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JR'S TOP 10 FILMS-2013
2019,
2019-2010,
2019 MID YEAR,
2018,
2018 MID YEAR,
2017,
2016,
2015,
2014,
2013,
2012,
2011,
2010,
2009,
2009-2000,
2006
"Good Old JR" Jim Rutkowski
weighs in with his picks for the TOP 10 films of 2013 |
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THE YEARS BEST...
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Movie Reviews by:
Jim "Good Old JR" Rutkowski
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10. Short Term 12
9. Inside Llewyn Davis
8. Fruitvale Station
7. Blue is the Warmest Color
6. Stories we Tell
5. The Act of Killing
4. 12 Years a Slave
3. Gravity
2. Her
1. Before Midnight |
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Every year starts the same way: a countdown ushering
out the old, a kiss, a song, and best wishes for the next twelve months. Some
years fulfill the promise that exists at 12:01 on January 1; many do not. It
takes 365 days to make a determination. In the world of film, there are various
metrics that can be applied to decide whether a year is successful or not. In
Hollywood, it's the box office receipts. For me, as a viewer and amateur
reviewer, it's putting this list together. Some years are a struggle. Finding 10
films to praise as the best of the year can be a chore. Not so this year. When I
began to gather my notes, I found that I had upwards of 20 films that could have
made the list. The chore was trying to determine the ones to leave OFF. So, in
other words, a very good year at the movies.
For the completists out there, the titles that fall just below 10 are (and in no
particular order):
Nebraska
Wolf of
Wall Street
Captain Phillips
American Hustle
Upstream Color
Mud
Blackfish
Frances Ha
The Conjuring
Now here are the top ten, in reverse order...
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#10-SHORT TERM 12 |
Directed and written by: Daniel Cretton
Grace (Brie Larson in a star-making turn) is an employee at Short Term 12, a
foster care facility for teens with emotional problems, requiring special
supervision and patience. Alongside boyfriend Mason (a marvelously measured John
Gallagher Jr.), Grace deals with an influx of escalations and seclusion from her
kids, with Marcus (Keith Stanfield) a young man about to turn 18, forced out of
the system, while Jayden (Kaitlyn Dever) is new to the home, showing little
tolerance for others as she waits for her father to claim her. There are grace
notes peppered around “Short Term 12” that guarantee tears, and the picture’s
summation of anger and its limiting, destructive characteristics is carried out
with gravity, not sentiment. Created with an open heart and intelligence, “Short
Term 12” is a rare viewing experience, articulating troubled minds with an aim
toward an emotional purging that’s completely earned and appreciated.
Available on DVD/Blu-ray. |
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#9-INSIDE LLEWYN DAVIS |
Directors: Ethan Coen, Joel Coen Writer:
Joel Coen
The Coen's latest follows a week in the life of a young folk singer as he
navigates the Greenwich Village folk scene of 1961. Guitar in tow, huddled
against the unforgiving New York winter, he is struggling to make it as a
musician against seemingly insurmountable obstacles-some of them of his own
making. At this stage, the Coens are working with a confidence and a maturity
stripped of a need to razzle-dazzle. While their protagonists often find no
direction home, they transport you again and again. Don’t be fooled by the
seemingly minor key; just because Inside Llewyn Davis doesn’t have the genre
trappings of a Fargo or
No Country for Old Men, or the Lebowski
catchphrases, this is a fine work by – let’s just call it – the most
consistently innovative, versatile and thrilling American filmmakers of the last
quarter-century. Currently in theaters. |
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#8-FRUITVALE STATION |
Directed and written by: Ryan Coogler
Fruitvale Station is the name of an Oakland stop on the Bay Area Rapid Transit
system. There, early on the morning of New Year’s Day 2009, a 22-year-old black
man named Oscar Grant, on his way home from celebrating New Year’s Eve with
friends in San Francisco, was shot in the back by a white BART policeman for
reasons that remain unclear. (On trial, the cop claimed he had mistaken his gun
for his Taser, resulting in a reduced conviction and sentence). As played with
extraordinary compassion and subtlety by Michael B. Jordan—whose face will be
familiar to fans of The Wire and Friday Night Lights, Oscar is a young black man
of a type we don’t often see on movie screens. He’s nobody’s angel. He’s served
stints in prison in the past, his chronic lateness to work has just cost him his
job at a grocery store meat counter, and when his girlfriend Sophina (Melonie
Diaz) accuses him of messing around with other women, he barely bothers to deny
it. But Oscar is also a devoted father to his and Sophina’s 4-year-old daughter,
Tatiana (Ariana Neal), and a loving son to his single mother, Wanda (Octavia
Spencer). And he’s trying to get his life together and cut out the small-time
pot dealing that threatens to land him in jail again. Fruitvale Station’s
wrenching power lies in the specificity of its storytelling and the ordinary
human warmth of the world it conjures. You walk out of it, not shaking your head
over an abstract social problem, but grieving the senseless death of one flawed,
complex, tragically young man.
Available on Dvd/Bluray and for digital rental. |
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#7-BLUE IS THE WARMEST COLOR |
Director: Abdel Kechiche Writers: Julie Maroh, Abdel Kechiche
The years best foreign language film. Also, surprisingly the best comic book
adaptation of the year, based on a French graphic novel of the same name. It
centers on a 15-year-old girl named Adèle who is climbing to adulthood and
dreams of experiencing her first love. A handsome male classmate falls for her
hard, but an unsettling erotic reverie upsets the romance before it begins.
Adèle imagines that the mysterious, blue-haired girl she encountered in the
street slips into her bed and possesses her with an overwhelming pleasure. That
blue-haired girl is a confident older art student named Emma, who will soon
enter Adèle's life for real, making way for an intense and complicated love
story that spans a decade and is touchingly universal in its depiction. Blue is
the Warmest Color opened amidst controversy - graphic sex scenes, actresses
sniping at the director, some lesbian critics calling it a "male fantasy" - but
the experience of seeing the movie dispels most of those concerns. This
languorous coming-of-age story provides an intimate portrait of a young woman
coming to grasp with her sexuality, experiencing first love, and learning to
live with the consequences of a tragic mistake. For my money, lead actress Adele
Exarchopoulos gives the best female performance of the year, with the camera
frequently lingering on her features in extreme close-up. Raw, honest,
powerfully acted, and deliciously intense, it offers some of this years most
elegantly composed, emotionally absorbing drama.
Available on Dvd/Bluray February 25. |
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#6-STORIES WE TELL |
Director: Sarah Polley
One of two documentaries on my list this year. In this inspired, genre-twisting
new film, Oscar-nominated writer/director Sarah Polley discovers that the truth
depends on who's telling it. Polley is both filmmaker and detective as she
investigates the secrets kept by a family of storytellers. She playfully
interviews and interrogates a cast of characters of varying reliability,
eliciting refreshingly candid, yet mostly contradictory, answers to the same
questions. As each relates their version of the family mythology, present-day
recollections shift into nostalgia-tinged glimpses of their mother, who departed
too soon, leaving a trail of unanswered questions. Polley unravels the paradoxes
to reveal the essence of family: always complicated, warmly messy and fiercely
loving. Stories We Tell explores the elusive nature of truth and memory, but at
its core is a deeply personal film about how our narratives shape and define us
as individuals and families, all interconnecting to paint a profound, funny and
poignant picture of the larger human story.
Available on Dvd/Bluray and for digital rental. |
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#5-THE ACT OF KILLING |
Director: Joshua Oppenheimer
The years best documentary and probably the most difficult to watch. At some
point during The Act of Killing, your brain will simply want to shut down. It’s
difficult to describe, much less process, what this documentary captures. So
I’ll start with some facts: From 1965 to 1966, mass murders were carried out in
Indonesia in the name of anti-Communism. Those who declared themselves
Communists or were suspected of being Communists or were simply guilty of being
Chinese were slaughtered at the hands of paramilitary groups and the local
criminals recruited by them. The number of victims was somewhere between 500,000
and 2 million. That’s the population of a large American city, in case you were
wondering. Today in Indonesia, this is hardly a source of national shame.
Indeed, the murderers are celebrated as heroes, to the point that a handful of
them were eager to talk to documentary filmmaker Joshua Oppenheimer about their
past. What’s more, they restage the murders in intimate detail, offering, for
example, a tour of the benign rooftop that once served as a killing factory.
There, they demonstrate how a length of wire would be tied from a pole to a
victim’s neck and then yanked, because that method resulted in the least amount
of blood. The piece de resistance – if that’s the right phrase – is an
elaborately costumed musical fantasy “directed” by some of these men, in which
one appears as some sort of benevolent god and another is dolled up in drag.
It’s all hard to fathom and almost as arduous to watch. It ends with one of the
most devastatingly candid moments I’ve ever seen in a documentary. Part
historical document, part character portrait and part art project, The Act of
Killing ultimately registers as something altogether more powerful: an exorcism.
Available on Netflix and DVD/Bluray. |
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#4-12 YEARS A SLAVE |
Director: Steve McQueen Writer: John Ridley
In 1841, Solomon Northup (Chiwetel Ejiofor) is a free negro working as a skilled
carpenter and fiddle player, and living with his wife and two children in
Saratoga Springs, New York. Two men (Scoot McNairy and Taran Killam) offer him a
two-week job as a musician, but they drug Northup and he wakes up in chains,
about to be sold into slavery. 12 Years a Slave is a master class in turning
history into cinematic drama. Speeches are few and far between, while sound and
imagery are at the forefront. The film contains what might be the scene of the
year. A sequence midway through depicts a botched hanging that is harrowing and
devastating. 12 Years a Slave boasts several strong performances – Michael
Fassbender, who starred in McQueen’s previous features and plays a particularly
cruel slave owner here, proves once again he’s best as a man possessed by
demons. But the standout performance in the film comes from Lupita Nyong’o,
making her feature debut as Patsey. McQueen’s use of ultra-violence operates to
repulse rather than arouse. His film is a tough, soul-sickening, uncompromising
work of art that makes certain that when viewers talk about the evils of
slavery, they know its full dimension. This isn't a revenge fantasy like last
year's Django Unchained.
Being rereleased to theaters. |
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#3-GRAVITY |
Director: Alfonso Cuarón Writer: Alfonso Cuarón, Jonás Cuarón
Dr. Ryan Stone (Sandra Bullock) is a brilliant medical engineer on her first
shuttle mission, with veteran astronaut Matt Kowalsky (George Clooney) in
command of his last flight before retiring. But on a seemingly routine
spacewalk, disaster strikes. The shuttle is destroyed, leaving Stone and
Kowalsky completely alone - tethered to nothing but each other and spiraling out
into the blackness. If there was ever a film created for the theatrical
experience it's this one. Making excellent use of both the big screen and 3-D.
Believe the hype: “Gravity” is as jaw-droppingly spectacular as you’ve heard —
magnificent from a technical perspective but also a marvel of controlled acting
and precise tone. Itdoes everything right in ways that are both big and small.
It’s beautiful and horrifying, detailed yet enormous, specific yet universally
relatable. Yes, it’s about how space can be a wondrous and unforgiving place but
it’s also about earthly human truths: love and loss, perseverance and
redemption. From the opening 15 minute unbroken scene to the finale involving
rebirth, Gravity is filled with the same kind of exhubarance of film making that
the pioneers of early cinema must have felt.
Coming soon on DVD/Bluray. |
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#2-HER |
Directed & written by: Spike Jonze
Set in an unspecified future just a few years from now, the film stars Joaquin
Phoenix as Theodore, a talented correspondence writer at a website called
BeautifulHandwrittenLetters.com. Still nursing the pain of his failed marriage
to Catherine (Rooney Mara), Theodore mostly keeps to himself, save for
occasional interactions with his neighbor Amy and her husband Charles (Amy Adams
and Matt Letscher). But after purchasing a new artificially intelligent
operating system that calls itself Samantha (Scarlett Johansson), he develops an
unexpected rapport with the device as it evolves into a bona fide companion. In
a world of seemingly infinite connectivity, we’re constantly hearing about how
all of this technology is in fact forcing us apart — whether we're spending more
time instant messaging than interacting or looking at our phones instead of the
human being on the other side of the dinner table. Spike Jonze’s Her examines
one man’s relationship with just such an electronic device. Far from being a
cautionary tale, it highlights how technology itself can not only fulfill our
emotional needs, but also clarify our relationships with the people it’s meant
to connect us with. Ultimately, Her possesses the drive of a science-fiction
opus that speculates where we’re going as a species and how we might get there,
and yet applies its discoveries to the individual. All of which is why it’s a
modest sort of masterpiece, a truly great film that manages to make an
unconventional relationship seem enormously rewarding, but mostly because it
accomplishes in Theodore’s life what we wish real ones did in ours: teach us
about ourselves, and help us to be more — not less — open to love.
In theaters now. |
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#1-BEFORE MIDNIGHT |
Director: Richard Linklater Writers: Richard Linklater & Ethan
Hawke & Julie Delpy
The third movie in the Richard Linklater/Ethan Hawke/Julie Delpy "Before…"
series, this is the best, most mature of the three. The three films were made
nine years apart. Allowing the viewer to touch base with these characters to see
where life has taken them, ultimately giving the audience a huge level of
emotional investment. Before Sunrise (1995) chronicled love at first sight.
Before Sunset (2004) dealt with regrets and rekindling love. Before Midnight
(2013) explores what happens when the honeymoon period is over and real life
intervenes. Eighteen years after first meeting, Celine and Jesse are not in the
same place they were that magical night in Vienna. As with its predecessors,
Before Midnight is a talky affair but the dialogue sparkles with humor and
substance. The final 30 minutes are powerful and honest. Anyone who has been in
a long-term relationship will find many touchstones in this movie. Jean-Luc
Godard famously stated that "The cinema is truth at 24 frames per second."
Often, when faced with overproduced blockbusters and special effects laden
mainstream fare, it's easy to forget that. It takes something like Before
Midnight to remind us of what "truth" means. It's a delicate thing, easily
missed either in whole or in part. There's nothing wrong with escapism; I love
many escapist motion pictures. But it's a rare and powerful thing to confront
something honest and real on the big screen. It stays with you in a way that
nothing else can. Before Midnight is fiction but it might as well be a
documentary.
Available on Dvd/Bluray
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Images © Copyright 2019 by their respective owners No rights given or
implied by Alternate Reality, Incorporated
Review © 2019 Alternate Reality, Inc.
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