Archive for Best of 2010

John Harvey’s TOP SIX MOVIES OF 2010!

Posted in 2011, Best Of Lists, John Harvey Reviews with tags , , , , , , on January 12, 2011 by knifefighter

(Editor’s Note: Here are our last “Best of 2010″ lists, from contributors John Harvey and Jason Harris.)

THE TOP … errr … 6 MOVIES OF 2010
by John Harvey

Yeah, I know. Six movies is sort of a strange number to use in a “Year in Review” article. Ultimately, there’s six movies that I want to pimp. I didn’t feel like dumping one down the well for the sake of a round number.

1. INCEPTION

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inception_(film)

This was a fabulously directed and written movie. Also, it proved that American audiences will shell out cash to see a complex film containing characters that have some depth. And they shelled out the money to see it multiple times, because it stayed in the top 10 grossing movies for a helluva long time. Calling Christopher Nolan: More like this, please.

2. KICK-ASS

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kick-Ass_(film)

Based on the comic book of the same name by Mark Millar and John Romita, Jr., KICK-ASS was tremendous mix of action-packed fun, general hilarity and shocking violence. This film also introduced many moviegoers to Chloë Grace Moretz as Hit-Girl, who was fantastic as a foul-mouthed, 12-year-old crime fighter. Her performance made me much more willing to see the honorable-mention-worthy LET ME IN, in which she also starred. KICK-ASS also did a lot to help me forgive Nicolas Cage for his many unforgivably bad movies (but then this past weekend I saw a preview for SEASON OF THE WITCH, and now I’m back to hoping that he falls down steep flight of stairs … go figure).

3. TRUE GRIT

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/True_Grit_(2010_film)

Written and directed by the Coen brothers, TRUE GRIT introduced us to another terrific young actress, Hailee Steinfeld, who took the starring role next to Jeff Bridges in this American Western adaptation of the Charles Portis novel of the same name. As usual, Jeff Bridges put in a great performance as Rooster Cogburn, but you should really see this film to catch Steinfeld’s portrayal of Mattie Ross. She’s really an amazing young talent. The film itself is a true  Western minus the spaghetti. Listening to the rhythm of the dialogue is worth the price of admission. It’s reminds me a bit of the dialogue style used in the Coen Brothers’ OH BROTHER WHERE ART THOU (2000).

4. THE TOWN

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Town_(2010_film)

Ben Affleck is an actor who has made several career choices that filled me with ‘meh.’ That said, THE TOWN went a long way toward changing my opinion. Not only did he star in this movie, but he also directed it and shared a partial writing credit. This gritty crime thriller isn’t terribly complex, but it’s filled with interesting, textured characters and great actors in all the main roles. Jeremy Renner steals almost every scene he’s in. In addition to a lot of compelling tension between the characters, THE TOWN features some mighty fine action scenes. I haven’t forgiven Affleck for SUM OF ALL FEARS (2002) yet, but I’m getting there.

5. SPLICE

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Splice_(film)

The previews made this movie look like a horror monster thriller. Bollocks. Starring Adrien Brody, Sarah Polley and Delphine Chanéac, SPLICE was much closer to straight sci-fi, but no one wanted to call it that because everyone knows that sci-fi has huge space ships and aliens who look a lot like humans with misshapen foreheads.  SPLICE used gene science to frame a thoughtfully-paced film dealing with subjects ranging from parenthood and relationships to the potential dangers of genetic manipulation. It’s a very human, emotional story featuring (on average) very good acting.

6. TERRIBLY HAPPY

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terribly_Happy

Speaking of the Coen brothers, if you liked BLOOD SIMPLE (1985) or NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN (2007), then you’ll also probably like TERRIBLY HAPPY. This intense, intelligent little Danish thriller deals with a police officer’s troubled integration into a small town where he’s supposed to be escaping the stresses of big city police work. Predictably, that train comes off the tracks quickly. This isn’t a fast-paced, shoot ‘em up thriller filled with tent-pole scenes. Rather, it focuses on the complex and vicious social politics of small town life versus the big city.

WORST MOVIE OF 2010

SALT

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt_(2010_film)

This movie gave me the kind of aimless, sprinting rage last seen in the 2002 Danny Boyle zombie film, 28 DAYS LATER. SALT provided movie goers with a paint-by-numbers plot, crap acting, shrug-worthy action sequences, and, frankly, Angelina Jolie’s mouth scares the s#!t out of me.

Movies That PROBABLY Would Have Made My TOP 10 Had I Been Smart Enough to See Them

Before you yell at me for not including certain wide-release movies in my list. Here’s my missed opportunities. I’ll see them all eventually, but I didn’t see them in 2010. Shame on me.

  • Black Swan
  • How To Train Your Dragon
  • Machete
  • Toy Story 3
  • The Social Network

GUILTY PLEASURES

PIRHANA 3D

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piranha_3D

This movie was gory, silly and pretty much dreadful … but I can’t help but love it. Alexandre Aja’s PIRANHA 3D was not simply an homage to the ridiculous, drive-in exploitation horror film, it’s an actual ridiculous, drive-in exploitation horror film. It’s just a funny, goofy, gory popcorn-chomping film. Oh … and there’s many fantastic boobies.

JACKASS 3D

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jackass_3D

Not a lot to say about this movie except that it’s about lunatics doing idiotically-dangerous things. And I’m ashamed to say that I laughed myself nearly to the point of incontinence. Oh, by the way, I saw it in 2D because even the guys in the film thought doing it in 3D was dumb. They were right.

OSCAR PREDICTIONS

People who know I’m a movie buff continue to ask who I think will win at the Oscars. Let me sum it up for you in two words:

MACGRUBER sweep.


 

 

 

 

 

Now leave me alone!

– END -

© Copyright 2011 by John D. Harvey

Dan Keohane’s 2010 IN REVIEW

Posted in 2011, Best Of Lists, Daniel Keohane Reviews with tags , , , , , , on January 11, 2011 by knifefighter

(Editor’s Note – Staff lists of the best movies of 2010 continue this week, with Dan Keohane kicking things off)

2010 – THE YEAR IN REVIEW
by Dan Keohane

OK, so if Wikipedia‘s list of “Motion Pictures Released in 2010” is to be believed (which is probably not the case, I’m sure a lot of Indies came out that weren’t in there), I saw a lot more 2010 movies than I thought I had. Some I watched in theaters or the drive-in, more so in the latter part of the year. Others, via Netflix or other rentals. Some of the films I chose to watch, others were rented by my kids and I happened to be sitting there and ended up watching. I’ve seen, and reviewed, more than what is listed below, but those weren’t 2010 films and so, alas, do not make the list.

Of the Wiki-listed, naught-tenner science-fiction / horror / fantasy films I’ve seen, I’ve ranked them in order of how much I enjoyed them:

INCEPTION & SHUTTER ISLAND: Have to give these two puppies a tie for “Best 2010 Film I’ve Seen.”  As usual, DiCaprio will be snubbed for his leading role in both, as has become a recent Oscar tradition. He was great – though for the most part he played the same character. INCEPTION wins for its sheer originality, visual effects, and balls. Not everyone is going to get off on this film, many probably walked out dazed and confused, and not in the good way. Me, I loved it, even if I did have to strain my brain to follow the plot’s details. SHUTTER ISAND wins for one of the best screen adaptations of one of the best suspense novels I’ve ever read. I loved the book by Denis Lehane years ago, and this film did it perfect justice. Not since THE GREEN MILE has a favorite novel so vividly been brought to life.

HARRY POTTER & THE DEATHLY HALLOWS, PART 1 comes in second. Say what you will of the film, as a stand-alone entity, but it kept loyal to Rowling’s final book – the first half of it at least. A lot of people thought it was too slow, but that’s because the first half of the book was that way. (Wait until PART 2, like the second half of the book, it never lets up). It did drag, but the actors did such a great job with it, that, being a major fan of the books and films, I was more than pleased with the result.

ALICE IN WONDERLAND – I rented this with my kids and was pleasantly surprised. Now, don’t go into this movie with any expectation that the story is based on anything specific written by Lewis Carroll. Some parts were lifted from his Alice books, but this film is original in plot, and stupendous mostly in capturing the dark side of most every character in this beloved series. Johnny Depp was insanely brilliant, as usual, as was Helene Bonham-Carter as the psychotic Queen of Hearts.

ONDINE – I guess everyone’s favorite Irish heartthrob Colin Farrell had disappeared from films for a while to clean himself up, and it must have worked. Farrell’s newest (for me, at least) role as the shy fisherman, Syracuse, in Neil Jordan’s touching love story ONDINE is played with such quiet intensity I found myself a fan again, as I had been years before when he was the only decent actor in (the British TV series) BALLYKISSANGEL. ONDINE falls somewhat in the fantasy realm as Farrell’s perfectly-matched co-star Alicja Bachleda is supposedly a seal who shed her coat… well, long story, and one I’ll hopefully share in a review I promised Lauran I’d write soon.

LET ME IN – I thought the original LET THE RIGHT ONE IN from Sweden was brilliant, and LET ME IN was a perfect remake. I mean.. perfect… to the frame, and that’s unfortunate. This is my only objection to this movie… if they were going to recreate the film exactly, why bother? If people don’t want to read subtitles watching the original it’s their loss, or they can use the dubbing feature (ick) on the DVD. Same sets, same everything, except the actors. If you’re going to make a US version, make it a US version. Still, if you haven’t seen the original, you’ll dig this, because it is made very nicely and well-acted. Which is why it’s up this high.

Three Animated films I watched and enjoyed in 2010: TOY STORY 3 was the best of the bunch. SHREK FOREVER AFTER wasn’t as bad as SHREK 3, but still far from the first two. DESPICABLE ME was cute, and fun to watch with the kids.

THE WOLFMAN – Overall, a great werewolf film, but I have an issue with going too overboard with CGI. And stupid martial-arts wire-acrobatics which do not conform to the physical laws of nature. The climactic battle between the two werewolves was so “fake” (yea, I know they weren’t real, but it just LOOKED fake and it shouldn’t) it ruined, for me, what was an otherwise well-done classic horror film.

KICK-ASS – Uber violent but oddly cute. I actually didn’t finish it, not sure why, but will some day. Maybe.

PARANORMAL ACTIVITY 2 – Far better than the original, though to understand the ending you need to watch the first. At least this time they used security cameras around the house as a better excuse for the “real” footage.

IRON MAN 2 – Not as good as the original, but still a brilliant Iron Man film, especially with Robert Downey Jr. and Gwyneth Paltrow heading the cast. But the film fell way short, unfortunately, because of a sorely miscast Don Cheadle as Rhodey Rhodes and the stupidest ending sequence – I mean, they had Mickey Rourke as this uber cool, tough bad guy Whiplash, and he fights them using remote control robot monsters? The first fight at the race track was far, far better.

THE LAST AIRBENDER – Maybe The Last Avatar Film. I reviewed this here at Cinema Knife Fight recently. Nice Visuals, not enough humor. Stuff like that.

THE TOOTH FAIRY – Starring “The Rock” in the title role.. not as bad as you would expect, I begrudgingly have to admit admit….

THE SORCERER’S APPRENTICE & PERCY JACKSON & THE OLYMPIANS – hard to tell these two apart, both good drive-in films, but likely will not change the world in even the slightest way. Worth watching if you have kids, otherwise give the four bucks’ rental cost to someone on the sidewalk holding out a cup.

DEVIL - Noooooo! M Night, where have you gone? Come back…. come back…

CASE 39 – Reviewed this one here as well. No sense rehashing this one… Too painful

Also saw DATE NIGHT, DEAR JOHN and LETTERS TO GOD… yes, I have two beautiful daughters and will force myself to watch anything if it makes them happy….

© Copyright 2011 by Daniel G. Keohane

NICK’S PICKS: THE BEST OF 2010

Posted in 2011, Best Of Lists, Nick Cato Reviews with tags , , , , , , on January 6, 2011 by knifefighter

(Editor’s Note: Now that Michael and I have had our say, we asked each of our regular contributors to assemble a Best of 2010 list, too. So here’s Nick Cato to kick them off ~ LLS)

NICK’S 2010 PICKS
By Nick Cato

While I went on a huge retro-kick this past year (seeing many midnight classics AT midnight in New York City, including re-releases of PINK FLAMINGOS, A CLOCKWORK ORANGE, THE WARRIORS, ERASERHEAD and THE HOLY MOUNTAIN), I only managed to see 11 new films in the theater, and two new ones on DVD. So, instead of a typical Top Ten list (being I can’t do one!), here’s the eleven films I caught this past year at my local cinema…with a quick review (full reviews can be seen on the monthly archives).

-THE CRAZIES remake was a lot better than I expected. While it didn’t capture the tone of George Romero’s 1973 original, it was quite an entertaining film.

-I was lucky enough to see an advanced screening of SLIME CITY MASSACRE, the long-awaited sequel to Greg Lamberson’s 1989 SLIME CITY. If you like gooey, trashy films a’ la Troma, make sure to catch this one on DVD or if it hits your town.

-The Brooklyn Academy of Music was the scene for a screening of SURVIVAL OF THE DEAD, the sixth Romero zombie outing. While I enjoyed it better than DIARY OF THE DEAD (2007), the film suffers from ridiculous dialogue. I’m hoping George is done with the undead now (although at a Q&A after the film he said they might be doing two more zombie films based on characters from DIARY. I’m not too thrilled).

-CROSPEY was a very well done documentary about a true crime case on Staten Island, New York, that took place in the late 70s / early 80s. The film includes disturbing footage of a former mental institution (taken from an old Geraldo Rivera special report) and some in-depth interviews with those who knew the alleged kidnapper/killer in focus.

-Sage Stallone’s Grindhouse Releasing has been getting some great films into theaters over the past several years, but this time they delivered a real treat: a never-before-released sequel to a little gem titled MASSACRE MAFIA STYLE (also known as THE EXECUTIONER from 1978), titled GONE WITH THE POPE. While I think four people in the packed theater even saw the first one, POPE is a stand-alone gangster epic with an absurd plot: the mob kidnaps the Pope and holds him ransom until every Catholic in the world sends them 50 cents! (Or a dollar—I forgot). Make sure to check the DVD when it’s released. Gangster fans will laugh till it hurts.

-ALL ABOUT EVIL was the directorial debut of drag queen Peaches Christ. It’s a fun little horror/gore comedy about a female theater owner who becomes a snuff film director by accident. Natasha Leonne is amazing as psycho director Deborah Tennis, and John Waters regular Mink Stole makes an appearance along with a nice, psychotronic cast. Some of us got to see this with an opening stage show that was like the bastard child of Rocky Horror. Easily the most fun I’ve had in a theater all year.

-I was thrilled to see a real film version of MACHETE (a fake trailer for it was part of the GRINDHOUSE double feature in 2007). There’s a lot of great gore scenes and Danny Trejo is to-die-for as the title character, but the ending fight between him and Steven Seagal was just SO ridiculous I felt like the director went out of his way to insult the audience. It’s fun with that one major flaw.

-Surprisingly intense for a PG-13 rated film, THE LAST EXORCISM is a must-see for fans of exorcism films. This time everything is seen from the point of view of a Protestant minister who openly admits he’s not a genuine exorcist…but when he confronts a girl who might actually be possessed, he begins to take his life-long, traditional faith seriously. A refreshing Christian character and some well-done spook-outs made this one of my favorites of the year.

-PIRANHA 3-D was gory, silly, and had more boobs per square inch than a wet t-shirt contest in a closet. It’s all goofy fun, but I think it would’ve been just as fun in 2-D (the film had a couple of 3-D effects added after the film was completed). Richard Dreyfus has a cameo that’ll make JAWS fans squeak in geek glory, and Ving Rhames is a small town cop who puts an outboard motor to good, bloody use. At least it was better than your standard SyFy channel killer animal flick…

-The remake of I SPIT ON YOUR GRAVE featured some truly brutal revenge/kill sequences, but the tone that made the 1978 original so hard to watch is nowhere to be found. Star Sarah Butler does a fine job in Camille Keaton’s iconic role, but the audience is expected to accept a little TOO much here. Bottom line: ENOUGH with the remakes!

-Love it or hate it, PARANORMAL ACTIVITY 2 delivered everything the original did, and this time the ending was perfect. I can’t understand why so many horror fans hate these two films…they play on your imagination and if you allow yourself to go with it, there’s no reason you shouldn’t have a blast (and even get a little creeped-out, too). GREAT job here.

-I’m very happy I rented Dario Argento’s latest film, GIALLO, on cable Pay Per View, as the film was pulled after its star Adrien Brody decided to sue the producers! (Google the story for more info. I’m sure it’ll eventually be re-released on DVD). This is no masterpiece, but if you take it as a spoof of the whole “giallo” thing (which apparently Argento himself did), you might enjoy yourself. I did.

-THE HUMAN CENTIPEDE earned this year’s reputation as the “sickest” film to see, and while it is quite grim (especially the ultra-dark ending), there’s plenty worse out there. It’s a decent take on the mad scientist thing, and I’m looking forward to the sequel (which last I heard had a 12-person ‘pede!).

-END-

© Copyright 2011 by Nick Cato

Cinema Knife Fight Presents: THE BEST OF 2010

Posted in 2011, Best Of Lists, Cinema Knife Fights with tags , , , , , on January 5, 2011 by knifefighter

CINEMA KNIFE FIGHT: THE BEST MOVIES OF 2010
by Michael Arruda and L.L. Soares

(The Scene: An old-style art deco movie palace. MICHAEL ARRUDA & LL SOARES are dressed in tuxedos. They are sipping champagne, with LL’s being a darker shade of red than Michael’s.)

MA: Happy New Year, everyone!

LS: Yes, Happy New Year!

MA: We’re ringing in the New Year with our picks for the Top 5 Best Movies of 2010, based on films we saw and reviewed for this site. I’m also sticking to horror/science fiction movies, while LL has decided to include non-genre films as well.

LS: Bully for you! I bet you think you’re special or something!

MA: Ahem. I’ll start.

My pick for my Number 5 movie of 2010 is SPLICE, the science fiction thriller starring Adrien Brody. This slick science fiction flick was surprisingly adult and featured a well written screenplay by director Vincenzo Natali and Antoinette Terry Bryant, as well as fine performances by Adrien Brody and Sarah Polley as the two scientists who create a new life form in their laboratory.

I wasn’t expecting much from this one and ended up liking it a lot. I enjoyed its story, and I also liked that it didn’t deteriorate into a melodramatic horror tale, but pretty much remained a solid science fiction movie throughout.

Well-made, well-written, and well-acted, SPLICE is well worth your time.

LS: I liked SPLICE a lot, too. I thought it was a really entertaining story, and well-acted. It even went a few places I didn’t think it would have the guts to, so that was a nice surprise. Adrien Brody actually turned a few solid performances in 2010, and is starting to become a real genre mainstay. I wonder if his career will continue to go in that direction, instead of the more arty films he made his reputation on, such as his Oscar-winning performance in Roman Polanski’s THE PIANIST (2002). And, aside from Brody and Polley, I also want to point out the terrific performance by Delphine Chaneac as Dren, the life form they create.

MA: I actually didn’t enjoy Dren as much as you did.

LS: For my Number 5 choice, it’s a tie, between my two favorite remakes of 2010. The first is THE WOLFMAN, starring Benicio Del Toro as the doomed and tragic Lawrence Talbot. This was the role made famous by Lon Chaney, Jr. in the 1940s, and there was a lot of apprehension going into this one. Chaney is one of the most underrated actors from the days of the original Universal monster films, but I always thought his performances as Talbot were among his best, and it was his signature role. Not only did the remake of THE WOLFMAN treat the original with the proper respect, it even strived to recapture the atmosphere and feel of the early Universal films, as well as the Hammer films of the 1950s. This movie wasn’t perfect – a subplot involving Talbot’s father, played by Anthony Hopkins, seemed a bit misguided – but overall this was really enjoyable film.

The other great remake of 2010 was THE CRAZIES. I was never a huge fan of George Romero’s original film from 1973 – I always thought it was a weaker variation on his zombie films – and I think director Breck Eisner actually improved on the original. The cast helped a lot, too, especially Timothy Olyphant as Sheriff Dave Dutten and Radha Mitchell as his wife Judy. This one had a lot of atmosphere and tension, and I liked it a lot.

MA: I liked both these movies, and they both made my Top 5, so I’ll have more to say on these in a bit. Your turn.

LS: What, me again?

MA: Would you like someone else to take your place?

LS: A wiseguy, eh?

Okay. My Number 4 pick for the best films of 2010 is KICK-ASS. This is a surprise since you and I didn’t review this one. John Harvey did!

From the trailer, I expected this to be a lame parody of superhero films, but the movie itself was much different. Basically the story of people without superpowers who decide to become heroes, it’s an interesting idea. Aaron Johnson is okay in the lead, but the real reason to see this movie is for the one-two punch of Nicolas Cage, doing his best Adam West impersonation as Big Daddy, and the amazing Chloe Moretz as his daughter, Hit-Girl. I thought their storyline was way more interesting than Kick-Ass’s. Hit-Girl is easily one of my favorite characters of the year. With her foul mouth and astounding martial arts skills, she easily dominates every single scene she is in. My only complaint about the movie is Christopher Mintz-Plasse as “Red Mist.” I loved the guy as McLovin’ in SUPERBAD (2007), but he seemed too jokey and out of place here, and it would have been a lot more interesting if his character had been played in a much darker way.

MA: I loved this movie too, and I didn’t include it on my list because I was focusing on horror movies. I thought Chloe Moretz as Hit-Girl was by far the best part of this movie, and while I enjoyed Cage’s Adam West bit, I didn’t really enjoy his performance as much as Moretz’s.

Now it’s time for my Number 4 pick.

At Number 4, I’m going with THE WOLFMAN.

This is a strange pick for me, because there were a lot of parts to THE WOLFMAN that I didn’t like, but the parts I did like, I liked a lot, and these mostly have to do with the look of the Wolfman himself.

By far, the best part of THE WOLFMAN is its werewolf scenes, and this is because the werewolf looks really good. It’s an effective mix of CGI effects and wonderful make-up by make-up master Rick Baker. Not only does the werewolf look frightening, but it also captures the look of the original. There’s a lot of Lon Chaney Jr. in the face of Benicio Del Toro’s werewolf.

Not so good is the story. Screenwriters Andrew Kevin Walker (who wrote SLEEPY HOLLOW [1999]) and David Self (who wrote THIRTEEN DAYS [1999]) wrote an average story that did very little to wow me. I didn’t like the new characterization of Larry Talbot, of his father, Sir John Talbot, nor did I enjoy the new character, Inspector Abberline.

Benicio Del Toro is fine as Lawrence Talbot, but what’s missing from his performance is what made Chaney stand out as Larry Talbot in the original, and that is, his tragic angst at being a werewolf. In this movie, Talbot’s life’s a mess even before he becomes a werewolf. So, it’s almost as if this latest tragedy is no big deal for him.

Director Joe Johnston does do good job at the helm. The movie looks almost beautiful. There are times the scenes in this film look like paintings. And the action/scare scenes work very, very well.

So, the story’s not so hot, but the technical aspects of the film and the look of the actual Wolf Man more than make up for it. On the strength of its visuals alone, THE WOLFMAN is my pick for the 4th best horror film of the year.

LS: Well, it was Number 5 for me, so I totally agree that it’s a good one.

MA: My Number 3 pick is a movie I didn’t review but saw anyway, and that would be THE LAST EXORCISM. This was a complete surprise for me, because I wasn’t expecting anything from it. It had a compelling story, smart direction by Daniel Stamm, it was scary, and it included a knockout performance by Patrick Fabian as Rev. Cotton Marcus.

I was on the edge of my seat a couple of times during this movie, and as far as exorcism movies go, other than the original THE EXORCIST (1973), there haven’t been many better than this one. It was far superior to the recent EXORCIST sequel and to THE EXORCISM OF EMILY ROSE (2005)

LS: I actually liked THE LAST EXORCISM a lot, too. It made my Top 10 list, but was Number 7, so you liked it a little more than I did. But I thought it was a big surprise – I went into it not expecting much and I was really impressed. It used the whole “fake documentary” style perfectly, and Patrick Fabian was terrific as Reverend Marcus.

My Number 3 pick for the best films of 2010 was THE HUMAN CENTIPEDE.

This was easily the most buzzed-about horror film of the year, and I thought it delivered the goods. It doesn’t make a helluva lot of sense if you think about it – a mad scientist grafting together the digestive tracks of three people to form one large new life form – why would anyone want to do this? Well, because Dr. Heiter (played by Dieter Laser) is INSANE! I thought this was one weird, original little movie and I’m looking forward to the sequel.

MA: You’re right on the money with your comment that this one makes no sense, and that was my biggest problem with THE HUMAN CENTIPEDE. I also didn’t enjoy the character of Dr. Heiter either. He’s a walking mad scientist cliché. But you’re right about all the buzz surrounding this one. Go figure!

LS: My Number 2 pick for the best movie of 2010 was Darren Aronofky’s BLACK SWAN. A powerful psychological thriller about sexual repression and madness, it delivers an Oscar-worthy performance by Natalie Portman as Nina Sayers, a ballerina on the edge. Mila Kunis also turns in a great performance as Lilly, a girl who appears to represent Nina’s dark side. Aronofsky is one of the best directors making movies today and BLACK SWAN is just further proof of this.

MA: My Number 2 pick is PREDATORS. I loved PREDATORS.

This is another one that really surprised me, because again I had zero expectations for this movie. I really wasn’t into watching yet another PREDATOR movie. But this movie erased these doubts immediately, starting with the very first scene.

Writers Alex Litvak and Michael Finch wrote a story that hooked me from the get-go.

I think the main reason for its success was that PREDATORS tells a brand new story.

It’s not a remake or a “re-imagining” of the 1987 original movie PREDATOR, starring Arnold Schwarzenegger. It’s a brand new chapter in the franchise. It’s refreshingly entertaining throughout.

Another reason I was skeptical about PREDATORS was Adrien Brody. I didn’t really have much faith in him as the lead in an action-horror movie. He’s no Arnold Schwarzenegger, and I expected him to be sorely miscast. Boy, was I wrong. Not only does Brody actually carry this movie, he delivers one of the best performances in a genre film this year. He comes off as utterly convincing in the role of a tough, mercenary killer. Who woulda thought?

While the special effects were just OK, the action sequences are topnotch, thanks to director Nimrod Antal, who does a good job here. There are plenty of exciting action sequences and intense hunt scenes in this one, and it’s gory when it needs to be.

PREDATORS is easily one of the most entertaining horror movies of the year, and for me, it’s the runner up to the best horror film of the year.

LS: This was a great year for Adrien Brody. He breathed some new life into genre cinema, first with SPLICE and then PREDATORS, which is even better. I thought the Predators franchise was on its last legs, but this movie was smart, well-written, and well acted by all involved, but especially Brody. It was Number 9 on my Top 10 list, and I agree it was one of the best films of 2010.

MA: Now it’s time for our picks for the Number 1 movie of the year. The envelope, please. My pick for the Best Horror Movie of 2010 goes to: THE CRAZIES.

THE CRAZIES is a nonstop rollercoaster ride of a movie that kept me on the edge of my seat throughout. From the opening sequence at a baseball game, in a scene that is sweating with realism, the movie grabs you by the throat and doesn’t let go. For a movie like this, or any horror movie for that matter, the audience has to believe for it to work. From the get-go, THE CRAZIES will have you believing in every farfetched thing that happens, and it’ll do it with great acting, directing, and writing.

Director Breck Eisner crafts one compelling scene after another. The scene in the farmhouse where one of the townspeople, now a crazy, torments his family is wonderfully done and terribly frightening. The scene where Judy and Becca are strapped to tables, and they are menaced by the man with the pitchfork is incredibly suspenseful, and then there’s the even better scene in the car wash.

The screenplay was written by Scott Kosar, who also wrote the screenplay for THE AMITYVILLE HORROR (2005) and THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE (2003), and Ray Wright. It’s filled with one memorable scene after another, along with realistic dialogue and fleshed out characters who you really care for.

LS: Pretty amazing that the guy who wrote that lame TEXAS CHAINSAW remake wrote a script as good as THE CRAZIES. I’m impressed.

MA: The acting is also excellent. Both Timothy Olyphant as Sheriff David Dutton and Radha Mitchell as Dr. Judy Dutton stand out as the leads in this movie, and Joe Anderson is even better in the supporting role as Deputy Russell Clark

THE CRAZIES is a relentless horror movie, one that goes for the throat early on and doesn’t let go.

Hands down, THE CRAZIES is the best horror movie of 2010.

LS: Well, since it made my Top 5, I totally agree that THE CRAZIES was an enjoyable flick.

Unlike you, I refuse to just stick to just horror movies – only because we reviewed a wide range of films in 2010. Sure, horror is still our main focus, but we also reviewed superhero films, westerns, and films a little harder to define. If we reviewed it here, then it’s fair game for our “Best Of” lists.

As for my Number 1 film of 2010, it was a movie I saw in the fall of 2010, but didn’t write a review for until this week. Gaspar Noe’s ENTER THE VOID. This is a movie about what happens after death, and it’s a trippy, surreal journey of the soul. It also defies categorization.

I thought it was visually astounding and emotionally powerful. And it’s like nothing else that came out in 2010. Since it was in very limited release, I doubt you had a chance to see this one, Michael. But then again, there’s a good chance it would not be your cup of tea, anyway.

MA: No, I didn’t get to see this one. But it sounds better than THE HUMAN CENTIPEDE!

Okay, that wraps things up from here. Happy New Year everybody!

(Confetti falls from the ceiling)

LS: And don’t forget to look for our WORST OF 2010 movies column, coming real soon!

—END—

© Copyright 2011 by Michael Arruda and L.L. Soares

L.L. Soares: MY BOTTOM FIVE

Posted in 2011, Best Of Lists, Cinema Knife Fights, LL Soares Reviews with tags , , , , , , on January 5, 2011 by knifefighter

THE BEST MOVIES OF 2010: MY BOTTOM FIVE
by L.L. Soares

When we wrote up our Best Movies of 2010 list this time around, I originally had a Top 10 list, but Michael and I decided to go with our Top 5 movies of the year for the Cinema Knife Fight “Year in Review” column. Since I’d already made my list of 10 (and some Honorable Mentions), I figured I’d post this anyway. So below is the rest of my list.

RECAP FROM ABOVE

My Top Five Films for 2010 were

1)      ENTER THE VOID (Directed by Gaspar Noe)

2)     BLACK SWAN (Directed by Darren Aronofsky)

3)      HUMAN CENTIPEDE (Directed by Tom Six)

4)      KICK-ASS (Directed by Matthew Vaughn)

5)      THE CRAZIES (Directed by Breck Eisner)/THE WOLFMAN (Directed by Joe Johnston) (tie)

So here’s the rest of my list:

6)      BAD BIOLOGY – Frank Henenlotter’s first new film in over a decade is a crazy, surreal look at two people with mutant genitals who discover each other. It’s not exactly a love story. As all-out weird as Henenlotter classics like BASKET CASE (1982) and BRAIN DAMAGE (1988), this was a breath of fresh air, and completely original. Too bad it didn’t get a proper theatrical release.

7)      THE LAST EXORCISM – As Michael stated in his list, this was a little movie that delivered the goods most big movies fail to.  In fake documentary style (taking its cue from 1999’s THE BLAIR WITCH PROJECT to the more recent PARANORMAL ACTIVITY movies), we go on the job with Reverend Marcus (Patrick Fabian), who is basically a scam artist who “exorcises” people who believe they are possessed by demons. He thinks it’s all in their minds, but he performs the expected rituals and believes he is actually doing them a service (so he does have an altruistic streak). That is until he comes across a girl who may be truly possessed, and he has to take the Devil head-on, rediscovering his faith in the process. A smart, well-acted film that was a real surprise in 2010. (Directed by Daniel Stamm.)

8)      FASTER/MACHETE (tie) – The two best “action films” of 2010 were anything but business as usual. FASTER, directed by George Tillman Jr., was a grim, existential throwback to the revenge/fast car thrillers of the 1970s, giving Duane “The Rock” Jones a role that actually vindicated him after all his previous bad film choices. MACHETE was Robert Rodriguez’s roller coaster of a film featuring Danny Trejo as a Mexican Federale who takes the law into his own hands to stop a crooked senator with a very aggressive anti-immigration policy (played by Robert DeNiro!). There were some flaws, but overall Rodriguez’s film (an expansion on a fake trailer he’d originally made for 2007’s GRINDHOUSE) is a blast and a successful attempt at capturing the feel of grindhouse flicks of the 70s and 80s. With lots of gore and nudity to boot!

9)      PREDATORS – This is rare case of a franchise that was limping along given new life thanks to a solid script and good acting. Adrien Brody leads a group of killers, soldiers and mercenaries trying to survive when they find themselves transported to an alien planet – which is essentially a game preserve – and are hunted down by the titular Predators. I’ve always loved the way the Predators look, and I never thought they were ever really done justice on film – even in the very first PREDATOR film from 1981, starring Arnold Schwarzenegger (which was good, but not as good as this one). Not only is this my favorite of the series, but it’s a pretty solid stand-alone film by itself. Proof that reboots aren’t always lame. (Directed by Nimrod Antal)

10)   SLIME CITY MASSACRE – Gregory Lamberson’s sequel to his 1988 cult classic, SLIME CITY, is a lot of fun. After an apocalyptic event, survivors scavenging for food find the basement of occultist Zachary Devon, who is long dead but awaiting resurrection thanks to his homemade Himalayan yogurt, which allows him and his followers to possess those who eat it (and there’s some funky wine to wash it down). When I originally reviewed this one I had a few minor quibbles, but overall thought it was pretty entertaining. A second viewing just confirms that. Featuring strong performances by leads Kealan Patrick Burke (also a well-regarded horror writer), Jennifer Bihl and thinking man’s scream queen Debbie Rochon, and smart direction by Lamberson, this one has a TROMA feel, but is better than most of their recent output. Hopefully it will get a theatrical and/or DVD release in 2011 (after mostly playing film festivals in 2010). If you watch it at home, make sure to have plenty of yogurt and neon-colored wine on hand to make it a complete experience.

HONORABLE MENTIONS

SCOTT PILGIRM VS. THE WORLD – A very innovative film, based on yet another comic book, where Scott Pilgrim’s (Michael Cera) life is pretty much a real-life video game, as he starts dating Ramona Flowers (Mary Elizabeth Winstead), and finds out  he has to defeat each of her Seven Evil Exes to seal the relationship. An interesting variation on superheroes (everyone seems to have secret superpowers in this world) and video games (with lots of video game-related visuals) that seemed ahead of its time. Maybe in a few years it will get the respect it deserves. Unfortunately, the box office numbers when it was released showed a lot of people just weren’t ready for it yet. Directed by cult director Edgar Wright, who previously gave us SHAUN OF THE DEAD (2004) and HOT FUZZ (2007).

PIRANHA 3D – One of the most fun times I had at the movies in 2010 was this 3D “spectacular” (actually a sort of a remake of the 1978 Roger Corman-produced “classic.”) The original film was a riff (that’s putting it politely) on JAWS, featuring scientifically mutated piranhas (as if real piranhas weren’t bad enough!). In the reboot, an undersea earthquake opens up passageway into a long hidden part of the sea where prehistoric piranhas dwell. They’re big, they have lots of teeth, and they’re hungry! With lots and lots of gore and nudity, including a long naked underwater ballet and a blood-drenched finale. With some laughs, too. Directed by Alexandre Aja, who previously gave us the intense flicks HIGH TENSION (2003) and the remake of THE HILLS HAVE EYES from 2006.

MONSTERS – Two Americans try to make their way back home from a Mexico that has been overrun by extraterrestrial creatures who crashed to earth along with a space probe and grew to gigantic proportions. A statement on American/Mexican relations (the monsters are just fine as long as they stay where they’re supposed to, but once they try to invade America, they’re dealt with swiftly) as well as a kind of love story, with very interesting creature effects. This one is kind of quiet for the most part, with sudden bursts of action. I thought it was very well done. But it really needed a different title. (Directed by Gareth Edwards)

SPLICE – Adrien Brody continues to be the hardest working man of 2010 in a movie about scientists (him and Sarah Polley) who create a clone that’s a hybrid of human and animal DNA. The new life form, Dren,  grows at an alarming rate and has strong emotional bonds to her “parents” which results in lots of problems as she hits “puberty.” (Directed by Vincenzo Natali)

PARANORMAL ACTIVITY 2 – Sequel to the 2008 hit, this is yet another of those “fake documentaries” – which have started to spin off into their own genre. The story involves yet another house haunted by an unseen presence (captured on surveillance cameras) and is mostly a prequel to the first film, except for the ending, which is a sequel to the first film (it makes sense if you see it). Full of lots of little scares, and a few big ones, as we watch the goings-on in the house when its inhabitants are there, and when they’re not (or sleeping). This was the one movie that seemed to get the strongest audience reactions in 2010.

Well, that’s it for me for 2010. Now, forward to the future!

© Copyright 2011 by L.L. Soares

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