I blame the holidays.
I maintain a list of films I've watched all year on Letterboxd.
They include films from the past year that have triggered introspection, impressed
with their craft, or just made me giddy in my cinema seat. And then the end of
the year approaches, the holidays arrive, and I get caught up in the spirit of
the season. That is when I inevitably recalibrate the rankings on my list. When
I think back upon the past twelve months, the films that register more than
others now are those that have moved
me the most. The word 'movie' dates to the 1890s when it was first noted
that projecting still images in quick succession approximated movement on the
screen; this definition makes sense. But I like to think of movies, the good
ones at least, as films that move us the most, those that emotionally register, often irreversibly. Come the end of the year,
the more cerebral films tumble down the list and the ones that have altered
something within my emotional circuitry, rise to the top. The
list of films stays the same, but when it comes to the rankings, the heart has
always trumped the mind. And so is the case with this year’s list too:
1.
STRONGER:
Nominally, this is a film about a person overcoming physical disability, at this time
already an exhausted genre in cinema. But director David Gordon Green makes this
a film about all the other things
that are impacted by sudden disability; the lives of those around the person; the sense of self as
the ground has literally disappeared from under them. The perennially
underappreciated Jake Gyllenhaal is supported by career-best performances from
Miranda Richardson and Tatiana Maslany. The film has no interest in making
heroes out of any of the characters (based on real life individuals). And by
allowing them to be deeply flawed, ill-intentioned even, i.e., human, STRONGER became the
most emotionally authentic film I saw this year.
2.
CALL ME BY YOUR NAME: Like BOYHOOD, this is a film that doggedly refuses to add up
to much through most of its running time. Until the very end when it suddenly
does, and it quietly breaks your heart. Director Luca Guadagnino, a master of
surfaces rendered with impossible beauty, lets the film languor, letting the
viewer soak into the locale and the characters. Its a deeply immersive experience. More than anything else CALL ME BY YOUR NAME
gets the subtle, complex dance of first love just right: the initial tentative
circling around each other, the mixed messages, the dubious reading of signals, and the alacrity
with which those around are recklessly used as pawns. This is the rare film
that understands the cruelty that goes hand in hand with the swoon of young
love.
3.
THE BEGUILED: A wounded soldier during the American Civil War is rescued to a
Girls School. This is your classic rooster-in-a-henhouse story. In her take on
the 1971 Clint Eastwood/Geraldine Page film, Sofia Coppola has left much of the story intact,
but chosen to tell it from the perspective of the hens instead of the
rooster. What great fun to watch the psychosexual repression get pressure
cooked into a delicious stew of moral ambiguities. Inspite of a constant backdrop of
booming cannons from the Civil War era, the sexual politics feel fiercely relevant.
4.
THELMA:
All those lamenting the death of good cinema should immediately get their hands on
this Norwegian thriller. A young girl leaves her sheltered small town family
life to attend university in a big city, and starts noticing strange things
happening to and around her. Always holding its cards close to the chest, THELMA evolves
into something utterly unexpected. You watch the film with incredulity, unsure
at every minute where the story is headed. Is this is a coming-of-age film. Is
it supernatural horror. Is it a character study about the perils of repressing sexuality. Is it a strident rebuke to religious fanaticism. As you think back
on the film afterward, you realize it is not primarily any of those things,
although it touches upon them all. And you recognize that the film’s ambitions are grander still, taking on nothing less than how the world at large looks at femininity.
5.
KAPOOR
AND SONS: For a long time, the biggest enemy of mainstream Indian cinema had
been a willful adherence to moral and cinematic tropes that were dated even
decades ago. Which is what has made the Indian films from the last 5-7 years so
utterly exciting, as experimentation in form, in structure, and in content have
led to a new golden age, with exceptional films coming from young filmmakers
eager to marry the aesthetic of independent cinema with quality of craft.
KAPOOR AND SONS earns its place in this pantheon. It is blessed with
superlative acting from an enviable ensemble cast and a director who knows
precisely how to tap into their talent. But the thing that truly sets this film
apart from others in the cadre is the script. The writing in this film refuses to
find easy villains. It knows that family conflicts can spontaneously escalate
to something not unlike between enemy lines during war. The writing seeks
empathy, it seeks understanding in the face of long germinated prejudices, and
it seeks space for everyone to breathe. This film made me glad to be alive.
6.
THE POST:
At a time when the big studios are almost exclusively financing sequels and superhero
franchise films, a resolutely cerebral film seems a minor miracle.
Steven Spielberg has made an astute turn in his career with a recent trilogy of
political films, LINCOLN, THE BRIDGE OF SPIES and now THE POST, that while
superficially unrelated, all comment urgently on the state of contemporary
politics in America, and the dangerous path we are currently treading. Kay
Graham, the de-facto publisher of The
Washington Post , in the early 1970s was faced with the choice of publishing the next of the
Pentagon papers at the risk of having Nixon shut down the newspaper. THE POST is hermetically sealed within its times. But when
you consider the issues at stake: the press versus a government
bent on stifling its freedoms, a woman trying to exert her moral will in a
predominantly male business, corporate imperatives directly abutting
national security risks, you realize just how relevant this film is to the absolute
now. THE POST is Donald Trump’s worst nightmare, and for that alone it is an
accomplishment.
7. THE KILLING OF A SACRED DEER: The films of Yargos Lanthimos make you wonder if
he is the person most urgently in need of a hug in the whole wide world. But thank goodness for filmmakers like him. Demonstrating once again why he is a
master of the disquiet, he is able to effortlessly conjure up unease and
impending terror. The teenaged children of a celebrated cardiologist (Colin
Farrell) and his ophthalmologist wife (Nicole Kidman) start to suddenly get
sick with no medical explanation. Does any of it have to do with the young boy
that the cardiologist has taken under his wing? Like all of his films,
Lanthimos creates a world with its own absurd rules, and staunchly sees the
film through based on those tenets. Isn’t it that evil is so frightening
because it often hides in plain view amongst the banal. Part cold knuckled
revenge thriller, part unforgiving moral treatise, and an altogether unpredictable
and sinister experience, this movie may be too disturbing for some. But every
lover of cinema needs to watch this film.
8. COCO: This film nicely fits in with the best of
Pixar films in its ability to create a complex new world and being unafraid to tackle darker ideas.
This film owes a lot visually to Miyazaki’s SPIRITED AWAY, and the influence of
Pixar’s own MONSTERS INC is apparent. However the film’s place and sensibility
is uniquely its own. It uses the Mexican rites of Dias De Los Muertos
(Day of The Dead) as its springboard, but those rites resonated strongly with
the Indian customs I grew up with, speaking to the universality of our common traditions. COCO filled me up and then devastated me.
Note to Pixar: please abandon all efforts with
sequels; your recent original material (INSIDE OUT, THE GOOD DINOSAUR and now COCO) speaks
for itself and doesn’t need to be diluted by mediocre sequels.
9.
LOGAN LUCKY: Were this film made by another director and distributed by a major
studio, it would have been a runaway hit. But we expect proficiency from
someone like Steven Soderbergh, and to our great peril, take him for granted.
The director of the OCEAN’S ELEVEN reboot (and the sequels) takes a stab at
another heist story, this time set in the down South NASCAR racing circuit
instead of the gleaming Vegas surfaces of the OCEAN’S films. Oh but what fun
this film is, probably the most entertaining one I saw this year. Soderbergh
walks a tight line between mocking his characters and demonstrating unequivocal
fondness for them. I have no desire to live in a world in which Steven
Soderbergh is no longer making films.
10.
A CURE FOR WELLNESS: This is a blindingly original film. A young man is sent to a
hidden mountain resort to bring back an office colleague who has seemingly been
retained there against his will. The man arrives there, and of course, nothing
is what it seems, and from there things take on one twisted turn after another.
With a commitment to its craziness that initially puzzles and then outright
wins you over, A CURE FOR WELLNESS is what happens when you allow a filmmaker
with lofty vision (Gore Verbinsky) to go with his full creative intent and you get
the hell out of his way. What an utter lunatic delight this film is.
11. DUNKIRK: What is left to say about DUNKIRK
at this point? That in spite of other incredible mainstream productions
released this year, you will not find a film with better craft. That this is
the film that Christopher Nolan has been working toward his entire career. In
which he has found the right scale, placed hubris in check, and put to optimal
use his penchant for time dilation. Many expected DUNKIRK to be the story of
the exodus of the more than three hundred thousand Allied soldiers out of
France from Nazi control. But Nolan wisely decided to focus on a handful of
individuals- in air, on land and on water - demonstrating yet again that his best
work comes from smaller scale projects.
12. GET OUT: Of all the films on this list,
Jordan Peele’s debut directorial effort will likely be talked about most in ten
years’ time. The premise is deceptively simple: invited to the family home of
his Caucasian girlfriend, a Black man begins to sense that things may not be
what they seem when he arrives there. The film works as a satisfying straight up thriller. But it gives so much more upon introspection. Peele has mentioned that the
inspiration for the film was a mash-up between THE STEPFORD WIVES and GUESS
WHO’S COMING TO DINNER. By adroitly
approaching this as a genre horror film, Peele is able to have the viewer
experience a gleefully amplified version of the African American experience in America.
And therein lies its genius.
13.
MOTHER! There is something to be said for a film that
will just not submit to a middling response. Most viewers have outright hatred - the seething,
foaming at the mouth kind - for the film. And then there's a minority who have
great admiration for it. Here is the key to the movie: it is the rarest of
films which is aided by a little bit of prior knowledge before being
viewed. The film, from its look into an early marriage in the first act, then to
a home invasion in the middle, and finally to a spectacularly deranged last
act, is open to many interpretations. I saw the entire film as an allegory for what the
conversation between a prideful Creator and his young creation might look like.
Once you see the Javier Bardem and Jennifer Lawrence characters as God and Mother
Earth, respectively, the film makes absolute sense from first scene to last.
The film has also, rightly, been seen as a statement on artistic creation, and
the exacting, crippling demands it makes from the artist. Or simply as an age-old
push and pull between a wanting masculinity and a giving female presence. No
matter how you look at it, as insightful, or as overly obvious, you cannot deny
that this is the work of a wily provocateur. And we are remiss to toss it aside
based on literal interpretations of the film’s events.
14.
LADY BIRD:
You come out of the theater having watched LADY BIRD, and you want to give the
film a hug. Greta Gerwig has long been a double threat (an endearing screen
actor and a sharply discerning screen-writer) and over the years there have been
many (including me) who have wondered when Hollywood would wise up to her talents. Well,
Hollywood was too busy bankrolling the next superhero film, and so Gerwig wrote
and independently directed her first feature based on her experiences of
growing up as a teenager in Sacramento. There is not a single innovative thing
in this film, from the plot, to the structure, to the insights it provides. But a
story well told, and with an abundance of respect for all its characters, is all
it takes for a movie to hum with universal truths.
15.
THE LOST CITY OF Z / MUDBOUND: I am cheating
and placing two films in the final spot because I cannot bear to let either one
go unsung. Both are strikingly ambitious pieces of cinema, with wide breadth
in scope, created by filmmakers relatively young in their careers. In
his sixth film as director, James Gray takes on the true story of British
explorer Percy Fawcett who went deep into the Amazon to search for the mythic
City of Z in the 1920s. Gray uses this premise to reflect on a multitude of
themes: the heedless obsession that has driven the greatest explorers, the tremendous and
often irreversible toll this takes on families left behind at home, and the
inherent danger in assuming ascendancy during the initial interaction with
aborigines in a newly discovered land. This is a smart, grueling, meditative
piece of cinema.
MUDBOUND is only the third movie from Dee Rees and
it plays with the assured confidence of a filmmaker telling a story that must be told. Without sentimentalism or overt stridency, Rees follows a multitude of
characters navigating the American South after the end of WWII. They are all achingly human, victims of their
time and their prejudices - and the abject whims of fate. To Dees’ credit, there
is equal compassion and an objective search for comprehension for the
motivations behind Caucasian and Black characters alike. Some are monsters,
yes, and the ugly cruelty of racism is a constancy, but there is also always the
haunting presence of an unsparing destiny that will not allow unrealistic
outs for any of the characters.
As I wrap up
this list, I realize that there were so many other fine films in 2017 that
could have just as easily been on my list. So I had to get nit-picky in
eliminating some movies. Both I, TONYA and BABY DRIVER should
have made the list, but I had to make some tough cuts and they were painful eliminations. THE FLORIDA PROJECT is a bonafide great film, but I couldn't buy into its conclusion. THE SHAPE OF WATER is visually as wondrous a film as
any Guillermo Del Toro has made, and Sally Hawkins breaks your heart, but its conclusion
unfortunately succumbed to the one thing Del Toro has always avoided:
sentimentality. THREE BILLBOARDS OUTSIDE EBBING, MISSOURI features crackerjack
performances from a stellar ensemble, but
the film ultimately felt too mean-spirited and eager to provoke at any cost. THE DISASTER ARTIST is good
entertainment but seemed a bit of a piffle, an inside joke. As you would expect from Paul Thomas Anderson, every scene in the enigmatic PHANTOM THREAD buzzes with surgical precision, but the film's eleventh hour turn to an unforeseen direction soured my mouth; had this conclusion always been Anderson's intent or was the film constructed only as a character study of the Daniel Day Lewis character (and that last act tacked on after the fact)?
I have also deliberately left out documentaries because there were so many compelling ones released this year (you absolutely must watch FACES, PLACES) and I will put out a separate list for them. Likewise I will be soon be publishing a list of the best of commercial cinema in 2017, where ATOMIC BLONDE, JOHN WICK-2 and STAR WARS: THE LAST JEDI should find their rightful top perches. For an impenitent list maker like me, this should nicely feed my mania; watch this space for more.
I have also deliberately left out documentaries because there were so many compelling ones released this year (you absolutely must watch FACES, PLACES) and I will put out a separate list for them. Likewise I will be soon be publishing a list of the best of commercial cinema in 2017, where ATOMIC BLONDE, JOHN WICK-2 and STAR WARS: THE LAST JEDI should find their rightful top perches. For an impenitent list maker like me, this should nicely feed my mania; watch this space for more.
I need to see Cure for Wellness. And you need to see Phantom Thread! Great list. Faces Places opens Jan. 5 in San Diego at Digital Gym Cinema.
ReplyDeleteThanks Beth.
ReplyDeleteYes, I definitely need to see PHANTOM THREAD. It hurts me that Daniel Day Lewis may no longer be seen on the screen again; I hope he reverts on his retirement claims. And I am so thrilled FACES PLACES is opening at the Digital Gym Cinema. The film truly got to me; again I cannot bear to think that this might be Agnes Varda's last!