5.
The Bourne UltimatumWith the exception of Wes Anderson’s films, few entries in recent cinema have been as exciting to watch as first viewings of the Bourne films. Much has been critically made over the "spy with a conscience" that has already influenced major action films (namely
Casino Royale), but the praise is wholly warranted. The only other times that I have been wowed so much by an action sequence was the bridge scene from
Mission: Impossible III. For the series' third and final (?) installment, director Paul Greengrass and his crew (especially cinematographer Oliver Wood and editor Christopher Rouse, both so key to the maestro's trademark mixed camera surveillance look) ante up by having three such scenes. Since
The Bourne Identity was released in 2002, Matt Damon has elevated himself from “rising star” to a near sure thing and one of the industry’s best. His Bourne is many wonderful things, and as more of his memory has come back, he has proven not just to have a heart, but, especially in
Ultimatum, to be more vulnerable and human than we expect a super spy to be. The result could be the best action film of all time and possibly the best series of its kind, replacing the smugness of Bond with more intrigue and high stakes adrenaline. High octane is an understatement: new standards in filmmaking have been set.
4.
The Darjeeling LimitedThe most linear Wes Anderson film since
Bottle Rocket (in that the narrative “distractions” from attention-grabbing detail are greatly diminished), it nonetheless feels like (stealing one of the few worthwhile lines from the Anderson-produced
The Squid and the Whale) “minor” Anderson. In the Indian-set tale of brotherhood found, Adrien Brody fits seamlessly into the Anderson world while a band of familiar faces (Owen Wilson, Jason Schwartzman, and Anjelica Huston) quote the script’s precious painful poetry with relaxed control. It was a treat to see Anderson largely accepted into the mainstream this year. After being somewhat recognized in his own American Express commercial two years ago, he really hit it big with his short
Darjeeling “prequel” film
Hotel Chevalier, available for free download on iTunes. The 13 minute film became so popular that it was added before
Darjeeling in its wide theatrical release after Anderson and Fox Searchlight claimed for weeks that it would be cut after festival circuit screenings. Critics continued to be divided on Anderson’s work, but even haters noticed that his scenes of sustained emotion show a promise for maturity as a filmmaker. For us Wes disciples, we understand and welcome his need to grow, but trust that he will keep making “Wes Anderson films.” For us, he’s seemed mature for a long time.
3.
Gone Baby GoneThe year’s biggest surprise comes from a family whose sons’ careers have taken distinctly different paths. Now, order in the Affleck household has finally been restored. It is Casey who is the real actor (which we’d only seen in small doses) and Ben who is the real writer (which we knew) and director (which we didn’t). Based on Dennis Lehane’s novel, the film begins in typical exciting detective story fashion and then after a midpoint “solution” it flips the genre on its head to spectacular results. As Casey investigates his native Boston streets for leads on a missing child, Ben’s technical work gives us hope, desperation, adrenaline, and heartbreak as we follow his brother’s relentless search for answers. Casey (who was by far the best thing in
Ocean’s 13 and apparently wicked in
The Assassination of Jesse James) has given his oath to a neighborhood family and it is his unstoppable desire to do the right thing that plunges him and us to dangerous depths of determination, all in the name of honor. With a crackling
Departed-esque “Bah-ston” script and engrossing cinematography, Ben surpasses Clint Eastwood’s adaptation of Lehane’s
Mystic River by great lengths. Thanks to a who’s who of famous friends (Morgan Freeman, Ed Harris, et al) in memorable supporting roles, Ben makes sure that his hard work is channeled by the right people. It’s been a good year for Boston, with near widespread athletic dominance and a Best Picture win for
The Departed, and the luck of the Irish continues with a solid, gritty homage to the city by its new favorite family. Welcome back, Ben. We’ve missed you.
2.
ZodiacA film that came out so long ago that I’m not convinced it was actually 2007 still manages to stick with me more than titles I saw last week. David Fincher and his crew (most notably screenwriter James Vanderbilt and cinematographer Harris Savides) take the notorious unsolved case and let it play out in a manner that pulls us in the same way that magnetically attracted those obsessed by the mystery. Instead of taking the unrealistic approach that many Zodiac films employ of only following the killer, Fincher’s film shows how three San Francisco men’s lives were forever altered by their unrelenting quest for truth and closure. The wise narrative choice allows Boy Scout cartoonist Robert Graysmith, Inspector Dave Toschi, and investigative reporter Paul Avery’s characters to grow in remarkable depth as they continue to pursue the case after everyone else has attempted to forget about it. An understated Jake Gyllenhaal as Graysmith leads a perfect cast of “I know that face”s that effortlessly embrace their respective real-life 60s/70s personas. Each shot and piece of dialogue feels so consciously precise and full of importance that 2.5 hours of screen time have rarely passed with such smoothness and intrigue. I highly anticipate the
Director’s Cut DVD (I know where $25 of my Christmas money is going) as no other film this year is more worthy of a director’s commentary. Fincher’s meticulous attention to detail made for such a tight film considering the magnitude of the project that it will be priceless to hear his take on the process.
1.
No Country For Old MenI realize that I am echoing the sentiments of critics nationwide, but there can be no other choice. Cormac McCarthy’s novel read like a screenplay, but the Coen Brothers’ meticulously faithful detailed adaptation and their expert knowledge of the language of film gives the literature its deserving visual presentation. No weak links are present here. Josh Brolin, capping a stellar year (
Planet Terror and
American Gangster), is excellent as a quiet Vietnam vet hunter and Tommy Lee Jones keeps his often loopy trademark acting in perfect check. Then there is Javier Bardem’s Anton Chigurh. The character was haunting enough on the page, but Bardem’s portrayal of the merciless bounty hunter is the perfect realization of the Grim Reaper, human only in that he bleeds, drinks milk, and has breakable bones. Alongside an already superb cat-and-mouse film are meditations on mortality and attempting to make sense of unexplainable evil, proving that
No Country is far from the likes of simple Spaghetti Westerns. It’s about drug runners and gratuitous violence, but these are merely devices of the larger darker issues of the morally devolving world. Martin Scorsese’s
The Departed held this spot last year, and this time another “comeback” picture from a talented director (in this case, directors) earns the crown. It is encouraging to see great filmmakers return to peak performance, especially since the sparks hint at soon and future greatness. It speaks extra volumes that even after reading the book, the film is still surprising and has so much to offer. Only the
Lord of the Rings trilogy has offered similar literature-to-film satisfaction, and
No Country will be likely rewarded with a similar deluge of Academy Awards in the new year