Listmania: Al’s Best of 2016 Awards

On the latest episode of the Woo L.A. Podcast, you can hear my picks for what I thought was the best in film of 2016. I waited until now to release these because I wanted to wait until I had a chance to see everything from last year. For these nominees and winners, I tried to be objectionable first, and biased second. Anyway, please take a look and feel free to comment.

Best Film

Arrival
Fences
Hell or High Water
*La La Land
Moonlight

Moonlight

Best Director

Damien Chazelle (La La Land)
Mel Gibson (Hacksaw Ridge)
*Barry Jenkins (Moonlight)
David Mackenzie (Hell or High Water)
Denis Villeneuve (Arrival)

Best Actor

Casey Affleck (Manchester by the Sea)
John Goodman (10 Cloverfield Lane)
Jake Gyllenhaal (Nocturnal Animals)
Aaron Taylor-Johnson (Nocturnal Animals)
*Denzel Washington (Fences)

Best Actress

Amy Adams (Arrival)
Jessica Chastain (Miss Sloane)
*Viola Davis (Fences)
Natalie Portman (Jackie)
Michelle Williams (Manchester by the Sea)

Hail, Caesar!

Best Screenplay

10 Cloverfield Lane
*Hail, Caesar!
Hunt for the Wilderpeople
The Edge of Seventeen
The Lobster

Best Cinematography

Arrival
Hacksaw Ridge
Hail, Caesar!
*La La Land
Silence

Best Film Editing

Deepwater Horizon
*Hacksaw Ridge
La La Land
Moonlight
Patriots Day

ARRIVAL

Best Production Design

10 Cloverfield Lane
*Arrival
Deepwater Horizon
Passengers
The Witch

Best Visual Effects

Captain America: Civil War
*Deepwater Horizon
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
Rogue One
The Jungle Book

Woo L.A. Podcast #4: A Late Best Of 2016 In Film

Welcome to the podcast number four. I am joined by the host Al (@AlRob_MN), his roomie Julia (@Reality_Diva1), and Joel (@JoeM_136) makes a swift return. We have a theme tune too now, and Al is also dabbling with some section-defining jingles – work like a charm. Discussion-wise, the four of us touch on our final “best of” for the films of 2016, as mine were announced and published a while back and are old news, you’ll get a chance to hear who shone brightest for Joel, Julia, and Al. We also manage to recommend a large handful of worthy movies from 2017 so far. Tune in, and get commenting while you’re at it. Enjoy.

Film Honors: 2016

My own personal choices for the year. They reflect not just necessarily what I think is the best or essential cinema, but perhaps resonate with me or inspire, both at the time, and still today. Subject to alter choices if new viewings are worthy enough. Other published Film Honors posts can be found at the menu at the top of the page.

Filmmaking Breakthrough

Bi Gan (Lu bian ye can)
Alice Winocour (Maryland)
Chris Kelly (Other People)
Barry Jenkins (Moonlight)
Keith Maitland (Tower)

Acting Breakthrough

Laia Costa (Victoria)
Alden Ehrenreich (Hail Caesar!)
Avin Manshadi (Under the Shadow)
Kim Tae-ri (Ah-ga-ssi)
Anya Taylor-Joy (The Witch)

Costume Designing

Alice Through The Looking Glass
Ah-ga-ssi
Love And Friendship
Pride And Prejudice And Zombies
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story

Set Designing

10 Cloverfield Lane
Alice Through The Looking Glass
Hail, Caesar!
Ah-ga-ssi
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story

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Actor Support

Jeff Bridges (Hell or High Water)
Vincent Cassel (Juste la fin du monde)
John Goodman (10 Cloverfield Lane)
Michael Shannon (Nocturnal Animals)
Patrick Stewart (Green Room)

Special Effects

Alice Through The Looking Glass
Doctor Strange
Captain America: Civil War
The Jungle Book
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story

Sound Designing

Arrival
Deadpool
The Jungle Book
Kubo And The Two Strings
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story

Actress Support

Naomie Harris (Moonlight)
Léa Seydoux (Juste la fin du monde)
Molly Shannon (Other People)
Hayley Squires (I, Daniel Blake)
Kalieaswari Srinivasan (Dheepan)

Picture Editing

Busanhaeng
Divines
Goksung
La La Land
Under the Shadow

Cinematography

Bradford Young (Arrival)
Chung Chung-hoon (Ah-ga-ssi)
Zach Kuperstein (The Eyes of My Mother)
James Laxton (Moonlight)
Sturla Brandth Grøvlen (Victoria)

Directing

Babak Anvari (Under the Shadow)
Houda Benyamina (Divines)
Deniz Gamze Ergüven (Mustang)
Sebastian Schipper (Victoria)
Makoto Shinkai (Kimi no na wa.)

Cast Ensemble

Chevalier
Hail, Caesar!
Moonlight
Mustang
Tower

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Score Composing

Alexandre Desplat (The Light Between Oceans)
Jóhann Jóhannsson (Arrival)
Mark Korven (The Witch)
Mica Levi (Jackie)
Jo Yeong-wook (Ah-ga-ssi)

Actor Lead

Joel Edgerton (Loving)
Dave Johns (I, Daniel Blake)
Vincent Lindon (The Measure of a Man)
Géza Röhrig (Saul fia)
Matthias Schoenaerts (Maryland)

Screenplay Adapted

Pedro Almodóvar (Julieta)
Chung Seo-kyung, Park Chan-wook (Ah-ga-ssi)
Rhett Reese, Paul Wernick (Deadpool)
Makoto Shinkai (Kimi no na wa.)
Whit Stillman (Love And Friendship)

Screenplay Original

Babak Anvari (Under the Shadow)
Romain Compingt, Houda Benyamina, Malik Rumeau (Divines)
Robert Eggers (The Witch)
Deniz Gamze Ergüven, Alice Winocour (Mustang)
Taylor Sheridan (Hell Or High Water)

Actress Lead

Oulaya Amamra (Divines)
Ruth Negga (Loving)
Narges Rashidi (Under the Shadow)
Emma Suárez (Julieta)
Adriana Ugarte (Julieta)

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Motion Picture

Ah-ga-ssi (Park Chan-wook) South Korea
Busanhaeng (Yeon Sang-ho) South Korea
Divines (Houda Benyamina) France / Qatar
Julieta (Pedro Almodóvar) Spain
Kimi no na wa. (Makoto Shinkai) Japan
Mustang (Deniz Gamze Ergüven) France / Turkey / Germany
Saul fia (László Nemes) Hungary
Under the Shadow (Babak Anvari) UK / Iran / Jordan / Qatar
Victoria (Sebastian Schipper) Germany
The Witch (Robert Eggers) Canada / USA

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Please comment below with your own preferences (or repellents) across many aspects of motion pictures from this year. I’d love to discuss my choices too, and those that did not quite make it.

 

Woo L.A. Podcast – Live Not At The Oscars

Hey everyone, Robin, Joel, Ryan, and I enjoyed doing the special podcast so much that we wanted to do another one during the Oscars. We Skyped for over 6 hours, and I decided to try something and cut it down to just under 2 hours (including the intro and outro song). Jonathan Holmes and my roommate Julia Bertram, make their podcast debuts here and they were naturals. We had so much fun watching the show and laughing with each other, and I hope that you enjoy listening to all the madness. The Best Picture mix-up was really crazy, and you can tell by our reactions. Thanks for listening everyone!

Ryan Adams (@filmystic)

Julia Lee Bertram (@Reality_Diva1)

Jonathan Holmes (@MisterBrown_23)

Joel Meléndez (@JoeM_136)

Al Robinson (@AlRob_MN)

Robin Write (@WriteoutofLA)

The Flicksation Podcast Movie Challenge

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This past week, the guys at The Flicksation Podcast ranked their top 10 favorite movies of 2016. The type of movies they watch for the most part are different than the ones I watch, with a few exceptions. This year in an attempt to try and become a more versatile movie watcher, I want to challenge myself and all of you readers to try and watch all 30 movies that made their top 10s. If you accept the challenge, please try and track for us your progress with a hashtag of #FlicksationMovieChallege. Of the 30 movies they mentioned, 3 of them made ¾ of the lists, Moonlight, The Lobster, and The Wailing.

In alphabetical order, here are the movies (IMDB links open in new window):

20th Century Women
American Honey
Aquarius
Arrival
Certain Women
Cosmos
Demon
Elle
Embrace of the Serpent
Green Room
H.
Kubo and the Two Strings
La La Land
Land and Shade
Manchester by the Sea
Moonlight
Mountains May Depart
Neon Bull
Swiss Army Man
Tharlo
The Handmaiden
The Lobster
The Love Witch
The Measure of a Man
The Red Turtle
The Wailing
The Witch
Tickled
Toni Erdmann
Valley of Love

I highly recommend you go and listen to their double episode Best of 2016 before you check out their top 10 lists on Letterboxd, but here are their Letterboxd accounts:

Eric Madsen
Ian Thomas (The Minister)
Robert Gassaway
Ian Nichols (The Cryptkeeper)

Woo L.A. Podcast – Oscar Picks With Al Al Land

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I’d been thinking for a long time about doing a podcast, and Robin and I have talked more specifically about doing one. The idea and opportunity came up to send out the call to those who might be interested, and I’m very happy with who decided to agree to join in with this specific recording. I had the idea to talk about what I/we wanted to see win at this year’s Academy Awards. I am joined here by Shawna (@brokefilmcritic), Joel Meléndez (@JoeM_136), Daniel Smith-Rowsey (@smithrowsey), Ryan Adams (@filmystic), and of course, Robin Write (@WriteoutofLA). It was a lot of fun, but I was definitely overwhelmed by the excitement and in turn wasn’t as conversative as I should have been. But it doesn’t matter because we ended up with almost 3 hours of great Oscars talk, and I would happily do it again. I also want to give a special thanks to Eric S. Madsen (@Hazer75) and Christian Estabrook (@Poor_Frisco) for helping me out with my questions about how to do some of the technical aspects of putting a podcast recording together. Thanks guys! Anyway, please take the time to listen and then let us know what you think and if you want to join in on the conversation, tell us what you want to see win on Oscar night.

Review: Passengers

Morten Tyldum decided that after making the pulsating, brilliant Headhunters in his native Norway that he would downgrade, flying off to make the English-language The Imitation Game. After that was over-lavished with Academy Award nominations, he got the opportunity to direct a big budget sci-fi movie with none other than Chris Pratt and Jennifer Lawrence. Sounds promising, right? Let’s fast-forward to Passengers then. This once eagerly-anticipated movie was an avalanche, as it turns out Passengers is nothing short of a monstrous crash. And those excited about Andy Garcia’s comeback will be bemused to fuck. It’s a shame those hibernation pods could not put you to sleep again as the movie experience itself (which gave me plenty of laughs actually) made me very drowsy indeed.

pass

Humiliatingly proving that guys think with their dicks, stuck alone in space with 90 years to kill, Jim (Pratt) opens the hibernation pod of eye-candy Aurora (Lawrence) – Aurora being the name of Sleeping Beauty remember – tut-tut, so he can woo her with space views and get laid. I love(d) Jennifer Lawrence, but my respect for her diminishes somewhat with this experience. Tight clothing galore, she gets to crawl across tables and be seductive – even in a moment of personal contemplation you can almost see her nether regions. The story cannot spark, as it’s a ludicrous screenplay, every minor plot turn leads to dead ends. Characters speak the words of space and time travel and the biggest decision of their loves and the greatest opportunity known to man or woman, but there appears to be no passion or conviction. Lines like “How bad can this get?” or “How do we get out of this?” only echo your own sentiments watching this.

Even when Aurora finds out what Jim did, she’s furious, but the malfunctioning ship conveniently brings them together. Later, a message from home offers Aurora good wishes that she will find the right man. Oh come on! The supposed self-sacrifice from Jim is a joke too, I did want to close my eyes and I did want to miss a thing. Thomas Newman’s score is tiring, repetitive, like clanging bells in the distance – please stop. Sets are very nice and grand to look at, but Academy, this was not a real spaceship. The special effects illustrate that they had way to much money to spend here. Jim’s initial bearded isolation is slightly reminiscent of (Space) Cast Away. Then Blue Lagoon (in Space) when Sleeping Beauty wakes. Titanic is brought to mind with the sinking ship reference. There’s even throw backs to The Shining with the bar scenes. And when the android spills the beans, I remembered Ash choking Ripley with a rolled up magazine. It was comforting to be reminded of much better cinema, to which Passengers pays zero homage.

Review: The Witch / Under the Shadow

The problem with horror films is that there are not enough horror films. Let me rephrase, the problem with horror films is that there are not enough good ones. Great ones. That might not be an issue for you, but I love a good scare. A high level of intrigue. Being startled, wondering whats behind that door, those trees. Strange, unexplainable behavior. The danger to humanity, the innocent. Oh I could go on and on. When we talk about really good horror films now it is a rare occurrence for a reason. In 2016 we talked about the return of the Blair Witch, there was yet more occult with The Conjuring 2 and Ouija: Origin of Evil, and there were some genuinely impressive creepy moments in Don’t Breathe. As far as unadulterated, quality horror films goes, there were to almighty gems that stand in the top tier. Terrific motion pictures from breakout filmmakers, dwelling the endangered children and their somewhat helpless guardians, engulfing our attention with well thought-out conventions of horror execution.

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The Witch (or The VVitch) is a New England folktale by admittance, taking us back to the 17th century to witness a cast-out family become the victims of an unknown evil deriving from the large forest beside their newly-resided farm. Their tormentors come in the form of a rabbit, a goat, but also through the possession of the children, ruffing up the already shaky dynamics of the family. Eldest daughter Thomasin (the excellent Anya Taylor-Joy) appears to take the brunt of the blame here, several times named as a witch by her own kin, all the while the origin of such horrors is not too far away.

Making his debut, Robert Eggers delivers a classic genre fit, writing a screenplay rife with local, olde dialect and ways of life. The Witch brings the danger from the woods formula back to life following a whole host of wannabes and duds. Eggers is totally at home here, crafting some really eerie inner-family conflict and unseen potential perils, as told with such a steady, reliant pace. Without giving too much away for those that have not yet seen this, there are some genuinely frightful moments too, including a crazed animal attack and a boy not in control of his own body and mind. The final moments, when blood is shed and the true revelation comes to light, is an extraordinary climax.

horuts

Under the Shadow is an authentic, atmospheric film showing us horror in its abstract demons (the Djinn), and through the social turmoil of the war between Iraq and Iran in the late 1980s. Produced in the UK, the film is written and directed with masterful technique by Iranian-born Babak Anvari (also his first feature), and was the rare UK submission for this year’s Foreign Language Film – sinfully not selected in the end. The tried and tested tale of a mother attempting to protect her child is portrayed in Under the Shadow with such a unique, natural flavor and poise, it is scene-for-scene unmissable. Set in war-torn Tehran, Shideh and her young daughter Dorsa experience some spooky goings-on, not least when an undetonated missile crashes through the apartment building.

Amidst the horrors, the suspense, surrounded by war, Under the Shadow is also about a woman restricted by her own culture, unable to continue her studies because of her political views, struggling to be on the same page as her husband, and finding unease with Dorsa’s current behavior. Actress Narges Rashidi plays Shideh with such commanding conviction, and she is aided and abetted by sprightly youngster Avin Manshadi as Dorsa. Anvari’s writing and directing are both superb, an assured debut, Under the Shadow is carefully constructed in story-telling and technique, while featuring some fine inner-apartment photography, sound design, and efficient editing. One of the year’s very finest.

Preview: Film Honors 2016

Wherein I analyse my own choices ahead of Sunday’s big announcements. Check out the Film Honors 2016 Nominees in full, or go straight on ahead:

The Handmaiden Is No Dreamgirls (Thankfully)

prehm

The Handmaiden, like a few other exceptional efforts, perched just outside my top 10 for 2016 for some time, one of those fine films that gives you the biggest headaches when it comes to finalizing your end of year lists. Don’t feel sorry for The Handmaiden, though, some perchers like Toni Erdmann and I, Olga Hepnarová didn’t get into the 10 and were mentioned nowhere but were close in many categories (the latter’s omission actually stings). Absent, then, in Directing, with nods for breakthrough actress Kim Tae-ri, the costumes, the sets, the screenwriting, the cinematography, score, and Motion Picture, The Handmaiden with the most nominations (7) could multi-triumph in what are quite open categories for competition.

Design And Tech Choices Are Not All Traditional, Period

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So, there’s also Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, and Alice Through The Looking Glass scoring in both Costume and Set Designing groups. Love And Friendship, and Pride And Prejudice And Zombies scored sartorially, and Hail, Caesar! was hailed for it’s production design – making a somewhat traditional, period selection. Only 10 Cloverfield Lane, for Sets, represents a more contemporary film design. Technically, the Special Effects and Sound Design covered your typical super-heroes, fantasy adaptations, Disney live action, animation, classic sci-fi, while Picture Editing dipped its toe out of the commercial water, and honored the likes of Train to Busan (which scraped a Motion Picture nomination too), and The Wailing (which, sadly, did not).

Many Oscar Favorites Squeezed Out

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Although Barry Jenkins missed out on Directing, Moonlight heads the pack of the Motion Picture bunch including Naomie Harris, Editing, Cinematography, and Cast Ensemble. A clear victory for the big 3 of the Oscar race – Manchester by the Sea grabbed the standard Actor Lead and Screenwriting mention, while there will be no such sweep for La La Land having only been nominated for Picture Editing. Hell or High Water also mimics its Oscar run with deserved nominations for Motion Picture, Taylor Sheridan, and Jeff Bridges. Similarly, Arrival competes for Cinematography and Sound, while I deem Jóhann Jóhannsson’s music eligible (of course). Oscar Could Have Beens include composer Alexandre Desplat for The Light Between Oceans, and Whit Stillman’s screenplay for Love And Friendship.

Small And Large Casts Are Acting Up

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Teaming up with double acting nods, I, Daniel Blake (Dave Johns, Hayley Squires), and Mon Roi (Vincent Cassel, Emmanuelle Bercot) may appear to have an edge. Representing their movies entirely with one mention are Kalieaswari Srinivasan (Dheepan), Michael Shannon (Nocturnal Animals), Patrick Stewart (Green Room), John Turturro (Mia Madre), and Markees Christmas (Morris from America). Many films with 2 nominations also compete in acting, John Goodman (10 Cloverfield Lane), Molly Shannon (Other People), Géza Röhrig (Son of Saul), Matthias Schoenaerts (Disorder), and Ruth Negga (Loving) are standing by should they lose their other category. Alden Ehrenreich is the breakthrough for Hail Caesar!, which also was mentioned for its Ensemble Cast – joining Chevalier and My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2.

Some Dark Horses From Germany, Japan, Spain, And France

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One shot wonder Victoria (and Motion Picture nominee) has a huge foot in the door as a potential spoiler. Sturla Brandth Grøvlen’s cinematography is an achievement even beyond the one continuous take, and hats off to director Sebastian Schipper for having the balls, and actress Laia Costa for her terrific stamina. Makoto Shinkai’s unforgetable animation Your Name has just the three nods, but they are top tier – Motion Picture, Director, Screenwriting, and this will prove to be tough competition in all. Actress duo Emma Suárez and Adriana Ugarte both play Julieta in Pedro Almodóvar’s Motion Picture nominated film, and it is near impossible to call it between them. Although outside of the Motion Picture list, women of Les Innocentes (no Anne Fontaine for Directing, sorry) have two strong pushes for Caroline Champetier’s Cinematography, and the screenwriting collaboration of Sabrina B. Karine, Pascal Bonitzer, Anne Fontaine, and Alice Vial.

A Breakthrough For Breakthroughs

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With 5 apiece, and the only films to earn Screenwriting, Directing, and Motion Picture nominations were Under the Shadow (actress Narges Rashidi, writer/director Babak Anvari, Editing), The Witch (write-director Robert Eggers, actress Anya Taylor-Joy, Mark Korven’s Score), and Mustang (director, co-writer Deniz Gamze Ergüven, actress Günes Sensoy, Cast Ensemble). Are those movies now heading into a three-horse race? Mustang co-screenwriter Alice Winocour also competes in Breakthrough Filmmaker with her directing and writing of Disorder. The only female in the pack is joined by Bi Gan (Kaili Blues), Alex Lehmann (Blue Jay), Chris Kelly (Other People), and Barry Jenkins (Moonlight) – proving an exceptional year for up-and-coming filmmakers.

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Comment below – thoughts, predictions, gratifications, grumbles, whatever.

 

Review: Loving

Companionship derived through pure love is tough at the best of times, but for the likes of Richard and Mildred Loving their struggles were not through their own devotion to each other, but rather the inter-racial marriage laws in certain parts of America in the 1950s. Still somehow relevant today, the notion that two people who just want to be together but instead have to be hauled to jail and soon the Supreme court is an upsetting, sorry state of affairs. I’m sure many before have tried and failed, love had not conquered, and that is nothing to celebrate, but with the film Loving, and ever since it fluttered at Cannes, audiences have been smitten by the smallest, and yet grandest, of victories of the heart.

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Jeff Nichols’ second film of 2016 (following Midnight Special) depicts the Lovings as they fall in love, expect their first child, before deciding to marry. Given the absurd laws in 1958 Virginia, they travel to Washington instead to the perform a low-key ceremony. They are soon arrested on their return for breaching marital laws of the state, one enforcer in particular exudes a kind of disgust that a white man and black woman can share the same bed. The Lovings sadly have to go through the criminal justice motions, pleading guilty of course, and face the potential prospect of not returning to their home and family for 25 years should they continue to live as husband and wife. Richard and Mildred, small town folk unaccustomed to the big bad world, proceed towards an endured conclusion where they can hope to live harmoniously together without the ludicrous laws or prejudices halting them.

Nichols writes and directs with plenty of space for his actors to breathe and express their love and pain, giving the Lovings the full width of their human story. Paced so steadily, the film is in danger of stopping altogether at rare times, but it would not have been as affecting or true had it gone for the throat of high drama or steam-rolled through the facts. Loving is delicate, honest, and heart-warming, beautifully played by its leads. Joel Edgerton does rough around the edges quite marvelously, and here he is driven by Richard’s unequivocal adoration of his wife. Ruth Negga is far more subtle and endearing, her timid, quietly determined portrayal of Mildred punches above its weight, defeating all doubt or restrictions and leaving the obvious, idyllic notion, on this occasion, the winner. All you need is love.

Review: The Wailing

Forget about what you expect going into Na Hong-jin’s extraordinary The Wailing, a shape-shifter of a film, part detective story, part mystery, part thriller, part horror, part God only knows what. South Korean cinema gets a fairly bright pin on the map of international movies of 2016, The Wailing sets up the strange tale without any quibbles, and soon your mind is soaring through spiritual goings-on and physical ailments, hinting heavily on evil possession. What lies beneath, or even full-on at the surface, is a story about human beings struggling to come to terms with the outbreak – at the center the local policeman Jong-goo, who is going through a transformation himself, a rain-soaked, bemused law enforcer soon becomes a father frantic and hysterical as a result of the traumatizing events.

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Na Hong-jin is feeding the audience psyche with this unexpected roller-coaster, The Wailing is only his third feature film, but you hardly know it, constructing a well shot and edited picture. Like the characters in the movie, you may get a bit lost at times, which is par for the course, and not once are you far from impressed. The enigmatic woman and local hunter provide sources of info for our detectives, but also plant suspects in your head – you are forced to keep guessing who is causing the ailments, all the while holding onto a linear pathway to which this may all make sense in the end. That I won’t give away, not intentionally anyway, The Wailing, even with its absurd moments (like the vivid sequence of a shaman’s ritual to help the afflicted), deserves you to see it for yourself.

Whatever your tastes in the year of yet more spoon-fed formulas and commercialism, The Wailing (aptly titled at times, you’ll see), doesn’t have to be your kind of thing to engross you. Hong-jin writes and directs with a real twisted passion, and the whole affair is merged together so well in all its varied mood swings and visual splendors. There’s emotion too, if that is what you are looking for, the acting is bold, and affecting. In particular Kwak Do-won as the policeman who seemingly unravels with the horrors around him, and youngster Kim Hwan-heeIl-gwang who plays his daughter – giving Linda Blair a run for her money in the body-take-over outbursts. Their astonishing scenes together might well send shivers down your spine, even if the movie overall doesn’t rock your world in the end.

Review: Allied

Headed by two beloved acting forces Marion Cotillard and Brad Pitt, with a well-established film-maker of the last 30 years Robert Zemeckis, a critically acclaimed screenwriter Steven Knight, a household-name score composer Alan Silvestri, and a narrative set amidst war, politics, romance, intrigue, humor – seen that kind of fodder before, sure, but we always come back. However, and this is a huge however, finely selected, well-loved ingredients are all well and good if you concoct something delicious and memorable, rather than leaving the components to seemingly turn rotten. Allied, in its mixed critical bag status, is not a good motion picture by any small stretch of the imagination. Falls flat from the outset, like its central characters, struggles to move, shackled by a force that remains a mystery. Throughout the movie my mind echoed the same word over and over again: ludicrous.

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A film where Brad Pitt’s French accent is so lethargic it is like he is taking the piss a la his Italian in Inglourious Basterds. A film where Marion Cotillard as Marianne mentions being in Casablanca so much you can just about hear Bogart and Bergman politely asking her to shut her mouth – this is not a homage to the classic in any shape or form. Ludicrous to plant that in our minds. A film where a couple of agents pretend to be married but fall in love anyway somewhere along the way – but you clearly miss that part. A film where a successful assassination, including some what-the-fuck shooting-ups of the interiors, compels Max (Pitt) to propose. Ludicrous. Cotillard is having a rough time recently with the poor reception of her movies, but is the ripest of the bad apples here. Pitt appears to be made of cardboard, his wooden / animatronic face only partially comes to life when he gets to say curse a lot a lot. Fucking ludicrous. Screenwriter Steven Knight brought us the very good Dirty Pretty Things, Eastern Promises, and Locke, but with Allied has seemingly been force-fed kryptonite. Robert Zemeckis has had a successful career, especially the early days, but is way out of his depth here. No lavish scenery and attempts at breath-taking cinematography can save him. And composer Alan Silvestri just borrows his own Cast Away tinkles and strings before falling asleep.

The film’s late plot turn, that Marianne might be a spy (no fucking way!), shows that Max cannot believe this revelation, but this is not as grimly awkward as Pitt, the actor, not for the first time in this movie being unable to comprehend his own acting duties. Did he forget his lines? Media speculation about the supposed affair between Pitt and Cotillard is not only a waste of air space, but Angelina Jolie would have left him anyway once she had seen the first cut of this. However, and this is a teeny-weeny however, Allied has two cinematic high points – an air raid taking place while Marianne gives birth (appears ludicrous) but is well shot as all hell breaks lose in the background as a new life enters the world; and an enemy plane shot down from the glowing skies in the distance heads towards a house party. The latter scene book-ended with a jubilant jump for joy that “they got one”, before Marianne declares they forget the war tomorrow and spend time together. Of course, they have a picnic not far from the now heavily populated crash site. Ludicrous.

Listmania: Al’s Top 10 Movies of 2016

It’s time for me to look back on the year in movies that was for 2016, and rank my top 10 favorites of the year. These 10 are not what I would objectively call the best, but more what ones I had the most fun or thought were the most interesting. Overall I saw around 50-60 movies so far, which some left to see. I saw Silence and loved it, but after some debating decided to not put it in the top 10. It was a brilliant movie, but it’s story felt a little too cold for me to really enjoy. It would however make my top 10 best of 2016. I still haven’t seen Manchester by the Sea, so that one is not eligible for this list, a is Miss Sloane, Nocturnal Animals, and Lion as well. 

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  1. Hell or High Water (David Mackenzie) – August 12, 2016

This is great movie because it blends neo western and crime drama seamlessly. It’s fun to watch of course, but also is insightful about how many people in middle-America might be feeling about the banks and their money. Great performances highlighted by Chris Pine, Ben Foster, and Jeff Bridges. Director David Mackenzie has done it again after the stirring Starred Up.

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  1. The Nice Guys (Shane Black) – May 20, 2016

If I want to smile, all I have to do is start thinking of moments and scenes from this movie. I love its humor and how great it is to see Ryan Gosling and Russell Crowe working together to solve a mystery. This is the funniest movie of the year, and the best thing ever is to hear Gosling scream like a 12-year-old girl.

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  1. Hail, Caesar! (Joel & Ethan Coen) – February 5, 2016

I love watching this movie because it’s full of interesting people doing interesting things in a Hollywood studio. George Clooney is kidnapped, Alden Ehrenreich is a goof character actor, Channing Tatum is a song-and-dance man, and Josh Brolin is just trying to do his job and keep things from getting out of hand. I mean really, would that it were so simple?

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  1. Deadpool (Tim Miller) – February 12, 2016

The best WTF movie of the year. Watching Ryan Reynolds give joke after joke after joke about all kinds of things was great, and when you add it to the fact that he’s a superhero, it’s all the more enjoyable. I loved the look of Deadpool’s suit, and the makeup for Wade’s face was incredible. I can’t wait to see where the filmmakers take us for the sequel.

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  1. Money Monster (Jodie Foster) – May 13, 2016

Besides The Wolf of Wall Street, this is my favorite movie about the stock market. I loved seeing Jack O’Connell hijack the set of George Clooney’s stock market show, and have Clooney strap a bomb jacket to himself. I was on the edge of my seat for almost the entire movie. All the secrets and lies that people tell to try and avoid or get out of situations is so interesting. Jack O’Connell gives one of my favorite performances of the year as someone who’s mad as hell, and is not going to take it anymore.

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  1. Deepwater Horizon (Peter Berg) – September 30, 2016

Besides the battle scenes in Hacksaw Ridge, this was the most harrowing movie to watch at times, but very much worth it. I couldn’t believe how well the explosion of the oil rig was recreated. It was like being there at times. So crazy this happened in real life, but so oddly enjoyable to watch it happen in the movie. It’s like getting a front-row seat to watching a bad car crash. I don’t think I’ll ever forget the moment when poor Jimmy (Kurt Russell) gets thrown from his shower and lands a ways away on glass. Yikes!

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  1. Arrival (Denis Villeneuve) – November 11, 2016

Denis Villeneuve is on a roll for me with his last few American movies, Prisoners, Sicario, and now Arrival. I love how he stages each pivotal moment, and how Amy Adams captures the feelings and thoughts of the movie’s audience. In my opinion, she should have been nominated for an Oscar for this, and it’s a shame she wasn’t. My favorite thing in the movie is seeing them go up into the space craft for the first time and not knowing what to expect. It was riveting.

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  1. Hacksaw Ridge (Mel Gibson) – November 4, 2016

This was Mel Gibson’s comeback, and it was a joy. I liked the story of Private Doss, who didn’t believe in going into battle with a weapon of death. He wanted to save lives at the risk of losing his. In this day and age that is very admirable. Andrew Garfield to me gave a wonderful performance, and I will always remember his prayer of “let me get one more”.

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  1. La La Land (Damien Chazelle) – December 9, 2016

It’s obvious why I would love this movie. The singing, the dancing, the classy design and editing, and so much more. I was in awe of the movie and all of its moving parts. I still sing those songs in my head, and I really enjoyed watching Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling live in a dream-like existence for a while.

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  1. Patriots Day (Peter Berg) – December 21, 2016

Every year I look ahead to what’s coming out, and I rank what my most anticipated are.  Last year this was #1 with a bullseye because I love movies that are recreations or real life events. I remembered all the coverage I watched on CNN about the Boston bombings and the search for the bombers. The movie was everything I had hoped it would be and more. Peter Berg and his team did a fantastic job with the choice of actors, and it had a good script and set pieces. I also really like how he paid homage to the city and people of Boston, and that he never made anything feel like it was too much and/or offensive. He handled the film with much care. I thank him for that.

Film Honors 2016: Nominations

2016. The movies took us to some great places and times. Some not so memorable, some disappointing, some ruined somewhat by hype. A lot of fine films and filmmaking stayed with us for the journey – some came early, some turned up right at the last minute. Zombies boarded our train. We climbed through a mirror. Found ourselves trapped in an underground bunker. Confined to a small Turkish village. And we won’t be frequenting that music venue any time soon. We hung our with a panther, a bear, wolves. Almost learnt a new form of language. Sung and danced in L.A. Saw a boy grow into a man. Helped as nuns gave birth. We robbed banks in the West. Played thoughtful games on a boat. And shook our heads at the British benefits system. And in the end it comes down to this — Film Honors 2016 Nominations.

It is that time of the year again. There were two new categories this year. I simply could not resist with the astonishing amount of breakthroughs in cinema this year gone by – so now we honor acting and filmmaking. Choosing just 5 in each was a real gut-buster by the way. The 10 films nominated for Motion Picture will by default reveal my top 10 of 2016. Again, with all Film Honors, these are that impossible blend of personal choices and objective merit. Some films you will be surprised to see missing, many reasons for this including those that were inches away, those that were popular but had no chance with me, and those deemed beyond February 2017 releases here in the UK – which is why you won’t see The Lobster being as it was released last year here. Being in the UK you are likely to see some movies you saw in 2015. Welcome to England.

Remind yourselves of the 2015 Film Honors.

Check out the Longlists published earlier in the month.

The nominations for the 2016 Film Honors were announced 9pm London time, live on Twitter – hashtag #FilmHonors2016.

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Filmmaking Breakthrough 

Bi Gan (Kaili Blues)
Alex Lehmann (Blue Jay)
Alice Winocour (Disorder)
Chris Kelly (Other People)
Barry Jenkins (Moonlight)

Acting Breakthrough 

Markees Christmas (Morris from America)
Laia Costa (Victoria)
Alden Ehrenreich (Hail Caesar!)
Kim Tae-ri (The Handmaiden)
Anya Taylor-Joy (The Witch)

Costume Designing

Alice Through The Looking Glass
The Handmaiden
Love And Friendship
Pride And Prejudice And Zombies
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story

Set Designing 

10 Cloverfield Lane
Alice Through The Looking Glass
Hail, Caesar!
The Handmaiden
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story

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Actor Support 

Jeff Bridges (Hell or High Water)
John Goodman (10 Cloverfield Lane)
Michael Shannon (Nocturnal Animals)
Patrick Stewart (Green Room)
John Turturro (Mia Madre)

Special Effects

Alice Through The Looking Glass
Doctor Strange
Captain America: Civil War
The Jungle Book
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story

Sound Designing

Arrival
Deadpool
The Jungle Book
Kubo And The Two Strings
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story

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Actress Support 

Naomie Harris (Moonlight)
Günes Sensoy (Mustang)
Molly Shannon (Other People)
Hayley Squires (I, Daniel Blake)
Kalieaswari Srinivasan (Dheepan)

Picture Editing

La La Land
Moonlight
Train to Busan
Under the Shadow
The Wailing

Cinematography 

Bradford Young (Arrival)
Chung-hoon Chung (The Handmaiden)
Caroline Champetier (Les Innocentes)
James Laxton (Moonlight)
Sturla Brandth Grøvlen (Victoria)

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Directing 

Babak Anvari (Under the Shadow)
Robert Eggers (The Witch)
Deniz Gamze Ergüven (Mustang)
Sebastian Schipper (Victoria)
Makoto Shinkai (Your Name)

Cast Ensemble

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Hail, Caesar!
Moonlight
Mustang
My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2

Score Composing

Alexandre Desplat (The Light Between Oceans)
Jóhann Jóhannsson (Arrival)
Mark Korven (The Witch)
Mica Levi (Jackie)
Jo Yeong-wook (The Handmaiden)

Actor Lead 

Casey Affleck (Manchester by the Sea)
Vincent Cassel (Mon Roi)
Dave Johns (I, Daniel Blake)
Géza Röhrig (Son of Saul)
Matthias Schoenaerts (Disorder)

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Screenplay Adapted

Pedro Almodóvar (Julieta)
Seo-kyeong Jeong, Chan-wook Park (The Handmaiden)
Sabrina B. Karine, Pascal Bonitzer, Anne Fontaine, Alice Vial (Les Innocentes)
Makoto Shinkai (Your Name)
Whit Stillman (Love And Friendship)

Screenplay Original

Babak Anvari (Under the Shadow)
Robert Eggers (The Witch)
Deniz Gamze Ergüven, Alice Winocour (Mustang)
Kenneth Lonergan (Manchester By The Sea)
Taylor Sheridan (Hell Or High Water)

Actress Lead 

Emmanuelle Bercot (Mon Roi)
Ruth Negga (Loving)
Narges Rashidi (Under the Shadow)
Emma Suárez (Julieta)
Adriana Ugarte (Julieta)

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Motion Picture 

The Handmaiden (Chan-wook Park)
Julieta (Pedro Almodóvar)
Moonlight (Barry Jenkins)
Mustang (Deniz Gamze Ergüven)
Son of Saul (László Nemes)
Train to Busan (Yeon Sang-ho)
Under the Shadow (Babak Anvari)
Victoria (Sebastian Schipper)
The Witch (Robert Eggers)
Your Name (Makoto Shinkai)

Listmania: Al’s 5 Disappointments Of 2016

So for most people, the year of 2016 in movies was horrible. It was only saved by movies like Moonlight, Manchester by the Sea, and La La Land. That is an overstatement, but I think it fits the sentiment. Most of the summer blockbusters were a disaster, and to quote Ian, the Minister of Truth, they should be “flushed down the toilet”. I can’t argue with this. I skipped a ton of movies this year because they looked so bad that I couldn’t justify spending my time or dollars on them, but there were still some pretty bad movies anyway. Here are my top 5 least favorite, biggest disappointments of the year.

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5. Swiss Army Man (Dan Kwan, Daniel Scheinert) – June 24, 2016

This premiered at Sundance in January and to good word of mouth. I got excited to see this, but once I did, I couldn’t believe what I saw. It was an entire movie about fart and masturbation jokes, that most of them fell flat with me. I might have really enjoyed this movie 10 years ago, but not now. Also, the ending was such a letdown, and frankly, a bit confusing as to what it was really trying to say. It doesn’t matter, because now I don’t care.

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4. X-Men: Apocalypse (Bryan Singer) – May 27, 2016

I didn’t have high expectation going into this movie, but after the great Days of Future Past, I figured it would at least be fun. Well it wasn’t. It wasted its main villain in Apocalypse, and misused most of its other characters. I don’t have any real interest any more in continuing this storyline of X-Men movies. I can say though that I would like to see a spin-off of Quicksilver. He’s the redeeming thing in the movie and now the franchise.

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3. The Infiltrator (Brad Furman) – July 13, 2016

I usually like these drug smuggling, gangster type movies, but this one was just crap. It was unintelligible most of the time, and that in turn made it boring. I feel bad that the great Bryan Cranston wasted his time with this one, and I feel like he has better things he could be doing. By the time we finally got to where we’d see Pablo Escobar, he was off screen again. He literally was in the movie for a half-second. Ugh!

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2. Suicide Squad (David Ayer) – August 5, 2016

Oy vey! What hasn’t already been said about this stinker of a DC universe movie? It had an interesting premise, but didn’t make good use of its story. I wanted so much more of the Harley Quinn-Joker story, but we didn’t get that. In fact, to the contrary, I don’t really understand why the Joker is even in this movie. He’s free to run around and no one is trying to capture him. Not even the Batman? Batman is too busy trying to arrest Deadshot?! This movie makes me cross-eyed when I try to reason the writer’s decisions here. It’s just bad. I had at one point thought this would be one of my movies of the year. The trailer fooled me. The trailer was way better than the final product.

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1. Live by Night (Ben Affleck) – December 25, 2016

I should have done my research with this one. If I had I suspect I might have been less interested in seeing it. But since I didn’t, I wasted my time watching this snooze-fest. It’s really long, and really boring. I can’t say it was a badly made movie, but the editing and characters are bad bad bad. I actually feel for Ben Affleck now. He was 3 for 3 before this. If you haven’t seen it, I say don’t bother. Again, I was fooled by the trailer. I should try and remember this for 2017. Fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me. *Sad face*

Review: American Honey

With American Honey, British director Andrea Arnold ventures out with her road movie, implying something altogether bigger, broader, bolder. Making huge leaps across the waters to produce a film set in the States, Arnold certainly has afforded the right to do so, proven herself a worthy maker of films with authenticity, integrity and ground level human scope. A much-buzzed about Cannes-favorite, American Honey, steps a little outside of Arnold’s usual comfort zone, but still retains her grasp of the craft of memorable film-making. That said, her latest effort is not as glorious as the wave of praise suggests. Some fine moments, sure, but this is certainly no Fish Tank.

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A break-out central performance from Sasha Lane just about carries the movie to the finish line, but at close to three hours it is a long, long journey. What the screenplay tends to do is rely on its own regurgitation of the same character frictions and life lessons to be learnt. Arnold, too, really goes to town with her music playlist, cramming the picture with so many songs, acquired tastes many of them, that too often do we have to witness on-the-road sing-alongs it loses novelty faster than I would have liked. Back to Lane, though, an assured performance, her heavy expressions and no-fear attitude display her character’s inner turmoil, while Shia LaBeouf just seems to be playing another misunderstood idiot. Hard to believe why our heroine would be smitten with this guy for so long. Hats off to Riley Keough, in super-bitch mode, devours the scenery when she enters, and is mercilessly under-used and under-developed.

I’ll rave about the Robbie Ryan cinematography though, given a clear platform to really let his hair down with his talent for visual scope and outdoor lighting. Arnold has not particular tripped here, her dedication and determination are all over this. There’s a comforting, semi-exciting feel at times as we spend time crammed into the mini-bus as roadies discuss their Darth Vader obsessions or show off their unusual pets. There are some real highlights – the strolling bear; the shopping for the kids of a junkie mom; Lane’s Star calling out LeBouf’s Jake in her first canvassing opportunity. But add to that some questionable rather than affecting plot shifts, it is just not enough in the end given the film’s over-long duration.

Review: Train to Busan

The hyperactive, refreshing journey that Asian cinema can sometimes take you on is exemplified by Train to Busan, from South Korea, a pulsating, edge-of-your-seat thrill-ride from beginning to end. Wasting no time, Yeon Sang-ho sets the scene, a swift, affecting introduction to some fine characters, before letting rip with a form of zombie apocalypse we’ve not quite seen before. And do we need a fresh take on the zombie genre. All hell breaks loose on the train when a stray woman, clearly bit, gets the blood ball rolling. One bite leads to another, as it goes, and the transformation and chaos is almost instant. The infected twist and creek with the longing for flesh, a horrifying, riveting event for the eyes, you’re stunned by what you witness, all the while somewhere in you there’s a gratitude for something cinematically original.

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Cities are overrun, people are part-eaten in an instant, and in turn become ravenous, characters we soon grow to admire and care for often come within a inch of their lives. The frenetic pace is so exhilarating you barely have time to stop for breath. The enclosure of a passenger train has rarely been so claustrophobic, with hardly any place to climb or hide, let alone run. What Train to Busan also achieves, that many horrors or thrillers fail on or neglect, is the pure, human story-thread. Terrific characterization and key scenes of engaging dialogue builds relationships and genuine rapport between people now living in immediate fear. Perhaps the sweetest moment is one you’ll almost miss, as the daughter of the main character assures her own safety by merely singing, a feat she was so afraid to do at the beginning of the movie.

It’s touching sequences and fleeting moments such as these that make Train to Busan much more than a terror flick. Emotions blend with compassionate, kinetic story-telling, and a narrative that zooms by like a hurricane. Even the blistering scenes of special effects, which admittedly might not appear to be up to scratch at times, nonetheless make its mark in accommodating elements of entertainment and suspense – including a couple of ludicrously brilliant set-pieces you have to see to believe. Teamed with a terrific sound design, and ample examples of magnetic, but never showy, cinematography (both grand in scope and keeping right in the nooks of the action), the film offers much to find a seat at all four corners of your brain. Given the tough-to-resist against-the-odds factor of the humans fighting for survival, it takes up a good deal of space in your heart too.

Review: La La Land

To boot, I loved almost all the separate components of the film individually but I didn’t love the resulting bundle.

Aesthetically, my eyes were gently caressed with beauty for the full duration of the movie and for that I’m most appreciative.

Ryan Gosling is his usual, immaculate self, succeeding in gracing us with yet another stunning performance — stylish, suave and utterly charming.

Emma Stone has her ups and middles but never a down, and she gave me one of the sole two scenes that made my breathing falter against an emotional hiccup; another win.

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Now, on the musical side of things…

Meh.

The songs left me disinterested, the overall sound dress of the film rang uninspired and repetitive, only resonating with my pathos during a couple of instances, while the rest lagged tiredly to the request of the more instinct-driven scenes.

The story itself… a bit silly, no? Simplistic almost, benefiting from a strong start, a fantastic ending and the sparking chemistry between the protagonists, on the other hand, lacking any sort of actual substance past the forced demand to fall head over heels with the kitty-cuteness that we are being presented, no questions asked. I don’t like having my arm twisted into feeling, and this is where this otherwise whimsical tale of sensory affluence hit another miss for me.

To sum up. I acknowledge the individuality of the project, felt the strive and artistry that is so craftily weaved into the seams of this audiovisual extravaganza and I was, without a doubt, entertained. On the flip side, the way it all translated to my reason, the shortcomings of La La Land make this a middle-tier effort, only edging ahead on account of the fact that along with the glossy couple, I got to glide with effortless elegance through a Starry Night, brush shoulders with Monet, journey into the colourful and the capricious.

For that fact, I will accept defeat, bump it up another half a star and humbly take off my fedora to it.

Listmania: Al’s Top 5 Films From Spring 2016

 

Hey everybody. My name is Al Robinson, and as much as I love movies, I equally love making lists, especially lists about movies. Last year I became “The Listman” via The Flicksation Podcast, as suggested by Eric Madsen (@Hazer75). I started recording my segments for the podcast around July.  It was a really fun run and it came to an end in December. I have decided to resurrect it in written form for Write out of LA. I hope to make this a new regular segment that I will try to release on Sundays. For my first one here, I wanted to give credence to my 5 favorite movies of the spring season of 2016, which I consider the months of January – April. To me there is no winter season. I’d like to pretend altogether that winter doesn’t exist. Usually the spring season doesn’t grant us many great films, but last year was a nice change. We got a bunch of great movies, and these here are my favorite 5.

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  1. Everybody Wants Some!! (Richard Linklater) – March 30, 2016

One of the best hangout movies. Somehow writer/director Richard Linklater made a movie in which not much happens, but you don’t care.  It’s not about the plot, but all about the characters. It’s college baseball players who just want to party and have a great time in the few days before the semester starts. I had a great time watching these guys having a great time.

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  1. Eddie the Eagle (Dexter Fletcher) – February 26, 2016

The perfect underdog story. Eddie Edwards was a real guy in England who wanted to become an Olympian, and had so much drive to be so that he nearly killed himself. He was a one-man ski jumping team at the 1988 winter Olympics in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. What made him the Eagle was his ability to fly down the hill, and celebrate like a champion afterwards. This movie captured my heart.

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  1. 10 Cloverfield Lane (Dan Trachtenberg) – March 11, 2016

This is my favorite thriller of 2016. It’s got a great premise of a possible alien invasion that they keep us guessing until the final act. It’s a movie that takes place almost entirely underground in a bunker, but amazingly never feels claustrophobic. The characters make the film great, and we get an especially memorable performance from the great John Goodman. I can’t wait for the next one.

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  1. Hail, Caesar! (Joel & Ethan Coen) – February 5, 2016

This is the Coen Brothers doing what they do best. They like to blend comedy with drama, and here they do it flawlessly. I love how it’s about Hollywood, and involves scenes of filmmaking. Josh Brolin is a studio fixer that has many things to worry about. He’s really great at his job, and the character is better for it. Also, I love that the Coens here got Channing Tatum to do a song-and-dance number. You just can’t beat that scene. No dames for sure Channing, no dames for sure. This is a movie that will just grow in stature with subsequent viewings.

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  1. Deadpool (Tim Miller) – February 12, 2016

Deadpool is a movie that I don’t think any of us expected to be this great. It’s a perfect blend of comedy and comic-book action. Deadpool is a hilarious and entertaining character that likes to break the fourth wall and for that, the movie overall is very meta. It’s a comic-book movie that doesn’t have an interest in being a comic-book movie. Rather, it’s more interested in being an R-rated romp that is going to live on forever as how to do things the right way. Simply put, I love this movie.

Review: I, Daniel Blake

I know something of the welfare system in this country, an often infuriating loop-the-loop, procedures and forms to fill out over basic human rights and common sense reasoning. The structure is there for a reason though, to process entitlement, clamp down on fraud, and blah blah, but there are many who get caught in the cross-fire of the political ping-pong. Ken Loach’s overwhelming I, Daniel Blake zeros in on this very premise, watching a man with decency and willingness be dragged from pillar to post of the benefits systems. Some of the interactions between these regular people and members of the civil service in the film may appear harsh and disobliging, but it all rings very familiar alarm bells, this could well be a documentary that would be too-close-to-home for some.

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Loach, along with screenwriter Paul Laverty, weave together a really exposing, under-the-surface view on this very real predicament. At ground level, we experience these unfortunate characters mistreated and all-too-easily dismissed. And it’s so effortlessly affecting at times, nothing is forced down your throat, I was feeling genuinely sad emotions. As you rally for these people, there are moments of personal euphoria too, in particular when Daniel (Dave Johns) witnesses some rather unhelpful treatment of single mother Katie (Hayley Squires) and her two children, he exclaims his disgust with the tax-paying system, getting Katie to the front of the queue for signing on. It’s a small cry for victory given the discourse, and honestly I wanted to get up and applaud myself. Later, Katie’s face of genuine gratitude when Daniel tells her he’ll sort the place out for her is a lovely little moment you could miss if you’re not paying attention.

I, Daniel Blake is an important film, very important, but as a film telling a story (of real life) this is an assuredly handed picture, developing characters so authentic, and adding smidgens of dramatization at just the right temperature. There’s a melancholic thread throughout, a familiar scope of the impoverished human landscape, but a sense of hope and drive to work, or feed your kids, in spite of the obstacles. Being so hungry you have to open a tin and stuff your face in a food bank (one example of how heart-breakingly good Squires is here); not being able to use a computer, everything is “online by default” now; applying for sickness benefit quickly turning into an enduring, deeply frustrating rigmarole – all because the state fails to connect the dots or paint by numbers. Maybe for the subtext, not for all tastes, but it has touched many – including the jury at Cannes last year where the film was awarded the Palme d’Or.