Film of the year and best war film - 1917 – Epic! Amazing single take at the start. That Sam Medes thinks he’s dead clever,
doesn’t he? (Prime)
Best comedy – A Personal History of David Copperfield – Genuinely
funny, excellent cast, as you’d expect from Iannucci. (Prime)
Best Musical - Cabaret - Had forgotten how great this film is and
that we had a posh BFI freebie from back when newspapers used to give away
discs. (DVD)
Most re-made music drama - A Star is Born - Lady Gaga very
good (well, who wasn’t better than Streisand but not as good as Garland) as too
was Bradley Cooper as drunken has-been.
Not enough songs. This film has
now been made 5 times! (Prime)
Best Noir - Terminal - Interesting effort by Margot
Robbie. Stylish and twisty. (Prime)
Worst Brad Pitt - The Dark Side of the Sun - a very young Mr. Pitt debuts as boy with
weird skin disease meeting lovely actress.
Set in Yugoslavia thus showing its age.
Rather fond of fighting and drink driving round those parts. (DVD)
Best Shakespeare-derived - Ophelia – Colin Farrell
excels as evil king. (Netflix)
Most mixed genres - King of the Travellers
- 2 Irish traveller families feud. Funny
start, went a bit western, then ended up as Romeo & Juliet. Great song by Johnny Cash: ‘Sunday Morning
Coming Down’. (Prime)
Best suspense drama - Go With Me - Anthony Hopkins
helps a young woman track nasty Ray Liotta.
Good but lots of unexplained stuff such as why the sheriff didn’t help
her and why Hopkins was so keen to catch the bad man. (Prime)
Best Spike Lee Joint - Da 5 Bloods - Old Vietnam
vets go back to find body of their fallen comrade and gold, with inevitable
results. Good use of old footage and Trump jokes but Inevitably preachy at the
end. (Netflix).
Best Melodrama - The Artist - Black and white, mostly silent, funny,
and wonderful acting dog. (DVD)
Best Western - Lonesome Dove - True tale of
preacher’s ambition to build a church. (Prime)
Best Spy - Black Book - Jewish woman joins Dutch resistance, accused
of spying for the Nazis. Good, twisty story.
Made Dutch look as bad as the Nazis; interesting as it’s by Paul
Verhoeven. (Prime)
Close second - Despite the Snow - Story of Russian woman spying for
America interspersed with modern day ancestor finding out what happened to her.
(Prime)
Best teen - Enola Holmes - Entertaining tale of younger sister of
Sherlock. Possible TV pilot. (Netflix)
Daftest action - Rambo Last Blood - Thin, predictable
storyline. The Rambo goes to rescue his not-daughter, with inevitable results.
(Prime)
Glitziest - The Aeronauts - First balloonists to get above the
clouds. Loosely based on a true story,
female lead an amalgam of 2 actual
women. Felicity Jones very funny in the
role. (Prime)
Most intelligent Statham - Redemption (Aka
Hummingbird) - wondered anew why he didn’t do more stuff like this. (Prime)
Best sequel - Angel Has Fallen - best in the
franchise by far, possibly due to Nick Nolte as jaded Vietnam vet who springs
into action. (Prime)
Best disaster - Skyscraper - Dwayne as ex-soldier having to save family from mile-high skyscraper on fire. An updated Towering Inferno but fun. (Netflix).
Best Psychological Thriller - The Devil All The Time – based on book by Donald Ray Pollock, in the vein of Cormack McCarthy. Best quote: “some people are born to be buried.” (Netflix)
Most pointless remake - Rebecca - Ben Wheatley manages to make it less spooky than the original. (Netflix)
Best of the Rest
Comedy
Second best comedy - The Story of Fire Saga -
hilarious! Tons of cameos from actual Eurovision
contestants, fantastic fake songs and great research on Icelandic folklore; un sure
what Icelanders made of it! (Netflix)
Best Shakespeare-related - Bill - Lute-player seeks fortune in
London. (Prime)
Most mayhem - The Baytown Outlaws - Ne’er do wells rescue a boy in
a wheelchair, with attendant mayhem, car chases and shoot ups. (Prime)
Cleverest - 5 Greedy Bankers - imaginative low budget Brit Flick.
Hilarious turn by Pippa Heywood, good use of cheap locations and props, great
music, some good old-fashioned slapstick and several laugh-out-loud moments. (Prime)
Best caper - The Captor (aka Stockholm) - story of daftest
heist in history, from where term ‘Stockholm syndrome’ comes; actually a
misnomer; she was just glad to meet someone in Sweden who wasn’t totally boring
and conformist! (Prime)
Best Welsh - The Baker - hitman hides in Welsh village, ends up as
a baker. (Prime)
Quirkiest - Blow The Man Down - 2 girls in small coastal Maine town
try to cover up a crime leading to uncovering others. (Prime)
Best Hugh Grant - The Gentlemen - Grant channelling Michael Caine
in typical Guy Ritchie caper. Excellent routines from The Toddlers. (Prime)
Best old men - Going with Style.
Gentle comedy wherein old blokes cheated out of pensions do a bank
robbery. Lovely acting and good cameos.
(Netflix)
True Life/Biopic
Best court-room - The Trial of the Chicago 7 - Well-told story of anti-Vietnam
war activists accused of starting riots. (Netflix)
Most shocking - Dark Waters - How Dupont poisoned us all with
Teflon. Terrifying! Enough to make you
join the tin-foliers! (Prime)
Best girl power- Gunjan Saxena: The Kargil Girl – Indian film about
first female fighter pilot, battling chauvinism all the way. (Netflix)
Second best - Hidden Figures - Amazing Black women at NASA. A bit cheesy but good. (Film 4)
Best Nazis - Good - Writer given job of justifying eugenics. Rises up the ranks despite misgivings.
(Prime)
Best Christian - The Meanest Man in Texas - Young man gets
sentenced to death row for murder he was only partly responsible for. Finds love and redemption. Good apart from the Jesus message. (Prime)
Best Space - Skywalker - Russian tale of first man
to do a spacewalk. Entertaining and
exciting. (Prime)
Pedestrian second - First Man – A boring Neil Armstrong. but some
good imagery and background on the Gemini Project. (Netflix)
Best maniac - The Professor and the Madman - Mel Gibson gets help writing
the first OED from psycho Sean Penn. (Prime)
Close second - Mad to be Normal - David Tennant convincing
as the maverick RD Laing. (Prime)
Best German - Balloon - 2 families try to escape East
Germany. But why? You may well ask.
(Prime)
Best French - The Emperor of Paris - about Francois Vidocq, who effectively
invented forensics during the Napoleonic era.
Good sets, costumes and fight scenes. (Prime)
Best American - The Great Debaters - Denzel in true tale of African-American debating
team beating waspy whites at Harvard. (Prime)
Best inter-War - The Exception - Kaiser Vs. Nazis. Excellent turn by Chris Plummer. Gripping. (Prime)
Best 9/11 - Shock and Awe - Tale of the only press
agency to dig out the truth about WMD. Very educational and excellent cast.
(Prime)
Close second - The (Blank) Report - how the CIA
covered up torture after 9/11, investigator spends years finding the evidence
on behalf of a senator. (Prime).
War
Craziest - Midway – True story of decisive naval Pacific
battle. So crazy it’s hard to believe. (Prime)
Best low budget - Lancaster Skies - British film that could have
been made just after WWII. Low-key,
low-budget claustrophobic feel reminiscent of Neville Shute. (Prime)
Best imitation of the ‘A’ team - Rogue Warfare
trilogy – Although number 2 is quite slow, it picks up again in number 3. Could
there be a number 4?
Best Korean War - Operation Chromite - Yanks vs commies at Incheon. Liam Neeson a joy as General MacArthur with
corn husk pipe! (Prime)
Best Spanish Civil War - There Be Dragons – 2 childhood friends
drift apart to opposite sides during Spanish Civil War. Prague stood in for Madrid, making a big mess
of Wenceslaus square! (Prime)
Best Middle East - 12 Strong – Jerry Bruckenheimer
telling of special forces hooking up with a warlord against Taliban in
Afghanistan. I reflected that’s what led
to the war in the first place. (Netflix)
Best Norwegian - The Bird Catcher - Jewish girl
disguised as boy hides out with family on farm, subsequently occupied by Nazis. Gorgeous scenery and good story but weird
murder/suicide shooting scene. Lead actress had amazing eyes! (Prime)
Best Irish - The Wind That Shakes The Barley - A young
Cillian Murphy in fictionalisation events leading up to Irish partition. Explained the background politics really
well. (Prime)
Best Post-war - The Song of Names - Man searches for childhood
wartime friend who’s lost and regained his faith and learnt the song of
names. Incredibly moving. (Netflix)
Best Cold War - The Coldest Game - Aged professor and ex chess
grandmaster gets roped into a game in Warsaw as part of a complicated spy
scheme amidst Cuban missile crisis. Good turn by Bill Pullman. (Netflix)
Crime
Best - The True Story of the Kelly Gang - NOT a true story of Ned
Kelly, but really good Australian effort with men in large beards and dresses.
(Prime)
Most predictable - The Judge - Son defends dad who is a judge on
trial for murder. Set in gorgeous little
town of Sherburne Falls. Good
characters, especially grumpy old git Robert Duvall.
Most action - The Courier - Ex-military courier kicks ass to
protect witness to heinous crime. (Netflix)
Best sequel - Equalizer 2 - Denzel in top action mode. Much better than the first one. (Netflix)
Best homage - Knives out - Parody of Agatha Christie whodunnit in
large country house. Funny, entertaining and good cast but Dan Craig had a ridiculous
mid-west accent. (Prime)
Daftest - Cut Bank - Caper wherein small-towners come up with a
rouse to extort money from USPS. (Prime)
Best drug-related - Crossing the Line - slow but
watchable modern western tale of young woman roped back into drugs running. Great music fit well with backdrop of
depressed ‘rusty belt’. (Prime)
Close second - White Boy Rick - Teenager with crap dad, gunrunner,
turned FBI informer, turned drug dealer, turned longest-serving non-violent
criminal in US history. (Netflix)
Least convincing assassin - Ava - Crack assassin foils
assassination attempts on herself.
Entertaining but Chastain too small to be believable. (Netflix)
Best Scorsese-inspired - Uncut Gems - Relentlessly paced action in the
Scorsese tradition (who’s credited as an exec producer) but portraying Jewish
rather than Italian community. (Netflix).
Best British - The Corrupted - Loosely based on land grabs before
London 2012. Among an eclectic cast, Timothy
spall very convincing as evil property developer. Harrowing
in places. (Prime)
Best arms dealing - The Last Thing He Wanted - Journalist agrees to final arms deal on
behalf of her ill dad; does not turn out well. (Netflix)
Sci-fi
Best acting - Hotel Artemis - Jodie Foster plays Nurse running underground
hospital for criminals. Good turn from Dave Bautista. Odd but entertaining. (Prime)
Worst thought-out premise - Upgrade - Paraplegic gets AI implant
with predictable outcome. Some imaginative elements but issues with basic
premise – the Elon Musk character could have just stomped on it. (Netflix)
Best action - The Old Guard - Charlize Theron leads band of ancient
immortals to root out evil. Possibly another A-Team-style pilot. (Netflix)
Too Uber- cool - Curvature - too-cool meta-physical effort about
time travel. (Prime).
Daftest - Bleeding Steel – Daft Jackie Chan outing. Ace psychedelic colours but unfathomable
plot. (Prime).
Most fun - Rampage - The always-entertaining Rock in a romp with
giant GM animals. Ridiculous fun. (Netflix)
Most unfathomable - Jauja - Viggo Mortensen goes in search of his
missing daughter in weird foreign co-production. (Prime)
Quirkiest - The Man from Earth - Interesting premise of man who
might be Jesus. Amazingly for a quirky cheap film, the sequel Holocene, was
made by popular demand. (Prime)
Most imaginative - The Vast of Night - nerdy teens
investigate strange noises, 1950’s style. (Prime)
Best British - Frequency - Imaginative film about everyone
operating at different frequencies. A low frequency boy gets together with a
high frequency girl which isn’t meant to be possible. (Prime)
Best Russian - Attraction - Young
woman attracted to an alien. More than a
nod to the day the earth stood still. (Prime)
Best space opera - Jupiter Ascending - Girl turns out to be saviour of the world.
Daft but enjoyable. (Netflix)
Best robots - Revolt - American soldier and French medic versus
scrap metal robots in Kenya. (Prime)
Most cheesy - Love and Teleportation - Ex Ivy
League prof builds a teleporter. Cheap and cheesy fun. (Prime)
Fantasy
Most ridiculous - John Wick 3: parabellum. So ridiculous we watched it twice. (Netflix)
Oddest - Dean Spanley - Odd tale of transmutation and re-incarnation
with Peter O’Toole in scrooge mode. (Prime)
Horror
Best vampires - Nightwatch - Long-overdue repeat viewing for this
bonkers but clever, original and highly entertaining Russian film. (DVD)
Best war horror - Deathwatch - Had forgotten about this film which
is odd as it has a great cast. Although
a work of fiction, it really captures the psyche of WWI. (DVD)
Best ghost - An English Haunting - Good old-school British ghost story.
Posh people whingeing about inheriting huge house. (Prime)
Most psychedelic - Colour Out of Space - From the crazy mind of HP
Lovecraft. Meteor-like thing drops in
Nic Cage’s backyard. (Prime)
Best British - White Chamber - originally viewed as post-Brexit
Britain, could now be seen as post-Covid too. (Netflix)
Best Welsh - Dark Signal - Radio station in North Wales picks up
signals, leading to discovery of who the psychopath is. (Prime)
Silliest- They’re Watching - US TV crew travel to Moldova for a
home makeover show. Very silly but sometimes hilarious. (Prime)
Most moronic - Cell - Stephen King feeds
conspiracy-theorists. (Prime)
Period Drama
Best - Soldier of God - Knights Templar and Saracen save each other
in desert. Atmospheric and ponderous.
(Prime)
Best epic - The Mission: The Story of Islam - tale of Mohammed getting messages from god.
Those Isis dudes ought to watch it for the true message of peace and
tolerance! (Prime)
Grimmest - The Nightingale - Young Irish woman in Tasmania enlists
Aborigine to avenge her. (Netflix)
Best Indian - Sye Raa Narasimha Reddy - Hero fights evil British in colonial India. Uplifting and inspiring. (Prime)
Best romp – Northmen - Vikings looking for Lindisfarne land in
Scotland by accident. Lots of romping through forests, clashing of swords and
manly growling. Thin on plot but entertaining. (Netflix)