Month: January 2012

Ep. 34: Grey Matters

Ryan and James watch Liam Neeson fight a wolf and react to Oscar nominations.

Brad’s 2011 Oscar Thoughts

If you still haven’t heard, the 2011 Academy Award nominations were announced this morning. Surely, Ryan and James will share their thoughts about it on this Friday’s show. I, however, cannot attend this week so I chose to post my thoughts here instead. Now, I know stating the following may ruin my chances of ever winning a Best Director trophy but: I don’t really care for the Oscars anymore.

Growing up, it was fun to watch all the pomp and circumstance, hoping to see my favorites celebrated as I thought they deserved to be. But as an adult, I recognize the award show for what it really is: a revenue-generating, marketing machine. The broadcast generates ad revenue because couch potatoes gush over movie stars, the accolades justify creative talent when asking for bigger paychecks, and studios use the award to re-market under-performing films or squeeze a couple more dollars out of blockbusters. This is why it’s annoying when people get bent out of shape when the nominations or wins don’t match their expectations. Sorry your opinion wasn’t validated. As if winning the Oscar for Best Picture certifies scientifically that Shakespeare in Love is the Best Picture of 1998 because Miramax lobbied for it successfully. I would have picked Saving Private Ryan, but my opinion is irrelevant because I’m not an Academy member.

The Oscars are nominated and voted on by industry peers. Actors vote for actors, writers for writers, etc. Hundreds of films are released in a single year, so campaigns are forged because the Academy can’t judge everyone’s work fairly without sitting through every film. So it’s not about who definitively did the most creative or impressive work of the year, it’s about convincing the voters who to think did the most creative or impressive work of the year. And just like high school, the more friends you have in your pocket, the better your chances are of printing some celebratory text on the DVD in order to persuade customers to buy/rent it. (preferably buy)

Now to step off the soapbox… and here’s some comments I have about the nominations:

Best Picture category was expanded to give more commercial movies a chance yet this list is more of the usual five. Some deserving stuff on here though.

Best Animated Feature doesn’t include Tintin? Are you kidding me? And is this the first year a Pixar film wasn’t even nominated? Good thing Cars sells a lot of toys.

Nothing from Drive? No wait… Sound Editing.

I guess you only make the cut for Costume Design if you’re doing a film set in the past.

I think maybe it’s time VFX was split into two categories. Best Practical FX and Best Digital Effects.

Only two original songs? I guess the telecast will be an hour shorter this year! Yea!

Ryan’s complete list of movies from 2011!

The blog post all Reel Nerd fans have been waiting for…Ryan’s complete list of movies he saw in 2011! They are ranked from 59-1, yes I saw 59 movies this year( I did cheat and have My Week With Marilyn included).  I really enjoyed movies this year. I was surprised by many movies and disappointed by a few. Brad that this year was ok, I actually think this has been a strong year for movies and that’s why this list took a little longer to put together. So sit back, grab a Coke and some popcorn and enjoy my list. Better yet tell me if you agree or not. If you would like to hear what I had to say about my top 10 movies of the year, please download my awesome podcast on itunes. Just search Reel Nerds(I guess you can agree with James or Brad as their choices are also on the cast…)

59. Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 1: This is a terrible movie and it’s made by people who should know better. If Anna Kendrick and Billy Burke were not in this movie it would be worse. Wooden acting, terrible directing, sloppy editing, and no redeeming qualities make this not only the worst movie of the year but also the most painful to sit through.

58. Creature: Yes this is a terrible movie, but the reason this is ranked higher then Twilight is because at least this movie had no money and wasn’t trying to be something it’s not. Don’t see this movie unless you want to see one of the worst movies of all time, almost as bad as House of the Dead.

57. The Rum Diary: Talk about bad editing. This movie jumps all over the place and not even Johnny Depp can save this piece of shit. Like Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, I think some people will say they like this movie but they will be lying because like Fear and Loathing this movie sucks.

56. happythankyoumoreplease: Yes that’s the actual title of this boring and unoriginal movie. Josh Radnor whom I like in How I Met Your Mother, is the writer and director of this snooze fest. He tries so hard to make this movie ‘independent’ that it’s really distracting.

55. The Mechanic: See only for Ben Foster, other then that typical Jason Statham fair, which is not a good movie.

54. Drive Angry: The writer of Jason X writes a B-Movie starring Nic Cage and it is not good. Some cool gore though. And Cage has sex with a lady and shots bad guys while she is riding him, so there’s that.

53. No Strings Attached: It’s cool seeing Natalie Portman not take herself so seriously but the movie is meh.

52. Immortals: One cool scene has Helios making people explode by using a whip.  Not enough to keep it from being below average.

51. Just Go With It: I like Adam Sandler and Jennifer Aniston and the movie is funny at parts but not quite enough to rise it above other rom-coms.

50. Green Lantern: Until DC learns how to write comic characters like Marvel, they will be stuck with only one amazing film franchise and that’s Nolan’s Batman(not Burton’s don’t get me started). Oa looks good though.

49. Your Highness: It’s silly and you get to see Natalie Portman’s butt so it’s not too bad. It just feels like it could’ve been funnier.

48. Insidious: The demons are cool looking and the ending is cool. Some clichés keep it from the top however.

47. Change-Up: The best part if this movie is watching Ryan Reynolds and Jason Bateman play each other. Other then that it’s typical body switching stuff. And what’s up with CGI boobs?

46. The Sitter: This movie has more heart then you might expect and it is really funny at parts.

45. Hugo: Can you say overrated?

44. Water For Elephants: Ok period piece and Christophe Waltz is great to no ones surprise.

43. Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides: A big disappointment. Again Johnny Depp cannot save this movie, and the tacked on romance is really annoying.

42. Cedar Rapids: The acting is really good but the movie is really boring, it tries to be Up In The Air but it can’t reach those heights, hey oh!

41. Cowboys and Aliens: So much potential but it falters at the twist. I do really like Harrison Ford in this movie.

40.  30 Minutes or Less: This movie is fun but with so many other great movies this year it is somewhat forgettable.

39. Cars 2: Not as bad as some would have you believe, just not as good as Pixar’s other movies. But I would watch this 100 more times then have to suffer through another Shrek.

38. Bridesmaids: A lot of people love this movie and there are some truly great moments but it doesn’t quite do it for me.

37. Hobo With A Shotgun: Brad’s favorite movie from 2011 is different and a blast( I did it again! Pun after pun!) but towards the end it gets really weird and that hurts it’s ranking for me.

36. The Thing: I liked this movie more then I thought I would. There are some great tension filled scenes and it is a fun movie.

35. Super: Another one of Brad’s favorites and it is a cool movie. The reason it isn’t higher on my list is it’s a hard movie to recommend. I do like it but I don’t think I would show it to my mother.

34. Transformers: Dark Of The Moon: I do not like this franchise, but the action is amazing and it’s one of the only movies that I think 3D actually adds something to it. And there is a sweet Fatality at the end, Optimus Prime rips Megatron’s head off with his spinal column hanging from his severed head, excellent!

33. Winnie The Pooh: This movie is so cute. It is also wonderfully animated. I miss animation like this and I love that Disney has started to produce hand drawn animation again.

32. Young Adult: Patton Oswalt is very good in this movie but it’s hard to really get behind a movie where the main character is such a bitch.

31. The Hangover II: The Wolf Pack is funny and a little darker this time.

30. Attack The Block: Fun little British movie. I like the kids and the monsters are really creative.

29. A Very Harold And Kumar Christmas: I hate stoners and drug movies…but for some reason I love the Harold and Kumar movies.

28. Scream 4: I really like the Scream franchise and this movie fits nicely into the Scream lore. The ending actually fooled me and the dialogue is as snappy as ever.

27. Fast Five: Take a lame franchise with a bad actor as it’s lead and add a little Rock and you have one of the most surprising movies of the year. This franchise needed a shot in the arm and The Rock provided it. Also it has some sweet car chases.

26. My Week With Marilyn: I saw this movie this week but it came out last year(see Brad I included a 2011 movie in my 2011 list, burn!) and I was surprised how good it was. Michelle Williams is fantastic and a sight to behold on screen.

25. The Muppets: Fun movie that proves sometimes all you need is a happy song.

24. War Horse: Great movie and well worth a viewing. Sometimes Spielberg is so good you can take him for granted.

23. Rise of the Planet of the Apes: Another movie that surprised me with how good it was. It has a clunky title but the movie is fantastic.

22. Horrible Bosses: Super funny despite it’s dark premise, I mean Jamie Foxx’s character’s name is Mutha Fuckin’ Jones.

21. Paul: Funny Sci-Fi movie with two of my favorite leads, Simon Pegg and Nick Frost. It also has some great cameos and winks at classic sci-fi movies.

20. Red State: Such a risk by Kevin Smith, but he pulls it off. Extra points because he brought it to Denver so we got to watch it with him and engage in a Q&A afterwards, never forget that experience.

19. The Adjustment Bureau: I really liked this movie. The two leads Matt Damon and Emily Blunt have amazing chemistry.  Give this movie a shot it’s worth it.

18. 50/50: Cancer funny? Not really but this movie is and it also has plenty of heart. All the actors are on top of their game.

17. The Adventures Of Tintin: My favorite animated movie of the year. It’s really fun to see what Spielberg did when he wasn’t hindered by the physical world.

16. Conan O’Brien Can’t Stop: I really interesting look at the inner workings of a comic genius and the pressures that come with it. I highly recommend this documentary for Conan’s fans and anyone wondering if they have what it takes to be on tour.

15. Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows: Robert Downey Jr. has become my favorite actor and he kills it again as the famous detective. Guy Ritchie’s direction is as cool as ever.

14. The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo: Haunting and brutal. Rooney Mara is awesome as Lisbeth. This movie will stay with you long after the credits stop.

13. Moneyball: Brad Pitt is so good in this movie you forget you are watching Brad Pitt.

12. Tucker and Dale vs. Evil: Horror movie fans will love this movie like me. And casual horror fans will love the play on clichés. Either way this is one of the coolest movies of the year.

11. X-Men: First Class: Hands down the best X-Men movie. This movie is all kinds of cool and so close to being in my top 10. Also one of the greatest cameos ever and the greatest use of fuck in a PG-13 movie.

10. Real Steel: The biggest surprise for me this year was how good this movie was.

9. Fright Night: Another surprise this year, Colin Ferrall is great as the vampire Jerry.

8. Thor: A movie that could be goofy is awesome. Another pleasant surprise on how good this movie is.

7. Crazy, Stupid, Love. : Romantic comedies are hard sales because they are so predictable. This one might seem predictable but it often turns what you know about rom-coms on it’s side. Ryan Gosling and Steve Carrell kill it, and who doesn’t love Emma Stone?

6. Captain America: The First Avenger: I love Steve Rogers and he is played superbly by Chris Evans. Can’t wait for The Avengers.

5. The Artist: Charming. Amazing. Touching. A silent movie with a lot of heart.. This movie must be seen to be appreciated. And who doesn’t love a dog who saves your life.

4. Mission: Impossible-Ghost Protocol: The Best straight up action movie in years. Tom Cruise still rocks and this movie has many scenes that will leave you breathless.

3. Super 8: Behind the alien story lies one with tons of heart. When kid actors are this good you can’t wait to see what they do next.

2. Drive: This movie is so cool. I want Ryan Gosling’s jacket from this movie and drive as good as him and be as good looking as him…fuck! See this movie it is quiet awesome.

1. Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows Part 2: An epic ending to an epic film series. Beautiful and heartbreaking, the death of Lord Voldermort is a welcome sight. Harry Potter The Boy Who Lived indeed.

Ep. 32: Nerds Like It Hot

The Reel Nerds spend the week with Marilyn Monroe.

A Line for The Iron Lady

Impressively, this is a line outside for The Iron Lady.

Brad’s Top Ten Films (and More!) of 2011

Looks like it’s my turn to do this! If you really don’t wanna sit through 3 hours of podcast to find out what my favorite movies of 2011 were, here you go. Again, I feel the need to clarify, these are not Oscar picks. These are simply the movies I enjoyed (which are better than Oscar picks!) on some level in a year of mostly underwhelming cinema (in my sole opinion it seems). I saw 57 different films away from home this year (none more than once) and I’m going to cover them ALL in the following blog.

That’s right, by reading this, you’re getting bonus content not featured on the show! And James isn’t here to complain about my choices. I still maintain Enter the Void: Director’s Cut qualifies as a 2011 release. And if not, and I did keep a legitimate 2011 movie off my list because of it, does anybody really care that Brad’s top ten was devoid of Paul, Attack the Block, Rubber, or Tucker & Dale? Of course not.

I form my list based on what I see in theaters in any given year. And limited release movies have weird, sporadic release schedules. Some small movies can take up to a full year to travel the country. Does that mean I have to exclude something from my list that debuted in New York in October and couldn’t physically see in Denver until February? I don’t think so. And I’m pretty sure if James had the chance and it was 2003, he’d put the Alien: The Director’s Cut on his list. So ha! Okay, rant over. You can read my list while I read James’ impassioned response to what I just wrote.

Midnight Madness – Classic films they show late every weekend. I only went four times this year. Boo.

The Muppets Take Manhattan

Corny, charming, innocent humor. Surprised it still entertains after all these years.

Giorgio Moroder’s Metropolis

The 80’s synth music was bizarre at first, but now I can’t seem to enjoy it without it. Unfortunately, I was also exhausted so I nodded off during the final act. It’s on streaming so I’m gonna watch it again soon.

Tron

The original Tron back on the big screen! I know it’s a classic, but I’d rather watch Tron: Legacy again.

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Movie

My all-time favorite movie back on the big screen for the second year in a row. Of course I loved it!


2011 New Releases

Creature

We have a whole episode dedicated to exposing how shitty this was. I don’t think I need to say more. Really sad this got into more theaters than Tucker and Dale.

Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides

The only thing this movie inspired was a chance to rake in 3D money. Lazy and dull, it relies on its score to generate any excitement. There’s a sword fight akin to the lightsaber battle between Obi-Wan and Darth Vader from Episode IV. And the great Ian McShane is wasted as a pussified Blackbeard.

Immortals

I’m pretty sure this movie was made because studio execs quickly wanted a 3D version of 300. Unfortunately it all style and no substance. And if the Titans are so dangerous, why did the infinitely powerful Gods imprison them instead of kill them, which they have to do anyway once they escape? I heard that both gods and titans come back to life after they’re killed, so what’s the point of getting upset and fighting anything really?

Sucker Punch

Stylish for sure, but the characters and plot are so arbitrary and dull that I was looking around the theater for something to watch.

The Rum Diary

Boring.

Unknown

Basically Taken 2 as Liam Neeson is trying to rescue his taken identity. I wasn’t impressed with Taken so naturally this didn’t excite me either.

Green Lantern

Hal Jordan is supposed to be fearless but he mopes around for a lot of the movie. So he actually fears becoming awesome. Hammond screams painfully in every scene he’s in, and the experienced Lanterns use chains to tie up Parallax the fart cloud. The CGI on Oha was pretty good though.

Green Hornet

Much better than audiences and critics treated it. But Gondry’s quirky sensibilities clearly clash with the studio’s blockbuster expectations all over the screen.

Captain America: The First Avenger

I liked it better than Thor, and the scene with Stanley Tucci before Rogers’ transformation is wonderful, but Bucky’s friendship feels like an afterthought and the Avengers’ shoe-horned ending robs Captain America of his own movie’s resolution. The Tesseract is this year’s Macguffin.

Thor

Thor charms the audience but I still don’t feel like he really earned his powers back. His romance with Natalie Portman feels thrown in just cuz. The gods apparently live in Mario Kart’s Rainbow Road and their city looks fairly empty for a metropolis.

Source Code

A cool concept, but lacks the visual style I adored from Moon. Might have followed it better had I not seen it at a theater with mono sound.

Hugo

Not the crappy kids CGI fest I expected. It’s pretty boring until the plot celebrates the history of cinema. After that, I just want to watch a documentary about George Milei.

Rise of the Planet of the Apes

Better than I expected, but I still don’t think a monkey revolt is that interesting.

Real Steel

Another surprise. Had a deeper emotional core than I expected and the robots, CGI or not, are pretty convincing.

The Hangover: Part II

Pretty funny. Hits the same beats as the original but I find it hard to relate to as I’m not a blackout partier/drinker.

X-Men: First Class

Pretty good except I feel they missed an opportunity to build Xavier and Magneto’s relationship in future movies. The history of the X-Men makes it seem like they spent years as buddies saving the world and promoting pro-mutant sentiment. But here, they seem to meet and turn against each other over a couple weeks.

Cars 2

Even the weakest Pixar film is better than most other CGI features. Not a Pixar classic but it’s still fun and clever in some ways.

Transformers: Dark of the Moon

About as good as the first one. The final act action is impressive in 3D. But Megatron sulks and thinks so lowly of humans he doesn’t just squish Witwiki’s girlfriend when she calls him a bitch? Meanwhile all the other Decepticons are running around killing every human they see?

The Thing

Pretty standard horror flick. It’s pretty much the same plot as the original although it fits in as a prequel pretty well. I saw this before the original and it makes parts of the original seem unnecessary without the prequel.

Bellflower

A trippy film about two Road Warrior fans. One of them meets a chick who breaks his heart and you follow the resulting downward spiral. Pretty cool in some aspects, but sometimes the characters are rather unlikable.

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2

I’ll admit, as a franchise, the Harry Potter films are respectable and an amazing achievement for maintaining their quality for so long. But unless you’re a fan, you’re just watching actors grimace and point sticks at each other for most of the movie. Would be more interesting if there was some method to the magic madness.

A Very Harold and Kumar Christmas in 3D

Pretty funny at the time. The 3D didn’t impress me because most of it occurs over high-speed slo-mo screen grabs and alternates between cardboard cut-out 3D. Doesn’t resonate, but comedies don’t really have to.

The Devil’s Double

It was two hours of watching a dictator’s son be a dick to everybody. But pretty impressive that Bucky pulled off both roles and the director of Die Another Day made it.

Martha Marcy May Marlene

A tense examination of the psychological damage resulting from life in a cult while also demonstrating the psychological damage from dealing with your own family.

Young Adult

I like Jason Reitman’s resume, and Patton Oswalt’s performance, but Charlize Theron’s CHARACTER is SO unlikeable, I can’t see myself watching this again without a good reason.


Honorable Mentions in no particular order.

These films all fit into my bottom three. Some were tough to leave out.

Cedar Rapids

A fairly funny film about a goody-two-shoes that comes to terms with his corrupt world that felt like an adult comedy from the early 90’s.

13 Assassins

Kind of boring until the second half which is one epic battle. Like 300, it’s 13 samurai standing against an entire army and plenty of badassery ensues.

Rubber

I unfortunately forgot to mention this on the podcast. I was excited about the prospect about a film about a killer tire. Instead I got a film about a killer tire wrapped in a film examining “the no-reason” aspect of films. Why is there a killer tire? No reason.

The Muppets

In one episode I said “The Muppets would be successful if they didn’t pander to modern audiences and simply embraced their nostalgia”. And that’s what Jason Segel did to make a quality film that brought the Muppets back into the public eye. It’s full of corny and now meta-humor that’s very faithful to the characters and older films.

Attack the Block

The kids were likeable, but they were also shithead little punks and it kept me from liking the movie more. The aliens alone were very creative.

Tucker and Dale vs. Evil

A lot of horror movies do the same thing: a group of teens get killed in the woods. One survives to kill the killer. Tucker and Dale does something new by making those teens the villains and the slasher not a slasher at all. Finally something different from the genre and a super funny film.

Anonymous

A very good “what if?” tale if you don’t assume the filmmakers are out to prove something. Felt convoluted because some of the Old English dialogue was hard to follow and has a very expositional climax. But otherwise, very impressive.

Moneyball

So good, it actually made me interested in the business side of baseball. Wally Pfister’s in-game cinematography is beautiful.

The Illusionist

Great animation and silent storytelling about a magician finding his way in a world bored with illusions. When he becomes the surrogate of a runaway girl, he discovers his life is it’s own illusion.

Paul

A solid comedy homage to science fiction and although Seth Rogen is funny as Paul, his voice is too recognizable to not distract me from the fact that Paul is being voiced by a famous comedy star. Paul should feel like his own character and not Seth Rogen wearing an alien mask.

War Horse

Spielberg shows why he’s a master of cinema with beautiful visuals and solid storytelling, but he doesn’t step outside his comfort zone. Impressively he gets you to connect with a horse as the protagonist and the scene with the Brit and German releasing it from the barb wire is one of the best scenes I’ve witnessed all year.

Submarine

The disclaimer at the beginning sells the movie as this bizarre, one of a kind story but it’s not as weird as we’re led to believe. It’s still quirky and weird throughout but it’s still just about a kid who lashes out against his parents breaking up.

Trigun: Badlands Rumble

Another anime movie based on a show I loved, but this feels only like an extended episode. No revolutionary animation or deeper insight into Vash’s character. The villain isn’t even that much of a bad guy, he just loves stealing for the fun of it. Good to see Vash on screen again though.

Cowboys & Aliens

Under-appreciated, although the aliens are pretty unconvincing and Olivia Wilde’s character turn is a cop-out. What breaks my heart is to see Harrison Ford back in movies and the audience rejecting it for a third time. Maybe I’m making too big a deal out of it because I watched The Fugitive this weekend and remembered how awesome that movie was.

Horrible Bosses

Really funny. I don’t know what else to say. Just really funny.

Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows

Another film I was impressed was better than I expected. But there are several moments that so beyond belief, it just makes Holmes look like a cartoon.

Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy

Maybe it was just me, but this movie is so complex at times I couldn’t enjoy following it. Plus I’m not a fan of “let’s go hear this guy’s story” detective work. Gary Oldman gets to sit around, interview people, and look simultaneously scared and stoic.

The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo

I wasn’t impressed with this at first, but it haunted me in the weeks that followed. Visually it’s amazing and Lisbeth proves she’s a cool character, but again I’m not a fan of Daniel Craig interviewing people over and over. And Ryan’s right. If you’re familiar with detective stories, you know who the killer is two hours before Mykiel does.

The Adventures of Tintin

I love seeing what Spielberg can do with a camera unlimited by the physical world. Every scene is staged and shot so creatively it makes up for Haddock’s overly long memory breakthrough plot point. It’s a lot of time wasted with exposition but Spielberg at least tries to creatively show you what Haddock’s mind is working through.

My Favorite 10

10. Enter the Void: Director’s Cut

I didn’t actually love this movie. It’s really boring in many places and 3 hours long. But it’s on my list because of two things. One: It’s daring in the way it tries to show you something different. Two: It contains a couple of the most terrifying sequences I’ve ever seen in a film. I recommend seeing it at least once because I guarantee it’s a film you’ve never seen anything like before.

9. Evangelion 2.0

I grew up a fan of Neon Genesis Evangelion. I was expecting these new movies to be prettier version of the show I already new. But this second installment changes that and goes off in a bold new vision of less introspection. This movie ends pretty much where the show does, so I’m VERY curious to see where the next two movies go.

8. Red State

I liked Red State because I appreciate when an artist tries to do something outside their wheelhouse. Plus, it’s a treat to screen the movie with the writer/director in the house. I’m not crazy about the expositional climax. In fact, when I watched it, I was actually hoping he’d go balls out and throw the audience the apocalypse curve ball for another shocking twist (but because we already saw that in Dogma, it makes sense why he wouldn’t go back to the well on that one) so what he did go with seems regressive after everything Smith did to break out of his safe zone. However, what leads up to it is thrilling and compelling.

7. 50/50

You wouldn’t expect anyone to tackle the subject of cancer through vulgar, raunchy comedy which is why the script for 50/50 is something special. It makes you laugh while maintaining a strong emotional core as you follow Levitt’s character through his difficult battle while fairly exploring the lives around him. If I was making Oscar picks, this would rank higher.

I really only had a top six this year and pretty much the next few films are a collective number 1, constantly jockeying for my favorite film of the year.

6. Super 8

Remember back in the 80’s when aliens weren’t trying to kill us in every movie featuring aliens? Well, that’s only thing Super 8 doesn’t pay homage to. Despite that, it rekindles the magic of an era of science-fiction that has fallen by the wayside. It exhibits that sensation of wonder that made me love movies in the first place.

5. The Artist

Film is a visual medium and unfortunately the general conception is that audiences only see movies with sound and color. So a film that defies this and creates an experience you can understand without those components is an achievement to me. This cute and clever homage to a bygone era is a beautiful treasure that deserves an audience.

4. Mission: Impossible: Ghost Protocol

This is some of the most fun I’ve had watching a blockbuster in a long time. Equal parts creativity and tension, this film is relentless. The villain is pretty weak, but you don’t really notice as the plot unfolds because you’re too busy keeping up with each extravagant action set-piece. And that’s really impressive for the fourth film in any franchise.

3. Drive

Intense. Almost like The Artist, this is a film that shows instead of tells. The quiet protagonist let’s you ride shotgun to this simple tale made all the more interesting with compelling characters and shocking violence. And the 80’s synth and titles were icing on the cake.

2. Super

I enjoy Super because of how disturbing it is. It’s funny because it’s full of realism and failure. It’s an even better portrayal of comic-book heroes in the real world than Kick-Ass.

1. Hobo With A Shotgun

The title alone grabbed my attention and I loved all the resulting schlock that came with it. I adore how it embraces its Grindhouse genre and exploits everything it can. From cheesy dialogue, to hyper-violence, to exaggerated characters, Hobo With A Shotgun emulates the terrible film with laser precision.

James’ Top Twenty of Twenty-Eleven

 This has been a fun year of movies for me. My grand total came to 58 this year, which was certainly more than I’ve seen in past years but what made this year particularly special was the variety. Without doing the podcast with my good friends I wouldn’t have been drug to movies like Fright Night or had the chance to see Drive and 50/50 in theaters. This was the year that I got to see Red State when Kevin Smith brought it to town and I got to stand up and ask him a question.

But as you look over this list I hope that it’s clear what things I value most in movies because what they all have in common is strong characters wrapped with important stories.

Twenty

Fast Five

There’s no reason for the fifth Fast and Furious movie to be as good as this. I went into the theater with a tongue in cheek attitude and ended up having a surprising amount of fun. Fast Five brings back characters from previous movies and lays emotional weight on their stories in ways that should be clunky and pointless, especially to the majority of people who haven’t suffered through all the sequels that came before this one. But it is thanks to a descent script that asks move of actors than has been asked of them in years and an injection of The Rock that this movie becomes a tight, thilling heist film that crescendos with a car chase that may final dethrone Bad Boys II in my heart as the winner of “Most Car Chase” car chase in cinema.

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Nineteen

Captain America: The First Avenger

For all the things this movie was asked to do to set up the Avengers movie it is truly a surprise that it turned out watchable, much less exciting, visually impressive, and emotionally charged. Joe Johnson and the screenwriters chose wisely to put the characterization of Steve Rogers at the core of the movie, so that even when the action isn’t the most original, or perfectly paced, we still care about Steve. Without the well-formed heart of Steve Rogers this movie falls apart, and so does The Avengers. This is the secret that Marvel understands and DC doesn’t. (Though not as secret because writers have known this since Gilgamesh)

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Eighteen

X-Men: First Class

It’s amazing how a different time period can freshen up a dead franchise. This is a movie that deserves to be higher on my list. The story of how Eric and Charles become friends and the unbiased way it analyzes the different viewpoints of these two characters makes Magneto feel less like an arbitrary villain and more like a bitter cynic; not evil, just the part of us that we try our hardest not to be.

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Seventeen

Attack The Block

This is what’s beautiful about indie film today. Where the idea of guerrilla film-making once meant that certain sacrifices had to be made, this movie was able to tell an interesting, high-concept story with some of the more exciting and stylish CG in years.

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Sixteen

Tucker and Dale Vs. Evil

There is no reason why you should not have seen this movie, unless you don’t like gore… or comedy. There have been plenty of spoof movies over the past ten years but where those movies produce schlock, this movie becomes one of the most memorable comedies of the year.

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Fifteen

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo

All the facets of this movie should make it a contender for my number one. A complex mystery, a strong woman, David Fincher’s style and direction, and a score by Trent Reznor and Atticus Finch, but in the end I was left impressed, interested, but untouched. The mystery is undermined by a shortage of suspects—likely as a result of being a compressed version of the novel—and the characters are given too little time to grow for me to fall in love with them or be inspired by their strength. While Lisbeth is still given her subplot with the rapist to help characterize her, the extreme nature of that situation is undone by its brevity, too complex and too loud to flesh out a great character. A good movie in the end, but perhaps the only way that it will stay with me is that it caused me to order the book.

Fourteen

The Muppets

I didn’t always have hope that this movie could deliver but I’m excited to say that it did. As a true fan, Jason Segal was able to isolate the things that made The Muppets so much different from the movies that we get today.

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Thirteen

Fright Night

I tend to hate horror movies. Too often they emphasize content over character and are accompanied by unpolished scripts and dispassionate, unfocused directors. But Fright Night is none of those things. Marti Noxon’s script has the punch and wit of a Buffy the Vampire Slayer episode, and coming off of The United States of Tara, Director Craig Cillespie has the vision to create long, intense shots—like the scene with the apple—and he has the guts to let the character moments breath. Where other horror movies may be concerned with what crazy things they can show you, this remake of Fright Night focuses on what crazy things it can make you feel.

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Twelve

Crazy, Stupid, Love.

We don’t get enough romantic comedies like this one.

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Eleven

Young Adult

Jason Reitman is perhaps the most exciting filmmaker in Hollywood for me. Up in the Air remains one of my favorite scripts so I was disappointed when his next film was not one he’d written but Young Adult shows both growth in Diablo Cody as a writer as well as the musings of Jason Reitman and his habits of answer-less questions.

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Ten

The Adventures of Tintin

This movie may not quite have a main character who pops the way that Indiana Jones does but it’s in the same wheelhouse. The adventure is fun and the animation is beautiful. It’s a good time at the movies and after an afternoon watching The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo that’s really all I needed.

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Nine

The Help

It would be easy to buy the wardrobe on the cheap and sling together an easy villain and some cliched scenes about overcoming adversity and tie it all together with a smart-mouthing black woman and call it ‘inspiring when it’s not offensive’, but that’s not The Help. This is a movie that focuses more on the culture of Jackson, Mississippi than it does on the issues of race. A movie like the one I imagined would have no place for Celia Foote or a dynamic understanding of the social webbing that these women are entwined that this movie seeks to expose. Rather than create a straw man out of racism and beat it like a cruel nazi until dull audiences cheer and go home, The Help adds color to what otherwise might be our black-and-white understanding of this issue (Pun intended).

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Eight

Red State

Kevin Smith has meant something special to me over the past six years and I can’t explain to you exactly why but to see him take such a drastic change at this point in his career was to finally turn to all those people who unfairly judge him and show that he has the talent to do something that would have been hard for even the most respected writers. This movie breaks so many of the basic rules of story-telling that the narrative should fall on its face but somehow it holds together. It functions both as a fun thriller and as a magnifying glass on one of the most despicable and shaming groups over people in our country. I feel like stealing some of Smith’s own words from the introduction he wrote to the second trade of Garth Ennis’ Preacher:

“And if this book offends the delicate sensibilities of some people due to their religious convictions—well, that saddens me. Because, as a man who has an unflappable, fervent, and devout faith in God, let me assure those who find this book spiritually questionable that I know—in my heart and soul—the Lord to be mighty, just, loving, and righteous…

…and a huge and of” Red State.

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Seven

Rango

I dunno… see this movie.

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Six

Thor

When I heard they were going to make a Thor movie and that it would be one of the stepping stones on the way to The Avengers I worried that this would be the movie that let this whole Marvel plan fall apart. But the choice to put Kenneth Branagh in charge of the movie was a stroke of genius. Branagh’s instincts turned what could have been a silly cosmic story that audiences couldn’t connect with—like The Green Lantern—into perhaps the most dramatic super-hero film we’ve had yet. No matter how inhuman our heroes and their foes may be in this movie we see our humanity in their desires and their failures.

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Five

50/50

This movie proves that being funny doesn’t mean that you can’t deal with serious issues or walk through very dramatic territory. In the land of Hangovers and Bridesmaids this movie aims for lasting greatness because it has something to say beyond it’s excuse for comedic situations. You can see writer Will Reiser working through his actual emotions about his experience with cancer on the page as he refuses to give even himself any easy outs. These are real people living through real life situations and in the end sometimes life is funny too.

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Four

Drive

Everything about this movie is quietly cool. That’s all I have.

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Three

Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol

The only way I can explain how this movie could ever be as fresh and exciting as it turned out is that because Brad Bird came from animation no one ever told him about any of the limitations in place in live-action film-making, and so for him they didn’t exist. This movie is a true spectacle on the scale of a Jim Cameron film but without any of the hangups that come from being artificially inflated. Anyone who isn’t already a super-spy in a fantastical world of stolen nuclear missiles and moving invisible walls needs to see this movie.

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Two

Moneyball

As the one person on the podcast who didn’t see The Artist, I can call Moneyball a masterful use of silence. Perhaps greater even in theory because that silence is in such contrast to the rest of the movie that when all the sound drops out your heart drops with it. This isn’t as simple as a sports movie, or a movie about overcoming adversity or a lack of faith, this is really a piece about a man’s search to explain why his life hasn’t gone the way it should have. All his work goes into proving that the system he disappointed was broken to begin with. The movie is fascinating, doubly so to someone like me to doesn’t follow baseball. These are people playing an unfair game, and we love them for it.

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One

Super 8

When I think of Jaws I think of Quint’s speech about the Indianapolis. Given another few seconds to think and I remember the dinner table seen when chief Brody tells his son to give him a kiss. I don’t think about the shark because I don’t love the shark. Likewise, when I think about Super 8 I forget, at first, about the alien because that is a maguffin, it’s an excuse for me to explore the lives of these children and their friendships. I envy these kids for the lives they live and the adventure they get sucked into.

That’s not to discount just how wonderful the alien storyline in this movie is, because that part is good too. The suspense at Kelvin’s gas station is among Abram’s best work. The train wreck is a magnificent. The movie recreates the tone and atmosphere of the eighties with the same sepia-toned realism as American Graffiti. And Giacchino’s score might be his best yet.

But as good as all that is, when hero someone talk about this movie, or when I hear the theme used in trailers over the next twenty years, my first thought will be to Joe and Alice sitting on the carpet with the projector shining in our eyes as they finally let go the weight that children like them should never be asked to carry. I love this movie.

Filmsplosion 2011

The Reel Nerds countdown their top ten movies of 2011, giveaway a gift card, and look forward to the films of 2012.

2011 Filmsplosion Poster

The Reel Nerds will revisit 2011 and name each of their 10 favorite films of the past year and more! It’s a Filmsplosion Party!

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