Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Favorited: My 10 Favorite Movies Of 2013

I just realized that I've been formatting my favorites lists this year completely differently than I did last year. Oh well, time for the list of my top 10 favorite movies of 2013!

First, though, I wanted to highlight two movies that must be seen because I think they are actually two of the best movies of 2013, but they are clearly not my "favorites" for one simple fact: they are so gut-wrenching and powerful that I never want to see them again. They are:


12 Years A Slave

Steve McQueen (Hunger, Shame) makes movies that are hard to watch, but 12 Years A Slave takes this difficulty to another level. The brutality, both physical and emotional, isn't made any easier to watch by the even-handed direction and beautiful cinematography. And Chiwetel Ejiofor's alternately subtle and explosive acting makes you feel Solomon Northup's horrific ordeal so deeply that you may find yourself running to watch 2012 or Kinky Boots just to remind yourself that he can also be fun and campy when he wants to be.



The Act Of Killing

Go watch it on Netflix. Then never watch it again, because it's so horrifying. Decades ago in Indonesia, government-sanctioned death squads murdered over a million ethnic Chinese and progressives, all in the name of eradicating Communism. And today, the leaders of these death squads are revered as national heroes. Director Joshua Oppenheimer, along with several Indonesians who had to work anonymously for fear of reprisals in their home country, convinced these death squad leaders to reenact their murders for the camera. But because these monsters are also film buffs, they decide to stage the reenactments in various film genres— film noir, westerns, gangster films, and even musicals— as they laugh and fondly remember their acts of torture and sadism. The Act Of Killing looks at true evil in the eyes, and it's the most important and effective documentary of 2013. It's truly a relief when the movie ends, and you can finally look away from the evil on display.




In contrast, the following movies on my list of favorites are all pleasures to watch, and I look forward to watching them over and over again in years to come.

10. Captain Phillips

In everything from the gritty realism of United 93 to the over-the-top theatrics of The Bourne Supremacy and Ultimatum, Paul Greengrass is a master of directing action and suspense that makes you feel like "you are there." In Captain Phillips, he takes a story that is still fresh in everyone's mind, a story where everyone in the audience still remembers the ending, and still manages to create tension that builds for two hours. When we get to that final scene where Tom Hanks somehow conjures up one of the most disturbing emotional collapses I've seen on screen, we totally get where he's coming from, even if we don't understand how an actor could get even himself to such a state. I like to think that it's a performance that's too good for an Oscar nomination.



9. The Great Beauty

Both a glorious ode to the good life in Italy and a bittersweet lament to a promising creative talent squandered, Paolo Sorrentino's seeming modern-day update of Fellini's La Dolce Vita is first and foremost a joy to watch. A drunken bacchanal in the first 10 minutes is kinetic and exciting filmmaking and economical storytelling, showing a party that looks both horrifying and enticing, much like the whole of The Wolf Of Wall Street. Much of the remainder of the film is a gorgeous, languid idyll with an underlying sense of loss. By the way, Sorrentino's last movie, This Must Be The Place, starred Sean Penn as an aging goth rocker, clearly based on Robert Smith, who goes on a mission of revenge to find the Nazi officer who humiliated his father during the Holocaust. Shockingly, it's actually good. Don't believe me? Watch it on Netflix.



8. Stories We Tell

When is a documentary not a documentary? That's the question I found myself asking with the revelations at the end of Sarah Polley's fantastically entertaining Stories We Tell. Polley has proven to be an excellent actress (The Adventures Of Baron Munchausen, The Sweet Hereafter, Dawn Of The Dead) and an even better director (Away From Her, Take This Waltz), but in this gem of a film, she turns the camera on her own family's dark secrets. Deciding to investigate years of jokes and rumors that the man who raised her, Michael Polley, was not actually her biological father, Polley sat her family members down to get the true story. And when she finally got the truth, she had Michael Polley sit in front of a microphone and narrate it. The result is funny, sad, and surprising.



7. Inside Llewyn Davis

At first, the Coen brothers' newest practical joke of a movie seems to be about the 1960s folk music scene in Greenwich Village, but instead it turns out to be a portrait of a self-destructive, self-defeating, and insufferable artist who appears to have fallen out-of-love with his art but continues to do it because he can't do anything else. Oscar Isaac's deceptively complex performance is prickly, humorous, and profoundly sad. Good thing there are also lots of beautiful images, healthy laughs, and great music to keep the audience from succumbing to despair.




6. The World's End

It starts off like an uproariously funny buddy reunion comedy. Then it turns into a spectacular alien robot invasion action movie with a satirical Douglas Adams-like edge. And in the end, it reveals itself to be a razor-sharp allegory about alcoholism and rehab. Edgar Wright's latest genre mash-up is all of these things, and the surprise is that it's all great. Simon Pegg and Nick Frost have proven to be excellent comic actors in their previous films together, but in playing against types in The World's End, they finally show that they are simply great actors.



5. The Wolf Of Wall Street

Probably the most divisive movie of the year, and for me, also the funniest. While American Hustle is like a classic Martin Scorsese movie from 20 years ago, The Wolf Of Wall Street is like a movie Scorsese would make if he were 25-year-old hotshot director fresh out of film school. It's almost unthinkable that Scorsese has made this movie in his 70s. It's brash, offensive, energetic, relentless, disturbing, exhausting, sprawling, repetitive, and entertaining as all hell. Leonardo DiCaprio does physical comedy that we didn't think was possible. Jonah Hill is now the unlikeliest two-time Oscar nominated actor ever. Yes, these characters are despicable monsters. The fact that we recognize that is the whole point.



4. Gravity

The dialogue is by the numbers, but the story and the story-telling are magnificent, and the direction is mind-boggling and brilliant. Alfonso Cuarón is challenging David Fincher as my favorite working director today. I've already said that five years ago, I would've found it inconceivable that Matthew McConaughey would one of my favorite actors today... well, the same can be said for Sandra Bullock (just compare her powerful performance in Gravity to her delightful comic acting in The Heat). Sure, you could argue that the movie is nothing more than a thrill ride, but when a thrill ride makes you feel as emotionally exhausted and renewed as Gravity does in its final, glorious shot, you have to admit that even a thrill ride can be a monumental, great film.



3. Nebraska

Bob Nelson's long-gestating screenplay is the first feature that Alexander Payne has directed that he didn't write or co-write himself, but it somehow still feels like a classic Payne script. Many have said that the story is too dour and depressing to call Nebraska a comedy, but what else can you call it when you find yourself laughing so much and so hard? The glowing black-and-white cinematography somehow makes the stark, wintry Nebraska landscapes look beautiful. Career-changing performances by Bruce Dern, Will Forte, and June Squibb are just highlights in a movie loaded with great character actors, some of whom make a deep impression with less than a minute of screen time.



2. Her

On paper, Her sounds like a disaster waiting to happen; it has the makings of a wacky comedy about a weird guy who falls in love with the voice of his operating system. On screen, it's a thing of beauty, a prickly, universal love story that cuts deep. One big reason is Joaquin Phoenix, who hasn't been this lovable or relatable in a movie since he was Leaf Phoenix and playing an awkward teen in Parenthood. It would have been easy to play his character as weird and antisocial, but instead Theodore Twombly is sad and sympathetic, a man so devastated by his divorce that he's shut himself off from other people. When he finally finds joy in his operating system, Samantha, it's a palpable joy. And because of Scarlett Johansson's soulful vocal performance, Samantha feels more human than a vast majority of movie characters last year. Of course, none of this would matter a bit without Spike Jonze's remarkable screenplay, which starts off with a very strange sci-fi premise and turns it into a profoundly human love story.



1. Before Midnight

It's funny that my top two movies of the year are both love stories which on the surface seem too unusual for everyday people to relate to, but in the end speak universal truths about relationships. With Richard Linklater's love story that started in 1995's Before Sunrise and continued in 2004's Before Sunset, the culprit was how impossibly, grandly romantic and idealized the story of Jesse and Celine's meeting, separation, and reunion seemed to be. When we left off in 2004, Jesse and Celine had reunited and reconnected, and we were left with the tantalizing suggestion that they might finally get together for good. And when Before Midnight opens, we learn that they did in fact get together and are vacationing in Greece with two precocious daughters. The romantic dream has come true. Then Before Midnight proceeds to shatter all illusions of idealized romance by chipping away at their relationship, showing the cracks that appear in any long-term relationship, before blowing it all apart in its traumatizing, brutally ugly final half hour, where Jesse and Celine go for each other's throats (figuratively) in a no-holds-barred fight that ends with their relationship in shambles. As explained in this article in The Onion AV Club, it's the Scene Of The Year. Will their relationship survive this disaster? Guess we'll have to wait until 2022.







Monday, January 20, 2014

Favorited: My Favorite Movies of 2013 - The Ones The Didn't Make The Cut

Welcome back, everyone! So I meant to publish my list of favorite movies of 2013 a lot sooner, but I had a few last movies to watch before compiling my list... then I got a temporary job that kept me busy for most of the past week. Things will get busy all over again when grad school begins in two days, so I'm finally sitting down and getting this list done.

Like 2012, 2013 was a packed with great movies. Unlike 2012, though, this time I have forced myself to narrow down my list to only 10 favorite movies (although as you'll see, I did kind of cheat again, this time with the definition of "favorite").

Today I'd like to present my list of runners-up, the movies I felt need to be mentioned but which I couldn't include in my absolute top ten. Even in this list, I need to divide it into smaller lists.

First off, here is a short list of 2013 movies that I did not see but may have had a shot at making my list if I'd seen them:

20 Feet From Stardom
After Tiller
Beyond The Hills
Blue Is The Warmest Color
Concussion
Kill Your Darlings
Let The Fire Burn

Next, here's an unreasonably long list of movies that I saw and liked very much— seriously, I would give most of these movies 3 1/2 out of 4 stars— but didn't even make it into my top 20!

42
Ain’t Them Bodies Saints
All Is Lost
Blackfish
Blue Jasmine
The Conjuring
The Counselor
Cutie And The Boxer
Drinking Buddies
Enough Said
Fast And Furious 6
Fruitvale Station
The Grandmaster
The Great Gatsby
A Hijacking
The Hunt
I’m So Excited
Iron Man Three
Monsters University
Much Ado About Nothing
Pacific Rim
The Past
Philomena
The Place Beyond The Pines
Prince Avalanche
Prisoners
Saving Mr. Banks
Sightseers
Spring Breakers
The Square
Stoker
This Is The End
Tim’s Vermeer
To The Wonder
The Way, Way Back
The Wind Rises
The Wolverine
You’re Next

And now, here's the meat of this blog entry:

My favorite movies of 2013, numbers 11-20 (in alphabetical order):

I only ranked my top ten, so I am presenting the 10 runners-up in alphabetical order.

American Hustle

I adore David O. Russell, and I adore this movie, but Devin Faraci wrote an essay for Badass Digest a few weeks ago that unfortunately expresses exactly how I feel: American Hustle will suffer an undeserved backlash if it wins the Best Picture Oscar because it's nowhere near the best movie of the year. Like Argo, The Artist, and The King's Speech, American Hustle is an excellent film that I enjoyed greatly, but it's nowhere near my favorite movie of the year.



Dallas Buyers Club

As I've said over and over again last year... if you told me 5 years ago that Matthew McConaughey would be the most exciting and daring actor working today, I would've thought you were insane. And after C.R.A.Z.Y and the vastly underrated The Young Victoria, I eagerly await any film that director Jean-Marc Vallée chooses to make.



Frances Ha

Noah Baumbach and Greta Gerwig's sublime, lovely, and very funny ode to adrift twenty-somethings trying to find security and a place in the world is also beautiful to watch. The final scene/punchline, where we learn the meaning of the film's title, is absolutely perfect. It's also streaming on Netflix, so you have no excuse for not watching it.



Frozen

I kind of pains me to admit that I liked Frozen more than Hayao Miyazaki's gorgeous The Wind Rises, but Frozen really stirred my soul with its spectacular animation and fabulous songs by the husband-and-wife team of Robert Lopez (Avenue Q and The Book Of Mormon) and Kristen Anderson-Lopez. Again, just watch THIS:



The Hunger Games: Catching Fire

To be honest, I liked the first Hunger Games movie, but I felt it was missing a sense of excitement and grandeur that was in the books. Catching Fire, on the other hand, improves on the first movie in almost every way. Packed with excitement, suspense, menace, and spectacle, it's two-and-a-half hours of pure entertainment, capped off with a nasty cliffhanger of a final scene that's like a punch to the gut.



Mud

Again, Matthew McConaughey, FTW and WTF? After Shotgun Stories and Take Shelter, this makes three winners in a row for writer-director Jeff Nichols, who this time spins a modern-day Mark Twain tale of childhood, revenge, humanity, and violence.



Rush

Perhaps the most under-appreciated high-profile film of the year. Rush is the most thrillingly-directed film of Ron Howard's career. Chris Hemsworth probably gives what will be the best performance he will ever give. And Daniel Brühl is a revelation in the first of two 2013 movies in which he was billed as a supporting actor but was actually the lead (the other being The Fifth Estate). 



Short Term 12

Destin Cretton's portrait of the staff of a foster care facility for troubled teens is a real as it gets, full of drama, heartbreak, humor, tragedy, and eventually a wonderful sense that everything will be okay. It's a great big hug of a film, anchored by an unbelievably great performance by Brie Larson.



The Spectacular Now

Like Short Term 12, The Spectacular Now is a lovely, delicate low-budget work of art. Directed by James Ponsoldt (Smashed) from a screenplay by Scott Neustadter and Michael H. Weber ((500) Days Of Summer), it's a simple high school romance between the smart good girl and the lovable popular guy... who also happens to be an alcoholic.



Upstream Color

Shane Carruth's long-awaited follow-up to his confounding 2004 time-travel drama Primer is even denser and more intellectually-challenging. It's also probably the most downright gorgeous movie of 2013, so don't even try to decode it; just watch it and soak it all in. It's also available to stream on Netflix.



Up next, my top 10 favorite movies of 2013!

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Favorited: My Favorite Songs Of 2013 - The Top 10

What better way to kick off the new year than with my list of 10 favorite songs of 2013?


10. Jake Bugg - Two Fingers

Ever since he exploded on the scene with his song "Lightning Bolt," which you've probably heard on that Gatorade commercial, and was heralded (annoyingly and prematurely) as the "new Dylan," I don't know whether to be irritated or impressed by this 19-year-old brat from Nottingham. Since his music was slow to catch on in the US, he actually released two albums here last year. The second album, produced by Rick Rubin, was somewhat underwhelming, but I still can't stop listening to his debut album. Especially this song, which I love even more than "Lightning Bolt."


Oh, what the hell, here's Lightning Bolt:



9. Nine Inch Nails - Came Back Haunted

As many of you, I was at Nine Inch Nails' epic "farewell show" at the Wiltern Theatre back in September 2009. To absolutely no one's surprise, Trent Reznor decided that he wasn't done writing new music and touring. Hesitation Marks is a killer comeback album, the live show was a mind-boggling light show, and this song was a fantastic first single.



8. The National - I Should Live In Salt

I've loved The National for several years, but for some reason I was slow to warm to their new album Trouble Will Find Me. I'm so glad I gave it several more listens, each listen revealing more and more to adore. Seeing them perform live in a cemetery sealed the deal. I had a tough time deciding between the opening two songs on the album, but it was the gorgeous first song that I finally named my favorite.


But Demons is a close second.



7. Kanye West - Black Skinhead

Yeezus is maddening and brilliant, just like its creator. This song is the most incendiary song on my list, and it was the perfect soundtrack to THE WOLF OF WALL STREET trailer. I do have to point out that the erroneous "300 Romans" lyric annoys me every time I hear it, though.



6. Daft Punk - Get Lucky

No explanation needed. This earworm was everywhere last year.



5. Neko Case - Man

She's no longer the queen of alt-country. She's just a flat-out rocker... that is, when she's not a power pop chanteuse with The New Pornographers. Everything about this song is genius, especially the caustic lyrics. I think it's virtually impossible for Neko Case's voice to ever sound less than perfect, no matter what she's singing.



4. Janelle Monáe - Dance Apocalyptic


So that's a video of Prince declaring Janelle Monáe's album The Electric Lady the best album of 2013, though he may be somewhat biased, since he duets with her on the album's opening song, "Givin Em What They Love." Ever since I saw her open for Of Montreal back in 2010, I've told people to imagine James Brown, Prince, Stevie Wonder, and Michael Jackson all packed into the body of a tiny stylish woman from Kansas. Though she shows off her beautiful, powerful singing voice better on other songs like "PrimeTime," no song captured the insane energy of her already legendary live shows as well as this song.


And here's "Givin Em What They Love."



3. Frightened Rabbit - Late March, Death March

This band from Glasgow, Scotland, played FOUR shows in Los Angeles between November 2012 and October 2013, and I was at all four. Even better, I won free tickets to two of those shows. It should be pretty obvious that Frightened Rabbit are one of my favorite bands as well as one of the most sadly unappreciated bands around. I named their song "Swim Until You Can't See Land" my favorite song of 2010, after all. It was tough deciding which of these two songs from their most recent album Pedestrian Verse was my favorite, so here are both.


And here's The Woodpile



2. CHVRCHES - The Mother We Share

My favorite new band of 2013 are also from Glasgow, and though they're friends with Frightened Rabbit, CHVRCHES couldn't be any more different, with their soaring synthpop stylings and adorable, whipsmart, pixie-ish frontwoman. I've been hyping them since last winter, months before their wonderful album The Bones Of What You Believe was finally released. The album is packed with gems, so it was tough to name just two favorites, but let's just say that according to my Last.fm page, I listened to "The Mother We Share" over forty times last year.


To quote the AV Club's review of the album, "As good as 'The Mother We Share' is, it wouldn’t be enough to carry the album, but CHVRCHES follows it with an even catchier song, 'We Sink'."



1. John Grant - GMF

I don't know whether to laugh or cry when I listen to John Grant. An interviewer once famously asked Bob Mould to respond to a description of Mould as "the saddest man in rock," to which he replied, "He's never met Stephin Merritt (of The Magnetic Fields), obviously." Well, John Grant may have them both beat. Originally from Denver but now residing in Iceland, the hulking, gay, sardonic, HIV-positive former addict and lead singer of The Czars also writes some of the most beautiful melodies and hilarious lyrics this side of, well, Stephin Merritt. As I predicted when this incredibly self-deprecating song was first released last spring, it's my favorite song of the year.


It's also worth checking out the music video, which is a study in amusing awkwardness.





As with last year, I wanted to end my list with my "late discovery" favorite, a song from 2012 that I didn't fall in love with until 2013, but should have been on my 2012 list. This year, that honor goes to a song from an artist whom I failed to appreciate until his brilliant set at Coachella last April.

Father John Misty - Well, You Can Do It Without Me



Finally, here's a Spotify playlist counting down my 20 favorite songs of 2013 (with a few of the runners-up).


That's it for the music, folks! Stay tuned for my annual list of favorite movies of 2013!