This Cinephile

Monday, December 31, 2018

Complete Grades 2018

Alphabetical, by grade.

A+


A


A-
A Star is Born
Blindspotting
Eighth Grade

B+
Blackkklansman
First Man
Hereditary
Lean on Pete
Leave No Trace

B
A Quiet Place
A Simple Favor
Annihilation
Bad Times at the El Royale
Beautiful Boy
Black Panther
Creed II
Dumplin'
Hearts Beat Loud
Isle of Dogs
Juliet, Naked
RBG
Searching
Thoroughbreds
Widows

B-
American Animals
Avengers: Infinity War
Blockers
Bohemian Rhapsody
Borg vs. McEnroe
Chappaquiddick
Game Night
Halloween
Love, Simon
White Boy Rick

C+
Beirut
Don't Worry He Won't Get Far on Foot
Every Day
Flower
Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again
Ocean's 8
Solo
You Were Never Really Here

C
Hot Summer Nights
I Feel Pretty
Ready Player One
Upgrade

C-
Disobedience
Gringo
The Party
Red Sparrow
Sorry To Bother You
Tag
Truth or Dare
Tully
Unsane

D+
Breaking In
The Strangers: Prey At Night

D
The Commuter
Destination Wedding
Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom
Siberia
Unfriended: Dark Web

D-
Den of Thieves

F
The First Purge
Winchester

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Friday, December 28, 2018

Top Ten Films of 2018

10. Widows - What we need more of are smart, well written films for adult audiences. Unfortunately, these sorts of movies don't do super well at the box office, so we don't get them often enough. I'm not sure how much money Widows made, but it is definitely the kind of movie I'm referring to - well written (by Gone Girl author Gillian Flynn), smart, thrilling, intricate plot, and, of course, super entertaining. Part of the entertaining part is that exquisite cast - Viola Davis, Michelle Rodriguez, stand out Elizabeth Debicki, Cynthia Erivo, Liam Neeson, Colin Farrell, Robert DuVall... I could go on. The cast is stellar and every one of them holds their own in one of the best ensembles of the year.

09. Black Panther - I do know how much money Black Panther made at the box office: all the money. Comic book movies tend to do that (especially Marvel), but very few comic book movies are THIS DAMN GOOD. There are so many superhero movies these days, it's easy to get bogged down. In my opinion, there are only a few that really stand up above the rest: Christopher Nolan's Dark Knight trilogy, The Captain America trilogy, and, now, Black Panther. This movie is seeped in and celebrates African and black culture. And let's not forget about the women! Each strong and independent and capable in different ways - none of them need a man to save them, thank you very much. Black Panther needs them as much as they need him. Black Panther is what America needs right now - a hugely entertaining, bad ass comic book movie that has one of the single best villains (see Best Supporting Actor), AND strong women, AND celebrates equality.

08. Leave No Trace - A small, quietly intimate story of wilderness survival, a loving portrait of a modern American family, Leave No Trace is the best movie you've never heard of this year. Starring Ben Foster and newcomer Thomasin McKenzie as a father with PTSD and his daughter who live in the Portland woods, Leave No Trace has little dialogue, very few other characters and slow burns it's way through their story, as they eventually try to reintegrate themselves into a society that doesn't know what to do with them, and that they are far from comfortable in. It's a solid little movie worth checking out.

07. First Man - The story of the first man on the moon, First Man starts slow, but once it hits the half way mark, it starts to find it's footing and becomes a completely enthralling look at the origins of the space program and the struggle it caused the families of the original astronauts. It might not be as enrapturing as Damien Chazelle's first film Whiplash. And it is definitely quieter and more settled than his last effort, La La Land. But Chazelle is one of the best young directors working today, and First Man shows his talents and range (there is a particular parachuting scene that is so beautifully directed, I still think about it on a regular basis). There is a whose who of supporting actors in this film, but the solid work of a strong and silent Ryan Gosling and his stressed, but feisty wife played by Claire Foy elevate the film.

06. Lean On Pete - Look, I thought this was going to be a nice movie about the love between a down on his luck kid and a horse, but instead it was the saddest movie I've seen all year and I spent the entirety of a Friday night weeping on my couch. So, there's that. But Lean on Pete is wonderful: a small movie about a boy who doesn't have a very great family life, who finds a job working for a horse racer, and finds solace in a relationship with a horse that is about to be slaughtered. He steals said horse, and embarks on a cross country journey to save his life and find his long lost aunt. It's touching and moving and beautiful and sad as hell. It features a truly star making performance from Charlie Plummer. Remember that name. He's going to be huge.

05. Hereditary - Every year, some movie gets touted as "the best and scariest horror movie of the decade." A few examples of this include The Witch, It Follows and The Babadook. All of those were highly disappointing for me as they were neither scary, nor the best anything. But Hereditary finally lives up to the hype. Sure, it may not stick that crazy ending (there's a better ending in there somewhere, even if I can't think of what it is), but it IS 100% truly terrifying, and that's a start. There is a particular scene (let's call it the car crash scene) that still sends shivers up my spine. Hereditary is a throwback horror movie, reminiscent of the greats like Don't Look Now, Suspiria, Rosemary's Baby, back when filmmakers understood that scary was more than a jump scare, it was a tense feeling that permeated through your bones and stuck in your head for weeks, months, years. That's Hereditary.

04. Blackkklansman - Spike Lee has been making movies for decades, and Blackkklansman is his masterpiece. It's the most timely movie I've seen this year (literally watched it on the 1 year anniversary of the white supremacist rally that turned deadly in Charlottesville). It's the true story of a black cop who infiltrated the KKK by telephone, and then used a white cop as his double to attend meetings and rally's. It seems too bizarre to be true, but it is, and it's a compelling story filled with haunting visuals and absolutely textured, complicated performances.

03. Eighth Grade - If you've ever been awkward. If you've ever desperately wanted to fit in although you knew you never would. If you've ever felt utterly alone. Then this movie is for you. Eighth Grade is a great movie, a timeless movie that will never go out of style because it's about the most painful part of many people's lives (and some of us still feel this day on the regular). Not much happens plot-wise in the movie, but everything feels vital and important, just like that time period in your life. Elsie Fisher is going to be a huge star, and I credit the movie for almost taking her over the edge in a painful way, but never quite going there. Eighth Grade is a coming of age film bound to become a classic.

02. A Star is Born - I hope someone in Hollywood continues to remake A Star is Born every decade for the foreseeable future (next reiteration, hear me out, role reversal - Timothee Chalamet as the young ingenue and someone like Amy Adams as the washed up has been). It's just that kind of timeless tale of love and loss and stardom. I was obsessed with the Barbra Streisand / Kris Kristofferson version growing up, and was worried I would be disappointed by this version, but I wasn't. It lived up to my expectations, and then some. It's not a perfect movie, but it is the most enjoyable time I had at the movies all year. The performances are superb, the chemistry between Bradley Cooper and Lady Gaga is perfect, the songs are all wonderful. And that ending, well, it just rips your heart out, doesn't it?

01. Blindspotting - I heard co-writer, co-star and scene-stealer Rafael Casal describe this movie as two characters who want to be in a buddy comedy, but the world around them won't allow it. I like that, because the chemistry between Casal and Daveed Diggs is very bromance. Diggs is Colin, a good man who did a stupid thing and is now a felon, trying to get through his last few days of parole without his live wire of a best friend (Casal) getting him into any trouble. But when Colin witnesses an unarmed black man being shot by a white cop, his mind starts to fracture and his world spins out of control. There are a lot of heavy topics in a movie that is so funny. There's a lot of discussions to be had about race relations, gentrification, and a whole slue of heady topics. Blindspotting should be essential viewing, right down to that frenetic energy finale that is so mesmerizing you might have to watch it twice. It's the best ending of the year, and the best movie of the year.

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Wednesday, December 26, 2018

Best Actress 2018

05. Emily Blunt in A Quiet Place - Blunt has been doing solid and impressive work for decades, but never has she been as good as she is here. A Quiet Place has minimal dialogue, but Blunt manages to create a fully formed character anyway. That scene where she is trying to quietly give birth in a bathtub while monsters attack her house is one of the best of the year, and her performance there is unforgettable.

04. Lady Gaga in A Star is Born - It's impressive enough that someone who is such a confident global superstar make an audience believe that she is an unsure nobody with stage fright. That's the big picture gist of what Gaga has to do in this movie. But then it's all the little things too, that makes her performance truly shine. It's the lights out chemistry with Bradley Cooper. It's the subtle looks and sighs. I'm fully convinced that a few of her best moments are things she messed up on a little bit, but went with anyway. That instinct helps her deliver one of the most exciting performances of the year.

03. Blake Lively in A Simple Favor - There is a lot I can't really say about this movie because the plot gets progressively more bonkers as it goes on, and I truly don't want to give anything away (although the film loses it's footing and can't land the ending, it's still a pretty fun ride and worth a watch, for sure). But one thing I can say is this: Blake Lively is an f-ing delight in this movie. I've been reminded lately that she's kind of good in everything she does, although for some reason, I don't ever think that. But she's a treat here. Give her more work like this, please!

02. Elsie Fisher in Eighth Grade - It takes a lot to completely and utterly carry a movie. There are very few actors that can do it (Tom Hanks, Leo DiCaprio, maybe that's it). But in Eighth Grade, a teenage girl with little acting experience carries the movie with ease. Fisher is a revelation. She's awkward and unsure. She's snotty and rude to her father. She's trying desperately to fit in at school. She makes you laugh and then rips your heart out. Forget Lady Gaga - it's here that a star is born.

01. Toni Collette in Hereditary - This movie, this performance! I have not been able to stop thinking about either for six months. Collette is a wrecking ball, coming through this movie like a house on fire. It's a ballsy, take no prisoners kind of performance. It's the kind of role that I think would scare off a lot of actresses, but Collette commits 110% and ends up giving one of the most gut-wrenching performances of the year.

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Friday, December 21, 2018

Best Actor 2018

05. John Cho in Searching - I wasn't expecting to enjoy Searching quite as much as I did, and a lot of that has to do with Cho's performance as a desperate father looking for his missing daughter. He experiences almost every emotion you can imagine during the running time of the film - from loving, to exasperated, to worried, to pleading, to angry. It's a wonderful performance that starts so subtly and continuously builds with power and emotion.

04. Ryan Gosling in First Man - This performance is a gem, and it might just slip under the radar and garner Gosling no recognition, which would be a shame. Gone is the movie star charisma that makes Gosling so lovable. Instead it's replaced with a singular silence to play Neil Armstrong, a man who shunned the spotlight, and was laser focused on one thing - getting to the moon. It may seem like Gosling isn't doing much with his strong and silent performance, but there are moments when his humanity will still rip your heart out.

03. Bradley Cooper in A Star is Born - Cooper seemingly did it all with this movie - he wrote it, directed it, co-wrote the songs, AND he gives his best performance ever as boozy folk singer Jackson Maine. This performance has an old Hollywood swagger to it, playing a deeply flawed individual with a warts and all intimacy. His chemistry with Lady Gaga is electrifying, and she might steal all the awards season love, but he gives one hell of a performance in his own right.

02. Rami Malek in Bohemian Rhapsody - Say what you will about the movie (critics hated it, fans loved it, I was somewhere in the middle), but Malek's transformation into Freddie Mercury is spectacular. He not only looks and talks like him, but he moves like him too, with the sexy strut of a rock god. This isn't just play acting, this is is something much more. This is Malek completely becoming Mercury, someone we all know so well. His performance is mesmerizing.

01. Daveed Diggs in Blindspotting - Diggs' performance is great from the first scene, but it's that spectacular ending that left me breathless and wanting to re-watch the movie over and over again. Diggs starts out as a lovable felon. He's almost done with his parole, and while he's done something bad, we never think of him as a bad guy. He's kind and funny and hard working. Then he witnesses a police shooting of an unarmed black man, and it turns his whole world upside down. By the time we reach that explosive conclusion, Diggs has given one of the most compelling performances of the year. Diggs is a superstar. I can't wait to see what he does next.

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Wednesday, December 19, 2018

Best Supporting Actress 2018

05. Michelle Williams in I Feel Pretty - Michelle Williams is one of the most talented actresses working today. If there was any justice, she would already have an Oscar. It's a good thing she'll have plenty of future chances, because she's surely not going to win it for this movie. I Feel Pretty is by no means a good movie. It's mediocre at best, but Williams work is still impossibly delightful. With the breathy voice and the airhead Barbie looks, Williams steals every scene she is in and makes this mediocre movie something you can actually sit through. Shining so brightly in such a dull movie is just further proof of how very talented she is.

04. Thomasin McKenzie in Leave No Trace - Director Debra Granik has an eye for talent. She gave Jennifer Lawrence her breakthrough role with Winter's Bone, and now it looks like she'll do the same with McKenzie. As the daughter of a survivalist with PTSD, McKenzie shines as a young woman who spent her life living in the wilderness trying to adapt to a normal life. She has very little dialogue throughout the movie, but you still feel every emotion she wants you to. Chemistry with movie dad Ben Foster surely helps, but this is a raw and authentic performance from a talent so young, that it makes you excited for what she will do next (hopefully she won't follow the same route as Lawrence and become a caricature of herself).

03. Claire Foy in First Man - First Man is basically a boys club. The entire cast is almost entirely male. Maybe that makes Foy even better, because she stands out in every single scene she is involved in. She's a supportive wife and mother, struggling with a husband who would rather go to the moon than stay on earth with his family. She is loving and tender, sassy and tough. She is a force to be reckoned with, and that scene where she goes to NASA headquarters to demand answers is a gem.

02. Ashlie Atkinson in Blackkklansman - There are quite a few stand out performances in Blackkklansman. Adam Driver and John David Washington are rightly getting awards season attention. But no one is talking about Atkinson, who plays the wife of a white supremacist / KKK member. She is at once a friendly and welcoming hostess, and a hateful, self-righteous bigot. It's a performance so layered, it feels so intimately authentic, that it will leave you feeling chilled to the bone. Her Connie is just as likely to bake you a pie with a smile on her face than she is to put a pipe bomb in your mail box. She's riveting to watch.

01. Elizabeth Debicki in Widows - Debicki is a revelation. In a star-studded cast that stars a who's who of the most talented character actors and movie stars, Debicki steals every single second of screen time she has. As an abused widow whose gone from her mom's house to her husband's house, she starts the movie as a lost and terrified little girl who doesn't know how to do anything on her own. Throughout the movie, we watch as she grows before our eyes, with the movies best (maybe only?) character arc. She learns to wield her sex appeal to get things done. She learns to read people's wants, needs and desires to get them to do what she needs them to. And she finally stands up for herself, and refuses to be anyone's punching bag. In the hands of a lesser actor, this role would have diminished to the background in such a talented cast. Instead, she becomes the best part of the movie.

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Monday, December 17, 2018

Best Supporting Actor - 2018

05. Michael B. Jordan in Black Panther - I've said it once and I'll say it again: a superhero movie is only as good as its super villain. Black Panther is easily the best Marvel entry outside of the Captain America trilogy and one very big reason is Michael B. Jordan as Killmonger, the absolute best villain Marvel has ever given us (second possibly only to Heath Ledger's the Joker in terms of superhero movies in general). Killmonger is the best kind of villain because he is completely justified in his actions, and he's really only a villain because he is pitted against Black Panther himself in his desire to open the Wakanda borders and use their advanced technology to help all the people. This doesn't seem like a particularly villainous idea. Perhaps this is why Killmonger is so profoundly tragic and Jordan's portrayal is so layered and textured that you can't help but be a little on his side.

04. Timothee Chalamet in Beautiful Boy - Last year, Timothee Chalamet gave one of the best performances of the year as the lovesick teenage protagonist of Call Me By Your Name. This year, he shows why he is one of the most exciting young actors out there with a compelling performance as a meth addict in Beautiful Boy. He gets a showcase for his considerable talents in scenes where he's doing everything from begging for money to stealing from his father, to suffering through withdrawal to living in the ecstasy of the high. The movie isn't necessarily great but the fact that you can't keep your eyes off Chalamet elevates the material.

03. Sam Elliott in A Star is Born - There is a particular moment in A Star is Born that is so emotionally devastating, it's hard to hold back tears. It's not the scene you are probably thinking of. Instead, it's almost a throwaway moment. It's a tiny moment without words. It's just a few seconds. A single shot of Elliott reversing out of a driveway after dropping off his brother Jackson (Bradley Cooper) and having a small sweet moment. The camera focuses on his face as he reverses his truck, and the sadness and pain in his eyes is so heartrendingly raw, that it cuts through your soul. That one moment is the moment I can't stop thinking about.

02. Josh Hamilton in Eighth Grade - Josh Hamilton's performance in Eighth Grade is the kind of performance many people are likely to forget. It's not showy or over the top. It's not big or flashy. His performance is warm and comforting, like a soft blanket and a mug of cocoa on a winter's night. He stars as a well-meaning father, navigating the difficult life of dealing with a teenage girl (and even the awkward, self conscious teenage girls are kind of a nightmare, let's be honest). His performance reminds me of the very best kind of performances - those that feel like real life.

01. Alex Wolfe in Hereditary - Toni Colette seems to be getting all the love for her performance in Hereditary (and deservedly so), but Alex Wolfe goes toe to toe and beat for beat with her. His performance as a carefree teenage boy who sinks slowly and maniacally into a morbid fever dream is so compelling, it's hard to argue there is a better supporting performance this year. His slow descent into darkness is the anchor of the film. While his mother (Colette) may or may not be out of her mind, he is the heart and soul of the film, the one character who you truly care about. And bonus points for his expression during the long take after that car crash. He's incredible.

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Friday, December 14, 2018

2018 Yearly Wrap Up

Before I get into top 5 lists for acting and my top 10 films, here are a few categories, just for fun...

MVP - Lady Squads! (See: Widows, Ocean's 8, Annihilation, Blockers)
Runner up - The adorable dog who co-starred in Widows AND Game Night

Director - Spike Lee for Blackkklansman
Runner Up - Damien Chazelle for First Man

Ensemble - Widows
Runner up - Blackkklansman

Scene Stealer - Jake Ryan in Eighth Grade
Runner Up - Jesse Plemmons in Game Night

Poster - Blackkklansman
Runner Up - First Man

Kiss - Simon and Bram on the ferris wheel in Love, Simon
Runner Up - Ally and Jackson in A Star is Born

Chemistry - Daveed Diggs and Rafael Casal's best friend bromance in Blindspotting
Runner Up - Ben Foster and Thomasin McKenzie's father / daughter bond in Leave No Trace

Dance Sequence - Jonah Hill dancing in his underwear in Don't Worry He Won't Get Far On Foot
Runner Up - Mamma Mia Here We Go Again end credits

Musical Sequence - Live Aid concert in Bohemian Rhapsody
Runner Up - Shallow at Jackson's concert in A Star is Born

Song - Shallow from A Star is Born
Runner Up - Hearts Beat Loud from Hearts Beat Loud

Score - First Man
Runner Up - Hereditary

Action Sequence - Safe room robbery in Widows
Runner Up - Final Match in Borg vs. McEnroe

Fight Scene - Creed vs. Drago rematch in Creed II
Runner Up - Black Panther vs. Killmonger in Black Panther

Single Scene - Pool party in Eighth Grade
Runner Up - Birth scene in A Quiet Place

Ending - Blindspotting's (so good, there is no runner up, only this forever)

Cinematography - First Man
Runner Up - Blackkklansman

Breakthrough Performance - Lewis Pullman steals scenes from veterans in Bad Times at the El Royale
Runner Up - Cynthia Erivo is bad ass in Widows and is the heart and soul of Bad Times at the El Royale

Comedic Performance - Rachel McAdams in Game Night
Runner Up - The teenage ladies of Blockers

Villain - Killmonger in Black Panther
Runner Up - Topher Grace in Blackkklansman

Hero - Black Panther
Runner Up - RBG

Bad Ass - Jamie Lee Curtis in Halloween
Runner Up - The ladies of Widows

Original Screenplay - BLindspotting
Runner Up - Eighth Grade

Adapted Screenplay - Blackkklansman
Runner Up - Leave No Trace

Quote - "I pity your wife if you think six minutes is forever" from Bohemian Rhapsody
Runner Up - "Gucci!" from Eighth Grade




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Wednesday, December 12, 2018

Worst Films of 2018

Back again from my year long exile to deliver the best and worst of the year! Before I get to the best (beginning next week), let's start with the worst. There were actually quite a few bad movies this year, so here are a few more than 5, but less than 10!

05. The Commuter - Or as I like to refer to it as: a huge waste of talent! Yes, this movie stars Liam Neeson, Vera Farmiga, Patrick Wilson, Jonathan Banks, Sam Neill and 2017 MVP and future Little Woman Florence Pugh. And, yes, it wastes all of their considerable talent in a fairly predictable, not at all thrilling thriller. This is paint by numbers, with most of the talent looking bored as can be. Fair play to you: I was bored too.

04. Keanu Reeves Movies - If you know me at all, then you know that I love Keanu Reeves. Like, I would leave my family and friends and job and run off just to have one night with Keanu Reeves. He's a bonafide movie star who is far more talented than anyone gives him credit for. Unfortunately, 2018 wasted him in two very terrible roles. The first was as a spy who falls for a waitress in the convoluted Siberia. It's described as a "romantic crime thriller" but it is neither romantic, nor thrilling. The second was as a cynical curmudgeon in the not as smart as it wants to be Destination Wedding, co-starring everyone's OTHER favorite 90s crush, Winona Ryder. Their chemistry is fine, but the script is needling and annoying and for a movie where everyone talks so much, it doesn't really have much to say.

03. Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom - Can we be done with this series now? The original is one of the greatest blockbusters of all time. There were a few decent sequels. The reboot was fine and had a few genuinely fun and thrilling moments. The sequel to the reboot (whew) is just plain exhausting.

02. Den of Thieves - Honestly, I remember absolutely nothing about this movie except actively hating it.

01. Horror Movies - Every year, I watch as many horror movies as I can. Sure, 50% of them are dumb and dull and awful, and 49% of them are not so great, but still fun... but every now and again, you come across that 1% - a gem that makes it all worth it. And, yes, there was that gem in 2018 (you'll have to keep reading to find out which movie!), but there were also a lot of duds. First there was the unnecessary Unfriended: Dark Web, which was a sequel that no one wanted or cared about. Then there was The First Purge, the fourth in a franchise that started off good, somehow got even better (thanks Frank Grillo), and then turned real bad, real fast. Next up is the utterly boring Winchester, based on a real life house that has long interested me, but somehow the movie version bored me to tears (I didn't think anything starring Helen Mirren could be that uninteresting). And finally, the worst of the worst, The Strangers: Prey At Night. The first Strangers movie is one of the greatest horror movies of the 2000s, genuinely and effectively terrifying. This is just a cliche rip off that has no scares, no originality, and no heart.

Starting Monday: The best of 2018!