7 posts tagged “movies”
I had grand plans to do a post a day about my favorite 2007 things starting about 2 weeks ago but life got in the way. It's hard to write when grandma's in town and a Felicia returns and you're stuffing your face all the daggone time.
So, here's what I would've gone into more depth about.
Best Albums of 2007
- Untrue - Burial (Yeah, it creeped on up)
- Play With The Changes - 4Hero
- Version - Mark Ronson
- The Reminder - Feist
- American Gangster - Jay-Z
- Kala - M.I.A.
- Our Earthly Pleasures - Maximo Park
- Koop Islands - Koop
- Writer's Block - Peter, Bjorn & John
- Ear Drum - Talib Kweli
- Neon Bible - Arcade Fire
- Introducing... - Joss Stone
- Under The Black Light - Rilo Kiley
- The Fragile Army - The Polyphonic Spree
- The Undisputed Truth - Brother Ali
- Desire - Pharoahe Monch
- The Weatherman LP - Evidence
- Those Things - Miguel Migs
- Proof of Youth - The Go! Team
- Volta - Bjork
Best Record Label of 2007 - The Numero Group
Best Hip-Hop Album of 2007 that you probably don't have
Best Albums of 2007 that didn't come out in 2007
- Bees + Things + Flowers - Incognito
- Keep Reachin' Up - Nicole Willis & The Soul Investigators
- The Only Thing I Ever Wanted - Psapp
- Set Yourself On Fire - Stars
- Best Kept Secrets: The Best of Lam 1996-2004 - Lamb
Best Songs of 2007 (based on actual spins)
- Innocence - Bjork
- Black Mirror - Arcade Fire
- Unlike Me - Kate Havnevik
- Int'l Players Anthem (I Choose You) (featuring Outkast) - UGK
- Give It To Me (f/ Nelly Furtado & Justin Timberlake) - Timbaland
- The Show - Talib Kweli & Madlib
- Don't Act (F/ Freeway) - Skillz
- I Still Love H.E.R. - Kanye West
- Ancient Curse - Peter, Bjorn & John
- Lookin' At Me Sideways - Brother Ali
- Innocence - Bjork
- Paper Planes - M.I.A.
- Int'l Players Anthem (I Choose You) (featuring Outkast) - UGK
- I'm A Flirt (Remix ft. T.I & T-Pain) - R.Kelly
- He Can Only Hold Her - Amy Winehouse
- 1 2 3 4 - Feist
- Champion - Kanye West
- Young Folks - Peter, Bjorn & John
- Look Inside - 4Hero
- Roc Boys (And The Winner Is...) - Jay-Z
- Michael Clayton
- Ratatouille
- No Country For Old Men
- Superbad
- Lars and The Real Girl
- The Heart of the Game
- Who Killed The Electric Car?
- Dixie Chicks: Shut Up & Sing
- An Unreasonable Man
Best Read of 2007 - The Race Beat: The Press, The Civil Rights Struggle, and The Awakening of a Nation
Best Website of 2007 - Last.fm
Best Website of 2007 to hate to sorta like - Facebook
Best Blog Podcast Vlog Content Site of 2007 - Undercover Black Man
Best New (to me) Content Site of 2007 - Away with Words
Was it the absurdity? Because, of course, a Real Doll is absurd. It's offensive and gross. That said, Ryan Gosling's Lars is far from absurd. He's a sweet, gentle soul who takes in the world from a very safe distance. So, theater patrons, is it his curious mental illness that is laughable? I might be able to accept that. I, however, only occasionally got the joke. Most of the time, I was just sad for Lars and his hurt and proud of the simple acts of kindness and honesty that this entire town shows him at the right moments to provide some level of therapy and healing.
But still, that fucking doll. I know we imbue objects with our own feelings and hangups and I'm trying to accept that this creepy sex toy could be anything to anybody in the right context -- something the movie showcases time and again -- but still. There are dudes paying thousands of dollars to hump an inanimate woman (with a backstory like she came from the Cabbage Patch) who won't reject them. Or talk. Or think. Or be.
You'll forgive me if I struggle with accepting her as Lars and his community does.
And yet, even though I squirmed in my seat with my brow furrowed, it is a wonderful film. The acting is spot on. We get to know these people in both their little and big moments. And, I cared.
Real Doll notwithstanding...recommended.
Have I done this before?
AFI's top 100 movies. Bold the ones you have seen. Strike out the ones you couldn't finish. * the ones you have seen more than once.
1. Citizen Kane (1941)
2. Godfather, The
3. Casablanca (1942)
4. Raging Bull (1980)
5. Singin’ in the Rain (1952)
6. Gone with the Wind (1939)
7. Lawrence of Arabia (1962)
8. Schindler's List (1993)
9. Vertigo (1958)
10. Wizard of Oz, The (1939)*
11. City Lights (1931)
12. Searchers, The (1956)
13. Star Wars (1977)*
14. Psycho (1960)*
15. Sunset Blvd. (1950)
16. 2001 : A Space Odyssey (1968)
17. Graduate, The (1967)
18. General, The (1927)
19. On the Waterfront (1954)
20. It’s a Wonderful Life (1946)*
21. Chinatown (1974)
22. Some Like It Hot (1959)
23. Grapes of Wrath, The (1940)
24. E.T. The Extraterrestrial (1982)*
25. To Kill a Mockingbird (1962)*
26. Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939)*
27. High Noon (1952)
28. All About Eve (1950)
29. Double Indemnity (1944)
30. Apocalypse Now (1979)
31. Maltese Falcon, The (1941)
32. Godfather Part II, The (1974)
33. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1975)
34. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937)
35. Annie Hall (1977)
36. Bridge on the River Kwai, The (1957)
37. Best Years of Our Lives, The (1946)
38. Treasure of the Sierra Madre, The (1948)
39. Dr. Strangelove (1964)
40. Sound of Music (1965)
41. King Kong (1933)
42. Bonnie and Clyde (1967)
43. Midnight Cowboy (1969)
44. Philadelphia Story, The (1940)
45. Shane (1953)
46. It Happened One Night (1934)
47. Streetcar Named Desire, A (1951)
48. Rear Window (1954)*
49. Intolerance (1916)
50. Lord of the Rings : The Fellowship of the Ring (2001)*
51. West Side Story (1961)*
52. Taxi Driver (1976)
53. Deer Hunter, The (1978)
54. M*A*S*H (1970)
55. North by Northwest (1959)
56. Jaws (1975)*
57. Rocky (1976)*
58. Gold Rush, The (1925)
59. Nashville (1975)
60. Duck Soup (1933)*
61. Sullivan’s Travels (1941)
62. American Graffiti (1973)
63. Cabaret (1972)
64. Network (1976)
65. African Queen, The (1951)
66. Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)*
67. Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966)
68. Unforgiven (1992)
69. Tootsie (1982)*
70. Clockwork Orange, A (1971)*
71. Saving Private Ryan (1998)
72. Shawshank Redemption, The (1994)*
73. Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969)
74. Silence of the Lambs, The (1991)*
75. In the Heat of the Night (1967)
76. Forrest Gump (1994)*
77. All the President’s Men (1976)
78. Modern Times (1936)
79. Wild Bunch, The (1969)
80. Apartment, The (1960)
81. Spartacus (1960)
82. Sunrise (1927)
83. Titanic (1997)*
84. Easy Rider (1969)
85. Night at the Opera, A (1935)
86. Platoon (1986)
87. 12 Angry Men (1957)
88. Bringing Up Baby (1938)
89. Sixth Sense, The (1999)*
90. Swing Time (1936)
91. Sophie’s Choice (1982)
92. Goodfellas (1990)*
93. French Connection, The (1971)
94. Pulp Fiction (1994)*
95. Last Picture Show, The (1971)
96. Do the Right Thing (1989)*
97. Blade Runner (1982)*
98. Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942)
99. Toy Story (1995)*
100. Ben-Hur (1959)
This is the most lo-fi sci-fi film I've seen in quite awhile. Cuaron makes no visual flights of fancy to wow the audience. He captures you with the possibility of this time. We aren't so far off from this now he seems to say. Don't sleep or this is your tomorrow. He doesn't leave us caught out there in this dismal time without a life preserver, however. At all times, we are shown characters who cling tightly to their humanity despite how close the world teeters on oblivion.
And, make no mistake, this is our world. Where I noted in my review of V for Vendetta last year,
here, Cuaron makes no such misstep. Having already diverted significantly from the source material, he creates a near-apocalyptic Britain that is as diverse racially as it is today. Perhaps even more so. The anti-immigrant fervor of this UK obviously has racial overtones but isn't as simplistic as Vendetta's white-washing makes it. Dark skinned folks are still a part of the country, although in obviously fewer numbers, and are often relegated to large refugee ghettos where Islamic extremism prospers. The rich whites have the freedom to live high above it all and "not think about it" while even the liberal anti-establishment whites are able to hole up in private enclaves and get high while people of color and whites with foreign dialects are put in cages and whisked away. They may be out of mind but they are never out of sight.I know that Alan Moore's source material serves to guide this choice but if they're going to gloss over the big picture concept of fascism vs. anarchism -- the two extremes that are the base of everything within the comic books -- and essentially bring it down to a question of neo-conservatism vs. revolutionary action, then maybe we could have had some brown people on the screen. Modern Day England has roots in the Middle East and Africa and those groups are growing. Surely, a near future UK would be even more culturally mixed.
Sci-fi films often create a very white future. Spielberg's futuristic movies all have this conceit. Minority Report's Washington D.C. is the cleanest and most vanilla the chocolate city has ever been. A.I. and Back to the Future, part II have similar issues. Even Will Smith's starring vehicle I, Robot lacks the multicultural casting any version of our soon-to-come years must have.
The world has become more diverse and more connected, not less. That Cuaron remembers this is achievement enough and should get you in the theatre. That it is, also, a spectacular movie that hits on all cylinders, comes in at under 2 hours, and leaves you with grim but hopeful thoughts of the world to come makes it one of the very best films of 2006 and the best sci-fi flick in ages.
This was originally posted on Negro Please on March 26, 2006. I want to reference it in a post I'm creating to talk about Children of Men and have yet to create a proper archive of the soon-to-be gone site, so here it sits.
V for Vendetta's
futuristic England is an all caucasian country. Apparently the
neo-conservatism masquerading as fascism in the film involved the
complete white-washing of what is currently a pretty diverse community.
Dark skin is no where to be found. It's odd for me that the Wachowski
Brothers would make that choice (or allow that choice to be made by the
director). One of the reasons I connect and enjoy the Matrix trilogy so
much is that it's a world of many hues with the heroes, to a person,
reflecting that multicultural aesthetic. I know that Alan Moore's
source material serves to guide this choice but if they're going to
gloss over the big picture concept of fascism vs. anarchism -- the two
extremes that are the base of everything within the comic books -- and
essentially bring it down to a question of neo-conservatism vs.
revolutionary action, then maybe we could have had some brown people on
the screen. Modern Day England has roots in the Middle East and Africa
and those groups are growing. Surely, a near future UK would be even
more culturally mixed.
But enough of my race hangups.
Or maybe not. It's interesting when we, as Americans, are confronted with revolutionary images we can sympathize with. After all, our country is built on the overthrow of one government for the creation of our own. Those images don't reconcile well in a post 9-11 America but V is compelling. He's seeking to overthrow a government who lies to its people, who institutes curfew, who seeks to keep order by opression and suppresion and the populace goes along with this very easily. My mind kept going to John Brown. How important were his "terrorist" actions at Harper's Ferry and before in moving the cause of abolition forward? Is he a hero or villain or something in between?
The same can be asked about V who uses violence and destruction to move his cause forward. The film is supposed to be raising the question of whether or not this push towards revolution, which is fueled mostly by vengeance, should be celebrated but doesn't really. Even at the key plot twist, we aren't really left with questions about V's "goodness".
There are some thought provoking elements to the film, however. Afterwards, there was a deep discussion about torture and terror, death penalties and revenge. For that I'll forgive the silly and unnecessary love story elements at the end, the sometimes ridiculous dialogue and the pacing of the flick. It felt longer than it should have and took far long to get to the hook of the story. But, for all its flaws, it's a good film and worth the money.
Just remember 2 things: In the future, the cool guys wear masquerade masks and speak in iambic pentameter and a revolution without dancing is one we don't want.
Books, movies, music; what's in your top 5 right now?
- De La Soul - Stakes is High
- Basement Jaxx - Crazy Itch Radio
- Dilated Peoples - 20/20
- Pharrell - In My Mind
- The Futureheads - News and Tributes
according to allconsuming & netflix:
- The Prestige
- Coffy
- Layer Cake
- The Devil's Playground
according to tivo
- The Wire
- Battlestar Galactica
- Lost
- Grey's Anatomy
- The Office
according to allconsuming & amazon.com:
Books, movies, music; what's in your top 5 right now?
According to last.fm
According to netflix
according to allconsuming: