Nope, not going to do a “Best
of the Year” list. They’re fun enough and it’s not as if I am adverse to them,
but I think I’ll step away from some empirical opinions. There are those “the
most overrated films of the decade” going around – OF. THE. DECADE!!! – and although
it’s satisfying to see films that you’ve rated highly at the top of some list
of DA BEST, it’s easy to forget it’s entertainment as well as cultural
barometer. I mean, it’s daft how I raise my eyebrow every time I see ‘Once
Upon A Time… in Hollywood’ trumping far more mature films and tighter
scripts; or when I see ‘Booksmart’ is consistently above ‘Eighth
Grade’. I mean, it’s not as if they are bad films – far from it. Besides,
forgoing the numbers lists means I can cast my net wider for an indulgent overview
of what I’ve seen.Oh, and I'm including Netflix releases too, it seems.
Let’s start with some
drama.
Sara Colengero’s ‘The
Kindergarten Teacher’ was all kinds of great: Maggie Gyllenhaul’s performance;
the offbeat premise of a kindergarten taking upon herself to nurture and protect
what she sees as a pupil’s nascent genius; constantly uncomfortable so you were
never sure how bad or creepy it would get; a fantastic ending. A truly great drama about talent and how art is crushed beneath the mechanisms of society.
‘Vox Lux’
was just as curious as Bradley Corbet’s debut, the searing ‘The Childhood of
a leader’, but not as successful. Like ‘In Fabric’, it took a jump
in the middle, delineating a clear halfway point that – unlike Strickland’s
film – it didn’t quite smooth over with genre. ‘Vox Lux’ was left mostly
to make the leap by its own devices, being a slightly frosty and elusive
character portrait of a popstar, before and after fame. Nevertheless, Natalie
Portman gave what was just one of many great female performances of the year.
Speaking of which, Sarah
Bolger single-handedly bolstered Abner Pastoll’s ‘A Good Woman is Hard toFind’, stopping it from falling into trite Brit-soap crime scenario, whilst
Haley Bennet in Carlo Mirabella-Davis’ ‘Swallow’ is likely to be
overlooked but provided a vivid and brave show of a woman discovering herself
without histrionics.
Jia Zhanke delivered another
fascinating female-led drama-thriller with ‘Ash is the Purest White’ with
Zhao Tao as Qiao going through multiple personas as she drifts through genres
trying to survive to find purchase.
Felix van Groening’s ‘Beautiful
Boy’ was filtered through the mosaic aesthetic – temporal skipping; important
vignettes and memories that made up the whole – that breathed a little fresh
air in the “family drug-addict” genre so that it ultimately accumulating emotional
heft.
Jeramiah Zagar’s ‘WeThe Animals’ also delivered this mosaic technique to giddy and
dreamlike effect.
A similar style was employed
by Barry Jenkins’ for ‘If Beale Street Could Talk’, but it was
the scenes left long to play out that were highpoints. It was ostensibly a simple tale of a romance
broken by prejudice, but as with ‘Moonlight’, Jenkins used formal experimentation
and design only to enhance the emotional resonance and to conflate past and
present, that being our natural state. It certainly tapped into the timeless
qualities of domestic drama and, as with its predecessor, circumnavigated cheap
sentiment for the genuinely romantic.
And for domestic drama, Noah
Baumbach’s ‘Marriage Story’ leapt ahead. Incisive, nimble, and
brilliantly played by Adam Driver and Scarlett Johansson. Forget all those American
comedies that trade on stereotypical gender representations, here was a film
that was based on decent people trying to negotiate themselves out of their
attachment and feelings. It opens with a list of all their good qualities
before pulling the rug from under the audience by having this list as part of
the discussion for marriage counseling. But every scene had a wealth of tiny
telling and truthful details: Driver asking what he should do with the divorce papers
he’s been served – indeed, the whole discussion surrounding the serving the
papers is hilarious; their kid planting treasure hunt clues when being picked
up and his parents are still debating matters; a father-son day becoming a tour
of lawyer offices, etc. Most scenes are bustling and interrupted by a multitude
of perspectives so that nothing is quite focused or clear. So, like life then.
No one is villainous or heroic, just going along at the mercy of their foibles.
And did I mention career bests from Driver and Johansson?
Pedro Almodovar’s ‘Pain
and Glory’ was also moving in effect, and although cinephiles would be
gaga for the autobiographical elements, it stood independent and strong as
itself: a character drama with many clean and vivid visuals and a gentle rather
than Almodovarian camp touch.
Yorgos Lanthimos gave his
most articulate and accessible satire with ‘The Favourite’, that
hit all the right buttons with exceptional performances and quotable script. It
belonged to that cluster of films directed by a non-Brit that nevertheless captured
something quintessentially British, somewhere between prestige costume drama and
Monty Python. That it was 49 on ‘Sight & Sounds’ Year’s top 50, that it was
superceded by many inferior scripts surely proves a serious oversight.
I have a soft spot for
maintained ambiguity that uncovers the human condition, especially that of
delusion (which is why I am a fan of ‘The Turn of the Screw’). Chang-Dong’s
Lee’s ‘Burning’ was a brilliant balancing act of letting character
and audience perhaps misinterpret everything so that, by the end, your
uncertainty was left intact, with perhaps more questions than answers. And yet
it was still a satisfying and meticulously rendered puzzle happy to leave its mysteries
in place.
It was also this
conflating of delusion with the tragic that left a deep impression with Brian
Hanson’s ‘The Black String’, the kind of narrative that
drama-infected-with-horror does so well. And Frankie Muniz provided a brilliant
performance that is surely to be overlooked as it’s not genre film that will get much coverage.
Rian Johnson’s ‘Knives
Out’, on the other hand, as a big title, was satisfying because it was
a tightly wound whodunnit with subversions, conventions and clues all carefully
placed for maximum enjoyment. The cast are having fun, the story is confidently
told, it twists and turns, has a little social commentary to give it bite, and
it all clicks together nicely.
Alternatively, the equally
entertaining ‘Come to Daddy’ by Ant Timpson seemed happy
to freefall into other genres, keeping both audience and Elijah Wood on their
toes.
Mike Leigh’s brilliant drama
based on the massacre at ‘Peterloo’ was comparatively as baggy as
it was affecting. Not as sharp as ‘The Favourite’ but its aim was
different, dissecting class and cruelty over an impressive convincing canvas. It
was a long wait, but the when the massacre finally comes, it creeps up and
chills with its inevitability.
The trailers for ‘Eighth
Grade’ did nothing to entice me; in fact, I was a little put off. But I
was so wrong. I heard some reviews say something that intrigued me and so I went
to check for myself. Bo Burnham’s film was hardwired with empathy for shy,
struggling, awkward and uncool kids and one of the very best American coming-of-age
films in the genre. It carried a pained tone and the comedy of embarrassment
without ever laughing at the expense of its characters or compromising how
funny it could be in serious, squirmy moments. Its understanding for those
determined to battle with clumsiness and shyness and uncoolness was disarming.
The scene in the back seat of the car one of the most uncomfortable and distressing
of the year. The way that Elsie Fisher says “yesno” in one breath captures in
one gesture the brilliance of her wonderfully awkward, raw performance. The
film’s compassion and amusement stay as a permanent aftertaste and define the
work so stridently.
Olivia Wilde’s ‘Booksmart’
was similarly a breath of fresh air by applying extra female empathy to the
old get-to-the-party scenario. This was two young studious women that realise
at the last moment before graduation that all their sacrifices for academia
didn’t make them better or more worthy than their peers. The lack of bullying
was a welcome absence from such a familiar scenario: indeed, it was our protagonists
who appeared to be the most judgemental. Rather, the film tore through its
familiar genre archetypes but left our central pair and others with integrity. But
I would say it is surely an error of evaluation that ‘Booksmart’ was
above ‘Eighth Grade’ by some margin in the ‘Sight & Sound’ top 50
poll, no matter how much fun it proved to be.
There was Gene Stupnitsky’s
‘Good Boys’ similarly about uncool tweens – but not shy or
lonely – that offered a boys’ perspective. It was consistently funny, putting
crude potty-mouth humour in its young actors’ mouths, offering the familiar bromance
get-to-the-party odyssey scenario but with younger dudes. There was a lot of
humour to be mined in the boys’ limbo period of knowing dirty words but not
about sex toys, the knowing-of-but-not-knowing-about drift between childhood
and adulthood. But it couldn’t quite shake the feeling of laughing at rather
than with the kids from time-to-time, so even if it had fun boundary-breaking
by having the kids swear, even as it was positive in these tweens were enlightened
enough to know to ask girls permission to kiss, there wasn’t the sense that it
was truly saying something new.
But if you were looking
for a boys-version of the empathy found in ‘Eighth Grade’ you had to
look to Jonah Hill’s ‘Mid ‘90s’. Here was something like a less
judgemental and nihilistic ‘Kids’, another picture of a kid with a troubled
homelife, trying to make friends and be cool, finding confidence and going
slightly off the rails in the process. A regular childhood then. But it’s culminative
effect was very moving. Maybe not the full hug of ‘Eighth Grade’, but a sympathetic
and understanding pat on the back that turned out to be surprisingly moving. It
also featured a vivid edit that conveyed the shock and speed of a car accident.
Paul Dano’s debut ‘Wildlife’
also had a solid and vivid look at family life through the eyes of a kid. The father-figure
goes off firefighting, seemingly as a result of midlife crisis, and the mother-figure
goes off the rails. The kid has to absorb, understand, cope and grow up. Young Ed
Oxenbould, who had been so obnoxious in ‘The Visit’ and promising in ‘Better Watch Out’,
here
revealed a performance of such subtlety that those films hadn’t even hinted at.
He proved the equal of the heavy-weighters Jake Gyllenhaal and Carey Mulligan.
There was a consistent softly lit but clear edged hue to the compositions that
often made it beautiful, creating the look of unsentimental nostalgia.
But if you were looking
for bildungsroman without the hint of privilege, then there was the poverty of Nadine
Labaki’s ‘Capernaum’ which trod a fine line between the manipulation
of ‘Slumdog Millionaire’ and the kind of raw street despair found in,
say, ‘Pixote’ or ‘Vito and the Others’. But the contrivance of
our young protagonist making a case to divorce his parents really was secondary
to all the genuine anguish and details that made up the bulk of the film. The
scene of young Zain having to decide to desert his baby-sitting duties and not
quite being able to walk away was one of the year’s most emotionally gruelling
scenes.
‘Honey Boy’
was all about Shia LaBeouf but benefitted from Alma Har’el’s subtle leading-in
the leading-out with editing and composition that implied something more
dream-like. In fact, the IMDB page does a nice summary: “A young actor's stormy
childhood and early adult years as he struggles to reconcile with his father
and deal with his mental health.” It doesn’t even mention that it’s based upon
LaBeouf’s childhood (even watching ‘Even Stevens’ he evidently had
something; I liked him in ‘Holes’, had no interest on him going the ‘Transformers’
route, and then fully redeemed by ‘American Honey’). Har’el’s attention
to temporal shifts, smooth segues and always a hint of the dreamy when not
letting the characters just play out and bounce of one another meant this felt
so much more than a vanity project – LaBeouf plays his own dad, after all.
Never once does it feel like ego: the lack of sentiment, the dominance of melancholy
and sadness, the performances by the leads and several good one-liners help (several
frustratingly included in the trailer). Even the meta stuff doesn’t get in the way
of the story. A great autobiographical reflection.
But if any film was
enhanced by how it was made, Mark Jenkin’s ‘Bait’ proved
remarkable upon learning that its creation included Bolex camera stock development
with coffee granules. With its themes of modernity stomping all over more
traditional cultures, of class war and masculine pride, it certainly felt
pertinent, even as its aesthetic bridged past and present forms of cinema. Its clash
of the old and new was baked into its very DNA. If Guy Maddin went all Ken Loach,
it might resemble this.
‘Bait’s dialogue
with the form was certainly more interesting and invigorating than Tarantino’s ‘OnceUpon A Time… in Hollywood’, whose nostalgic recreation of
a bygone screen era was enjoyable to wallow in, but then stretched into rewriting
history and thus staking it out clearly as pure wish-fulfilment. Still, its Golden
Era Los Angeles 1969 recreations surely boosted it up the cinephile’s Top 10s,
despite its inconsistency.
Joe Talbot’s ‘The Last
Black Man in San Francisco’ offered another pleasant depiction of characters
defined by place. There’s an agreeable breeziness with a laid-back depiction of
a desperate culture, even the trash-talking street corner gang, but there’s a
core of unmistakeable melancholy. If it ultimately relies upon notching up the
dramatics for effect, it’s held high by the central performance of Jimmie Fails
and Jonathan Majors’ delicious turn as Fails’ oddball gentle friend.
Craig Brewer’s ‘Dolemite
is My Name’ is a safe biopic of underdog-made-superstar kind about Rudy
Ray Moore. But Eddie Murphy hits a peak, managing to step back from being too
loud and rude, as you might expect, so that Moore’s humanity and naivete shows
through. If it ultimately holds no surprises, it’s affable, amusing and
entertaining with many fine turns, including from Da’Vine Joy Randolph and Wesley
Snipes.
On the other end of the
spectrum, Guy Nattiv’s ‘Skin’ was the biopic of a white supremacist,
Bryon Widner, who struggled to leave that upbringing. It’s a timely film,
asking the audience to find the humanity in these violent fascists, with Jamie
Bell giving a full-blooded and believable performance. Both he and Danielle Macdonald
find that through-line from the character’s angry past to their determination
to evolve. Nattiv keeps the narrative on its toes by intercutting with the two-year
process it took for Widner to have his tattoos removed and dispenses background
information in casual conversation so that the story is never burdened with
flashbacks or too much obvious manipulation. It’s a clear-headed film that
calls for empathy but not necessarily sympathy, a commendable balancing act.
‘One Cut of the Dead’ by
Shin'ichirô Ueda was an instantaneous horror hit, mixing zombies, farce, a
little meta-fiction, a little media commentary and many layers of humour. But
it’s overarching good-humour and altruism for low-budget filmmaking also made
it an uplifting treat.
Jordon Peele’s ‘Us’
perhaps had too much ambition and too many ideas for its own good, but I can’t really
fault it for that – even if this did lead to a clunky piece of exposition to
cram it all in. If nothing else, he proved that extending his agenda from race
and embracing class allowed him to access the zeitgeist in increasingly
interesting ways, happily playing with, taking and giving old and new symbolism.
On the other hand, Peter
Strickland’s ‘In Fabric’ also seemed wilfully stuffed with whatever
it fancied, a highly odd and unique vision of a killer dress and perverted British
deadpan that happily laughed with the genre, rather than at it.
And speaking of uncharted
genre regions, I was so happy to go into Ali Abbasi’s ‘Border’
knowing next-to nothing so that its surprises came fully formed and were some
of the best. I went in knowing that it was by John Ajvide Lindqvide, author of
one my very favourite horrors, ‘Let The Right One In’: I was not
disappointed.
Joe Begos’ ‘Bliss’ and
Adam Egypt Mortimer’ ‘Daniel Isn’t Real’ went
the more psychedelic routes which made them delirious and compelling. Both were
about finding and grappling with identities where you couldn’t quite trust yourself.
‘Bliss’ channelled a punk rock sensibility whilst ‘Daniel’ was
like, maybe, Abel Ferrara doing Bret Easton Ellis. Both had the warning that the
cosmos is against us.
Dan Gilroy’s ‘Velvet
Buzzsaw’ was horror set in the pretension of the art world – not
the struggling punky art fringe of ‘Bliss’ – and although this setting
made it intriguing, its satire fell short of gelling. Not as sharply honed as Gilroy’s
‘Nightcrawler’. Or maybe it wan't shambolic enough?
Ari Aster’s ‘Midsommer’
was no disappointment after his noteworthy debut ‘Hereditary’. Like
that film, it was so very well directed – he is a master at sudden reveals,
showing close-ups when they will impact most, or slowly panning to show the worst
– that this almost leapfrogged the fact that it was fervently tied to genre tropes
and convention. But it had many unforgettable set-pieces and a sun-drenched
folk horror environment that easily put it above most others. Surely this kind of example is why we're living in a golden period for horror.
Emma
Tammi’s ‘The Wind’ was an example of small-scale horror showing
its strength in eschewing the demands of a big budget. Mood and the desolate
setting of a Western Frontier in the 1800s were enough where a woman believes
herself to be plagued by a prairie demon. Shuffling the timeline of the
narrative doesn’t help when a straight through-line of development for Caitlin
Gerard’s performance would and should have been the backbone, but this is the
kind of film that plays up and satisfies the love of the uncanny and hinted horrors.
Robert ‘The Witch’ is the epitome of this lowkey allusive genre
strain, but ‘The Wind’ will satisfy those looking for something a little
more ambiguous than mainstream fare, not to mention feminist.
Andy Mitton’s ‘The
Witch in the Window’ was another superior small-scale horror
that
offered superior father-son interaction and a nice line in characters not
acting too stupid just to facilitate the plot. It was creepy, modest and
memorable where the horror is just the tragedy of human failings and uncanny
things happening before you realise that reality had failed you a while ago.
Ciarán Foy’s ‘Eli’
was also held together by another strong child performance from Charlie Shotwell.
But the adults seemed underwritten and the answer to all the mystery wasn’t
really so much. Nicely filmed, though.
Lee Cronin’s ‘A
Hole in the Ground’ was another example of generic horror being
told solidly with above-average execution and showing that boundary-breaking
wasn’t always necessary to being good. It was creepy and left haunted by an
aftertaste of paranoia about reality and others. Which was agreeable.
Alejandro Aja’s ‘Crawl’
was popular, although I did have a couple of friends that thought it laughably
bad. I don’t think the CGI alligators did it for them, but I confess it made me
jump a couple of times and I found it fun enough. But
it was Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett’s ‘Ready or Not’ that
proved the hit, providing a decent and winning dose of genre fun and satire.
This above-expectation standard
went for others such as Andre Ovredal's
‘Scary Stories to tell in the Dark’ and
Lars Kleverg’s contentious ‘Child’s Play’ revival. Of
course, these were known properties that brought with them expectations, so the
fact that they weren’t absolute disappointments tended to give them a pass. The
former didn’t need to be so solid just as the latter didn’t need to be ultimately
so generic.
For comparison, films
like Nicholas McCarthy’s ‘The Prodigy’ was just too formulaic,
despite having one uncomfortable and chilling possessed kid outwitting his
shrink/exorcist scene. Tate Taylor’s ‘Ma’ held promise, but it
too was ultimately too typical, despite its memorable and nasty basement denouement.
Even so, the acting and the characterisation was a cut above – after all, this
had Octavia Spencer, but also Diana Silvers, Juliette Lewis and even Luke Evans
delivering the goods. Is it just me being too generous are does it seem that characterisation
in such genre fare has recently raised its quality just a notch? Even standard
fare like Paul Davis’ ‘Uncanny Annie’ seemed
to have protagonists that were coloured in a little more than just archetypes.
Where Christopher Landon’s
‘Happy Death Day 2U’ was also a lot of fun as a follow-up, features
like Danishka Esterhazy’s ‘The Banana Splits Movie’ and Bobby
Millers’ ‘Critters Attack’ ultimately ended up with “must try
harder” stickers, despite the pleasing practical effects.
Oh, and incidentally one
my most enjoyable and surprising experiences was watching Joran Ruin’s ‘The Drone’ at FrightFest. The poster had me expecting a very average film
about a killer drone, but as soon as the serial killer started reflecting that
he needed to call an Uber and the audience started laughing, I realised I had
been very wrong in my expectations. A very funny parody of those Eighties
possessed-thingy horrors where I could feel the audience enjoying themselves.
They were just the right crowd and I laughed a lot.
And although I am a fan
of Jim Jarmusch, ‘The Dead Don’t Die’ just seemed lazy and surprisingly
amateurish. If Jarmusch’s style is to cross over to horror, he has yet to find
the right vehicle and angle.
Speaking of reboots … why
do I insist on being hopeful and disappointed by the latest ‘Godzilla’
trend? Like ‘Kong: Skull Island’, ‘Godzilla: King of Monsters’
had several notable moments and images but didn’t quite make it to being unquestionably
good. But as a friend retorted when I was laying into ‘Skull Island’: “Then
again: it’s a movie about a giant ape.” It’s true that the idea of these films is
usually greater than the end result, and that’s been the standard for almost the
entirety of the unstoppable ‘Godzilla’ franchise, with the original
exempt and a few exceptions, depending on your generosity.
Of course, if you were
truly going for the gargantuan and cosmic, then the Russo brothers’ ‘Avengers:
Endgame’ had it in spades. Despite the genre’s detractors, its agenda
promotes people coming together to battle seemingly insurmountable odds to stop
an egotistical, sociopathic delusional bad guy. That seems to me a far more mature
message than rewriting history for a revenge fantasy offered by ‘Sight & Sounds’’
number 2 film of the year, ‘Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood’. Aside from
that, the fact that ‘Endgame’ had such a big cast, didn’t drop the ball
and achieved an ending that was genuinely epic, intimate and moving in equal
measure isn’t bad for a supposedly juvenile genre.
And then I liked Peyton
Reed’s ‘Ant Man and The Wasp’ for its modesty, for being so small-scale
as a contrast. Nothing exceptional at all, but solid fun with a wealth of good
size jokes.
Of course, Zack Snyder’s ‘Justice
League’ wasn’t going to bolster the genre any, and you had retorts like
David Yarovesky’s ‘Brightburn’
flipping
the Superman mythos. Going dark and adding horror is often mistaken for a
mature response to the superhero genre, but the genre has always done this.
And then there was Todd
Philips’ ‘Joker’ to set the cat amongst the pigeons and remind
people that the comic book genre also wanted to be taken seriously. A film
about psychological issues without the cushion of Oscar-baiting earnestness,
although it did have an award-worthy performance from Joaquin Phoenix at its
centre. Both loved and hated, it was surely a surprise commercial success,
hanging around the cinema screens for the latter months of 2019 and lingering
on into the next decade. …And did I foolishly say this wasn’t the kind of thing that usually
got awards?
For more reassuring thrillers,
Chad Stahelski’s ‘John Wick: chapter 3 – Parabellum’
offered
the entertaining fights – death by library book! – whilst being as dumb and as
juvenile as a president photoshopping his head on ‘Rambo’ (and no, I
didn’t see ‘Rambo: Last Blood’). Of course, it helps to have the thoroughly
likeable Keanu Reeves as your frontman.
S. Craig Zahler’s ‘Dragged
Across Concrete’ offered an exceptional long, slow burning denouement.
Whilst Zahler is always interesting on violence – he’s good at finding that
super-violence and delivering it just so it hurts, so it’s not quite the celebratory
humorous overkill of ‘John Wick’ – and while his rehabilitation of Vince
Vaughn has been successful, his same for Mel Gibson might be frowned upon. Nevertheless,
Gibson does good work and although it’s all a little ambiguous, the film could
be seen as white-man-whining-and-redeeming-with-violence or it could be seen as
a little dig at past-it white machismo at Gibson’s expense. It’s a long,
riveting thriller that – like Ari Aster – is interesting for what he shows and
when. For example, we don’t get the heist as expected, but the aftermath is one
prolonged showdown that escalates to a near end-of-the-world starkness.
If ‘Wick’
and ‘Concrete’ had exemplary set pieces, Kiril Sokolov’s ‘Why
Don’t You Just Die?’ dragged out the action set piece to feature
length, admittedly abetted by flashbacks. It spooled out with the mechanics of
the action getting meticulous attention – like ‘Delicatessen’s Caro and
Jeanet doing John Wick, perhaps; a favourite moment had our hapless anti-hero
pulling a defeated face as a television set bears down on his face in slo-mo – and
then with the claustrophobia of a single room theatre production. It moved
through double-crosses and escape attempts with similar aplomb and proved thoroughly
nihilistic fun.
Takashi Miike’s ‘First
Love’ was typically enjoyable genre hokum. I saw it at the London Film
Festival where there was an introductory video of Miike leaning against Godzilla
and cheekily promising burning dogs. Miike has done this kind of Yakuza drama in
his sleep, but very few directors are as focused on being unruly so that you never
quite know what’s coming next: street horror, humour, outrage, violence and
romance in equal measure.
There was a notable
response of ambivalence from friends to Martin Scorsese’s ‘The Irishman’.
Similarly, I thought it good and admirable (and not because of the CGI) but I
couldn’t quite muster up full excitement.
Rather it was Ciro
Guerra’s ‘Birds of Passage’ that offered a fresher setting and
context for the genre. Perhaps not as otherworldly and unique as ‘Embrace of
the Serpent’ but Guerra’s respectful attention to cultures is riveting and
revealing. There was the same clear composition and direction that was
observational, empathetic and fascinating.
It was Alejandro Landos’ ‘Monos’
that was a triumph of startling visuals and increasingly tense narrative pull. It
just seemed to reach into that cinematic realm of the truly phenomenal.
Claire Denis’ ‘High
Life’ occupied the adult science-fiction corner, delivering the heady
mixture of alienation, sexuality, humanity and sex in that particular way that
only this genre can reach. And of course it helps to have Robert Pattinson as
your frontman, adrift in space with memories and big themes. If perhaps it left
a little detachment (and I wasn’t the only viewer who found it initially a
little confusing) maybe multiple viewings will be more rewarding.
Whereas Josh Cooley ‘Toy
Story 4’ was one of those sequels that won by not being a disappointment:
of course coming on the back of a beloved and pretty much perfect trilogy was
not going to do it any favours, but it was a decent conclusion for life-after-ownership
for the toys themselves. And ‘Toy Story’ never quite forgets how creepy
dolls can be. Hell, I’m not even fully comfortable with Forky.
But it was with Jérémy
Clapin’s ‘I Lost My Body’ that showed the oddball potential of
animation could be found, telling the tale of a disembodied hand trying to make
its way back to the young man it belonged too. Along the way, the lost appendage
seems to possess the memories of his attempts at romance in a fairly drab and uncaring
world. Highlights include the hand battling a pigeon and Naoufel (Hakim Faris)
the pizza delivery man unsuccessfully trying to deliver to a woman, just
communicating through the intercom. It’s a melancholy film that happily
utilises surrealism and gentle, downbeat romantic drama to touching effect, all
the time utilising beguiling composition and animation. And it’s hard to argue
with Jared Mobarak’s conclusion to its meaning: “We must acknowledge our
phantom limbs and accept that we’ve survived.”
Films I didn't get
to see but wanted to:
'Shaun the Sheep: farmageddon',
'The Souvenir', 'Parasite'. Wimped out of going the see the first on my own, couldn't see the second showing anywhere and tried to book the third for the one showing I could see but it wa already sold out.