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Showing posts with label Scorsese. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scorsese. Show all posts

Thursday, January 02, 2020

Film Reviews 2019

Best Thriller - Arctic. Surprisingly watchable survival flick with Mads Mikkelsen and lots of snow and ice.  Apparently filmed in 19 days.  Amazing! (Netflix)

Best Sci-fi - I think We’re Alone Now. Thought-provoking, post-apocalyptic tale.  Peter Dinklage plays a man who thinks he’s alone, then meets a woman and her weird ‘parents’...  (Netflix)
Best Drama - The Red Violin.  Film 4 production from 1999 following a unique violin through time across the world. Weird but good. (Prime)
Best Cinematography - Roma. Worth watching for the arty black and white even though not much happens.  The first ever Netflix film to be up for an Oscar. (Netflix)
Best Fantasy - King Arthur, legend of the sword.  Enjoyable, funny and superb giant animals. The best Guy Ritchie effort for a long time albeit with inevitable echoes of Snatch and Robin Hood  (DVD)
Best Arty - p(Pi). Quirky low-budget film in grainy black & white. (DVD)
Best Foreign Noir - Skin of the Wolf.  Spanish tale of wolf hunter in the Pyrenees and his unfortunate wives. Very grim.  (Netflix)
Best Pirates - Pirates of the Caribbean, Salazar’s Revenge.  A real hoot!  Hardly stopped laughing.  (Netflix)
Best Animation - Space Pirate.  Very convincing artwork especially the hair. (Prime)
Best New Christmas film - The Knight Before Christmas. Light-hearted but funny romance (Netflix).
Best Bible-inspired - Paul, Apostle of Christ.  Sort of follow-up to Quo Vadis. Shame about the cheesy, holy ending. (Netflix)
Best Sequel - El Camino, A Breaking Bad Movie.  Following the exploits of Jesse Pinkman after the series end.  Entertaining and funny in places with hilarious dialogue: “I already apexted!” (Netflix)
Close second - Creed II.  Better than the previous Creed.  Littered with meta-refs to old Rocky. (Netflix)
Best Re-telling of History - Black Death.  Grim but watchable tale of the plague in 1349. Sean Bean managed to not die straight away which made a bit of a change. (DVD)
Close second  - The King.  Reworking of Henry V.  Variable performances but  improved as it went along, ( Netflix)
Best Musical Collaboration - Vox Lux.  Tale of a young popstar’s rise to fame.   Interesting musical collab between Scott Walker and Sia. (Netflix)
Best Biopic and charity shop find - Before Night Falls. Interesting tale of a writer exiled from Cuba.  Featuring an early starring role for Javier Bardem  and two bit-parts from a pre-pirate Johnny Depp. (DVD)

Best of the Rest
Big Films
Best Oscar winner - Green Book.  Italian hardnut drives poncy black pianist from NY to deep south.  Good if a bit schmaltzy in places. (Prime)
Best Scorsese - The Irishman.  Much-anticipated and lauded epic at an astonishing 3.5 hours.  DeNiro back to his best as aging gangster with a lot of humorous touches such as the pensioner jail when they’re all wearing beige and shopping for his own coffin. (Netflix)
Best single take - Baby Driver. Entertaining, some funny bits and clever filming of scenes in one take, to the soundtrack. (Netflix)

Thriller
Best political - Miss Sloane.  About machinations of lobbying in Washington.  Interesting plot, good cast and unexpected twist at the end. (Netflix)
Best British – Remainder. Started weird and became even weirder as it went along. (DVD)      
Oddest - London Fields.  An odd do.  Trying to do a Jim Thompson but trying too hard.  An uncredited Johnny Depp provides a superb example of his character acting as cockney geezer. (Netflix) 
Silliest - American Assassin. Watchable but some ridiculous scenes, especially the boat fight at the end. (Netflix)

Sci-fi
Best British - The White Chamber.  Imaginative Brit horror sci-fi in a post-Brexit world! 
Best American - The Frame. Mind-bending sci-fi.  The two main characters think the other is off the telly. (Prime)
Best Asian - The Wandering Earth. Imaginative Chinese film wherein earth goes on a 25,000 voyage to another solar system. (Netflix)
Best Romantic - Upside Down.  An homage to the French tradition.  Nice and gentle. (Prime)
Most unfathomable - In the Shadow of the Moon. Complicated time-traveling effort. I literally lost the plot. (Netflix)

War
Best WWII – Hurricane. Tale of Polish pilots fighting with RAF in WW2.  Pretty good and very funny in places. (Netflix)
Most overrated – Dunkirk.   Mainly boring but contains good actors and details such as the spitfire flying without fuel. (Prime)
Best WWI - The Ottoman Lieutenant.  Girly as expected but very nice scenery and a good portrayal of an interesting time in history at start of WWI.  (Netflix). 
Most educational - The Photographer of Mauthausen.  Very interesting and educational.  About mainly Spanish communist and anarchist prisoners in a German concentration camp.  Stayed largely true to the real story with faithful reproductions of the actual photos. (Netflix).

Foreign
Best locations - Salt & Fire.  Odd but sometimes funny Werner Herzog do, filmed in Bolivian salt flats. (DVD)
Close second  - Tracker.  Well-told tale of Boer who goes to NZ after the war, tracks a Maori for money, ends up bonding. (Prime)
Most prophetic - A Fortunate Man. Interesting if over-long Danish tale of an engineering genius who ends up a loser.  From a series of books written at turn of century so the idea of harnessing natural power quite prophetic.  (Netflix)

Comedy
Best - Goodbye Stalin.  Amusing East German tale of a woman who goes into a coma and doesn’t know the Berlin wall has fallen. (DVD)
Darkest - A Perfect Day.  Wryly comic tale set in war-torn Bosnia. (Netflix)
Daftest – Mordecai. Johnny Depp capers about as posh English art collector conscripted to help find a stolen painting.  Ludicrous but a fun bit of escapism. Hilarious slapstick scene at the start was disappointingly not repeated. (Prime)

Fantasy
Best foreign language – Iceman.  Imaginative tale based on the remains of a stone age man found in the Alps.  Dialogue in ancient language descended from Etruscan. (DVD)
Best low-budget - Viking Destiny.  Cheap NI production with Terence Stamp as excellent Odin. (Netflix)
Best film based on a video game - Assassin’s Creed. Surprisingly good.  Great cast and fun location-spotting.  (Netflix)
Most gruesome - Valhalla Rising. Grim tale of pagans and Christians; One Eye escapes slavery and travels to the holy land which turns out to be the new world . Wise kid a bit like Jesus. (Prime)
Best dragons – Warbirds. Madcap story of women pilots fighting dragons at end of WW2. (DVD. 
Daftest Jackie Chan - Bleeding Steel.  Very silly but shiny, colourful, entertaining and good ideas about what to do with a cheap smartwatch and the USB port on a phone! (Netflix)

Graphic Novels
Best Marvel - Captain Marvel.  Iffy start but improves. Lovely homage to Stan Lee. (DVD)
Best DC - Wonder Woman.  Entertaining telling of the backstory of Diana as an Amazonian princess getting involved in WWI. (Prime)
Close second - Justice League.  Enjoyable romp featuring Batman and Wonder Woman and invention of The Flash. (Prime)
Weirdest – Snowpiercer.  Last remaining people on earth trapped on a train that perpetually circles a globe  covered in ice.  Based on a French graphic novel which explained a lot. (Netflix)

Crime
Best acting - The Launderette.   Big Short-type film about insurance scams. Excellent double act from Banderas and Oldman and superb turn from Meryl Streep. (Netflix)
Best gangsters - Once Upon a Time in London.  Educational and entertaining story of gangs in 1930’s  London. (Netflix)
Most authentic – Highwaymen.  Old rangers catch Bonnie & Clyde. Inevitable age jokes and authentic details about the demise of the psycho duo. (Netflix)
Most stylish – Blackhat.  Classy effort by Michael Man about dastardly hackers (Netflix)
Best British - Dead in a Week., Young man asks a hitman to do him in. Very British wry humour. (Netflix) 

True Life and Biopic
Best British - Kinky Boots. Northants shoe factory saved by making boots for drag queens. (telly box)
Most macho - The 12th Man. Incredible story of possibly the manliest man in history escaping Nazis in ‘Fortress Norway’ with help from Magic reindeer (Netflix)
Close second - Only The Brave; true tragic tale of wildfire fighters, good but very macho.  (Netflix)
Most ridiculous - Pain & Gain. Bodybuilders turn criminal.  Initially sceptical that it was a true story, subsequent research revealed actual events were even more ludicrous.  You just can’t make this stuff up! (TV)
Close second - American Made. Tom Cruise as a pilot cum drugs runner for Escobar then the CIA and White House. Crazy stuff!  (Netflix)
Most intelligent – Changeling.  Excellent offering from Clint Eastwood about a boy who goes missing, police corruption etc. (DVD)
Most inspirational - The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind.  Chiwetel Ejiofor writes, directs and stars in this lovely film about a Malawian boy who saves his village by working out how to use wind power.  (Netflix)
Best cinematography - At Eternity’s Gate.  Decent biopic about Van Gogh with Willem Defoe. (Netflix)
Funniest - The Happy Prince.  Rupert Everett piles on the pounds to play Oscar Wilde in his latter years. (Netflix)
Most underrated - The Red Sea Diving Resort. Israeli/US operatives get Jews out of Ethiopia.  Unfairly bad reviews.  (Netflix)
Best Kevin Spacey replacement - All the Money in the World. Decent telling of the Getty story focusing on kidnapping of Paul 3.  Spot the one scene they couldn’t re-shoot! (Netflix)