BEST AND WORST
BEST
1. The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring
2. Gosford Park
3. Shrek
4. Mulholland Drive
5. Bandits
6. Memento
7. From Hell
8. A.I. - Artificial Intelligence
9. Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within
10. The Endurance
Runners-up:
Atlantis: The Lost Empire, A Beautiful Mind, Blow, Bridget Jones'
Diary, The Deep End, Ghost World, Hannibal, The Homeboy, Hedwig
and the Angry Inch, Jurassic Park III, Monster's Ball, Monsters
Inc. and The Mummy Returns
WORST
1. Bubble Boy
2. Zoolander
3. Freddy Got Fingered
4. Glitter
5. Pearl Harbor
6. Saving Silverman
7. Along Came A Spider
8. Planet of the Apes
9. Hardball
10. The Princess Diaries
Runners-up:
A Knight's Tale, Captain
Correli's Mandolin, Scary Movie 2, Tomcats
and Town and Country
|
Written by DAVID KEYES
January 18, 2002
THE BEST MOVIES OF 2001:
1 - The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring
Few times in the recent past has a movie so swiftly shattered the highest
expectations of our moviegoers and totally restructured the way we view
the cinema. Peter Jackson's first of three installments of J.R.R. Tolkien's
trilogy of "The Lord of The Rings" is exactly that kind of
movie, one that not only tells its story thoroughly and wisely, but
also takes us to places more elaborate, lush and vivid than those of
the most intimate corners of our imaginations.
Like the source material, "The Fellowship of the Ring" grasps
at its audience through the sense of a difficult undertaking; as you
watch it unfold, you begin to wonder just how many sleepless nights
the filmmakers endured to put so much work into their screen endeavor.
Every frame is drenched in breathtaking beauty, layered so cohesively
that there is never a moment when we think, "oh, this is too much,"
or "there isn't enough there." It's like watching the interpretation
of Middle-earth directly through Tolkien's eyes, and no doubt he himself
would have approved of the result.
But "Fellowship" isn't the best film of the year simply because
of its visuals or its detail, but because it is, ultimately, THE essential
thrill ride of 2001. The film is endlessly exciting, never slow, always
interesting and observant, and loaded with energy. I myself have seen
the picture four times since its release, and the experience gets better
during each new viewing. Given those examples, just imagine the surprises
that wait for us in the next two installments of the trilogy.
2 - Gosford Park
Robert Altman, resuming his directing career after two recent highly
successful (but also highly overrated) endeavors"The Gingerbread
Man" and "Cookie's Fortune"finally struck gold
with this English murder mystery set in the countryside, as characters
from every elite corner of society descend into an atmosphere soused
with intrigue, suspicion, struggle, naivety and intense dislike. As
the screenplay puts microscopes onto its individual characters, it wisely
begins to intertwine their detailed personal stories in a way that justifies
several motives for committing murder, amplifying our experience from
regular viewers to investigators.
The cast is topnotch right down to the minor parts. Maggie Smith is
an Oscar contender as a snotty cousin who sometimes speaks the most
painful truth, and Kristen Scott Thomas is superb as Lady Sylvia, who
gets a little too close to a valet even when her husband is killed in
their own house. "Gosford Park" is magic from beginning to
end, a real model for the notion that it doesn't necessarily take originality
to be entertaining.
3 - Shrek
The year's greatest animated film is also one of the most amusing satires
in recent memory. "Shrek" leaped onto movie screens last May
with little promotion and hype, but almost instantly it won over audiences
with its imaginative and thought-provoking scope of storytelling, where
everything from Grimms' fairy tales to old Disney movies fell victim
to the witty and introspective sense of humor of the screenplay. No
stone was left unturned, especially when it came to poking fun at the
Mouse House cartoon clichés. Heck, even the three fairies of
"Sleeping Beauty" were doused into humiliation.
But above all else, "Shrek" wasn't just about having fun
at the expense of someone else's creations. It was about trying something
fresh and invigorating with the tired fairy tale angle, and Dreamworks
proved once and for all that they could undertake familiar territory
with an innovative twist. The look of the film is semi-PIXAR in detail
but totally unique in style, utilizing computer animation to a degree
that will likely shape the studio's future endeavors from now on. When
it comes to animation, Disney still dominates, but now, finally, they
appear to have competition.
4 - Mulholland Dr.
David Lynch isn't exactly the most coherent filmmaker of his generation,
but once "Mulholland Dr." begins to work its magic, you realize
that this is hardly a problem. The movie is a diving board for nightmarish
ideas and unconventional techniques, as we are sent face-first into
a world when nothing is certain, except for the fact that the journey
will be splintered by plots with dead ends, players with multiple identities
and images that never implement closure. But it's never boring and almost
always engrossing; not until the final frame plays out do our eyes lift
from the screen.
To prevent our senses from feeling cheated in the meantime, Lynch enlists
grade-A acting talent from several new faces, the most notable being
Naomi Watts, who may very well be on her way to an Academy Award nomination
next month. Others do an astoundingly emotional job with the spontaneous
substance they are given, and every scene stands out with energy and
beauty. This is not a movie for the casual viewer, but those who understand
(and admire) the director's past work will find this to be his greatest
endeavor yet.
5 - Bandits
Many critics lashed out at this Barry Levinson vehicle like it were
a speeding vehicle destined for a deadly crash, but "Bandits"
is far from being the mess that so many have proclaimed. Here is an
endlessly invigorating crime caper that never hesitates to deliver an
entertaining payoff, with plot twists that leave smiles on our faces,
story arcs that many of us can easily relate to, and physical comedy
situations that have us rolling in the aisles.
The script by Harley Peyton juggles several different devices into
one neat and creative package, utilizing clichés and formulas
to such a high level of energy that we don't mind the familiarity in
the least. And to top it all off, the movie employs a concluding twist
that is one of the most believable and well-executed of the genre's
recent past, allowing viewers to exit the theater uplifted rather than
disappointed. It's a wonder that more people didn't admire it.
6 - Memento
Few people have been able to stride through the last year without hearing
a word about Christopher Nolan's breakthrough feature, a massive critical
success and immediate classic in the minds of those ambitious few who
made an effort to see it last spring. On the surface, "Memento"
barely exhibits a dent of intrigue, but beneath a basic plot lies an
edifice so profoundly unconventional and effective that the script inherits
a remarkably bright sheen, keeping us focused and baited for a good
two hours. When the lights finally go up, only then do we realize why
the movie structures itself backwards; the actual beginning of the story
is much more climactic than the ending, which in turn serves as the
film's introduction. Confusing? Yes. But it's compelling all the same.
7 - From Hell
The story of Jack the Ripper was brilliantly realized in the graphic
novel "From Hell," but for once in a very long time, here
is a movie adaptation that takes the source material to a much more
intense and enthralling level. Directed by the Hughes brothers, who
are well-known for their violent (but effective) "Menace II Society,"
this is a thriller that does more than depict the literary events; it
lives and breathes them. Johnny Depp effectively plays an inspector
who combs crime scenes looking for small imperative details, and the
atmosphere he is surrounded by comes off as one of the most creepy and
unnerving settings of recent cinema history. In fact, when characters
hear footsteps in the distance, there is even an urge in us to look
over our own shoulders.
8 - Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within
Whereas "Memento" survived greatly on the basis of its offbeat
technique, "Final Fantasy" came across vigorously on two levels:
for its magnificent digital visuals as well as its sense of exciting
storytelling. Few critics saw it that way, alas (some even contend that
the plot is merely a paint-by-number endeavor to help exercise the CGI-rendered
aspect of the movie), and the film sank at the box office very fast
despite an extreme buildup of hype weeks prior. Now that it is available
on DVD, maybe those who at one point showed interest in the project
will take the opportunity to discover all of what the film has to offer.
And take it from yours truly: the list of goodies featured in this cinematic
treasure is almost endless.
9 - A.I. - Artificial Intelligence
A Spielberg and Kubrick collaboration? That question is what countless
viewers had on their mind when they went in and saw "A.I.,"
an effort that was planned by the late "Eyes Wide Shut" director,
but later passed off onto his good friend and confidant. The material
here is conveyed as if it were a synergy between these two titans of
cinema; it emphasizes subtle plot dynamics to a bizarre degree, while
the visuals are so rich and evocative that they practically jump off
of the movie screen. Ultimately, however, it all comes down to whether
or not you can accept the fact that the story provides a non-living
being with an emotional core. If you can embrace the notion, then the
movie scores. If not, you're likely to despise the director's very attempt
at trying.
10 - The Endurance
Documentaries seldom attain importance with moviegoers because they
are frequently seen as boring retellings of events we learned much about
in high school history classes. "The Endurance," however,
ultimately proved how erroneous the general consensus can be, and the
fact that it's one of the year's best movies period goes to show how
exciting the movie experience can be even when you're visiting the past.
Unlike most documentaries, however, this is a film that deals with material
so few of us are familiar with: an arctic expedition in the early 1900s
that inflicted chaos and resulted in near-fatality for a crew of ambitious
explorers. Going along with accounts from relatives of the survivors
is archival footage shot by a crew member on board the ship itself,
which is so thorough and clear for its time period that our intrigue
is raised to complete astonishment. Liam Neeson is the narrator behind
the film, and while his voice carries us through the details, the images
and retellings create a powerful human portrait that persists even after
the ship in the title crumbles under a blanket of ice.
Honorable Mentions: 2001 wasn't exactly the greatest year for
movies, but it was home to some other solid endeavors. Among them are:
Atlantis: The Lost Empire, A Beautiful Mind, Blow, Bridget Jones'
Diary, The Deep End, Ghost World, Hannibal, The Homeboy, Hedwig and
the Angry Inch, Jurassic Park III, Monster's Ball, Monsters Inc.
and The Mummy Returns.
THE WORST MOVIES OF 1998:
1 - Bubble Boy
When it comes to pathetic attempts at humor, nothing in 2001 could beat
the travesty that is "Bubble Boy," a film that was unfairly
boycotted for its use of immune deficiency in a humorous tone, but should
have been thrown into the garbage for its childish approach and lazy
direction. Jokes fly off the screen like paper airplanes with torn noses,
and then the audience is actually expected to buy into a plot that is
rendered useless by the infuriating climax. This trash is a waste of
respectable celluloid.
2 - Zoolander
It isn't much of a stretch from "Bubble Boy" in terms of stupidity,
but "Zoolander" goes beyond that to come across as one of
the most tone-deaf and lethargic comedies of recent memory. What's even
more baffling is how the film managed to score a respectable ensemble
cast, composed of Ben Stiller, Owen Wilson and Milla Jovovich and featuring
countless cameos from big-name celebrities. As you watch familiar faces
scroll through the screen, you wonder with much deliberation, "why
are the even there?" Some actors don't even have their own lines
of dialogue, leading many of us wonder if they're present simply for
the sake of preventing audience members from dozing off in complete
boredom.
3 - Freddy Got Fingered
No one likes to assume anything about a movie before they actually see
it, but few of us could get past that factor when it came to "Freddy
Got Fingered," the wild child of Tom Green's incredibly morbid
imagination. The very title of the film suggests something disturbing
about the material, and yet nothing on this planet could prepare us
for watching it unfold. Green, who directed, wrote, produced and starred
in the film, can be credited with having big enough balls to take comedy
as low as it can go, but the outcomes of his efforts are disturbing,
unfunny, creepy, callow and utterly nauseating. When he has the audacity
to swing a newborn baby around the room by the umbilical cord in the
picture, we begin to wonder if he's actually reenacting what his own
mother did to him when he was born.
4 - Glitter
As if the last few years of her music career couldn't already prove
that she lacked genuine substance, Mariah Carey had the nerve to participate
in this calamity of a film to try and prove to the world she could also
be a decent actress. Perhaps her much-publicized visits to hospitals
last summer can be attributed less to exhaustion and more to shame;
this is a movie so bad in so many ways, even its own stars wouldn't
have the guts to defend it.
5 - Pearl Harbor
It may be history, but even that doesn't excuse "Pearl Harbor"
from failing to deliver a concise direction and clear narrative. Like
"Titanic," it utilizes the love story angle to draw us into
the historical events, but whereas James Cameron's movie was also a
technical triumph, Michael Bay's endeavor is simply loud, overproduced
and annoying. A tragedy this big in US history deserved a much more
significant treatment.
In brief:
6 - Saving Silverman
Characters may be trying to save Silverman from something in this film,
but who is going to save unsuspecting viewers from watching this dreadful
experience?
7 - Along Came A Spider
Considered a prequel to the magnificent "Kiss The Girls,"
this crime thriller sees the familiar Alex Cross character wade through
a web of intrigue so muddled and senseless that not even the villain
himself seems to carry a purpose.
8 - Planet of the Apes
Tim Burton may be the most visionary director of his time, but the perspective
employed in his version of the famous "Planet of the Apes"
story detracts him from truly realizing the crucial purpose of the material.
9 - Hardball
Half sports movie, half coming-of-age story, all of it predictable and
pointless. Keanu Reeves stars in his most detestable role to date here,
a slacker with a gambling debt who hides behind negativity so heavy
that none of us are ever able to identify with him.
10 - The Princess Diaries
The ugly duckling-turned beauty queen cliché received one-too-many
screen treatments with this highly successful teen comedy from Disney,
a film that put its cuteness factor on overload and slogs its way through
so many dreary emotional moments that we end up crying for all the wrong
reasons.
Other disasters this year: A Knight's Tale, Captain Correli's
Mandolin, Scary Movie 2, Tomcats and Town and Country.
� David Keyes, CINEMA 2000. To keep
the content of these pages at near-perfect quality, please e-mail the
author here if the above review
contains any spelling or grammar mistakes. |