Here they are at last! Out 1's First Annual Top 10 Lists. This year we should possibly give them a subtitle of "No Country For Different Opinions" as 3 of the 4 lists have the same #1 film and a certain film ranked 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th on the different lists. The quality of films this year has been much discussed and we have to agree. All we can do is hope for as strong of a year in 2008. If so, the 2000's are shaping up to be one hell of a decade for films.
JAMES HANSEN'S TOP 10
Honorable Mention (alphabetically): 12:08 East of Bucharest (Corneliu Porumboiu), Eastern Promises (David Cronenberg), Enchanted (Kevin Lima), Into Great Silence (Philip Groning), Lake of Fire (Tony Kaye), Lust, Caution (Ang Lee), Michael Clayton (Tony Gilroy), Once (John Carney), Regular Lovers (Phillipe Garrel), Ten Canoes (Rolf De Heer)
Best experimental film that didn't qualify for the Top 10 since it only had one showing: At Sea (Peter Hutton)
The worst thing that happened this year that should have been the best: The Oprah/Cormac McCarthy interview
10. Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (Tim Burton)- What’s the deal haters? Queasy about the blood or not, Burton creates such a perfect atmosphere with subtly inspired performances (especially by Bonham Carter) it is easily his (second) best film. Burton, nor Depp, will never top Ed Wood.
9. No Country For Old Men (Joel and Ethan Coen)- Maybe I bought into some criticism as this slid down here, but as far as using pure filmmaking technique to maddeningly toy with viewer’s expectations, this is as great as it comes.
8. Zodiac (David Fincher)- Second to #6 for being the successfully variant film of the year. Mystery, crime drama, character study, period(s) detail...”all over the place” has never been so good. Fincher is some kind of genius to make this so insanely effective.
7. I’m Not There (Todd Haynes)- I couldn’t pay my friends to go see this with me. They are all fools.
6. The Assassination of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford (Andrew Dominik)- Quite the opposite of #8, this film climbed the most on my list with expanding admiration post-viewing. I loved it when I saw it but Casey Affleck’s incredible performance and the daring storytelling tactics and pacing that work so perfectly made this unforgettable.
5. 4 Months 3 Weeks and 2 Days (Cristian Mungiu)- The entire Academy Awards Foreign Film selection committee should be: a) fired and subsequently tortured by those guys in Hostel 2, b) forced to watch Bratz: The Movie over and over until they die, c) sent as peacekeepers to Darfur (why not?), or, d) very, very ashamed of themselves for overlooking the best foreign language film (submitted to the Academy) of 2007.
4. There Will Be Blood (Paul Thomas Anderson)- Although “I drink your milkshake” may already be the most irritatingly quoted line of the year, nothing can take away from the perfection that was this film, especially in the highly debated, transcendentally magnificent ending.
3. Colossal Youth (Pedro Costa)- Totally draining and pretty damn slow paced, but this poignant, meditative film becomes totally mystical and rewarding beyond comprehension.
2. Southland Tales (Richard Kelly) - A wonderful collision at the end of the world. Brilliant pastiche of post-9/11 anxieties and impending madness that bleeds into hysterical comedy. The Rock is a pimp.
1. Syndromes and a Century (Apichatpong Weerasethakul)- Do you believe in magic?
BRANDON COLVIN'S TOP 10
Honorable Mentions: Knocked Up (Judd Apatow), Michael Clayton (Tony Gilroy), Juno (Jason Reitman), Before the Devil Knows You're Dead (Sidney Lumet)
Most Unendurably Boring Artsy Film: Lady Chatterley (Pascale Ferran)
10. Superbad (Greg Mottola)
An exceedingly hilarious and beautifully vulgar depiction of high-school man-boy myth-and-reality, the Apatow produced film hovered above Apatow's Knocked Up as the ultimate comedy of the year.
9. The Assassination of Jesse James By the Coward Robert Ford (Andrew Dominik)Brazen filmmaking at its finest, Dominik's confident direction is amplified by the gorgeous cinematography of Roger Deakins. The formerly underrated Casey Affleck churns out the most nuances performance of the year.
8. Zodiac (David Fincher)
An infinitely huge step forward from the masturbatory Fight Club, Fincher's masterfully paced meditation on technology and epistemology is elegant and powerful, a promise of things to come.
7. No End In Sight (Charles Ferguson)
A frustrating, detailed analysis of the bureaucratic inefficiency and political missteps that pummeled the Iraqi people into a state of anarchy and tragedy.
6. The Wind That Shakes The Barley (Ken Loach)
If you're looking for a dramatic example of the unavoidable problems involved in nation-building, look than further than Ken Loach's heartbreaking, wonderfully intelligent analysis of the formation of the IRA and the impact it had on Irish society. It should be required viewing for any government official.
5. Ratatouille (Brad Bird)
Like Bird's brilliant film The Incredibles (2004), Ratatouille sets a new standard in animation. Bird helms a lively, dense (yes, I said it) investigation into passion, elitism, and the nature of criticism. Anton Ego's perfectly scripted monologue brought tears to my eyes.
4. Lake of Fire (Tony Kaye)
The most pathetically unseen film of the year, Kaye's stark black-and-white documentary is perhaps the most complete and important cultural document regarding the subject of abortion yet created.
3. Margot at the Wedding (Noah Baumbach)
Baumbach's follow-up to the superior The Squid and the Whale is nearly as emotionally-complex and unnerving. Full of immediacy and imperfect characters, Margot features dazzling performances and a deft script.
2. There Will Be Blood (Paul Thomas Anderson)
Recalling the cinematic bravado of early Martin Scorsese and Robert Altman, PTA's powerful, subtly crescendoing character study is not to be missed. Oh, there's also this actor Daniel Day-Lewis. He's pretty good too.
1. No Country For Old Men (Joel and Ethan Coen)
A perfect film.ANDY HOBIN'S TOP 10... OF DOOM
10. Hairspray (Adam Shenkman)An exercise in genre that succeeds without need for pop covers, fantasy sequence, or other explanations for the presence of music. That total absence of irony propels this utterly lovable film.
9. Away From Her (Sarah Polley)
Saying Away From Her is about Alzheimer's is about saying Sideways is about wine. Sarah Polley's deeply affectionate adaptation of Alice Munro's short story is a heartbreaker.8. The Wind That Shakes the Barley (Ken Loach)
Ken Loach's Palme D'or winner about the ragtag beginnings of decades-long Irish wartime keenly focuses on the conflict's divisive impact on family. A small war film of Private Ryan impact.
7. The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford (Andrew Domminick)
A beautifully lensed metawestern featuring the performance of a lifetime by Casey Affleck.
6. Once (John Carney)
The best love stories are the ones that find new ways to tinker with the notion of happily ever after, and this little musical rocked me to my core. "Falling Slowly" is the song of the year.5. Before the Devil Knows You're Dead (Sidney Lumet)
A modern Greek tragedy directed with Tarantino-esque energy by Sidney Lumet. It's hard to believe that Kelly Masterson is a first time screenwriter.
4. There Will Be Blood (Paul Thomas Anderson)
Daniel Day-Lewis gives a towering, thundering performance in P.T. Anderson's epic story of madness and greed. Jonny Greenwood's score is a star unto itself.
3. Eastern Promises (David Cronenburg)Not as strong as History of Violence, but David Cronenburg's thriller of smothering intensity secures his reputation as a truly visionary filmmaker.2. Michael Clayton (Tony Gilroy)
Tony Gilroy's directorial debut is easily the best legal thriller of the last ten years. Special mention is due for the pants-poopingly cathartic ending.
1. No Country For Old Men (Joel and Ethan Coen)
The Coens' clear-eyed portrait of dread is equally funny, scary as hell, and expansively sad. Javier Bardem's portrayal of Anton Chigurh - the very diplomat of gathering darkness - has cemented its place in any future discussions of the screen's best villains.JACOB SHOAF'S TOP 10
Preface: There were approximately thirty more titles I wanted to see before making this list, but a deadline’s a deadline. This may (and probably will) be updated in the coming months. Also #2-7 are more or less interchangeable as to their order. This is just what I settled on at the time of composing this list (the same can be said for #10 and a few of the honorable mentions).
Honorable mentions (alphabetically): The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford (Andrew Dominik), Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead (Sidney Lumet), I’m Not There (Todd Haynes), Into Great Silence (Philip Gröning), Juno (Jason Reitman), The Lives of Others (Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck), Margot at the Wedding (Noah Baumach)
Best repertory film: Pierrot le Fou (Jean-Luc Godard)
Most awkward opening shot: Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead (Sidney Lumet)
Moviegoer I most wanted strangled: The idiot that kept saying “Show us the gooch!” in reference to Anton Chigurh performing surgery on himself. Are you friggin’ twelve?!
10- Superbad (Greg Mottola) – Those who know my usual taste in movies are probably somewhat disillusioned to see this on my list. “What’s this? A populist comedy?! Where is he going to put Transformers? I think I laughed more during this film than any other film I’ve seen in the theaters. It’s crass and crude, but Michael Cera is brilliant and the humor is so outrageous and constant that I can’t put this title to the wayside.
9- Atonement (Joe Wright) – Keira Knightley and Joe Wright team up for another fantastic period piece about a young woman looking to amend a wrong she inadvertently made as a child. This film also has the best tracking shot I’ve seen since Van Sant’s Elephant (or possibly even Tarr’s Werckmeister Harmonies).
8- Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (Tim Burton) – This movie is all over the place. A maniac barber, a cannibalistic chef, a street urchin, and a young couple in love all come together to sing while London eats its own. I’ve never laughed so hard at a child being sentenced to death by hanging.
7- Once (John Carney) – This touching romance/follow-your-dreams film has a lot going for it, most notably one of the best original soundtracks I’ve ever heard. The interaction between the two leads is amazing.
6- The Wind that Shakes the Barley (Ken Loach) – Though the brogue takes a little getting used to, this proves to be quite a powerful film. The execution scenes are devastatingly sad. Truth be told, I teared up twice during this film.
5- Zodiac (David Fincher) – I’ll admit that this film is so massively sprawling and detail-oriented that I recall very little of what actually happens. However, what I do remember is being in a complete state of paranoia by the time the credits rolled while simultaneously being floored by an amazing movie.
4- Away From Her (Sarah Polley) – This is another of the year’s emotionally draining films. Julie Christie gives an amazing performance as an institutionalized Alzheimer’s patient. And while Christie seems to be the Oscar shoe-in, the complimentary performance of her husband by Gordon Pinsent has been dreadfully under-praised. There’s also some fantastic editing in this film (the “abandonment of the elderly” montage is particularly noteworthy).3- There Will Be Blood (Paul Thomas Anderson) – I don’t think that this wunderkind is capable of making a bad movie. Or even an average movie. And though he thins his usually Altman-esque cast down to just a few key players, this film still resonates with the same power and possibly even more intensity than his previous work. PS-Sweet Lord, Daniel Day-Lewis is crazy.
2- Michael Clayton (Tony Gilroy) – Despite the notable handicaps of being involved with the scripts of Armageddon and The Cutting Edge, Tony Gilroy proves to be a skilled director. Watching Karen Crowder (Tilda Swinton) spiral out of control when Clayton (George Clooney, as if you didn’t know) confronts her is priceless. And the expression on Clooney’s face as he drives is the closest I’ve seen to a visage of death since Ingmar Bergman started a chess game in 1957.
1- No Country for Old Men (Joel and Ethan Coen) – This movie is mind-bogglingly good. The countless accolades and critical boners are deserved. The Coen brothers have crafted their most spot-on film since Fargo (though this time the Coens may well take home the best picture statue that eluded them in 1996).
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Monday, January 21, 2008
Out 1's Top 10 Films of 2007
Wednesday, January 16, 2008
Out 1 "Overrated Film Poll" Results
Out 1's poll for the most overrated film of the year has officially ended. There seems to be vast disagreement over what the most overrated film is with none of the films thoroughly running away with the contest. Nonetheless, the year's most "acclaimed" comedies have taken the cake. Thanks to everyone for voting! We had more than twice as many people vote in this poll than our first poll, and our hits have continued to go up. Thank you all so much for spreading the word for Out 1! Let's keep that going! Also, for those of you who voted for other...let us know what those films are in the comments section. Always important to get all the different perspectives!
What was the most overrated film of 2007?
No Country For Old Men | 3 (7%) |
Diving Bell and the Butterfly | 3 (7%) |
Ratatouille | 1 (2%) |
Eastern Promises | 1 (2%) |
Into the Wild | 5 (12%) |
Atonement | 1 (2%) |
Sweeney Todd | 5 (12%) |
Grindhouse | 1 (2%) |
The Apatow Train (Knocked Up, Superbad, Walk Hard) | 7 (17%) |
Juno | 6 (15%) |
Other | 4 (10%) |
No Film Was Vastly Overrated | 2 (5%) |
Sunday, January 13, 2008
13th Hour Golden Globe Predictions
*Post Globes Editor's Notes*
Whoa. Some major surprises tonight. Atonement over No Country, Sweeney over Juno, Schnabel over the Coens... (I'd like to say, though, that earlier in the day I had suggested that if anyone were to beat the Coens it would be Schnabel...I'm just saying.) Should definitely mix up the Oscar odds until announcements next week. Hobin got 8 correct (counting Ratatouille, which is a category no one else voted for...we all would have got it right...trust me.) Nevertheless, Hansen and Shoaf got 7, and Colvin got 6 by my count. Not all that hot, but some pretty crazy stuff. Get excited now...Hobin will be live blogging the Oscars. Set your calendars now and be here for it!As much as "serious critics" like to look down on the awards season, we embrace everything here at Out 1 and, frankly, get damn excited about awards and lists. (Top Ten Lists will be unveiled January 21st...) In time for the Globes tonight, truncated press conference or not, these are our predictions for who will win and who should win tonight leading up to Oscar nominations next Tuesday. This also is a time to introduce a new writer, Andy Hobin, to the Out 1 crew. Andy is the awards guru/consultant as he tracks this stuff like crazy. He will be writing other things as well, but we consider him our main awards man. Hope you enjoy the last minute predictions! We'll be tracking them online tonight as we anxiously watch the "news conference." Get excited!
BEST PICTURE - DRAMA
Colvin Will: No Country For Old Men
Colvin Should: No Country For Old Men
Hansen Will: No Country For Old Men
Hansen Should: There Will Be Blood
Shoaf Will: No Country For Old Men
Shoaf Should: No Country For Old Men
Colvin Will: Juno
Colvin Should: Juno
Hansen Will: Juno
Hansen Should: Sweeney Todd
Shoaf Will: Juno
Shoaf Should: Sweeney Todd
BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM
Colvin Will: The Diving Bell and the Butterfly
Colvin Should: haven’t seen any...
Hansen Will: The Diving Bell and the Butterfly
Hansen Should: anything else (hopefully 4 Months 3 Week and 2 Days)
Shoaf Will: The Diving Bell and the Butterfly
Shoaf Should: Persepolis (based on the preview...I’ve only seen The Kite Runner...)
BEST DIRECTOR
Colvin Will: Coen Brothers
Colvin Should: Coen Brothers
Hansen Will: Coen Brothers
Hansen Should: Joe Wright (we need an upset for God’s sake!) And why the f*** is PTA not nominated here? Seriously.
Shoaf Will: Coen Brothers
Shoaf Should: Coen Brothers
BEST ACTOR - DRAMA
Colvin Will: Daniel Day-Lewis
Colvin Should: Viggo Mortensen (haven’t seen TWBB)
Hansen Will: Daniel Day-Lewis
Hansen Should: Daniel Day-Lewis
Shoaf Will: Daniel Day-Lewis
Shoaf Should: Daniel Day-Lewis (based solely on the badass preview)
Colvin Will: Julie Christie
Colvin Should: Julie Christie
Hansen Will: Julie Christie
Hansen Should: Julie Christie
Shoaf Will: Julie Christie
Shoaf Should: Keira Knightley (only one I’ve seen)
Colvin Will: Johnny Depp
Colvin Should: Johnny Depp
Hansen Will: Johnny Depp
Hansen Should: Johnny Depp
Shoaf Will: Johnny Depp
Shoaf Should: Johnny Depp
Colvin Will: Ellen Page
Colvin Should: Amy Adams
Hansen Will: Marion Cotilllard
Hansen Should: Amy Adams
Shoaf Will: Marion Cotillard
Shoaf Should: Ellen Page
Colvin Will: Javier Bardem
Colvin Should: Casey Affleck
Hansen Will: Javier Bardem
Hansen Should: Casey Affleck (with Bardem in a virtual tie)
Shoaf Will: Javier Bardem
Shoaf Should: Javier Bardem (with Affleck as a close second)
Colvin Will: Amy Ryan
Colvin Should: Cate Blanchett
Hansen Will: Amy Ryan
Hansen Should: Cate Blanchett
Shoaf Will: Cate Blanchett
Shoaf Should: Cate Blanchett
BEST SCREENPLAY
Colvin Will: Coen Brothers
Colvin Should: Coen Brothers
Hansen Will: Coen Brothers
Hansen Should: Coen Brothers
Shoaf Will: Coen Brothers
Shoaf Should: Coen Brothers
BEST ANIMATED FILM
Sunday, January 6, 2008
Jacob Shoaf's Favorite Scene of 2007
It’s hard to pick just one favorite scene from a year with so many great films. There’s the fantastic confrontation between George Clooney and Tilda Swinton in Michael Clayton, the mesmerizing tracking shot that surveys the beach during the Dunkirk evacuation from Atonement, and, pardon my foray into the lowbrow arena, the opening of Aqua Teen Hunger Force Colon Movie Film for Theaters (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FSyO1t2As3U&feature=related – if you haven’t seen this three-minute middle finger to seat-kickers, cell-phone talkers, and crying babies, then you really should). Though there are still around thirty movies I would like to see from 2007 before I finalize anything, a task is at hand and it must be completed.
My favorite scene of the year is from the film which seemed to garner the most overall critical acclaim. I am of course referring to the Coen brothers’ No Country for Old Men. In this scene, Anton Chigurh (Javier Bardem) confronts a gas station proprietor (Gene Jones) and forces him into a very high-stakes coin toss. It’s ridiculous how much tension the Coens are able to build from just a conversation between two men and a scant seven shots (in terms of camera positions, not cuts...and one of those shouldn't even count as it was only an establishing shot). Chigurh turns the proprietor’s friendly banter into a growing threat which slowly envelopes the room. Even a crinkled food wrapper placed on the counter by Chigurh lurches toward the man as an ominous threat of his possible doom. It’s a fantastic scene from a truly great movie. If you haven't seen it: slap yourself, say ten "Hail Tarkovsky"s as penance, and get thee to a film-ery, friendo.
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Saturday, January 5, 2008
Brandon Colvin's Favorite Scene of 2007
No scene in any film this year is packed with as much emotional intensity and psychological complexity as Jesse James’ death scene in Andrew Dominik’s brilliant The Assassination of Jesse James By the Coward Robert Ford. A wordless, meditative exchange between Jesse (Brad Pitt) and Bob Ford (Casey Affleck) oozes with suicidal, homicidal, idolatrous, nervous, and romantic tension that build to the climactic shooting of the quintessential Western outlaw. Gracefully edited by Curtiss Clayton and Dylan Tichenor and photographed with passionate delicacy by the great Roger Deakins, the dense enigmatic murder/assisted suicide scene (which lends the film its name) rides a unique undercurrent of metaphysical and existential probing that arouses an unexpected and deeply affecting swirl of transcendental spirituality and nihilistic disappointment. Essentially an amplified microcosm of the film’s themes, the killing of Jesse James comprises a very powerful scene that lingers in the mind of the viewer like a sun-glinted, dusty memory of human frailty.
*Editor's Note- due to copyright issues, all videos of the film have been taken offline, so the scene is not available to be shown. Sorry everyone!
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Friday, January 4, 2008
The Best Scene of the Year: Richard Kelly's Southland Tales
I know there are many of you who are anxiously awaiting a review of There Will Be Blood, as my grade for it went up last weekend when I saw it, but I have decided to see it again before I write anything definitively about it. Plus, unless you live in New York, LA, or Chicago (maybe), there has been no chance to see the film yet. I will do my very best to avoid spoilers in the review for those of you who have to wait to see it. Once it is in a wide release, we may do a second review talking more specifically about the issues within the film, which require talking about the plot and events in the film.
That's a preview of what is to come (as well as the Out 1 Top 10 Lists, expected on or around Martin Luther King Jr. day), but I decided to post my favorite single scene out of any film this year. For its subversively hysterical beauty, I give you the best scene of the year from one of the year's best films: Richard Kelly's Southland Tales.
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