Floating Heads

5 Jan 12

My Top 10 Films of 2011

Most critics seem to be in agreement that 2011 was not an especially great year for film but there were nevertheless gems to be found if you did a little digging. I did a lot of digging last year, more than ever in fact, surpassing my previous benchmark (by about 30 films) by viewing a record 103 films in the theatre in 2011. And that’s not including about a half dozen of those which I saw more than once. Much of this is due to the fact that I took my first trips to the Sundance and Toronto Film Festivals, and began writing a bit more seriously about film at The Playlist on Indiewire, and consequently here. If you’re like me you have already read 1,000 other Top 10 lists - and you’ve read the films that won’t be appearing here - so let this be the last (and hopefully best). There’s always an instinct when you start reading other lists to start rearranging your own but I tried - this year more than ever - to go with my initial instincts and not be swayed by critical consensus. Here are my favorite films from 2011.

1. Drive (Nicolas Winding Refn)
The elements are all familar - a man with no name, a woman in trouble, a criminal kingpin, a femme fatale and a heist gone wrong - so how is it that “Drive” feels like nothing I’ve ever seen before? Director Nicolas Winding Refn fuses his gonzo arthouse sensibility onto a Hollywood genre film and the results are riveting. Despite a well traveled plot, I was on the edge of my seat for the entire film with no idea what was going to happen next. The opening establishes an expectation and then the rest of the film proceeds to dismantle that expectation, scene by scene. The opening getaway is thrilling in its quiet precision. Then comes the neon tinged opening credits with “Nightcall” synths blaring and you wonder if this is supposed to be for real. And then about thirty minutes or so into the film comes the first burst of violence - so strong and so unexpected you could see the hands going up all over the theatre - and you realize this is for real.

Then comes the strip club, the elevator, the chinese restaurant and you start to wonder why every movie isn’t this movie? And with your jaw still hanging open you start to get a little angry with other, lesser, filmmakers for being so lazy. Director Refn re-imagines the heist film as a neon noir fairy tale where anything can happen and no one is safe. You might have to go back as far as “Pulp Fiction” to find a filmmaker who fused pop music and images quite as effectively as Refn does here. But unlike Tarantino’s sprawling, verbose scripts, “Drive” is incredibly economic. Scenes that in lesser films would be full of exposition, here have been shaved down to the bone. You get everything you need without a wasted moment. I had such a strong, visceral reaction to the film I have a hard time relating to anyone who doesn’t love it. This was the best film of 2011.

2. The Artist (Michel Hazanavicius)
Despite taking home nearly every critics award, there has been quite a backlash building for “The Artist,” which I could understand if it wasn’t so damn good. Look, I was skeptical too. Snatched up by The Weinstein Co. just before it’s Cannes debut, this seemed like exactly the type of movie that usually gets on my nerves: an exercise in nostalgia aimed squarely at the older Oscar voters that make up the bulk of the Academy. (Otherwise known as Oscar Bait.) And on top of that, it had the added gimmick of being a silent film. At its NYFF premiere I skeptically spent the first few minutes resisting its charms, wondering what purpose other than novelty a silent film could serve in 2011. But within minutes all of that cynicism melted away and I thought, ‘Fuck that. I love this movie.’ I was utterly charmed by stars Jean Dujardin and Berenice Bejo, dazzled with the way Hazanvicius used the format as a storytelling device while playing with conventions and by the time the film ended I was incredibly moved. Wiping away a few tears I thought, ‘if this wins Best Picture, I’m totally okay with that.’ A great film.

3. Bridesmaids (Paul Feig)
In the six months since “Bridesmaids” became a massive box office hit, I’ve been thoroughly baffled by the conversations I’ve had with people about the film. If you thought it “wasn’t that funny” or that it was “just okay,” I don’t know what to tell you other than that you probably don’t deserve a comedy this good. Not every scene is designed for laughs and that’s what makes it brilliant. It’s a film with the confidence, nay balls, to let the audience breathe for a minute and watch star/co-writer Kristen Wiig make a cupcake. Why? Because it’s an important character beat. In any other studio comedy, this would have been the first thing to go. Thank producer Judd Apatow, screenwriters Wiig and Annie Mumolo and director Paul Feig for having the courage to go for humor and pathos, creating some of the most memorably awkward sequences (in a good way) since the U.K. “The Office.” Melissa McCarthy has been deservingly receiving praise for her performance but the entire cast shines here with Rose Byrne, Maya Rudolph and Wiig absolutely nailing every scene. I’ve seen the film four times now and I could watch it again right now. The best comedy of the year and one of the best films period.

4. Attack The Block (Joe Cornish)
Hype can be a killer. And after a raucous almost-legendary Midnight premiere at SXSW, was there any way “Attack The Block” could possibly be as good as it was supposed to be? Yes, it can. Dumped in the middle of summer with a non-existent marketing campaign, it’s already a cult classic in the making. Centering on a group of young teens in South London fighting off an alien invasion, there are nods to the 80s cinema of John Carpenter and Steven Spielberg but they feel lived in, genuine, as if they’d been absorbed naturally rather than studied. Like “Shaun of the Dead” or “District 9” before it, the film has a distinct voice - in this case first-time filmmaker Joe Cornish - and you can see his fingerprints all over the film. And Cornish has more on his mind than simply recapturing an era. He’s been inspired in equal part by his experiences growing up there and the issues of race and class that the film hints at make it a lot more substantial than your typical alien invasion flick. And that’s not even mentioning Thomas Townend’s ultra-saturated cinematography, the propulsive score by Basement Jaxx, wonderfully stylized creature design and the ending which is likely to raise your goosebumps as it did mine. Believe.

5. Young Adult(Jason Reitman)
Speaking of backlash, sometime around the time Diablo Cody collected her Oscar for “Juno” most of the world’s cinephiles collectively decided the screenwriter was a hack. Which is too bad for them because I suspect now they’re going to be eating those words. Hilarious, uncomfortable, sincere and devoid of the stylized dialogue she has long been criticized for, this is the film that should silence any and all of her detractors. Charlize Theron-in a brilliant, monster performance-stars as an author of young adult novels who returns to her hometown to win back her married high-school boyfriend. It’s an uncompromisingly ugly portrayal that movie stars do not give very often if ever, and she does it without prosthetics or distractions. I’ve liked each of director Jason Reitman’s previous films but felt they each received a bit more praise than they were perhaps deserving. Ironically “Young Adult” is his best film to date and it’s being completely ignored principally because he made a film where the lead character is unlikable. She’s not Meryl Streep in “The Devil Wears Prada,” instead resembling a female version of Noah Baumbach’s acidic (and underrated) “Greenberg,” another love-it-or-hate-it proposition dividing viewers who simply didn’t want to spend time with a prick. It’s their loss, the film is a career best for all involved.

6. Hanna (Joe Wright)
One of my earliest favorites this year, “Hanna” reminded me of a lost Danny Boyle film from the 90’s. Director Joe Wright (“Pride & Prejudice”), here making his first steps into the action milieu, is an outsider to the material just as Hanna is to the civilized world and the disparity proves galvanizing for the filmmaker. A preternaturally sharp Saoirse Ronan stars as the titular character, a young girl raised by her father (Eric Bana) in the woods and trained to be an expert killer until she is no longer content to live in seclusion. On the run, she’s hunted for as-yet unknown reasons by a CIA agent (Cate Blanchett) as she has her first experiences with civilized mankind. Puzzlingly, audiences and certain critics don’t seem to get that it’s a fairy tale. Yes, Blanchett is over-the-top but everything here is amplified. This is the same film that with a straight face introduces a suitcase with a giant blinking red button and sets the finale in an abandoned Hansel & Gretel house. So yeah, the film isn’t wholly concerned with approximating reality. And that’s okay because the reality of the film works and works wonderfully.

7. Shame (Steve McQueen)
Somehow I was late to the game on British artist-turned director Steve McQueen (no relation). I hadn’t seen his first film until a few weeks before his latest was set to unspool at the Toronto Film Festival. But in a way I’m glad it happened that way because the one-two punch “Hunger” and “Shame” - both with awe-inspiring performances by star Michael Fassbender - have convinced me McQueen is one of the most exciting new filmmakers working today. Fassbender gives arguably the single best performance this year as Brandon, a Manhattan advertising executive whose sex addiction begins to spiral out of control. Carey Mulligan is atypically cast as Cissy, his dramatic younger sister who comes to stay with him. Carefully framed with beautiful, precise, long takes McQueen doesn’t spell anything out for you but doesn’t drag things out either. As it builds to it’s “Requiem For A Dream”-esque climax, his filmmaking demonstrates such confidence you can see why stars like Brad Pitt are dying to work with him.

8. Like Crazy (Drake Doremus)
After similarly themed films like “(500) Days of Summer” and “Blue Valentine” became successful, I’m surprised that Drake Doremus’ Sundance darling didn’t find a bigger audience. Without the arch stylization of the former and exaggerated melodramatics in the later, “Like Crazy” may be the best of the bunch. On the surface, it’s simple. A boy and a girl fall in love in college and after graduation enter unwittingly into a long distance relationship. From there, things become complicated. But the way the story is told - full of perfectly realized moments, painful and true - as it skips forward in time dispensing with overused cheap dramatic moments like ‘will they or wont they’ and cutting right into the heart of the ‘it’s already done.’ Felicity Jones delivers a breakout performance in the film, whose only real flaw is Anton Yelchin. While he’s not bad in the role, he lacks the necessary charisma for making you fall for his character at the beginning of the film. But if you can suspend disbelief long enough to say “okay, they love each other,” you’ll be helpless to defend yourself from the remainder of the film where it takes your heart and rips it out. Initially my second favorite film at Sundance, “Like Crazy” actually jumped into first position after a second viewing in October rendered it even more impressive 10 months later.

9. The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo (David Fincher)
Upon seeing the original Swedish version of the international bestseller, I questioned, “How David Fincher will make anything interesting out of this I have no idea.” While still hampered by the whodunit source material, Fincher does everything in his power to turn the procedural potboiler into high art and very nearly succeeds. Keeping the momentum from “The Social Network,” this film retains key members of production (including DP Jeff Cronenweth, composers Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross and editors Kirk Baxter & Angus Wall) who are all firing on all cylinders here. The results are intoxicating. Fincher is aesthetically unsurpassed by almost anyone working today and ‘Dragon Tattoo’ is a visual and aural marvel. Rooney Mara is everything she needs to be to portray the iconic Lisbeth Salander: a complex, mesmerizing human character and Daniel Craig - who hasn’t really found a good role since becoming Bond - is a perfect fit as Blomkvist. If the film is not on the same level with the director’s best work (“Se7en,” “Fight Club,” “Zodiac”), it’s only because he’s set the bar so high.

10. Kill List (Ben Wheatley)
A former soldier is pressured by his wife and their grim financial situation to take the occasional job as a contract killer. Against his better judgement he takes on a job - the “kill list” in question containing several seemingly unrelated targets - even after red flags start being raised and things spiral out of control from there. To further describe what makes this film great would be to rob you of the pleasure of seeing it for yourself. Violent without being gratuitous, with turns you would never see coming from the outset, the easy rapport between leads Neil Maskell and Michael Smiley keeps the film alarmingly watchable even as the rug starts to get pulled out from under you and you’re not even quite sure what kind of film you’re watching. Suffice to say this British chiller is one of the most distinctive and indelible genre efforts I’ve seen in some time and I’ll likely be recommending it to friends for years to come. “Kill List” is available OnDemand starting today. Don’t miss it.



Runners Up.

11. Conan O’Brien Can’t Stop (Rodman Flender)
One of the most overlooked documentaries of the year. Directed by O’Brien’s Harvard classmate Flender, this warts-and-all tour doc gains unfettered access to the self deprecating late night host, revealing sometimes bitter though always hilarious dimensions to his enthusiastic onscreen persona. An illuminating (though not always flattering) portrait of the comedian.

12. Beginners (Mike Mills)
Graphic artist turned filmmaker Mills’ warm, semi-autobiographical account of his father coming out of the closet at 75 (played wonderfully here by Christopher Plummer) has divided critics sharply between those that found it too precious and those that fell head over heels for it. For me, the film has only grown in my estimation upon repeat viewings where the film’s heart-on-a-sleeve construction has really worked its charms.

13. George Harrison: Living In The Material World (Martin Scorsese)
I had the pleasure of seeing Scorsese’s epic 3 1/2 hour doc on the big screen during the NYFF and as many times as I’ve heard The Beatles story told in countless articles, books and other films, Scorsese along with editor David Tedeschi manage to make it feel exciting again. The audio mix for the soundtrack alone deserves an award.

14. Submarine (Richard Ayoade)
Initially my favorite film from Sundance ‘11, this underrated British coming-of-age film suffered from (unavoidable) comparisons to “Rushmore” But unlike many deadpan also-ran’s, Ayoade’s film has the style and heart to pull it off thanks in part to newcomers Craig Roberts and Yasmin Paige and the filmmaker’s varied influences. And it’s got a killer soundtrack.

15. Midnight In Paris (Woody Allen)
This comic fantasy casts Owen Wilson stars as Allen surrogate Gil, a frustrated screenwriter who idealizes Paris in the 20’s. The actor brings his laid back delivery to Allen’s usually high-strung dialogue and the contrast is unexpectedly brilliant. While not one of Allen’s great films, it was one of the best times I had watching a movie all year.


16. Corman’s World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel (Alex Stapleton)
B-movie king Roger Corman may be responsible for helping to launch the careers of countless Hollywood legends - from Martin Scorsese and Jack Nicholson to Jonathan Demme and Ron Howard - but has never really gotten his due until now. This lovingly crafted doc traces Corman’s 50+ year career on the outskirts of the industry with insightful interviews from his many protégés.

17. Harry Potter & The Deathly Hallows: Part 2 (David Yates)
Despite never having read the books, I’ve enjoyed my annual trips to Hogwarts over the last decade and though I never became a full Potter-phile, something became very clear during the terrific closing chapter of Warner Bros. unshakable franchise: I’m really going to miss these characters.

18. Miss Bala (Gerardo Naranjo)
A Mexican beauty pageant contestant gets kidnapped by a drug lord and forced to become a runner for his gang. It may sound dire but through Naranjo’s lense, it becomes the framework for a sparse first-person thriller. Shot in incredibly long fluid takes, Naranjo takes potentially bleak subject matter and turns it into invigorating cinema.

19. 50/50 (Jonathan Levine)
A cancer comedy is an extremely risky move so credit director Levine and screenwriter Will Reiser for nailing just the right mix of emotion and laughs with with this inspirational dramedy inspired by Reiser’s own battle with the disease. Features strong turns from an unsung Bryce Dallas Howard and Seth Rogen who shines by bringing his comic persona into a more dramatic film.

20. Super (James Gunn)
My pick for the Most Underrated Film of 2011, Gunn’s superhero satire is funny and weird and surprising in ways that can’t easily be summed up. Alright, fine: it’s like a darker, weirder “Kick-Ass” with Rainn Wilson from “The Office” as a depressive wannabe superhero and Ellen Page as his sexy sidekick.

Notable: Arthur Christmas, Being Elmo: A Puppeteers Journey, Captain America: The First Avenger, Friends With Kids, Horrible Bosses, The Ides Of March, Jane Eyre, Moneyball, Win Win, X-Men: First Class.

attack the block bridesmaids drive film girl with the dragon tattoo hanna like crazy listomania shame the artist young adult kill list conan george harrison: living in a material world submarine beginners midnight in paris harry potter corman's world miss bala 50/50 x-men: first class

13 Dec 11

The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo review

Arriving a little over a year after his last film, “The Social Network,” conquered every critics awards (only to be narrowly shut out at the Oscars), and adapted from a series of books that seemingly everyone on the planet has read by now, David Fincher’s “The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo” arrives with the weight of impossible expectations. It was one of my most anticipated movies of the year and that’s coming from someone who hasn’t read the books and hated the original Swedish film. (My 20 word review said simply, “This was a bad TV movie. How David Fincher will make anything interesting out of this I have no idea.”) The story follows disgraced journalist Mikael Blomkvist (Daniel Craig) who is aided by brilliant but damaged computer hacker Lisbeth Salander (Rooney Mara) in a search for a woman who has been missing for 40 years. Blomkvist is hired by Henrik Vanger (Christopher Plummer) whose great-niece Harriet he suspects may have been the victim of a serial killer and prompts the the journalist to investigate the Vanger family who he introduces as “the most detestable collection of people that you will ever meet.”

Since Fincher has already pretty much set the bar for serial killer movies with “Se7en” and “Zodiac,” let’s get the bad news out of the way up front. While the director works wonders with the material, the film just doesn’t quite live up to those benchmarks nor does it approach the pure, scorching sound and fury in that brilliant teaser trailer. (We can all agree that it’s the year’s best, right? I got goosebumps every time I saw it in the theatre.) The good news is that (‘Benjamin Button’ aside) Fincher can seemingly do no wrong and the film is a visual and aural marvel, aesthetically unsurpassed by almost anyone working today. The opening credits—featuring the Karen O./Trent Reznor collaboration on Led Zeppelin’s “Immigrant Song”—are likely to blow your hair back but then moves towards a more classical style of filmmaking. Impeccably photographed by his ‘Social Network’ DP Jeff Cronenweth, the filmmaker is done with creating the kinds of flashy shots that are now imitated by his peers and is now only interested in serving the scene. Likewise, his seamless employment of special effects is arguably the best in Hollywood because you usually don’t even realize you’re watching one (see: this “Zodiac” video).

The investigation takes place mainly on a remote island in Sweden during a frigid isolating winter and the bleak backdrop perfectly fits the icy remove between the characters. The cast is great top-to-bottom with Mara turning the iconic Salander into a complex, mesmerizing character and Craig—who hasn’t really found a good role since becoming Bond—is a perfect fit as Blomkvist. The score by Oscar-winning ‘Social Network’ duo Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross lacks some of the more obvious themes of their previous score but provides more atmospheric and unconventional thrills all the same. At 2 hours 40 minutes ‘Tattoo’ moves remarkably quickly, packing in details at a brisk pace and abstaining from uniting its two leads for nearly 90 minutes. So where does it fall short? Having not read the books I can’t say with certainty that the problem lies with the source material but I can certainly say it lies within the adaptations. At the core of the material, it’s simply not that great of a story and like mega-sellers (“The Da Vinci Code” or the ‘Harry Potter’ series), there are just too many fans of the book to get into any major changes without pissing off your entire fanbase.

Fans of the book should love it, because you certainly couldn’t wish for a more accomplished visual stylist than Fincher to bring the book to life, but newcomers to the material may wonder what all the fuss is about. Yes, Salander is an interesting character and setting full of potential intrigue but in the end it’s just too straightforward. (There are really only a couple of suspects and if you look at the most suspicious one, you’ll probably be right.) There are detours and pieces of information that don’t drive the story forward and even bits from the book that may seem crucial in the book (like the infamous brutal rape scene) but come off as a bit gratuitous in the film. Would we have felt any differently about her character without some of these moments? Possibly but probably not. And it’s certainly not a conventional thriller in that there are very few scenes involving any sort of chase or suspense, even the violence is limited to a few brief blasts. As an auteur who does not double as his own screenwriter, Fincher is at the mercy of the scripts and that puts him at a handicap. Though he recognized the challenge of turning a “supermarket potboiler” into a great film, I’m not sure he got all the way there.

film review girl with the dragon tattoo

24 Oct 11

The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo (Directed by David Fincher)

The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo (Directed by David Fincher)

film poster girl with the dragon tattoo artist

22 Sep 11

The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo (Directed by David Fincher)

film trailer girl with the dragon tattoo david fincher

30 Aug 11

Most Anticipated Fall Movies ‘11

September is almost here which means (amongst other things) that Summer Movie Season has ended and Fall Movie Season is about to begin. There will be a flood of new movies released between now and the end of the year, many of them Oscar hopefuls and though it seems like awards season just wrapped up, it’s about to begin again in full force starting with the Toronto Film Festival next week. This will be my first trip to TIFF and I will also be attending the New York Film Festival in October (as usual), so I’ll be checking out quite a few films a bit early. Here are the films that I’m most looking forward to for the remainder of 2011.



1. THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO (Dec 21) Anyone who’s been in a theatre while this trailer played knows exactly why it’s at the top of this list. The propulsive, wordless teaser for David Fincher’s latest is all sound and fury and is nearly impossible to watch without getting the chills. While it doesn’t explain much of the story, about a journalist (Daniel Craig) aided by a goth punk computer hacker (Rooney Mara) in search of a missing woman, it’s hard to imagine anyone watching it without thinking, “I have to see this. Right. Away.”



2.
TINKER TAILOR SOLDIER SPY (Dec 9) From the director of the Swedish vampire coming-of-age tale (and one of the best horror films of the past decade) “Let The Right One In” comes this adaptation of the John Le Carre espionage thriller set during the Cold War with the most impressive British cast this side of a Harry Potter film including Gary Oldman, Colin Firth, Tom Hardy, John Hurt, Mark Strong and more. The trailers for the film have been all atmosphere and intrigue and that’s enough to get me to the theatre opening day.



3.
THE MUPPETS (Nov 23) After Jim Henson passed away, the Muppets seemed to lose their magic for a decade or two, so credit “Forgetting Sarah Marshall” co-writers Jason Segel and Nicolas Stoller for reviving the excitement again around these characters. The excellent, witty trailers should have both kids and nostalgia-prone adults both eagerly anticipating this one. “Flight of the Conchords” director James Bobin rounds up a cast including Segel, Amy Adams, Chris Cooper and a ton of cameos but all you really need to know is that Kermit, Miss Piggy, Fozzie Bear, Gonzo and Animal will all be there, too.



4.
THE DESCENDANTS (Nov 23) It’s been 7 years since writer/director Alexander Payne released his last film; only a year less time than it took him to release his first 4 films “Citizen Ruth,” “Election,” “About Schmidt” and “Sideways” which made him one of the most promising filmmakers to come out of the late 90s/early 00s. Well after a hiatus Payne is back with his latest dramedy with George Clooney as a man trying to reconnect with his two daughters after his wife suffers a boating accident. It’s also playing TIFF and NYFF so expect it to be a major awards contender. 



5.
WE BOUGHT A ZOO (Dec 23) Speaking of hiatuses, it’s also been 7 years since the world has seen a Cameron Crowe film. The writer/director behind classics like “Say Anything,” “Jerry Maguire” and “Almost Famous” hit a snag with his last effort “Elizabethtown,” which ironically was about a man dealing with a colossal failure in his career. His comeback effort is based on the bestselling non-fiction book about a father (Matt Damon) who moves his family to the countryside to re-open a struggling zoo. If this isn’t enough to get his career back on track, the notorious music fan also has the doc “Pearl Jam Twenty” out in September.

Read More

a dangerous method carnage film girl with the dragon tattoo listomania mission impossible the descendants the muppets the skin i live in tinker tailor soldier spy we bought a zoo young adult fall movies

29 May 11

The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo (Directed by David Fincher)

trailer david fincher girl with the dragon tattoo

3 Jan 11

My Most Anticipated Films of 2011


1. Moonrise Kingdom
dir: Wes Anderson (The Fantastic Mr. Fox, The Royal Tenenbaums, Rushmore)
Anderson’s 7th film is set in the 1960’s as 2 twelve year olds fall in love and run away from their New England town.  Cast includes
Bruce Willis, Edward Norton, Bill Murray, Frances McDormand, Tilda Swinton and 2 yet-to-be-named pre-teens.  As much as I’ve been disappointed by his recent films I’m still hoping he’s got another classic in him.  This could be it.


2. The Tree Of Life
dir: Terrence Malick (The New World, Days Of Heaven, Badlands)
This was in the same spot last year but now we’ve got a trailer and an actual release date.  The film features Brad Pitt and Sean Penn as father and son, (in the 1950’s and present day), and will probably be beautiful (as long as it’s not boring.)  I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs are out, though.


3. The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo
dir: David Fincher (The Social Network, Fight Club, Se7en)
Fresh off his Best Picture win for The Social Network, (you know it’s going to happen), Fincher has turned his attention to an adaptation of the first installment in the incredibly popular Millenium Trilogy.  I saw the Swedish original and had a hard time picturing anyone turning it into something interesting but if anyone can do it, Fincher can.  (Benjamin Button notwithstanding.)


4. Hugo Cabret
dir: Martin Scorsese (Kundun, The King Of Comedy, Boxcar Bertha)
Martin Scorsese ditches Leonardo DiCaprio for the first time in a decade to adapt this book about an orphan living inside a train station in 1930’s Paris.  The film stars “Hit Girl” Chloe Moretz along with Christopher Lee, Sacha Baron Cohen and Jude Law among others and will be filmed entirely in 3D.  (Not kidding.)


5. Super 8
dir: JJ Abrams (Star Trek, Mission: Impossible III)
I’m not sure exactly what this is about and I like it that way.  I do know it stars Kyle “Coach Taylor” Chandler, Elle Fanning (who was amazing in Somewhere) and appears to evoke an 80’s era Spielberg. 
JJ Abrams loves “mystery boxes” and next summer I’m going to open one with Super 8 inside.  Watch the teaser.


6. Contagion
dir: Steven Soderbergh (Che, Traffic, Erin Brockovich)
In case anyone thought Soderbergh was taking it easy this year, (after releasing 4 films in 2009), he’s already got 2 films ready to go for 2011.  The 2nd of which is Contagion, a CDC centered action-thriller with a huge cast including Matt Damon, Kate Winslet, Marion Cottiard, Gweneth Paltrow, Jude Law, Bryan Cranston, etc. etc. 
He doesn’t need to retire, he just needs to slow down! 


7. Haywire
dir: Steven Soderbergh (The Informant!, Solaris, Out Of Sight)
That other Soderbergh film, which will be released first, is Haywire.  A gritty spy thriller described as
“if Alfred Hitchock made a Pam Grier movie”, this one stars mixed martial arts fighter Gina Carano backed by another sizeable cast including Ewan McGregor, Michael’s Douglas & Fassbender, Bill Paxton and Antonio Banderas.  I almost got to see it last month but apparently that was impossible.


8. Submarine
dir: Richard Ayoade (TV’s ‘Garth Marenghi’s Darkplace’)
This one came out of nowhere at the Toronto Film Festival where it got ecstatic reviews and I decided I had to see it as soon as possible
The quote that got me was: “A coming of age story which is equal parts Rushmore, Election and Squid and the Whale.” and if everything works out that will hopefully be in about 4 weeks at Sundance.  Please let everything work out.


9. The Descendants
dir: Alexander Payne (Sideways, About Schmidt, Election)
Somehow it’s been almost 7 years since Payne’s last film hit theatres.  In that time there’s been a lot of Payne-lite, (The Weather Man, Up In The Air, etc.) but there’s no substitute for the real thing.  George Clooney stars as a man trying to reconnect with his 2 daughters after his wife suffers a boating accident.  He will probably find himself in painfully awkward/funny humiliating situations.


10. The Skin That I Inhabit
dir: Pedro Almodovar (Broken Embraces, Volver, Talk To Her)
This one is going to be dark.  Antonio Banderas reteams with director Almodovar for the first time in 2 decades starring as a plastic surgeon hunting for the men who raped his daughter.  Yikes!  But I’m sure it will still have the directors trademark color palette, a beautiful score and a tone that switches from melodrama to comedy and back again.  I hope.

11. Drive (Nicolas Winding Refn)
Ryan Gosling is a stuntman who moonlights as a getaway driver.  From the (insane) director of Bronson and also starring Carey Mulligan, Christina Hendricks, Albert Brooks and Bryan Cranston.

12. Hanna (Joe Wright)
It looks like a remake of The Professional from the director of Pride & Prejudice.  Starring Saoirse Ronan, Cate Blanchett and Eric Bana.  Watch the trailer.

13. Your Highness (David Gordon Green)
Unofficial Pineapple Express sequel, set in medieval times, swaps Seth Rogen for Natalie Portman AND Zooey Deschanel.  Sounds like an upgrade.  (Sorry Seth.)  Watch the trailer.

14. Harry Potter & The Deathly Hallows Part II (David Yates)
The last last finally last and final Harry Potter film.  I can’t wait.  No spoilers.

15. Cowboys & Aliens (Jon Favreau)
I’m still not sure how much I trust Jon Favreau to direct action, but I do trust Daniel Craig to be a badass.  And it would be great for Harrison Ford to have a role that wasn’t terrible.  Watch the teaser.


16. Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (Tomas Alfredsen)
A Cold War espionage film starring Thomas Hardy, Gary Oldman and Colin Firth would be exciting.  But that film directed by the guy who did Let The Right One In is a must-see.

17. This Must Be The Place (Paolo Sorrentino)
The insane director of Il Divo brings you Sean Penn, (dressed as Robert Smith from The Cure) stars as an aging rock star who sets out to find his fathers executioner, an ex-Nazi war criminal.  

18. X-Men: First Class (Matthew Vaughn)
I had about zero interest in an X-Men reboot until I saw Kick-Ass and they set the film in the 60’s.  Now I have a lot of interest.  They even hired January Jones so I keep picturing Mad Men-era X-Men and I can’t not love that.
 

19. Sucker Punch (Zach Snyder)
While it looks way too CGI heavy for my liking, it also looks insane.  And once every 2 years I kinda look forward to a Zach Snyder film.  Watch the trailer.
 

20. The Muppets (James Bobin)
A brand new Muppets film, from the writers of Forgetting Sarah Marshall and the director of Flight Of The Conchords.  It might actually work.

Also released: While We’re Young (Noah Baumbach), Young Adult (Jason Reitman), Source Code (Duncan Jones), Beginners (Mike Mills)War Horse (Steven Spielberg), Paul (Greg Mottola), 30 Minutes Or Less (Ruben Fleischer), The Sitter (David Gordon Green), Wanderlust (David Wain), Bridesmaids (Paul Feig), The Hangover Part II (Todd Phillips), Twixt Now and Sunrise (Francis Ford Coppola), The Cabin In The Woods (Drew Goddard), One Day (Lone Scherfig), We Bought A Zoo (Cameron Crowe), The Adventures of Tintin (Steven Spielberg), Mission: Impossible: Ghost Protocol (Brad Bird), Cars 2 (John Lassetter), The Green Hornet (Michel Gondry)

contagion film girl with the dragon tattoo haywire hugo cabret listomania moonrise kingdom submarine super 8 the descendants the skin i live in drive hanna your highness harry potter cowboys & aliens tinker tailor soldier spy this must be the place x-men: first class sucker punch the muppets

6 May 10

I Saw 9 Movies: Not Recommended

I guess I’ve been busy recently because I haven’t reviewed a movie in the last 2 months even thought I’ve seen a lot of them.  Sorry!  Here are some movies you should probably not go see…

OKAY STUFF


Gainsbourg, Je t’Aime … Moi Non Plus
I don’t know how many times I need to learn this but I really do not like biopics.  Before the film I knew next to nothing about Serge Gainsbourg I went into the film with no idea of what to expect.  The film begins promisingly as a precocious young Gainsbourg flirts his way through art school but eventually becomes a stale greatest hits of his life.  Entire wives come and go with hardly an introduction so you begin to get bored, the third act is especially tiresome.  You could never get away with storytelling this sloppy in a fiction film.

A Thorn In The Heart
A very personal documentary by Michel Gondry about his auntie who was a schoolteacher.  It’s clearly a very loving portrait of a family member that he admires, but mostly devoid of Gondry’s visual inventiveness I don’t think the subject transcends being interesting to a general audience.  

My Trip To Al-Qaeda
Tribeca Film Fest entry, this documentary is based on a one-man play by Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Lawrence Wright.  It reminded me of An Inconvenient Truth because no matter how informative somebody talking you through a slide show is, it’s not interesting as a film.  At all.  I might be spoiled by movies like The Cove or Man On Wire but I really want a good story with engaging characters even in documentaries.  The film seemed very familiar and didn’t seem to have any new information so it seemed kinda pointless.


NOT REALLY GOOD STUFF

Hot Tub Time Machine
I thought this might be dumb funny, but it was dumb dumb.  It also cost $14(!!!) draining any remaining joy out of the experience.
 

The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo
This was a bad TV movie.  How David Fincher will make anything interesting out of this I have no idea.

Everyone Else
Sometimes I wonder if I should take more chances on movies I’ve never heard of before to find some gems.  After this movie I don’t wonder that as much anymore.

film review gainsbourg thorn in the heart my trip to al-qaeda hot tub time machine girl with the dragon tattoo everyone else