Tuesday, January 19, 2016

My 2015 Movies

Just because, I thought I'd let y'all know what I saw in 2015, by week!

December 28, 2014: Big Hero 6
January 4: The Imitation Game
January 11: Resevoir Dogs
January 18: American Sniper
January 25: Struck By Lightning

February 1: Mr. & Mrs. Smith
February 8: Kingsman: The Secret Service
February 15: The Theory of Everything
February 22: Along Came a Spider

March 1: Fired Up
March 8: The Grand Budapest Hotel
March 15: The DUFF
March 22: Transcendence
March 29: Birdman, Night Crawler

April 5: Home
April 12: While We're Young
April 19: Good Will Hunting
April 26: Avengers: Age of Ultron

May 3: Ex Machina
May 10: Far From The Madding Crowd, Pitch Perfect 2
May 17: 22 Jump Street
May 24: Don Jon
May 31: Lucy

June 7: Inside Out
June 14: What If
June 21: Jurassic World
June 28: The Lego Movie

July 5: Spy
July 12: Ant-Man
July 19: The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 1
July 26: Two Night Stand, Mad Max: Fury Road

August 2: Trainwreck
August 9: Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
August 16: Mission: Impossible - Rogue Nation
August 23: The Man From U.N.C.L.E.
August 30: The Gift

September 6: (I had sorority recruitment so I had zero time)
September 13: The Maze Runner: Scorch Trials
September 20: Black Mass
September 27: Hotel Transylvania 2

October 4: The Martian
October 11: Zathura
October 18: American Pie
October 25: Wet Hot American Summer

November 1: Spectre
November 8: Insomnia
November 15: The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 2
November 22: Black Swan
November 29: The Good Dinosaur

December 6: Wayne's World
December 13: Star Wars: The Force Awakens
December 20: Sisters
December 27: The Big Short

Saturday, January 16, 2016

The Revenant: Beautiful

The Revenant is, in a word, stunning. Famously shot chronologically, using only natural light, it's absolutely a visual and technical masterpiece. The film opens on a battle sequence, and some of the lengths of the unbroken camera shots are incredibly unbelievable.

The film has also gotten a ton of critical acclaim, winning a handful of Golden Globes last weekend and claiming several Oscar nominations this week. The public, as well as critics, believe that the role of Hugh Glass will finally be the piece that wins Leonardo DiCaprio "his" Oscar. He famously ate raw meat for the role (he is a vegetarian), and has been regaling the celebrity news and the awards circuits with tales of how grueling the process was, for himself, for the other actors, and for the crew.

I walked out of the film with two prevailing sentiments. First, that I had no desire to see the film again anytime soon. It was one of those works of art that leaves you emotionally drained, raw, and in no hurry to jump back in to the world that it had created. Second, I was cold. Very cold. The entire film was shot in Canada and Southern Argentina and was about a winter fur-trapping mission gone awry, the difficulty of survival against the elements, and all I could think of when I left the showing was how happy I was going to be to snuggle up under my duvet that evening.

The story of a frontiersman battling nature to survive and seek vengeance on the man who, after trying to kill him, left him for dead and murdered his son is surprisingly accessible, even though neither I nor anyone I know has ever faced such a plight. Which sounds like an elementary thing to say, but it's not- Glass is not overly-humanized for the sake of the audience. He is not given large amounts of interaction with other people that reveals his character, and he isn't given trivializing backstory in order to show his tenacity. We are instead to glean his humanity by the way that he behaves, by himself, in a frozen forest. I would hate to think of the impression I would give an audience if I were observed behaving, by myself, in a frozen forest.

I think the true gems in the film, DiCaprio aside, are Tom Hardy, the man who leaves Glass for dead, and Domnhall Gleeson, the moral captain of the fur-trapping expedition. Gleeson may have been the most underutilized actor in the film (which is saying something when the entire 2.5 hour extravaganza has roughly 100 total lines of dialogue), but I may be biased. I think he's had one of the most exciting years that any actor has had, ever, with his appearances in Ex Machina, Brooklyn, The Revenant, and a little film called Star Wars: The Force Awakens. The first three have generated a hefty critical buzz, and the latter has had unprecedented global box office success.

Spoilers ahead, you've been warned.

I found the series of flashbacks to his wife and earlier life helpful at first, as I wanted to know more about how Glass came to be, but ultimately to be a waste of energy. I didn't follow everything that they were trying to tell the audience, and it wasn't consistently apparent whether they served as a figment of Glass' mentality in order to survive the tundra or as a vehicle for the audience to learn more about Glass' wife. I'm forced to assume the former, because if their purpose was the latter, they failed desperately. In a film where so many things worked so well, they were the only thing that, in my mind, weren't executed perfectly.

Alejandro González Iñárritu has created quite a stunning film. It left me visually breathless, it was a cinematic masterpiece, and yes, it might finally win DiCaprio that Oscar. However, at times, it was too in-your-face. Critics (some appropriately, some inappropriately) have claimed that this movie isn't for the faint-of-heart, and they were correct.

Ultimately, it left me lacking. Yes, the cinematography was beautiful, and yes, the acting was superb, but The Revenant builds too fantastical of a world with such a gritty underlayer. The HFPA, in my opinion, gave the Golden Globe to the wrong "Best Picture". It would have been better served in the newsroom, the futuristic desert wasteland, or the Room.

Thursday, January 7, 2016

GO SEE SPOTLIGHT

I really wanted to make the title more clever, but the sentiment I wanted to get across could not be expressed in a clearer way.

In case you haven't heard, Spotlight is a little film that opened in wide release on Thanksgiving Day and has been catching the attention of critics and the public alike. It's been nominated for over 100 awards so far (including 3 Golden Globes- Best Motion Picture, Best Screenplay, and Best Director) and has generated a lot of Oscar buzz (the Oscar noms will be announced next week, but the film is on the shortlist and the Huffpost has it as the 'frontronner' for best picture). Spotlight follows the story of the Boston Globe reporters who uncovered the child molestation scandal within the Catholic Archdiocese in 2002. It's an absolute triumph for Tom McCarthy, as well as for the cast.

The reason you may not have heard about any of this is that it's arrival was relatively quiet. Spotlight was produced by Anonymous Content, First Look, Participant Media, and Rocklin / Faust, and domestically distributed by Open Road Films, who distributed Nightcrawler last year. The first word I heard of Spotlight was a commercial that aired after it had already opened, but the film had an extremely successful run at film festivals before it opened domestically. It didn't have the budget of The Martian, the visual pomp and circumstance of Mad Max: Fury Road, or the razor sharp wit of The Big Short (all of which were on my 2015 list and all of which you should definitely see ASAP), and it needed absolutely none of these things to be wildly successful.

Let's start with the cast. Completely star studded, the ensemble stars Mark Ruffalo, Michael Keaton, Rachael McAdams, Liev Schreiber, John Slattery, Brian d'Arcy James, and Stanley Tucci. Honestly, it's impossible to choose a standout. Ruffalo is a treasure as always, McAdams is equal parts determined and compassionate, d'Arcy James is absolutely a treat, and it's refreshing to see Tucci out of the Hunger Games makeup. Each member of the cast delivered an authentic performance (the time spent consulting the actual reporters definitely shows, and was an incredibly worthwhile investment), and the effect was an incredibly compelling and believable performance. Spotlight's journalists didn't get the traditional Hollywood treatment- they were allowed to be frustrated, disenchanted, gritty, incorrect at times, but most significantly, they did their jobs with a ceaseless determination that seemed neither heroic nor rushed.

The film is paced beautifully. In what can only be described as a slow burn, Spotlight never overplays or underplays the significance of the story it is telling, nor does McCarthy's film pass judgement on the events that are occurring. He simply tells the story as it unfolds, and presents the facts in a way that feels like reading a really good novel. Actually, the feeling is not unlike reading a newspaper.

To say anything more about the plot of Spotlight would be a disservice to anyone who hasn't already seen it, so I'll simply say that the gravity of the story being told means that Spotlight is not one you should miss. I'll certainly be giving it a second look as soon as possible, and I'll be rooting for the film in the awards circuit this year.

The Reason for the Season

Hey y'all!

Full disclosure, I think New Years is a bullshit holiday. But every year, I feel compelled to make a resolution, and at the end of 2014, I wanted to make one that I could actually keep. Fall semester 2014 was kind-of a bummer, and the thing I did to get my mind off the world was to go to the movies. So, my New Years Resolution for 2015 became that I was going to watch more movies, specifically, a new one per week. It went so well that I decided to keep it going for 2016, with the addition of a blog.

I've been saying I need to write more lately, and this is a way to tie that in to something that I already know I love doing. Help hold me accountable- write me mean things if I ever let you down.

- Anna