A student's look into the world of cinema and all its elements.



Thursday, December 29, 2016

The 20 Best Movies of 2016: 20-11



2016 may have been the biggest roller coaster of a year in recent memory. It has been both a year of strange sometimes frightening occurrences across the globe that have left a strong feeling of uncertainty at the end of the year. Luckily in times of uncertainty the movies tend to step up to the table and 2016 was a fantastic example of such. 2016 was the best year for films in recent memory providing an incredible list of diverse choices for moviegoers of every taste. Due to the amazing amount of great films to come out this year, and my expanded movie viewing in general, 2016 will represent the first year that I have chosen to expand this list to 20 movies. Anything else seems criminal at this point. Here are the films that made the biggest impact on me in 2016, and represent the tip top of an extraordinary year. Here is part one of my list of the 20 best films of 2016:


20. The Salesman

Asghar Farhadi has been one of the decade’s most inspired filmmakers. His film A Separation represents one of this decade’s biggest achievements, a film whose power was in its beautiful subtlety. The Salesman continues this mold, providing a tragic portrait of the downturn of a relationship and the horrors of sexual assault. The Salesman is a film that uses its quiet nature to its advantage, its lack of noise amplifies the tragedy at its core. Farhadi has carved a magnificent corner all to himself, creating emotionally powerful films that deal with serious adult struggles with grace and subtlety, and while The Salesman never reaches the levels of greatness found in A Separation it is still a film that deserves to be seen.





19. I, Daniel Blake

Ken Loach’s best film in years, I, Daniel Blake’s portrayal of the flawed British welfare system is one of 2016’s most heartbreaking films. In I, Daniel Blake Loach provides a powerful critique of the system through the examination of two heart wrenching cases of the welfare system letting ordinary folks down. The film’s two central characters, beautifully portrayed by both Dave Johns and Hayley Squires, are perfect sympathetic contrasts to the cold hearted system that is supposed to help them. Loach presents their struggles in minute ways by focusing on the crazy amount of complications that the welfare system provides and never resorts to overly broad, manipulative strokes. Its power comes through Loach’s empathy for the characters’ situations, not through grand gestures to show a system in crisis.  It makes for a devastating film that ultimately feels urgent and unsettling.





18. Lemonade

BeyoncĂ©’s short film about the emotional roller coaster ride of being cheated on remains one of the most unique and powerful film experiences of the year. Using a mix of montages set to her latest album BeyoncĂ© manages to cover a lot of emotional ground, running through various sequences of anger, regret, empowerment, and at the end of the day forgiveness. The most important aspect of Lemonade though remains its sublime ability to convey internal conflict visually. Often times filmmakers focus solely on the emotional conflict that is easy to display, subtlety be damned. Lemonade manages to capture internal conflict in ways few have by letting the meld of music and visuals do jobs that dialog and exposition cannot handle. The result is a detailed and beautiful portrait of cheating and emotional conflict that is hardly ever seen on film.





17. Eye in the Sky

One of the unfortunately forgotten great films of 2016, Eye in the Sky is a great old school contemplative war film updated for 2016 technology. In this case the moral dilemma at the centre are drone strikes and their potential for collateral damage. Beautifully examined from many of perspectives, from the hardened war general, to the brand new drone pilot who does not approve of the situation, to the potential innocent bystanders on the ground, Eye in the Sky is a fantastic and detailed examination of the detached nature of a drone strike. The film is also tense as hell, and is just a perfectly constructed thriller building slowly to its explosive and tragic climax. Because of its scary relevance and extreme competence Eye in the Sky is one of 2016’s very best and should not be looked over.
  
 

16. Love and Friendship

Few writers have a crackling pen like Whit Stillman and there may be no better example than in his Jane Austin adaptation/parody Love and Friendship. One of the most devious and hilarious films of the year Stillman combines his signature acid tonged characters with the rigid rules of Austin to great effect. Throw in a great tour de force performance from Kate Beckinsale (her best in years) to deliver Stillman’s gospel and you have a great mashup that should not be forgotten.






15. Green Room

What do you get when you get a clash between punk music and Nazis? Pure chaos of course! Green Room is one of 2016’s most intense films, and continues the rise of great young filmmaker Jeremy Saulnier. Sualnier creates a claustrophobic pressure cooker by spending the majority of the film with the main characters locked in a Nazi bar with no other option but to try and escape or die trying. What ultimately steals the show though is the intelligence of all the characters involved. The main characters in Green Room are not your usual thriller/horror movie archetypes and the decisions they make in situations of grave danger are intelligent. They are not just cannon fire, instead they feel like real human beings trying their best to survive a horrid situation. A similar level of intelligence is found in the film’s main villain, Patrick Stewart’s frighteningly cold Neo Nazi gang leader Darcy. Darcy is not just scary because of the lengths he is able to go to get rid of the main characters but also because of his insane level of competence. It makes Green Room one giant deadly game of chess that provides 2016’s most intense thrills while never forcing one to question the intelligence of anyone involved.







14. Hell or High Water

The western is dying on the vine. What seems to be left of its caucus are unfortunate nostalgia films (The Magnificent Seven) or filmmakers’ making allusions to it without expressly being forced to make one (Quentin Tarrentino’s last few films come to mind). Then there is Hell or High Water, a film that proves that there is still room left at the table for a new updated version of the western. Similar to the Choen Brother’s No Country for Old Men, Hell or High Water sets a heist story in the midst of America’s dying small towns with a great degree of success. Hell or High Water is thrilling and intelligent tackling not only the usual tropes of a heist movie but is also an offbeat examination of the characters at the centre and the institutions that got them to the place they find themselves in. Hell or High Water is another hopeful example that the modern western can still be relevant and creative; a sign that, while the genre has hit hard times, that it is not dead yet.




13. The Lobster

Imagine the most strange and absurd premise possible. Maybe a world in which single people are hunted and sent to a hotel where they have 45 days to find love or they are turned into an animal of their choosing. Now take this premise to the most natural extremes. There yet? Now go a little bit further and you have Yorgos Lanthimos’ amazing English language debut The Lobster. The Lobster is a great example of pure absurdity and commitment to its premise. The Lobster continues to go to new, strange, hilarious heights throughout its near two hour running time while all the while continuing to play by all the rules that it establishes early on. The result is a wonderful piece of dark, absurdist filmmaking that is beautiful in its own wacky way.




12. Nocturnal Animals

Another film to slot into the capital S strange category Nocturnal Animals is a beautiful film that is wholly unique. Blending stylish art film and gritty thriller all in service of describing a failed marriage between a hardened art curator, and a romantic author is a strange premise on paper but works surprisingly well in practice. Tom Ford’s now signature style blends the genres perfectly creating a film that is as powerful substantively as it is stylish. It also features another great performance from Amy Adams as the cold Susan as well as one of the best endings to any film in 2016. Nocturnal Animals is the complete package, and a total tour de force of a film.






11. Manchester by the Sea

Grief is a popular emotion for filmmakers as it is easy to comprehend and visualize. The balance of displaying grief is often tough as filmmakers tend to struggle with walking the line of being powerful but not overly manipulative. Kenneth Lonergan has mastered the understanding of grief and that is on display in full force in Manchester by the Sea. Lonergan’s portrayal of grief in Manchester by the Sea is complex and understanding empathizing with his characters throughout some of their darkest hours. Casey Affleck’s Lee Chandler is a man deeply consumed by a dark inescapable grief that continues to compound through the loss of his brother and the subsequent revisit to the town he left behind. Affleck’s masterful performance shows a man cut off from the world through grief, and his inability to talk to the people around him is more powerful than any outward emotion. It makes for a film that is not flashy in its depiction of loss and is more powerful for it. Combined with a beautiful understanding of place and some dynamite supporting performance it makes for an absolutely stunning motion picture. Manchester by the Sea is an film that is impossible to shake and the fact that it only ends up at number 11 on this list speaks volumes to the sheer amount of amazing films that 2016 has produced.



Next: 10-1 The absolute cream of the crop in 2016 (Coming Tomorrow)

Monday, June 27, 2016

Game of Thrones “The Winds of Winter” Review: Game on




 Dany and Tyrion confiding in one another on Game of Thrones
Photo credit: HBO

A bunch of thoughts on what might have been the best Game of Thrones episode ever right after I give you some very ineffective console…

“I do things because it feels good.”
-Cerci

Ok Game of Thrones you got me back.

After weeks of wheel spinning and a climax that ultimately did very little for me, Game of Thrones really needed a bounce back with its finale “The Winds of Winter.” While I have not been reviewing the show for the last few weeks (apologies most weeks got me to the point where I was watching and beginning to write about the show mid week at which the episode was at that point old news) I have begun growing very frustrated with it. Two weeks ago “No One” spun the show in circles, reverting a lot of progress in the character development front (Jamie) and revealing that some characters were being spun around repeating very similar arcs to the ones they had previous for the sole purpose of keeping them out of the action (Arya). It made for a frustrating lack of process that ultimately never ended up serving the story in any positive manner. Then there was “Battle of the Bastards” that despite it’s cool (if overlong) battle sequence never really provided the emotional satisfaction it wanted to due to just how awful of a character Ramsey was. Not to mention there was no satisfaction to the victory as Jon and Sansa were frustratingly bad at war to the point that their victory seemed as if it came from sheer luck.

Luckily for the show “The Winds of Winter” was much more than just a simple bounce back episode. In fact it may be the best episode in the show’s run so far. One of my main criticisms of the show that has been made even more opaque over the last few weeks is the moment to moment nature of the show’s storytelling. Because of the “bounce around Westeros” format the show doesn’t often provide a chance for building coherent themes or connecting its thoughts. It can make for a show that contains great individual moments but often lacks the connecting elements of a great television show. “The Winds of Winter” is the first episode of the show that finally begins the process of connecting the show’s various, characters, themes and plotlines. It begins to shed a lot of the fat that had made the show so frustrating over the last few years and begin the process of moving towards a dramatic finish. It finally feels like there is an end game in sight and it feels so good.

It helps that the finale managed to pull all of this off in beautiful fashion. The first third of the episode was one of the best single sequences that the show has ever done rivaling and maybe even topping the amazing battle sequence from “Battle of the Bastards.” The quicker editing, the beautiful new piano theme from series composer Ramin Djawadi, and the near perfect composition of the lead up to Cersei’s bombing of the Sept of Balor made for a sequence that was both memorable and satisfying. Gone are the characters that have been holding Cersei back from fully being a part of the more central conflict that was looming. No more distractions from the faith or a younger queen. Even her son Tommen is now out of the way as the young king, out of greif and perhaps a little bit of powerlessness, decided to take his life in the most beautiful and horrifying ending shot possible. Everything that stemmed from the opening third that took place in King’s Landing was perfectly executed, and made for one of the best single sequences in the show’s history.

But unlike other episodes of Game of Thrones it was not just a single sequence that defined the episode rather the amazing King’s Landing sequence tied into the rest of the episode’s themes of revenge, power, and leadership. Dany, using both the lust for revenge that the Dornish and Tyrells possess has found herself new allies on her way over to Westeros (finally!), Arya exacted her vengeance to finally rid of the Freys once and for all in a fashion that had me both cheering and actively questioning the good of Arya’s sociopathic nature, and Jon Snow managed to wrangle together the leadership and belief in one’s self to become a competent King of the North. It all tied together in a beautiful coherent bow. Never, like I had in the past, was I asking why we were focusing on a particular area of the show or what all the individual parts of an episode had to do with each other. For Game of Thrones this was mighty refreshing.

Best of all though, “Winds of Winter” is finally bringing the characters together. Long gone are the day’s of sprawling and stalling as it seems as the show looks to finally be centering these characters around a single plot line. Dany is finally making the trek over to Westeros that has been way too long in the making, the Starks finally have a leg to stand on again in Jon Snow/Tygarian (the nobility of Ned again rears its ugly head) even if Littlefinger’s devious plotting may be ultimately out to get him, and there is no doubt who the f-ng official queen of Westeros is now. The final participants of the Game of Thrones are set and it’s time for them to begin to square off.

Season six of Game of Thrones had many a frustration, especially in its later half but I could not have asked for a better finale than “The Winds of Winter.” The show has finally rid of a lot of the fat and has began to connect its sprawl in a beautiful novelistic fashion. We are just (or so at least the creators would have it) two seasons away from the conclusion of show and I could not be more excited to find out where this roller coaster ride will conclude.

Some other Musings:

  • Jon Targaryen/Stark!!!!! So turns out he wasn’t a bastard after all! Thank you Bran for being a part of a useful part of the show for once!

  • Cersei’s strange look of authoritative satisfaction as she took the throne was one of the most chilling scenes of the episode. Even if loosing her son was not in the plans it sure did not seem like she cared by the end of it. Her icy stare as she looked to take back her own destiny was one of the many memorable shots that punctuated this beautiful episode.

  • In an episode of big moments we still got time for some great scenes of intimacy. The peak of this being the wonderful conversation between Tyrion and Dany. For the first time Tyrion has a place, and a cause in which to believe in. Will his newfound belief end up being his downfall? Or can he overcome the odds in the way he always has?


That’s it for this season. It was a little rough getting there at times but boy what a satisfying conclusion.

Now let’s see if they can stick the landing...

That’s just me though. What did everyone else think?