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Someone
tell me it isn’t true – I’ve
gone all soft this year, having musicals and animated
features making the bulk of my Top 10 List? But
what’s there not to like about the glitz,
the glamour and the glory? What’s there
not to like about the big sets, the big cast and
the big voices? All together now, let’s
sing: We’re “Dreamgirls”/Boys
we’ll make you happy! And if Oscar Best
Supporting Actress Jennifer Hudson didn’t
blow you away with her hollering voice, maybe
John Travolta in “Hairspray” will.
The guy has nabbed a Best Supporting Actor (not
actress!) nomination for his hilarious portrayal
of Edna Turnblad. All together now, let’s
sing: And if you try to hold me down/I’m
going to spit in your eye and say/That you can’t
stop the beat! Before you think I have a thing
for big women, my favorite on-screen princess
this year has to be Giselle. The girl has left
me “Enchanted” because she has enlightened
me by asking (singing, actually): How does she
know you love her?/How does she know she’s
yours?
Then
there are the adorable yellow folks in “The
Simpsons Movie”. Not much singing here,
but Homer’s “Spider Pig” was
delightfully silly enough for me to include it
in the list. And I also got to “Meet the
Robinsons”, who brought me to the wacky
future and experience the true meaning of…
family (aw, that’s sweet, isn’t it?).
Remy’s delectable “Ratatouille”
dish looked mouth-watering (on screen, at least)
enough to secure a place in the list as well,
what’s more, the movie was set in Paris!
I really want to visit the City of Love, especially
after seeing “Paris Je T’aime”.
Maybe (just maybe) I’d meet my true love
there, and my story will be made into a short
film by the likes of international directors like
Tom Tykwer, Olivier Assayas and Gus van Sant.
Speaking
about love, the guy-and-guy relationship in “Eternal
Summer” and the guy-and-girl one in “Lust,
Caution” are so affecting and thought-provoking,
it made me all teary-eyed. Before you accuse me
of being a softie, look at the guys in “The
Warlords”, weren’t those tears rolling
down their cheeks like water running free from
a tap I saw? Come on, I am sure I can be as macho
as them one day – after all, all you got
to do is dream.
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A significant
portion of last year’s Oscar roster wound
up on my personal and heretofore unstated ‘Worst
of’ list (with the sinister “Blood
Diamond” and the manufactured banality of
“Little Children” being particular
grievances) and I still fear that 2008’s
biggest Oscar-baiting prestige film in “American
Gangster” will eventually sink its stained
teeth into an undeserving berth. With that confession
aside, it does come as no surprise that the films
in this year’s ‘Best of’ list
might not find itself vying for Academy consideration.
But then again to be fair, the frontrunners (as
well as its dark horses) have not found their
way onto our island as of yet or possibly at all.
So it goes to say as far as 2007 goes, it’s
not just the smaller indies that rule the roost
and I’m glad to say that in this year’s
list I’ve discovered more than a few gems
in some of the year’s more commercially
viable releases that will hopefully enrich you
as it did me. The list of my year’s favourite
films is close to my heart and mind, with some
aiming to be intellectually stimulating and others
continuing to expand the passion conspicuous not
just in film but to all of the life that it reflects
in some form or other.
And nothing extols the latter
more than Craig Brewer’s audaciously volatile
“Black Snake Moan”, stamping his imprint
on provocative filmmaking in the clear skies and
sticky grime of his Americana and a genuine exaltation
of life’s ability to hurt and destroy but
most importantly to heal the deepest of psychic
wounds. After his celebrated and equally maligned
“Hustle & Flow”, Brewer proves
he’s not going softly into the night with
an intensely charged piece of Southern Gothic.
Matt Groening also proves his own point to detractors
with the eagerly awaited “The Simpsons Movie”,
even if Homer refuses to pay to watch the year’s
best comedy, animated or otherwise. Containing
the year’s funniest gag with Bart’s
sly flash of full-frontal nudity and the most
memorable use of a spider-pig, its politically
aggressive humour is a relieving return to form
and offers the sincerest and most heartrending
scenes of familial discombobulation when Bart
reacts to his lack of perceived paternal affection
and Marge questions her marriage to Homer.
David Cronenberg has no such
quotidian preoccupations with the traditional
family units (which was already evinced in his
“History of Violence”) in his masterful
“Eastern Promises” where he presents
London as a teeming hive of ethnic and ethical
tensions fueled by the cultural isolation of its
displaced immigrants. His typically exquisite
composition of light and gloom seeping into souls
is represented by an utterly fascinating performance
by Viggo Mortensen as he peers into the city’s
heart of darkness. With that we move swiftly on
to a town’s heart of goodness in Craig Gillespie’s
“Lars and the Real Girl”, a modern
fable that either takes to heart our rampant consumerism
or expresses a lost idealism in an increasingly
cynical world. I’d like to think that this
film understands deeply and with love and sadness,
the fundamental fragilities that shape us. In
a landscape of films that advocate conflict, it
is unusual to witness this film, which actually
wants its characters to get along and be happy.
In a curious intimation of the
previous two films mentioned, Bill Guttentag and
Bill Sturman’s documentary “Nanking”
reminds us of humanity’s capacity for both
inexplicable evil and profound goodness. The shared
human consciousness between the heroic foreigners
and ravaged citizenry during the Rape of Nanking
remains a small consolation in view of one of
humanity’s worst moments. The personification
of evil is also considered in the microcosm of
a serial killer and spate of obsessions that drive
the men who hunt him in David Fincher’s
“Zodiac”. Subtextual guilt-trips and
a spectacularly reeling anticlimax get under skins
and fester, both in clear and thoughtful engagement
with his most intensive work to date since the
fervour that surrounded and sustained “Se7en”.
Satoshi Kon’s subliminally
sublime “Paprika” also festers under
our skins and psyches as it leads us down a rabbit
hole where dreams are cinema, surfaces are liquid
and the Internet plugs into you instead. Dynamic
and brimming with metaphorical ideas and conceptual
collisions predicated on cinema’s own ability
to shape and deconstruct our purview. The despairing
nightmare apparent in Kon’s deepest residues
is amplified in Gela Babluani’s Kafkaesque
menace, “13 Tzameti”. Its tonally
confident monochromatic canvas recalls an intensely
grim, bleak nightmare that plasters over the hyper-realism
of its brutality, a slow burn allegory for the
fatalism infecting our existential crises and
the criminality forced upon France’s émigré
populace for the enjoyment of an upper class.
Rounding off the list are two
films sensitively tuned to the best of feminine
wavelengths that navigate the lives of women and
the family they love when all is said and done.
Pedro Almodóvar’s gentle homecoming
in “Volver” deals with a spate of
deaths comically, reminds us of the tenuous ties
that are ignored and the happiness discovered
at its end – all to the tune of Penelope
Cruz’s show stopping number that rightfully
grabbed her an Oscar nomination for Best Actress
this year. The other film dealt with death most
tragically when Adrienne Shelley who wrote, directed
and performed in the delightfully exuberant “Waitress”
passed away shortly before the film was released.
The wit and charm surging through Shelley’s
script is bolstered by chemistry of both Keri
Russell and Nathan Fillion, and both are occupants
of Shelley’s searing emotional truths and
wisdoms. Yes indeed, the sisters are doing it
for themselves
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I’ve
always felt a Number One in a Top 10 of a year
should always feature a universally ok-ed and
lauded film that anyone from almost any walks
of life can walk in and say “Boy, that’s
a good film”. Unlike the year of musicality
when Chicago won big; socio-political commentary
wave of 2004/2005 that saw Crash, Hustle and Flow
and The Constant Gardener dominate the screens,
2007 seems quite a mixed pot of films.
Creeping in at Number 10 for me is The Simpsons,
the long-awaited TV to big screen adaptation of
an insanely popular cartoon franchise Even as
I write, I feel like they deserve higher. Without
a doubt, it pulls off all the bells, whistles
and familiar kicks off the series while milking
the big screen advantages presenting us with a
fantastic, one-off adventure that can be so hard
to pull off. Imagine the animators trying to stay
relevant having to update the political barbs
and gags… 300 clocks in at 9th, a genuinely
impressive, comic book come to life production
of the legendary battle of the Spartans. I would
have appreciated it better if it didn’t
succumb to being a glossy, comic-to-screen print
but given the fact that the comic WAS like that
– presented frame for frame almost identically
– this was just me wishing the director
took some creative license.
The Italian and The Dead Girl comes in at 8th
and 7th, one a wonderfully stirring Russian film
about socio-cultural displacement of a young boy,
the other an amazingly incisive and refreshing
series of stories about the plights and tribulations
of women in modern day society. The bottom half
is topped off by Enchanted – a real action
fairy tale that is part animated – which
spins a twist on the traditional fairy tale while
adding modern day relevance with a realistic,
lovable sweetness in its ending.
Hot Fuzz is about as British as it gets in humour,
style and direction and snags Brit-flavour its
place in the top 10. Flash. At number four, truly,
is just about the best Asian war film in some
time, probably the reason 300 limped in at ninth.
Marred by an audience lacking perception, some
of whom actually laughed regularly, Andy Lau,
Jet Li and Takeshi Kaneshiro’s characters
were so representative of real life personalities,
ideals and principles that that it spoke to me
right to the core. The battle scenes were gloriously
tremendous with realism, yet maintaining so many
incisive portrayals and themes that apply in life,
politics and war with zero preachiness. The religious
insertions and commentary were almost ingenious.
It was without a doubt my favourite film of the
year.
The podium finishers are three distinctly different
films that provided strong movie entertainment
in their own right. Bourne Ultimatum finishes
third – a strong, political action thriller
that delivers massively as a last installment
of a book to film trilogy. Damon continues his
inspired portrayal and finishes on a fantastic
high that guaranteed great action for all. In
second is a film that is almost interchangeable
with the first – the wonderfully inspired
Hairspray. Have we ever seen a movie so filled
with unbridled energy and feel so genuine since
Grease? Hairspray is immensely entertaining, charming,
beguiling and lovable all-at-the-same-time, delivered
by a stellar cast that oozed so much natural charisma
and fun that you’d get off the armchair,
toss the popcorn and swim 20 miles, run a marathon
if it meant you could be an extra on the set and
join in the fun.
Hairspray is joined at the top by Ratatouille,
a Pixar film that fully justifies Disney’s
investment – it is a film impossible not
to love and frankly, halts a whole chain of almost
uninspiring Disney animation fare. Along with
Enchanted, Ratatouille is a celebration that there’s
life yet in this old boy. So lushly and movingly
animated with a plot so well paced and engaging
and characters that really carry their own weight
so much more than perhaps any other animated film
– the sight of an almost child-like Anton
Ego basking in simple happiness with the lovable
Linguini, rat et al simply coats anyone’s
heart with honey, marmalade and syrupy goodness
that makes it, along with Hairspray, two of the
lovably un-missable films of the year
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