Year in Review: Part 1
Josh Timmermann: Ready to get this shindig underway? I am. The best, if not necessarily most original, way that I can think of to open JLT/JLT's first (hopefully/possibly) annual year in review discussion (not such an inspired title, admittedly) is some first day of school-style roundtable introductions. How about name, writing outlet(s), location, and since the point of this chat session is to debate the past year's offerings in film and music (and whatever else comes up--tv, books, online goings-on, etc.) some personal best-of's for '06? (List whatever you'd like--since my interests tend toward both movies and music, I'll do films and albums.)
I'll start: Josh Timmermann, founder and co-operator of JLT/JLT,
Herrin, Illinois, and lists:
01.
Three Times02.
Miami Vice03.
United 9304.
Fast Food Nation05.
Shanghai Dreams06.
The Descent07.
Looking for Comedy in the Muslim World08.
Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan09.
L'Enfant10.
Duck Season01. Yeah Yeah Yeahs -
Show Your Bones02. Joanna Newsom -
Ys03. Lily Allen -
My First Mixtape04. The Pipettes -
We Are the Pipettes05. The Mountain Goats -
Get Lonely06. Prince -
312107. Nellie McKay -
Pretty Little Head08. CSS -
Cansei de Ser Sexy09. Bubba Sparxxx -
The Charm10. Lily Allen -
Mixtape II
Okay, now that that's out of the way, some food for thought, just to get the ball rolling here:
Some of the more interesting films from last year imagined a pretty bleak future, from the global warming crisis in
An Inconvenient Truth to sci-fi-tinged dystopian flicks like
A Scanner Darkly and
Children of Men. Apocalyptic or post-apocalyptic scenarios are nothing new in movies, granted, but the immediacy and tone of this year's batch seemed fairly prescient. Al Gore's slide show is an admirably proactive gesture (an attribute I'd also ascribe to the underappreciated
Fast Food Nation), while Richard Linklater's and Alfonso Cuaron's films are grimly pessimistic. Is this a chicken-or-the-egg paradigm? Are these films eerily in step with the zeitgeist, or are they simply taking timely advantage of some free-floating national (global?) anxiety and (as some have alleged) pandering to liberal sympathies in the process?
Another big to-do in movies this year--or at least one the mainstream press has taken to enthusiastically--is the Latin invasion, most specifically Cuaron, Alejandro Gonzalez Innaritu, Guillermo del Toro, and Fernando Eimbcke (some have grouped in Almodovar, which strikes me as fairly absurd). Thoughts? Personally, I'm not sure I buy it, though I liked
Children of Men (albeit not as much as Cuaron's lovely
A Little Princess) and was thoroughly charmed by Eimbcke's
Duck Season. (Del Toro's
Pan's Labyrinth has yet to open in my neck of the woods, and I frankly have little to no interest in bothering with Gonzalez Innaritu's
Babel.)
And just because I want to be (by default) the first person to bring it up: the
Borat phenomenon seems to be the cine-year's most compulsively discuss-able event. I was skeptical going in, but it really is as funny as it's cracked up to be, and nearly as insightful. In my initial
post, I called it the year's most problematic movie, which, upon reflection, is a position I stand by, and while I disagree with
Armond White, I think his argument that it's an unapologetically divisive insta-red-state/blue-state argument-starter is perfectly valid. Less frequently brought up is the way this bona-fide critics' movie subverts the traditional auteurist paradigm. How many folks even mention director Larry Charles (who also, for the record, helmed 2003's unfairly maligned
Masked and Anonymous)? It's all Sacha Baron Cohen, and probably, mostly justifiably so. Of course, the same can be said of
An Inconvenient Truth, which--poor David Guggenheim--is commonly referred to as That Al Gore Movie.
On the aural front,
Idolator recently unveiled its inaugural
Jackin' Pop critics' poll. And TV on the Radio took album. What?! Yeah, that's right a record called
Return to Cookie Mountain has been designated, via the critical consensus, 2006's best record. I myself "get" TVOTR about as much as poll poobah (or does the Voice have some sort of copyright on that term, Tom?) Michaelangelo Matos. (His "Williamsburg Radiohead" point was dead on.) Any defenders? I'm crossing my fingers that Pazz & Jop shakes out better. Hell, I'll even take another Dylan win over
Cookie Mountain!
The singles topper was no surprise, and begs an interesting line of thought. Was 2006, with "Crazy" achieving a "Hey Ya"-level of ubiquity (my dad still can't get enough of it), Lady Sov on TRL, and Lily Allen topping the pops (at least on her side of the Atlantic), finally the year that "blog pop" translated into "pop as in popular"? Defeatists seemed to give up last year when
Arular more or less flopped, and Annie and the new and improved Robyn failed to gain traction outside of Scandinavia. But Gnarls Barkley? They were everywhere, and while I like them less than M.I.A. or Robyn, there seems to be some vague sense of vindication in hearing something so consciously odd--that lit up the blogosphere before the airwaves--on Top 40 radio.
Not surprisingly, Cee-lo and Dangermouse also took Artist of the Year honors in the Idolator poll, but
my vote went, without a second thought, to Timbaland. Between miraculously resurrecting Aaliyah in the form of Nelly "I'm Like a Bird" Furtado and taking on the full-time role of JT's mentor, the man is having his best year since "Get Ur Freak On," if not "Are You That Somebody?," dropped. Stopping to think about it, has there been a more inventive and influential artist in music in the past decade? I mean, really, and if so, who?
Alright, enough from me for now. Let's hear some thoughts from the rest of you. Have fun, and until next time.
Best,
Josh
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Dave McDougall: Hi all, I'm Dave McDougall, I write about movies at my blog
Chained to the Cinémathèque and occasionally about whatever else strikes my fancy (music, mostly) at
Dave Should Get Out More. I live in Park Slope in Brooklyn, NY.
My list of Best Films of 2006 (new releases) is not a top 10 because
it's incomplete for not having seen either Eastwood film, or
Pan's
Labyrinth, or
Children of Men, or
Three Times, or
Miami Vice (among
many, many others). So I'll leave it at a top 9, at least until I see
Children of Men this afternoon and rent
Three Times tonight.
1.
Army of Shadows2.
United 933.
Inland Empire4.
Idiocracy5.
Tristram Shandy: A Cock and Bull Story6.
X-Men: The Last Stand7.
A Scanner Darkly8.
Casino Royale9.
Mutual AppreciationMy album list shouldn't even make a Top 10, since I spent of most '06
discovering old bands and re-releases. So I don't have an opinion on
new albums from The Liars, TV on the Radio, Grizzly Bear, etc, etc,
etc. I also need to spend more time with most of these, but here are
10 new albums I heard and liked in '06:
1. Clipe -
Hell Hath No Fury2. The Knife -
Silent Shout3. Joanna Newsom -
Ys4. Girl Talk -
Night Ripper5. Mission of Burma -
The Obliterati6. Justin Timberlake -
FutureSex/LoveSounds7. CSS -
Cansei de Ser Sexy8. Phoenix -
It's Never Been Like That9. The Pipettes -
We Are the Pipettes10. Yeah Yeah Yeahs -
Show Your BonesI almost put Weird Al Yankovic's
Straight Outta Lynwood on the list
just for "White and Nerdy," which seems to me to be the perfect
meta-hiphop song, exploring (exploding?) the difference between
audience and artist, fantasy and reality. It critiques the idea that
you can buy your associations (in this case, with black people) and
takes down capitalism's "Lost in the Supermarket" ethos ("came in here
for a special offer, guaranteed personality" - The Clash). It also is
just as bangin' as the song it parodies, thanks in part to Weird Al's
top-notch flow (seriously).
My number one album is another exploration/critique of the American
Dream's principle of self-betterment through capitalism. Pusha T and
Malice do think that you can buy a sort of happiness, but they
recognize that everything comes at a cost. "Dirty money know how to
treat the girls," and the girls are willing to let their moral
questions slide in exchange for expensive gifts. (Does that make them
whores? Probably, but Clipse will take the payoffs for their hustling
work; the girls "don't have to love me, just be convincing"). The
album's conflicted, everybody-sells-out theme is both a positive and
negative reflection on the American Dream. With all that drug money,
they can "ride around shining," and they will -- because "tomorrow's
not promised, we just live for today." This is some dark shit.
Josh, I think your theory that blog-pop may have finally broken
through to the mainstream misses the point. Pop has always had an ear
for the leftfield, the warped reflection of itself; how else to
describe Missy's career? Timbaland's? Gwen Stefani's? This year,
though, blog-pop was (coincidentally?) in step with what gets
reflected in avant-pop. M.I.A. and Annie spring from traditions that
have been not fully incorporated into American radio-pop - dancehall
and europop respectively. Successful pop stretches boundaries of pop
but is sourced in familiar traditions. The reason it can be "popular"
is that it sounds exactly like all the songs you've heard before, only
a little bit different [See: Kelly Clarkson stealing from "Maps"].
Gwen Stefani's "Wind It Up" doubles this by taking the tradition of
hiphop/pop music and bringing in a standard cultural reference point
(
The Sound of Music / yodeling) that also sounds familiar at the same
time that it sounds completely foreign [Think: Puffy sampling The
Police, only weirder]. In "Wind It Up," Pharrell also uses these
unfamiliar/familiar sonic elements in familiar ways - horse-hoof
counterrhythms that sound more Timbaland than Amish. If I had a
singles list, "Wind It Up" would be on top, followed by all the Timbo
joints that would fit plus the DFA remix of "My Love". Timberland is
currently working with Lovefoxxx and M.I.A.... 2007 (or '08) is going
to be a good year.
As for films, if you had asked me in November I would have called '06
a down year, but the last 2 months of the year brought some serious
highlights.
Inland Empire strikes me as the most complex film ever
released in theaters; it's certainly one of the hardest to parse.
Lynch's movie is an exploration of dangers of role-playing, a
manifesto for a new digital auteurship, an exercise in translating
Transcendental Meditation to the screen, a pushing of narrative
fracture to its logical limit, a recursive strange loop designed to be
unsolvable, a puzzle to be solved. In New York, the theater it's
playing it is offering a deal: see it 9 times, get the 10th admission
free - and people are at least considering the offer. If Chris Marker
was a maximalist, he might have made a work like
Inland Empire.
A Scanner Darkly felt to me less fully realized than I wanted. The
thematic and narrative elements of paranoia and being under constant
surveillance didn't make the leap to shot selection. A remake where
every camera angle is that of a surveillance camera, only we don't
realize that until halfway though - that's the movie I wanted to see.
Mutual Appreciation: Bujalski is overrated by certain critics; his
movies don't tell us much new about ourselves. But I like that he
doesn't shy away from insecurity, silence, and inaction in his
anthropology of resistant youth. He captures his characters like Woody
Allen by way of Satyajit Ray, but I'd love to see that same
observational eye turned away from himself and to the outside world.
Or perhaps his work is that project of cultural anthropology? If he's
the new Michael Apted, I'm curious to see what my generation looks
like in 20 years.
X-Men: The Last Stand proved that the comic book movie is the one
genre that Hollywood consistently gets right.
It's surprising how poorly the old Bond films hold up, even the
Connery films.
Casino Royale reinvigorated the Bond franchise by
taking it away from tongue-in-cheek British Empire nostalgia and
adding the gritty physicality that we expect in action movie
"realism." Seeing Bond become a Double-0 was the best action sequence
since Jason Bourne left Paris - helped in large part by the temporal
complexity and the selective ownership of information (Bond, audience,
victim). Eva Green adds intellect to the mostly physical gifts of a
Bond girl, makes previous Bond girls look like paper cutouts - on
brains, acting ability, and, with apologies to Ursula, ownership of
her physical appeal. The best Bond movie ever? Yes... considerably.
The two funniest movies of the decade so far - and maybe of my
lifetime - hit theaters in 2006.
Idiocracy was the great dystopian
film about stupidity that Mike Judge always had in him, and though it
was barely released in theaters is now available on DVD (buy it now,
seriously).
Tristram Shandy: A Cock and Bull Story is the
Big Lebowskiof meta-cinematic literary adaptations, but much funnier than that
sounds, and full of sly jokes that, like Lebowski, go a bit too fast
for the audience on first go but richly reward fast minds and repeated
viewings.
Two movies about heroism and self-sacrifice topped my list this year.
Army of Shadows was released in France in 1969 but never in the U.S.
This year's restoration and American showings revealed a masterwork
unrivalled in Melville's storied career. It opens with what might be
the finest opening shot in the history of cinema, eliciting a
slow-building visceral response that prepares you perfectly for the
spectacularly intimate epic of national pride and self-sacrifice that
follows. The movie's sense of brotherhood strikes hardest in the
moments when our main characters deal with ordinary Frenchman: in the
barbershop, or in a Nazi military headquarters. Or even between
members of the resistance, sworn to protect each other's identities
even when alone together in a room, or to make good on past debts no
matter the cost. The final coda makes the story so much larger than
even that which we've seen. A true masterwork.
United 93 is the greatest American movie about heroism, period. (I
might even strip the qualifier "American"). Heroism is usually
signalled in movies by some special abilities that call a character to
the profession of hero. In
United 93, the heroes are passengers on a
plane, called to heroism through circumstance. I'll leave off an
analysis of why Greengrass's technique is flawless, why his narrative
strategies and casting make these characters all the more real, how
the film makes expert use of what we know coming in. Instead, let's
focus on what happened that day: They used what was at their disposal
to down the plane.
That's a start... show me what you got
- Dave
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Chris Dashiell: Hi, I'm Chris Dashiell. I write for
cinescene.com, and do a little radio show on kxci.org. I also have a
blog which is mainly on philosophy and politics.
This is fun. I've enjoyed reading the comments so far.
First of all, I have to mention the perennial dilemma I face when doing top-10 movie lists. I live in a relatively small city (Tucson, AZ), and therefore some of the releases that pile up at year's end as Ocar bait don't make it to screens here until February or even later (if at all). In addition, many foreign films don't make it here until a year, or even two or three years, after their initial limited release.
You'll understand when you see the films on my list, because many of
them would be considered 2005 films, or earlier, by most critics in the bigger cities who get to see everything sooner.
Well, I won't let such films just fall through the cracks because of the exigencies of scheduling. If they're great, I will list them. And I certainly don't think I'm alone in this problem. I would bet that many cinephiles who don't live in NY, LA, Chicago, etc., are faced with this every year.
Another drawback to not being in a major urban center is that many of the exciting films I read about never make it to a screen here. We do have an art theater, but economics seem to dictate that they choose what's considered more palatable foreign fare (in the 2nd tier of foreign work, for the most part) rather than the latest Hou or Jia film. Well, I can rent
The Death of Mr.Lazarescu, because we have a great video store here, but I'm rather old-fashioned in my insistence on seeing motion pictures on a big screen before including them in a top-10. With fewer foreign films making it here each year (alas), I might have to change my thinking on this eventually.
Judging by the accounts I've read from film fests, we're in a sort of golden age of film right now. But in the ordinary world of multiplex theaters, we continue to sink into a dark age. Very dismaying. I'm tempted to list my #1 as all the films I was prevented from seeing by the absurd distribution system in the U.S., which sends all the same crap to every theater because the studios are dedicated to the big score, the blockbuster hit, rather than to making and distributing good films. But enough--it's the same rant from me every year, except worse.
1.
The New World (Terrence Malick)
2.
Cache (Michael Haneke)
3.
Darwin's Nightmare (Hubert Sauper)
4.
L'Enfant (Jean-Pierre & Luc Dardenne)
5.
Since Otar Left... (Julie Bertucelli)
6.
Half Nelson (Ryan Fleck)
7.
The Science of Sleep (Michel Gondry)
8.
The President's Last Bang (Im Sangsoo)
9.
Why We Fight (Eugene Jarecki)
10.
Neil Young: Heart of Gold (Jonathan Demme)
I don't have time to discuss all these in details right now, but I look forward to saying more.
Suffice it to say that my predilection for Terrence Malick is due to a deep affinity in our world views. His use of voice-over as a method for conveying the subjective, spiritual nature of experience is so close to my own view, and so beautifully executed in
The New World, that I can overlook minor infelicities and still make the film my #1, the only film on the list that I went to see twice this year.
Haneke's metafictional horror film about the poison of colonialism in a man's soul was so disturbing, and resonated on so many levels for me, that it could easily switch places with Malick's film in my estimation, with the only reason for its ranking being a slight preference for the sublime over the brutally honest.
Three nonfiction films made my list. With the political situation deteriorating as it has been, I have found myself more drawn to films of immediacy and engagement, and documentaries tend to be more that way. In the same vein, the best TV of the year was Spike Lee's When the Levees Broke, a model of what good television documentary can and should be.
My B-sides will probably include
Children of Men,
Sophie Scholl,
Clean,
Mutual Appreciation,
The Proposition,
Deliver Us From Evil,
Ballets Russe, and
Borat. I also liked, but with more reservations:
Duck Season,
A Scanner Darkly,
12 and Holding,
The Queen,
Room,
Jesus Camp,
Searching for the Wrong-Eyed Jesus,
This Film Is Not Yet Rated,
The Cave of the Yellow Dog. A curious case is An Inconvient Truth--as cinema, it's not much more than a filmed lecture with some biographical filler. But as an event, it's probably the most important film of the year.
My keenest disappointment this year was Michael Winterbottom's
Tristram Shandy: a Cock and Bull Story. With a brilliant first half hour completely sucking me in and anticipating more delights, the film shifts into its "film within a film" conceit--and never really returns. I think the old
French Lieutenant's Woman idea could have worked if it had been balanced with enough Sterne to give the film some heft. But it just meanders, and the problem is simply that Steve Coogan bantering with the cast and crew is not, and could never have been, as interesting as Laurence Sterne. It pains me to think of what might have been.
Avenue of the overrated:
Little Miss Sunshine,
Dreamgirls,
United 93 Interesting failure:
The Departed Pee-yew:
The Fountain,
The Da Vinci Code,
Click I am set to see
Iraq in Fragments and
The Painted Veil this week, so perhaps things could change.
Dash
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Teresa Nieman: Firstly, I'm Teresa Nieman, of
Prefix, my blog (
Cult Iconic), and of course, JLT/JLT. I'm from Canada, but currently live in (and have for the past 7 or so months) Herrin, Illinois.
Secondly, my ever-changing '06 lists.
01. Yeah Yeah Yeahs --
Show Your Bones02. Diplo / Mad Decent --
Worldwide Radio Podcasts03. Tom Waits --
Orphans: Brawlers, Bawlers and Bastards04. Cansei de Ser Sexy --
CSS05. Justin Timberlake --
FutureSex / Lovesounds06. Asobi Seksu --
Citrus07. Clipse --
Hell Hath No Fury08. Cat Power --
The Greatest09. Girl Talk --
Night Ripper10. The Game --
The Doctor's Advocate01.
Miami Vice (Michael Mann)
02.
Three Times (Hou Hsiao-hsien)
03.
Half Nelson (Ryan Fleck)
04.
L'Enfant (Dardenne brothers)
05.
The Departed (Martin Scorsese)
06.
Down in the Valley (David Jacobson)
07.
An Inconvenient Truth (Davis Guggenheim)
08.
United 93 (Paul Greengrass)
09.
A Scanner Darkly (Richard Linklater)
10.
Fast Food Nation (Richard Linklater)
Thirdly, Dave:
X-Men III? Elaborate, if you would. I found it run-of-the-mill crappy, but, admittedly, didn't give it much thought other than "I'd rather be seeing something else right now," followed by "Thank God that's over with." I also skipped the sequel, but mildly enjoyed the first in the series.
Though, you having a greater appreciation than most for a largely-panned big budget popcorn adaptation reminds me of my after-thoughts on
Silent Hill--a movie I saw back in April, rated 4/10, and haven't seen since. But in the time between then and now, I've come to think of it rather fondly, as one of the purest examples of good video game adaptation, and it's now sitting in my #23 spot. While literature (so long as it possesses some kind of workable narrative) is always a safe bet for celluloid revamping, video games have yet to produce a great film version.
Resident Evil (I saw only the first one), and
Bloodrayne took the action-movie approach.
Doom and
Silent Hill went the way of making it as close to its original source as possible. The former with it's reverse-Snorri-cam (the kind attached to the actor, a la
Requeim for a Dream)-ish stylings, evoking the sense of actually playing, or watching someone else play, the first-person battle game Doom, for better or worse. Christophe Gans'
Silent Hill is slightly more cinematic--but only in the way that "cinematic sequences" are in actual video games (like when you beat a level and watch as a new part of the story unfolds via animation). The execution is graceless, the actors' voices seem appropriately disjointed (as if they could just as easily be voice-overed), and the plot unfolds in a miraculously find-the-flashlight-escape-the-monsters way that really is, in hindsight, extremely innovative.
Silent Hill is, by all means, an experimental art film.
Perhaps not coincidentally, my number one film of the year is also an adaptation that both embraces its source material, and re-imagines it. Yes, I'm talking about
Miami Vice, the most sumptuous, swooning, near-incoherent exercise the in TV-to-movie jump, to date. (Even moreso than
Fire Walk With Me, which I only realized could be a contender after typing this. Though, that being made by the creator of its boob tube predecessor kind of cancels it out.) Both the Linklater's on my list are also adaptations (of books), as is
The Departed (of the HK action-drama
Infernal Affairs). If you really want to stretch things, you could say that
An Inconvenient Truth is the celluloid adaptation of Al Gore's global warming slideshow, which would make a grand total of 5 adaptations in my top ten . Weak year for original works, or great year for colliding mediums? Probably both, but I haven't yet seen
Inland Empire, among others.
Speaking of things colliding: genres did so in music moreso than they have in years. Josh, you brought it up this being the age of blog-pop. I think that's a more literal phenomenon than you realize. Not only are artists approved, avoided, and handed buzz through blogs--they're also becoming more and more blog-exclusive. Or, at the very least, internet-exclusive. Countless singles, remixes and mixtapes were released as mere downloadable mp3 links--things you couldn't get in stores even if you wanted to--from prolific artists and previously unheard of ones alike. Furthermore, mixtapes thrived--from Diplo's Mad Decent Podcasts, to Girl Talk's mammoth cornucopia of pop on
Night Ripper. Lily Allen released a stellar one (
My First Mixtape) to build hype for her upcoming album, and an unfortunate one later on (
Mixtape II), which only heated the backlash flames. Still, her
First was notable not only for fantastic song choice and sheer cool factor, but also because she's the only gal-pop-singer I can think of who has, well, even made a mixtape.
I have more to say, but the Golden Globes are on, Justin and Cameron are there, much awkwardness may ensue, and I'll let someone else have a turn.
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L. Michael Foote: Hello, I’m L. Michael Foote. I write about movies for
Stylus Magazine. Like Chris, I live in a small town (East Lansing, Michigan), which, while good for college sports, doesn’t offer much in terms of art theaters. Happily, I’m moving to Manhattan next August, so I’ll be more prepared next year.
I know nothing about music (I think I own, like, four albums from
2006?), so I’ll just say that I enjoyed both
FutureSex/LoveSounds and
Ys.
Onto film:
01.
Two Drifters02.
L’Enfant03.
United 9304.
Children of Men05.
A Scanner Darkly06.
The Queen07.
The Death of Mr. Lazarescu08.
The Departed09.
Old Joy10.
SlitherMany of the films on my list (
L’Enfant,
United 93,
The Death of Mr. Lazarescu,
Old Joy and, to a lesser extent,
The Queen) share a certain quality. We can’t feel neutral about these situations (a baby sold on the black market, a hijacked plane, a dying and neglected man), but we are incapable of passing judgment on the characters. The filmmakers don’t develop character or narrative traditionally, but instead force us to pay careful attention to human behavior. Of course, if human behavior were transparent, then life would be easy. This style certainly isn’t unique to the films of 2006, but I was impressed by how many movies developed an unfathomable realism.
Although the titular grouch dominates the story in
The Death of Mr. Lazarescu, the man rapidly sinks into a coma. As Lazarescu becomes comatose, our attention shifts to his surroundings. I feel ill equipped to analyze the institutions around him (although the film is apparently meant partly as a satire of the Romanian hospital system). But Romanians are people too, and the meandering film allows us to observe neighbors, nurses, and doctors. We don’t know these characters, just as we don’t know the man who takes thirty minutes out of his day to pull our wisdom teeth. Of course, being selfish beings, we still judge the doctor based on how he treats us, and, even though Lazarescu is never portrayed as a martyr, we still hope for compassion. One nurse, who initially arrives in the ambulance, is easily the most empathetic character of the movie, but even she has moments where she treats Lazarescu insensitively – drifting off into her own void and ignoring Lazarescu’s attempts at conversation. In marked contrast, one arrogant doctor treats everybody as minions, but when other characters are turned off by his rudeness (sometimes a reaction conveyed only through subtle body language), he responds, even moved to offer a (somewhat flippant) apology. It’s not much, but it’s a move in the right direction. At the risk of sounding starry-eyed, I’ll say that
The Death of Lazarescu made me want to be a better person for all those I meet, but never know. Are moral standards good reasons to like a movie?
I found
United 93 moving for most of the same reasons. With no exposition, no flashbacks, and no clumsily developed personality traits, we couldn’t even try to understand the faces on board that plane. I found this lack of pretension very powerful…
I agree, Josh, the apocalyptic tone this year is far more pressing than, say, 2004 and
The Day After Tomorrow. These films are explicitly connected to our lives –
An Inconvenient Truth (which I haven’t seen) is purportedly based on fact, and
Children of Men contains plenty of references to modern politics. I disagree, however, with your assessment of
Children of Men as a pessimistic film. I loved Manohla Dargis’ interpretation, in which she argued that
Children of Men is about fragile hope. There’s a lot to worry about today, and the scenarios in
Children of Men are definitely plausible (minus the infertility plot device, which brought a welcome urgency). But when that giant boat came with TOMORROW emblazoned across it (fuck subtlety, subtlety is lame), I felt great about 2007. Check with me in twenty years; hopefully my optimism is justified.
And Chris, I completely agree with you regarding
The New World. Malick easily topped my list last year. I love how the man captures perception, filming the world from contrasting vantage points. But Malick still sees an objective truth, even though it’s difficult to apprehend (I always feel closest, ironically, when the voice-overs explicitly contradict the images). And the New World contains my favorite cinematic depiction of prayer when Pocahontas (for lack of a better name) pours out her heart to some spiritual deity, and the lightning flashes in (we hope) response. Really great stuff!
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Daniel Rivera: Hello, all.
I'm Daniel Rivera, formerly of
Stylus Magazine, and now a regular over at
South Dakota Dark. I live in the largely desolate, but always on the "grow," Ocala, Florida. Here we're known for our horses as well as our rather unapologetically large Republican voting block. Go me! Due to this, among other factors, good film is somewhat hard to come by in my little corner of the universe. Understandably, I spend most of my time drowning my very being in music. 2006, while I've heard was a fine year for film, was no different for me in this respect. However, in the spirit of discussion, I went ahead and racked the old brain to come up with as many films as I could that I figured were worth a damn to me in '06. I don’t have much time to get into anything today, but I did want to jump in here with something. So, here’goes. My lists are as follows:
01.
The Departed02.
United 9303.
Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan04.
The Descent05.
Dave Chappelle's Block Party06.
Slither07.
A Prairie Home Companion08.
Brick09.
Down In The Valley10.
Little Miss Sunshine Not as bad as I thought it would be, but it's clear that I could seriously use a trip to a video store, or a day pass to a town that actually gives a damn about good film.
01. The Hold Steady,
Boys and Girls in America02. Joanna Newsom,
Ys03. TV on the Radio,
Return To Cookie Mountain04. Junior Boys,
So, This Is Goodbye05. Hot Chip,
The Warning06. Peter Bjorn & John,
Writer's Block07. The Thermals,
The Body, The Blood, The Machine08. Yeah Yeah Yeahs,
Show Your Bones09. Cat Power,
The Greatest10. The Pipettes,
We Are The Pipettes Okay, back to film for a moment. I've always been a bit of a horror "enthusiast." I find it interesting the recent trend of horror films that have surfaced within the past several years. It's as if there are two sub-genres--which granted isn't necessarily anything new, per se--consisting of...well, good horror films and bad horror films. To explain: While films like
Slither and
The Descent share a much different tone from one another, they still manage to share the same scope in that their cerebral nature vastly outweighs the admittedly visceral elements prevalent in both.
The Descent, while largely dark and surprisingly terrifying, is still able to convey its own quietly vicious thesis statement without getting bogged down by shock value sentiments and cheap horror kicks. Slither, with a much more playful quality, loves the fact that it is over the top and, well, gross. Its ironic tendencies infest its very spirit but never seem to dull the weight of the more iconoclastic instances that bubble to the surface time and time again. Both films are very much indebted to past films within the genre, but what makes them special is the way they strip it all down the most basic skeletal structure and add their own flavor in spades. This trend of films such as
Slither and
The Descent is in direct conflict with much more popular mainstream horror films such as your
Texas Chainsaw remakes and countless repackaging of superior Japanese horror films. The fact that the aforementioned films failed to gain any real popularity (outside of cult followings) coupled with sad truth that all of these Japanese horror films would be much more popular if the American studios would simply find a way to release them in American cinemas as opposed to finding some hack director and some pretty pseudo-teen victims to put through the meat grinder, only points to a sad state of affairs that is really only fixing to get much, much worse. I know I’m not the only horror lover in this group. Teresa? How do we keep good horror films alive?
This, unfortunately, is all I have time to get into at the moment. However, I do plan to take issue with a certain comment made by a certain Timmermann about a certain
Cookie loving group of fellows. It’s taking everything in me not to punch you in the stomach right now, sir. I kid.
Cheers,
Daniel.
-
Tom Breihan: Hey dudes. I'm Tom Breihan, and I write the
Status Ain't Hood blog on the
Village Voice website.
2006 was the first entire calendar year I spent living in New York, and it's not easy to go to the movies here. Even matinees are upwards of $10, and evening showings sell out on Tuesdays, so you need to plan ahead, not something I'm particularly good at doing. On top of all that, I was busier writing about music than ever before this year, so I barely ever made it out to the movies. I spent a whole lot more time throwing stuff in my Netflix cue and watching movies on my laptop in bed while my fiancee slept next to me, which is probably not the ideal way to experience these things. So my top ten list, such as it is, has a whole lot of gaping holes, and it prizes quick-and-dirty spectacle over psychological intricacy. In any case, it looks something like this:
1.
District B132.
The Departed3.
Jackass Number Two4.
Idiocracy5.
Dave Chappelle's Block Party6.
Talladega Nights7.
The Descent8.
Brick9.
Borat10.
CarsOne thing I like about most of those movies: they involve groups of talented
and/or charismatic people (I guess you can't really call the
Jackass dudes "talented") figuring out ways to get major film companies to give them piles of money to pull insane stunts. With
District B13, some French exec figured out that David Belle's eye-popping parkour stunts would work perfectly if they were wedded to a ridiculously cliched action-movie vehicle. Dave Chappelle decided that he wanted to put on a concert and then got a major studio to bankroll it; most of the movie's charm comes from what I'd like to think is his everyday persona.
Talladega Nights is the latest product of Will Ferrell and Judd Apatow's gloriously loony manic-comedy cottage industry. And those same boardrooms somehow realized that they could make money by paying Sascha Baron-Cohen to bait rodeo audiences or Chris Pontius to drink horse cum. Even
The Departed was just another testament to Scorsese's genius for roping mass audiences into his singular aesthetic. These guys are all running cons, and they're all working.
For me, though, every movie I saw in the past year utterly wilts in the light of the ongoing project of
The Wire. The HBO series rings all sorts of personal bells for me, not least because my hometown is the show's main character. But a full-immersion serial drama like that one is also able to tell stories with the srot of satisfying sweep that movies just can't handle. More and more, TV shows are meaning more to me than movies; their lack of time-constraints allows them to create entire worlds.
Lost and
Big Day and
Veronica Mars and
Entourage and
Heroes and
30 Rock and
24 and
Arrested Development (RIP) all assumed huge levels of sophistication on the part of their audiences and then ran with those assumptions.
As for music, various permutations of this top-ten list have run in a few different publications, but here's the newest permutation:
1. T.I.:
King2. Justin Timberlake:
FutureSex/LoveSounds3. Clipse:
Hell Hath No Fury4. Ghostface Killah:
Fishscale5. The Hold Steady:
Boys and Girls in America6. Z-Ro:
I'm Still Livin'7. Lily Allen:
Alright, Still8. DJ Drama & Lil Wayne:
Dedication 29. Trae:
Restless10. Celtic Frost:
MonotheistAs for the whole blog-pop meme, I think it's a little misleading. Every year has its frisky and ambitious pop stars; if blogs existed in 1982, maybe we'd all be patting ourselves on the backs for Prince and Duran Duran. And most of the success stories mentioned weren't really success stories, at least not in the US. Lady Sovereign had a fun, cartoony video that did OK on TRL for a week or so, but it didn't translate to album sales. Lily Allen might be a pop star in England, she'll crash and burn if her label is dumb enough to push her in mainstream pop markets over here. Only Gnarls Barkley really found a popular niche for themselves, and that success has more to do with one great and uncategorizeable than it does with all the press that might've come their way. Until the Annuals and Beirut start dominating drive-time playlists, I'm afraid blog-pop will be a blogger's fantasy.
Instead, this might've been the year of
Grey's Anatomy-pop or
VH1 Artist-to-Watch-pop, as most of this year's big sellers came from blandly anonymous hacks like James Blunt or the Fray. Old-school personalities like Justin and Beyonce were able to hang, but plenty of American record buyers, it seems, could really give a fuck about persona. Those guys who get their CDs displayed on Starbucks counters are making a sort of fuzzily utilitarian brand of pop that's outselling rap and rock on a disturbingly regular basis. The year's other big commercial winners were Nashville country and Disney teenpop; nothing else can sell to save its life. Album sales are plummeting across the board. A couple of weeks ago, the
Dreamgirls soundtrack hit Billboard's number one position after selling only 66,000 copies, the lowest total since Soundscan opened shop. Unless some huge new paradigm suddenly materializes, a couple more years like 2006 will mean we won't have the record industry to kick around much longer.