Half a year behind, as
usual, I’m ready to make my summation of the films of 2014. First I fill in some films that took a while
to reach home video, and then give my overall ranking in comparison to the
critical consensus, as I calculate it from various polls. My aim is to provide a finer filter for those
who have some trust in my taste -- to take the fifty most acclaimed films of
the year, and to offer clues to which you might actually want to see.
When it comes to Andersons , I typically prefer Paul Thomas to Wes, and this past
year was no different. In fact, I liked
the loosey-goosey Inherent Vice (MC-81, NFX, #7) as much as any of P.T.’s films. Usually I’m not that fond of movies
for which the best advice is to not even bother making sense of them, but in
this case I was happy to go along for the trip.
To summarize the film, or even to list its characters, would be a fool’s
errand -- it’s all too much, doesn’t add up -- but the movie is a fun ride that
will leave you dizzy and disoriented, yet eager to get back on for another spin. A late example of L.A. noir, set a little after the wave of the Sixties had
crested, crashed, and receded, this first-ever adaptation of a Thomas Pynchon
novel comes out as paranoid and convoluted as you would expect. And who better to center it on than the
stoner PI played by Joaquin Phoenix, weird but strangely winning, as we have
come to expect? I can’t pack any more of
this big baggy monster into a tight case of 200 words, but if I haven’t
convinced you to see it yet, get a fuller picture from Andrew O’Herir of Salon (who has, incidentally, moved into
my triumvirate of favorite critics, with Anthony Lane, longtime New Yorker writer,
and Stephanie Zacharek, of the Voice and elsewhere. Other opinions I always value, without
necessarily agreeing, are A.O. Scott and Manohla Dargis of the NY Times,
Ty Burr of the Globe, and Dana Stevens of Slate.
Not that there aren’t others worth reading, but with these I always know
where I stand.)
To round out my perspective
on the Top 50, I finally took a look at two international heavyweights, and one
weightless debut. Leviathan and
Winter Sleep, both long and lugubrious,
are the must-see latest from two modern masters of world cinema, the latter having nudged out the former for top prize
at Cannes . Andrei
Zvyagintsev and Nuri Bilge Ceylan look at Russia and Turkey , their respective homelands, each with a bleakly
beautiful eye and a stately pace, punctuated by searing confrontations between
fully-realized characters.
Leviathan (MC-92, NFX, #30), set in a decaying fishing village above the Arctic Circle, references
the Hobbesian definition of the state, a passage from the Book of Job, and an
actual whale skeleton on the beach, in ways that that are heavy but not
heavy-handed. The title defines Putin’s Russia , but also the state of nature, nasty and brutish for
sure. A corrupt official has his eye on
a seafront piece of property for development, long in the family of a stubborn mechanic
with a beautiful younger wife, and a troubled teenage son from a previous
marriage. The mechanic decides to fight
city hall with everything he’s got, and unleashes a Job-like string of woes. I send you to Andrew O’Herir again, at least
his first paragraph, to fill in more of the context. It’s all very powerful, and powerfully
depressing, in the grand Russian tradition.
Things ain’t too happy down
in Turkey neither, as portrayed in Winter Sleep (MC-88, NFX, #32), though the Central
Anatolian landscape of Capadoccia is equally striking, and equally a character
in the story. A wealthy retired actor
has inherited a tourist hotel high above the town, hewn out of the soft
sandstone characteristic of the area. He
too has a beautiful younger wife, and a difficult divorced sister with whom he
has a fraught relationship. In truth,
each of his relationships is fraught, because really, he’s kind of an asshole,
despite his own view of himself as benign and enlightened. His forced humor, feigned modesty, and
dubious charity are only a cover for privilege and egotism. Without a raised voice, this film records
some of the most eviscerating conversations I have ever heard. With Ceylon channeling Chekhov, this too has a very Russian
literary flavor. Needless to say, the
acting in both these films is superb, though none of the players were familiar
to me.
Nor in Strange Little Cat (MC-80, NFX, #31), a
strange little number that started out as a student assignment to make a film
derived from a Kafka story. Ramon Zűrcher’s
final product bears little resemblance to “The Metamorphosis,” but tells a
family tale that is uncanny in its own way.
Spending one day with an extended family inside the tight confines of a Berlin
apartment, we gradually come to understand who is who, how they are related,
and how they relate to each other, with weirdness taken for granted on all
sides. The cat may be the least strange
occupant of the place. Short but dense
and offbeat, the film turns out to be oddly disarming, when you’re ready for
something completely different.
Couldn’t bring myself to
watch Stray Dogs (MC-84, NFX, #20) or Norte, The End of History
(MC-81, NFX #29), shying from the prospect of dismal duration. I have little more patience for so-called Slow
Cinema than for Slow Food.
Among “Best Picture”
nominees, I found American Sniper (MC-72,
NFX) more palatable than I expected. As
a battle film over which battlelines were drawn, I expected a jingoist
screed. Clint Eastwood turns out to be
more subtle as a director than as a right-wing ideologue and operative,
especially given the eye-opening performance of Bradley Cooper as the deadliest
sniper of them all. I would compare this
film favorably to The
Hurt Locker, for its you-are-there
feel for Americans in combat in Iraq (while both are far surpassed by Generation Kill, David Simon’s HBO series). Taken simply as a taut, economical,
action-adventure war movie with overtones of the Wild West, American Sniper has a lot to say for itself. Gladly oblivious of the story of Chris Kyle
in Iraq and afterward, I could take it without a lot of
baggage. Within its genre, Eastwood
delivers a fine specimen, until he fudges the aftermath, when the sniper goes
home. Sienna Miller could have been
given more to do, as the wife who needs to bring her husband home from the war,
psychologically as well as physically.
The film glosses over the adjustment, much as the soldier himself does,
and then brings up his shocking death without really confronting it, a decisive
failure of imagination and nerve. If
they weren’t going to deal with it, they should have ended the film where Kyle
ended his memoir, adding only an endnote, instead of a half-formed scene that
raises more questions than it resolves.
On a different note, I
have a sleeper to recommend -- it’s a good touchstone, to determine whether you
should take my cinematic recommendations and reservations to heart. If you prefer Gone Girl to The Blue Room (MC-72, NFX), then you probably should look
elsewhere for film finds. Mathieu
Amalric’s film is half as long and twice as good, in a fine Gallic tradition of
psychological thrillers mixing sex and murder – no femme is more fatale than a French one, ever since the New Wave one-upped the American film noir.
Amalric and Stéphanie
Cléau -- his partner in sex,
crime, and filmmaking -- adapt a Simenon novel into a bantamweight puncher
worth of its pulp-ish models, from Hitchcock to Clouzot, Truffaut, and
Chabrol. The film is swift, elliptical,
and confounding. I won’t spoil any of
its unfolding.
At this point, I’m ready to offer my own summation of the
best films of 2014, ranking them in comparison to the critical consensus, as I
compute it. I list them under four headings,
in roughly declining order of my preference.
EXHORTATIONS (I urge you to see these):
Boyhood (#1)
Mr. Turner (#16)
Two Days, One Night (#12)
We Are the Best! (#25)
RECOMMENDATIONS (I advise you to see these):
Ida (#6)
Whiplash (#8)
Nightcrawler
(#17)
Inherent Vice
(#7)
Under the Skin
(#3)
Ilo Ilo (Singapore )
Gloria (starring Pauline
Garcia)
Leviathan (#30)
Winter Sleep (#32)
Like Father, Like Son (#50)
It Felt Like Love
(#49)
Beyond the Lights
The Trip to Italy
The Blue Room
APPRECIATIONS (you might find something to like
in here):
A Most Violent Year (#37)
Birdman (#4)
The Immigrant
(#14)
Tracks
Wild (#48)
Still Alice
American Sniper
Strange Little Cat (#31)
Only Lovers Left Alive (#11)
Foxcatcher
(#28)
Force Majeure
(#15)
Love is Strange
(#35)
Listen Up Philip
(#19)
Theory of Everything
The Imitation Game
Locke (#42)
EQUIVOCATIONS (you’re on your own with these):
The Grand
Budapest Hotel (#2)
Gone Girl (#13)
Stranger by
the Lake (#19)
Snowpiercer (#18)
Goodbye to
Language (#9)
I hope you find something
new and notable in this list, which you might not have heard of otherwise. Search in the box at the top left of this
page for my comments on individual films, which include direct links to
Metacritic for more info and opinion.
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