Showing posts with label 2011. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2011. Show all posts

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Reed ’Em & Weep: The Worst of 2011




Not Contrarianism, But Genuine Dislike:
(if I hated ’em, you should, too)
In a list, the worst:
American: The Bill Hicks Story
Battle: Los Angeles
Dogtooth
Inception
Monsters
The Resident
Rubber
Skyline
Somewhere
Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives


These are the worst because they represented such colossal wastes of potential—on paper, I could see these movies working (maybe)—
Or else were hyped way out of proportion to their actual values—
Or else it was a case of “The Emperor’s New Clothes,” where I just can’t see what everyone else is marveling over (that, or maybe it’s the blows to the head I’ve taken over the years…).
Or else they were just BAD—I mean of absolutely no redeeming Ivanlandic value: boring, stupid and without entertainment value. These films made me angry because they were a complete waste of my time.

With The Worst, I tried to stick to those flicks released in or near 2011—no need to pick on Mr. No Legs again—and I didn’t include those unmentionable movies that I turned off after 15 or 20 minutes: that just doesn’t seem fair—who knows, it could have turned out great!

[There are flicks I no love that I despised while watching until about an hour in (and now I see how awesome that first hour is, knowing that the movie pays off), for example, Fritz Lang’s Scarlet Street.
Until about, say, the 65 minute mark, I hated this movie—then something clicked, and I LOVED it:
Everything started making perfect sense, and the performances, especially those from the godlike Edward G. Robinson and eternal sneering badboy Dan Duryea, became brilliant.
That said, there is no reason I can think of to go and have a second screening of Your Highness….]

But enough yapping about perfect examples of cinematic magnificence, onto the crap!

The Resident (2011)—Hammer Films’ “big comeback” is worse than the company’s zero-budget dreck from their early-1970s low point, like The Satanic Rites of Dracula.
Review HERE

Inception (2010)—Maybe if I’d seen this over-hype postmodern tribute to Philip K. Dick in a theater, I might have been impressed, but the dialog was flat-out exposition, and it’s impossible for me to see Leo DeCraprio as anything but a petulant and constipated pinch-face.
Review HERE

Rubber (2010)—A smarmy waste of potential that has utter contempt for the genre and for its audience. Awful, just awful.
Review HERE

Somewhere (2010)—THIS won the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival? WTF?!?
Sofia Coppola better get back to adapting contemporary novels—writing about “what she knows” ain’t cutting it anymore. Somewhere was nowhere.
I love what Carson Reeves writes on Somewhere at his awesome website Script Shadow:
“When you’re asking people to pay ten bucks for your movie, a cohesive storyline is required. Or a goal. Or a purpose. Or a point. Somewhere is a film that feels cobbled together from random dailies and rehearsal takes.”

American: The Bill Hicks Story (2009)—I’m a big fan of the late comedian, and am already familiar with his life and routines—there was very little new this documentary had to offer me—and the cutesy animated bits were actually quite distracting.

Meanwhile, I was surprised at how little of Hicks’ stand-up was actually presented. I got the feeling that the legal or financial rights to a lot of footage was unavailable, like his performance on the late-1980s Impact Video Magazine.

And how was this documentary for someone unfamiliar with Hicks and his work? Well, the Missus of Ivanlandia had only heard a handful of the comedian’s routines before seeing his, and she, too, was very disappointed.

Another reason to include this mediocre movie on the worst list is because its existence will prevent a better, more comprehensive documentary on Hicks from being made for a long, long time.

Monsters (2010)
Skyline (2010)
Battle: Los Angeles (2011)
Wonderful effects ruined by cruddy scripts—
I most certainly love alien invasions, spaceships, monsters, mass destruction and colossal loss of human life in my movies, but these flicks made me gnash my teeth in frustration:
Their scripts were all willfully stupid, with unrealistic dialog that was beyond cliché, and without fail the characters were so unlikeable (or underwritten), I was constantly praying for their deaths.

Yes, the effects are stunning—but their exquisite quality and detail only further points out how little the filmmakers cared about the scripts of their movies,
and that’s why I would like to take all the effects-heavy moments (about 30 minutes from each flick, I guess), then edit/intercut them together; except start one of the films completely out of sequence—keep the films’ original music and sound effects, but lose all but the most rudimentary dialog. Trim it to 75 minutes (not including any credits), then have American-International release it and title it “Invaders From the Fifth Dimension”—

Lemme tell ya, as incomprehensible and post-modern as that mish-mosh I’ve conjured up might be, it would be a lot more fun than Monsters, Skyline and Battle: Los Angeles as they are now.

Dogtooth (2009)
Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives (2010)
And these two are The WORSTEST of 2011!

Everywhere else in the blogosphere and beyond, these two movies were loved more than a drowning man loves oxygen, and for the life of me, I cannot see why. Did I see the same movies those other critics did? Do I not get it because I didn’t take enough “film theory” classes in college? Or is it because I haven’t sublimated my own personality to jibe with whatever “zeitgeist” is happening?

I’d heard and read good things about Dogpoop and Uncle BoreMe, and on renting them, I wanted to like them—I want to like every movie I rent! I do not get joy out of seeing a bad movie.

But these movies? Oy.
Dogtooth’s idea-free imitation of David Lynch was 25 years too late to be relevant; and Uncle Boonme was molasses-paced quasi-beatific religious hokum

Whatever subject matter contained in either film could have been presented more effectively in a 10-minute short—self-conscious and pretentious ambiguity (which both flicks WALLOW in) is more welcome in a short film: in a feature-length pic, it’s cruel and unusual punishment.

Here’s what I wrote about Dogtooth in February 2011:
I fucking HATED Dogtooth. Art school wankery, through and through.
Antonioni-Lynch mashup cheered on only because the young leads are
easy on the eyes.
Had they been fat grotesques, that beautiful reality would crush the
pretentions of this Greek snoozefest.

C’mon, guys! Ted Post did this back in 1973 with The Baby, AND he hit
plenty more relevant socio-economic points while he did it.

Art movies that are enigmatic on purpose are, in my opinion, LAZY.
Jeez, man, either go the distance and be like Stan Brakhage (a GOD, I
might add), or at least be willing to focus and tell a story.

And ambiguity is delightful at times… but almost throughout all of
Dogtooth, I felt a smugness emanating from the film. I really cannot
put my finger on it. It was like they were screeching nyah-nyah-nyah-nyah-NYAH!
I mean, I really this flick is a con, an example of the Emperor’s New Clothes.

Of course, maybe the joke’s on me: Dogtooth get’s 93% from the Rotten Tomato-meter!

And more recently, here’s what the magnificent Phantom of Pulp wrote about Uncle BonghitMe at his very recommended site:
It's on top of my Worst of 2011 list because it was an interminable bore. It got praised by professional critics and ended up on some 'Best' lists. Well, it ended up right here on a different list. Seriously, if this film had been in English instead of Thai, it would have been crucified for the steaming turd it is.

Mr. Phantom, I couldn’t agree more!


Saturday, January 7, 2012

The Best Movies (and a little TV) Seen in 2011


The Best/The Silver Medals/Honorable Mentions

These are my faves that I saw this year—it’s impossible for me to see everything on my meager salary, and who in their right mind would want to see every film released in a year?
That’s like saying that a person has to eat in every one of NYC’s restaurants and diners: it’s an almost impossible task that’s sure to make you sick to your stomach.

And if a movie from 1928 that I’ve never seen before turns out to be better than any other film I’ve seen this year, then why not include it on my “Best Of"?

That said, the majority of the films listed are first-time-viewings—unless otherwise indicated.
As for the films listed that I’ve seen before, what can I say?
These flicks are perennial favorites, movies that are, to me, CLASSICS and always deserve to be on a “Best Of” list.
(That might not be fair—what? I’m gonna put Casablanca on my list every year I see it? Maybe…
—but when a masterful old timer stomps some young pup and its new tricks, The National Film Board of Ivanlandia is there to cheer them on.)

Then there are those movies that click so just right with me that I know they’re a “new perennial fave.”

Meanwhile, I am sorry that I never got around to writing up many of these flicks, but that’s what the future is for, right? (Jeez, I’m full of rhetorical questions today, aren’t I?)
And films I have written about have been URL’ed so’s you can have yourself hours of fun! (A few films, like Up Tight!, Crawlspace and The Monitors, have links to sites that covered these worthwhile flicks when I didn’t.)
Enjoy!


THE BESTEST/THE FAVES
(in order of year released)

The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928; Carl Theodor Dreyer)

Shadow of a Doubt (1943; Alfred Hitchcock)

These Are the Damned (1963; Joseph Losey)

Kitten With a Whip (1964; Douglas Heyes)

The Naked Prey (1965; Cornell Wilde) new perennial fave

Skidoo (1968; Otto Preminger) seen before/perennial fave

Up Tight! (1968; Jules Dassin) new perennial fave

The Devils (1971; Ken Russell) seen before/perennial favorite

Los Angeles Plays Itself (2003; Thom Andersen) [Interesting gap in the years there, between this film and the previous one…]

Aachi & Ssipak (2006; Jo Beom-jin)

There Will Be Blood (2007; Paul Thomas Anderson) seen before/ new perennial fave

I Saw the Devil (2010; Kim Ji-woon)

Super (2010; James Gunn)

13 Assassins (2010; Takashi Miike)

Tucker & Dale Vs. Evil (2010; Eli Craig)

Insidious (2011; James Wan)

Rango (2011; Gore Verbinski)


SILVER MEDALS

Macbeth (1948; Orson Welles)

Last Year at Marienbad (1961; Alain Resnais)

A Big Hand for the Little Lady (1966; Fielder Cook)

The Wild Angels (1966; Roger Corman) perennial fave (and an award-winning blog entry! YOWZAH!)

Why Man Creates (1968; Saul Bass; short film)

Brewster McCloud (1971; Robert Altman) seen before/perennial fave [mega-post on this fave in the works…probably ready in a year or so…}

The Outside Man (1972; Jacques Deray)

Assault on Precinct 13 (1976; John Carpenter) seen before/perennial fave

Dreamchild (1985; Gavin Millar) seen before

Alien Abduction: Incident at Lake County (1998; Dean Alioto) seen before

Dream Home (2010; Ho-Cheung Pang)


HONORABLE MENTIONS

My Son John (1952; Leo McCarey) (HINT: replace the word “communist” with “homosexual” and the flick becomes even more inadvertently hilarious—a camp classic that clearly craves a cult!)

Run Silent Run Deep (1958; Robert Wise)

Ikarie XB-1 (1963; Jindřich Polák)

Battle of the Bulge (1965; Ken Annakin)

The Monitors (1969; Jack Shea)

Riot (1969; Buzz Kulik—and produced by William Castle!)

Sometimes a Great Notion (1970; Paul Newman)

Pretty Maids All in a Row (1971; Roger Vadim & Gene Roddenberry)

Crawlspace (1972; John Newland) (Arthur Kennedy, not Klaus Kinski)

ZPG (1972; Michael Campus)

A Cold Night’s Death (1973; Jerrold Freedman) seen before

Cops and Robbers (1973; Aram Avakian) –from an original script by Don Westlake!

Let Sleeping Corpses Lie (1974; Jorge Grau)

Airport ’77 (1977; Jerry Jameson) It’s not so much a disaster movie, as an all-star action-adventure/caper/soap opera (keep your eyes open for a youngish M. Emmet Walsh playing a hero!), with the film’s last third being a high-tech rescue mission.
Most inadvertently interesting scenes from a sociological point of view? James Stewart on the Navy ships: Airport ’77 was made with the cooperation of the DoD, and all the sailors you see are the real deal. Meanwhile, Stewart—although retired by then—was a general in the US Air Force. The respect those swabbies show to Jimmy Stewart is quite genuine!

Fast-Walking (1981; James B. Harris)

Lion of the Desert (1981; Mustapha Akkad)

Pet Sematary (1989; Mary Lambert)

Scandal (1989; Michael Caton-Jones)

G.I. Jane (1997; Ridley Scott) I don’t know why this flick was so hated when it came out—I found it really enjoyable.

Mission to Mars (2000; Brian De Palma) See above—additionally, I found this flick’s conclusion (inside the Martian Head-structure) to be quite moving.

Linda Linda Linda (2005; Nobuhiro Yamashita)

[REC] 2 (2009; Jaume Balagueró & Paco Plaza)

The Other Guys (2010; Adam McKay)

Apollo 18 (2011; Gonzalo López-Gallego)

Ironclad (2011; Jonathan English)

Rise of the Planet of the Apes (2011; Rupert Wyatt)

2011’s Best TV
Sons of Anarchy Seasons 1-3 (2008-2010)
Parks and Recreation Seasons 1-3 (2009-2011)
Breaking Bad Seasons 1-3 (2008-2010)
Louie Season 1 (2010)
Downton Abbey Season 1 (2010)
The Shield Season 6-7 (2007-2008);

(No surprises here, really—everybody loves these shows, right? But what’s funny is that, aside from these shows and an occasional episode of Dragnet, Adam-12 or the 1960s version of The Outer Limits, that’s about it for my TV viewing. I don’t have the time to watch TV shows, there are too many movies to see!)

For a look at 2010’s “Best Of,” go HERE

Coming Soon (promises, promises…):
—The Worst of 2011~I swear I’m not being contrarian!
—2011’s Index!
—December’s Movies: time off from work meant plenty of couch time!