Showing posts with label Gravity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gravity. Show all posts

Friday, February 28, 2014

Hashmoney's Top Ten Films of 2013

2013 was one of the best years in cinema. I truly believe that this last year was just an amazing time for us as an audience. From about the month of September to early January, the films that were hitting theaters were some of the best that came out in the last few years. Heck even during the entire year, you had great films popping up at times.

From the list of films that you see below you, I picked the best films of the year because of one trait that most of them had: A human element. It seemed that amongst all the superhero films and all the loud action films that true storytelling might soon be going by the wayside. But thankfully that didn't happen.

The films on this list show all the elements that make great films. Great filmmaking talent. Superb Storytelling and great acting. Without further ado and with the Academy Awards taking place this Sunday, here are my picks for the top ten films of 2013.





10.



Prisoners was a surprise for me when it was released in late September. I expected an intense film but not one that had this many great characters in it. Every character had a great backstory to them. From Hugh Jackman's career best performance as an angry father whose is desperately trying to find his daughter anyway possible. To Jake Gyllenhall's detective who is assigned to find Jackman's son. To Paul Dano as the mentally challenged young man who is the prime suspect in the case. Everything in this film is set up for maximum impact. Even the controversial ending I loved. I won't spoil but to just say that I can't think of any other way to end it. The character, like many people in this film, was a prisoner of their own making.




9.



Paul Greengrass is a great filmmaker. That is no surprise. Captain Phillips was an intense true story about the MV Maersk Alabama being hijacked by Somali pirates in 2009. It is written with great skill by Billy Ray, whose also wrote the under appreciated Shattered Glass and Breach. Again, not a surprise considering what a great writer Ray is. But what gets this film onto the list is Tom Hanks. Hanks has always been a great leading man and a good actor. But not since Cast Away have I seen Hanks give such an emotional performance. What he does here is amazing. Not only guiding audiences through the emotional roller coaster that he goes through as Phillips but also giving a great performance alongside actors who have never acted before. Barkhad Abdi needs to be commended as well for his performance as the lead Somali pirate. He really shows us why his character makes the hard choices he does before he take over the Alabama. Just a great intense film all around.




8.



Stoker is just a damn creepy film. The director of the original Oldboy, Park Chan-wook, just keeps viewers on the edge the whole time. We see that the family in the film is unhinged but Chan-wook does a great job sustaining the tension on how unsettling this family is. You never know what to expect. Mia Wasikowska plays India Stoker, a young girl who on her 18th birthday loses her father in a horrible car accident. At the funeral, Stoker and her unstable mother played by Nicole Kidman, receive a visit from Charlie, the brother of Stoker's father. The fun in this film is watching Stoker and Charlie interact with each other in devious ways. These two people are not normal. You know they are capable of dark, evil things. But yet you can't take your eyes off of them. That is the power Stoker has over you and it is magnificent to watch.




7.



David O. Russell is a filmmaker on a roll. All the more surprising considering that before 2010, he was someone many people left for dead after all the on set horror stories about his behavior. But he cleaned up his act and now has risen to the level we thought he was capable of early on in his career. The Fighter and Silver Linings Playbook were both great films. But American Hustle is his best film. Some people have complained that Russell ripped off Martin Scorsese with this film. I don't think that is the case at all. Russell has always loved stories about characters trying to escape their circumstances and Hustle shows that off. Here we get five characters who are trying to do just that.against the backdrop of the ABSCAM operation in the late 70's. There is not a bad performance in this film. Christian Bale and Jennifer Lawrence both give the best performances in the film. It is great to see such life come from such a complicated film and it is even better to see Russell pull it off beautifully.




6.



Matthew McConaughey is getting raves and plenty of awards attention for Dallas Buyers Club and he should. It is a great performance. But the best film that he did this year to me was Mud. It is a simple and small film that is just great southern storytelling. Director Jeff Nichols has mentioned numerous times that the story was influenced by Mark Twain's storytelling and that is clearly evident in the film. While McConaughey gives a great performance, the story is really about the two children, Ellis and Neckbone, who find McConaughey's character hiding out along the banks of the Mississippi River. Tye Sheridian is especially great as Ellis. He has a lot of innocence to him that makes us care about him throughout the film. McConaughey though shows that with this film and with the other great performances he has given lately, that he is ready to leave behind the dumb romantic comedy roles and do films that are up to his potential as a leading man. Mud is one of those films.




5.



It's been a great couple of years for teen films. We have had a few great ones come out the last few years after having to suffer through the awful horror of "young adult" films that followed in the wake of Twilight. But starting with The Perks of Being a Wallflower, I think we are starting to see the slow emergence of good truthful teen films come back to us. One of those films is The Spectacular Now. It is a flat out great film. A lot of that has to do with the two lead actors in this film, Miles Teller and Shailene Woodley. The chemistry these two have is amazing and it keeps the film grounded in reality. Through them, we experience what it felt like to be in love for the first time. The stupid decisions we make as teens because we are always told that our high school years are the best times of our lives. Director James Ponsoldt makes sure the film is not rushed. It moves at it's own pace. If for nothing else, the film works because the two lead characters feel like people we grew up with in high school. Find this film and watch it. It's a true buried treasure from the heart.




4. 



Some films you know are going to be brilliant. The second it was announced that director Richard Linklater had shot Before Midnight, I knew it was a film that was not going to disappoint and it didn't. Midnight show Linklater, Ethan Hawke, and Julie Delpy are in complete control of these characters. All three have written a film that is mostly just talk. But the talk is never boring. The dialogue clues us in on what is happening in the lives of Jesse and Celine. It's been nine years since Before Sunset. The two of them have kids now and we can since the relationship is about to hit a major crossroad. When it does, all the feelings the two have felt about each other for the past nine years comes out. To watch Hawke and Delpy play these roles again is something to behold. None of the scenes they have together strike a false note. This maybe the end of the story for these two characters. But it wouldn't surprise me if in another nine years, we get another film about Jesse and Celine as they enter into old age together. We all would welcome it.





3. 



12 Years a Slave is not just a historical film. It is a nightmare. That is the best word to describe it. A nightmare. It was hard enough to be a black man in the 1800's. But director Steve McQueen makes sure we feel the horror of what Solomon Northup went through. It's hard enough for someone to be born into slavery. But to see Solomon, a free black man living up in the north, have his freedom taken away from him is just inhuman. McQueen though makes sure to never let up on the nightmare. He surrounds the story with great characters. Most notably, Edwin Epps, a cruel slave owner played with evil brilliance by Michael Fassbender. To hear Epps quote bible scripture in order to justify slavery is a truly awful thing to hear and see. The film ends on just the right note. Even if all was to go right, McQueen is right in saying that we must never forget what slavery did to this country and what a truly inhuman, evil thing it was. A powerful, well told film.




2.



Rush is a great story about a subject that we thought we were bored enough with: auto racing. But the film, which covers the 1976 Formula One racing season, does something unexpected. It gets inside the heated rivalry between James Hunt (Chris Hemsworth) and Niki Lauda (Daniel Bruhl). Formula One is already considered a dangerous sport. Why in the world would these two drivers risk everything they have over something like car racing? That is the question director Ron Howard and writer Peter Morgan ask. At his best Howard is a director that is exceptional at putting you right into the middle of dangerous situations. Think back to the fires in Backdraft or the damaged shuttle going through space in Apollo 13. For Howard, Rush is his best film in a decade. With great cinematography, amazing writing, and great acting by the two lead actors, Rush is an great film to watch. Whether it is following the cars around the track or watching the horror of one of the drivers being burnt alive in 800 degree heat after a crash, Rush is just pure a simple storytelling done to excellent effect. Ron Howard needs to do more films like this. Rush shows what a great director he can be at times.




1.



Watching Gravity for the first time this year, I almost got the sense of what it must of been like to watch 2001: A Space Odyssey back in the day. The sense of wonder and being completely in awe of what was on the screen. This film was an excellent experience. One that not only was completely immersive, but one that pushed the boundaries of film forward. Director Alfonso Curon did things in this movie that were truly impressive. The special effects in this film were amazing but you never felt them take center stage. The story and the acting is what kept our attention. Sandra Bullock was grace under pressure. She plays an astronaunt who is stuck floating in space with George Clooney after space debris has hit destroyed the space shuttle they were attached to. The both of them have to survive the deep cold space as they try to avoid debris and other disasters from happening to them. That is it. The story is simple. Yet from that Curon is able to do amazing things. All the way to the end, Curon is able to leave you breathless. This film is an achievement that Curon and his film crew should be proud of. They made a film that comes once in a lifetime and was undoubtedly the best film of 2013.

Friday, January 17, 2014

A Quick Opinion of the 2014 Oscar Nominations.







2013 was a kick ass year in film. I can't think of a better late end of year run series of films than the ones we just had. It is now that time of year to kick off Oscar season.

The nominations were announced Thursday morning. I want to take a look at some of the big categories and share some quick thoughts on who has the best chance of going home with an Oscar and who got robbed of a nomination.

So let's go ahead and take a look:



BEST PICTURE


AMERICAN HUSTLE 
CAPTAIN PHILLIPS
DALLAS BUYERS CLUB
GRAVITY 
HER
NEBRASKA
PHILOMENA
12 YEARS A SLAVE
THE WOLF OF WALL STREET



Captain Phillips sadly lost it's chance of winning when both Tom Hanks and Paul Greengrass did not get nominated in either of their respective categories. Dallas Buyers Club, Nebraska, and Philomena are probably going to get most of it's awards in the acting categories, while Her will have a better chance of getting Best Screenplay.  The Wolf of Wall Street is in the same position Django Unchained was in last year. It is a cool and hip film to nominate for best picture but one that the older members of the branch don't have the stomach to vote for the win. So that leaves American Hustle, Gravity, and American Hustle. Gravity, my personal favorite film of the year, is going to sweep the technical categories. But the lack of a Best Original Screenplay nomination I think is a sign that it won't win here. American Hustle is a fun film. Audiences and critics both love it. If it were any other year, I would pick it to win. But 12 Years a Slave is one of those movies that comes along every once in awhile that is so powerful that I think the members of the academy will probably go ahead and pick it. It doesn't pull any punches and the way Steve McQueen guided the movie is an achievement in of itself. I expect the academy to honor it with it's highest award.



BEST ACTOR


CHRISTIAN BALE - AMERICAN HUSTLE
BRUCE DERN - NEBRASKA
LEONARDO DiCAPRIO  - THE WOLF OF WALL STREET
CHIWETEL EJIOFOR - 12 YEARS A SLAVE
MATTHEW McCONAUGHEY - DALLAS BUYERS CLUB


Tom Hanks not getting nominated here is a stunner. Walking out of Captain Phillips, I thought he was a shoo-in for a acting nod. But DiCaprio and Bale's films became really popular as of late and Hanks had the misfortune of having his movie open all the way back in October. Bruce Dern gives the performance of his career in Nebraska and it is really good to see him nominated here. But I think it is a two man race here between Ejiofor and McConaughey. Ejiofor would win it if I was picking the winner. 12 Years a Slave is very much dependent on us caring for the lead character and Ejiofor more than succeeds in making us see the struggles that his Soloman Northup went through. McConaughey though is having a Tom Hanks-like comeback. To think of where he was a few years ago being stuck in Kate Hudson films to now working on the next Christopher Nolan film is truly remarkable. He too gave one of the best performances of the year. And considering that he lost an insane amount of weight in order to play the part, it pretty much seems to be a given that he will win. Let's just hope he can fit in a Dazed and Confused quote in his acceptance speech somewhere.



BEST ACTRESS



AMY ADAMS - AMERICAN HUSTLE
CATE BLANCHETT - BLUE JASMINE
SANDRA BULLOCK - GRAVITY
JUDI DENCH - PHILOMENA
MERYL STREEP - AUGUST: OSAGE COUNTY


I said this to people in August when I saw the film and I am going to say it again: Cate Blanchett is going to win Best Actress. Woody Allen wrote her an excellent character to play in Jeanette "Jasmine" Francis. Blanchett handled the part like a pro and she should be awarded here. Amy Adams could win for American Hustle since she is on the hot streak she continues to be on. Bullock was also good in Gravity but I think the acting branch will probably see that film as more a technical film than an acting one. Judi Dench is well respected but she has not won any awards to suggest a win here. As for Miss Streep, I think she got this nomination by the skin of her teeth. Osage County has not been a hit with critics and reviews from audiences have been mixed. In fact I could have sworn I heard groans in the press room when the academy announced her name. Meryl has three trophies already, time for Cate to get one of her own. 



BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR



BARKHAD ABDI - CAPTAIN PHILLIPS
BRADLEY COOPER - AMERICAN HUSTLE
MICHAEL FASSBENDER - 12 YEARS A SLAVE
JONAH HILL - THE WOLF OF WALL STREET
JARED LETO - DALLAS BUYERS CLUB


It is awesome to see Barkhad Abdi get nominated for Captain Phillips. To go toe to toe with Tom Hanks and look like a seasoned pro is a major accomplishment for the first time actor. But he hasn't won any acting awards yet, so the nomination may end up being his award. Bradley Cooper did well in American Hustle but his hair probably is getting more press than his acting did in the film. Jonah Hill continues to impress as a dramatic actor but I just don't see the academy giving him the trophy. Michael Fassbender continues to be one of the best actors around these days. His character was evil and the interactions he had with Ejiofor were some of the best scenes in 12 Years a Slave. But I think Jared Leto is going home with the award. Leto has over the last decade played mostly psychopaths and characters with a dark side. But he showed a surprising amount of heart in Dallas Buyers Club. Him and McConaughey were great together and Leto's transgender character I thought really gave the film a good dose of humor and heart amongst all the talk of AIDS and medical procedures. If he wins, I expect many a mention of his role on the brilliant TV show My So-Called Life to be mentioned on Twitter.



BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS



SALLY HAWKINS - BLUE JASMINE
JENNIFER LAWRENCE - AMERICAN HUSTLE
LUPITA NYONG'O - 12 YEARS A SLAVE
JULIA ROBERTS - AUGUST: OSAGE COUNTY
JUNE SQUIBB - NEBRASKA


Great surprise seeing Sally Hawkins getting a nod for Blue Jasmine. She really provided a great counter point to the madness of Blanchett in the film. But she has not been nominated for anything else so far so I don't think she gets the win here. Unlike Streep, Julia Roberts earned her acting nomination for Osage County. But like Streep, the lack of buzz for the film hurt her chances. June Squibb was a hoot to watch in Nebraska. Voters though I think will probably think of the film more for Bruce Dern's role that for Squibb's. Jennifer Lawrence has kicked ass and taken names in 2013. She won Best Actress for Silver Linings Playbook, had a mega hit with Catching Fire, and continued her great acting work in American Hustle. But to be honest, I don't think her work in Hustle is one of her best. Sure she is great and all and I would not be shocked in the least if she wins again. But Lupita Nyong'o was amazing in 12 Years a Slave. She could have overacted or gone over the top with her role but she didn't. It made her character "Patsey" all the more better for it. The academy, in this case, I think will stray from the popular choice of Lawrence and give it to the right choice, which would be Nyong'o.



BEST DIRECTOR



DAVID O'RUSSELL - AMERICAN HUSTLE
 ALFONSO CURON - GRAVITY
ALEXANDER PAYNE - NEBRASKA
STEVE MCQUEEN - 12 YEARS A SLAVE
MARTIN SCORSESE - THE WOLF OF WALL STREET



This category has become a two man race. Martin Scorsese is a great director and will always be one, but The Wolf of Wall Street has just as many haters as it does admirers, so he will not get the win here.  Alexander Payne continues to make great small dramas. Nebraska is a great film but one that will get more support in the acting category than the directing branch, so no luck for Payne here. This is the third time in a row that David O'Russell has been nominated for best director. Any other year I imagine a groundswell of support for O'Russell getting the directing nod, but for the same reasons that Payne has with Nebraska, I think people are probably going to see Hustle as more an acting achievement than a directing one. So that leaves, Steve McQueen and Alfonso Curon. McQueen winning this would not be a surprise at all. He took a story that he could have dumb down and shied away from the harsher more violent parts of Soloman Northup's story but he didn't. Because of this, he made an amazing film and got great performances out of everyone in the cast. But Alfonso Curon did something even more impressive. In a day and age where CGI and special effects have made movies less personal, Curon made a film that was both a character driven story and a special effects treat. Gravity is a film that did not let the special effects take over the story. You felt like you were in space. You were into Sandra Bullock and George Clooney's struggle in trying to not float away into the dead of space. This is an excellent acheivement over all and while McQueen would not be a bad choice for winner in the category, I expect Curon to win here.


Before I go, I wanna give a quick shout out to a fellow friend and blog writer. If you wanna read another take on the Academy Awards, go to kentuckygeekgirl.com and get your fix there. She is also a great writer and has a cool logo to boot!