Sunday, April 29, 2012
Film in 2011: A Top 10
10. Heartbeats
Lifts technique effortlessly to create style. There is nothing original here, but the finished work is both immediate and compelling. Xavier Dolan is destined for great things.
9. Jane Eyre
A wonderfully atmospheric romance. The director moved from the gang wars of Mexico to classic British literature with almost too much ease.
8. A Dangerous Method
David Cronenberg continues to evolve as a filmmaker. Many say he's mellowed, but his films have simply become more internal, body horror replaced by mental chiller. This film alternates between being an unsettling account of a man's journey into his own mind and fascinating biopic. See it.
7. Certified Copy
A film that takes at least two viewings to piece it together, it is non stop thought provoking. Who are we watching? What is their relationship? Plus, Juliette Binoche gives her best performance in years.
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
The State of Television in 2011: A Top 5
Television has long been catching up to film in quality. It offers a unique format to tell a story, and in recent years authors have finally been taking advantage of it. David Lynch showed that it was possible, if not yet feasible, to run a show with artistic merit with Twin Peaks; but it wasn't until the early 2000's, with The Sopranos, that television really came into its own. Since that illustrious show broke open the floodgates, directors like Martin Scorsese and Michael Mann have been a part of creating wonderfully detailed pilots. I would argue that since the year 2000 television has gotten better every year... until last year. Mad Men, the best still running show right now, had no episodes air in 2011; Modern Family got stuck in a rut that everyone should have seen coming and despite still featuring a stellar cast seems to be telling the same stories over and over; and new shows like New Girl (starting to hit its stride in 2012) and The Killing have been completely underwhelming.
Is this the start of a new downward slide in quality? Or just a blip in the slow march towards cinema's death? While the death of cinema might be premature, I'd say that this is an anomalous year, a momentary blip in the sloooooooow transference of the moving image from the movie theater to our living rooms. Networks, having yet to figure out how to make money off the 20-somethings, have increasingly looked to capitalize on the aging baby boomers. CBS in particular being the poster boy for releasing backwards programing, that is soon to be reviled. NBC, on the other hand, looks more like a cable channel in terms of ratings than the network powerhouse of old which featured behemoths like Cheers, Friends, and Seinfeld. Yet, in this age of re-watching and catching up on cult shows of the past, it's programming seems set to be influential for years. In the midst of this transition and dip in quality there were some good shows to be seen. Naturally, I haven't watched everything, in fact I haven't even watched everything that's supposed to be great, but out of what I have seen this is the best of 2011 in television:
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Sleaze: A Case for the NC-17 Rating
Every year, it seems, a film is threatened with the dreaded NC-17 rating which restricts the audience of the film to adults only. Why is this rating considered the kiss of death for a film's earning potential? For years distributors have aimed for the magic PG-13 rating which seems to go hand in hand with wads of cash. This sort of thinking is exactly Hollywood's problem in so many areas, using shaky causation to maintain the status quo.
This sort of thinking can be seen with 3D where the conventional wisdom is that to compete with home theaters and pirated films, movies had to become a bigger spectacle. Along came Avatar and post-production 3D and soon it seemed that it was impossible to see a big budget film in 2D. It no longer became possible to discern what was causing the drop in ticket sales, and they certainly have continued to drop: 1.28 billion last year and a recorded drop in each of the last 7 years.
Monday, February 7, 2011
Top 15 Films of 2010
RED One Digital Camera; what many of this years most acclaimed films were shot on, including The Social Network |
In the 30's we reacted to the Great Depression with stories that all but ignored it. People wanted escapism on the sort of scale that they could only get at the movies. This time around (and maybe this says something about the scale of this crisis compared to that one) our greatest films tackle our problems head on. Small regional films like Winter's Bone, about a young girl who must do the unspeakable to protect her family, resonate far more than as isolated tales of woe and were more widely seen than they would have been even 5 years ago. Two other surprise box office successes in The Town and True Grit also tackled characters who were down and out, financially and otherwise. They are genre films tailored to our times, made with care and skill.
Labels:
David Fincher,
Edgar Wright,
Film,
List,
Sofia Coppola,
Year's Best
Sunday, January 30, 2011
Essential 5: Wong Kar-Wai
Wong Kar-Wai is often cited as the world's most romantic director. His films are known for characters who go through life as if there is nothing else but romance and they are shot so lovingly as to make even the most stone-hearted viewer agree. If that was all there was to him, he would still be a director worth watching -- genuine romance is almost impossible to find at the movies. His films are also filled with subtext. For instance, Wong always shows clocks and highlights the movement of time in every shot. On one level this merely hightens the sense that all relationships are finite, and so is heartbreak. On a second level though, he is referencing the ticking clock that Hong Kong (where many of his films take place) was under during British rule. Many of those who live in Hong Kong had fled mainland China after the rise of communism there and lived in Hong Kong to escape what they saw as an oppressive system. Wong Kar-Wai shows metaphorically the fear many in Hong Kong must have felt about the hand-over of power that happened in 1997.
Thursday, January 20, 2011
Top 5 TV Shows of 2010
The real story of the last 10 years in entertainment is the rise in quality of television. Sure, there were sporadic bursts of genius before the new millennium (Twin Peaks, Seinfeld, and of course I Love Lucy) but finding 5 good shows in any particular year would have been a challenge. Now though,there are at least 10 good shows, of which I haven't seen several (most of Treme, Boardwalk Empire, Breaking Bad) but what I did see convinced me that in many ways any show in the following top 5 could compete with any mainstream film released this year.
Labels:
30 Rock,
Bored to Death,
List,
Mad Men,
Modern Family,
Parks and Recreation,
Television,
Year's Best
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Reminder: Movies are an INDUSTRY
"There is a cultural elite, in America, which tries its utmost to manipulate the habits and tastes of consumers. It consists of the corporations who sell nearly everything... and while its methods include some of the publicity-driven hype that finds its way into newspapers, magazines and other traditional media, its main tool is not criticism but marketing." -A.O. Scott
Sunday, January 9, 2011
Evidence of Sanity
Assessing Art is difficult always, but it is particularly hard in the online film world right now. It is seemingly impossible to find your own voice and your own opinion. Everyone is writing about the same thing in the same way. Not to say it is entirely fruitless, right now is none-the-less one of the few times in the year when mainstream critics step back from individual films and look at the big picture. Yet, a consensus is easily formed (this year it's The Social Network) and even though that sort of thing is questioned, its always done in the same way.
Most critics are unwilling to adapt but one who is certainly not is Matt Zoller Seitz. He is one of the founders of the excellent and influential film blog The House Next Door and continues to write for Salon.com and the New York Times, among others. He is perhaps best known as one of the pioneers of new media in film criticism. What he has done with slide shows and short videos to both augment the usual review and create new ways of looking at films is refreshing. In this particular instance though, I was impressed by what he said in plain old print media about how two films changed his perceptions this year. The article stands head and shoulders above all criticism I've read in the past few months. And it can be read HERE.
Sunday, October 10, 2010
500 Million Friends (or The American Dream)
"Involuntarily I glanced seaward - and distinguished nothing except a single green light, minute and far way, that might have been the end of a dock. When I looked once more for Gatsby he had vanished, and I was alone again in the unquiet darkness." -F. Scott Fitgerald
The Social Network is easily the critical darling of the year. Everyone talks about the technical genius, the screwball paced dialogue, and the performances, but an examination of the film's relationship to the audience has been largely lacking. I believe that the film's true genius lies in the way it updates "The American Dream" to the modern era. Everyday we see self-made millionaires like Zuckerberg and celebrities with no more claim to fame than being friends with Paris Hilton (or being Paris Hilton for that matter) and we have almost no choice but to think about how it could be us -- suddenly rich for some simple idea or for who we know. That may be "The American Dream" but it isn't "The American Story". That story can be seen everywhere, from works of art like Citizen Kane to real life melodrama like William Randolph Hearst's censorship of that same film. The American Story is broken dreams and the corruption of ideals and no film has better shown it recently than The Social Network.
"I'll see you in my dreams" Essential 5: David Lynch
"My movies are film-paintings - moving portraits captured on celluloid. I'll layer that with sound to create a unique mood -- like if the Mona Lisa opened her mouth, and there would be a wind, and she'd turn back and smile. It would be strange and beautiful." - David Lynch
David Lynch is the rare artist capable of making the non-rational… digestible… maybe even understandable, and even if we can’t articulate that understanding, we can approximate it. Discussion inevitably turns to the darkness inside us all or the hidden face of seemingly idyllic communities. He often visualizes the fractured psyche, perhaps as a metaphor for society, or individuals, or even himself. Machines are a common motif, often juxtaposed with less ordered, organic imagery like physical deformities, fire, and waterfalls. All of this is true of Lynch, but beside the point. Few film authors are so visual, and none are quite so focused on evoking instead of explaining. Critics love to over-analyze Lynch, and I’m no exception.
For me at least, watching Lynch is like being under a spell. I’m mesmerized by the images, the story, and most of all by what it’s doing to me. Intellectual exercise is generally strenuous, and requires a great deal of conscious thought. With Lynch, though, you feel as if it is your subconscious getting the work-out. After I am done I feel as if I understand myself better or perhaps that I am more comfortable with myself in a way that is impossible to describe. Is intellectualism possible if it eludes your consciousness?
I’m going to resist the urge to delve deeper into the state Lynch puts me in. Nothing is more boring than someone else psychoanalyzing themselves. So, here are the essential films of David Lynch. His films taken together create a rich interconnected body of work that is best considered together. But you have to start somewhere and inevitably some make easier entrance points than others. If you are interested in this (very) important filmmaker I recommend starting here:
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