KNIVES OUT! FILMDRUNK’S TOP TEN OF ’07

01.07.08 Written by Vince Mancini

Sometimes people ask my opinion about stuff.  I like that.  Saves me the trouble of trying to get their attention through shouting and stick-pokery.  Anyway, since some people (many imagined) asked, here’s my top ten movies of 2007 that I actually saw.

1. Gone Baby Gone
Though I think the title should’ve been You Think Ya Fackin’ Betta Den Me?, a movie that keeps you talking about it after it’s over is rare. This movie did that, and was pretty damned exciting too.  2007: The Year of Affleck(s).  There, I said it.*  

2. There Will Be Blood
This was basically the Daniel Day Lewis show.  And I’m more than okay with that because dude was harsh (even if he looked like Borat and talked like Agent Smith in The Matrix).  Extra points for not welching on the promise inherent in the title.

3. Juno
Early on I was worried that this was going to be Indie-flick-by-numbers spiced up with cleverer than average dialogue.  It turned out to be a lot more than that. It managed to be hilarious and touching at the same time, and I’m pretty sure I’m really gay for saying that.  Could’ve done without the indie folk rock soundtrack in every scene though.

4. No Country for Old Men
Yeah, you could make a case for this being higher on the list and wouldn’t necessarily be wrong, but the ending pissed me off enough to drop it a few spots.  You don’t end a movie like that with SPOILER ALERT KIND OF Tommy Lee Jones talking about a dream he had, you just don’t.  Swap the last two scenes around and you’re fine.

5. The Lives of Others
Yes, I know it won an Oscar in 2006, but it wasn’t released in the US until 2007. Anyway, great flick. The entire time I couldn’t stop thinking about that quote about how German toilets are the key to the horrors of the Third Reich.

6. Knocked Up
"It’s doggy style – it’s just a style, we don’t have to go outside."  So many classic lines.  The argument that it’s somehow sexist is retarded – for one thing, Paul Rudd’s daughter is the funniest person in the movie.  It would make the list for the security guard monologue alone.

7. Superbad
Maybe not as straight up funny as Knocked Up, but there was just something endearing about it that made you forgive a joke if it wasn’t up to par.  It was sort of a throwback to 80s comedies or Tommy Boy – a movie doesn’t have to be perfect to be a classic.  "You know how many foods are shaped like cocks? ALL THE GOOD ONES!"  

8. Ratatouille
I’m not sure how I feel about Patton doing anything but stand-up (of which he is undisputed king, in my mind), but for what it was, Ratatouille was impressive on every level. Pixar has somehow uncovered the secret to making kids movies you don’t have to be super high to enjoy (though it always helps). They keep pumping these out and Tim Allen can go back to obscurity where he belongs.

9. American Gangster
Solid story, solid ensemble – plus it was nice to see that Ridley Scott has grown out of shakey cam/cut to closeups of random objects-style action sequences.  Take a lesson, Peter Berg, annoying camera work is the only reason The Kingdom isn’t on the list.  

10. Hot Fuzz
I loved this, and I hated Shaun of the Dead. So much to like in this one – ripping on cheesy action flicks, a South Park-esque plot, a guy getting a model skyscraper impaled through the mouth – how could it not be on the list?  

 

Movies that looked good that I haven’t seen yet:
Sweeney Todd
– I can’t imagine a musical making the list, but I thought I’d mention not having seen it in case it changes my life. Assassination of Jesse James etc. etc. – supposed to be good, I guess. Into the Wild – I’ve heard this is good, but, as they say, I’m missing a little information here

 

Movies You’re Smoking Rock if You Put on Your Top Ten List List
A top ten shittiest movies list would be sort of pointless, what with so many shitty movies out this (and every) year, I thought a most overrated list would be far more relevant.

Atonement
It didn’t look like something I’d like, but I went because of all the buzz, the awards nominations, its inclusion on so many people’s best of ’07 list, etc. Let me be the first to tell you, this movie sucked harder than a Dyson vacuum cleaner made of Nic Cage.  After they got done setting up the premise that you already assume from the trailer, the plot went absolutely nowhere.  It was a love story about two people who were on screen together for maybe five minutes total, and the rest was faux-profound, tangential fluff.  She’s scrubbing her hands, but they won’t come clean - OH THE SYMBOLISM! An old woman pushing a cart – so meaningful! Barf barf barf.  And then a wannabe "twist" ending that managed to be both completely predictable and totally unsatisfying.  It was only out of morbid curiosity that I stayed until the end.

Darjeeling Limited
A film school movie that looked pretty but had nothing to say. And no, "I like India!" doesn’t count.  I used to be a Wes Anderson defender, now I’m not so sure. Your pretentious friend with the scarf probably loved it. Should’ve made Hotel Chevalier and left it at that.

Eastern Promises
Not bad, persay, but extremely overrated.  Dude, it’s 2007, we choreograph fight scenes now.  The beauty of David Cronenberg is usually the hyperrealistic violence – a high-school-video-productions-quality fight scene takes away from that.  Plus it just wasn’t that interesting.

 

*Note to Boston people: I bust your balls because I envy the fact that your city has an identity and inhabits such a cool place in pop culture, not because I dislike you.  Plus, your accents make everything funny. Also, I think Dennis Lehane has child rape issues.

Everyone ready to discuss?  Knives out!

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10 BEST OF 2007

12.18.07 Written by Vince Mancini

The new Rolling Stone came out this week, with Peter Travers’ list of the 10 best movies of 2007 (one of many 10 best lists).  His list:

1. No Country For Old Men
2. Atonement
3. Into the Wild
4. Eastern Promises
5. Sweeney Todd
6. American Gangster
7. There Will Be Blood
8. Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead
9. I’m Not There
10. tie between Knocked Up and Juno

I haven’t seen all of these and some of them aren’t out yet, but a couple things jump out. Like, why isn’t Gone, Baby, Gone on anyone’s best of ’07 list? Yeah, it was an Affleck project; it was also better than the movie that won him an Oscar and at least deserving of a spot in the top ten. Knocked Up and Juno also deserve their own spots, and what about Superbad?  Even when it wasn’t hitting on all cylinders it still had that Tommy Boy-esque likability factor that most comedies these days are missing.  And Eastern Promises, really? Seems to be on everyone’s best of list, but I don’t get it. I like Cronenberg, but this ain’t his best movie. One of the few scenes with action (the naked fight scene) was laughably bad. I’m not saying every movie has to be Jackie Chan, but I would like to get the sense of how something could actually happen rather than just a montage of grunting and Viggo’s balls flopping around.

One thing we can agree on: Travers’ "Michael Bay Award For Worst Soul-Sucking, Dumb-Ass Bottom Feeder" that he gives to Pirates of the Caribbean 3. Amen. I actually forgot that came out in ’07 – I think I repressed it like the time I got molested.

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SCORSESE AND DICAPRIO DO LEHANE

10.23.07 Written by Vince Mancini

Marty sleeps inside a pocket watch in Leo\'s waistcoat

BFFs Marty Scorsese and Leo DiCaprio will be teaming up again for Dennis Lehane’s (Mystic River, Gone, Baby, Gone) Shutter Island, which I’m assuming somehow involves murder and child rape.

Drama is set in 1954, with DiCaprio in final talks to play U.S. Marshal Teddy Daniels, who is investigating the disappearance of a murderess who escaped from a hospital for the criminally insane and is presumed to be hiding on the remote Shutter Island. [Variety]

Okay, so I was half right (though it doesn’t say whether the murderee was a child or if it had been raped first), and of course it’s going to be set in Bawston, like Mystic River and Gone, Baby, Gone*.  Meanwhile, Scorsese’s still mulling my autobiographical script about a muscular ninja who escapes from a hospital for the criminally handsome in a sequined spaceship that crash lands on Planet Awesome, where he wrestles chicks and bangs tigers.  

*Which I think should’ve been titled You Think Ya Fackin Betta Den Me?

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GOT ANY AFFLECK IN YOU, QUEAH?

09.28.07 Written by Vince Mancini

Party Time.

Collider has a bunch of clips (click here to see them) from Gone Baby Gone, the directorial debut of Ben Affleck, starring Casey, his ill bro’, or "kid brotha" as they say in Beantown.

Ben Affleck co-wrote the script, based on a novel by Dennis Lehane, who also wrote Mystic River.  It also stars Ed Harris, Michelle Monaghan, and Morgan Freeman.  Release is set for October 19th.

It’s interesting to note that, unlike Run, Fatboy, Run, they chose not to punctuate the title. But I read in National Geographic that everyone from Boston is borderline illiterate, so I suppose it makes sense.  Also interesting to note that the title is a reference to a Violent Femmes song, which was the Afflecks’ nickname in high school.

Also, Casey won 2nd place in the "World’s Most Effeminate Names" contest we held in the abandoned hospital. First place? Jamie.

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