With the films I’ve seen so far from 2007, there’s no doubt in my mind that it’s been an extraordinary year in the cinema. Frustration about availability aside, I’m actually excited that there are a number of films yet to be discovered from this great year. Here’s a listing (in order of how badly I want to see them) of the films I’ve yet to watch from 2007 that I feel I need to see before compiling my list:
In Theatres/Not on DVD Yet:
There Will Be Blood
The Diving Bell and the Butterfly
Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead
I’m Not There
Margot and the Wedding
The Savages
Into The Wild (To be honest, this one came to my area, but I never found time to get to it. I sort of counted on it being recognized come Oscar time and to get a re-release-a la Michael Clayton-but that never happened)
The Kite Runner
On DVD-Just Haven’t Watched Yet
Paprika (read H-Dogg’s review here)
The Wind that Shakes the Barley (Like Paprika and many of the foreign films I’ve seen this year, this was released in 2006 but didn’t hit US theatres until 07)
The King of Kong (out on DVD January 29th)
Rescue Dawn
Waitress
Bug
Sicko
A Mighty Heart
Here is a list of films that I found to be especially excellent and are definitely in consideration to be in my top 10:
No Country For Old Men
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
Atonement
The Lives of Others
The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford
Ratatouille
Once
Michael Clayton
Zodiac
Gone Baby Gone
Across the Universe
Juno
Eastern Promises
The Lookout
Charlie Wilson’s War
American Gangster
In The
The Darjeeling Limited
Sunshine
Directorial Debuts
Three established talents tried out the director’s chair this year and the results were three exciting films that were among the best of the year.
Screenwriter Scott Frank (Minority Report, Out of Sight) helmed the overlooked bank-robbery thriller The Lookout. In Frank’s hands, a film that could have come off as Memento-lite (the protagonist, played by Joseph Gordon Levitt, suffers from a brain injury that forces him to write everything down in a notebook) into a nuanced character study about living with a disability-as well as an exciting pot-boiler.
After playing with spy-genre conventions as the screenwriter of the Bourne trilogy, Tony Gilroy turned the legal drama on its ear with the morally gray world of Michael Clayton. The great performances and deliberate pace indicate an uncompromised vision of a director to look out for.
Following the media frenzy that was Bennifer I & II, I feel I could happily go the rest of my life without seeing Ben Affleck in front of the camera again. As a director, though, I’m excited to see where he goes next after his debut with Gone Baby Gone. Based on the Dennis Lehane novel of the same name, Baby stars Affleck sibling Casey as a PI trying to find a missing girl and finds himself having to make a very tough decision. It is a film that has haunted me since I saw it back in October, and a lot of that credit goes to Ben Affleck.
I’m not ashamed to say I’m a fan of musicals, especially in a year that turned out so many good ones. Tim Burton’s Sweeney Todd is one of my favorite films of the year and was a perfect match of director and subject. The Beatles-centric Across the Universe is a flawed film, but over time those flaws have endeared themselves to me as interesting quirks. For those who don’t like musicals, the indie hit Once integrates its music so seamlessly to its subject matter-two street musicians who form a bond over their shared talent-that it would take a heart of stone to deny its charms. Also, I’d be lying if I said I didn’t enjoy the potential disaster turned feel-good hit Hairspray as well as Disney’s live-action fairy tale Enchanted.
Most moviegoers would often list Comedy as their favorite movie genre. Well, not me—in fact, it’s probably pretty low on my list. I love humor, but most modern comedies…well, suck. I’m looking at you Chuck and Larry. Well, this year there was berth of great comedies that I can’t deny my love for: The Seth Rogen two-fer of Knocked Up and Superbad, the glorious animated highs of Ratatouille and The Simpsons Movie, Juno (where’s the Oscar love for JK Simmons, Allison Janney, and Jennifer Garner? Where? I’d gladly give-up the Best Picture nom -which, to be honest, I think is pushing it a bit- for a single nod for the supporting cast), the dry wit of The Darjeeling Limited and The TV Set, and my personal guilty pleasure of the year Hot Rod. I laughed a lot this year.
My subscription to Netflix has allowed me to check out foreign films that I normally would have passed on—and this was a great year to jump in. Paris Je T’aime is a collection of 18 short films, a third of which I loved, a third of which I tolerated, and a third of which…well…let’s just say if the film was around thirty minutes long it would be a shoo-in for my best of the year. The Lives of Others won the best foreign language Oscar last year and was one of my favorite films that I saw in 07. Fans of Cloverfield or Little Miss Sunshine might want to check out the Korean offering The Host, which combines elements of both for a film that---well, it’s certainly not dull. Another flawed film that is anything from dull is Black Book from the
2 comments:
I wanted to post and say I forgot to include the excellent FBI thriller Breach in my list of favorite films of the year. Even if it doesn't make my top 10, it's a great film that shouldn't be overlooked...even though I did.
I'd go back and add it, but everytime I edit something it messes up all sorts of things.
Thanks for saying what I feared was only in my head - Juno for Best Pic is a stretch. It's a great movie, but...Best? However, Jen Garner is glorious. She made me want a baby and that's no easy feat. Maybe she and Connie Britton can get together and discuss why they've been overlooked this season.
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