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At The Picture Show
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TOP 10 OVERALL
1. The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford (directed by
Andrew Dominik)
2. There Will Be Blood (directed by Paul Thomas Anderson)
3. Knocked Up (directed by Judd Apatow)
4. No Country for Old Men (directed by Joel and Ethan Coen)
5. I'm Not There (directed by Todd Haynes)
6. Grindhouse (directed by Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez)
7 (tie). Manda Bala (directed by Jason Kohn) and 12:08 East of Bucharest
(directed by Corneliu Porumboiu)
8. Hot Fuzz (directed by Edgar Wright)
9. Ratatouille (directed by Brad Bird)
10. Before the Devil Knows You're Dead (directed by Sidney Lumet)
HONORABLE MENTION
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
The King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters
La Vie en Rose
Michael Clayton
Sunshine
The Lives of Others
Paprika
Zodiac
The Aura
Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story
The Host
The Simpsons Movie
Across the Universe
Gone Baby Gone
4 Months, 3 Weeks & 2 Days
The Bourne Ultimatum
ALSO WELL WORTH CHECKING OUT
Interview, Once, The Lookout, My Kid Could Paint That, Away from Her, The
Orphanage, The Darjeeling Limited, Juno, Persepolis, Rescue Dawn, Lake of
Fire, Hairspray, Enchanted, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, Crazy
Love, Rocket Science, No End in Sight, Bee Movie, Into the Wild, Superbad,
Margot at the Wedding, Atonement, Shoot 'Em Up, 3:10 to Yuma, The Astronaut
Farmer, Dan in Real Life, American Gangster, Lars and the Real Girl, Charlie
Wilson's War, The Great Debaters, Stardust
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The best of 2007
Running down the best the year had to offer in sci-fi, fantasy and horror
Now that the Oscar nominations have been announced and the Sundance madness
has finally subsided, I can finally post (belatedly) my best-of-the-year list for
2007. As this is a specialty magazine, these are the best of the year in the
categories of science fiction, fantasy and horror . . . but my full list, just in case
you're interested, is listed as well.
Grindhouse
Directed by Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez
Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez are two fierce independents who have
gotten where they are by doing it their way. This year, they teamed up to craft a
wholly singular experience in Grindhouse - not just one movie, not just two
movies, but a fully-loaded moviegoing package. Between Rodriguez's blood-and-cheese-soaked zombie thriller Planet Terror, Tarantino's brilliant re-constructive
slasher pic Death Proof and a full slate of fake trailers that perfectly recreated
vintage styles, Grindhouse was the beautiful spawn of the two filmmakers'
respective passions.
Read full review here.
Ratatouille
Directed by Brad Bird
Brad Bird makes it 3-for-3 with Ratatouille, about a Parisian rat who longs to be a
world-class chef. Bird once again shows a great talent for fantastically eccentric
characters and a visual sophistication that rivals most live-action directors. He
greets us with a uniquely textured view of Paris and an astonishing set of character
designs - most notably the pompous food critic Mr. Ego, shaped and dressed like a
walking coffin.
Read full review here.
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
Directed by Tim Burton
Tim Burton has more stylistic versatility than many will give him credit for.
Despite his clear Gothic influences and his own visual proclivities, his best films
have always been able to stand apart, creating worlds all their own. And he's
dabbled in animation (The Nightmare Before Christmas), period-specific dark
comedy (Ed Wood), comic books (his Batman films) and has now successfully
tackled the musical form with Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street.
Flowing effortlessly between music and horror, between the hilarious and the
grotesque, Burton crafted his best film in years - trudging neck-deep in pessimism
and madness with hot, vengeful glee.
Read full review here.
Sunshine
Directed by Danny Boyle
Danny Boyle has been able to navigate from film to film over the last decade or
so, through successes and failures, without ever getting stuck in a rut. With
Sunshine, he tackled the space opera, studying a team of scientists charged with
re-igniting a dying sun to save Earth. The film examines man's ability - and
choice - to play God, using stunning images to express the characters' view of the
sun as, essentially, a supernatural entity. Suspended in the middle of space, the
characters' mission is saddled with the sense of doom from the very start and
gradually moves from suspense, to horror, to poignant moment of truth.
Read full review here.
Paprika
Directed by Satoshi Kon
Twisting and bending the various modern alliances between reality and fantasy -
in all its forms - Satoshi Kon's Paprika stands alone in the way it experiences its
characters' mindset. Because that's really what it's all about - this is a world in
which people can tap into each others' minds, dreams, nightmares until no one can
decipher between what is real and what is not. Or rather, the possibility looms that
what is real and what isn't is no longer a distinction that needs to be made.
Paprika is a visual extravaganza not for its own sake but for the story's sake, and
as such it serves its purpose as brilliantly as it can.
Read full review here.
The Host
Directed by Joon-ho Bong
Before Cloverfield's big box-office take, the Monster Movie made a comeback
with Joon-ho Bong's The Host, which hilariously doubles as an absurdist political
satire. And somehow, the film manages to make it seem emotionally relevant as
well. The Host isn't light on its message - and doesn't intend to be - but keeps us
consistently off-balance. At times, we're not sure if we should laugh hysterically
or cringe at the tragic truths that somehow arise out of a giant, carnivorous sea
monster.
Read full review here.
Across the Universe
Directed by Julie Taymor
The single most exhaustively creative (or creatively exhausting) movie of the year
was Julie Taymor's Across the Universe, a psychedelic
musical/fantasy/romance/movie-poem to the Beatles and the 1960s. So that means
it doesn't all work - and indeed, certain scenes fall flat on their face - but so much
of it works so beautifully that you'll wonder if you've ever seen anything like it.
The short answer? You haven't. Taymor's visual ideas and stylistic experiments
are astoundingly original; she brings more life to one musical number than some
directors have been able to muster their entire careers.
Read full review here.
The Orphanage
Directed by Juan Antonio Bayona
Much has been made of the recent renaissance of Spanish-language cinema, highlighted by
directors Alfonso Cuaron, Guillermo del Toro and Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu.
Though The Orphanage does boast del Toro's name as a producer, it is a film that
definitively belongs to director Juan Antonio Bayona and writer Sergio Sanchez,
who put their own stamp on the Ghost Story in this tale of a mother's grief at the
mysterious and spontaneous disappearance of her son. With an opening that
marvelously foreshadows the chilling climax, The Orphanage is sad, powerful and
classically effective horror filmmaking.
Read full review here.
Enchanted
Directed by Kevin Lima
Finally, Disney can laugh at itself - and finally, Disney has started to catch up
with the modern sensibilities that sent Pixar shooting past it more than a decade
ago. Enchanted is the kind of tongue-in-cheek cleverness that Disney's films have
been lacking for quite some time. In this case, the target is the studio's own
princess fairy-tale movies, literally brought to life as Princess Gisele (an Oscar-worthy Amy Adams) is sent out of her perfect animated world and into the rat race
of New York City. Adams and James Marsden nail the idiosyncracies of cartoon
characters with absolute precision, existing on a whole different wavelength from
the film's naturally human characters. Enchanted knows these conventions inside
and out, and uses them to its full advantage.
Read full review here.
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
Directed by David Yates
David Yates is no longer obscure. He has proven he can take over a long-established series - a series which requires visual flare, a delicate feel for action
and no shortage of special effects - without it missing a beat. Harry Potter and the
Order of the Phoenix followed up Goblet of Fire in fine style, gracefully exploring
Harry's growing alienation and a frustrating battle with the forces of bureaucracy
(personified by Imelda Staunton's brilliant turn as Dolores Umbridge) and
climaxing in an impressive series of visually bold action sequences. Of course,
he's no Cuaron . . . but his return to the director's chair for the sixth installment
will be more than welcome.
Read full review here.
Read more by Chris Bellamy