Christians face from a government that wants them to renounce Christ. While these two young priests watch these people abandon their faith to live, and keep their faith until a brutal death, they are forced to question their own belief in God. Scorsese aptly titles this film "Silence" because he raises a set of simple yet profound questions of faith: how can God exist yet be silent in the face of unspeakable horrors? And can you accept a God that does this? Scorsese does not attempt to answer these questions but masterfully uses a foreign world and the strong performances of his three leads in order to explore these questions.

When "Silence" ended, the full theater I sat in was--fittingly--silent.

Honorable Mentions

"Hidden Figures" - I really enjoyed this movie and its overall message but did not find it daring enough. It was a crowd pleaser to a fault. Themes of racism and resilience were powerful yet lacked nuance. This review sums up my overall feeling about the movie pretty well: https://sojo.net/articles/hidden-racism .

"Hacksaw Ridge" - I loved about 3/4's of this movie and its message. The end was tonally mismatched with the rest of the film. Mel Gibson, in typical Mel Gibson fashion, seems to indulge in the very thing he is criticizing, violence and war. I also find his final scene with imagery of the cross paralleled with Japanese officers committing suicide generally confusing and likely problematic. This is an incredible true story.

"Central Intelligence" - This comedy by The Rock and Kevin Hart was the best comedy of the year. It's lighthearted and has a lot of laughs.

"Everybody Wants Some" - Everyone who knows me knows I love me some Richard Linklater. This movie is excellent nostalgia porn about the 1980s and these dopey baseball players drinking and trying to get laid. It is insightful once these jocks meet women they actually want to date and try to find and develop some semblance of a soul.

Worst Movies of the Year... Maybe Ever

4. "Suicide Squad" - ruined a great performance by Margot Robbie, the saving grace of this movie.
3. "Batman v. Superman" - can D.C. Comics stop making movies? Please... They're consistently terrible.
2. "Collateral Beauty" - ASTOUNDINGLY awful. I can't believe there were hundreds of people who worked on this movie. They have hurt the careers of a handful of respectable actors and made the world a worse place.
1. "Patriot's Day" - This movie is insulting and Mark Wahlberg is a terrible human being. I am not surprised the guy who once said he could have foiled 9/11 is the action hero of a movie that should be about Boston's people.



Now...

If I picked the Oscar winners based on the nominations provided by the Academy.

Best Actor
Denzel Washington, "Fences"

Best Supporting Actor
Mahershala Ali, "Moonlight" 

Best Actress
Emma Stone, "La La Land"

Best Supporting Actress
Viola Davis, "Fences"

Best Adapted Screenplay
"Arrival"

Best Original Screenplay
"Manchester by the Sea"

Cinematography
"Silence" 

Visual Effects
“Rogue One"

Costume Design
"La La Land"

Director 
Screw it, it should be Martin Scorsese, "Silence".
But if I had to pick Kenneth Lonergan, "Manchester by the Sea"

Best Picture
"Lion"

Sunday, February 28, 2016

I Speak in Movies: Top 10 Movies of 2015

A few years back I started an annual tradition where I would choose my top ten movies of the year. I am not going to be as detailed in this entry as in years past but I will provide a few thoughts. These rankings reflect what each of these films meant to me, whereas my Oscar picks try to evaluate these movies on merit and their importance to a broader film context.
10 

"Bridge of Spies" is classic Spielberg. It looks great, feels historically accurate, yet is polished just enough to appreciate his greatness as a director. This will be ranked as one of his second-rate movies, which is a testament to his prowess. Per usual, Tom Hanks also delivers a strong performance. The third element of this film, and perhaps the most compelling, is Spielberg's portrayal of Postwar Germany. As an American born at the very end of the Cold War, the effects of the East Germany and West Germany divide is a topic that is little known or talked about among my peers. Without spoiling the scene, one of my favorite moments from this film involves Hanks' character riding a train looking at the Berlin Wall. It resonates. 
10 (tie)

"Room" is an emotionally exhausting film. Brie Larson and newcomer Jacob Tremblay take a film, which could have been just as a powerful as TV movie, to the next level. Like Paul Newman in "Coolhand Luke" or Steve Carell in "Dan in the Real Life", Larson is provided the opportunity to sing in character, which lands a poignant punch to this film. In many ways, "Room" is two movies and I left the theater wanting to know more about these characters. While this movie focuses on two captives locked in a shed, it's a great allegory for growing up and developing the paradigms through which we see the world.  

9

I am as big of fan of Rocky Balboa as the next guy. "Creed" is the best entry into this series since the original. My personal favorites from this film: Tessa Thompson and the first fight scene in the Mexican club. The camera work here is as skillful as a choreographed dance--kudos to director Ryan Coogler. Many of the Rocky films reflect the broader sociopolitical context in which they were made (check out one of the worst and funniest examples here). "Creed" is for this generation. When you think about the original "Rocky" beating "Taxi Driver" or "All the President's Men", it makes sense. "Rocky" captured the can-do, working class, white narrative which Americans love(d) to believe. A better film like "Taxi Driver" reverberated a fracturing sense of the American identity prevalent in seventies America. This year, the roles are reversed. "Creed" is the daring movie representative of the moral and racial anxiety felt in the United States today. This movie should be nominated for Best Picture; Michael B. Jordan should be nominated for Best Actor; and Ryan Coogler should be nominated for Best Director. Check out my 2014 blog entry here and you'll find my criticism of Hollywood and the Academy. Unlike some people who hate being right, I love it. Unfortunately, the black collaborators of "Creed" are not recognized for their brilliance. 

8 

“Trumbo" is a force. After watching "Breaking Bad" and this movie, I am convinced there's nothing Bryan Cranston can't do in front of a camera. How did this guy go unrecognized for so long? I have known since high school that Dalton Trumbo was blackballed for being a communist sympathizer, but I never knew to what extent that situation unfolded. As a fan of classic cinema, this movie made me re-evaluate many of the stars and films from the 1950s. Of course I usually try to take into account the broader context in which art is made, but "Trumbo" provided a greater understanding of that history. Going full circle here, how did 2015 shape "Trumbo"? "Trumbo" portrays the lunacy all too common in Cold War and Post 9-11 America. We shouldn't see the world as good versus evil, and then sacrifice our liberties in the face of real and perceived threats.

7

"The Revenant", starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Tom Hardy directed by Alejandro González Iñárritu, was fantastic. This movie is stunningly beautiful and thoroughly intense. Although DiCaprio doesn't speak much in this film, his determination for revenge bleeds into every scene. Native American criticisms of this movie are valid and deserve a deeper analysis than the one I provided in this entry; however, if you want to read a good perspective check out this piece here by Gyasi Ross, Editor at Large Blackfeet Nation/Suquamish Territories. Ross writes forcefully about aspects of "The Revenant" that I enjoyed most while also raising fair complaints. I'll provide you one of my favorite passages from his review:

The movie also portrays Native people in a fairly historically accurate light. Native people were brutal during this time period because we had to be brutal. White Americans were brutal. French people were brutal. Native people could not be exempt from that world and were trying to hold on for dear life; guns, germs and steel threatened our very existence. If the movie hadn’t shown Native people with a willingness to participate in the brutality of the time period it would have been inaccurate and dangerous as it would have stripped our ancestors of the dignity of protecting our people at all costs. The white men were terrified of “The Ree” (the Arikara people) and probably with good reason; from historical accounts and also from the movie, the Ree could get down with the best of them and were fierce warriors defending their people. 

"Spotlight" is one of the most authentically Boston movies I have ever seen. Hell, Mark Ruffalo's character got pizza from Santarpio's. I am hooked. This movie is also devastating. "Spotlight" explores how entire communities can ignore and bury awful truths about themselves. Director Tom McCarthy goes to great lengths to show us how the Catholic Church covered up sexual abuse by hundreds of their priests. This movie is compelling. Michael Keaton, like Iñárritu in "The Revenant", gives praiseworthy work that trounces their collaboration in last year's overrated Best Picture winner "Birdman". Mark Ruffalo as reporter Mike Rezendes, however, stole the show as he became obsessed with his search for truth.

SPOILER ALERT- When the Spotlight team at the Boston Globe finally released their story at Christmas time and the children's choir is singing "Silent Night," this movie hits its apex. During the end credits I noticed that some of the kids affected by the negligence and criminality of the Catholic Church spanned from neighborhoods in Boston to the communities I lived in South Dakota. I left the theater feeling hurt and reflecting on 2015. What are we collectively repressing from the public conscience nowadays? It's racial inequity.  

5

This is my first time ever seeing a "Mad Max" movie. "Fury Road" is one of the most unique and intriguing action movies I have seen in a long time. Director George Miller creates a provocative look at the accumulation of wealth to the few; the Earth's depleting natural resources; and feminism. Not only is this movie grimly beautiful at nearly every point, but the action provides a stage on which the characters can be developed in meaningful ways. While I am a fan of large, commercialized action movies like "The Avengers" and defend their creativeness, "Mad Max: Fury Road" takes originality to the next level. I need to see this movie again.  

4

This one strongly acted and infuriating movie. "The Big Short" depicts the corporate greed of Wall Street leading up to the 2008 financial crash. Bale, Pitt, and Carell form the best assemble cast of the year. These are complicated, normal people disgusted by a system making them rich. Steve Carell not being nominated for his role in "The Big Short" is another mistake by the Academy, who instead opted for the showier performance by Christian Bale. Director Adam McKay designs this movie so that I was rooting for the protagonists trying to exploit the excess of Wall Street, yet, by doing so I was anxiously awaiting the crash of the global economy and the destruction of millions of people's lives. Without spoiling part of "The Big Short's" charm, McKay has a few gags which work well in explaining the complexities of high finance. When the end credits rolled, I felt disgusted. This is a harsh reminder that for all the criminality leading up to the 2008 crash, only one top banker went to jail. This movie makes me worry for the future. 


"The Hateful Eight" is intense. Quentin Tarantino spends at least two hours building suspense for the third act. Everyone is talking about Leo with a mama grizzly bear being the most tension-filled scene of the year, but I challenge anyone who says this to watch "The Hateful Eight" and tell me different. Not only does this film look great but it also gives us a score produced by legendary composer Ennio Morricone. Samuel L. Jackson as Major Marquis Warren gives one of his best performances and the top acting job of the year. It is wrong that the Academy overlooked his work. Given the controversial nature of "The Hateful Eight", I am not surprised though. Matt Zoller Seitz, my favorite critic, who writes for RogerEbert.com, articulated these criticisms eloquently here. I'll include the best excerpt from this scathing review below:

Quentin Tarantino's ultraviolent, ultra-talky sorta-Western "The Hateful Eight" is an impressive display of film craft and a profoundly ugly movie—so gleeful in its violence and so nihilistic in its world view that it feels as though the director is daring his detractors to see it as a confirmation of their worst fears about his art... When the violence arrives in "Hateful Eight," it's unmoored not just from any morality espoused by the characters (who are hateful, after all!) but also, it seems, from Tarantino's own moral compass—if indeed he has one, and after this movie I have serious doubts. From "Reservoir Dogs" and "Pulp Fiction" through his recent run of movies, he's given us a mix of proudly amoral and morally struggling characters, then shown them working through their hypocrisy and relativism in finely tuned, ping-pong style exchanges (like that final Travolta-Jackson conversation in "Pulp Fiction"). In "Hateful Eight," for the first time in Tarantino's career—and in contrast to such brutal, semi-exploitive but ultimately mournful films as "The Wild Bunch" and "U-Turn"—there's no detectable moral framework to speak of. We're just watching a bunch of scorpions in a bucket getting ready to sting each other, then stinging each other—sometimes verbally, sometimes with fists or guns or other weapons: tearing flesh, coating hardwood floors with gore and brains. 

Seitz's criticisms are fair but I'm not certain that I agree with him. The violence of Tarantino does serve a purpose--I hope. The key to this movie surrounds the Lincoln letter and the fate of Jennifer Jason Leigh's character. If you think about these two symbols more deeply, it undercuts Seitz's criticisms. "The Hateful Eight" is one of those movies where I left the theater feeling like I saw something powerful but I was not sure how to articulate these feelings into thoughts. I find myself in a similar position months later. 
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I have spent more time writing about this movie than any other. To read my thoughts on "Star Wars: The Force Awakens", click here. A big thanks to all those who participated in this conversation. I have removed nearly everyone's identity who contributed.
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Relegating "Inside Out" to the Best Animated Feature category instead of including it in the Best Picture category is just plain stupid. Here is a movie about growing up and being human. "Inside Out" is one of the most original movies I have ever seen. There are only good characters in this film. Conflict is created by a human struggle we all face: how we learn to deal with our emotions effectively through making sense of the world. Sadness appears to foil Happiness at every turn, yet through this movie we appreciate how sorrow helps us empathize with others and fondly remember the past. "Inside Out" is about the power memories and the control we can or can't exercise over ourselves. This is one powerful film and the best of 2015. 

Honorable Mentions

"Brooklyn" - a great love story depicting the hardships faced and the strength needed to immigrate to America, but in the year of Führer Donald J. Trump, it does little to take its commentary to the next level. This is a pleasant movie.

"Water Diviner" - I wanted to love this movie but I could only like it. The "Water Diviner" is about an Australian father looking for his dead children on the shores of Gallipoli in Turkey during World War I. Director-actor Russell Crowe hones in on a father's regret for regaling his children about the glory of war, yet Crowe curiously undermines this theme by making this an action movie.

"McFarland, USA" - This movie is about a Mexican-American community in California and the discrimination they face. While this movie does little to challenge conventionality, I appreciated its sincerity and willingness to show the strength of immigrant America.

"Jurassic World" - This is one of the worst movies I've ever seen. It was a commercialized, sexist, overly reliant on CGI piece of crap.

"Spectre" - Another horrible movie in 2015. It seems to exist in a world where the Austin Powers series hasn't been released. Unfortunately for "Spectre" everyone else lives in a world where we saw "The Spy Who Shagged Me". SPOILER ALERT - The villain will reveal his entire evil plan while petting a cat and giving Bond enough time to free himself. Bond will give said villain a scar on his face but does not kill him. The villain then escapes his secret lair via a helicopter. Yeah, it's that bad. Might as well have called him Dr. Evil. 


Now...

If I picked the Oscar winners based on the nominations provided by the Academy.

Best Actor
Leonardo DiCaprio, "The Revenant"

Best Supporting Actor
Mark Ruffalo, "Spotlight" 

Best Actress
Saoirse Ronan, "Brooklyn"

Best Supporting Actress
Jennifer Jason Leigh, "The Hateful Eight"

Best Adapted Screenplay
"Brooklyn" Written by Nick Hornby

Best Original Screenplay
"Inside Out" Written by Pete Docter, Meg LeFauve, Josh Cooley; Original story by Pete Docter, Ronnie del Carmen

Cinematography
"The Revenant" Emmanuel Lubezki

Visual Effects
“Mad Max: Fury Road" Andrew Jackson, Tom Wood, Dan Oliver and Andy Williams

Costumes
"Mad Max: Fury Road" Jenny Beavan

Director 
"Mad Max: Fury Road" George Miller

Best Picture
"Mad Max: Fury Road"