- Avatar (3D)
- Up (3D)
- Where the Wild Things Are
- Fantastic Mr. Fox
- Watchmen
- The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
- The Hangover
- District 9
- JCVD
- Ponyo
- State of Play
- Synecdoche, New York
- Defiance
- An Education
- Inglourious Basterds
- Separation City
- Star Trek
- The Secret Life of Bees
- 2012
- Zombieland
- (500) Days of Summer
- Public Enemies
- Sherlock Holmes
- Away We Go
- A Serious Man
- Duplicity
- This Is It
- Hotel for Dogs
- RiP: A Remix Manifesto
- Surrogates
- Taking Woodstock
- Terminator Salvation
- The Spirit
- G.I. JOE: The Rise Of Cobra
- Confessions of a Shopaholic
- Fast & Furious
- Transporter 3
- Underworld: Rise of the Lycans
- 12 Rounds
- Bruno
- Under the Mountain
- Big Stan
- I Love You, Beth Cooper
- Jonas Brothers: The 3D Concert Experience
- Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen
- Seven Pounds
There are a few conspicuous absences: Moon, Let The Right One In and X-Men Origins: Wolverine. I'm fairly certain the latter is pants, so I didn't bother to endorse it with my $16. I'd have watched the other two if they'd been screened in more than one boutique cinema in my home-town. That theatre decided to screen them at either inconveniently late times, or during work-hours. Their decision was no doubt based on the fact that staunch genre fans would make the effort, regardless of timings. Well, I say, screw 'em! If a film's good, promote the hell out of it, and schedule it for a time when the largest possible audience can see it.
We've a real problem on our hands with the silo'd world of boutique theatres. They've misguidedly pigeon-holed their audience as mid-40s women who drag their husbands / friends to anything that has subtitles or a small budget or what I have begun to call a "mid-concept" plot. The same demographic has misguidedly decided that it won't be caught dead at a multiplex in a mall, regardless of the quality of films screening there. The two groups are mutually reinforcing themselves into an endless loop of movies that feature any of the below:
- a bumbling assassin
- women who must band together doing something folksy (cooking and gardening, usually) to shake off their midlife blues
- a Westerner interacting with "world culture" and learning its many pleasured joys
- a soundtrack that regularly lapses into accordion playing, regardless of the film's nationality
- a broken family unit that lives together in a grim decorated apartment block, before an outside arrives and adds colour to their world... then the outside leaves again
- anti-American / anti-globalisation sentiments that uphold the conservative rural way of life as the only virtuous existence
- two or three dancing scenes, no matter how needless their inclusion be
- a running time that is no shorter than 110 minutes
- a period setting of the mid-90s or late-80s, without any real need for it
- a dog that acts as comic relief
This was the year where, hopefully, everyone saw at least one 3D movie. If you haven't yet, book a ticket for Avatar. I hear there might be a session that's not sold out, um, sometime next week.
One small gripe: The Hurt Locker never made it to my town. I've seen a copy, though I won't repeat the methods I employed to do so. Rest assured, I am so fond of that film that if it had been screened nearby, Avatar's position on this list would be threatened.
At the other end of the spectrum, Will Smith might be tempted to go into hiding after the disastrous three-peat of I Am Legend, Hancock and Seven Pounds. Here's hoping that 2010 is a better year for The Fresh Prince.
F. M. F > Watchmen > D9 > Zombieland > Avatar > Benj But > Sherlock Holmes. Fact!
ReplyDeleteHi there Anonymous. Good to see you here. I see we've a 72% agreement on ranking. Exciting. You can stay.
ReplyDeleteAlso worthy of comment is the fact we're 100% in our ranking of Avatar > Benjamin Button > Sherlock Holmes.
I've a rivetting essay on the way about why Sherlock Holmes is the best Saw movie ever made. I bet you can't wait!
An interesting list sir. One small gripe: you haven't made it to Let the Right One In or Moon (which is still on...) but you saw The Jonas Brothers?! The Jonas Bros. In 3D no less.
ReplyDeleteYou make an intersting point re: boutique cinemas and their choices of films. I'd be keen to read any more you have to say on the matter...
I am also pissed Hurt Locker is still not out here. You can get it on DVD for Swayze's sake!
Hey there Andy. Dunno if you know this, but I've been reviewing for a local film website about Flicks. Hence: Jonas Brothers, 12 Rounds and other such films that I may not have paid money to see otherwise! Heh. There's still time for Moon.
ReplyDeleteHey there Dirk, I'll gladly stay should further posts provide for titillating reading.
ReplyDeleteAnonymous