Thursday, June 5, 2014

1983

Viewed/Ranked

  1. Return of the Jedi
  2. Superman III
  3. Scarface
  4. Monty Python's Meaning of Life
  5. Trading Places
  6. The Right Stuff
  7. Risky Business
  8. The Curse of the Pink Panther
Other Notable Releases
  1. A Christmas Story
  2. The Big Chill
  3. Breathless
  4. Cheech & Chong Still Smokin'
  5. Christine
  6. Cujo
  7. The Dead Zone
  8. The Evil Dead
  9. Fanny and Alexander
  10. Flashdance
  11. The King of Comedy
  12. Mr. Mom
  13. National Lampoon's Vacation
  14. Octopussy
  15. The Osterman Weekend
  16. The Outsiders
  17. Porky's II: The Next Day
  18. Psycho II
  19. Silkwood
  20. Smokey and the Bandit Part III
  21. Staying Alive
  22. The Sting II
  23. Strange Brew
  24. Sudden Impact
  25. Tender Mercies
  26. Terms of Endearment
  27. To Be or Not to Be
  28. Twilight Zone: The Movie
  29. WarGames
  30. The Year of Living Dangerously
  31. Yentl
  32. Zelig

1982

Viewed/Ranked

  1. Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan
  2. Blade Runner
  3. Gandhi
  4. E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial
  5. Rocky III
  6. The Road Warrior
  7. First Blood
  8. Annie
  9. Trail of the Pink Panther
  10. The Secret of NIMH


    Other Notable Releases
    1. 48 HRS.
    2. A Midsummer Night's Sex Comedy
    3. Airplane II: The Sequel
    4. An Officer and a Gentleman
    5. Conan the Barbarian
    6. Creep Show
    7. The Dark Crystal
    8. Das Boot
    9. Death Wish II
    10. Diner
    11. Fast Times at Ridgemont High
    12. Friday the 13th Part III
    13. Grease II
    14. Halloween III: Season of the Witch
    15. Night Shift
    16. Poltergeist
    17. Porky's
    18. Sophie's Choice
    19. Tootsie
    20. Tron
    21. The Verdict
    22. Victor/Victoria
    23. The World According to Garp

    1981

    Viewed/Ranked

    1. Superman II
    2. Reds
    3. History of the World, Part I
    4. Time Bandits
    5. Excalibur
    6. Clash of the Titans
    7. The Great Muppet Caper
    8. Raiders of the Lost Ark
    9. The Fox and the Hound
    10. Stripes
    Other Notable Releases
    1. An American Werewolf in London
    2. Arthur
    3. Blow Out
    4. Body Heat
    5. Buddy Buddy
    6. The Cannonball Run
    7. Chariots of Fire
    8. Escape from New York
    9. The Final Conflict: Omen III
    10. For Your Eyes Only
    11. Friday the 13th Part 2
    12. Gallipoli
    13. Halloween II
    14. The Howling
    15. The Legend of the Lone Ranger
    16. Mommie Dearest
    17. On Golden Pond
    18. Prince of the City

    Sunday, May 11, 2014

    1980

    Ranked/Viewed

    1. The Empire Strikes Back
    2. Raging Bull
    3. The Blues Brothers
    4. The Stunt Man
    5. The Formula
    6. Caddyshack
    7. The Shining
    8. Mad Max
    9. Airplane!
    10. Flash Gordon
    11. Herbie Goes Bananas
    12. Altered States
    13. Smokey and the Bandit II
    Other Notable Releases
    1. 9 to 5
    2. American Gigolo
    3. Any Which Way You Can
    4. The Big Red One
    5. The Blue Lagoon
    6. Coal Miner's Daughter
    7. Cruising
    8. Fame
    9. Friday the 13th
    10. Heaven's Gate
    11. Kagemusha
    12. Melvin and Howard
    13. Oh, God! Book II
    14. Ordinary People
    15. Popeye
    16. Private Benjamin
    17. Prom Night
    18. Somewhere in Time
    19. Stardust Memories
    20. Stir Crazy
    21. Urban Cowboy
    22. Where the Buffalo Roam
    23. Xanadu

    Sunday, January 19, 2014

    Some of the pretty good older movies I've enjoyed in recent months

    Anchors Aweigh (1945)
    Kind of astonishingly good, and in a pleasantly surreal way, as Gene Kelly and Frank Sinatra con their way into Frank's courtship of lovely Aunt Susie, who's looking after the boy they randomly stumble across on shore leave.  Real old school Hollywood charm.

    White Christmas (1954)
    Here's a Bing Crosby classic I've seen previously, but really only appreciated for the first time the most recent time I saw it.  It's not just an excuse to hear the title song again (previously debuted in Holiday Inn), but rather to celebrate the soldiers who experienced WWII on the war front and who are still struggling to get back to what they "used to know."

    Becket (1964)
    Everyone (except Oscar voters) knows how brilliant an acting talent the late Peter O'Toole was, a magnetic and commanding presence completely unparalleled and never duplicated in film.  Here he's Henry II to Richard Burton's title character, who at first is as close a match to O'Toole as anyone could hope to be, but soon enough undergoes a religious conversion that puts Henry and Becket at odds.

    These are three movies that quickly shot themselves into the ranks of my all-time favorites.  I don't tend to just assume that an older movie has earned immortality, the way some critics do.  They have to earn their acclaim through their work.  These do.

    Monday, January 13, 2014

    For those who became Colin Farrell fans after Saving Mr. Banks

    Suppose you've just seen Saving Mr. Banks, the new movie based on the creation of Disney's Mary Poppins and you really enjoyed Colin Farrell's performance as P.L. Travers' dad.  Perhaps you're now wondering, where has this actor been all this time?

    It's true that Travers Goff is a new kind of role for Farrell, but he's been this consistently good for ages, since Tigerland, really, the movie where Hollywood discovered him.  He gives a performance of considerable depth in Banks, sure, and it's probably his most romantic role in a mainstream movie ever, certainly where he wasn't top-billed (although his part as one of three Heath Ledger stand-ins in The Imaginarium of Dr. Parnassus would give that title a run for its money).  (It's also a perfect lead-in to his upcoming Winter's Tale.)

    Truth in fact, he's my favorite actor, but this is only because Farrell has consistently impressed me, even when the material around him needs a little more time to appreciate than his own work.  Critics like him, too, although the form his career has taken to date has made it hard for them to admit it, except for the Golden Globe he won for In Bruges.

    That's actually the movie I'd suggest you start with, post-Banks.  He plays a mournful assassin, troubled by the accidental shouting of a child.  It presents a comparable display of his impressive full range.

    So far, then, Saving Mr. Banks and In Bruges.  What else?  It's hard for me to not say everything else, but I'm trying to be objective here, okay, trying to keep his career open.

    Let's go back to the beginning, then, with Tigerland, where he plays a noncomformist Army recruit during the Vietnam War, giving equal doses of hope and hell to those around him.  His early Hollywood roles after this struggled to expand on a performance that already said everything there was to know about that particular facet of his talent.

    Try The New World next.  It's his John Smith in the Terrence Malick version of Pocahontas.  It's perhaps the defining role of Farrell's famous soulful eyes, nearly silent (as with all Malick films) but none the worse for it.

    Another strictly bouncy performance of whimsy (if you don't want him in a superhero movie, Daredevil) is featured Ask the Dust, where he plays a struggling writer who falls in love with a woman as contentious as he is.

    That's Saving Mr. Banks, In Bruges, Tigerland, The New World, and Ask the Dust.  Anything else?  Again, being a big fan already makes it hard for me to limit myself.  One of the least popular movies ever also happens to be my favorite ever, Alexander, which to my mind is Farrell's most important performance to date.  If you want to take one last suggestion from me, that's it.  As far as I'm concerned, you'd start there, but perhaps it's a better place to finish.  By this point you will probably want to just see all of his movies anyway...

    Monday, December 23, 2013

    2014 at a glance

    All dates are subject to change, but here's a look at what I find worth looking at in the year ahead:

    Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit (1/17)
    I have yet to see any of the previous Jack Ryan movies, but that doesn't diminish my appreciation for their considerable cinematic legacy, and this one features a stellar cast (Chris Pine, Keira Knightley, Kevin Costner) and a terrific director (Kenneth Branagh).

    Ride Along (1/17)
    Kevin Hart seems destined to be a huge star, and this will be his biggest test to date, buddying with Ice Cube in a movie directed by Tim Story.

    I, Frankenstein (1/24)
    Aaron Eckhart finally seems to be making some forward momentum from The Dark Knight.

    Labor Day (1/31)
    Jason Reitman, Kate Winslet, Josh Brolin...Another dynamo combination right there.

    The Monuments Men (2/7)
    It kind of seems wrong to speak of WWII in terms of other than the Holocaust or all the fighting, but if there's a worthy story elsewhere this is probably it, the struggle to rescue the culture Hitler was also busily smashing along the way.

    Winter's Tale (2/14)
    With films like The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus and Odine under his belt, Colin Farrell is fast locking in a new career as a star of modern fantasy.  This may be the movie where audiences take notice.

    Pompeii (2/21)
    Paul Anderson's genre credentials seem to be expanding with this effort.  Could be very interesting.

    3 Days to Kill (2/21)
    Kevin Costner returns to starring roles.  I figure that's a good thing.  And this one's directed by McG, who became widely unappreciated far too quickly.

    300: Rise of an Empire (3/7)
    We'll see the true appeal of this budding franchise as it forges ahead without Gerard Butler.

    Grace of Monaco (3/14)
    It only figures that Princess Grace would eventually find herself back in the movies.  And Nicole Kidman is about the right person to make it happen.

    Muppets Most Wanted (3/21)
    Kind of sad Jason Segel isn't back for this one (on the whole, I think Forgetting Sarah Marshall was still a better Muppets effort than his actual one), but I'm always game for these guys.

    Stretch (3/21)
    Directed by Joe Carnahan?  Check.  Excellent cast?  Check (Chris Pine, Jessica Alba, Patrick Wilson, Ray Liotta, James Badge Dale, who's still looking for that breakout role he richly deserves; Carnahan could very well help him achieve that).  It's worth noting that one of Pine's most interesting roles to date was in a Carnahan movie already (Smokin' Aces, wildly underappreciated as a whole).

    Noah (3/28)
    The last time Darren Aronofsky tried something hugely ambitious (The Fountain), he come incredibly close to pulling it off.  This one stars Russell Crowe.

    Captain America: The Winter Soldier (4/4)
    One of the Avengers movies I'm most looking forward to, although I'm wondering if they're going to lose the real appeal of the last one trying to make it funnier.  I love the pedigree of Anthony and Joe Russo (Arrested Development, Community), but that's the wrong direction for a premise that seems can't-miss for comic book fans already familiar with the material, arguably the strongest of this character's long history.

    Dom Hemingway (4/4)
    Ten years ago Jude Law starred in every movie that was released for an entire year.  It seems wrong that he's had to wait so long for a comeback.

    St. Vincent De Van Nuys (4/11)
    Another actor who hasn't starred in his own movie for a long time (the curiously can't-miss misfire of playing FDR in Hyde Park on the Hudson from last year doesn't seem to count) is Bill Murray.  And this seems like about as classic a Bill Murray movie as you can get.

    Transcendence (4/18)
    This Johnny Depp movie is getting Inception buzz.  Depp's yet another actor vying for a comeback in 2014.  Was this planned or something?

    The Other Woman (4/24)
    Cameron Diaz is in on the act, too.  I think it's downright criminal how her career fell off the public radar, after an early millennial bid to become arguably the best actress in the industry.

    The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (5/2)
    It's a testament to this rebooted franchise that the buzz surrounding this effort has nothing to do with how it compares to the Raimi/Maguire/Dunst era.

    Belle (5/2)
    Can we all agree that Gugu Mbatha-Raw deserves to be a star no matter how complicated her name is?  Keep it at Gugu if you have to.  She's awesome.  Make her stardom happen already!

    Chef (5/9)
    Jon Favreau and Robert Downey, Jr. reunite.

    Godzilla (5/16)
    Will this be the one that makes this franchise actually relevant to American audiences?

    X-Men: Days of the Future Past (5/23)
    The movie where 20th Century Fox finally realizes it had the Avengers formula before Disney did.

    Blended (5/23)
    If you're a really big fan of 50 First Dates, you might love this Adam Sandler/Drew Barrymore reunion.  Oh, and this also counts as a Barrymore comeback.  The trend continues!

    Maleficent (5/30)
    This Angelina Jolie project based on Sleeping Beauty has been building buzz for a while now.

    A Million Ways to Die in the West (5/30)
    His Oscars hosting gig seemed to sabotage Seth MacFarlane's mainstream push.  Can he win it back in a Western?

    Edge of Tomorrow (6/6)
    Tom Cruise in another opulent sci-fi spectacle.  This one also features Emily Blunt!

    22 Jump Street (6/13)
    Sequel to the surprise original, and apparently part of Channing Tatum's own bid for a comeback.  Although, seriously, that 2012 track record would be hard for anyone to duplicate.

    How to Train Your Dragon 2 (6/13)
    Loved the first one.  Expect to love the second one.

    Transformers: Age of Extinction (6/27)
    The fourth in this series has a brand new cast.  Could be very interesting.

    Tammy (7/4)
    Apparently Melissa McCarthy's passion project, which might go a long way to answering the question of how long she can remain a huge star.

    Fast & Furious 7 (7/11)
    This was always going to be a hit.  After the passing of Paul Walker, probably expect the franchise's biggest hit yet.

    Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (7/18)
    Needs to be leagues better than the last one.  I hated that one.

    Sex Tape (7/18)
    Jason Segel!  Cameron Diaz!

    Jupiter Ascending (7/25)
    It's the Wachowskis.  Either they find their popular mojo again, or this will be next summer's After Earth.

    Hercules (7/25)
    Dwayne Johnson as Hercules.  Or as the Klumps matriarch might put it, "Hercules!  Hercules!"

    Guardians of the Galaxy (8/1)
    Pound for pound, the ensemble put together for this gamble in the Avengers cycle might be the best yet.  It will need to be.

    Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (8/8)
    Could be very interesting!

    The Expendables 3 (8/15)
    The casts for these movies just keep getting more interesting.

    The Giver (8/15)
    I've never read the book, but the movie might finally help me correct that.

    Sin City: A Dame to Kill For (8/22)
    I'm game for this in a big, big way.

    The Loft (8/29)
    With a cast boasting the likes of Rhona Mitra, Karl Urban, James Marsden, and Wentworth Miller, I'm salivating.

    Search Party (9/12)
    The same goes for one with Krysten Ritter and Alison Brie, two brilliant stars of hugely unappreciated sitcoms.

    The Equalizer (9/26)
    More than a decade after Training Day, Denzel Washington and Antoine Fuqua finally reunite?  I'm there.

    Selfless (9/26)
    Directed by Tarsem?  I'm already penciling it in as one of my favorite movies of the year.  The man is a genius.  It also stars Ryan Reynolds, who might be the star capable of finally explaining that to everyone else.

    Gone Girl (10/3)
    David Fincher previously got me to experience a much buzzed-about book as a movie with The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo.  He's going to be doing it again with this film.

    Dracula Untold (10/3)
    Could be the movie where Luke Evans finally distinguishes himself.

    And as always, there are bound to be a few surprises along the way, too.  But I think 2014 is looking pretty darn good already!