Showing posts with label Inside Out. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inside Out. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 31, 2019

The Best of the 10's - Danny's Best Movies of the Decade!



- Well, we did it - we made it to 2020! At times though, it felt like we just barely got there. And the great films of the decade often reflected the anger, the angst, the anxieties of the times we live in - as well as the need to preserve things like truth, and compassion, and empathy, and hope.

The decade saw new movies from legendary filmmakers - Scorsese, Spielberg, The Coen Brothers, Paul Thomas Anderson, David Fincher, George Miller, Quentin Tarantino, and more. But it also saw the rise of countless exciting new voices. People like Steve McQueen, Greta Gerwig, Bong Joon Ho, Ava Duvernay, Alex Garland, Ryan Coogler, Taika Waititi - and so many more.

These past ten years have, in many ways, flown by. The previous decade, for me, was marked by change. I graduated from high school, and college, and moved to LA. This decade - well, it's been more about plugging away, grinding it out, and figuring out how to build the life for myself that I want. But one thing is clear: almost no experiences were better, or more memorable, or more meaningful than the times I had with the movies.

Here's to a great decade ahead.


THE BEST MOVIES OF THE 2010's:


1. Mad Max: Fury Road

- The best and most heart-pounding action movie ever made, this improbably amazing sequel from director George Miller is the most incredible cinematic experience of the decade. It's filled with memorable characters, jaw-dropping set pieces, all-timer performances, and an urgent message that felt much-needed this decade. And how often, in these crazy last few years, have we all felt like Furiosa - donning our warpaint, bracing for battle, and running/racing/escaping towards a sometimes seemingly-impossible dream of a better future. Mad Max is my pick for the decade's best.


2. The Social Network

- When David Fincher's film was first released, it felt important. Now, it feels vital. A brilliantly-written, amazingly-directed, impeccably-acted film - the movie is a tech-world origin story for our time. Writer Aaron Sorkin's dialogue has never been sharper, and Fincher's direction has never been more confident - he imbues even small moments with a near-apocalyptic intensity.


3. Boyhood

- Richard Linklater's crowning achievement - shot over a decade - is an incredibly moving portrayal of growing up that impeccably captures moments big and small. It's a unique cinematic achievement that may never again be replicated. Linklater created a film that gave us an unprecedented feeling of watching a life unfolding before our eyes.


4. Her

-What was once sci-fi dystopian fiction is now nearly reality. That alone nets Her a spot near the top of this list - but the film is also just incredibly well-made. It's riveting. I remember seeing it in the theater - you could hear a pin drop at certain moments. What director Spike Jonze accomplished with this one is right up there with his other great directorial efforts like Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind - like that film, this is a movie that will provoke discussion well into the next decade.


5. Inception

- Christopher Nolan's pop-cultural atom bomb shows the director at his pulse-pounding best. The movie nearly vibrates with thunderous intensity, and its twisty sci-fi plot was, is, and will be debated for years to come. 


6. The Wolf of Wall Street

- Martin Scorsese's best film of the decade is also one of the legendary director's all-time masterworks. A scathing satire of Wall Street greed and excess, the film felt like essential art following the economic crash at the end of the last decade.


7. Spider-Man: Into the Spiderverse

- The more I thought about this movie, the more I was in awe of it. It's nearly perfect. The way it introduces so many characters, so quickly, yet makes us care so much about each of them. The way it looks. The way it emotionally involves you. The way it gives you so many moments of sheer cinematic awesomeness.


8. Jojo Rabbit

- A minor miracle of a movie, Jojo Rabbit is hilarious and heartfelt and subversive and daring and really, really shouldn't work. But this story about a Hitler-worshipping young boy in Nazi Germany - who slowly begins to shake off the cobwebs and see the error of his ways - somehow becomes both a brilliant satire of times past and a vital reflection of the times we live in now. Well done, Taika Waititi.


9. Scott Pilgrim vs. The World

-Edgar Wright's rock n' roll action-comedy is the decade's ultimate new cult classic. Mixing ultra-stylized visuals, quotable comedy, and a hefty dose of Millennial angst - Scott Pilgrim is, quite simply, one of the coolest movies ever.


10. Inside Out

- Pixar's best movie of the decade, Inside Out was a movie about empathy at a time when empathy was sorely needed. An instant-classic that makes you laugh, cry, and actually come away with a better understanding of your fellow humans. Pretty remarkable.



THE NEXT BEST:


11. Cloud Atlas

- The Wachowski's time-spanning epic is a truly one of a kind film that left me floored. It's a sprawling, ambitious, thematically-rich epic that is practically bursting with ideas, philosophy, high-concept storytelling, and audio-visual fireworks.


12. The Handmaiden

- A true stunner from one of the great directors, Chan Wook Park. The Handmaiden casts a spell from moment one - and despite its length it leaves you wanting more. The entire story turns on its head halfway through, making you question everything you thought you knew about its characters.


13. The Witch

- One of the creepiest and most genuinely disturbing horror movies ever made. Director Robert Eggers made a film that might have been great even without the horror element - but when things ramped up, they *really* ramped up. The Witch almost feels like something you shouldn't be watching.


14. 12 Years a Slave

- A riveting look at a life in slavery, this film featured several star-making turns. Here is a film that is a stark reminder of the horrors of slavery. But man, this is also a cinematic tour de force - an utterly captivating, tension-packed narrative filled with unforgettable moments.


15. The Raid: Redemption / The Raid 2

- Arguably two of the best, most insane action movies ever. Jaw-dropping. Directed by Welsh-born Gareth Evans, these Indonesian-set films, in my view, forever raised the bar for martial-arts action cinema.


16. Planet of the Apes (trilogy)

- One of the greatest movie trilogies ever, the rebooted Apes had everything - great action, great characters, incredible f/x, and a lot to say. These movies transcended being mere blockbusters to become something truly special. They masterfully follows in the grand tradition of the original film (and in the tradition of original Apes writer Rod Serling) - for they are a profound, Twilight Zone reflection of our own world.


17. Eighth Grade

- Writer/director Bo Burnham absolutely kills it with this one - delivering a movie that's hilarious, emotional, and spot-on in its depiction of life as an eighth grader. Sure, some of the details were specific to 2018 - but the genius of the film is that it hits on universal truths that anyone who's ever been 13 can immediately relate to.


18. Parasite

- A searing look at class struggle, Parasite is also just an incredible piece of edge-of-your seat filmmaking. It's a darkly funny thriller that has Hitchock-ian levels of tension, all while delivering some biting, eat-the-rich social commentary.


19. Gravity

- An incredible journey into deep space, seeing Gravity in IMAX 3D was an all-time amazing movie-going experience. Gravity is also a powerful reminder of the human spirit. Space travel has always represented the pinnacle of human achievement, and that to me is what Gravity is really about - the will and desire to literally reach for the stars.


20. The Grey

- One of the most purely badass and downright awesome movies of the decade. A stunning, stirring tale of man vs. nature - more specifically, Liam Neeson vs. hordes of giant, merciless WOLVES. But it's a tale told with style and a surprising amount of substance, ultimately becoming a more-epic-than-expected rumination on life, death, and finding the will to fight on no matter the cost.


21. Uncut Gems

- Uncut Gems will put directing powerhouses The Safdie Brothers on your radar, and it will also remind you that Adam Sandler is a uniquely talented actor when cast in the right film. This movie never stops, never relents, never slows down. It's kinetic, intense-as-hell.


22. The World's End

- More than fitting capper to the thematically-linked trilogy that started with Shaun of the Dead and continued with Hot Fuzz. In fact, this may be the best of the three - a film that's at once an all-too-relatable meditation about how you can't go home again


23. Drive

- Stylish to the extreme (and with a killer soundtrack to boot), Drive was the neon-lit breakout for director Nicolas Winding Refn. It's rare that a film combines the over-the-top badassery of the best B-movies with the sense of artistry inherent in many Oscar-worthy dramas. But Drive is that movie and more.


24. Toy Story 3

- Pixar imbued its Toy Story franchise with incredible poignancy and surprising darkness in this third and best installment. A film that kids and adults can enjoy with equal enthusiasm, Toy Story 3 is another credit to the continued genius of Pixar.


25. Whiplash

- "Not quite my tempo." Damien Chazelle's breakout film was a nightmarish meditation on the pain and suffering that comes with attempting to be the best. Unforgettable. In this film, music is a battle, and Miles Teller's young, would-be-drummer extraordinaire is at war.


THE NEXT BEST

26.) Nightcrawler

- A dark satire of our culture of exploitation, Nightcrawler sadly becomes more relevant with each passing year.


27.) The Florida Project

- An incredible film about the hopes and dreams of those who are marginalized and left behind in our society, I still think about the ending of this movie all the time.


28.) Dunkirk

-  Christopher Nolan's ultra-intense war movie takes you on an unforgettable, visceral journey.


29.) Roma

- Alfonso Cuaron paints an incredible portrait of a life remembered in this affecting, amazingly-directed film.


30.) Phantom Thread

- Paul Thomas Anderson's at times overlooked, not-quite-what-it-seems masterpiece features an all-time great (and possibly final!) performance from Daniel Day Lewis.


31.) Inside Llewyn Davis

- The Coen Bros' best film of the decade is another hard-to-pin-down film from two of the best ever. It's incredibly-written, funny, weird, mysterious, and deeply layered.


32.) This Is The End

- One of the flat-out funniest movies ever, this over-the-top comedy features an all-star cast of celebrities (playing themselves!) dealing with the end of the world in incredibly hilarious fashion.


33.) How To Train Your Dragon

- One of my favorite-ever animated movies, How to Train Your Dragon featured soaring visuals, an amazing score, and an epic mythology - as well as a deeply moving father-son story at its core.


34.) Creed

- Ryan Coogler injected a second life into the Rocky series, casting Rocky Balboa as the mentor to a new generation of fighter. Michael B. Jordan made Adonis Creed into the hero we needed this decade.


35.) Interstellar

- Christopher Nolan brought us to the farthest regions of the universe in this mind-bending, mind-blowing science fiction epic.


36.) Ex Machina

- Alex Garland was one of my favorite directors of the decade. His sci-fi AI film Ex Machina was an awesomely dark and crazy thriller that has to be seen to be believed.


37.) It Follows

- I was such a big fan of this horror movie that it inspired me to try my hand at writing horror movies. The film that helped open the floodgates to the decade's new wave of indie horror movie-making, It Follows is a creepy, fun, atmospheric blast of horror movie magic.


38.) The Irishman

- A fitting summation of a life in crime films. But this time, Scorsese's usual rock and roll filmmaking style is tempered by an elegiac, mournful look at aging characters filled with regret.


39.) Once Upon a Time in Hollywood

- The film is quieter and more contemplative than typical Tarantino fare, but that makes it all the better of a film to live in for a bit and take in all the great little details - from the world-building to the great dialogue moments to the iconic Brad Pitt performance at its center.


40.) The Shape of Water

- Guillermo Del Toro is a filmmaker who I have so much admiration for, and The Shape of Water might just be his best work to date. It's a monster movie, a love story, and an adventure film wrapped in one - but Del Toro's passion and attention to detail is evident in every frame.


41.) Burning

- This Korean thriller is one of those crazy, holy-$%&# movies that is hard to talk about for fear of spoilers. Suffice it to say, it's an unforgettable movie about revenge and presumption of guilt and man, it goes to some dark places.


42.) Hell or High Water

- This badass crime thriller pits two young would-be criminals against a grizzled sheriff in the form of one Jeff by-god Bridges. I mean, 'nuff said - right? But the movie also shows an America - decaying, desperate - crawling towards an apocalyptic end-times.


43.) Moana

- One of the best Disney animated movies of the decade, Moana is a colorful, uplifting journey filled with fantastic music and - finally - a Disney "princess" who feels modern and empowered.


44.) They Came Together

- The comedic geniuses behind Wet Hot American Summer came together again (see what I did there?) for what was, I think, another absolutely hilarious film. If you like weird, absurdist comedy - it doesn't get much better than this.


45.) Moonrise Kingdom

- One of Wes Anderson's best, as the director's whimsical sensibilities play perfectly with a movie about childhood and first loves.


46.) Snowpiercer

- Bong Joon Ho's modern cult classic is an insane journey packed with crazy action, an up-for-anything cast (Tilda Swinton!), and some pretty cutting social commentary to boot.


47.) The Ballad of Buster Scruggs

- The Coen Bros' Wild West anthology of weird tales about life and death is, I think, a low-key masterpiece. It can be riotously funny and also oddly poignant - and it's chock full of great performances.


48.) Black Panther

- Wakanda forever! Marvel's best movie resonates because of the thematic depth that Ryan Coogler brings to the table. The movie's got cool action and the requisite superhero bombast, but it also felt relevant to the here and now in a way that the late, great Stan Lee always strove for in his comics.


49.) Coco

- Another Pixar great, Coco tackles some potentially dark subject matter with wit and humor and heart in the sort of way that Pixar is so incredibly skilled at.


50.) Spotlight

- The searing true story of how a group of determined Boston Globe reporters uncovered the Catholic Church scandal, this one is an important reminder of the power of the press and of a society that values truth above all.


THE NEXT 50:
 

51.) Young Adult
52.) 13 Assassins
53.) Black Swan
54.) Logan
55.) First Reformed
56.) The Hateful Eight
57.) Mission: Impossible - Fallout
58.) Captain America: The Winter Soldier
59.) The Lighthouse
60.) Midsommar
61.) Zero Dark Thirty
62.) Beasts of No Nation
63.) Us
64.) Frances Ha
65.) Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
66.) The Big Sick
67.) Okja
68.) Avengers: Infinity War
69.) Long Shot
70.) Ladybird
71.) Apollo 11
72.) Captain Phillips
73.) Django Unchained
74.) 1917
75.) The LEGO Movie
76.) Green Room
77.) Knives Out
78.) Warrior
79.) Captain America: The First Avenger
80.) Short Term 12
81.) Martha Marcy May Marlene
82.) A Better Life
83.) Star Wars: The Last Jedi
84.) Suspiria (2018)
85.) Big Hero 6
86.) Guardians of the Galaxy
87.) True Grit
88.) Room
89.) Selma
90.) Tron Legacy
91.) Pacific Rim
92.) Edge of Tomorrow
93.) Lincoln
94.) Sing Street
95.) Thor: Ragnarok
96.) Train To Busan
97.) The Farewell
98.) The Conjuring
99.) Nebraska
100.) Searching

30 More That Just Missed The Cut:

The Guest, Attack the Block, Hello My Name Is Doris, Dredd, You're Next, Wild Rose, Mandy, Get Out, The Nice Guys, IT, The Cabin in the Woods, The Shallows, Obvious Child, The Adventures of Tintin, I Don't Feel at Home In This World Anymore, Predestination, Looper, Safety Not Guaranteed, The Way Way Back, Shoplifters, Raw, The Post, Kick-Ass, Locke, John Wick (1-3), The Babadook, Crimson Peak, Three Identical Strangers, Stoker, Fruitvale Station

Wednesday, December 30, 2015

THE BEST OF 2015 - The Best MOVIES Of The Year


THE YEAR IN MOVIES - 2015

- It's been quite a year at the movies. But let's face it, this will forever go down as the year of Star Wars. All year, the anticipation built for The Force Awakens. And since December 18th, it feels like all anyone who's a movie fan can talk or write or think about is The Force Awakens. So what does it all mean for movies? First of all, let's take a step back and acknowledge that Star Wars is much more than just a movie - it's a giant multimedia franchise with decades of cultural history and baggage. When we see a new Star Wars movie, we're not *just* watching a movie - we're practically watching the next chapter in our collective pop-mythology. From a critical standpoint, it's hard to talk about The Force Awakens and not get caught up in all the other *stuff* that is tangential to the movie itself. Hence, endless think-pieces that, while interesting food for thought, are often merely projecting the writer's predisposed feelings about Star Wars (and George Lucas, JJ Abrams, Disney, the prequels, the merchandising, and blockbuster movies in general). The fact is though - The Force Awakens was a pretty amazing piece of pop entertainment. It may have had some issues with its storytelling (too much contrived mystery, too much choppy plotting), but let's also admit that the film's story has been analyzed far beyond that of most big blockbuster films. If we'd put the original trilogy and/or any number of other big blockbusters through a similar microscope, we'd find as many (and likely many more) holes. The Force Awakens works so well though because it has the kind of character, heart, visual artistry, and old-fashioned "movie magic" that so many big films today lack. It's a movie that begs for a second or third viewing. It's a movie that will inspire people. That to me is the ultimate takeaway from the movie's success - the epic sci-fi stories, superhero sagas, and fantasy worlds that were once for a select few are now, officially, for everyone. Ultimately, I think that's a big net positive.

And yet ... there is another. The best big blockbuster of 2015 was, no question, the superlative Mad Max: Fury Road. It's hard to describe to skeptics just why the movie works so well - you just have to see it to understand. But no other movie this year so completely floored me. The combination of incredible characters, amazing world-design, propulsive action, and thematic depth made this one of the best action/adventure movies of all time. Prior to Fury Road, the Mad Max franchise was iconic. Now, it's a whole new level of legendary.

Indeed, 2015 was a landmark year for genre film. It Follows was one of the best horror movies of the last several years - a low-budget indie that was so creative and fun that it made you want to go make your own horror movie immediately (seriously: the movie inspired me to take a stab at my first-ever horror screenplay). Ex Machina was exactly the kind of high-minded sci-fi film I love - dark, boundary-pushing, and thought-provoking. Same goes for the future cult-classic Predestination. The Martian mixed real science with a near-future sci-fi premise to achieve greatness - and it marked a welcome return to space for the great Ridley Scott. We got a new Western from the king of genre mash-ups, Quentin Tarantino - and man, The Hateful Eight was a rip-roaring exercise in awesomeness, with an all-star cast of badass actors. And it wasn't even the only badass Western this year starring Kurt Russell! As if his role in The Hateful Eight wasn't enough, Russell also starred in the certifiably kick-ass Western/horror mash-up Bone Tomahawk, and appeared in Furious 7. 2015 was a full-on Kurt Russell Renaissance. For someone like me who grew up on movies like Escape From NY, this was cinematic bliss. Speaking of Furious 7, it was one of a couple of great action movies this year. Another standout was Mission Impossible: Rogue Nation - it was a franchise-best installment, full of some of the coolest set-piece action scenes I've seen in this or any year.

If 2015 had a failing, it's that the big, prestige, Oscar bait-ish movies in many cases fell flat, at least for me. Only a handful - Spotlight, Room, Brooklyn - really lived up to their full potential. Interestingly, one of the year's best high-minded dramas came from Netflix. I was late to watch Beasts of No Nation - I mean, how good could a movie created by Netflix really be? Turns out, it could be amazing. Beasts was a true cinematic tour de force and one of the year's best.

Another underdog that proved to have championship potential was Creed. I wasn't among the doubters - I love the Rocky series, and knew it was in good hands with director Ryan Coogler and star Michael B. Jordan. And Creed did not disappoint - it was not just a great Rocky movie, but a great film, period. Pixar too proved itself again to be the reigning champ of animation. Inside Out was one of their best-ever films - a shockingly sophisticated, amazingly-crafted look at human emotion that was a great film for both kids and adults.

As always, I didn't see everything. But I did see a lot - and overall, I felt really good about the films of 2015. Here are my favorites.

DANNY'S BEST MOVIES OF 2015:

1.) Mad Max: Fury Road

- With Mad Max: Fury Road, director George Miller delivered a master class in how to do sci-fi/action filmmaking right. The action is non-stop and unrelenting, but never boring. It escalates in the same manner as a great song - slowing down, picking up again, and then bringing it all home like some sort of cinematic power ballad. I could talk for paragraphs just about the world of this movie. The characters, the vehicles, the mythology, the look and feel of the movie's post-apocalyptic wasteland. But I could talk just as much about how powerful the movie is thematically: it's one of the best-ever movies about breaking free from oppression and fighting for the right to free will. The battle of wills between Imperator Furiosa and Immortan Joe is one for the ages - an epic chase through the wasteland with life itself at stake.

2.) Room

- There was no moment more tense for me in a movie theater in 2015 than the "escape" scene in Room. It was one of the most edge-of-your-seat moments I've ever experienced while watching a movie. Room completely and utterly makes you root for its characters to get away from the hellish place they're trapped in. And then, it makes you root almost as hard for them to conquer the emotional trauma that they're left with in the aftermath. Room is amazing. Brie Larson's acting here is next-level - even better than her turn in Short Term 12. Kid actor Jacob Tremblay is phenomenal - a truly affecting performance. This is brave, bold storytelling that counterbalances its darkness with life-affirming hope and joy. Go watch Room if you haven't yet seen it.

3.) Spotlight

- Spotlight works on two levels. One, it's an old-school paranoid thriller, a crackling investigative procedural that is a tribute to the power of real, nose-to-the-grindstone journalism. In a world where real journalism is increasingly rare, it's a potent reminder of what we've lost. Second, it's a jaw-dropping reminder of the evils of institutionalized abuse. It shows you the full extent of the Catholic priest abuse scandal with mind-numbing reminders about just how far-reaching the problem was and just how much effort was put into keeping it out of the public eye. The movie has a true ensemble cast. It's not a showy movie, but it has a building intensity that, by the film's end, has built to a fever pitch. Extremely powerful filmmaking.

4.) Inside Out

- Inside Out is an amazing achievement from Pixar. Somehow, it distills complex emotional truths into easy-to-understand concepts and characters. It captures the way we think and feel with startling accuracy. But it doesn't stop there - the film's representation of our thoughts and feelings shows us how alike we all are on the inside. To that end, the film is a remarkable meditation on the power of empathy. Plus, it's also a lot of fun - with a fantastic voice cast and lots of humor. Not to mention, it's got incredible visuals that fully immerse you inside the movie's literal mind-trip. To me, this stands among the finest films Pixar has ever produced - and that says a lot.

5.) The Hateful Eight

- It's a violent, brutal, mean movie, but man, The Hateful Eight is a rollicking good time. With Tarantino, you know you're in the hands of a great storyteller, and this is a story that's got a lot to say. About justice, about race, about revenge, about war, about America. But it says its piece via dynamite dialogue, via larger-than-life characters, with a style and flair and sense of showmanship that are the trademarks of a great Tarantino film. The cast here is populated by all-time badasses doing career-best work. Samuel L. Jackson, Walton Goggins, Kurt Russell, and Jennifer Jason Leigh are all fantastic. This is a movie I won't soon forget, and it's a more-than-worthy entry in the Tarantino cannon.

6.) Ex Machina

- I was an early supporter of Ex Machina, and I'm glad to see that its fanbase has only grown in the months since its release. If nothing else, Ex Machina was further proof that writer/director Alex Garland is one of the best and most interesting filmmakers working today. The guy earned geek-cred for writing movies like 28 Days Later, Sunshine, and Dredd. But man, what a directorial debut with Ex Machina. In a world where sci-fi is too often equated with overblown blockbusters in which lots of stuff blows up, here was a smaller-scale, more intimate movie that really got into the science fiction of it all: here is this new technology - what does it say about us as humans, and how can it be used for good or ill? The movie's got three fantastic leads - Domhnall Gleeson, Oscar Issac, and, in a breakthrough performance, Alicia Vikander as an instantly-iconic android with an agenda. One of the best modern science fiction films, no question.

7.) Creed

- My hope for Creed is that this is the new template for how to continue a franchise. Enough with soulless reboots that lack respect for the source material. If you're going to revive a franchise, do it the right way, and do it in a way where the torch is properly passed. Creed is the ultimate passing-of-the-torch movie. It introduces a new franchise with a new star (a great Michael B. Jordan) and a new director (Ryan Coogler) that could theoretically be the driving forces behind many more movies in the series, for years to come. But it also never forgets its Rocky legacy, and in fact, it gives the Rocky character a great role to play and Sylvester Stallone the opportunity to turn in one of his best-ever performances. Creed feels right. It's a new generation of Rocky movie that's new and fresh and different, and yet it encapsulates all that makes Rocky great. The champ is here, and his name is Creed.

8.) Beasts of No Nation

- A lot of the big, sprawling dramas of 2015 left me feeling a bit empty. But Beasts of No Nation shook me to my core. A moving, powerful, unforgettable story - it's the fictional tale of a young boy in a war-torn African country, who is recruited by an unhinged general to be a soldier in his child army. The details are fictional, but the core truths at the movie's center are all too real - an affecting, eye-opening look at the world we live in today. Idris Elba is in acting beast-mode here, turning in the performance of a lifetime as the fearsome Commandant. And child actor Abraham Attah is phenomenal - showing us how a wide-eyed, innocent kid is turned into a soulless killer. Director Cary Fukunaga shows us the unrelenting chaos of war in absorbing, can't-look-away detail. The movie is a gut-puncher, but it's one of the year's best.

9.) It Follows

- Over the last couple of years, I've been really digging the indie-horror movement that's been completely subverting expectations about what the genre can be. Now, in the wake of films like House of the Devil, You're Next, and The Babadook comes It Follows - one of the freshest, coolest, most creative horror movies I've seen in years. The movie's premise is killer - a spectral force that can look like anyone stalks its victims anywhere and everywhere, and the only way to get rid of it is to pass it on through sex. It's the ultimate STD. But aside from that hook, what makes It Follows work so well is the atmosphere director David Robert Mitchell creates - a creepy homage to the works of John Carpenter, and other 80's horror movie icons that emphasized mood and tone over cheap jump-scares. To cap it all off, the movie features a great lead performance from Maika Monroe, who is quickly becoming an iconic Scream Queen of modern cinema.

10.) Star Wars: The Force Awakens

- What other movie generated as much pure excitement in 2015 - or ever? - as The Force Awakens? As I said up top, this is a hard one to talk about purely as a film, because there's so much baggage and weight of expectation that comes with this being the continuation of a saga that fans have waited decades for. But I will say this: the enthusiasm that people have for this movie is no accident. The secret of the film's success is taking the sort of classic, mythic storytelling of the original Star Wars and combining it with new, modern, diverse characters that feel vital and relevant for the times we live in. Star Wars has always had space-opera on a grand scale. But now it's also got a beating heart that, at times, eluded even the original films. Yes, JJ Abrams and team are building on the universe and themes that George Lucas created. But they've also launched a new era for Star Wars in epic fashion. That is no small feat. The movie is imperfect, yes. But at the end of the day, The Force is undeniably strong in this one.

JUST MISSED THE CUT:


11.)  The Martian

- A riveting journey into space and a harrowing survival story, this movie mixes humor, high-adventure, and a real respect for the science of it all, The Martian is a reminder of why Ridley Scott is one of the greatest of all time when it comes to epic, immersive sci-fi. It's got incredible visuals, a smart and witty script courtesy of Drew Goddard, a great leading-man turn from Matt Damon, and a stacked supporting cast.

12.) Wild Tales

- An anthology film about extremes of human behavior, this Argentinian movie is so good that it was nominated for an Oscar last year. It wasn't watchable in America until 2015, but man, I'm glad it was finally made available. It's a funny, shocking, highly-entertaining set of stories in the tradition of things like Black Mirror and The Twilight Zone - twisty morality plays that have to be seen to be believed.

13.) Brooklyn

- Even if you don't like romance, this movie is such a well done one that I guarantee it will win you over. Why? Because this absolutely charming period-piece is a winner - featuring a star-making turn from Saoirse Ronan, as an Irish immigrant in Brooklyn looking to start a new life, but still drawn back to the comfort and familiarity of her home country. The movie's got a smart, funny script from Nick Hornby - and really surprised me with just how much it drew me in and made me cross my fingers for a happy ending for its characters.

14.) Bone Tomahawk

- What's so cool about Bone Tomahawk is that it would still be pretty badass even if it was just a straight-up Western. The movie's first half is just that - and even then, it kicks ass thanks to a fantastic cast (Kurt Russell in top form as the gruff sheriff, Richard Jenkins ruling it as the bumbling deputy) and old-school solid filmmaking chops. But then, the movie kicks into overdrive when it's revealed that the guys Russell and co. are chasing are actually ... wait for it ... deadly mutant cannibals! Hells yeah. If you like badass movies, then this one is essential viewing.

15.) Sicario

- A grim n' gritty descent into hell-on-earth, Sicario is a harrowing look at the violence and chaos that can erupt in Mexican border towns like Juarez as part of the covert but deadly drug-wars being raged. With her intense turn here as an FBI agent recruited for a secret mission over the border, Emily Blunt solidifies herself as cinema's reigning most-badass-female. Meanwhile, Benicio Del Toro turns in a searing performance as an operative whose emotional scars have turned him into a stone-cold killer.

THE NEXT BEST:

16.) Predestination

- Predestination launched unceremoniously on VOD and digital-download services in January, but being a sucker for anything time-travel related, I gave it a look. As it turns out, this Ethan Hawke-starring adaptation of a Robert Heinlein story is actually really great - a well-acted film (in addition to Hawke, there's an incredible central performance from Sarah Snook that deserves to be talked about) with an absolutely killer twist ending. For me, this is a new sci-fi favorite.

17.) Crimson Peak

- Guillermo Del Toro's latest is an atmospheric gothic romance that also happens to be a ghost story. But this movie is pure Del Toro - which means its visuals are jaw-dropping, with unmatched attention to detail and an eye-popping artfulness. If you ever dreamed of a Del Toro-directed haunted mansion movie, well, here it is. And as an added bonus, Mia Wasikowska, Tom Hiddleston, and Jessica Chastain are all amazing here, gothing it up like nobody's business. This movie deserved to do better at the box office, but like other Del Toro films it will live on as an all-time cult classic.

18.) Dope

- Dope is the sort of under-the-radar breakthrough that you love to see as a film fan. It's a Lebowski-esque crime caper, in which a geeky inner-city teen accidentally gets stuck with a bag full of drugs that makes him a target for criminals and cops alike. Shameik Moore breaks out big-time here as nerdy Malcom, and director Rick Famuyiwa shows that he is one to watch.

19.) Kingsman: The Secret Service

- "Manners maketh man." So goes the super-spy credo of Kingsmea's dapper agent played by Colin Firth. Firth kills it in this one - an insanely fun, wonderfully vulgar, over-the-top, action-packed spy movie satire that is one of 2015's best blockbusters. Matthew Vaughn's adaptation of the Mark Millar comic book actually improves on the source material, delivering an applause-worthy deconstruction of the Bond archetype that deserves sequels of its own. Vaughn again proves that he's one of the best, most interesting action directors working today.

20.) Cop Car

- A down n' dirty grindhouse flick featuring a killer turn from Kevin Bacon, this movie casts Bacon as a psycho cop on a rage-filled quest to find his stolen vehicle. As it turns out, his police cruiser's been taken by two runaway kids, who have no clue to what extent they've messed with the wrong guy's car. I really dug this movie - it's a total showcase for director Jon Watts. It's no wonder he's been tapped to direct the next Spider-Man movie, because Cop Car shows that he's the real deal.

21.) Steve Jobs

- I had mixed feelings about this one upon exiting the theater, but over time, I really began to warm up to it. I think the key to appreciating this effort from director Danny Boyle and writer Aaron Sorkin is to realize that it's by no means a literal biography of Jobs, but a theatrical, representational microcosm of his life's defining work. It's a smart, thought-provoking look at the cost that great success and insatiable drive can take on one's soul. Michael Fassbender is electric in the leading role, and the supporting cast is also amazing - Kate Winslet, Jeff Daniels, and Seth Rogen each more than hold their own delivering Sorkin's hard-charging, hellfire-and-brimstone dialogue.

22.) Furious 7

- If I'm being honest, I've got to say this: Furious 7 is one of the most viscerally awesome and kick-ass action movies I've ever seen. Sure, it's all big, dumb fun - but what fun it is. Director Justin Lin cranks things up to eleven with this one, delivering some all-time great action set pieces that left me with my jaw squarely on the floor. The movie's just got a great sense of propulsive fun, with a lovable cast of action titans, including Vin Diesel, Jason Statham, Kurt Russell, Michelle Rodriguez, Ronda Rousey, and The Rock. Plus, it has an unexpected element of heart as well. The death of Paul Walker while the movie was still filming was an unbearably sad tragedy, but the movie pays tribute to Paul in a way that is honestly and sincerely moving. I'm sure few ever expected to shed a tear at a Fast & Furious movie, but this one both kicks ass and tugs at the ol' heartstrings.

23.) Mr. Holmes

- In this tale of an aged Sherlock Holmes' final case, Sir Ian McKellan delivers an acting master class. Playing both a younger, spry-er Holmes as well as an older, more brittle version, McKellan is absolutely phenomenal. An interesting, emotionally-involving twist on the Sherlock Holmes legend, this one is a must-watch for fans of the character and/or of McKellan.

24.) Mission Impossible: Rogue Nation

- Another great action movie that surpassed expectations, this one excels thanks to the back-to-basics direction of Christopher McQuarrie. McQuarrie understands the fundamentals of constructing a great action scene, always clearly establishing the stakes and creating a palpable sense of danger for the characters. Tom Cruise brings his usual high-intensity to the movie as Ethan Hunt, but this one finally makes us care about his supporting cast as well. Plus, Rebecca Ferguson is superb as the movie's deadly femme fatale. I guarantee we'll be seeing a lot more from her in the years to come.

25.) Mistress America

- Another home run for the creative combo of Noah Baumbach and Greta Gerwig. The two created a great film with Frances Ha, and they craft another winner here with Mistress America. They really seem to be making a play to be the modern-day Woody Allen - telling witty, funny, keenly-observed stories about young people in the big city. Gerwig also continues to shine as an actress - here, she is a barely-held-together ball of manic energy that isn't quite the queen of New York she thinks herself to be. I can't wait to see more movies from this team.


MORE GREAT FILMS OF 2015:

26.) Bridge of Spies

- Steven Spielberg tackles the Cold War in this poignant tale of a decent man doing his best to uphold the best of America's values, during a time when those values seem all but lost. The movie gets off to a slow start, but builds towards a whopper of a finale that has a lot to say not just about the Cold War, but about where we are today as a country. Tom Hanks is reliably excellent, but it's Mark Rylance who is the show-stealer - delivering a quietly amazing performance as a Soviet Spy who wants simply to be treated with dignity.

27.) Carol

- Director Todd Haynes makes Carol a powerful story about forbidden romance - less so with words and more so with subtle gestures, glances, and subtext. The always-great Cate Blanchett is a force of nature here, but the real star is Rooney Mara - in a nuanced, understated, memorable performance that boils over with bubbling-beneath-the-surface emotion. An effective look at how beneath the surface of idyllic 1950's America lay harsh realities of social oppression and emotional repression.

28.) Straight Outta Compton

- At times, Straight Outta Compton feels a little too much like a standard-issue biopic. But when it really pops - showing us the big moments in the career of NWA that changed music and pop-culture forever - it's chill-inducingly good. The cast here is universally excellent, and the movie effectively shows how the NWA were at the forefront of a culture war that still rages today. But when the focus is on the music, the movie really shines - capturing the sonic alchemy and lyrical power that made the NWA hip-hop revolutionaries.

29.) Spy

-  Spy is Melissa McCarthy's best-ever movie, and the one that most takes advantage of her considerable comedic skill-set. Paul Feig's witty, playfully subversive send-up of the spy genre was one of 2015's biggest surprises - a film that was really funny, had shockingly great action scenes, and had a lot to say on a meta level about how a great female comic like McCarthy can be used and abused by a Hollywood system that tends to typecast her in unflattering roles. Spy gave me great hope for Feig's upcoming Ghostbusters relaunch. This guy gets it.

30.) The Big Short

- Adam McKay's foray into more serious-business filmmaking - a look at the mid-00's housing market crash that led to financial crisis - is both commendably educational and satisfyingly pissed-off. The film features excellent performances from Steve Carell, Christian Bale, Ryan Gosling, and more - each playing guys who saw the crash coming, but were faced with a system that couldn't see or didn't want to admit that it was on the way. The movie goes a bit off the rails at times, with random cutaways and ADD-pacing. But it also felt like the chip-on-its-shoulder movie we needed going into the 2016 election season.

HONORABLE MENTIONS - OTHER HIGHLY RECOMMENDED MOVIES FROM THIS YEAR:

The Night Before
While We're Young
Me and Earl and the Dying Girl
What We Do In the Shadows
Avengers: Age of Ultron
Ant-Man
Goosebumps
Ted 2
Trainwreck
Sleeping With Other People
Trumbo
Everest
Unfriended

INDIVIDUAL 2015 AWARDS:

BEST LEAD ACTOR:

1.) Ian McKellan - Mr. Holmes
2.) Michael Fassbender - Steve Jobs
3.) Abraham Attah - Beasts of No Nation
4.) Matt Damon - The Martian
5.) Michael B. Jordan - Creed

BEST LEADING ACTRESS:

1.) Brie Larson - Room
2.) Saoirse Ronan - Brooklyn
3.) Charlize Theron - Mad Max: Fury Road
4.) Rooney Mara - Carol
5.) Emily Blunt - Sicario

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR:

1.) Idris Elba - Beasts of No Nation
2.) TIE: Mark Rylance - Bridge of Spies, Mark Ruffalo - Spotlight
3.) Sylvester Stallone - Creed
4.) TIE: Samuel L. Jackson and Walton Goggins - The Hateful Eight
5.) Jacob Tremblay - Room

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS:

1.) Jennifer Jason Leigh - The Hateful Eight
2.) Sarah Snook - Predestination
3.) Alicia Vikander - Ex Machina
4.) Kate Winslet - Steve Jobs
5.) Jessica Chastain - Crimson Peak

BEST DIRECTOR:

1.) George Miller - Mad Max: Fury Road
2.) Lenny Abrahamson - Room
3.) Quentin Tarantino - The Hateful Eight
4.) TIE: Cary Fukunaga - Beasts of No Nation, Ridley Scott - The Martian
5.) David Robert Mitchell - It Follows

BEST SCREENPLAY:

1.) Spotlight
2.) The Hateful Eight
3.) Brooklyn
4.) Ex Machina
5.) Steve Jobs
6.) Inside Out
7.) Dope
8.) Room
9.) Bone Tomahawk
10.) Creed

And that's it for 2015 - here's to an amazing year ahead, and to a year full of great movies.

Sunday, June 21, 2015

INSIDE OUT Is a New Pixar Classic




INSIDE OUT Review:

- To distill complex ideas and concepts into easily-palatable art that can be enjoyed and appreciated by all ages is no easy feat. And yet, with INSIDE OUT, the geniuses at Pixar do just that. They create a film so thematically rich and resonant that I have to say - it left me somewhat floored. This isn't the first film or TV show to look inside someone's head and anthropomorphize emotions. We've seen it in works from the old sitcom Herman's Head to Epcot Center's defunct ride Cranium Command. But never has a look inside a person's head been realized - visually or thematically - with this much thoughtfulness and artistry. INSIDE OUT is not just the best Pixar movie in years, it's right up there in the top two or three films that the storied studio has ever produced.

INSIDE OUT takes us inside the mind of young Riley, a girl who's been uprooted from her life in the Midwest to hilly, hippy San Francisco. The trauma of the move, combined with all of the normal preteen anxieties and awkwardness, means that a lot is going on inside Riley's head. And the film shows us how all of that plays out by going all in - showing us the inner workings of Riley's mind via personifications of Joy, Sadness, Fear, Anger, and Disgust.

The movie brilliantly conveys how these core emotions develop from infancy and through childhood, to the point where, in the preteen years, they once again begin to evolve and change. Watching the film from an adult perspective, there's an undeniable sense of nostalgia-tinged sense of loss in seeing Riley slowly stray from childhood innocence into pre-adult hyper-awareness of reality. Wonderment and imagination is supplanted by stress, social anxiety, familial frustration, and all-too-acute self-awareness. The effect is like watching a band make intricately composed music out of a few basic notes. It helps that the emotion-characters are so amazingly realized. Their designs are perfect - totally embodying - simply yet effectively - what each represents. And the voice-acting is similarly fantastic. Amy Poehler is award-worthy as Joy - spunky, caring, determined. But what's really interesting here is the interplay between Joy and Sadness. Sadness, voiced in a memorable and at times heartbreaking performance by The Office's Phylis Smith, is perhaps the film's most stand-out character. In part because Smith makes her both painfully reflective of the way in which we actually feel sadness, but also because the movie emphasizes just how important Sadness is in order for a person to experience Joy. The two characters are companions in the movie, just as the two emotions are intertwined in Riley's brain. It's a powerful idea that's at once both simple and incredibly layered - that in order to be well-rounded, empathetic people - we need to be able to experience and understand sadness.

There's a deep sense of nostalgia for childhood innocence in the film - it will likely have you thinking back to formative moments of your childhood in a way you likely haven't in a long while. But INSIDE OUT is also an incredibly fun and funny film. Louis Black was a standout to me as Anger. As with the other emotions, Anger seems to perfectly embody the way in which our own rage-meters actually get triggered. But man, Black is also hilarious in the role, serving as a red-hot rage-machine counterpoint to the sullen Sadness and peppy joy. Meanwhile, Mindy Kaling's snarky Disgust and Bill Hader's neurotic Fear round out the movie's comedic trio. When Joy and Sadness leave Riley's control center on a mission to prevent catastrophe, the scenes of Disgust, Fear, and Anger left to haplessly hold down the fort are consistently off-the-charts funny and entertaining.

What's also interesting is that, even though we get such a complex look at what's happening inside Riley's head, that fact never really undermines how great of a character Riley herself actually is. Riley could easily have felt like a walking puppet whose strings are being pulled. But instead, she feels fully-drawn and someone that we really, really root for. We just want her to turn out okay, and we cringe whenever Anger or Sadness or Disgust takes over and seems to derail her from being happy and her best self. Similarly, we can't help but feel a sense of loss as we see her growing up at the expense of childhood flights-of-fancy, like her almost-entirely-forgotten imaginary friend Bing-Bong (voiced amusingly by the always-great Richard Kind). But again, what's great is that while Riley's emotions are universal, she herself is still a very specific character. That means that the movie can have some real fun when it shows us fleeting flashes of other people's heads. The results are often really funny, but it's also sort of poignant to see how we can all be so different and yet so uncannily alike. This is a film that espouses empathy, and it does so in a deceptively smart and nuanced way.

INSIDE OUT would be an impressive film just by virtue of how spot-on it is in its representation of our memories, thoughts, and emotions. From the way our unconscious mind creates dreams and nightmares, to the way that an earworm ad jingle can get lodged in our brains, INSIDE OUT feels dead-on with its incredibly well-thought-out depiction of the human mind. Visually, Riley's mindscape is gorgeously rendered, with every aspect seemingly thought through to the last detail. At the same time, we never care about Joy and the rest of the emotions at the expense of Riley.

I could rave about INSIDE OUT for many more paragraphs, but I'll just compliment by saying that the film itself works in the same way as Riley's emotions do. This is a film that goes to some surprisingly dark and somber places, but in doing so it rewards us with true joy and heartfelt emotional connection. It's Exhibit A of what separates Pixar's best from the rest of the animation pack - they don't take shortcuts to get us emotionally involved in their stories - they don't hold back or pull punches, and that makes the payoff that much more meaningful. INSIDE OUT is a movie that will tug on the heartstrings of even jaded adults. But more importantly, there is an important and brilliantly-realized message here about understanding ourselves, and in doing so understanding and empathizing with others.

My Grade: A