Sunday, April 25, 2021

Geoff's Top Ten List of the Movies of 2020

 Every year, I try to see all the movies nominated for Oscars for Best Picture, Best Director, and all the acting categories. This year was strange to say the least. I only saw three movies in the theatre and that was the Nantucket Drive-In. Instead, I watched many, many movies at home under lockdown. I have watched over 200 movies, new and old, since last March. And, because almost all of the new movies were streamed immediately, I have reached my goal of seeing all the nominated movies. 

I resisted seeing a few of the movies until the last minute because I just didn't want to see them. These included Borat 2 (nominated for Best Supporting Actress and Adapted Screenplay) and Hillbilly Elegy (nominated for Best Supporting Actress, and Makeup and Hairstyling). My fears about Borat were well founded. It is one of the worst movies ever made. The nominations are a joke since the performances are awful and there is no screenplay. Hillbilly Elegy was not as bad as I feared, and the Makeup and Hairstyling nomination is definitely deserved! 

Anyway, here is my list. I have more overlap than usual with the Oscar nominated films this year. This is possibly due to the fact that I can't remember half the movies that I've seen in the last year, but mostly because they are good movies! The only two that didn't make my list are, The Father, and Judas and the Black Messiah which are both pretty good also. 


1. Nomadland
I'd like to say upfront that I am deeply in love with Frances McDormand so picking this film was a no-brainer. But the combination of McDormand's ethereal acting with the direction of Chloe Zhao and the cinematography of Joshua James Richards has produced an amazing film. Nomadland follows a recently widowed woman, who has sold everything and is traveling the country in a camper van. The scenes at campsites around the country include many non-actors who are doing just that. This is a haunting and poignant film. It could have been a downer but instead, it is beautiful and uplifting. Nomadland should sweep the board and win everything but it probably won't.



2. Promising Young Woman
Carey Mulligan seems to have been around forever, but she is only 35. Her first role was as Kitty Bennet in the Keira Knightley version of Pride and Prejudice, followed by, among others, An Education, Never Let Me Go, Sufragette, and most recently The Dig. The latter is a sweet little movie with Ralph Fiennes about the discovery of Sutton Hoo ship burial. Mulligan is always good, but in Promising Young Woman, she blows you off the screen. It is also deservedly nominated for Best Director and Original Screenplay, both by Emerald Fennell. If Fennell looks familiar to you, it is because she played the young Camilla Parker Bowles in The Crown. This a captivating and very troubling story about a woman seeking revenge for the death of a friend and willing to sacrifice her own life to do it. Mulligan is mesmerizing.

3. The Trial of the Chicago 7
We all know that Aaron Sorkin can write better than almost anyone, but The Trial of the Chicago 7 is his directorial debut. This film is nominated for a bunch of Oscars including Best Picture, Best Supporting Actor (Sacha Baron Cohen), and Original Screenplay for Sorkin. The Trial of the Chicago 7 is a very entertaining film which snaps, crackles, and pops off the screen. That cast is really great including Mark Rylance and Eddie Redmayne (as Americans), Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Frank Langella, and Cohen, who proves that despite Borat he can actually act. The story follows the well-known eponymous trial through all of its intense and weird moments. This film and Judas and the Black Messiah are sort of a set piece since Fred Hampton appears as a character in both. 


4. Sound of Metal
This movie came out of nowhere and it is just so good. It tells the story of a drummer (Riz Ahmed) in a rock band who starts to go deaf. I know you are starting to think about Children of a Lesser God, but stick with me. This movie does an amazing job of creating the environment that Ahmed is experiencing and sharing it with the audience. In addition to being nominated for Best Picture, Best Actor, and Best Supporting Actor, Sound of Metal is nominated for Best Sound which sounds weird but they should win! Also nominated, for Best Supporting Actor, is Paul Raci. He is the hearing son of deaf parents in real life and he gives an amazing performance here. The Best Actor category is very competitive and Chadwick Boseman will probably win but Riz Ahmed deserves it. 

5. Mank
Mank has lots of nominations, but I feel like it has been lost in the shuffle. This movie is about the writing of the script for Citizen Kane and it centers on the writer, Herman Mankowitz (Gary Oldman). Orson Welles (Tom Burke) is a minor character, but many Hollywood celebs of the 30s and 40s appear including David O. Selznik, Louis B. Mayer, John Houseman, and William Randolph Hearst. Hearst's young starlet girlfriend, Marion Davies is played by Amanda Seyfried. She is very good in Mank and is nominated for Best Supporting Actress. Mank has about ten nominations including Best Picture and Director (David Fincher), but weirdly not Best Original Screenplay. The writing is very good and so is the direction by Fincher. This is a really good, fun movie that might have won Best Picture in another year.

6. Minari
Minari, mostly in Korean with subtitles, seems like it should be in the Best Foreign Film category, but this film by director, Lee Isaac Chung, the son of Korean immigrants, who grew up on a farm in Arkansas, has made a film about Korean immigrants on a farm in Arkansas. Probably since the subject matter is so close to home, this is an emotional and heart-warming story of a family following the American dream. The ups and downs take a toll on the family and make for a compelling story. The cast is great, particularly Yuh-Jung Youn, who plays the grandmother. She is nominated and favored in the Best Supporting Actress category. Will Patton plays his usual slightly crazy character as a very stereotypical Arkansan who helps out on the farm and drags around a cross on Sundays. 

7. Supernova
This is not a PBS Nova show nor a bad SciFi movie. There is some questionable astronomy in the script, but Supernova is the story of long-term romantic partners, Sam and Tusker, who are also a very handsome couple since they are played by Colin Firth and Stanley Tucci. They are on a road trip to visit Sam's family and it is quickly evident that Tusker is suffering from dementia. There are no Oscar nominations for this small but engaging film which concentrates on the two main characters and their relationship, obviously nearing its end after 20 years. The two actors, who we have seen in so many other roles, show what good actors they are. 



8. Enola Holmes
This is definitely the most fun movie on my list. It is the story of Sherlock Holmes younger sister, based on a series of books by Nancy Springer. She has been raised at home by her eccentric mother (Helena Bonham Carter) and  pines for her famous brother, Sherlock (Henry Cavill). Enola (Millie Bobby Brown) is a chip off the old block and is eager to become a detective, herself. An opportunity presents itself when her mother mysteriously disappears leaving clues along the way. Brown, best known for playing Eleven on Stranger Things, is wonderful here and the lively script keeps things hopping around Victorian England. Brown and her sister also produced the film. She's 17. You should see this one. 


9. The Assistant
Anyone who has seen Ozark, will know how Julie Garner steals scenes as the tough, smart grifter, Ruth Langmore. In The Assistant, Garner shows her range in a completely different role as a production assistant to an entertainment mogul. It is a low-level job, but she aspires to be a producer. Unfortunately, she is subjected to abuse and sees others abused. When she tries to report it, she is warned that this isn't how to get ahead. The tension is relentless in The Assistant, as we watch Garner go through her drudge work feeling more and more trapped by the day. This film probably could only be written and directed by a woman. Kitty Green does both jobs here very well and Garner is great. 



10. The Vast of Night
This is the most obscure film on my list, but it is really good. The Vast of Night is written, directed, and acted to remind the viewer of a 1950's episode of The Twilight Zone. And they do a great job. A teen-age switchboard operator and a radio DJ in a small town, working late at night, start experiencing strange events involving UFOs. The tension grows as the two try to figure out the mystery. Sierra McCormick is wonderful as the young switchboard operator and high-school science whiz. The direction, and the art direction really set the mood as the film follows the mysterious events of one long night. It's definitely worth seeing. 






Sunday, February 9, 2020

Top Ten Movies of 2019

There are nine films nominated for Best Picture at the Oscars. Five of them are on my Top Ten List. I liked all of the nominees except Joker which I hated and Parasite which was meh. Here is my Top Ten...


1. Motherless Brooklyn

Despite being the best movie of the year, Motherless Brooklyn sank without a trace. Think Rain Man crossed with Chinatown. Adapted, directed, and starring Edward Norton, this film is a joy to watch. Norton plays a private detective with Tourette's in New York City. It has a great supporting cast including Bruce Willis, Alec Baldwin, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Bobby Cannavale, Cherry Jones, and Willem Dafoe.





2. Vita & Virginia

The title says it all. Vita & Virginia tells the story of the affair between Virginia Woolf (Elizabeth Debicki) and Vita Sackville-West (Gemma Arterton). Debicki is amazing in everything she does. See The Night Manager. Throw in Isabella Rossellini as Lady Sackville and Peter Ferdinando as the long-suffering Leonard Woolf, and you have a very lovely, romantic, tragic film.






3. Little Women

Greta Gerwig and her muse, Saoirse Ronan, have done it again. Last year, it was Lady Bird, and now it is Little Women. Gerwig adapted the book and gave it a very modern feel. The screenplay and the amazing cast including, Ronan, Florence Pugh, Emma Watson, Timothee Chalamet, Meryl Streep, and Laura Dern, make it a joy.






4. Pain and Glory

This semi-autobiographical film is written and directed by Pedro Amodovar with Antonio Banderas playing an aging director strangely similar to Almodovar himself. This is probably Banderas' best role ever, and he would win the Oscar for Best Actor if the fix weren't in for Joaquin Phoenix. Penelope Cruz plays Banderas' mother in flashbacks. It is in Spanish with subtitles but don't let that stop you.





5. Yesterday

I really loved this film about an unsuccessful musician (Himesh Patel) who gets hit by a bus and wakes up to find that The Beatles don't exist, and that he suddenly has a new, great playlist. Directed by the wonderful Danny Boyle, and co-starring Lily James (Downton Abbey), this is a very sweet and romantic film. The scene with John Lennon will make you cry.







6. The Two Popes

Ok, maybe you don't think a whole movie consisting of two old guys talking to each other is very exciting. But, I was fascinated by this story of Popes Benedict XVI and Francis I. Who knows if any of it is true, but the screenplay sizzles, and the two old pros, Anthony Hopkins (Benedict) and Jonathan Pryce (Francis), take it from there.






7. Marriage Story

The latest (probably autobiographical) film by Noah Baumbach, is the purposely mis-titled film, Marriage Story, which gives a detailed, emotional play-by-play of the divorce of a director (Adam Driver) and his actress wife (Scarlet Johansson). The supporting cast is a bunch of old pros who are fun to watch including, Laura Dern, Alan Alda, Ray Liotta, Julie Hagerty, and Wallace Shawn. And Marriage Story is not a complete downer. It has a very nice uplifting ending.





8. Once Upon a Time in Hollywood

I have a love/hate thing for Tarantino. I hated Inglourious Basterds, loved Django Unchained, and hated The Hateful Eight. You get the idea. I also have issues with Leonard DiCaprio. But, I pretty much loved Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. DiCaprio and Brad Pitt are great as an aging film star and his longtime stuntman. Plus the subplot of Charles Manson and Sharon Tate (Margot Robbie) adds a frisson that lasts until the surprise ending.





9. Ford v Ferrari

This film tells the true story of how Henry Ford II (Tracy Letts) gets revenge on Enzo Ferrari (Remo Girone) for calling him fat. Ford hires car designer, Caroll Shelby (Matt Damon), and crazy driver, Ken Miles (Christian Bale), to beat Ferrai in the 24 hours of Le Mans in 1966. Ford v Ferrai is a romp which doesn't take itself too seriously. It's very fun to watch. Outlander's Caitriona Balfe is along for the ride as Bale's wife.





10. 1917

As you probably already know, this fast-paced, exciting movie was made to look like it was filmed in one long take. It tells the story of two soldiers in World War I who are sent on an impossible mission to try and call off a doomed attack. Dean-Charles Chapman and George Mackay are bland but great as the two soldiers, and we get nice cameos every 15 minutes or so by well-known British actors to perk things up. The cameos include, Colin Firth, Andrew Scott ( The Hot Priest), Benedict Cumberbatch, Mark Strong, and Richard Madden (Rob Stark). Sam Mendes wrote and directed 1917 which may pick up an Oscar or two.

Saturday, September 21, 2019

Ad Astra

What does Ad Astra have in common with Spider-Man and WALL-E? In Ad Astra, Brad Pitt's character survives while hanging off the side of a rocket during launch like Spider-Man in Avengers Infinity War and WALL-E. This also gives you an idea of the realism of Ad Astra. It definitely falls in the category of bad-science movie, and I'm afraid it's also just a bad movie. I had a bad feeling when I saw the scene in the trailer for Ad Astra with astronauts shooting at each other from lunar rovers. The setup of Ad Astra is that a space mission headed by Brad Pitt's father (Tommy Lee Jones) is sent to Neptune, which beyond the Heliosphere (not), and where it will be easier to contact intelligent life (not), while taking high resolution pictures of exoplanets (not). It has something to do with antimatter (not) and somehow that creates a blast of cosmic rays that knocks out power on the Earth (not).

The rest of the plot makes very little sense unless you realize that someone apparently thought this movie needed more action, so instead of just going to Neptune directly from Earth, Pitt flies to the Moon, drives by lunar rover to the back side of the Moon (this is thousands of miles) while fending off Moon pirates, blasts off to Mars, then launches to Neptune while hanging on the side of the rocket. Then there are some Gravity-esque scenes while he transfers from his ship to another in Neptune orbit. Pitt needs to get from one ship orbiting Neptune to another so he launches himself using a rotating radar antenna and flies through Neptune's rings carrying a shield like Captain America.

There are some nice performances in this movie but they don't get much screen time. Donald Sutherland plays an astronaut who comes out of retirement to help Pitt, and Ruth Negga plays the head of the Mars base. And, of course, Tommy Lee Jones is Pitt's absent father, and Liv Tyler is his ex-wife. They are all good but barely register before they die or disappear. Natasha Lyonne has a funny cameo as an administrator on Mars. I love Brad Pitt, but go see Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. In Ad Astra, he's just doing that little frown of his all the way through the movie with lots of extreme close-ups.

And I haven't even mentioned the space monkeys...


Monday, June 24, 2019

The Nantucket Film Festival 24 (2019)





Movie#1: Nice to see Woody, Buzz, and the gang again. But it is mostly just Woody, Bo Peep and too much Forky. A toy from Canada, Duke Caboom, steals a few scenes. The evil toys are very scary.

Movie#2: Yesterday. An unsuccessful musician is about to give up when he is hit by a bus and wakes up to find that no one has heard of the Beatles (and a few other things). Well, you can guess what happens next at least up to a point. Ed Sheeran is involved. The direction is by Danny Boyle and the screenplay is by Richard Curtis so, ya, it's very good. Himish Patel is very good in the lead role. Lily James is great as his friend and road manager. And Kate McKinnon steals every scene as Patel's music company rep after he becomes famous. So what happened to the Beatles? You'll get some answers if you see this nice film. There is an amazing scene toward the end.




Movie#3: Toni Morrison. The Pieces I Am
This a fab documentary featuring, prominently, Morrison talking directly to the camera. It takes a fascinating look at her books and their origins, and also, the importance of her "other" job as an editor at Random House. Lots of Oprah, Angela Davis, and Fran Lebowitz.



Movie#4: Brittany Runs a Marathon
The title sort of says it all. A young woman who is overweight and has self-esteem issues, decides to change her life by starting to run. But it's way more complicated than that. Definitely a dramedy, this film has a some nice moments, but is a bit rough around the edges. A typical first-time writer/director effort.








Movie#5: A Faithful Man
This film (in French with subtitles) is a modern bedroom farce. After Abel and Marianne have been living together for 3 years, she tells him that she is pregnant but the baby is not his. She has been having an affair with his best friend. She leaves him. Eight years later, the best friend dies and Abel and Marianne reconnect. Now there is her son who thinks his mother murdered his father, and the best friend's sister (played by Johnny Depp's daughter), also in love with Abel. Who knows why a schlub like Abel is a love god, but this is a French comedy. There are some funny moments but not enough to give this a thumb's up.




Movie#6: South Mountain
Like A Faithful Man but much more serious. A couple with two teenage daughters breaks up when the husband reveals he has a girlfriend and a baby. Lots of love, hate, anger, and sadness between all the characters. Very good.


Movie#7: The Farewell
I just love Awkwafina. She was the best thing in Crazy Rich Asians. She has the lead role here, playing a young woman who mostly grew up in the US, who is returning to China with her family because her grandmother is dying. But this is mostly a comedy so the family is trying to hide the medical news from the grandmother. No spoilers. You have to watch the ending. Awkwafina is fab as usual and has a nice group of supporting actors. Sort of heart warming.


Movie#8: Vita & Virginia
I loved this film. It tells the story of the "friendship" between Virginia Woolf and Vita Sackville-West. The film contains many of the letters they wrote each other and is filmed at Sackville-West's actual home. Gemma Arterton (Vita) and Elizabeth Debicki (Virginia) really heat up the screen. The supporting cast, particularly Isabella Rossellini (Vita's mother), Peter Ferdinando (Leonard Woolf), and Emerald Fennell (Virginia's sister) are all great. Rossellini is ferocious. Try to see this when it opens in August.






Movie#9: Mickey and the Bear
Another first time writer/director Annabelle Attanasio has produced a very intense little film about a high school senior in a small town in Montana whose father, a former Marine with PTSD, is an alcoholic and drug addict. The parent/child relationship is reversed and the daughter (Camila Morrone) feels she can never leave her father even though she has been accepted to college in California. Morrone is very good as the daughter who is trying to be both a kid and a mother.


Movie#10: Official Secrets
This is a "true" story about a British spy (Keira Knightly) who leaks a memo that she believes will prevent the Iraq War. She confesses and is arrested. Her lawyer is Ralph Fiennes so how could she lose? In fact the UK government dropped the charges rather than release damaging documents. This film is pretty good but maybe a bit overly dramatic. Also, it was very disconcerting to see two characters from Game of Thrones (Ellaria and Varys) dressed like normal people.


Movie#11: The Peanut Butter Falcon 
Two words that strike fear into the hearts of the average moviegoer, Shia LaBoeuf. Yes, he is one of the eclectic group of actors in this strange but heartwarming movie. Also featured are Bruce Dern, Dakota Johnson, John Hawkes, and Thomas Haden Church. The film follows the story of a young man with Down Syndrome (Zack Gottsagen) who is living in a retirement facility (hilariously rooming with Bruce Dern) because the State doesn't know what to do with him. He escapes to pursue his dream of becoming a professional wrestler and is befriended by a good-for-nothing fisherman (LaBoeuf). They build a raft and float down a river like Huckleberry Finn along with Gottsagen's caregiver (Dakota Johnson). The film goes from one bizarre scene to another, but it does grow on you, and Gottsagen's performance is very compelling. And everyone lives happily ever after.


Movie#12: The Sound of Silence
Peter Sarsgaard makes a lot of weird and wonderful movies and this one gets added to the list. He is a House Tuner. This isn't Feng Shui. He listens to the sound of your fridge (B flat) and your toaster (G major) and solves your life issues. He believes this is scientific and is always trying to get his paper published. Rashida Jones also stars as a client whose toaster has the wrong key and makes her tired all the time. Like I said, weird but wonderful. The direction is nice and slow and often silent.


Movie#13: Ophelia
This is the biggest disappointment of the Festival. I was really looking forward to this retelling of Hamlet from Ophelia's point of view, starring Daisy Ridley (Ophelia), George MacKay (Hamlet), Clive Owen (Claudius), and Naomi Watts (Gertrude). But it was awful. It was definitely not written by Shakespeare plus they change all the lines from the play to the vernacular which makes it worse. And they don't add much. Ridley is good but Ophelia remains a cipher. And Hamlet and Ophelia spend very little time together. Watts as Gertrude is at least a character with some depth, but Owen is just having a bad hair day. They invent some strange stuff like Gertrude's identical twin sister who is a witch, and add some plot elements from Romeo and Juliet. But, it just doesn't work. I was also deeply disturbed by the fact that Laertes was being played by Draco Malfoy.


Movie#14: Maiden
This is a fabulous documentary telling the story of the first all-female crew to participate in the Whitbread Round the World Race in 1989. There is lots of actual footage taken during the race itself as well as interviews with the crew from the present day. Until you watch the film, you may have forgotten how revolutionary this was even in 1989. No one thought that women could actually do this. Spoiler alert. They do it and do it well.

Sunday, February 24, 2019

Top Ten Movies of 2018

This was a hard year to pick a Top Ten. I did my due diligence. I have seen about 90 movies that came out in 2018. There are lots of good movies, but very few that blew me away. Number 1 on my list, Won't You Be My Neighbor, definitely did blow me away when I saw it back in June at the Nantucket Film Festival. The other ones that really filled me with joy when I saw them were, Bohemian Rhapsody, On the Basis of Sex, and Spider-Man into the Spiderverse. Only four of my Top Ten overlap with the Best Picture Nominees for the Oscars, Roma, Vice, Bohemian Rhapsody, and The Favourite. The others are good too, especially Black Panther, but there are only 10 spots available. So here they are...
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                                    1. Won't You Be My Neighbor?

This is the feel-good film of the year and isn't even nominated for an Oscar for Best Documentary. The writers at the New York Times predicting the Oscars gave it Best Documentary anyway. I was too old to have watched Mr. Rofers when I was a kid but it doesn't matter. Won't You Be My Neighbor will make you feel better about the world and make you marvel at how ahead of his time Mr. Rogers was. You can stream it now.







2. If Beale Street Could Talk
This movie is directed by Barry Jenkins who directed Moonlight the Oscar winner two years ago. If Beale Street Could Talk isn't even nominated this year except for Best Adapted Screenplay (it's based on a James Baldwin novel) and Best Supporting actress for Regina King. It did win Best Picture and Best Director at the Independent Spirit Awards. If Beale Street Could Talk is a lovely, sad film about two star-crossed lovers with a great cast and music.






3. Roma
This film based on the director Alfonso Cuaron's childhood in Mexico is in Black & White and in Spanish with subtitles. But Roma is nominated for Best Picture, Best Foreign Film, Best Director, Actress, and Supporting Actress. It is an excellent movie. But Roma kicks it old school. Not only is it shot in B&W, but it is also has long scenes with people talking and no car chases. Roma is also controversial because it is a Netflix film, and Steven Spielberg, no less, thinks it shouldn't qualify for Oscar nominations. You can see it anytime on Netflix.




4. First Man
Obviously, I was going to like this film about one of the pivotal moments in my life, but it's actually very well done and strives for the kind of accuracy seen in Apollo 13 and The Martian. As a kid, I was obsessed with Gemini and Apollo, and followed every moment. I had my parents make special arrangements when I went to summer camp in July 1969 so that I would have access to a TV throughout the mission. Ryan Gosling is Neil Armstrong and does his usual amazing job playing this role which is very understated. Claire Foy, best known for playing Queen Elizabeth in The Crown, is very good as Armstrong's wife. This movie sank without a trace and has only a nomination for Best Visual Effects. It deserved better.


5. The Favourite
This is one of the best films of 2018, starring two of my "favourite" actresses, Rachel Weitz and Emma Stone, as well as Olivia Coleman as Queen Anne. They are all nominated for Oscars. The Favourite is definitely a romp but it also has an edge to it, and it's mostly a true story. It is a joy to watch these three great actresses play off each other. The cinematography, production design, and costumes are all nominated for Oscars also. They are just divine.






6. Bohemian Rhapsody
I didn't know what to expect from this movie. I loved Rami Malek from Mr. Robot, so I wanted to see it and I wasn't disappointed by Bohemian Rhapsody. In fact, I loved it. Malek and the other actors playing the band members of Queen were perfectly cast, and the last part of the movie showing Queen's performance at Live Aid filled me with joy. So, ignore Rotten Tomatoes on this one and stream it.






7. Spider-Man into the Spiderverse
This new take on Spider-Man (there are so many in the multiverse) had lots of good buzz and it did not disappoint. The many spider-people (and animals) that get together to save the multiverse really re-energize this somewhat tired part of the Marvel universe. There are two Peter Parkers, Peni Parker, Gwen Stacy, Miles Morales, and, of course, Spider-Ham. The late, great Stan Lee also makes an animated appearance. You don't need to be a kid to enjoy this movie.





8. On the Basis of Sex/ RBG
These two movies are linked, of course, but I watched both of them recently and they are very complementary. I recommend doing them as a double bill. Felicity Jones is fab and looks so much like the young RBG that it is spooky. This may be my favorite Armie Hammer role playing RBG's wonderful husband. On the Basis of Sex and RBG were two of my few feel good movies of the year. Left-wing wack-jobs like me will feel nothing but joy and inspiration. Please stream these.


9.  Vice
In case you are having moments where you wish W were president again, Vice should disabuse you of that notion. Dick Cheney is the epitome of the banality of evil and this film really brings it home. Written and directed by Adam McKay, who did the The Big Short, Vice completely blows up the 4th Wall, and paints a surreal portrait of the former VP. The actors, all nominated for Oscars, include an unrecognizable Christian Bale as Cheney, Sam Rockwell as W, and Amy Adams as Cheney's wife. Adams' performance is scary as hell and Rockwell is perfect as W. This movie may not be as good as The Big Short, but you have to see the scene where Dick and Lynn do Shakespeare.



10. Isle of Dogs
I love me my Wes Anderson. I will be forever grateful to him for rescuing Bill Murray and bringing him back to us, beginning with Rushmore. Like with the Coen brothers, I don't like all of Anderson's films but I want him to keep making them. Isle of Dogs is weird and great. How do describe a movie about dogs banished to an island of garbage that is is Japanese with subtitles except that the dogs speak English? Isle of Dogs is a really sweet movie. 






Honorable Mentions:

At Eternity's Gate
The Ballad of Buster Scruggs
Ben is back
Black Panther
Don’t Worry, He Won’t Get Far On Foot
Eighth Grade
Green Book
Incredibles 2
Juliet, Naked
Leave No Trace
Mid90's
The Old Man and the Gun
Operation Finale
A Private War
Puzzle
Woman Walks Ahead








Sunday, February 25, 2018

Top Ten Movies of 2017

I have seen, I believe, 79 new films that came out in 2017. Of the nine films nominated for the Best Picture Oscar, four also appear on my Top Ten List, The Shape of Water,  Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, The Post, and Lady Bird. I loved all four of these movies, but my number one is still Wonder Woman. This is a lovely film that, of course, gets no respect from the Academy. All I can say is, "and now I know... that only Love can truly save the world." 

See my lists below for Best Picture, Actress, Actor, Supporting Actress, and Supporting Actor.


I have seen all of the nominated performances except for Christopher Plummer, nominated for Best Supporting Actor in All the Money in the World. I am declaring a tie between Sally Hawkins (The Shape of Water) and Frances McDormand (Three Billboards) for Best Actress. They are both to die for. My Best Actor pick honors Harry Dean Stanton, who recently died at age 90 and was working right up to the end. Lucky is a nice little movie about a 90-year-old man living in a small western town. It's a nice sendoff for Stanton who had many memorable roles over the years. For Best Supporting Actress, I pick Leslie Manville, who was amazing as Daniel Day Lewis' ever-present personal assistant in Phantom Thread which is otherwise a beautiful but perplexing film. For Best Supporting Actor, I pick Willem Dafoe, a hard-working character actor whose face will be familiar to everyone. In The Florida Project, he has a wonderful role as the Manager and child wrangler of the Magic Kingdom Motel. 




There were some very good films released in 2017 that have no nominations and that no one has seen. Among my recommendations are,

  • Battle of the Sexes, a retelling of the famous tennis match between Billie Jean King (Emma Stone) and Bobby Riggs (Steve Carell).
  • Colossal, about an out-of-work young woman (Anne Hathaway) in New York City with a strange connection to a Godzilla-like creature that is destroying Seoul.
  • The Big Sick, based on a true love story of a Pakistani-American man and a "white" woman who spends most of the movie in a coma. Nice turns by Holly Hunter and Ray Romano.
  • Blade Runner 2049, the sequel to the iconic Blade Runner is way better than it had any right to be. But it is the antithesis of Jason Bourne, having no 2-second cuts, so you have to sit and watch some people talk to each other. Try it!
  • Molly's Game, you would think a movie starring Jessica Chastain and Idris Elba written and directed by Aaron Sorkin would have a built in audience but no. And it's really good!
  • Abundant Acreage Available, Amy Ryan, my vote for most underrated actress in Hollywood, stars as a woman fighting for the family farm after her father dies.

Best Picture:
1. Wonder Woman
2. The Shape of Water
3. Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
4. Lady Bird
5. The Florida Project
6. The Post
7. Blade Runner 2049
8. Battle of the Sexes
9. The Big Sick
10. Molly's Game
Honourable Mention: Baby Driver, The Beguiled, Lucky, Abundant Acreage Available, Wind River, Colossal, The Zookeeper's Wife

Best Actress:
1. Sally Hawkins (The Shape of Water, Maudie)
1. Frances McDormand (Three Billboards)
3. Jessica Chastain (Molly's Game, The Zookeeper's Wife)
4. Saoirse Ronan (Lady Bird)
5. Gal Gadot (Wonder Woman)
Honourable Mention: Amy Ryan (Abundant Acreage Available), Emma Stone (Battle of the Sexes), Meryl Streep (The Post), Daisy Ridley (The Last Jedi), Aubrey Plaza (Ingrid Goes West)

Best Actor:
1. Harry Dean Stanton (Lucky)
2. Ryan Gosling (Blade Runner 2049)
3. Tom Hanks (The Post)
4. Denzel Washington (Roman J. Israel, Esq)
5. Gary Oldman (Darkest Hour)
Honourable Mention: Ansel Elgort (Baby Driver), Jeremy Renner (Wind River)

Best Supporting Actress:
1. Lesley Manville (Phantom Thread)
2. Laurie Metcalf (Lady Bird)
3. Robin Wright (Wonder Woman, Blade Runner 2049)
4. Beanie Feldstein (Lady Bird)
5. Lucy Davis (Wonder Woman)
Honourable Mention: Allison Janney (I, Tonya), Octavia Spencer (The Shape of Water), Holly Hunter (The Big Sick), Lily James (Baby Driver, Darkest Hour), Kristin Scott Thomas (Darkest Hour)

Best Supporting Actor:
1. Willem Dafoe (The Florida Project)
2. Richard Jenkins (The Shape of Water)
3. Michael Stuhbarg (Call Me By Your Name, The Shape of Water, The Post)
4. Bob Odenkirk (The Post)
5. Dave Bautista (Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, Blade Runner)
Honourable Mention:  Chris Pine (Wonder Woman), Idris Elba (Molly's Game), Harrison Ford (Blade Runner 2049), Steve Carell (Battle of the Sexes), Woody Harrelson (Three Billboards),
Sam Rockwell (Three Billboards), Ray Romano (The Big Sick), Adam Driver (Logan Lucky, The Last Jedi)