Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Top 10 of 2011 (A.J.'s Picks)

by A.J.

It's that time of year again. All of the movies of 2011 are out and awards season has begun, top 10 lists have been published and, as is tradition, my list is about a month behind. 2011 was a pretty good year for comedies and a lot of movies were a genuine delight to watch. Here's some I especially enjoyed:

10. Bridesmaids
Bridesmaids does not feature women acting like the men from The Hangover. It features women being funny in the way that women are funny; we've just never seen that on film before. It's interesting to note that the one over-the-top gross-out scene in the movie was invented by Judd Apatow and Paul Feig, but even that scene still manages to be funny. Bridesmaids has a lot of funny low-key scenes as well as big set pieces. Kristen Wiig, whose SNL characters I rarely enjoy, does a good job of playing just a regular, down on her luck woman. The friendship her character Annie has with Lillian (Maya Rudolph) as well as the one the she develops with fellow bridesmaid Megan (Melissa McCarthy) feel genuine, which, sadly, is rare for movies about women. It doesn't matter if you're a man or woman, good comedy is good comedy and this is a very funny movie.

9. Super 8
In 2011, when every cell phone has a video camera and every computer comes with editing software, any kid can make a movie and post it on a website. To make your own movie in 1980, when Super 8 is set, one kid needed a Super 8 camera (which are simple to use, but not idiot-proof), your friends needed to help out, and you had to wait 3 days (even with a special rush order) for the film to develop. Super 8 follows 12 year-old Joe and his friends, who are making their own zombie movie when they witness a train crash and something mysterious escapes from one of the box cars. Shortly thereafter, strange things start happening in their town. Elle Fanning stands out among the cast of kids, but all of the young actors are very good and turn this summer sci-fi movie into a coming of age movie as well. That aspect doesn't unbalance the movie, it enhances the movie. When Joe's friend Charles creates a wife character for the detective in their movie, he notes that her concern for him makes you care about the detective character too. Good filmmakers, like J.J. Abrams, know this and that is what sets Super 8 apart from other summer movies, that, and it being one of the very, very few original ideas of summer 2011.

8. Cedar Rapids
In its own way, Cedar Rapids is also a coming of age story in that Tim Lippe, played by Ed Helms, has been in a state of arrested development for quite some time. Tim Lippe is an insurance agent sent by his boss to an insurance convention to win an award in the big city of Cedar Rapids. He's warned to stay away from Dean Ziegler (John C. Reily), a rude, crude, and hilarious insurance agent that knows his way around the convention. A common problem with comedies is that they are so concerned with being funny, they forget to be a good movie too. Cedar Rapids is hilarious and crude, but not too raunchy, and most importantly has interesting characters and it has a heart. Cedar Rapids is already out on DVD and I recommend watching it as it's one the funniest movies I've seen in a long time.

7. The Tree of Life
Terrence Malick's latest movie is his most difficult to place in a tangible context. His previous films were about soldiers at Guadalcanal, Pocahontas and John Smith, migrant workers at the turn of the 20th century, and criminals on the run. The Tree of Life is about a family in 1950s Waco, Texas, the oldest son of that family in the present day, and also there are scenes of the creation of the solar system and evolution of earth. The most common assumption is that the 1950s scenes are the memories of Jack (Sean Penn), pondering what life and nature and grace mean when you put all of it together in some grander scheme. But maybe the movie itself is pondering what existence and life and choices are all about. Where does it all come from, where does it all go? Or maybe we're watching the story of the universe, the story of everything, in which the seemingly insignificant occurrences of your childhood, and the lives and deaths of the people you know are as much a part of the story of the universe as the stars that created it and the life that came before. There is no right answer. Even if there is, it doesn't matter. This film is a visual poem. I watched it twice and enjoyed The Tree of Life much more the second time through; that first time was a tough one.

6. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
This is an excellent, dark, and sometimes disturbing murder mystery based on the novel by Stieg Larson and directed by master filmmaker David Fincher. It stars Daniel Craig as disgraced journalist Mikael Blomkvist who is hired by Henrik Vanger, the weary, aging industrialist haunted by the murder of his niece in 1965 by a member of his own family. Henrik is played wonderfully by Christopher Plummer, who is great at making us feel the same concern and urgency he feels for this cold case that is over 40 years old. But this movie is also about Lisbeth Salander (Rooney Mara) the pierced and tattooed young woman, who is an investigator of sorts, that comes to help Blomkvist in his investigation. As the two dig deeper into the past of the Vanger family, darker mysteries surface and the two find that the cold case is much more than anyone originally thought. Many fans of the Swedish film version felt that this American version was being rushed into theaters to cash in on the (mild) success the Swedish film had with American audiences. That may be true, but instead of a dumbed-down American remake we received a modern-day Alfred Hitchcock film.

5. The Artist
If you love movies as much as The Artist loves movies, this will be one of the best times you have at the theater. The Artist is about the last days of silent movies and beginning of talking pictures. George Valentin, the bigger-than-life silent film star, is played with pitch perfection by Jean Dujardin. His fame fades as sound becomes the norm and Peppy Miller (Berenice Bejo) who had a small part in one of Valentin's movies, becomes a movie star. This is a black and white, silent movie and a great introduction to classic silent cinema if you're not already familiar with that time period. The Artist deserves all of the praise it has received so far. It really is a delight about a time when Hollywood was still a dream factory.

4. Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
"Show, don't tell," is what you'll hear many times if you take film class or read a book about screenwriting. Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy is a movie that does just that, and George Smiley is a master spy whose most valuable skill is his ability to listen and observe. Smiley is brought out of retirement to find a mole in the highest echelon of "The Circus." Smiley is played by one of the best actors working today, Gary Oldman. Oldman gives a very subtle low-key performance. He can convey so much in the slightest facial expression and only raises his voice once. This is not what you think of when you think of a spy movie. George Smiley is the anti-James Bond but Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy is in no way lacking in tension and intrigue. When Smiley finally holds a gun, I felt like anything could happen. This film has such a talented ensemble it borders on being ridiculous, it's like a who's who of great British actors: Gary Oldman, Benedict Cumberbatch, Colin Firth, Toby Jones, Ciaran Hinds, Tom Hardy, Mark Strong, and John Hurt. All in the same movie!

3. Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol
On the other end of the spy movie spectrum is the 4th Mission Impossible movie. I like that each of the Mission Impossible movies has had a different director and had a different approach to the spy movie. Part one was an espionage thriller with some action, part 2 was an over the top Hong Kong-style action movie, part 3 was somewhere in between, and part 4 is an action movie done right. It doesn't scrimp on interesting characters and the story is simple, but solid enough sustain an entire movie. I recommended seeing this movie in IMAX for an extra exciting movie going experience; however, even if you see this movie at home on your TV you will still be thrilled and entranced. That's how you know it's a good movie.

2. Midnight in Paris
Woody Allen has said (I'm paraphrasing) that the New York in his movies is a New York that comes from films of the 1930s and 1940s. In this film, Gil's Paris of the 1920s comes from a young creative's idea of Paris, which is real enough for him and for audiences. This has been Woody Allen's most successful film and for good reasons. It doesn't matter if you're not a Woody Allen fan, Midnight in Paris is a delight to watch. Owen Wilson's natural cadence is perfect for Woody Allen's dialogue and Paris is beautifully captured. Midnight in Paris is ultimately a love story about romantic love, love for a city, love for literature and art, love for the past and love for life right here in the present.

1. Drive
"You have proved to be a real human being and a real hero" - "A Real Hero" by College featuring Electric Youth
Life can change on a dime. One week you're having a pleasant drive on a sunny day with your neighbor and her son, and the next week you have to protect them from mobsters. Sometimes you need a real human being, someone to connect with and remind you of the nicer side of life. Sometimes you need a real hero, sometimes you need to be that hero, and sometimes that means kicking in someone's skull in an elevator. And that's never going to be pretty.
"Style" is the first thing I think of when I think of Drive. Right from the opening titles, a sequence with the sleek, dazzling veneer of the 1980s, you know you're watching a different kind of movie. Director Nicolas Winding Refn gives us something quite different when he applies an art house sensibility to this story of a stunt driver that moonlights as a getaway driver. Though the movie is called Drive there are only two car chases and neither is an elaborate action sequence. There is not a moment in this movie that panders to the audience. This movie also could have been titled after one of the songs used called "A Real Hero." It's obvious and the lyric quoted above is the theme of the movie but it's true and the song is used effectively.
As Lani pointed out in her most recent post, Ryan Gosling rightly deserves recognition for his near silent performance as The Driver, whose calm reserve, coolness, and clever mind evoke Alain Delon in the French film Le Samourai and Clint Eastwood as The Man with No Name. Carey Mulligan plays Irene, the neighbor of The Driver, whose husband will soon be released from prison. The Driver has no past, no family. His blankness allows Irene to project onto him what she needs him to be and it allows the audience to do the same. The characters in Drive are archetypes, but they are very well played. Every piece of this film is deliberate and done with a skill and confidence rarely found in movies today.

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