General Chat / Top 25 films of 2003
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20-June 04
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vTd Offline
Finally, I've seen everything I wanted to see and I am ready to close the book...
2003 was a great year, the quality of which we haven't seen since 1999. We saw alot of trends this year. A trend back to epic filmmaking, that I hope doesn't even for a while, an abnormal number of films paying honor and respect to the Japanese people, and an equally strange number of pirate/sea films, a genre that has been dead since Cutthroat Island decided "grace" us with its unpleasant presence... just to name a few. I have seen so many good films this year that I could not even fit them all into 25 places, so I had to add an Honorable Mention for the first time. This is not a perfect list, I tried to combine an objective quality with just how much I liked something, and sometime my personal opinion won out. There is guaranteed to be something that you didn't like on here, or something you loved that isn't on here. Chances are that I've seen it and disagree. I am most certainly NOT trying to pass any of this off as fact, but rather this is how I see it. So lets try to keep this civil unlike last year.
Honorable Mention- I don't normally do this, but I had an unnatural amount of ***½-star films that did not make the Top 25 list... something that hasn't happened ANY other year. These are in alphabetical order.
In America (Jim Sheridan) ***½
"Make believe you're happy Johnny... Please, for the kids. "
The first thing that must be known is that In America is much more uneven than a few of the films that it made the list in front of, some of it is awkward and altogether too sappy but there is too much heart and cinematic brilliance on display here to not fall in love with it. It's a story of an immigrant Irish family trying to make a new life for themselves in New York City and dealing with the loss of a child. The entire cast is brilliant. Samantha Morton and Djimon Hounsou are heartbreaking, while the Bolger sisters are charming and adorable as Christy (through who's eyes the film is told) and Ariel. One scene in particular where Johnny (Considine) shells out every penny to their name just to win a prize in a carnival game for his daughters is easily the most tense scene in any film this year (you have to see it to understand). There were some flaws, Paddy Considine was never fully comanding or believable in his fatherly role, the ET subplot/ending was a little sappy, and it never really feels like the Early 80's, but all this is easily overlooked. Jim Sheridan is a great director and through the triumphs and faults, it is obvious that this film was very personal to him.
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Intolerable Cruelty (Coen Brothers) ***½
"I'ma nail his ***"
The Coen brothers are some of the most original people working in Hollywood today, so it originally pained me to see them making something so "mainstream". They had always been the masters of offbeat quirky comedy and drama. Thankfully, though this is lighter than some of their previous fare, it retains alot of the same offbeat style. Only the Coens would come up with something as fiendishly funny as Wheezy Joe's "end". In addition, the cast shines. Clooney has a great time as marital lawyer Miles Massey, so good that he worries more about his teeth than anything else. Billy Bob Thornton makes an entertaining appearance as a texas millionare. Lastly, Catherine Zeta-Jones is in a form that I didn't think she was possible. This movie has me convinced that she's a Goddess, the glow and beauty that she exudes here is almost inhuman. While more forgettable and more shallow than alot of their earlier offerings, this is still a Coen Bros. film.
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Phone Booth (Michael Schumacher) ***½
"At this range, the exit wound ought to be the size of a small tangerine"
Joel Schumacher can be singled out and blamed for ruining the Batman franchise. So who knew the man who put nipples on the batsuit could possibly pull of something as difficult as a film where the main character stands in a phone booth and emotes the entire time. Well, I did. He had awesome success four years ago when he and Farrell last teamed up in the criminally underseen "Tigerland". Farrell gives the performance of his life (so far, I'm expecting big things) in a demanding role. Like I said, it was him on screen in a phone booth for 85 minutes and because of his peformance and Keifer Sutherland's wonderful voice as the shooter, the film is pretty powerful. The one thing I could complain about is the ending, which is terribly trite and takes away from the film. Schumacher has proven he does good work with low-budget films. Unfortunately, The Phantom of the Opera (his next) isn't exactly low-budget
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School of Rock (Richard Linklater) ***½
"I pledge allegiance to the band"
Another wonderful surprise from last year. Richard Linklater makes a mainstream comedy with the heart and soul of an indy picture. The star of the show is Jack Black, he is just fun to watch. Finally someone gave him a chance to prove he can carry a film by himself, something many people have hoped for since he was in High Fidelity. And what would this movie be without an absolutely kickin' soundtrack. It plays as much an ode to classic rock as it does as a comedy. Though it's somewhat forgettable (a problem with most new comedies), it makes up for it by being insanely rewatchable, and if you don't feel like watching it just pop it in and listen to it in the background for all the awesome tunage.
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Up next... 25-23. -
vTd Offline
The Top 25
25. The Rundown (Peter Berg) ***½
"Don't worry, they're little people."
If I had to pick the best movie of 2003 that absolutely NO ONE saw, it would be this. People passed it over, because it was The Rock and Seann William Scott in a buddy action/comedy. No good could come from this right? Wrong. The Rock is the new action hero. It began when Ahnuld makes a cameo at the beginning and tells The Rock to "have fun". The torch was passed. What followed was one of the best pure action/comedies made in a long time. The action is creative and perfectly choreographed, taking full advantage of The Rock's physicality and talent. Not to mention it's almost ALL done without the use of guns, until the end, which makes the use of them all the more exciting. It's the most exciting part of the film. Go see this movie now, if not for the stylish action and fun characters, then atleast to see Christopher Walken give a speech about the tooth fairy.
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24. Love Actually (Richard Curtis) ***½
"Aren't you a bit young to be in love?"
There are some films that you can't imagine yourself loving before watching them. You sit there for the first 30 minutes thinking, "this is pretty decent, but that's it", but they slowly starts to win you over and by the end you are grinning ear to ear dumbstruck. They make you feel guilty for loving something so completely fluffy, but you love them none the less. Love Actually is that kind of film. It's a story (8 stories actually) about love in all its many and beautiful forms. Unrequited love, first love, unconditional family love, love vs. lust, friendship, love crossing language boundaries... there's two more in there, but I won't list them because I honestly can't remember. Suffice to say it's a small peak into people's lives during a time of year that is both magical and bleak to many different people. It's got a few minor problems. The pacing is awkward as there are one or two stories that end in the middle of the film (though I guess that adds a sense of realism since the movie has a definite timeline), and some of them are a little undercooked. But those flaws can't wipe the smile off my face. It completely won me over, be it with Hugh Grant's charming persona (which isn't new, but it works) or the humor and creativity of some of the storylines. It's a very sweet film, not in an overly sentimental and saccharine way, but it is like good cake (for lack of a better comparison). It's light and fluffy but leaves a delectable after taste.
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23. Swimming Pool (Francois Ozon) ***½
"How can you be so naive?"
Though advertised as an erotic thriller (which it most certainly is), Swimming Pool is mostly a front for an examination of the creative process. Ozon has created a film that oozes sexuality out of every pore, and there is no better setting to accentuate it than a small vacation town in the South of France during the offseason, giving off a sense of solitude that makes the film that much more enticing. Sarah Morton (Charlotte Rampling) is a writer of Mystery novels who wants something new, so her publisher sends her off to work in peace and quiet at his summer home. All is not quiet for long when she has an unexpected housemate. Even when nothing is really going on, the film has sexuality to burn, especially in the form of Julie, the nymphomaniacal daughter of Sarah's Publisher, who spends just about the entire film in either a bikini or completely naked. The story is mysterious and entertaining (with a great twist that gives the film its thematic presence), if a bit too slow, but it's not a problem with such a great blend of setting, story, and sex.
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Up next... 22-20. -
vTd Offline
22. Gerry (Gus Van Sant) ***½
"How do you think the hike's going so far?"
Like Gus Van Sant's other release this year, "Elephant" (which I didn't like), there isn't much of a story to describe. Two guys (Casey Affleck and Matt Damon) who call each other "Gerry" get lost in the desert(an adaptation of a real story from a few years ago) and we follow them until a major choice they make that alters both their lives. Gerry is a hypnotic visual experience. There is little dialogue, and what there is is improvised so the film relies on long tracking shots, lots of wide-angle static shots of beautiful landscapes (some of the finest cinematography of the year is here) which is infinitely more interesting than the same tracking shots of school hallways . And I can't forget to mention some beautiful and melancholic classical music. What starts out absolutely trivial in Gerry becomes one of the most powerful movies of the year by the end. Owen Gleiberman said "It's Andy Warhol meets Ansel Adams meets Blair Witch meets Beckett." I'm not sure I could possibly say it better, so I won't.
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21. Peter Pan (J.P. Hogan) ***½
"Never is an awfully long time."
Forget everything you knew about the safe and bland Disney Peter Pan, which now sucks in comparison to J.P. Hogan's adaptation of J.M. Barrie's story. There is something compelling about this telling of Peter Pan that has been thoroughly lacking in every other one previously (including the "sequel" Hook, which I enjoy for its playful charm). It's not the beautiful storybook production values or the skillfull acting from Rachael Hurd-Wood (Wendy) or Jason Isaacs as the deliciously malevolent Captain Hook, but the subtext of the novel (growing up, and all the feelings and trappings that go with it) that each and every previous attempt has been too squemish to deal with. You can sense a sexual tension between Peter and Wendy. It's not dirty, but more innocent like young people discovering their "first love". Wendy has a crush on Peter because of his boyish charm, and Peter likes Wendy as a child likes their mother (obviously shown when she is asked to be the mother of the lost boys). All of this helped along by the wonderful acting of the two principle children. Unfortunately, it's box office plunge was completely do to with people confused at the intelligence of this film. I should hope that this film is rediscovered in a few years, if not for its intelligence, then for just what a joy it is to watch.
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20. Seabiscuit (Gary Ross) ***½
"You don't throw a whole life away just because it's banged up a little bit."
Living in Baltimore, I've grown an affinity for horse racing (home of the Preakness Stakes), so suffer me a bit. Gary Ross takes his time getting the engine started with his tale of redemption in the 1930's. At first, it's all on autopilot. The film breezes through a lot of character history which giving the film a very choppy feeling, all interspersed with vignettes detailing how crappy life was during the depression that came off as if they were from a PBS documentary (they even had "that" voiceover guy doing the monologues. But as soon as the horse Seabiscuit actually enters the film (about 30 minutes in), the film finds a new energy and there is little that anyone could possibly find fault in with the rest of the film. It's tightly paced and incredibly enthralling. It's gorgeous, sporting some of the best (if not the best) cinematography of the year. The actors are all spot on (even Tobey Maguire goes above and beyond himself). Hell, the War Admiral race is maybe the best single scene of the year. The scene is literally perfect. This is the kind of film they used to make years ago when movies like Chariots of Fire were winning Best Picture Oscars. It's a safe underdog story, but it is told with so much grace and enthusiasm that it doesn't matter.
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Up next... 19-17. -
Ride6 Offline
Seabiscuit is far too low. It, for me, was the suprise of the year. I for one, don't really like animals or anything of that sort so we bought this with a gift card for my sister. We watched it and before the movie was less than 1/2 done we were all enjoying it. Enjoying a movie with a subject that I have no interest in is something I've never done on this scale before. Seabiscuit may be the best family movie for children 10 and up, ever.
Just my opinion but I've watched this more in the last six months than any other and it's just as good the first time as it was the 10th.
Although '03 was a strong year the 'Biscuit' should've made at least 10th IMO.
ride6 -
vTd Offline
Well, I saw 97 movies last year... so considering that, 20 is pretty damn good. I mulled over all of these for a long time, and the amount which separates most of them (especially from 20-10 and 2-9) is incremental... meaning I could have given alot of ties, but I hate ties so I'm forced to choose. It's really the terrible first 35 minutes and the lame PBS narration that dropped it a few spots.Seabiscuit is far too low. It, for me, was the suprise of the year. I for one, don't really like animals or anything of that sort so we bought this with a gift card for my sister. We watched it and before the movie was less than 1/2 done we were all enjoying it. Enjoying a movie with a subject that I have no interest in is something I've never done on this scale before. Seabiscuit may be the best family movie for children 10 and up, ever.
Just my opinion but I've watched this more in the last six months than any other and it's just as good the first time as it was the 10th.
Although '03 was a strong year the 'Biscuit' should've made at least 10th IMO.
ride6 -
vTd Offline
19. House of Sand and Fog (Vadim Perelman) ***½
"I have taken us so far off our course..."
House of Sand and Fog took some time to win me over. When I saw the trailer, I thought it was rather lame. Melodrama out the wazoo, and exactly how far can you take a story about some damn house? Well I was wrong (it happens fairly often). This is an actor's showcase. Jennifer Connelly, Shoreh Agdashloo, and Ben Kingsley. The first two are good, but Ben Kingsley is out of this world as a tragic ex-Iranian military leader turned father who is always trying to do what is best for his family. This means working multiple menial jobs (construction, convience store clerking), and putting up a false economic front for a sense of pride. He absolutely steals the show in this tragic tale, loaded with enough hubris to make even the Ancient Greeks happy. It's a beautiful movie, and it's a movie worth crying over. If the ending doesn't get to you, you might not be human.
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18. All the Real Girls (David Gordon Green) ***½
"It's different when it's your family..."
All the Real Girls feels, as the name sort of implies, real. The love in the movie feels real and honest. Maybe it's like the dialogue in Pulp Fiction feels "real" when it's really anything but, but that's really irrelevent. This movie won't win over fans of Sandra Bullock romance movies that rely completely on plot contrivances and misunderstandings to build a love story, but instead it gives us an honest (that word again) view of two people's first love. What's interesting is that we enter right in the middle of this simple story. Noel (Zooey Deschanel) and Paul are already a pair. What transpires is an examination of the feelings and emotional development both sides pass through. In that sense, it's not really a love story at all, but more a "day in the life of..." film about two young lovers. There is no happy convient resolution, in fact what happens near the end of the film contains all the confusion and ugliness of a real relationship. It doesn't shoot for the stars, but often that isn't neccesary to make a good film. It's an authentic and bewitching polaroid of young love.
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17. Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (Jonathon Mostow) ***½
"Desire is irrelevent. I am a machine."
Continuing along the path of me being completely wrong about a film before seeing it. To say I was surprised is an understatement. I was particularly surprised about what a terrific job Jonathon Mostow did taking care of James Cameron's favorite child, respecting what had come before without taking it all too seriously. At a tight 1:50, it's almost too short. And it feels even shorter as the film starts at the speed of light and never lets up. Characters infinitely more likable than the first two movies (anyone who can stand to listen to Ed Furlong or the incredibly over the top Linda Hamilton in T2, a film I loved). Claire Danes and Nick Stahl are solid if unspectacular, but give the movie enough character to overcome a weak villain (compared to the first two). At it's heart, it's a straight action movie and the action is plentiful and hella-entertaining. The Champion Crane Chase is destructive in a way that we haven't seen in big movies since the early 90s, especially in this era of lame kung fu choreography taking the place of real spectacle. The humor has also thankfully been turned up a notch, but if there is one thing to say about Terminator 3 is that is has balls. The ending is not only unnervingly beautiful (considering what is being shown), but it is not at all consistent with a film costing 150 million dollars. Most films costing that much don't have the guts to end on such a downer. Its not perfect, but its a more than admirable addition to the Terminator saga.
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Up next... 16-14. -
vTd Offline
16. X2: X-Men United (Brian Singer) ***½
"Most people will never know anything beyond what they see."
Brian Singer is responsible for the best start to a superhero series yet created. Better than Spider-Man, Batman, and only slightly better than the first two Superman films. It retains its intelligence while still being chock full of fanboy pleasure. Based loosely off the "God Loves, Man Kills" storyline (I think that's the name. Correct me if I'm wrong), the movie picks up at the "beginning" of man's war against the mutant population. X2 agains gives us actors who have completely inhabited their roles. As far as I'm concerned Hugh Jackman is the perfect Wolverine, Ian McKellan is Magneto, there is no one better than Alan Cummings for Nightcrawler, and Patrick Stewart is Professor Xavier. One of the best things about the X-Men saga is the way it plays as an allegory without throwing it in our faces as the OTHER big May release of last year did (A hint? It starts with a Re and ends with a loaded). While the first used the mutant struggle as a symbol for foreign immigrants, this uses the same struggle as a metaphor for the acceptance of homosexuals. Unfortunately, it suffers from having too many characters to cover and some of the character devolpment seems thin, except for a few major players but that is expected in such an emsemble piece. The fight choreography is weak in places (something that plagued Spider-Man and the first X-Men much more) except for the two "tentpoles" which are perfect; those being the opening attack on the White House and Wolverine going crazy on the soldiers in the mansion. The X-Men series is an example of what can happen when a comic book series is treated with respect and intelligence.
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15. Winged Migration (Jacques Perrin) ***½
"Squawk Squawk!" (how the hell do you expect me to find a quote for this?)
Winged Migration, in theory is just about as simple a movie as could possibly be made. It's just a bunch of birds flying. But in reality, it's so much more. Winged Migration is visual poetry with more character than it has insight into its topic (birds migrating). It doesn't tell us about the birds and why they do what they do forgoing all Discovery Channel narration in favor of a "we're just going to shut the fu</>ck up and let the animals do the talking" style, in fact the information given is little more than a line at the bottom of the film about what type of bird it is and how far they fly each year. But we get to know these birds, and we feel sadness when a tern with a broken wing is slowly caught and killed on the beach by a group of crabs, hatred when a hunter decimates a group of geese we had been following since the beginning of the film, and joy when a parrot we have followed escapes from a poacher's cage on the Amazon and flys back to freedom. It does what many great films aspire to do with greater ease than is humanly possible. Luckily there are no humans to be found anywhere.
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14. Mystic River (Clint Eastwood) ***½
"Is that my daugher in there!"
This isn't a film to watch for the story, the story is really a by the numbers murder mystery with some convient plot coincidences to drive it forward. It's about the characters, and the star studded cast has infused Mystic River with more emotional power than just about anything released this year. It's an emotional wreck of a film, where people are crying in just about every other scene, but it works because of the uniformly spectacular performances from Sean Penn, Tim Robbins, Kevin Bacon, and Marcia Gay-Harden that make you sit up straight and give a damn about these characters and their problems even if there isn't a single person in this film who could be considered honorable. So why isn't the score higher? The ending (you know what I'm talking about if you've seen it) is contrived, non sensical, and commits a deliberate character assassination on just about every major character, all beginning with Laura Linney's useless "Lady Macbeth" speech. I place the blame fully on the lazy directing and editing of Clint Eastwood who routinely spent more time on the golf course than he did on his film. He's a Hollywood darling, but that doesn't mean I have to like him. Under a more deft and hand, this could have been a masterpiece. But with those useless extra ten minutes, it stands as merely a incredibly good film.
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Up next... 13-11. -
minnimee85 Offline
of the ones you posted...i agree with three..
two that i thought were horrendously bad-Mystic River and Phone Booth...I thought phone booth was just lame, and didnt show farrel as a good actor.. -
vTd Offline
Of the 16 I've posted, how many have you seen? All of them?of the ones you posted...i agree with three..
two that i thought were horrendously bad-Mystic River and Phone Booth...I thought phone booth was just lame, and didnt show farrel as a good actor..
I'm always open to hearing other people's opinions. -
minnimee85 Offline
most...a couple i havent (like that migration one)
Of the 16 I've posted, how many have you seen? All of them?of the ones you posted...i agree with three..
two that i thought were horrendously bad-Mystic River and Phone Booth...I thought phone booth was just lame, and didnt show farrel as a good actor..
I'm always open to hearing other people's opinions. -
vTd Offline
13. Matchstick Men (Ridley Scott) ***½
"I'm not very good at being a dad. I barely get by just being me."
Matchstick Men appears to be your standard con film, but it really isn't. It's a character study that utilizes elements of your standard con film, to both the advancement and detriment of the film. Nicholas Cage gives one of the best leading performances of the year not to be nominated for an Oscar, a shame since even Jude Law was nominated for his interpretation of a 2x4 in Cold Mountain. Sam Rockwell continues to prove he is a character actor extraordinare, and Alison Lohman manages to accurately channel a 13 year old girl despite the fact that she is in her 20's (though you wouldn't know it without looking it up, she completely looks the part). She was my pick for the best supporting female performance of the year. Anyway, where the film goes wrong is with its "twist" (a convention of the con film) that takes the father-daughter relationship that we have come to deeply care about and throws it out the window. I can understand why Ridley Scott did it, and it all logically falls into place, but it felt like being punched in the stomach and it hurt to the point where it actually slightly hurt the movie. Ridley did his job a little too well.
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12. Open Range (Kevin Costner) ***½
"A man's got a right to protect his property and his life. And we ain't lettin no rancher or his law men take either."
Say what you want about Kevin Costner. He's made a number of bad career choices in the last 10 years, but if there is one thing that defines him as a film maker, it's that the man knows how to make a good western. Dances with Wolves was one of the finest films of the last decade, and had it not been for another amazing film released in 1990 (Goodfellas), it would have fully deserved The Best Picture Oscar it won. 13 years later Costner returns to the genre. It's not Dances with Wolves, but it's a hell of a film anyway. Costner gives us a very nostalgic view of the frontier, where men were men or they didn't last long. The cinematography makes you yearn for those days when the land was undeveloped and the sky was crystal clear, but it's the characters that draw you in. This is Costner's best performance in a long while (not saying a whole lot when the only one to come close was his turn in 2000's Thirteen Days), yet it is Robert Duvall who steals the show. This was an Oscar worthy performance, pulling of Boss Spearman, a tired old Rancher who is tough and stern at one point but will also go and indulge himself in some expensive chocolate before a gun fight, with ease. Speaking of gun fights, there are not many in the history of cinema that can rival the shootout in this film. It's the film's crowning glory. Unlike the classic style of men standing in a line and shooting at each other, this is real. There's strategy, people run, people duck, people hide, most of the bullets miss, people get shot in the back, and it's loud as hell. It loses its steam when the movie delves into an obligatory love story between Costner and Annette Bening. The scenes are played well and the two have chemistry, but one cannot help but feel the subplot was shoehorned into a film that didn't need it. None the less, it remains the finest western anyone has made in a long while.
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11. Big Fish (Tim Burton) ***½
"They say when you meet the love of your life, time stops... and that's true."
Big Fish is a film with infectious heart, even though the majority of the film is spent telling tall tales with almost no conflict at all. Edward Bloom is dying and Edward's son is at odds with him, annoyed that never once has Edward come clean about himself, always relying on his tall tales about his life. It's a film about finding a middle ground between truth and what is true. You are glued to the screen because of the characters and the worlds they inhabit. In typical Tim Burton style, the world is beautiful. Both the real world which is shot to look mythic and the worlds of Edward Bloom's stories which are so colorful and imaginative that you can enjoy the film on that level alone. To top it off, Burton is finally letting go of his eccentricities to tell a (tall) tale of people who could actually live in our world. The ensemble cast is remarkable here, especially Finney, who manages to captivate with his voice as he spends the entirety of the film lying on his back in a bed. Danny Elfman is more than up to the task, giving us a score of a caliber we have not seen from him since Edward Scissorhands and The Nightmare Before Christmas. We see all this up on the screen, and we like it, but it is nothing without the ending. In what may be Tim Burton's finest 10 minutes of filmmaking ever, he makes us weep tears of joy and sadness over characters that we weren't even completely sure we cared about.
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Up next... The Top 10, which I will unveil tommorow... keeping you in suspense, or not. -
natelox Offline
Well, I can't say I agree with everything so far. I fell in love with "Love Actually". I found it very refreshing and original. The concept of following the, what was it, ten, different aspects of love was very cool. The comedy was on point and witty. One of my favorite films of all time.
"Matchstick Men" was a very cool movie. I watched it twice when I rented it. The beggining is very slow and doesn't really have a plot going for it, but once that frying pan hit's 'you' in the face, everything falls in place. It was a very cool movie, perhaps it derseved to be a bit higher.
"Phone Booth" was another cool movie. I thought parts of it were over done. For example, how did the sniper know all about Farrell's character, and how he cheated. Also, when the sniper was telling him to tell his wife his thoughts, that was just weird. I mean, who would say "I wanted to f*** her". I mean, that just sounded really weird to me. Good, but placed well on your list.
I wasn't too pleased with "In America". It focused way too much on their dead brother that you never meet (not that meeting him would have made it any better). That really hurt the story. The high point of the film was the curious black artist that was always screaming. I thought his story could have been worthy of a film. And you're right about the midway game scene. That was very nerve wracking.
"House of Sand and Fog" was complete crap. The story was awful and the fact that almost everyone ended up dead in the end was very depressing. I can think of many other endings which could have better and more uplifting. The movie started off great. The idea of that catch 22 was awsome, but the ending just ruined it. "Her" friend who was the cop really underplayed his role. They should have had someone else in his role.
I realize you haven't finished posting the rest of your list yet, but I hope to see these masterpeices: "Les Triplettes de Belleville", "Cidade de Deus" (2002, I know, but the American date was 2003) and "The Snow Walker". I doubt you saw that last one, but it's an amazing Canadian film. Definetly worth a watch if you can find it. And just for the sake of it, heres the top 5 movies I've seen:
1. City of God
2. Raiders of The Lost Ark
3. Love Actually
4. Les Triplets de Belleville
5. The Snow Walker
Note that four of them are from 2003.
I always look forward to this list, it's always a good read. -
Jacko Shanty Offline
Ya, 1999 was an awesome year for movies. 4 out of my top 5 movies came from 1999 (except for #1).2003 was a great year, the quality of which we haven't seen since 1999.
1. Ghost World
2. American Beauty
3. Go
4. Election
5. Pleasantville -
Turtleman Offline
Holy shit. I've only seen 5 movies out of all the movies you posted. Peter Pan was okay. But the special effects were horrible and cheesy, but I guess it was supposed to be like that. -
vTd Offline
Nate... don't expect to find The Triplets of Belleville on here. It was a nice idea, and I really enjoyed the creativity and strangeness of the world and I give it credit for that, but there was nothing there under the surface to support a feature film running length. I feel if the strangeness and creativity of it all is enough to sustain for the entire running length, then it's a great film. But none of that was enough for me.
As a 10-15 minute short film, it would have been amazing... but for what it is, I didn't think it was very good at all. And in general, 2003 was an awful year for animation... and only one made the list.
And City of God is definitely showing up, though probably lower than you will like.
And Raiders of the Lost Ark? A masterpiece to be sure (though The Last Crusade will always be my favorite), but it's 23 years old. -
JBruckner Offline
i've seen every movie on the list except gerry and the real girls.
so i think i've got a pretty good understanding of the movies.
what i really like about vTd's lists are how brutally honest he is.
one thing that i know for sure is that you wouldn't find some of these movies on any 'decent' critics list. many of them like the 'artsy' movies, and such. vTd, however, is different. this is why i respect your opinion so much. keep it up!
personally i would have put matchstickmen much higher on the list around 1-6. the movie was simply brilliant. i know that it didn't get much of a following in the box office, most movies which deserve don't EG harry potter, kill bill, etc. besides adaptation i think that cage's acting in matchstick men was one of his best.
anyways, i just wanted to reiterate what an excellent list you have put together here vTd, keep it up! -
vTd Offline
The Top 10
10. City of God (Fernando Meirelles) ****
Kinetic filmmaking, City of God announces the entrance of Fernando Meirelles, a man who seems to be destined for great things. His debut, City of God, is a crime epic in the vein of "Goodfellas" and takes the fracture narrative and uses it perfectly, bringing back memories of Quentin Tarantino and his opus, Pulp Fiction. It is both eye opening and haunting as we see the realities of what goes on in this real vicious underworld that makes any of the crime and violence in this country seem tame. Using the perspective of a kid "spectator" growing up the the City of God (the name for the projects outside of Rio de Janero in Brazil) who is also a budding photographer, we get a cold and calculating look at the seedy underbelly of society. The gritty and grainy digital camera style that Meirelles uses and the lack of any real actors only accentuates the authetic and grimy feel that he is going for. Crime lords like "Lil Ze" we grow to despise, but then we come to love his best friend "Benny", Ze's assistant. A man who considers himself a lover not a fighter, and not to mention the coolest guy in Rio de Janero. It scares us with its reality when eight year old "gangsters" are staring down the barrel of a gun. It's a gripping smack in the face.
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9. Kill Bill Volume 1 (Quentin Tarantino) ****
"Silly rabbit, trix are for kids."
What makes Kill Bill Volume 1 such a pleasure to watch again and again is its unflinching desire to revel in being a cinematic experience. From the dynamic cinematography, to the wondeful use of color, to the music, Kill Bill is an absolute feast for the senses and something that almost requires a big-screen viewing to get the full experience. It is style over substance (all the substance is backloaded into Volume 2), but that does not have to necessarily be a bad thing. Quentin Tarantino is so confident and in control of his style that all the beauty up there on the screen comes off as effortless. It's a simple plot with simple characters, as Roger Ebert put it "storytelling with no story". The characters are what they are because the plot requires them to be that way. But even like it is, Tarantino has managed to infuse the film with hints of a deeper psychological and emotional resonance. Again, QT uses his trademark shattered narrative to tell his story. One would think it would be a tired gimmick right now (and often it is, see 21 Grams where a shattered narrative singlehandedly destroyed a potentially great film) but he uses it to great effect, finding a climax where there was none and still retaining the plausible linear story. And now having seen Volume 2, the first half of Tarantino's Kung Fu epic now has added dimensions. It should be very interesting to see how the two work together edited to one film.
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8. The Last Samurai (Edward Zwick) ****
"I believe a man does what he can, until his destiny is revealed to him."
Some people spend so much time trying to contemplate and complain about individual details that they miss the grand scheme of things. They cannot see the forest for the trees, to borrow a cliche. The Last Samurai is a conventional epic, it's cliche ridden, I understand that. However, I've also come to a conclusion that none of that really matters... at all. The Last Samurai works as a piece of rousing storytelling like little else has this year. It is compelling storytelling from minute 1 to minute 144, never stopping for anything extraneous, Ed Zwick has created a film that never forgets its personal focus no matter how grand the scenery or the situations become. It is still the story of two men, Nathan Algren (Tom Cruise, who is actually playing a character rather than his usual schtick), a Civil War veteran who has not come to accept the sins of his past, and Katsumoto (Ken Watanabe), a rebel Samurai lord who believes he is doing what is best for his Emperor. Ken Watanebe, a newcomer to American films, takes what is ultimately Cruise's show and makes it his own. He often conveys more emotion in his eyes than most actors can using every trick in the book, which is especially important here where the dialogue is sparse because of the language difference. It's a surprisingly quiet movie bookended by frank and realistic action scenes. Special mention must be given to John Toll and Hans Zimmer, for making this film a feast for the senses. John Toll, the master behind such beautiful films as The Thin Red Line and Braveheart does amazing work here. When it comes to shooting the natural world, there is no one better. And Hans Zimmer, the best composer in Hollywood when he works alone, puts out one of his best scores ever (certainly the best since The Thine Red Line), subtle when it needs to be, and using native instruments to great effect. There are some directors that can take conventional films and make them more. Zwick has done it twice, with Glory and now this.
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Up next... 7-5.
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