Monday, January 21, 2013

Top 100 Films: 90-81



90. Andrei Rublev (1966) - Andrei Tarkovsky 
Well for those of you thinking this is my first Tarkovsky film let me disappoint you by mentioning it's also my last.  Over the years my favorite Tarkovsky film has changed without one specific film standing out over the others.  However his unrelated three-peat of Andrei Rublev, Solaris, and The Mirror are my favorites.  After revisiting the other two I got to give the edge to Andrei.  An epic even by Tarkovsky standards, it's opening sequence is spellbinding.  The fact that the film is a biopic on a Russian painter might seem like an odd subject but well Tarkovsky doesn't concern himself too much with the life of Andrei so much as meditating on life all those centuries ago, where religion was new, paganism was still dominant, and making a giant bell was one labor intensive nightmare.  Few filmmakers are this philosophical, rich, varied, and mystical, Tarkovsky is a cinematic poet whose films all seem to mean something different to everyone.  For my money though, Andrei Rublev is the best of them.

89. The Grand Illusion (1937) - Jean Renoir
Jean Renoir might very well be France's greatest director.  After a few interesting and varied silent films he hit his stride in the 30s producing masterpiece after masterpiece.  For most people the culmination of his brilliance was Rules of the Game, his last French film before Nazi occupation and his subsequent exile to America.  For me though you have to go back two years to The Grand Illusion, which was the first non-American film to get a best picture nomination from the Academy Awards.  The film takes Renoir's preoccupation with humanist themes and puts them on the forefront.  For his officers World War I is a gentleman's game, and people of their respective classes can respect each other while simultaneously trying to massacre the plot of land they occupy.  Renoir's idea that German's might not be bad people would have been unfashionable by this point in time but he has always maintained that people are inherently good but may do bad things.  A direct influence on countless films, notably The Great Escape and the other great 30s film to feature Dita Parlo, this is the standout masterpiece from the Golden age of French cinema.

88. The Third Man (1949) - Carol Reed
When the British Film Institute made their own list of the greatest British films of all time I was surprised to see The Third Man top the list.  A good film but I never quite understood how it could be that praised.  Well then I watched it again for this list and it made some sense.  The film features Orson Welles in possibly his greatest performance, and Reed seems to be directly challenging Welles the director in his style.  One of a couple of films Reed made in collaboration with Graham Greene, and featuring one of the most unorthodox film scores you're ever likely to hear this film is incredible.  It's part murder mystery, part film noir, mixed with some neo-realism, and maybe even a bit of the old west.  The film is filled with canted angles, low key lighting, and features arguably the most iconic reveal of a main character who just happens to show up more than two-thirds of the way through the film.   

87. Our Hospitality (1923) - Buster Keaton and John G. Blystone
For years I would have told you without batting an eyelash that Steamboat Bill Jr. was Buster Keaton's best film.  Plenty of people, in fact most of them would point to The General as the great stone face's best.  Now along with Sherlock Jr. and the Navigator all four of those films can easily lay claim to his best.  For my money, and after revisiting all of those films recently I went with a dark horse, Our Hospitality.  This was Keaton's second feature film as producer-director-star, made after Three Ages which essentially was another two-reeler expanded to feature length.  Keaton channels his inner D. W. Griffith with a spectacular river rescue worthy of Griffith's climax to Orphans of the Storm.  However Keaton was a comedian and this is probably his funniest film.  It's set-up is about a family rivalry and Keaton spends the entire film running around trying not to be killed by his families mortal enemies, all while courting their daughter.  Silly as it might be many of the films best moments have little to do with this rivalry.  I honestly was crying when the would be stowaway was thrown off the wagon Keaton was riding home.  Consider it a representative of arguably the most brilliant artist of the silent era but Our Hospitality gets my vote as Keaton's masterpiece.

86. Romeo and Juliet (1968) - Franco Zeffirelli 
So many people have tried to bring the works of William Shakespeare to the screen.  Romeo and Juliet has been arguably the most problematic of his films to visualize.  Countless versions have been made, the story has been reworked, re-envisioned, and beaten to death.  It seemed an odd choice when Italian director would offer up the most faithful and accurate adaptation.  He opted to cast unknowns who were actually teenagers to portray the roles of the tragically doomed lovers (a far cry from Norma Shearer and Leslie Howard who were near 40 for their version).  Leonard Whiting and Olivia Hussey are absolutely superb.  The entire cast delivers all those antiquated lines of dialogue with such conviction and feeling that even though you might not normally have any idea what the hell they're talking about it is perfectly conveyed via the performance.  Most people probably sat through this film in a high school English class, but give it another look, Shakespeare has never been given more justice on screen.

85. Natural Born Killers (1994) - Oliver Stone
For many people Natural Born Killers is the film that broke the camels proverbial back regarding Oliver Stone.  A highly acclaimed screenwriter who found himself taking home Oscar gold for Platoon and Born on the Fourth of July he seemed like he could do no wrong.  Then sometime in the 90s he started to get really weird with it, making films on JFK and The Doors seem more like acid trips.  When he got his hands on a script from then unknown Quentin Tarantino it seemed a perfect chance to make the most batshit insane movie of his career.  The result is a film that's alternately hilarious, gruesome, brilliant, messy, and incredibly polarizing.  Still today there are people who are completely divided whether it's a self indulgent wank fest or a visionary masterpiece and a brilliant satire of our violence obsessed gun culture.  I tend to opt for the later but well there just aren't any films like this, and anyone else who has tried usually fails horribly. 

84. Carlos (2009) - Olivier Assayas 
Over the past decade one of those random film prejudices I've developed is towards new movies.  Not entirely sure why it's happened but when putting together my master list for this project I didn't even bother contemplating some movies from the last few years.  You'd think that even my top films of the year would be under consideration.  Well eventually I stumbled upon the DVD at my local library and decided to revisit my favorite film from two years ago.  This five-hour plus epic is a truly extraordinary film.  Shot in several countries in mutliple languages it's a complex film about a complex man whose simultaneously awful yet idealistic.  As good as Assayas might be as a filmmaker Edgar Ramirez makes this movie.  It would be damn near impossible to sit through such an epic film if you couldn't believe in a character whose in nearly every scene.  One of those amazing objective films about troublesome politics and terrorism yet made, recalling some of the great politically charged films of the 60s.

83. Talk to Her (2002) - Pedro Almodovar 
You may have noticed nearly every film in this list is the best of something.  Whether it's  the best film from a director, a movement, or a country it's been the theme of the day so to speak.  Well it's fairly safe to say Pedro Almodovar might be the best working filmmaker in Europe and Spain's best since Luis Bunuel.  A rare filmmaker whose work has always shown well in this country, who makes films about some "alternative" lifestyles.  It's hard to prepare someone for an Almodovar film, but once you've seen one you'll gladly go for another.  Melodramatic, bizarre, perverted, and with a comical amount of transvestites.  Talk to Her was one of his more restrained films and brought him a best director nomination from the Academy.  I'll admit it was a bit of a toss up between this and All About My Mother, but you can do no wrong.  This encompasses many of his obsessions including the national tradition of bull fighting.  The highlight of the film for me though is the bizarre silent film sequence which is a different kind of odd for Almodovar.

82. The Bicycle Thief (1948) - Vittorio de Seca
Some time about a dozen years ago I first heard about this movement called neo-realism.  I didn't exactly know what it was about but the first film I heard about was The Bicycle Thief and I was blown away.  Shot on the streets of Rome with people who had never acted before I had never seen anything quite like it.  Plenty of critics have retroactively pointed out that the film has a bit of a sentimental side to it and many prefer the grittier films of Roberto Rossellini or Luchino Visconti.  If you ask me, and since you're on my blog you may as well hear my opinion, this is by far my favorite Italian film from the period.  This film is also remarkable for featuring probably the best child performance I've ever seen.  If you know how much I tend to despise children in movies, that alone is worth the price of admission.

81. Glen or Glenda? (1953) - Edward D. Wood Jr.
There are some films that are so bad they're good and few people have ever earned their reputation as being masters of the awful quite like Mr. Wood.  Well I would make the argument that Glen or Glenda?, his first film is actually brilliant.  I watched it after it was mentioned in the Village Voice film guide, and I couldn't have been more impressed.  Wood himself stars as the title character but this film is so insane to describe.  He sold the film as a scandalous low budget quickie but used it as a platform to defend his own strange obsession with ladies clothing.  The film features ridiculously unexplained use of stock footage, Bela Lugosi being whacked out on wowie sauce spouting incomprehensible gibberish, and a surrealistic sequence that seems straight out of Kenneth Anger's Fireworks.  This is the type of personal cinema that was championed by the French New Wave and is still remarkably interesting.  It's easy for me to forgive his monstrously comical limitations as a filmmaker when everything else is just so damn fascinating.  "Bad" movie be damned this is brilliant.

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