Fandango Groover posted his life in movies recently and thus laid down a challenge seemingly to all movie bloggers everywhere. So here's my offering to this viral sensation. May 22nd 2011.
My favourite movies, 1 per year, 1982 to 2010
1982 - Blade RunnerAn obvious choice, as it's one of my favourite movies of all time. Ridley Scott created something incredible and then revisited time and again to make it perfect. Others may always think of Harrison Ford as Han Solo but for me first and foremost he will always be Deckard, chasing and being chased through a derelict building in the rain by Rutger Hauer in Blade Runner. Sean Young is mesmerising in her beauty and even now, nearly 30 years later the effects have barely dated.
1983 - Star Wars Episode VI Return of the JediTurns out that I haven't watched too many films from 1983. But even if I had, I don't think there would be much to compare to this film. One of the finest opening sequences in cinematic history, well at least for those involved with the characters. A prison break to beat all others; you can find more in those 45 minutes or so to love than most movies give you in at least twice that long. And then there's the Ewoks dancing. The recent update that forced Haydn Christensen on us has to be added to Guido shooting first in the list of latter Lucas atrocities in my mind at least.
1984 - Ghost Busters1984 gave me a lot to choose from, Alex Cox made
Repo Man,
The Terminator was released, John Hughes had
Sixteen Candles, the original
Karate Kid was fighting for honour, Gizmo made his debut in
Gremlins, Axel Foley did the same in
Beverly Hills Cop not to mention Indy in
Temple of Doom,
Spinal Tap, the first Cohen Bros movie
Blood Simple and the Wim Wenders classic
Paris, Texas but how can anybody not choose Ghost Busters?
Bill Murray may have achieved great things after this but for pretty much everyone else this was a career high point and for me a movie that I have loved as a kid, a teen, a film student and a blogger.
1985 - The Breakfast ClubNothing compares to this movie, the ultimate teen flick. When I saw this for the first time I was hooked. I started to feel better about myself, I started to watch films for different reasons, started to ask more questions and demand more from what I saw. Even now I love watching this movie. It's impact on the genre is immeasurable, everything since has copied an stolen from it in one way or another.
1986 - AliensIt doesn't exactly have to beat off stiff competition but
Ferris Bueller pulled out every last piece of ingenuity he had to win this vote and still the second Alien movie won.
Platoon was a fine movie but it doesn't get better the more you watch it like Aliens does. And well
Blue Velvet is just too damned weird to be classed as a favourite.
Aliens is the best of the franchise, for me it adds something to the mix that the original just couldn't find.
1987 - Angel HeartWhilst I was very tempted to choose
The Brave Little Toaster based on how much I enjoyed it as a kid it can't be my favourite because I simply have no desire to watch it again (at least not until I have my own kids.) And I desperately want to see Wim Wenders'
Wings of Desire which I think will surpass the quality of Angel Heart but until then Alan Parker's ultra dark noir wins, not least for starring Mickey Rourke before he got a little bit crazy.
1988 - Die HardNot a tough call this one, Die Hard is amazing and much like 1983 there was a distinct paucity in quality this year.
Akira,
A Fish Called Wanda,
High Hopes,
Roger Rabbit and
Beetlejuice were all released in 1988 but a comparison to Bruce Willis makes for an obvious winner. Yippee Ki-yay!
1989 - Do The Right ThingInitially this was a tough year to call, once more due to a lack of obvious choices but then I remembered just how incredible this little film by Spike Lee was the first time I saw it and every time since.
You may ask how I can overlook
Batman or Sean Connery in
Indiana Jones but I was closer to choosing Jim Jarmusch's
Mystery Train or
When Harry Met Sally (yeah I still love this movie, it's very funny and incredibly sweet) over those two.
1990 - GoodfellasAgain, there's no real competition, this movie is solid gold, even on repeat viewings there's so much to enjoy, but remember the first time you saw it, wow!
I honestly thought there would be no competition but other bloggers haven't picked it so my searching around to see if any other movie could compare was a bit pointless.
The Grifters was hugely enjoyable,
Life Is Sweet was lovely, Arnie was badass in
Total Recall and
Miller's Crossing is a fine film but none of them had the same effect on me as Goodfellas.
1991 - The Silence of The LambsTough. Very tough.
Slacker was hugely influential to me as a wannabe film maker,
T2 was explosive and all round awesome when i saw it on VHS and
Delicatessen is perhaps Jeunet's finest film but the very first time I saw Silence of the Lambs I was hooked. Three amazing characters that you just can't turn away, Anthony Hopkins as Hannibal Lecter is obviously much discusses and Jodie Foster was the perfect mix of strength and vulnerability up against Ted Levine as the excellently creepy and fucked up Jame Gumb. Superb thriller, almost unmatched in it's genre.
1992 - Reservoir Dogs1992! A watershed year, the year a new generation of film maker came to prominence, the Sundance kids? Plus RDJ as
Chaplin, Stephen Rea wanting to sleep with a transvestite in
The Crying Game, the most absurd Oscar winner of all time starring in
My Cousin Vinny and Robert Altman's
The Player. But I don't think you can beat Reservoir Dogs for influence on me as a viewer or as a film maker. The dialogue and the non linear narrative were a revelation to my teenage mind.
1993 - Jurassic ParkOMGosh 1993 featured Bill Murray in
Groundhog Day, Tony Scott directing the best Tarantino script
True Romance and David Thewlis in
Naked. But the feeling I got watching Jurassic Park as a 10 year old can't be matched. Even now 18 years later the first time you see the dinosaurs at the lake is still completely magical.
1994 - Pulp FictionI seriously found this one difficult. I knew Pulp Fiction was gonna be 1994 before I even got to checking what other movies might've come close. Then I discovered quite a few of my all time favourite movies were also released that year.
Chungking Express is wonderfully sweet and melancholy and a really exciting piece of cinema for a film student, i'm pretty certain you won't be able to find a person alive who saw
Shawshank Redemption and didn't find it utterly compelling viewing, Jean Reno as
Leon is fabulous, I still quote
The Lion King on a regular basis, Nigel Hawthorne was outstanding in
The Madness of King George and Danny Boyle made his debut with
Shallow Grave. I don't think it's very fair that they had to come up against Pulp Fiction really.
1995 - Toy StoryWhat the hell happened in the mid 90's? Another seriously strong year for films.
Twelve Monkeys was so close to getting the nod before Leah reminded me that Toy Story was released. I don't think i've seen any movie as much as i've seen Toy Story. A movie that has everything and is infinitely quotable. But it wasn't just Twelve Monkeys, you can't look at 1995 without considering just how good movies like
Seven, Casino, Heat, Usual Suspects, Braveheart, Before Sunrise, City of Lost Children, Leaving Las Vegas, Welcome to the Dollhouse and
Die Hard 3 were.
1996 - ScreamScream wins by simple fact that it's both awesome and amazing at the same time. A real defining moment in my film viewing life. Sure I saw
Independence Day 4 times at the cinema and
Fargo might be the Coen Brothers best film of the 90's, Billy Bob Thornton was superb in
Sling Blade,
Secrets & Lies just might well be up there with Brief Encounter as one of my favourite movies ever, the phrase money baby was invented in
Swingers along with Vince Vaughn and
Jerry Maguire was showing me the money. All of these movies might have been my choice in most other years but the sheer pleasure I got from watching Scream throughout 1997 and how fondly I remember it means nothing else really had a chance.
1997 - L.A. ConfidentialThe year my two passions clashed harder than an iceberg and a ship. 4 very good science fiction movies -
Gattaca, Fifth Element, Contact and
Cube came up against the finest noir film in many many years and lost to the better film. Also in the running, taking shots from a sniper rifle was
Grosse Point Blank, the cool Fincher thriller
The Game and Tkeshi Kitano's wonderfully beautiful
Hana-Bi. There are not many noir films better than L.A. Confidential however, an extremely well made movie of the excellent James Ellroy novel.
1998 - The Big LebowskiIt was a straight run between
Dark City and The Dude but there is a line and across that line you do not as Walter might say, sorry scream. Dark City is a superb piece of science fiction however. So in a distant 3rd place race you'll find such fabulous work as
Happiness and
Elizabeth.
1999 - Ghost Dog: Way of the SamuraiTres tres difficult.
Fight Club was amazing,
The Limey is amazing,
American Beauty was amazing,
The Boondock Saints is so totally badass,
Being John Malkovich boggles the mind, The Matrix was truly groundbreaking to me then but has since been shown up to be a bunch of cool stuff stolen from other people so it is Jim Jarmusch that steals the crown with the superb Forrest Whittaker starring Ghost Dog. Cool, violent, meditative and recalling the superb Melville noir Le Samourai.
2000 - Amores PerrosNew millenium, drop in quantity of quality of films. Or at least from American film makers maybe. Lukas Moodysson released
Together, Fukasaku made
Battle Royale and Wong Kar-Wai had
In The Mood For Love but the debut from Innaritu was incredible.
It's use of multiple storylines colliding with a devastating car crash was later echoed by the Hollywood film Crash. Gael Garcia Bernal jumped out of the screen burning himself in to the minds of viewers around the world as the lovestruck Octavio. An often bleak and disturbing look at love and loss that stays with you for a long long time after the credits roll.
2001 - Monsters Inc.Donnie Darko,
Spirited Away, Amelie, Mulholland Drive and
The Royal Tenenbaums, what do these movies have in common? They are all superb pieces of film making, rightly hailed by film critics and fans around the world. AND none of them can compete with Monsters Inc. for my affection.
The vocal pairing of Billy Crystal and John Goodman is excellent, packed with charisma and displaying an obvious chemistry, combining to make their double act extremely funny in what was yet another superb Pixar film. Dreamworks really look so trashy in comparison don't they.
2002 - Infernal AffairsDirty Pretty Things, Adaptation, City of God. Fabulously dark, willfully bizarre and truly moving & exhausting film making in that order. BUT the first part of the Infernal Affairs trilogy was without doubt a movie event for me and my buddies at uni. Taking it's cue from Hard Boiled this was an exceptional piece of crime genre film making with an all star Chinese cast and a sense of class missing from the Scorsese remake.
2003 - Finding NemoKill Bill, Oldboy, Spring Summer Autumn Winter and Spring, Lost In Translation, 21 Grams, Last Life In The Universe, I am not exaggerating by saying that these films are some of my absolute favourite and most enjoyable pieces of cinema by some supremely talented film makers and I would be hard pressed to choose my favourite from any of them.
However Ellen De Generes as Dory and Albert Brooks as Marlin is the best comedy/movie double act since Crystal and Goodman. Another infinitely quotable movie and another beautiful film from the talent at Pixar.
2004 - Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless MindNarrowly beating out the finest piece of film making on WWII that i've ever seen,
Downfall, and the hauntingly beautiful Kim Ki-Duk film
3-Iron, not to ignore
Garden State or
Shaun of the Dead, is the fabulous Jim Carrey starring, Michel Gondry directed, Charlie Kaufman written love story with a difference, Eternal Sunshine. Blown away the very first time I saw it, I was completely outraged that Jim Carrey didn't win an Oscar for his performance.
2005 - Sin City
Not a huge amount that really jumped out and screamed pick me this year. having said that Sin City is a fabulous piece of noir film making. So much fun and so so stylish.
If I was gonna pick something else it would be the comic noir
Kiss Kiss Bang Bang, as my friend Kat said to me today, the last remaining reason not to hate Val Kilmer. And wasn't this the film that gave us back RDJ?
2006 - Clerks IIThe original film was robbed as my choice for 1994 because it had the misfortune of going up against Pulp Fiction, no such fate can befall the sequel in 2006. A particularly weak year of films fer sure but Clerks II for me was a truly enjoyable film. It feels like a movie made by a group of friends just having fun with things, like Kevin Smith just relaxed and let his much loved characters run wild. And the gratuitous choreographed dance scene a la Austin Powers is wonderful.
Two films that came close were the exceptional
Pan's Labyrinth and the much fun
Stranger Than Fiction and recently I saw the beautifully shot fable
The Fall.
2007 - There Will Be Blood2007 was a big year for great films, at the time I felt that
No Country For Old Men was unsurpassable for example but I must've watched and watched and watched
Superbad.
Juno was utterly charming,
Eastern Promises the best film about London I remember seeing and
The Darjeeling Limited is Wes Andersons finest work.
But still the more time that passes, the better There Will be Blood becomes in my mind. The opening 40 or so minutes are totally mesmerising, the absence of dialogue only serves to heighten the enjoyment, to the point where you only realise that nobody has spoken until somebody actually speaks. From what i've read of the source material this is largely Paul Thomas Andersons work too. Triple thumbs up for the work of Daniel Day Lewis also.
2008 - The Dark KnightThe year of Dark Knight really. I was completely amazed by the movie, Heath Ledger as the joker was like nothing i'd seen before. Especially after the Jack Nicholson joker! A dark multi layered comic book film from Chris Nolan, regardless of whether Batman can turn his head or not.
Mentions to
Wall-E and
In Bruges both of which in another year might've been selected for being yet another fabulous Pixar film and a delightfully dark and fun hitman movie respectively. I am also counting
Hurt Locker and
Gran Torino as 2009 because they were not released in the UK until 2009.
2009 - GamerOMGosh, I LOVE THIS MOVIE. Neveldine and Taylor created the best near future science fiction film imaginable. Every single aspect of the science fiction was spot on accurate in a myspace/facebook version of Running Man with Gerard Butler perfect in his role of grunting muscle bound killing machine Cable. In a world where people are making films like Surrogates and Source Code movies that actually get it right should be celebrated.
Hurt Locker, Hangover, Gran Torino, District 9, Star Trek, Fantastic Mr Fox, Moon, Jennifer's Body, An Education. Holy cow 2009 made up for the lack of films in 2008 didn't it.
2010 - InceptionLiterally I have no idea how Inception isn't everybody's choice for 2010, it was a phenomenal experience and an exceptionally unique piece of film making.
Toy Story 3 was great for all the reasons the first one was and then some, the Coens remake of
True Grit had me enthralled for the entirety and
Scott Pilgrim whilst not being everybodys cup of tea was top quality film making that entertains throughout, in the cinema I was struggling for breath I was laughing so much with no sign of a letup.