So yesterday someone I used to work with posted on Facebook a link to an online story from Entertainment Weekly titled "Blockbuster Video: 10 Things We Won't Miss" by one James Hibberd. As you may or may not know, Blockbuster Video has decided to close up it's remaining 300 stores (they used to have about 9000 of them!) by January of 2014. I know what you're thinking; "I thought Blockbuster died a few years ago". Well, in Canada, it did, but some of the franchises in the States remained open. Anyway, I read the article online, (this is it if you'd like to read it in it's entirety http://popwatch.ew.com/2013/11/06/blockbuster-video-we-wont-miss/) and I became more and more angry as I went on, being a former employee of Big Blue for eight years and all. I thought I'd try and tell y'all why, and maybe if one of you can let James Hibberd know he's a douchebag in the process that'd be good! I will start by showing each point he makes and follow each point with why he's a knob...enjoy.
1. The wrong movie is in the box. These first few entries listed could be said about video stores in general. But once Blockbuster Video conquered the known video rental world, Blockbuster Video was “the video store.” The company became synonymous with what a video store is, and its downfall is largely because it kept being just a video store. So these are fair game. So: You get home from Blockbuster. You have your overpriced 2-liter soda and movie-theater-sized box of Skittles and your movie. You go to the DVD player and open the box. And then:“WHERE IS STARSHIP TROOPERS? THIS IS FLATLINERS!”
First of all, stop using "so" to begin your sentences, that's my thing! I can understand his first point here. There were many times we had to issue credits because a lazy employee would not open the case to verify the correct movie was in it. If this happened to you once, I apologize on behalf of all video store employees around the world, it was our mistake. If it happened to you more than once, you're a moron! Would it not be on you, as the customer, to check to see if you are receiving the right title? When Blockbuster was a busy place, we would have to go through hundreds, sometimes thousands, of movie cases in as short a period of time as possible when returning them from the drop-box so that you guys could have them on the floor to rent again...occasionally one or two mistakes would happen. And, we actually adopted a policy to not check the title in the box in order to get you out the door faster, because we all know that's what you guys wanted anyway...spend an hour looking for the award winning "Starship Troopers" and no more than four seconds to pay and get out! Oh, by the way, it was a stupid customer that put the wrong disc in the wrong case to begin with!
2. The scavenger hunt. The clerk’s computer says there’s one copy of Office Space in the store. But its not where it should be on the shelf. Maybe it’s behind another movie? Maybe its stacked in the wrong category? It couldn’t be under “Drama” could it? “Where is it? You said you had a copy in stock. Where is it!?” So you go on a scavenger hunt around the store with the clerk trying to find that missing copy of Office Space because you’re really in the mood for Office Space and your heart was set on watching it. The best part of this is when the poor schlub clerk gets on his hands and knees and goes through the return bin to see if it’s buried under copies ofTitanic. Then he finally says maybe Office Space was stolen. STOLEN. You know, like your time.
Love this one...it's as though the staff had the time to put the wrong movie behind the wrong cover box just to watch and laugh at the customer trying to find it. Again, this happened because of the customer. They would hold three or four selections, find something else they wanted and put one of those original selections behind the cover of the last movie they picked out. You think your time was wasted trying to find these titles??? Ha!! Nothing I liked more than trying to locate "The Land Before Time Part 72" for someone in the kids section on a Saturday night when they could have rented just about any other kids' movie to keep their little rugrat quiet for two hours.
3. The unkind. Now we’re going way back: Blockbuster was normally pretty decent about staying on top of this, but we can’t do a post on video store gripes without mentioning those VCR tapes that were not rewound. “Be Kind, Rewind.” Also: Scratched /unplayable rentals.
Again, customer interference. I could never, ever understand why someone would rent a video, watch it and not press the rewind button on their VCR. Never, never, never. But, returning four hundred movies at a time through our drop-box, we would easily find 25% of them not rewound...because that extra 60 seconds of having to wait for the VCR to rewind it was far too much to handle for the customer. We had those little box rewinders going all day in our stores. And scratched DVDs? You should have seen some of the DVDs we would get back. They looked like someone took a steak knife to them just to see how much damage they could do. We had people tell us they ran over the disc in their car......WHAT!?!? What the hell are you people doing? And why would you ever let your 2 year-old child handle our merchandise? Drove us crazy! Oh, and try to explain to a customer that there may be a problem with their VCR/DVD player. Holy shit! That was like saying "The DVD plays fine, and by the way, I raped your mother!".
4. The New Releases mirage. Blockbuster-specific gripes now: You think you’re not too late to get a copy of The Fellowship of the Ring even though its Friday night and it just came out this week, because there’s a whole section of the New Releases wall filled with copies of the film. But remember: The movie artwork boxes are hollow. The boxes with the actual discs are in the Blockbuster boxes behind the artwork boxes. None of the false-front boxes have movies behind them. It’s a trick! The display wall is a total mirage. Blockbuster succeeded in looking fully stocked with the latest movies, even when there’s not one copy in the store. Fooled you! Now go see if a copy of Legend is in, loser!
The writer of this article started off by saying Blockbuster was the "company that squashed countless local mom-and-pop video stores". You mean those stores that would have three copies of the newest releases for you to rent on the first Friday night of release? Blockbuster would have dozens, sometimes hundreds of copies of the biggest new release...that released every Tuesday. Why, oh, why would customers wait until the first Friday night to try and rent these titles? Oh, you may miss your episode of "The Biggest Loser" on TV that night, so you have to wait to watch the latest huge video release on the weekend. You and about five thousand other people we would see on a Friday night!! "What do you mean you're out of copies of The Fellowship Of The Ring at 9pm on a Friday night?!". Seriously?!? We had 164 copies that were rented out by 5pm...deal with it and rent something else, jackass! And the false boxes were there to show you how many copies we had, not had in, big difference that most of the world understood.
5. Late fees. Of course. Late fees. Once you rented a Blockbuster video, the clock was ticking. You better watch it the first night, especially if it was a coveted New Release. Those dollar-a-day fees stack up quick. And there’s an unholy checking-account-crippling $60-80 full replacement fee lurking if you ever actually lost one of those boxes. For all their brightly lit stores, Blockbuster Video operated like the grim gang in Goodfellas: “Oh you forgot to return a DVD by midnight? F–k you, pay me! You returned it with the wrong disc? F–k you, pay me!”
Yes, you'd better watch it in a day, or else we wouldn't have any of The Fellowship Of The Ring to rent to you on that Friday night...see how this all works, James? Please, take our movie for a night and return it to us four weeks from now without any penalty. Oh, you want to reimburse us for the lost revenue from you having our product sit on your fireplace mantle for all that time? No, please, it was our pleasure. (Is my sarcasm coming through?). I like your use of the Goodfellas quote, because that's exactly how we felt! Does it really take eighteen days to watch Billy Madison, James...does it?? F--k you, pay me!
6. Prudishness. You had to get your porn elsewhere. Okay. But even NC-17 films of some artistic/entertainment merit were banned by the chain in the 1990s, which was yet another blow against studios looking for a way to distribute NC-17 films. In other words: If you really wanted to appreciate Elizabeth Berkley causing a minor tsunami in a swimming pool in Showgirls, you couldn’t get it at Blockbuster.
I must say, I agree with you on this one. Blockbuster in the States would be hugely against any film that contained questionable values. Up here in Canada, we didn't have too much of a problem with that. We may have less copies of said movies, and they'd be positioned high on the New Release wall, away from the precious eyes of your six year-old, but we'd have 'em. Another reason why Canada is so much better than the U.S.. (Crap, I may have opened up a can of worms with that).
7. Indie/foreign film? Ha! It’s called Blockbuster Video for a reason, film geek. You want an art film, or something with subtitles, you best go someplace else. But Blockbuster will have 71 copies of Enemy of the State.
Well, you said it yourself, it's called Blockbuster Video for a reason. Although, again, up here in Canada, Blockbuster enrolled in many programs that would see our stores stocked with a number of great Festival winners and Foreign classics, of which 98% of the customers would ignore for Enemy Of The State.
8. Those uniforms. During its heyday, Blockbuster had Disney-style clean-cut rules for its employees, who also had to wear pretty dorky uniforms (rather than dress like, you know, normal people, like at indie video and record stores). A group of employees actually sued Blockbuster for a 1994 policy that banned male employees from having long hair...
You're right, we should have dressed up in our ripped jeans, our Megadeth t-shirts, our spiked hair and face jewelery sticking out of our cheeks and eyebrows. No customer would have had a problem with that back in the '90's. Our uniforms did become more lax as the years went on, but there's nothing wrong with looking like you work somewhere when you work somewhere! Did you also want us to tell you what a dufus you were for thinking Little Nicky was the greatest movie ever? I mean to your face, of course.
9. Stagnation. When it comes to resisting change, Blockbuster critics point to the company being too slow to react to the rise of DVD-by-mail services and online streaming (Netflix was operating for six years before Blockbuster got in the movie-by-mail service game — which is astounding). But the company was slow to embrace other changes too that made even its core business pretty lousy. From shifting from VCR tapes to DVD. From pan-and-scan format videos to widescreen/letterbox. From DVD to Blu-ray. Being a Blockbuster customer who actually loved movies, and therefore loved improvements in the way movies were formatted or displayed, meant always being frustrated or disappointed because the company seemed reluctant to stock titles and formats until most of their customers were demanding the new versions. You never really got the feeling Blockbuster, as a company,loved, or even understood, movies. It’s like the way rental discs were given to customers in generic Blockbuster boxes stripped of their original packaging — you felt like you were renting a product unit, not a piece of commercial art.
Once again, purely an American thing here. I was there when DVD took over VHS. We were right on top of it, and it only made sense at the time. DVDs were much cheaper, took up less space on the racks, were more durable (unless you used them as coasters for your glasses that inexplicably had nails protruding from them) and they had room for more data for things like special features and audio tracks. Blu-ray was a slower process because it was a slower conversion from DVD to Blu-ray. But Blockbuster didn't care about the person who needed the newest of the new technology the first day it was released. We cared about the masses...and the business was hugely successful because of it. We didn't dictate to our customers what format they should have. We listened when the vast majority of our customers said they weren't going to get a Blu-ray player right away because they didn't want to spend, at the time, thousands of dollars for a new player and a HDTV. And why would we let you have the original packaging to our movies? So you could destroy them as well, making it near impossible to sell the movie off at a later date?
10. Then everything fell apart. First standards were allowed to slip a little. Remember how Blockbuster went from having every video displayed with the box cover facing toward you? And then all of a sudden stores starting stacking DVDs like library books to pile more in? And there was also the surge of video games, which was understandable. But then, during the final recent years of Blockbuster, the stores began to stock all sort of random items, whether they had something to do with movies or games or not. Posters, stuffed animals, T-shirts, toys. The stores went from creepily anti-septic and strictly regimented environments to random flea markets peddling anything to survive.
"...peddling anything to survive"...exactly. We had to. Why? Because you, the customer, were beginning to illegally download everything you could. We had to pile up our titles because it was never enough for you...we only had so much square footage in the store. We tried and tried to meet your ever increasing demands but it was just never enough. And now look where we are.
I loved being part of the movie rental business for nearly twenty years (eight at Blockbuster, but stints at Jumbo, Ambassador and Rogers as well). I loved to talk movies with people and watch thousands of movies for free. There were some horrible customers, as in any retail environment, that could ruin your day, but they were a very small minority. Most of the people that came through our stores were happy, friendly and accepting to any recommendations we had. Here are my ten reasons why I will miss Blockbuster:
1) Free movies
2 - 9) The people!
10) Making fun of people like you after they leave the store!
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Sunday, November 10, 2013
Sunday, November 3, 2013
My Faves - Wrapped Up!
For your easy perusal, my list of movies that I rated 10 out of 10 on imdb.com. I hope you had fun going through my series, agreeing or disagreeing, it's all good 'cause that's the great thing about movies...everybody has a different take on them. I'll list my top choices again, then I'll list the movies that just missed, ones I rated 9 out of 10, in case you were wondering. After this post starts the real fun; movies I rated 1 out of 10, the worst of the worst. I plan on getting angry with some of those entries, so be ready for some vulgar language!
10 out of 10's
Ok, that's 104 titles that I gave a perfect score. Out of 2,546 titles I've rated on imdb.com, that comes out to 4% of all my ratings. I feel that's not too bad. Now, the longer list, my 9 out of 10's:
10 out of 10's
- The General (1926)
- City Lights (1931)
- The 39 Steps (1935)
- The Adventures Of Robin Hood (1938)
- The Wizard Of Oz (1939)
- Citizen Kane (1941)
- Casablanca (1942)
- Double Indemnity (1944)
- Brief Encounter (1945)
- It's A Wonderful Life (1946)
- The Third Man (1949)
- Rashomon (1950)
- Strangers On A Train (1951)
- Singin' In The Rain (1952)
- On The Waterfront (1954)
- Rear Window (1954)
- Seven Samurai (1954)
- La Strada (1954)
- 12 Angry Men (1957)
- The Bridge On The River Kwai (1957)
- Touch Of Evil (1958)
- Some Like It Hot (1959)
- The Apartment (1960)
- Psycho (1960)
- Lawrence Of Arabia (1962)
- Dr. Strangelove (1964)
- A Man For All Seasons (1966)
- The Good, The Bad And The Ugly (1966)
- The Graduate (1967)
- Once Upon A Time In The West (1968)
- Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid (1969)
- The French Connection (1971)
- The Godfather (1972)
- The Exorcist (1973)
- The Sting (1973)
- The Conversation (1974)
- Chinatown (1974)
- The Godfather, Part II (1974)
- Young Frankenstein (1974)
- Jaws (1975)
- Dog Day Afternoon (1975)
- One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest (1975)
- Taxi Driver (1976)
- All The President's Men (1976)
- Rocky (1976)
- Annie Hall (1977)
- Star Wars (1977)
- Close Encounters Of The Third Kind (1977)
- The Deer Hunter (1978)
- Manhattan (1979)
- Kramer Vs. Kramer (1979)
- The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
- The Blues Brothers (1980)
- Airplane! (1980)
- Raging Bull (1980)
- Raiders Of The Lost Ark (1981)
- E.T. - The Extra-Terrestrial (1982)
- This Is Spinal Tap (1984)
- The Terminator (1984)
- Back To The Future (1985)
- The Princess Bride (1987)
- Wings Of Desire (1988)
- A Fish Called Wanda (1988)
- Die Hard (1988)
- Field Of Dreams (1989)
- Do The Right Thing (1989)
- Crimes And Misdemeanors (1989)
- Cinema Paradiso (1989)
- Goodfellas (1990)
- The Silence Of The Lambs (1991)
- Reservoir Dogs (1992)
- The Player (1992)
- Jurassic Park (1993)
- Dazed And Confused (1993)
- Schindler's List (1993)
- In The Name Of The Father (1993)
- The Shawshank Redemption (1994)
- Pulp Fiction (1994)
- Toy Story (1995)
- Fargo (1996)
- Boogie Nights (1997)
- Jackie Brown (1997)
- The Big Lebowski (1998)
- Rushmore (1998)
- Lock, Stock And Two Smoking Barrels (1998)
- Almost Famous (2000)
- Unbreakable (2000)
- Finding Nemo (2003)
- Lost In Translation (2003)
- Kill Bill: Vol. 1 (2003)
- Kill Bill: Vol. 2 (2004)
- Collateral (2004)
- The Curse Of The Were-Rabbit (2005)
- Once (2006)
- The Fall (2006)
- The Visitor (2007)
- Wall-E (2008)
- Up (2009)
- Fantastic Mr. Fox (2009)
- The Trotsky (2009)
- Kick-Ass (2010)
- Rush: Beyond The Lighted Stage (2010)
- Toy Story 3 (2010)
- Inception (2010)
Ok, that's 104 titles that I gave a perfect score. Out of 2,546 titles I've rated on imdb.com, that comes out to 4% of all my ratings. I feel that's not too bad. Now, the longer list, my 9 out of 10's:
- The Gold Rush (1925) - Charlie Chaplin eating shoes; dancing dinner rolls
- The Bride Of Frankenstein (1935) - awesome special effects for it's time
- Bringing Up Baby (1938) - great comedy with Hepburn and Grant
- The Lady Vanishes (1938) - Hitchcock on a train
- The Philadelphia Story (1940) - Hepburn, Grant and Stewart at their best
- The Maltese Falcon (1941) - Bogart and the stuff dreams are made of
- The Pride Of The Yankees (1941) - the story of Lou Gehrig, cameo from Babe Ruth
- Shadow Of A Doubt (1943) - Hitchcock and the two Charlies
- The Big Sleep (1946) - Bogie and Bacall heating up the screen
- The Treasure Of The Sierra Madre (1948) - Bogie as an American down on his luck
- Key Largo (1948) - Bogie, Bacall and the incomparable Edward G. Robinson
- The Bicycle Thief (1948) - wonderful Italian movie from Vittorio De Sica
- Sunset Blvd. (1950) - not 10/10 because it's narrated by a dead guy...pet peeve of mine
- A Streetcar Named Desire (1951) - Stellllaaa!! Brando doing Tennessee Williams
- The African Queen (1951) - Bogie again, this time butting heads with Hepburn
- High Noon (1952) - Gary Cooper, done in near real time. The beautiful Grace Kelly!
- Stalag 17 (1953) - great war prison film with William Holden, directed by Billy Wilder
- Les Diaboliques (1955) - French suspense, redone poorly in the 90's
- The Killing (1956) - Early Kubrick, racetrack heist, Sterling Hayden is great
- Witness For The Prosecution (1957) - Wonderful courtroom scenes with a great twist
- Paths Of Glory (1957) - Kubrick again, fabulous story, Kirk Douglas is great!
- The Seventh Seal (1957) - Bergman and death...quite the combo
- Anatomy Of A Murder (1959) - James Stewart in a great, underrated role
- North By Northwest (1959) - Hitchcock, Grant, crop-duster, Mount Rushmore
- The 400 Blows (1959) - Francois Truffaut's French New Wave drama
- Shoot The Piano Player (1960) - Truffaut again, this time directing a crime/thriller
- Yojimbo (1961) - Kuwosawa film that was remade as "A Fistful Of Dollars"
- The Hustler (1961) - Newman is great, but Jackie Gleason is pristine!!
- West Side Story (1961) - Romeo and Juliet as a Spanish Harlem musical
- To Kill A Mockingbird (1962) - Gregory Peck's best performance, Robert Duvall is Boo Radley
- Repulsion (1965) - Roman Polanski's take on losing one's mind; Deneuve is awesome!
- In The Heat Of The Night (1967) - "They call me Mr. Tibbs!". Poitier and Steiger are great!
- Bonnie And Clyde (1969) - Violent, romantic and wonderfully filmed. Great secondary characters.
- 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) - would have been 10/10 if not for crazy long ending
- Midnight Cowboy (1969) - Hoffman was fabulous; groundbreaking for it's time
- The Wild Bunch (1969) - Sam Peckinpah violence with a great cast
- MASH (1970) - super fun Robert Altman film that became one of TV's greatest shows
- Patton (1970) - George C. Scott is spot-on perfect! Long, but soooo good!
- A Clockwork Orange (1971) - a little super-violence from Kubrick
- Harold And Maude (1971) - funny, quirky, sweetly romantic, Bud Cort is superb
- Dirty Harry (1971) - the original is the best
- Sleuth (1972) - super fun with Caine and Olivier...DO NOT WATCH THE REMAKE!!!!
- Paper Moon (1973) - hard to believe Tatum O'Neal was only 10 years old
- Mean Streets (1973) - Scorsese's first great film
- The Taking Of Pelham One, Two, Three (1974) - Walter Matthau is great; wonderful suspense
- The Front (1976) - Woody Allen acting, not directing, and the wonderful Zero Mostel
- Network (1976) - "I'm mad as Hell, and I'm not gonna take it anymore!"
- The Goodbye Girl (1977) - Richard Dreyfuss is perfect in this adaptation of a Neil Simon play
- The Last Waltz (1978) - great documentary of The Band's last performance
- Animal House (1978) - not a great movie, but so much fun!
- Halloween (1978) - the first is easily the best, the first movie to scare the crap out of me
- The China Syndrome (1979) - Jack Lemmon, Michael Douglas, Jane Fonda..c'mon!
- Apocalypse Now (1979) - near perfect re-working of Heart Of Darkness
- Life Of Brian (1979) - Monty Python's hilarious take on the times of Jesus
- Being There (1979) - a little long, but Peter Sellers was never better!
- The Changeling (1980) - probably the scariest movie I've ever seen, and it's Canadian!
- The Elephant Man (1980) - phenomenal performance from John Hurt, haunting and heartbreaking
- Tootsie (1982) - great comedy with top notch performances from Hoffman and Lange
- Zelig (1983) - Woody Allen's fake documentary on a human chameleon...hilarious
- Ghostbusters (1984) - "Dogs and cats, living together...mass hysteria!". Lotsa fun!
- Amadeus (1984) - Tom Hulce was fantastic, but what about F. Murray Abraham? Awesome.
- Blood Simple (1984) - The Coen Brothers' first feature, a sign of greatness to come
- Lost In America (1985) - my favourite Albert Brooks film...very funny
- After Hours (1985) - a very dark comedy by Scorsese, overlooked as one of his best
- Runaway Train (1985) - great drama with Jon Voight, Rebecca DeMornay and Eric Roberts
- Hannah And Her Sisters (1986) - Woody Allen again, mixing comedy and high drama so well
- Ferris Bueller's Day Off (1986) - I know every line, every intonation, always a great time
- Raising Arizona (1987) - hilarious Coen Brothers film with Nicolas Cage's best performance
- Rain Man (1988) - great drama with some truly great performances
- Dirty Rotten Scoundrels (1988) - it might get silly, but it's soooo funny! Martin and Caine are perfect!
- Talk Radio (1988) - a wonderful performance from Eric Bogosian, directed by Oliver Stone
- Glory (1989) - as good as Denzel is, Matthew Broderick is as great!
- Wild At Heart (1990) - David Lynch film that is definitely not for all tastes, weird but wonderful
- Miller's Crossing (1990) - another great film from the Coen Brothers
- Reversal Of Fortune (1990) - Jeremy Irons and Glenn Close are fabulous. Best closing line ever!
- Dances With Wolves (1990) - Kevin Costner made something special with this one
- La Femme Nikita (1990) - remade and re-done but the original is great, by Luc Besson
- Truly Madly Deeply (1990) - one of the most romantic movies I've ever seen. Fabulous!
- Defending Your Life (1991) - another smart comedy from Albert Brooks
- Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991) - great idea for a sequel, and lots of money to make it look good
- Bugsy (1991) - great job by Warren Beatty playing real-life gangster Bugsy Siegel
- JFK (1991) - it may be a little too long, but it is always interesting
- Unforgiven (1992) - Clint Eastwood was never this good, and Gene Hackman was never so evil!
- Glengarry Glen Ross (1992) - Lemmon, Pacino, Arkin, Harris, Spacey, Baldwin...'nuff said
- Aladdin (1992) - Robin Williams as the Genie is the reason I rate it so high
- A Few Good Men (1992) - great drama with great performances, except for Demi Moore
- Lorenzo's Oil (1992) - based on a remarkable true story about a man who helps cure his son from a rare disease. Unbelievable!
- Groundhog Day (1992) - great fun with Bill Murray giving one of his best performances
- True Romance (1993) - written by Tarantino, violent crazy action throughout
- The Remains Of The Day (1993) - wonderful drama with a lesson in acting from Anthony Hopkins
- A Perfect World (1993) - loved this drama directed by Eastwood, and Costner at his best
- Philadelphia (1993) - performance driven drama by two of the best, Hanks and Washington
- Forrest Gump (1994) - a true epic that rarely disappoints
- Heavenly Creatures (1994) - early Peter Jackson treasure starring a relatively unknown Kate Winslett
- The Professional (1994) - Luc Besson's beautiful action/thriller. Natalie Portman is wonderful
- The Usual Suspects (1995) - one of the best scripts to come out of Hollywood in many a moon
- Braveheart (1995) - rousing Mel Gibson epic, "They'll never take our freedom!!"
- Babe (1995) - that goddamn pig makes me cry every freakin' time!!
- Se7ven (1995) - dark, mysterious, edgy, great!
- Leaving Las Vegas (1995) - not a lot going on, but the performances are fantastic. Great music, too.
- Big Night (1996) - two Italian brothers make a huge dinner for a star that never shows. Awesome!
- Trainspotting (1996) - that baby crawling on the ceiling sealed it for me! Great writing, performances and camera work
- Bound (1996) - yeah, it's sexy, but it's also a very good thriller
- Hamlet (1996) - a four hour adaptation of Shakespeare's play by Kenneth Branagh is worth the time invested
- The Assignment (1997) - little known thriller with Aidan Quinn and Donald Sutherland is surprisingly good
- Out Of Sight (1998) - awesome adaptation of a Elmore Leonard novel, directed beautifully by Steven Soderbergh
- Saving Private Ryan (1998) - the most intense first half hour of a movie I've ever seen!
- A Bug's Life (1998) - great, funny animation good for all ages
- Run Lola Run (1998) - non-stop action/drama and our first look at Franka Potente. Awesome camera work
- Notting Hill (1999) - it may be sappy Brit-com, but it's really, really good
- American Beauty (1999) - if it wasn't narrated by a dead guy it would be perfect! Still, I love!
- Fight Club (1999) - wonderfully imaginative story with great performances by everyone
- Three Kings (1999) - David O. Russell takes on the Gulf War with darkly funny themes
- Being John Malkovich (1999) - one of the most inventive films ever, kudos to Malkovich, Malkovich, Malkovich!
- Toy Story 2 (1999) - still a great watch, but it slowed down on the fun for me
- Gladiator (2000) - lots of action and a great good versus evil story
- Requiem For A Dream (2000) - Ellen Burstyn is remarkable, and the editing is top notch
- Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000) - magical and mysterious, beautifully filmed by Ang Lee
- Memento (2000) - hey, world, introducing Christopher Nolan! Awesome plot construction
- Shrek (2001) - great fun for all ages, Mike Myers makes a great ogre
- The Others (2001) - Nicole Kidman in a horror story that took me for a loop, big time!
- Secretary (2002) - another film that's not for everyone, but I fell in love with Maggie Gyllenhaal
- Spider-Man (2002) - loved this superhero film...lot's of action and more than adequate back story
- City Of God (2002) - fabulous story about two boys growing up in the slums of Brazil
- Punch-Drunk Love (2002) - Adam Sandler should always be in dramas. He, and everyone else, is super!
- The Rules Of Attraction (2002) - possibly my greatest guilty pleasure, I enjoy this film much more than I probably should
- Adaptation (2002) - another wonderful story from the team that brought us "Being John Malkovich"
- Dirty Pretty Things (2002) - awesome crime/thriller with my first introduction to the remarkable talents of Chiwetel Ejiofor
- LOTR: The Return Of The King (2003) - the best of the three, with more action than the other two combined
- Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind (2004) - crazy, inventive story with some fabulous filmmaking by Michel Gondry
- The Notebook (2004) - I know, I know...but the heart wants what the heart wants!
- Shaun Of The Dead (2004) - hilarious, scary, action-packed...great fun
- Millions (2004) - the guy that made "Trainspotting" directs a great film for his kids
- Sin City (2005) - violent throughout, but the look is extraordinary
- The 40 Year Old Virgin (2005) - I actually sprayed Sprite out of my nose in the theatre when I saw this! Still so funny after multiple viewings
- Kiss Kiss Bang Bang (2005) - comedy/thriller that is super fun because of Downey Jr. and Kilmer
- V For Vendetta (2005) - great adaptation of a great graphic novel, Natalie Portman is perfect
- Tsotsi (2005) - fabulous film from South Africa about a gang leader
- Cars (2006) - very enjoyable animated film for everyone...kids LOVE it!
- Little Children (2006) - hard to watch drama with great performances
- Pan's Labyrinth (2006) - Guillermo Del Toro creates a fantasy world like no other! Beautiful!
- A Good Year (2006) - Russell Crowe is great in this drama/comedy about a man who inherits a vineyard
- Letters From Iwo Jima (2006) - touching, heartfelt and brutal...great filmmaking!
- Notes On A Scandal (2006) - Cate Blanchett is wonderful, but Judi Dench is sooooo evil!!
- Death At A Funeral (2007) - the original, not the horrible American remake, is hilariously funny
- Ratatouille (2007) - another great animated film made more for adults than kids
- The Bourne Ultimatum (2007) - really liked the first two, loved the wrap up
- Superbad (2007) - some great comic performances add to the fun of the film
- Control (2007) - remarkable docu-drama around Joy Division's lead singer Ian Curtis
- No Country For Old Men (2007) - Coen Brothers again, this time with a top notch villain played perfectly by Javier Bardem
- The Counterfeiters (2007) - remarkable true story that takes place in the prison camps of WWII
- In Bruges (2008) - violent, funny, dramatic, this film has it all, in spades. Colin Farrell is great!
- The Dark Knight (2008) - the best Batman movie around with a special performance from Heath Ledger
- Hunger (2008) - based on a true prison hunger strike, hard to watch at times, but so worth it!
- Doubt (2008) - a study in great acting from Philip Seymour Hoffman and Meryl Streep
- The Reader (2008) - a coming-of-age story during WWII with some very powerful scenes
- 500 Days Of Summer (2008) - light, funny, sad, romantic, just a lot of fun
- Black Dynamite (2009) - easily the best send up of Blacksploitation films of the 70's...hilarious!
- An Education (2009) - another coming-of-age story, this time in 60's London. Carey Mulligan is great
- In The Loop (2009) - quite possibly the funniest movie ever, or close to it anyway
- The Hurt Locker (2008) - great suspense methodically captured by Kathryn Bigelow
- Star Trek (2009) - they got the two best actors to play Kirk and Spock and made the movie infinitely more fun and interesting than the original
- The Informant (2009) - Matt Damon is fabulous as a man who can't stop lying. Dark and funny
- Zombieland (2009) - great take on the zombie genre with a awesome cameo from Bill Murray
- A Single Man (2009) - Colin Firth in the best performance by any actor ever! Seriously!
- The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo (2009) - the original Swedish version is the best of them
- How To Train Your Dragon (2010) - so...much...fun! Liked it way more than I thought I would
- Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World (2010) - another highly inventive take on loneliness and video games
- The King's Speech (2010) - Colin Firth acting the heck out of another role. Great history lesson, too
- The Social Network (2010) - Jesse Eisenberg was much better than I could have imagined at first
- Silver Linings Playbook (2012) - not deep, but fun and engaging with a wonderful job by Jennifer Lawrence
Thursday, October 24, 2013
My Faves!!! - Part VIII
So here it is, the last part of my series, the 2000's. I've decided to take my favourites from the last 13 years rather than doing a decade and then 3 years, I hope you don't mind. During this period of time I was fully entrenched as a manager of Rogers Video and Blockbuster Video, having access to many, many movies. I took advantage of that, rating 1037 movies on imdb.com in the new millennium. (Yeah, I know the new millennium began in 2001, work with me here!). My final list of the series begins with...
Almost Famous (2000)
Starring: Patrick Fugit, Kate Hudson, Billy Crudup, Frances McDormand, Jason Lee, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Zooey Deschanel
Directed by: Cameron Crowe
IMDB Rating: 7.9
Rotten Tomatoes: 88%
Throughout my lists I've mentioned movies that may not have been praised by the masses, but made me feel good. This is one of those movies. Based on Cameron Crowe's real life adventures as a teenage scribe for Rolling Stone magazine, there is a lot to like about this film. One of those things is a sweet, realistic performance from unknown Patrick Fugit. His wide-eyed (literally) wonder as he experiences everything helps the viewer get lost along with him. We feel what he feels (love, betrayal, anger) and experience all the push and pulls that go along with it. The movie becomes even more interesting when one has a little bit of knowledge on who the characters represent. For instance, the band being followed, Stillwater, is a bit of a combination of bands Crowe followed, but mostly based on Led Zeppelin, The Allman Brothers Band and The Who. I had a lot of fun watching this movie, and still do on subsequent viewings, which is, for me, the mark of a great film, even if it isn't perfect. It's right for me!
- Stillwater's songs were written by Peter Frampton, Cameron Crowe, and Crowe's wife Nancy Wilson of Heart. Frampton taught Billy Crudup how to play guitar for the concert scenes.
- Jason Lee's singing voice was provided by Marti Frederiksen, a well known writer/producer that has worked with Aerosmith, Ozzy Osbourne, Carrie Underwood and Faith Hill.
Unbreakable (2000)
Starring: Bruce Willis, Samuel L. Jackson, Robin Wright
Directed by: M. Night Shyamalan
IMDB Rating: 7.2
Rotten Tomatoes: 68%
M. Night Shyamalan shot to stardom after his first film came out, "The Sixth Sense". That was a very good film, but I am always going to think "Unbreakable" is his best, especially since most of what he's involved with nowadays is total garbage. This movie, though, is anything but. It moves along very slowly, which I think put off some viewers. I found it's pacing perfect for the story; a man slowly realizes he possesses super-human abilities. It's a comic book story set in the real world. I love that idea. Bruce Willis plays the part very well, full of wonder and amazement and a kind of "why me?" attitude. His nemesis is introduced in the form of Samuel L. Jackson, a character with a horrible disease that makes his bones very brittle. I wanted so badly for a sequel to this film after the characters realize who and what they are. To me, this is brilliant storytelling and deserves to be viewed by everyone.
- The disease inflicting Elijah Price is called Osteogenesis Imperfecta, a real but very rare disease.
Finding Nemo (2003)
Starring: Albert Brooks, Ellen DeGeneres, Alexander Gould, Willem Dafoe, Brad Garrett, Geoffrey Rush
Directed by: Andrew Stanton, Lee Unkrich
IMDB Rating: 8.1
Rotten Tomatoes: 99%
I don't know how anyone could dislike this movie. I absolutely love it, from the first time I saw it and every subsequent viewing. Maybe, if I had a three year old that constantly yelled "Just keep swimming, just keep swimming" it would start to get on my nerves, but I don't, so I continue to love it. A fabulous story, great digital graphics and some of the best voice-over performance I've ever heard in a movie. The bar was set about a decade prior with Robin Williams in "Aladdin". Ellen DeGeneres moved that bar up; she was perfect as Dory. But even the smaller roles, the sharks, the turtles, and my favourite, the seagulls..."MINE?!". So much fun, great for all ages!
- Because of the incredible detail in the animation, a single frame, 1/24th of a second, would take up to four days render.
- The voice of Marlin was originally done by William H. Macy. After reviewing the movie, Michael Eisner said the film would not be a hit. Director Andrew Stanton decided to re-record the Marlin character with Albert Brooks.
Lost In Translation (2003)
Starring: Bill Murray, Scarlett Johansson, Giovanni Ribisi, Anna Faris
Directed by: Sofia Coppola
IMDB Rating: 7.8
Rotten Tomatoes: 95%
Trying to explain to customers in a video store why "Lost In Translation" is such a great movie kinda got, well, lost in translation. (See what I did there?). It's very hard to explain, but detractors have no problem spewing their hatred of the film. I guess part of it, for me, was seeing Bill Murray how I picture him being in real life. Traveling from town to town, promoting himself, making foreign commercials, being mostly bored and lonely. His character finds someone just like him in the form of Scarlett Johansson's character, recently married, but bored and lonely. They enjoy each other's company, but, in my eyes, it's never sexual. Maybe that's why some people didn't like the movie; they thought it was about a dirty old man. But the time they share together is infinitely more important than anything that can be construed as sexual. The last scene, even though we don't know what is said, is absolutely heartbreaking, but exhilarating at the same time. That's a very hard thing for actors and their director to convey, and it's done beautifully! Gorgeously shot and wonderfully acted, it remains one of my favourites.
- Sofia Coppola has said she wrote the lead role specifically with Bill Murray in mind. She has said if Murray didn't sign on, she may well have never made the movie at all.
- The inspiration of having Bill Murray's character do a commercial for Suntory Whiskey came from Sofia Coppola's father, Francis Ford Coppola, doing a real Suntory commercial with Akira Kurosawa in the 70's.
Kill Bill: Vol. I (2003)
Starring: Uma Thurman, David Carradine, Lucy Liu, Daryl Hannah, Vivica A. Fox, Michael Madsen, Sonny Chiba, Gordon Liu
Directed by: Quentin Tarantino
IMDB Rating: 8.1
Rotten Tomatoes: 85%
Have I mentioned yet how much fun Tarantino movies are? Well, if I haven't, they are! And this is probably the most fun I've had in a theatre in a long, long time. Tarantino does his take on the kung-fu genre, taking many elements from the 1970's and expanding on them. (Getting Sonny Chiba to play an important role was absolutely genius!). Who knew Uma Thurman could kick such ass?!? Yeah, it's incredibly bloody. Was it all needed? Absolutely! You can't have a send up of a very violent genre without being incredibly violent. But then the stories mesh so beautifully. The camera moves and flows with such apparent ease. The characters are cartoonish, exactly how they needed to be. Speaking of cartoons, that great Anime flashback? C'mon! By the end of the film I was all a flutter knowing Volume 2 was right around the corner. I'll be talking about that one next.
- Quentin Tarantino wrote the role of The Bride specifically for Uma Thurman. The idea of the story started between the two of them while they filmed "Pulp Fiction".
- Warren Beatty was Tarantino's first choice to play Bill. After Beatty turned it down, he suggested David Carradine.
Kill Bill: Vol. 2 (2004)
Starring: Uma Thurman, David Carradine, Michael Madsen, Daryl Hannah, Vivica A. Fox, Lucy Liu
Directed by: Quentin Tarantino
IMDB Rating: 8.0
Rotten Tomatoes: 84%
Not a sequel to "Kill Bill: Vol. 1" but a continuation, and, as such, just as much fun as the first. Although the pace of the movie is a bit slower, I feel it needed to be because we have to draw out the resolution. But what's great about the conclusion is that it doesn't take forever, as movies like this have demonstrated in the past. We get to see a little background in the "making" of Beatrix Kiddo, which is straight out of kung-fu movies from 30 years prior...a fantastic homage. The fight scene between Uma and Daryl in the small confines of the trailer is fabulous as well, and a little disgusting. With Volume 1 I couldn't wait to see the continuation. With Volume 2 I was more than satisfied how it ended.
- At it's first test screening in Austin, Texas, the film received a five minute standing ovation at it's conclusion.
- Michael Jai White, famous for his role in "Black Dynamite", filmed scenes with Bill, David Carradine, but were cut from the movie due to pacing concerns.
Collateral (2004)
Starring: Tom Cruise, Jamie Foxx, Mark Ruffalo, Jada Pinkett Smith, Peter Berg
Directed by: Michael Mann
IMDB Rating: 7.6
Rotten Tomatoes: 86%
Michael Mann is a very stylized director. He can find the beauty in something, or usually somewhere, where there is seemingly no beauty at all. He has normally done this with Los Angeles. This time he makes the L.A. at night look absolutely beautiful. He also gets what I consider the best performance of Tom Cruise's career. He plays a no-nonsense hit man, a guy you know you're gonna hate right away, but can't stop watching him. He "rents" Jamie Foxx and his cab as transportation for the night, stopping occasionally to cold-bloodily kill someone. Speaking of Foxx, this was the first time I saw him really lose himself in a role, rather than being that goofy guy on "In Living Color". (Yes, he was good in "Any Given Sunday" but it was not the hardest role to play!). There are some scenes in this film that had me saying to myself "would that really happen?", but I quickly forgot about those because I was totally rapt in what was going on. A very underrated film in my opinion, and should be viewed at least once. (By the way, watched this a few days ago and it's still good!).
- Michael Mann created backstories for all of the characters in the movie, right down to supplying the actors pictures of their characters' home towns.
- Adam Sandler was originally going to play the role of Max, the cab driver, and Russell Crowe was set to play the role of Vincent, the assassin. Sandler decided not to take the role and Crowe dropped out after constant production delays.
The Curse Of The Were-Rabbit (2005)
Starring: Wallace & Gromit, Ralph Fiennes, Helena Bonham Carter
Directed by: Steve Box & Nick Park
IMDB Rating: 7.6
Rotten Tomatoes: 95%
Here is another movie that, if I was six years old when I first watched it, would be one of my all-time favourites. I had never seen any of the claymation short films starring Wallace & Gromit. They were award winners, everybody loved them. I thought, what the heck, I'll watch the film that kids were going ga-ga over. Holy man! I was ga-ga watching it! So funny, so cute, so endearing...and a lot of jokes that would fly over any kids' head. The characters are fleshed out so well and with such loving care that you can't not love each and every one of them. But the real joy was watching the genius but silent dog, Gromit. He is what great animation is all about; a character that needs not speak a word and still conveys and elicits every emotion imaginable. If you have small children you need to do you and your kids a favour and watch this movie!
- The claymation process is a long and arduous one. A single line of dialogue containing just a few words would take any entire day to film. The film took five years to make.
- An estimated 2.8 tons of Plasticine was used, in 42 different colours.
The Fall (2006)
Starring: Lee Pace, Catinca Untaru, Justine Waddell, Leo Bill, Jeetu Verma
Directed by: Tarsem Singh
IMDB Rating: 7.8
Rotten Tomatoes: 59%
Boy oh boy. If you read some of the reviews on rottentomatoes.com, there is no way you'd ever want to see this film, and that would be a travesty! Words like "slow" and "dull" are thrown around, but I feel those descriptions could not be further from the truth. First of all, the look of the film is like no other I have seen before or since. Gorgeous photography, impossibly beautiful set design, it's remarkable what they were able to do without any digital enhancement. The story itself is wonderfully drawn out by an injured soldier (Pace) and his little girl companion (Untaru). He begins to tell a fairy tale in order to have the girl steal pain meds for him. The story he weaves is reminiscent of "The Princess Bride", but the relationship he strikes up with the girl is fabulous. And this little girl...you can't take your eyes off of her every time she appears on screen. She wasn't acting, she was playing, caught up in the story being told. Please, give this movie a chance. I don't think you'll be disappointed!
- The hospital scenes took six weeks to film and needed to be filmed in chronological order as Catinca Untaru was growing and constantly improving her English.
- The film was shot over four years in 28 different countries.
Once (2007)
Starring: Glen Hansard, Marketa Irglova
Directed by: John Carney
IMDB Rating: 7.9
Rotten Tomatoes: 97%
One of the sweetest, most romantic, most heartfelt movies I have ever seen! I know, that's saying a lot, but it's so true. My heart absolutely soared as I watched these two unknown actors/musicians create music together. The story simply revolves around a street busker and a lonely woman who find an immediate chemistry in the music they make. The main song in the film, "Falling Slowly", became a huge hit and ultimately won an Oscar for Best Song. I suppose it was the realism of the story, the dialogue, the singing that got to me. Apparently, the leads were an actual couple when this was filmed, making their performance so much more intense. Such a glorious film, one of those great low-budget treats that only come around once in a long while...see, I used the word "once" there...see what I did?
- Glen Hansard is the lead singer of a band called The Frames. Director John Carney was once a member of that band.
- Bob Dylan was a huge fan of the film and had Hansard and Irglova open for him on part of his world tour.
The Visitor (2007)
Starring: Richard Jenkins, Haaz Sleiman, Danai Gurira, Richard Kind
Directed by: Thomas McCarthy
IMDB Rating: 7.7
Rotten Tomatoes: 89%
A lonely college professor travels to Manhattan for a conference. He has an apartment there, but when he goes to it he's surprised to learn there is an immigrant couple living in there. The couple were part of a scam, but they have no place to go. The professor lets them stay until they can find another place to go. So begins a wonderful story, a coming-of-age film for a sixty year old man. Who is the visitor? Is it the foreign couple in a foreign land, or is it the professor, a visitor in his own world. Richard Jenkins is simply remarkable as the professor. He has that phenomenal ability to create both empathy and sympathy for his character, mostly conveyed in his sad eyes. The supporting players are very good as well, but make no mistake, this is Jenkins' film! Sad, touching, uplifting and romantic, a definite must see!
- Richard Jenkins was nominated 15 times for his role at various festivals and award ceremonies.
Wall-E (2008)
Starring: Ben Burtt, Elissa Knight, Jeff Garlin, Fred Willard, John Ratzenberger
Directed by: Andrew Stanton
IMDB Rating: 8.4
Rotten Tomatoes: 96%
Well, Pixar does it again! Why are all the best movies in recent years being made by an animation company?? "Wall-E" is probably the best of them. Forget about the message it's trying to convey, that's pretty in-your-face. It's the remarkable animation, the emotion conveyed in a robot's eyes and tiny voice. Every scene that Wall-E is in makes your heart swell! And then the adventure begins. He falls for another robot and goes to the end of the universe to find her. This is truly an amazing accomplishment in animated filmmaking. Not just the way it looks, which is fantastic, but the way this movie makes you feel. I'm pretty sure I had a smile on my face for the entire film. Another one of those films thats great for kids, but means so much more for the adults that watch it, too.
- Ben Burtt recorder over 2500 different sounds for the film. When director Andrew Stanton first met with him he told Burtt he needed to be about 80% of his cast.
- The Pixar team would regularly watch all the Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton movies and shorts to inspire them with the possibilities of purely visual storytelling.
Up (2009)
Starring: Ed Asner, Christopher Plummer, Delroy Lindo, John Ratzenberger
Directed by: Pete Docter & Bob Peterson
IMDB Rating: 8.3
Rotten Tomatoes: 98%
Pixar, you're killing me!! I was literally bawling my eyes out just eleven minutes into this movie! I couldn't believe it...I started to laugh at myself with the thought of an animated film making me feel this way, and so early into the film. If you've seen this movie, you know what I'm talking about, and if you've seen this movie and don't know what I'm taking about, visit your doctor immediately, you may not have a heart! Beyond that first eleven minutes is another great adventure from the greatest animation studio around. Big, bright colours fill the screen, contrasting the grouch as the lead character. Fabulous entertainment, again, for all kids and adults. Oh, and the "talking" dog was a stroke of brilliance!
- Someone figured out that if Carl's house was 1600 square feet it would take approximately 12,658,392 balloons to lift it.
- First feature film to be nominated for both Best Picture and Best Animated Feature at the Academy Awards.
Fantastic Mr. Fox (2009)
Starring: George Clooney, Meryl Streep, Jason Schwartzman, Bill Murray, Willem Dafoe, Owen Wilson
Directed by: Wes Anderson
IMDB Rating: 7.7
Rotten Tomatoes: 93%
Another animated film! This time it's directed by the weirdly creative Wes Anderson, the man behind "Rushmore" and "The Royal Tenenbaums". The film definitely has a unique look to it, sort of stop-motion claymation mixed with puppetry mixed with traditional animation techniques. It looks great! But the story is what really carries the film. It's filled with quirky characters, hilariously funny situations, and some high drama thrown in. You know exactly who the villains are, who the heroes are and can pretty much determine how the story will end...but it is super fun getting to that point. Another one of those great films that's good for all ages and should be viewed by everyone.
- The actors recorded their voice roles in natural setting rather than a studio. They recorded in a forest, in an attic, even underground.
- Mr. Fox's wardrobe was based on Wes Anderson's brown corduroy suits.
The Trotsky (2009)
Starring: Jay Baruchel, Saul Rubinek, Michael Murphy, Emily Hampshire, Colm Feore, Genevieve Bujold
Directed by: Jacob Tierney
IMDB Rating: 6.7
Rotten Tomatoes: 83%
I fell in love with this movie immediately! It's a great, Canadian comedy that is spot-on with all the performances within. A high school student thinks he is the second coming of Leon Trotsky. He is forced to go to a public school for the first time in his life. While there, he decides to create a real "student union" for better rights in relation to the oppressing teachers and principals. In lesser hands, this movie could have fallen on it's face. But it's incredibly smart, very believable and, most importantly, funny and sweet. Even though there are a lot of movies on this list for the 2000's, there are few I enjoyed more than "The Trotsky".
- Director Jacob Tierney had a childhood fascination with Leon Trotsky.
Kick-Ass (2010)
Starring: Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Nicolas Cage, Chloe Grace Moretz, Christopher Mintz-Plasse
Directed by: Matthew Vaughn
IMDB Rating: 7.8
Rotten Tomatoes: 77%
Here's another movie that reminds us why we go to the movies. "Kick-Ass" is total fun from beginning to end. The villains overact, the heroes are able to do ridiculous, unexplained things, but the movie never apologizes for it. Take it as it is or don't, your choice. My choice was to have a blast, and I did! The introduction of Chloe Grace Morentz as Hit Girl really made this film for me. So young, but commands every scene she's in, and she can really kick ass! This is not a movie for kids. It's a fantasy for adults and it works on every level. I haven't seen the sequel that came out last year, and I probably won't. I don't want anything to sully my love for the original.
- Nicolas Cage based his voice and mannerisms from the original Batman, Adam West. Knowing this, and then watching the film, it's amazing to see how accurate he is!
- Christopher Mintz-Plasse, who plays Red Mist, originally auditioned for the role of Kick Ass.
Rush: Beyond The Lighted Stage (2010)
Starring: Geddy Lee, Alex Lifeson, Neil Peart
Directed by: Sam Dunn & Scott McFadyen
IMDB Rating: 7.8
Rotten Tomatoes: 100%
I was always a fan of Rush's music, just never a die-hard fan, like I am with Van Halen or the Beastie Boys. My love for the band increased ten-fold after watching this documentary. I had no idea how respected Rush is within the music community. There are interviews with many respected artists who are huge fans of the group. The film takes it's time in tracing the lore of the band, starting by taking them back to where they grew up, right here in the big T-dot O-dot. We witness there rise from pumping out Top-40 rock hits, then changing directions to become a true prog-rock band, and back again. What really comes out of this documentary, though, is not only the incredible musicianship of these three men, but the incredible bond they have created in nearly 40 years of playing together. You don't have to be a fan of Rush to enjoy this film, the mark of a great documentary, but if you have even the smallest interest in them, you need to watch this!
Toy Story 3 (2010)
Starring: Tom Hanks, Tim Allen, Joan Cusack, Don Rickles, Ned Beatty, Michael Keaton, John Ratzenberger
Directed by: Lee Unkrich
IMDB Rating: 8.4
Rotten Tomatoes: 99%
Ok, I promise this is the last animated film on my list (until Finding Nemo 2 comes out, possibly). It's always hard to create a sequel to a movie that is as beloved as the original. It's so much harder to make a third in a series and still make it something people should see. "Toy Story 3" not only achieved this, it's quite possibly the best of the three films! What happens to toys when the kids that loved them grow up? It's a great, unexplored question and it is the perfect ending to a series of films that upped the ante for all that come after them. I cried, CRIED, like a baby, twice, while watching this movie, so much so that I was embarrassed by it. But there are hysterically funny scenes as well. After three of these films I felt like these were my toys, like I was a kid myself. I absolutely loved this movie and would gladly watch it numerous times...whenever I need a good cry!
- The final shot of the film, white clouds on a blue sky, resembles the first shot of the "Toy Story" trilogy, white clouds on a blue sky on Andy's wallpaper.
- There are 302 different characters in the movie.
Inception (2010)
Starring: Leonardo DiCaprio, Ellen Page, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Tom Hardy, Ken Watanabe, Cillian Murphy, Marion Cotillard, Michael Caine
Directed by: Christopher Nolan
IMDB Rating: 8.8
Rotten Tomatoes: 86%
Christopher Nolan has made many great movies, from "Following" to "Memento" to "The Dark Knight". For my money "Inception" is his best. Yes, I can understand when people say there is too much going on, that it becomes confusing. I say, watch it again. First of all, I didn't find it confusing. I was interested in every single scene. Second, the look of the movie is remarkable. The computer graphics are groundbreaking, but what really made my jaw drop were the fight scenes in the hotel with Gordon-Levitt. And knowing that those scenes contained no CGI makes them even more fabulous. (All the "floating" was done with wires!). I loved the story, I loved the adventure and I love...love...LOVED the ending! Truly a magnificent achievement in filmmaking.
- In the city scenes, in the first level of the dream state, the license plates contain a state motto that reads "The Alternate State".
- Take the first letters of all the main characters, Dom, Robert, Eames, Arthur, Mal and Saito, you get DREAMS.
Ok. That's it. I will not list any movies that I still want to see that were released between 2000 and 2013 because there are far too many. I hope you liked this series...my next post will be a wrap-up of all eight posts, plus a little added extra...those films that were rated as a 9 out of 10, just missing that perfect score. Thanks for reading!
Almost Famous (2000)
Starring: Patrick Fugit, Kate Hudson, Billy Crudup, Frances McDormand, Jason Lee, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Zooey Deschanel
Directed by: Cameron Crowe
IMDB Rating: 7.9
Rotten Tomatoes: 88%
Throughout my lists I've mentioned movies that may not have been praised by the masses, but made me feel good. This is one of those movies. Based on Cameron Crowe's real life adventures as a teenage scribe for Rolling Stone magazine, there is a lot to like about this film. One of those things is a sweet, realistic performance from unknown Patrick Fugit. His wide-eyed (literally) wonder as he experiences everything helps the viewer get lost along with him. We feel what he feels (love, betrayal, anger) and experience all the push and pulls that go along with it. The movie becomes even more interesting when one has a little bit of knowledge on who the characters represent. For instance, the band being followed, Stillwater, is a bit of a combination of bands Crowe followed, but mostly based on Led Zeppelin, The Allman Brothers Band and The Who. I had a lot of fun watching this movie, and still do on subsequent viewings, which is, for me, the mark of a great film, even if it isn't perfect. It's right for me!
- Stillwater's songs were written by Peter Frampton, Cameron Crowe, and Crowe's wife Nancy Wilson of Heart. Frampton taught Billy Crudup how to play guitar for the concert scenes.
- Jason Lee's singing voice was provided by Marti Frederiksen, a well known writer/producer that has worked with Aerosmith, Ozzy Osbourne, Carrie Underwood and Faith Hill.
Unbreakable (2000)
Starring: Bruce Willis, Samuel L. Jackson, Robin Wright
Directed by: M. Night Shyamalan
IMDB Rating: 7.2
Rotten Tomatoes: 68%
M. Night Shyamalan shot to stardom after his first film came out, "The Sixth Sense". That was a very good film, but I am always going to think "Unbreakable" is his best, especially since most of what he's involved with nowadays is total garbage. This movie, though, is anything but. It moves along very slowly, which I think put off some viewers. I found it's pacing perfect for the story; a man slowly realizes he possesses super-human abilities. It's a comic book story set in the real world. I love that idea. Bruce Willis plays the part very well, full of wonder and amazement and a kind of "why me?" attitude. His nemesis is introduced in the form of Samuel L. Jackson, a character with a horrible disease that makes his bones very brittle. I wanted so badly for a sequel to this film after the characters realize who and what they are. To me, this is brilliant storytelling and deserves to be viewed by everyone.
- The disease inflicting Elijah Price is called Osteogenesis Imperfecta, a real but very rare disease.
Finding Nemo (2003)
Starring: Albert Brooks, Ellen DeGeneres, Alexander Gould, Willem Dafoe, Brad Garrett, Geoffrey Rush
Directed by: Andrew Stanton, Lee Unkrich
IMDB Rating: 8.1
Rotten Tomatoes: 99%
I don't know how anyone could dislike this movie. I absolutely love it, from the first time I saw it and every subsequent viewing. Maybe, if I had a three year old that constantly yelled "Just keep swimming, just keep swimming" it would start to get on my nerves, but I don't, so I continue to love it. A fabulous story, great digital graphics and some of the best voice-over performance I've ever heard in a movie. The bar was set about a decade prior with Robin Williams in "Aladdin". Ellen DeGeneres moved that bar up; she was perfect as Dory. But even the smaller roles, the sharks, the turtles, and my favourite, the seagulls..."MINE?!". So much fun, great for all ages!
- Because of the incredible detail in the animation, a single frame, 1/24th of a second, would take up to four days render.
- The voice of Marlin was originally done by William H. Macy. After reviewing the movie, Michael Eisner said the film would not be a hit. Director Andrew Stanton decided to re-record the Marlin character with Albert Brooks.
Lost In Translation (2003)
Starring: Bill Murray, Scarlett Johansson, Giovanni Ribisi, Anna Faris
Directed by: Sofia Coppola
IMDB Rating: 7.8
Rotten Tomatoes: 95%
Trying to explain to customers in a video store why "Lost In Translation" is such a great movie kinda got, well, lost in translation. (See what I did there?). It's very hard to explain, but detractors have no problem spewing their hatred of the film. I guess part of it, for me, was seeing Bill Murray how I picture him being in real life. Traveling from town to town, promoting himself, making foreign commercials, being mostly bored and lonely. His character finds someone just like him in the form of Scarlett Johansson's character, recently married, but bored and lonely. They enjoy each other's company, but, in my eyes, it's never sexual. Maybe that's why some people didn't like the movie; they thought it was about a dirty old man. But the time they share together is infinitely more important than anything that can be construed as sexual. The last scene, even though we don't know what is said, is absolutely heartbreaking, but exhilarating at the same time. That's a very hard thing for actors and their director to convey, and it's done beautifully! Gorgeously shot and wonderfully acted, it remains one of my favourites.
- Sofia Coppola has said she wrote the lead role specifically with Bill Murray in mind. She has said if Murray didn't sign on, she may well have never made the movie at all.
- The inspiration of having Bill Murray's character do a commercial for Suntory Whiskey came from Sofia Coppola's father, Francis Ford Coppola, doing a real Suntory commercial with Akira Kurosawa in the 70's.
Kill Bill: Vol. I (2003)
Starring: Uma Thurman, David Carradine, Lucy Liu, Daryl Hannah, Vivica A. Fox, Michael Madsen, Sonny Chiba, Gordon Liu
Directed by: Quentin Tarantino
IMDB Rating: 8.1
Rotten Tomatoes: 85%
Have I mentioned yet how much fun Tarantino movies are? Well, if I haven't, they are! And this is probably the most fun I've had in a theatre in a long, long time. Tarantino does his take on the kung-fu genre, taking many elements from the 1970's and expanding on them. (Getting Sonny Chiba to play an important role was absolutely genius!). Who knew Uma Thurman could kick such ass?!? Yeah, it's incredibly bloody. Was it all needed? Absolutely! You can't have a send up of a very violent genre without being incredibly violent. But then the stories mesh so beautifully. The camera moves and flows with such apparent ease. The characters are cartoonish, exactly how they needed to be. Speaking of cartoons, that great Anime flashback? C'mon! By the end of the film I was all a flutter knowing Volume 2 was right around the corner. I'll be talking about that one next.
- Quentin Tarantino wrote the role of The Bride specifically for Uma Thurman. The idea of the story started between the two of them while they filmed "Pulp Fiction".
- Warren Beatty was Tarantino's first choice to play Bill. After Beatty turned it down, he suggested David Carradine.
Kill Bill: Vol. 2 (2004)
Starring: Uma Thurman, David Carradine, Michael Madsen, Daryl Hannah, Vivica A. Fox, Lucy Liu
Directed by: Quentin Tarantino
IMDB Rating: 8.0
Rotten Tomatoes: 84%
Not a sequel to "Kill Bill: Vol. 1" but a continuation, and, as such, just as much fun as the first. Although the pace of the movie is a bit slower, I feel it needed to be because we have to draw out the resolution. But what's great about the conclusion is that it doesn't take forever, as movies like this have demonstrated in the past. We get to see a little background in the "making" of Beatrix Kiddo, which is straight out of kung-fu movies from 30 years prior...a fantastic homage. The fight scene between Uma and Daryl in the small confines of the trailer is fabulous as well, and a little disgusting. With Volume 1 I couldn't wait to see the continuation. With Volume 2 I was more than satisfied how it ended.
- At it's first test screening in Austin, Texas, the film received a five minute standing ovation at it's conclusion.
- Michael Jai White, famous for his role in "Black Dynamite", filmed scenes with Bill, David Carradine, but were cut from the movie due to pacing concerns.
Collateral (2004)
Starring: Tom Cruise, Jamie Foxx, Mark Ruffalo, Jada Pinkett Smith, Peter Berg
Directed by: Michael Mann
IMDB Rating: 7.6
Rotten Tomatoes: 86%
Michael Mann is a very stylized director. He can find the beauty in something, or usually somewhere, where there is seemingly no beauty at all. He has normally done this with Los Angeles. This time he makes the L.A. at night look absolutely beautiful. He also gets what I consider the best performance of Tom Cruise's career. He plays a no-nonsense hit man, a guy you know you're gonna hate right away, but can't stop watching him. He "rents" Jamie Foxx and his cab as transportation for the night, stopping occasionally to cold-bloodily kill someone. Speaking of Foxx, this was the first time I saw him really lose himself in a role, rather than being that goofy guy on "In Living Color". (Yes, he was good in "Any Given Sunday" but it was not the hardest role to play!). There are some scenes in this film that had me saying to myself "would that really happen?", but I quickly forgot about those because I was totally rapt in what was going on. A very underrated film in my opinion, and should be viewed at least once. (By the way, watched this a few days ago and it's still good!).
- Michael Mann created backstories for all of the characters in the movie, right down to supplying the actors pictures of their characters' home towns.
- Adam Sandler was originally going to play the role of Max, the cab driver, and Russell Crowe was set to play the role of Vincent, the assassin. Sandler decided not to take the role and Crowe dropped out after constant production delays.
The Curse Of The Were-Rabbit (2005)
Starring: Wallace & Gromit, Ralph Fiennes, Helena Bonham Carter
Directed by: Steve Box & Nick Park
IMDB Rating: 7.6
Rotten Tomatoes: 95%
Here is another movie that, if I was six years old when I first watched it, would be one of my all-time favourites. I had never seen any of the claymation short films starring Wallace & Gromit. They were award winners, everybody loved them. I thought, what the heck, I'll watch the film that kids were going ga-ga over. Holy man! I was ga-ga watching it! So funny, so cute, so endearing...and a lot of jokes that would fly over any kids' head. The characters are fleshed out so well and with such loving care that you can't not love each and every one of them. But the real joy was watching the genius but silent dog, Gromit. He is what great animation is all about; a character that needs not speak a word and still conveys and elicits every emotion imaginable. If you have small children you need to do you and your kids a favour and watch this movie!
- The claymation process is a long and arduous one. A single line of dialogue containing just a few words would take any entire day to film. The film took five years to make.
- An estimated 2.8 tons of Plasticine was used, in 42 different colours.
The Fall (2006)
Starring: Lee Pace, Catinca Untaru, Justine Waddell, Leo Bill, Jeetu Verma
Directed by: Tarsem Singh
IMDB Rating: 7.8
Rotten Tomatoes: 59%
Boy oh boy. If you read some of the reviews on rottentomatoes.com, there is no way you'd ever want to see this film, and that would be a travesty! Words like "slow" and "dull" are thrown around, but I feel those descriptions could not be further from the truth. First of all, the look of the film is like no other I have seen before or since. Gorgeous photography, impossibly beautiful set design, it's remarkable what they were able to do without any digital enhancement. The story itself is wonderfully drawn out by an injured soldier (Pace) and his little girl companion (Untaru). He begins to tell a fairy tale in order to have the girl steal pain meds for him. The story he weaves is reminiscent of "The Princess Bride", but the relationship he strikes up with the girl is fabulous. And this little girl...you can't take your eyes off of her every time she appears on screen. She wasn't acting, she was playing, caught up in the story being told. Please, give this movie a chance. I don't think you'll be disappointed!
- The hospital scenes took six weeks to film and needed to be filmed in chronological order as Catinca Untaru was growing and constantly improving her English.
- The film was shot over four years in 28 different countries.
Once (2007)
Starring: Glen Hansard, Marketa Irglova
Directed by: John Carney
IMDB Rating: 7.9
Rotten Tomatoes: 97%
One of the sweetest, most romantic, most heartfelt movies I have ever seen! I know, that's saying a lot, but it's so true. My heart absolutely soared as I watched these two unknown actors/musicians create music together. The story simply revolves around a street busker and a lonely woman who find an immediate chemistry in the music they make. The main song in the film, "Falling Slowly", became a huge hit and ultimately won an Oscar for Best Song. I suppose it was the realism of the story, the dialogue, the singing that got to me. Apparently, the leads were an actual couple when this was filmed, making their performance so much more intense. Such a glorious film, one of those great low-budget treats that only come around once in a long while...see, I used the word "once" there...see what I did?
- Glen Hansard is the lead singer of a band called The Frames. Director John Carney was once a member of that band.
- Bob Dylan was a huge fan of the film and had Hansard and Irglova open for him on part of his world tour.
The Visitor (2007)
Starring: Richard Jenkins, Haaz Sleiman, Danai Gurira, Richard Kind
Directed by: Thomas McCarthy
IMDB Rating: 7.7
Rotten Tomatoes: 89%
A lonely college professor travels to Manhattan for a conference. He has an apartment there, but when he goes to it he's surprised to learn there is an immigrant couple living in there. The couple were part of a scam, but they have no place to go. The professor lets them stay until they can find another place to go. So begins a wonderful story, a coming-of-age film for a sixty year old man. Who is the visitor? Is it the foreign couple in a foreign land, or is it the professor, a visitor in his own world. Richard Jenkins is simply remarkable as the professor. He has that phenomenal ability to create both empathy and sympathy for his character, mostly conveyed in his sad eyes. The supporting players are very good as well, but make no mistake, this is Jenkins' film! Sad, touching, uplifting and romantic, a definite must see!
- Richard Jenkins was nominated 15 times for his role at various festivals and award ceremonies.
Wall-E (2008)
Starring: Ben Burtt, Elissa Knight, Jeff Garlin, Fred Willard, John Ratzenberger
Directed by: Andrew Stanton
IMDB Rating: 8.4
Rotten Tomatoes: 96%
Well, Pixar does it again! Why are all the best movies in recent years being made by an animation company?? "Wall-E" is probably the best of them. Forget about the message it's trying to convey, that's pretty in-your-face. It's the remarkable animation, the emotion conveyed in a robot's eyes and tiny voice. Every scene that Wall-E is in makes your heart swell! And then the adventure begins. He falls for another robot and goes to the end of the universe to find her. This is truly an amazing accomplishment in animated filmmaking. Not just the way it looks, which is fantastic, but the way this movie makes you feel. I'm pretty sure I had a smile on my face for the entire film. Another one of those films thats great for kids, but means so much more for the adults that watch it, too.
- Ben Burtt recorder over 2500 different sounds for the film. When director Andrew Stanton first met with him he told Burtt he needed to be about 80% of his cast.
- The Pixar team would regularly watch all the Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton movies and shorts to inspire them with the possibilities of purely visual storytelling.
Up (2009)
Starring: Ed Asner, Christopher Plummer, Delroy Lindo, John Ratzenberger
Directed by: Pete Docter & Bob Peterson
IMDB Rating: 8.3
Rotten Tomatoes: 98%
Pixar, you're killing me!! I was literally bawling my eyes out just eleven minutes into this movie! I couldn't believe it...I started to laugh at myself with the thought of an animated film making me feel this way, and so early into the film. If you've seen this movie, you know what I'm talking about, and if you've seen this movie and don't know what I'm taking about, visit your doctor immediately, you may not have a heart! Beyond that first eleven minutes is another great adventure from the greatest animation studio around. Big, bright colours fill the screen, contrasting the grouch as the lead character. Fabulous entertainment, again, for all kids and adults. Oh, and the "talking" dog was a stroke of brilliance!
- Someone figured out that if Carl's house was 1600 square feet it would take approximately 12,658,392 balloons to lift it.
- First feature film to be nominated for both Best Picture and Best Animated Feature at the Academy Awards.
Fantastic Mr. Fox (2009)
Starring: George Clooney, Meryl Streep, Jason Schwartzman, Bill Murray, Willem Dafoe, Owen Wilson
Directed by: Wes Anderson
IMDB Rating: 7.7
Rotten Tomatoes: 93%
Another animated film! This time it's directed by the weirdly creative Wes Anderson, the man behind "Rushmore" and "The Royal Tenenbaums". The film definitely has a unique look to it, sort of stop-motion claymation mixed with puppetry mixed with traditional animation techniques. It looks great! But the story is what really carries the film. It's filled with quirky characters, hilariously funny situations, and some high drama thrown in. You know exactly who the villains are, who the heroes are and can pretty much determine how the story will end...but it is super fun getting to that point. Another one of those great films that's good for all ages and should be viewed by everyone.
- The actors recorded their voice roles in natural setting rather than a studio. They recorded in a forest, in an attic, even underground.
- Mr. Fox's wardrobe was based on Wes Anderson's brown corduroy suits.
The Trotsky (2009)
Starring: Jay Baruchel, Saul Rubinek, Michael Murphy, Emily Hampshire, Colm Feore, Genevieve Bujold
Directed by: Jacob Tierney
IMDB Rating: 6.7
Rotten Tomatoes: 83%
I fell in love with this movie immediately! It's a great, Canadian comedy that is spot-on with all the performances within. A high school student thinks he is the second coming of Leon Trotsky. He is forced to go to a public school for the first time in his life. While there, he decides to create a real "student union" for better rights in relation to the oppressing teachers and principals. In lesser hands, this movie could have fallen on it's face. But it's incredibly smart, very believable and, most importantly, funny and sweet. Even though there are a lot of movies on this list for the 2000's, there are few I enjoyed more than "The Trotsky".
- Director Jacob Tierney had a childhood fascination with Leon Trotsky.
Kick-Ass (2010)
Starring: Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Nicolas Cage, Chloe Grace Moretz, Christopher Mintz-Plasse
Directed by: Matthew Vaughn
IMDB Rating: 7.8
Rotten Tomatoes: 77%
Here's another movie that reminds us why we go to the movies. "Kick-Ass" is total fun from beginning to end. The villains overact, the heroes are able to do ridiculous, unexplained things, but the movie never apologizes for it. Take it as it is or don't, your choice. My choice was to have a blast, and I did! The introduction of Chloe Grace Morentz as Hit Girl really made this film for me. So young, but commands every scene she's in, and she can really kick ass! This is not a movie for kids. It's a fantasy for adults and it works on every level. I haven't seen the sequel that came out last year, and I probably won't. I don't want anything to sully my love for the original.
- Nicolas Cage based his voice and mannerisms from the original Batman, Adam West. Knowing this, and then watching the film, it's amazing to see how accurate he is!
- Christopher Mintz-Plasse, who plays Red Mist, originally auditioned for the role of Kick Ass.
Rush: Beyond The Lighted Stage (2010)
Starring: Geddy Lee, Alex Lifeson, Neil Peart
Directed by: Sam Dunn & Scott McFadyen
IMDB Rating: 7.8
Rotten Tomatoes: 100%
I was always a fan of Rush's music, just never a die-hard fan, like I am with Van Halen or the Beastie Boys. My love for the band increased ten-fold after watching this documentary. I had no idea how respected Rush is within the music community. There are interviews with many respected artists who are huge fans of the group. The film takes it's time in tracing the lore of the band, starting by taking them back to where they grew up, right here in the big T-dot O-dot. We witness there rise from pumping out Top-40 rock hits, then changing directions to become a true prog-rock band, and back again. What really comes out of this documentary, though, is not only the incredible musicianship of these three men, but the incredible bond they have created in nearly 40 years of playing together. You don't have to be a fan of Rush to enjoy this film, the mark of a great documentary, but if you have even the smallest interest in them, you need to watch this!
Toy Story 3 (2010)
Starring: Tom Hanks, Tim Allen, Joan Cusack, Don Rickles, Ned Beatty, Michael Keaton, John Ratzenberger
Directed by: Lee Unkrich
IMDB Rating: 8.4
Rotten Tomatoes: 99%
Ok, I promise this is the last animated film on my list (until Finding Nemo 2 comes out, possibly). It's always hard to create a sequel to a movie that is as beloved as the original. It's so much harder to make a third in a series and still make it something people should see. "Toy Story 3" not only achieved this, it's quite possibly the best of the three films! What happens to toys when the kids that loved them grow up? It's a great, unexplored question and it is the perfect ending to a series of films that upped the ante for all that come after them. I cried, CRIED, like a baby, twice, while watching this movie, so much so that I was embarrassed by it. But there are hysterically funny scenes as well. After three of these films I felt like these were my toys, like I was a kid myself. I absolutely loved this movie and would gladly watch it numerous times...whenever I need a good cry!
- The final shot of the film, white clouds on a blue sky, resembles the first shot of the "Toy Story" trilogy, white clouds on a blue sky on Andy's wallpaper.
- There are 302 different characters in the movie.
Inception (2010)
Starring: Leonardo DiCaprio, Ellen Page, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Tom Hardy, Ken Watanabe, Cillian Murphy, Marion Cotillard, Michael Caine
Directed by: Christopher Nolan
IMDB Rating: 8.8
Rotten Tomatoes: 86%
Christopher Nolan has made many great movies, from "Following" to "Memento" to "The Dark Knight". For my money "Inception" is his best. Yes, I can understand when people say there is too much going on, that it becomes confusing. I say, watch it again. First of all, I didn't find it confusing. I was interested in every single scene. Second, the look of the movie is remarkable. The computer graphics are groundbreaking, but what really made my jaw drop were the fight scenes in the hotel with Gordon-Levitt. And knowing that those scenes contained no CGI makes them even more fabulous. (All the "floating" was done with wires!). I loved the story, I loved the adventure and I love...love...LOVED the ending! Truly a magnificent achievement in filmmaking.
- In the city scenes, in the first level of the dream state, the license plates contain a state motto that reads "The Alternate State".
- Take the first letters of all the main characters, Dom, Robert, Eames, Arthur, Mal and Saito, you get DREAMS.
Ok. That's it. I will not list any movies that I still want to see that were released between 2000 and 2013 because there are far too many. I hope you liked this series...my next post will be a wrap-up of all eight posts, plus a little added extra...those films that were rated as a 9 out of 10, just missing that perfect score. Thanks for reading!
Monday, October 14, 2013
My Faves!!! - Part VII
The next part in my series of favourite movies, the 1990's. It was around 1992 when I first started working in a video store, Jumbo Video on Steeles Avenue. I had graduated from high school, was waiting to go into college and I had a lot of time on my hands. Working in a video store gave me plenty of opportunity to see a plethora of movies, and for free! On imdb.com I have rated 711 movies released between 1990 and 1999. A great many of them were, in my opinion, absolutely terrible. But there were a handful that I gave 10 out of 10 ratings on. Here are those gems...
Goodfellas (1990)
Starring: Ray Liotta, Robert DeNiro, Joe Pesci, Lorraine Bracco, Paul Sorvino
Directed by: Martin Scorsese
IMDB Rating: 8.8
Rotten Tomatoes: 97%
If "The Godfather" is considered the best movie about the Mafia, "Goodfellas" has to be a close second. Based on the true story of Henry Hill, it's the tale of a mobster who gets so weighed down with what he's trying to accomplish that his only escape is to turn rat and spend the rest of his life in Witness Protection. This is a fast paced, blink and you'll miss something type of film that keeps the viewer totally involved from the very first scene. All the players are great, especially Ray Liotta, who, at the time, wasn't a big name. But his intense eyes and his total commitment to the role was a revelation! As good as he, and everybody is, the camera is the real star of this film. Scorsese has the camera constantly moving, hardly a static shot in the whole movie, giving the impression of a whirlwind life. The music, lots of Rolling Stones and Eric Clapton, meshes perfectly with the scenes. The movie is incredibly violent but never gratuitously, these were brutal people. Easily one of Scorsese's best and one I go back to again and again!
- The real Henry Hill has said that Joe Pesci's portrayal of Tommy was 90% accurate. One inaccuracy was that the real Tommy was a huge, strapping man.
- Most of the dinner scene with Tommy's mother, played by Catherine Scorsese, was improvised.
The Silence Of The Lambs (1991)
Starring: Jodie Foster, Anthony Hopkins, Scott Glenn
Directed by: Jonathan Demme
IMDB Rating: 8.7
Rotten Tomatoes: 94%
Take a young FBI recruit with a jilted past. Have her need the help of a brilliant psychiatrist turned serial killer. Have them both go after a terrible kidnapper. Stir and come out with one of the best movies of the decade. This movie, the first time I saw it, had me completely rapt, totally involved in everything that was being said and shown. Jonathan Demme, who was known more for his comedies and music videos, got the absolute best out of his cast. Jodie Foster proved to the world that she wasn't just some kid actress that got a choice role in "The Accused" a couple years prior. She conveyed every emotion as the unsure of herself rookie agent. And what else needs to said about Anthony Hopkins portrayal of Hannibal Lecter? Another one of those perfect roles that has been played by others, but not with nearly the same intensity and horror that Hopkins brought to the role. Just the right amount of scary with little touches of tongue in cheek wit.
- When Hannibal Lecter was being transferred, the plan was to have him in a yellow or orange jumpsuit. It was Anthony Hopkins suggestion to Jonathan Demme to have Lecter in a white jumpsuit to seem more clinical and unsettling.
- Buffalo Bill is said to be the combination of three real serial killers; Ed Gein, Ted Bundy and Gary Heidnick.
Reservoir Dogs (1992)
Starring: Harvey Keitel, Tim Roth, Michael Madsen, Steve Buscemi, Chris Penn, Lawrence Tierney
Directed by: Quentin Tarantino
IMDB Rating: 8.4
Rotten Tomatoes: 92%
Quentin Tarantino became the newest "boy wonder" director after the release of "Reservoir Dogs", and deservedly so. I became an instant fan of his Scorsese-like camera work, believable dialogue and brutal make-no-excuses violence. He was a video store geek, kinda like me, that had seen thousands of movies, most of which influenced him in one way or another. Yes, many of his ideas are "stolen" from other lesser films, but he puts those ideas together so well that the viewer doesn't care at all. Aside from his brilliant screenplay and direction, this movie has some outstanding performances, especially from Tim Roth and Michael Madsen. The soundtrack is put together with so much care, I went out and bought the CD right away! There will be other Tarantino films on my list, but this has to be one of the greatest debuts in the history of cinema.
- Tarantino's producing partner, Lawrence Bender, gave a copy of the script to his acting teacher who was friends with Harvey Keitel. Keitel read the script and asked to be involved. His name helped raise the budget from $30,000 to $1.5 million.
- In the opening scene, Joe demands to know who didn't tip. It's Mr. Orange that gives up Mr. Pink, a little foreshadowing on who the "rat" is.
The Player (1992)
Starring: Tim Robbins, Greta Scacchi, Fred Ward, Peter Gallagher, Whoopi Goldberg, Cynthia Stevenson, Brion James.
Directed by: Robert Altman
IMDB Rating: 7.6
Rotten Tomatoes: 98%
I do believe this was the first Robert Altman movie I watched, and loved it so much that I went and watched "MASH" and "Nashville" soon after. Although I liked those other films very much, "The Player" has remained my favourite of his. From the opening shot, an eight minute tracking shot that plays upon other great tracking shots in film history, I was sold. What follows is a great mystery tale of a screen writer that threatens to kill Tim Robbins, a high ranking Hollywood producer. Robbins is great, portraying his character with sure cockiness when needed and incredible vulnerability when called for. What really caught my attention while watching this movie for the first time was the audio, the way Altman overlaps dialogue but still makes the viewer focus on what he needs you to focus on. He mastered this technique in his earlier movies, but I think it works so much better in "The Player" than in his other movies. Oh, and then you have cameos from just about every actor in Hollywood at the time, which makes the viewing of this film that much more fun!
- All the celebrity cameos were not scripted but added in by Altman during filming. None of the actors making the cameos had written lines.
- If all the actors making cameos were to get their standard rates at the time of filming, it would have cost the producers over $100-million in salaries alone.
Jurassic Park (1993)
Starring: Sam Neill, Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum, Richard Attenborough, Samuel L. Jackson
Directed by: Steven Spielberg
IMDB Rating: 8.0
Rotten Tomatoes: 93%
I was 21 when this movie was released. I had to see it opening day in the theatre because of all the hype surrounding it (most expensive movie ever made, dinosaurs that looked real and so on). I sat through all the preamble, how they were able to make dinosaurs, blah, blah, blah. Then, in the quiet of the theatre, on screen we heard a low rumble. We saw the water in the cup tremble. The piercing scream of a T-Rex. I couldn't believe, at that moment, how scared, exhilarated, breathless I was. The rest of the film was a pure thrill ride and I was incredibly disappointed when it ended! For all it's faults (story gaps, poor dialogue) "Jurassic Park" was/is the reason we go to the movies. Steven Spielberg created a world for his viewers that, at the time, nobody thought possible. It made us believe dinosaurs could roam our Earth again...how ludicrous! I can honestly say I had never been so excited about a movie after watching "Jurassic Park" which is why it is on my list.
- Joseph Mazzello, who plays Tim in the movie, auditioned for the role of Jack Banning in "Hook". Steven Spielberg felt he was too young at the time for "Hook", but promised him to get him into a film in the near future. Spielberg kept his promise and cast him in one of the biggest films of all time!
- Universal Studios paid Michael Crichton $2-million for the film rights to his book, before it was even published. Pre-production of a movie started in 1989 based on Crichton's manuscript. The book was published in 1990.
Dazed And Confused (1993)
Starring: Jason London, Joey Lauren Adams, Rory Cochrane, Adam Goldberg, Milla Jovovich, Matthew McConaughey, Ben Affleck, Parker Posey
Directed by: Richard Linklater
IMDB Rating: 7.6
Rotten Tomatoes: 94%
I have often mentioned my love for the 1970's. This movie was made for me! It portrayed being a teenager of that era exactly how I thought it would actually be. Having fun with your buddies, falling in love, hearing some of the best music ever recorded for the first time. Richard Linklater was able to find kids who had never acted before to play some of the roles, and it shows. They had not been bogged down with bad acting habits, making them seem so much more realistic. Some critics found that distracting...I found it endearing. I was pulling for these kids. Their awkwardness beamed off the screen making me empathize with each and every one of them. There is a story that runs throughout, but it's really of no importance. The beauty of this film is in the simple interactions of it's players, stoned or sober, pretty or not, cool or geek. This was what it was like growing up in that era, I'm sure of it. And if it wasn't, I don't care!
- Approximately one-sixth of the entire budget of the film went to acquiring the rights to the songs used in the film.
- A stand-in was used for the pitching scenes as Wiley Wiggins, playing Mitch, had never throw a baseball before.
Schindler's List (1993)
Starring: Liam Neeson, Ben Kingsley, Ralph Fiennes, Embeth Davidtz
Directed by: Steven Spielberg
IMDB Rating: 8.9
Rotten Tomatoes: 97%
Steven Spielberg made some of the most thrilling movies of our time with "Jaws", "Raiders" and "Jurassic Park". He grew up when he made "Schindler's List". He filmed it in gorgeous, but brutally real, black and white (remember that one red coat on the little girl??). He held back nothing when it came to the atrocities of the WWII death camps, leaving nothing to the imagination to give the viewer a very uneasy feeling. Even if you don't agree with the reasons for Schindler's actions (saving his workers so he wouldn't go bankrupt?) you have to commend the man for the lives, real lives, that he was able to save. Liam Neeson was perfect, as was Ben Kingsley and Ralph Fiennes, but the real star of the show were the images that stay with you long after watching the movie...that's the mark of a great director. Nothing was gratuitous, it all needed to be shown, and Spielberg was the man to do it. This is by no means an easy film to watch, but it's one everybody should see at least once in their life.
- Spielberg had the rights to the story for ten years before filming it. He offered the project to Martin Scorsese (who turned it down, saying a Jewish director would do it more justice), Roman Polanski (a Holocaust survivor who felt it hit too close to home) and Billy Wilder (who convinced Spielberg to direct it himself).
- Harrison Ford was offered the lead role, turning it down because he felt the audience would be too distracted from the importance of the story.
In The Name Of The Father (1993)
Starring: Daniel Day Lewis, Emma Thompson, Pete Postlethwaite
Directed by: Jim Sheridan
IMDB Rating: 8.1
Rotten Tomatoes: 95%
Here's another "real-life" drama that pulls at the heart strings, but not in a manipulative way. A man, Gerry Conlon, is arrested by the British police after an IRA bombing in a pub. Although he had nothing to do with it, the police badger him so much and for so long that he admits to the crime. Implicated along with him are his four friends and his own father. We watch as they all try to adapt to prison life. Father and son create a bond that was missing for most of their lives together. When the father, played brilliantly by Postlethwaite, dies in prison, the son does everything he can to clear his name. Emma Thompson steps in as the lawyer who will accept nothing but justice for the family done wrong for 15 years. A remarkable story that plays out so well on film. The last scenes in the courtroom are some of the best I've ever seen, with every emotion being emitted out of Daniel Day Lewis' eyes. Watch the movie, then go to YouTube and search for the real Gerry Conlon. Fascinating stuff!
- Gabriel Byrne, who was executive producer on the film, was set to play the role of Gerry Conlon. He let Daniel Day Lewis do it instead.
- In real life, father and son did not share a jail cell.
Pulp Fiction (1994)
Starring: John Travolta, Samuel L. Jackson, Bruce Willis, Uma Thurman, Tim Roth, Ving Rhames, Eric Stoltz, Christopher Walken, Harvey Keitel
Directed by: Quentin Tarantino
IMDB Rating: 9.0
Rotten Tomatoes: 94%
After making such an auspicious debut with "Reservoir Dogs", Quentin Tarantino makes, what some would consider, one of the most influential films ever! It's hard to describe "Pulp Fiction" simply because it follows the structure of a pulp novel so well; time-twisting, violent, laced with profanity, incredibly funny and a complete joy to behold. Tarantino gets some of the best performances out of people that were previously viewed as washed up, including John Travolta and Bruce Willis. I've always felt the beauty of a Tarantino film is how he makes these extraordinary characters seems so ordinary, only they're placed in outrageous situations. It's almost how Hitchcock was able to constantly make us believe a regular guy could be witness to a terrible situation over and over again. The believability in the dialogue and direction makes the viewer not care. That's the suspension of disbelief you always hear about. It's ridiculous, but it's so much fun and magnetic that the viewer doesn't care! Tarantino quickly became a master of this, and even though I can't stand to watch him in an interview, you just can't deny the man's brilliance in filmmaking. Love, love, LOVE!!! Oh, and the best Christopher Walken cameo EVER!
- The contents of the briefcase has been deemed as "whatever the viewer wants it to be" by Tarantino. The most persistent theory is it's Marcellus Wallace's soul, extracted by the Devil through the back of his head, explaining the Band-Aid on the back of his neck and the briefcase's combination of 666. Tarantino has said the Band-Aid was used to cover up a scar on Ving Rhames' neck.
The Shawshank Redemption (1994)
Starring: Tim Robbins, Morgan Freeman, Bob Gunton, Clancy Brown, James Whitmore
Directed by: Frank Darabont
IMDB Rating: 9.3
Rotten Tomatoes: 90%
"In truth it's the purest Hollywood hoakum--a sunny, heart-tugging hymn to that old chestnut, the indomitability of the human spirit." This is a quote from a critic that didn't like "The Shawshank Redemption". It's a complaint I've heard before about this movie. Funny? This quote almost succinctly describes why I love it so much. There have been a great many movies that manipulate you into thinking you're watching something wonderful. There is no manipulation here; this IS a wonderful film, from the story, to the actors involved, to the albeit corny but gloriously happy ending. There is nothing wrong with losing yourself in a story, be it a book or a film. "Shawshank" lets you get lost. It's a movie about hope, something we all can relate to in one way or another. With that, you need characters you care about (Andy and Red) and characters you hate with everything in your being (Warden Norton). For some reason there is a stigma attached with loving this movie. I don't care, and it seems a lot of other "casual" movie-goers don't care either...it's the number one rated movie on imdb.com, so there!
- Kevin Costner turned down the role of Andy Dufresne. He has said it was a decision he has regretted.
- When initially released in the theatres, the movie was considered a mild flop, only grossing $18-million. After being nominated for Academy Awards, it made another $10-million in the theatres and became one of the most successful video rentals of all time.
Toy Story (1995)
Starring: Tom Hanks, Tim Allen, Don Rickles, John Ratzenberger, Annie Potts, Jim Varney
Directed by: John Lasseter
IMDB Rating: 8.3
Rotten Tomatoes: 100%
I'm a grown-ass adult! There is no way I should like a "kids" movie this much. How is it possible? I'll tell you...this movie made me feel like I was six years-old again. It took me right back to that innocence of childhood, where everything was an adventure. If you had a box, you had a castle. If you had some sofa cushions, you had an impenetrable fort. I watched this movie with all the open-mouthed, wide-eyed wonder of a child, and it felt amazing!! Never mind that it was the first full-length feature made entirely on a computer. PIXAR became a word that would become synonymous with quality movies for both kids and adults. I laughed, I cried, I felt like anything was possible. If I was born in 1989, this would easily be my favourite movie of all-time!!
- Billy Crystal was offered to voice the role of Buzz, but declined. He deeply regretted his decision after seeing the completed film. When John Lasseter was casting for "Monsters, Inc.", he called Crystal's house. His wife answered the phone, passed it to Billy saying who it was, and Billy said "Yes" before any other word was spoken.
Fargo (1996)
Starring: William H. Macy, Frances McDormand, Steve Buscemi, Peter Stormare
Directed by: Joel & Ethan Coen
IMDB Rating: 8.2
Rotten Tomatoes: 94%
I had always been a fan of the Coen brothers, from "Blood Simple" to "Raising Arizona" to "Barton Fink". I thought every one of their films were fun, exciting and inventive. They perfected their style with "Fargo". I remember going to the theatre to see this film. There were very few people in the theatre at the time, maybe ten or so. It was obvious to me that nine out of the ten people in the theatre had never seen a Coen brothers' movie before. I was the only one laughing, out loud. The way that they combine dark humour with brutal violence is something they have excelled at for years. The wonderfully twisted story of "Fargo" shows them at their very best. The performances have been reviewed as "cartoonish", but I think that can't be further from the truth. Those crazy accents are real and only add to the fun of the picture. Wonderfully dark, incredibly funny and a real beauty of a film!
- None of the scenes in the movie, interior or exterior, were filmed in Fargo. The region was experiencing the second warmest winter in 100 years, so filming of outdoor scenes were relocated to other parts of Minnesota, North Dakota and Canada.
- The movie is in fact NOT based on a true story.
Boogie Nights (1997)
Starring: Mark Wahlberg, Julianne Moore, Burt Reynolds, John C. Reilly, William H. Macy, Heather Graham, Don Cheadle, Philip Seymour Hoffman
Directed by: Paul Thomas Anderson
IMDB Rating: 7.8
Rotten Tomatoes: 92%
I saw a movie in 1996 titled "Hard Eight". It was Paul Thomas Anderson's first feature film that not a lot of people heard of, but I loved it. I waited for his next feature and got "Boogie Nights", a look into the burgeoning porn industry of the mid 1970's. Yes, the movie is graphic at times, but the story of this one kid, played very well by Mark Wahlberg, and his rise in the industry became instantly addictive. Mixed with a fabulous 70's soundtrack, it's almost impossible not to have a good time watching the "rise" of this young stud. Of course, not everything works out great in the end, but the story arc never lets you down; nothing surprising but nothing ridiculous either. Some big name stars played their parts beautifully, especially Burt Reynolds, whose last role in "Striptease" was kind of a caricature rather than the complete character he developed for this film. The pace of the film slows down near the end, but I feel that was deliberate, to parallel the slowing down of the main character's career, and the industry itself. Wonderful camera movements aid in the pleasure of watching this film, and Paul Thomas Anderson solidified himself as one of my favourite new directors.
- Leonardo DiCaprio was offered the part of Dirk Diggler and would have done it, but he was already committed to do "Titanic". It was DiCaprio that suggested Wahlberg.
- The song "Boogie Nights" by Heatwave was not used in the movie because the group's lead singer became a born-again Christian, saying the song was about dancing, not porn.
Jackie Brown (1997)
Starring: Pam Grier, Samuel L. Jackson, Robert Forster, Robert DeNiro, Bridget Fonda, Michael Keaton
Directed by: Quentin Tarantino
IMDB Rating: 7.5
Rotten Tomatoes: 86%
Of all the Tarantino movies on these lists of mine, I'd have to say "Jackie Brown" is still my favourite. I felt that this was the movie in which Tarantino grew up a bit. Instead of relying on fast-paced action and violence, he was able to get two great actors from the 70's and re-introduce them to a whole new audience. I had seen Robert Forster in small roles before this. He was absolutely fabulous in "Jackie Brown", as was a much older, much more mature Pam Grier. Tarantino's style was still apparent, twisting a few stories into one, making the finale so much fun. But this is really all about the performances, and it proved once and for all that Tarantino is an actor's director. I know a lot of people find this to be one of his more boring films, but I thought it was paced beautifully, in relation to the aging leads we were following. Great stuff!
- The casting director for the film is named Jaki Brown.
- Based on the Elmore Leonard novel Rum Punch. In the novel, Jackie Brown (actually Jackie Burke in the book) is white. Tarantino consciously changed her name and colour of her skin in order to work with Pam Grier.
The Big Lebowski (1998)
Starring: Jeff Bridges, John Goodman, Steve Buscemi, Julianne Moore, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Tara Reid
Directed by: Joel & Ethan Coen
IMDB Rating: 8.2
Rotten Tomatoes: 80%
I am going to admit something; I did not like "The Big Lebowski" the first time I saw it. I don't know if it was the mood I was in or all the hype surrounding it or what it was. I started to enjoy it more upon second viewing. Now, after seeing it about a dozen times, it is easily one of my favourite Coen brothers' film! I don't know why...I just know I love it more and more every time I see it. Jeff Bridges is a great actor, but I don't know if he ever committed to a role more than he did in this movie. He is absolutely brilliant, and brilliantly funny! The cast of weird secondary characters match him step for step, especially John Goodman and Steve Buscemi. Maybe it's a little hard to follow at times, introducing twists and new characters all the time, but it's so much fun to watch. The scene with Sam Elliott is one of the best cameos in any Coen brothers' movie. I'm laughing at some of the scenes in my head right now!
- A lot of The Dude's wardrobe in the film came from Jeff Bridges himself.
- The Dude says "man" 147 times in the movie, approximately 1.5 times a minute.
Rushmore (1998)
Starring: Jason Schwartzman, Bill Murray, Olivia Williams, Seymour Cassel, Brian Cox
Directed by: Wes Anderson
IMDB Rating: 7.6
Rotten Tomatoes: 87%
I believe my love for this movie is two-fold. First, Jason Schwartzman's characterization of Max reminded me of myself a little, just a lot more exaggerated. I was a dreamer in school, but unlike Max I never acted on my dreams. I suppose I had a chance to live vicariously through his actions on screen, and Schwartzman played him so brilliantly. Second, "Rushmore" immediately reminded me of "The Graduate", one of my favourite movies ever. I likened him, a bit, to Dustin Hoffman's Benjamin Braddock, a kid trying to find his place in the world, eventually carving out his own niche. Beyond those two reasons, there is much to love about this film, including a subtly hilarious performance from Bill Murray. Although Wes Anderson made a feature film before this, "Bottle Rocket", he really established his technique that would make him famous and listed with some of the best new directors of the last 20 years.
- 1800 teenagers from the USA, Canada and England auditioned for the role of Max.
- When Bill Murray first read the script, he liked it so much he said he would do it for free.
Lock, Stock And Two Smoking Barrels (1998)
Starring: Jason Flemyng, Dexter Fletcher, Nick Moran, Jason Statham, Vinnie Jones
Directed by: Guy Ritchie
IMDB Rating: 8.2
Rotten Tomatoes: 76%
Sometimes a good pace is all you need for a movie to succeed. This is an example of that. There is a lot going on in this film, and if you don't pay attention you're libel to miss something. It's action-packed, hilariously funny and a bit violent at times, everything you need for a good time at the movies. This was our introduction to Guy Ritchie's style of filmmaking, and I have to say, I became an immediate fan. He has since become a bit of a joke, with "Snatch" being the one exception, but his pacing and inventiveness in his debut is well worth watching again, and again. We were also introduced to one of the biggest action stars on the planet in Jason Statham, who seemed to become the definition of cool in a very short time. It's hard for me to pinpoint the exact reason I love this movie so much...it must be one of those movies that, as a whole, is better than the sum of it's parts. All I know is it's a great way to spend two hours!
- Lenny McLean, who plays Barry The Baptist, died of cancer a month before the movie premiered in England. As a result, the movie is dedicated to him.
- Just before filming, Vinnie Jones had been released from police custody for beating up his neighbour.
...Honourable Mention:
Baseball (1994)
Starring: Ossie Davis, John Chancellor, George Plimpton, Eli Wallach, Buck O'Neill
Directed by: Ken Burns
IMDB Rating: 8.0
Rotten Tomatoes: n/a
Being a huge fan of baseball, especially the history of the sport, there is no way I couldn't include the best documentary about baseball. Ken Burns took his time putting together over 1100 minutes of coverage about the great game. Starting with it's roots and who may or may not have invented the sport, through the "dead-ball" era of the 1920's, on to the first true hero of the game in Babe Ruth, through the breaking of the colour barrier, the stars of the 60's and 70's, free agency, the DH, and on to the money making business it is today. Fascinating stuff for even the smallest fans of the sport. Great interviews from people who played and covered the game, their love coming through with every word they say. If you're interested in the history of baseball in the least, this is a must watch. Take a weekend to learn what it's all about!
That was the 1990's, and even though I watched a lot of movies during that decade, there are still some that I need to see. Those include:
- Three Colors: Red (1994)
- Three Colors: White (1994)
- Three Colors: Blue (1993)
- Raise The Red Lantern (1991)
- All About My Mother (1999)
- The Celebration (1998)
- Safe (1995)
Goodfellas (1990)
Starring: Ray Liotta, Robert DeNiro, Joe Pesci, Lorraine Bracco, Paul Sorvino
Directed by: Martin Scorsese
IMDB Rating: 8.8
Rotten Tomatoes: 97%
If "The Godfather" is considered the best movie about the Mafia, "Goodfellas" has to be a close second. Based on the true story of Henry Hill, it's the tale of a mobster who gets so weighed down with what he's trying to accomplish that his only escape is to turn rat and spend the rest of his life in Witness Protection. This is a fast paced, blink and you'll miss something type of film that keeps the viewer totally involved from the very first scene. All the players are great, especially Ray Liotta, who, at the time, wasn't a big name. But his intense eyes and his total commitment to the role was a revelation! As good as he, and everybody is, the camera is the real star of this film. Scorsese has the camera constantly moving, hardly a static shot in the whole movie, giving the impression of a whirlwind life. The music, lots of Rolling Stones and Eric Clapton, meshes perfectly with the scenes. The movie is incredibly violent but never gratuitously, these were brutal people. Easily one of Scorsese's best and one I go back to again and again!
- The real Henry Hill has said that Joe Pesci's portrayal of Tommy was 90% accurate. One inaccuracy was that the real Tommy was a huge, strapping man.
- Most of the dinner scene with Tommy's mother, played by Catherine Scorsese, was improvised.
The Silence Of The Lambs (1991)
Starring: Jodie Foster, Anthony Hopkins, Scott Glenn
Directed by: Jonathan Demme
IMDB Rating: 8.7
Rotten Tomatoes: 94%
Take a young FBI recruit with a jilted past. Have her need the help of a brilliant psychiatrist turned serial killer. Have them both go after a terrible kidnapper. Stir and come out with one of the best movies of the decade. This movie, the first time I saw it, had me completely rapt, totally involved in everything that was being said and shown. Jonathan Demme, who was known more for his comedies and music videos, got the absolute best out of his cast. Jodie Foster proved to the world that she wasn't just some kid actress that got a choice role in "The Accused" a couple years prior. She conveyed every emotion as the unsure of herself rookie agent. And what else needs to said about Anthony Hopkins portrayal of Hannibal Lecter? Another one of those perfect roles that has been played by others, but not with nearly the same intensity and horror that Hopkins brought to the role. Just the right amount of scary with little touches of tongue in cheek wit.
- When Hannibal Lecter was being transferred, the plan was to have him in a yellow or orange jumpsuit. It was Anthony Hopkins suggestion to Jonathan Demme to have Lecter in a white jumpsuit to seem more clinical and unsettling.
- Buffalo Bill is said to be the combination of three real serial killers; Ed Gein, Ted Bundy and Gary Heidnick.
Reservoir Dogs (1992)
Starring: Harvey Keitel, Tim Roth, Michael Madsen, Steve Buscemi, Chris Penn, Lawrence Tierney
Directed by: Quentin Tarantino
IMDB Rating: 8.4
Rotten Tomatoes: 92%
Quentin Tarantino became the newest "boy wonder" director after the release of "Reservoir Dogs", and deservedly so. I became an instant fan of his Scorsese-like camera work, believable dialogue and brutal make-no-excuses violence. He was a video store geek, kinda like me, that had seen thousands of movies, most of which influenced him in one way or another. Yes, many of his ideas are "stolen" from other lesser films, but he puts those ideas together so well that the viewer doesn't care at all. Aside from his brilliant screenplay and direction, this movie has some outstanding performances, especially from Tim Roth and Michael Madsen. The soundtrack is put together with so much care, I went out and bought the CD right away! There will be other Tarantino films on my list, but this has to be one of the greatest debuts in the history of cinema.
- Tarantino's producing partner, Lawrence Bender, gave a copy of the script to his acting teacher who was friends with Harvey Keitel. Keitel read the script and asked to be involved. His name helped raise the budget from $30,000 to $1.5 million.
- In the opening scene, Joe demands to know who didn't tip. It's Mr. Orange that gives up Mr. Pink, a little foreshadowing on who the "rat" is.
The Player (1992)
Starring: Tim Robbins, Greta Scacchi, Fred Ward, Peter Gallagher, Whoopi Goldberg, Cynthia Stevenson, Brion James.
Directed by: Robert Altman
IMDB Rating: 7.6
Rotten Tomatoes: 98%
I do believe this was the first Robert Altman movie I watched, and loved it so much that I went and watched "MASH" and "Nashville" soon after. Although I liked those other films very much, "The Player" has remained my favourite of his. From the opening shot, an eight minute tracking shot that plays upon other great tracking shots in film history, I was sold. What follows is a great mystery tale of a screen writer that threatens to kill Tim Robbins, a high ranking Hollywood producer. Robbins is great, portraying his character with sure cockiness when needed and incredible vulnerability when called for. What really caught my attention while watching this movie for the first time was the audio, the way Altman overlaps dialogue but still makes the viewer focus on what he needs you to focus on. He mastered this technique in his earlier movies, but I think it works so much better in "The Player" than in his other movies. Oh, and then you have cameos from just about every actor in Hollywood at the time, which makes the viewing of this film that much more fun!
- All the celebrity cameos were not scripted but added in by Altman during filming. None of the actors making the cameos had written lines.
- If all the actors making cameos were to get their standard rates at the time of filming, it would have cost the producers over $100-million in salaries alone.
Jurassic Park (1993)
Starring: Sam Neill, Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum, Richard Attenborough, Samuel L. Jackson
Directed by: Steven Spielberg
IMDB Rating: 8.0
Rotten Tomatoes: 93%
I was 21 when this movie was released. I had to see it opening day in the theatre because of all the hype surrounding it (most expensive movie ever made, dinosaurs that looked real and so on). I sat through all the preamble, how they were able to make dinosaurs, blah, blah, blah. Then, in the quiet of the theatre, on screen we heard a low rumble. We saw the water in the cup tremble. The piercing scream of a T-Rex. I couldn't believe, at that moment, how scared, exhilarated, breathless I was. The rest of the film was a pure thrill ride and I was incredibly disappointed when it ended! For all it's faults (story gaps, poor dialogue) "Jurassic Park" was/is the reason we go to the movies. Steven Spielberg created a world for his viewers that, at the time, nobody thought possible. It made us believe dinosaurs could roam our Earth again...how ludicrous! I can honestly say I had never been so excited about a movie after watching "Jurassic Park" which is why it is on my list.
- Joseph Mazzello, who plays Tim in the movie, auditioned for the role of Jack Banning in "Hook". Steven Spielberg felt he was too young at the time for "Hook", but promised him to get him into a film in the near future. Spielberg kept his promise and cast him in one of the biggest films of all time!
- Universal Studios paid Michael Crichton $2-million for the film rights to his book, before it was even published. Pre-production of a movie started in 1989 based on Crichton's manuscript. The book was published in 1990.
Dazed And Confused (1993)
Starring: Jason London, Joey Lauren Adams, Rory Cochrane, Adam Goldberg, Milla Jovovich, Matthew McConaughey, Ben Affleck, Parker Posey
Directed by: Richard Linklater
IMDB Rating: 7.6
Rotten Tomatoes: 94%
I have often mentioned my love for the 1970's. This movie was made for me! It portrayed being a teenager of that era exactly how I thought it would actually be. Having fun with your buddies, falling in love, hearing some of the best music ever recorded for the first time. Richard Linklater was able to find kids who had never acted before to play some of the roles, and it shows. They had not been bogged down with bad acting habits, making them seem so much more realistic. Some critics found that distracting...I found it endearing. I was pulling for these kids. Their awkwardness beamed off the screen making me empathize with each and every one of them. There is a story that runs throughout, but it's really of no importance. The beauty of this film is in the simple interactions of it's players, stoned or sober, pretty or not, cool or geek. This was what it was like growing up in that era, I'm sure of it. And if it wasn't, I don't care!
- Approximately one-sixth of the entire budget of the film went to acquiring the rights to the songs used in the film.
- A stand-in was used for the pitching scenes as Wiley Wiggins, playing Mitch, had never throw a baseball before.
Schindler's List (1993)
Starring: Liam Neeson, Ben Kingsley, Ralph Fiennes, Embeth Davidtz
Directed by: Steven Spielberg
IMDB Rating: 8.9
Rotten Tomatoes: 97%
Steven Spielberg made some of the most thrilling movies of our time with "Jaws", "Raiders" and "Jurassic Park". He grew up when he made "Schindler's List". He filmed it in gorgeous, but brutally real, black and white (remember that one red coat on the little girl??). He held back nothing when it came to the atrocities of the WWII death camps, leaving nothing to the imagination to give the viewer a very uneasy feeling. Even if you don't agree with the reasons for Schindler's actions (saving his workers so he wouldn't go bankrupt?) you have to commend the man for the lives, real lives, that he was able to save. Liam Neeson was perfect, as was Ben Kingsley and Ralph Fiennes, but the real star of the show were the images that stay with you long after watching the movie...that's the mark of a great director. Nothing was gratuitous, it all needed to be shown, and Spielberg was the man to do it. This is by no means an easy film to watch, but it's one everybody should see at least once in their life.
- Spielberg had the rights to the story for ten years before filming it. He offered the project to Martin Scorsese (who turned it down, saying a Jewish director would do it more justice), Roman Polanski (a Holocaust survivor who felt it hit too close to home) and Billy Wilder (who convinced Spielberg to direct it himself).
- Harrison Ford was offered the lead role, turning it down because he felt the audience would be too distracted from the importance of the story.
In The Name Of The Father (1993)
Starring: Daniel Day Lewis, Emma Thompson, Pete Postlethwaite
Directed by: Jim Sheridan
IMDB Rating: 8.1
Rotten Tomatoes: 95%
Here's another "real-life" drama that pulls at the heart strings, but not in a manipulative way. A man, Gerry Conlon, is arrested by the British police after an IRA bombing in a pub. Although he had nothing to do with it, the police badger him so much and for so long that he admits to the crime. Implicated along with him are his four friends and his own father. We watch as they all try to adapt to prison life. Father and son create a bond that was missing for most of their lives together. When the father, played brilliantly by Postlethwaite, dies in prison, the son does everything he can to clear his name. Emma Thompson steps in as the lawyer who will accept nothing but justice for the family done wrong for 15 years. A remarkable story that plays out so well on film. The last scenes in the courtroom are some of the best I've ever seen, with every emotion being emitted out of Daniel Day Lewis' eyes. Watch the movie, then go to YouTube and search for the real Gerry Conlon. Fascinating stuff!
- Gabriel Byrne, who was executive producer on the film, was set to play the role of Gerry Conlon. He let Daniel Day Lewis do it instead.
- In real life, father and son did not share a jail cell.
Pulp Fiction (1994)
Starring: John Travolta, Samuel L. Jackson, Bruce Willis, Uma Thurman, Tim Roth, Ving Rhames, Eric Stoltz, Christopher Walken, Harvey Keitel
Directed by: Quentin Tarantino
IMDB Rating: 9.0
Rotten Tomatoes: 94%
After making such an auspicious debut with "Reservoir Dogs", Quentin Tarantino makes, what some would consider, one of the most influential films ever! It's hard to describe "Pulp Fiction" simply because it follows the structure of a pulp novel so well; time-twisting, violent, laced with profanity, incredibly funny and a complete joy to behold. Tarantino gets some of the best performances out of people that were previously viewed as washed up, including John Travolta and Bruce Willis. I've always felt the beauty of a Tarantino film is how he makes these extraordinary characters seems so ordinary, only they're placed in outrageous situations. It's almost how Hitchcock was able to constantly make us believe a regular guy could be witness to a terrible situation over and over again. The believability in the dialogue and direction makes the viewer not care. That's the suspension of disbelief you always hear about. It's ridiculous, but it's so much fun and magnetic that the viewer doesn't care! Tarantino quickly became a master of this, and even though I can't stand to watch him in an interview, you just can't deny the man's brilliance in filmmaking. Love, love, LOVE!!! Oh, and the best Christopher Walken cameo EVER!
- The contents of the briefcase has been deemed as "whatever the viewer wants it to be" by Tarantino. The most persistent theory is it's Marcellus Wallace's soul, extracted by the Devil through the back of his head, explaining the Band-Aid on the back of his neck and the briefcase's combination of 666. Tarantino has said the Band-Aid was used to cover up a scar on Ving Rhames' neck.
The Shawshank Redemption (1994)
Starring: Tim Robbins, Morgan Freeman, Bob Gunton, Clancy Brown, James Whitmore
Directed by: Frank Darabont
IMDB Rating: 9.3
Rotten Tomatoes: 90%
"In truth it's the purest Hollywood hoakum--a sunny, heart-tugging hymn to that old chestnut, the indomitability of the human spirit." This is a quote from a critic that didn't like "The Shawshank Redemption". It's a complaint I've heard before about this movie. Funny? This quote almost succinctly describes why I love it so much. There have been a great many movies that manipulate you into thinking you're watching something wonderful. There is no manipulation here; this IS a wonderful film, from the story, to the actors involved, to the albeit corny but gloriously happy ending. There is nothing wrong with losing yourself in a story, be it a book or a film. "Shawshank" lets you get lost. It's a movie about hope, something we all can relate to in one way or another. With that, you need characters you care about (Andy and Red) and characters you hate with everything in your being (Warden Norton). For some reason there is a stigma attached with loving this movie. I don't care, and it seems a lot of other "casual" movie-goers don't care either...it's the number one rated movie on imdb.com, so there!
- Kevin Costner turned down the role of Andy Dufresne. He has said it was a decision he has regretted.
- When initially released in the theatres, the movie was considered a mild flop, only grossing $18-million. After being nominated for Academy Awards, it made another $10-million in the theatres and became one of the most successful video rentals of all time.
Toy Story (1995)
Starring: Tom Hanks, Tim Allen, Don Rickles, John Ratzenberger, Annie Potts, Jim Varney
Directed by: John Lasseter
IMDB Rating: 8.3
Rotten Tomatoes: 100%
I'm a grown-ass adult! There is no way I should like a "kids" movie this much. How is it possible? I'll tell you...this movie made me feel like I was six years-old again. It took me right back to that innocence of childhood, where everything was an adventure. If you had a box, you had a castle. If you had some sofa cushions, you had an impenetrable fort. I watched this movie with all the open-mouthed, wide-eyed wonder of a child, and it felt amazing!! Never mind that it was the first full-length feature made entirely on a computer. PIXAR became a word that would become synonymous with quality movies for both kids and adults. I laughed, I cried, I felt like anything was possible. If I was born in 1989, this would easily be my favourite movie of all-time!!
- Billy Crystal was offered to voice the role of Buzz, but declined. He deeply regretted his decision after seeing the completed film. When John Lasseter was casting for "Monsters, Inc.", he called Crystal's house. His wife answered the phone, passed it to Billy saying who it was, and Billy said "Yes" before any other word was spoken.
Fargo (1996)
Starring: William H. Macy, Frances McDormand, Steve Buscemi, Peter Stormare
Directed by: Joel & Ethan Coen
IMDB Rating: 8.2
Rotten Tomatoes: 94%
I had always been a fan of the Coen brothers, from "Blood Simple" to "Raising Arizona" to "Barton Fink". I thought every one of their films were fun, exciting and inventive. They perfected their style with "Fargo". I remember going to the theatre to see this film. There were very few people in the theatre at the time, maybe ten or so. It was obvious to me that nine out of the ten people in the theatre had never seen a Coen brothers' movie before. I was the only one laughing, out loud. The way that they combine dark humour with brutal violence is something they have excelled at for years. The wonderfully twisted story of "Fargo" shows them at their very best. The performances have been reviewed as "cartoonish", but I think that can't be further from the truth. Those crazy accents are real and only add to the fun of the picture. Wonderfully dark, incredibly funny and a real beauty of a film!
- None of the scenes in the movie, interior or exterior, were filmed in Fargo. The region was experiencing the second warmest winter in 100 years, so filming of outdoor scenes were relocated to other parts of Minnesota, North Dakota and Canada.
- The movie is in fact NOT based on a true story.
Boogie Nights (1997)
Starring: Mark Wahlberg, Julianne Moore, Burt Reynolds, John C. Reilly, William H. Macy, Heather Graham, Don Cheadle, Philip Seymour Hoffman
Directed by: Paul Thomas Anderson
IMDB Rating: 7.8
Rotten Tomatoes: 92%
I saw a movie in 1996 titled "Hard Eight". It was Paul Thomas Anderson's first feature film that not a lot of people heard of, but I loved it. I waited for his next feature and got "Boogie Nights", a look into the burgeoning porn industry of the mid 1970's. Yes, the movie is graphic at times, but the story of this one kid, played very well by Mark Wahlberg, and his rise in the industry became instantly addictive. Mixed with a fabulous 70's soundtrack, it's almost impossible not to have a good time watching the "rise" of this young stud. Of course, not everything works out great in the end, but the story arc never lets you down; nothing surprising but nothing ridiculous either. Some big name stars played their parts beautifully, especially Burt Reynolds, whose last role in "Striptease" was kind of a caricature rather than the complete character he developed for this film. The pace of the film slows down near the end, but I feel that was deliberate, to parallel the slowing down of the main character's career, and the industry itself. Wonderful camera movements aid in the pleasure of watching this film, and Paul Thomas Anderson solidified himself as one of my favourite new directors.
- Leonardo DiCaprio was offered the part of Dirk Diggler and would have done it, but he was already committed to do "Titanic". It was DiCaprio that suggested Wahlberg.
- The song "Boogie Nights" by Heatwave was not used in the movie because the group's lead singer became a born-again Christian, saying the song was about dancing, not porn.
Jackie Brown (1997)
Starring: Pam Grier, Samuel L. Jackson, Robert Forster, Robert DeNiro, Bridget Fonda, Michael Keaton
Directed by: Quentin Tarantino
IMDB Rating: 7.5
Rotten Tomatoes: 86%
Of all the Tarantino movies on these lists of mine, I'd have to say "Jackie Brown" is still my favourite. I felt that this was the movie in which Tarantino grew up a bit. Instead of relying on fast-paced action and violence, he was able to get two great actors from the 70's and re-introduce them to a whole new audience. I had seen Robert Forster in small roles before this. He was absolutely fabulous in "Jackie Brown", as was a much older, much more mature Pam Grier. Tarantino's style was still apparent, twisting a few stories into one, making the finale so much fun. But this is really all about the performances, and it proved once and for all that Tarantino is an actor's director. I know a lot of people find this to be one of his more boring films, but I thought it was paced beautifully, in relation to the aging leads we were following. Great stuff!
- The casting director for the film is named Jaki Brown.
- Based on the Elmore Leonard novel Rum Punch. In the novel, Jackie Brown (actually Jackie Burke in the book) is white. Tarantino consciously changed her name and colour of her skin in order to work with Pam Grier.
The Big Lebowski (1998)
Starring: Jeff Bridges, John Goodman, Steve Buscemi, Julianne Moore, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Tara Reid
Directed by: Joel & Ethan Coen
IMDB Rating: 8.2
Rotten Tomatoes: 80%
I am going to admit something; I did not like "The Big Lebowski" the first time I saw it. I don't know if it was the mood I was in or all the hype surrounding it or what it was. I started to enjoy it more upon second viewing. Now, after seeing it about a dozen times, it is easily one of my favourite Coen brothers' film! I don't know why...I just know I love it more and more every time I see it. Jeff Bridges is a great actor, but I don't know if he ever committed to a role more than he did in this movie. He is absolutely brilliant, and brilliantly funny! The cast of weird secondary characters match him step for step, especially John Goodman and Steve Buscemi. Maybe it's a little hard to follow at times, introducing twists and new characters all the time, but it's so much fun to watch. The scene with Sam Elliott is one of the best cameos in any Coen brothers' movie. I'm laughing at some of the scenes in my head right now!
- A lot of The Dude's wardrobe in the film came from Jeff Bridges himself.
- The Dude says "man" 147 times in the movie, approximately 1.5 times a minute.
Rushmore (1998)
Starring: Jason Schwartzman, Bill Murray, Olivia Williams, Seymour Cassel, Brian Cox
Directed by: Wes Anderson
IMDB Rating: 7.6
Rotten Tomatoes: 87%
I believe my love for this movie is two-fold. First, Jason Schwartzman's characterization of Max reminded me of myself a little, just a lot more exaggerated. I was a dreamer in school, but unlike Max I never acted on my dreams. I suppose I had a chance to live vicariously through his actions on screen, and Schwartzman played him so brilliantly. Second, "Rushmore" immediately reminded me of "The Graduate", one of my favourite movies ever. I likened him, a bit, to Dustin Hoffman's Benjamin Braddock, a kid trying to find his place in the world, eventually carving out his own niche. Beyond those two reasons, there is much to love about this film, including a subtly hilarious performance from Bill Murray. Although Wes Anderson made a feature film before this, "Bottle Rocket", he really established his technique that would make him famous and listed with some of the best new directors of the last 20 years.
- 1800 teenagers from the USA, Canada and England auditioned for the role of Max.
- When Bill Murray first read the script, he liked it so much he said he would do it for free.
Lock, Stock And Two Smoking Barrels (1998)
Starring: Jason Flemyng, Dexter Fletcher, Nick Moran, Jason Statham, Vinnie Jones
Directed by: Guy Ritchie
IMDB Rating: 8.2
Rotten Tomatoes: 76%
Sometimes a good pace is all you need for a movie to succeed. This is an example of that. There is a lot going on in this film, and if you don't pay attention you're libel to miss something. It's action-packed, hilariously funny and a bit violent at times, everything you need for a good time at the movies. This was our introduction to Guy Ritchie's style of filmmaking, and I have to say, I became an immediate fan. He has since become a bit of a joke, with "Snatch" being the one exception, but his pacing and inventiveness in his debut is well worth watching again, and again. We were also introduced to one of the biggest action stars on the planet in Jason Statham, who seemed to become the definition of cool in a very short time. It's hard for me to pinpoint the exact reason I love this movie so much...it must be one of those movies that, as a whole, is better than the sum of it's parts. All I know is it's a great way to spend two hours!
- Lenny McLean, who plays Barry The Baptist, died of cancer a month before the movie premiered in England. As a result, the movie is dedicated to him.
- Just before filming, Vinnie Jones had been released from police custody for beating up his neighbour.
...Honourable Mention:
Baseball (1994)
Starring: Ossie Davis, John Chancellor, George Plimpton, Eli Wallach, Buck O'Neill
Directed by: Ken Burns
IMDB Rating: 8.0
Rotten Tomatoes: n/a
Being a huge fan of baseball, especially the history of the sport, there is no way I couldn't include the best documentary about baseball. Ken Burns took his time putting together over 1100 minutes of coverage about the great game. Starting with it's roots and who may or may not have invented the sport, through the "dead-ball" era of the 1920's, on to the first true hero of the game in Babe Ruth, through the breaking of the colour barrier, the stars of the 60's and 70's, free agency, the DH, and on to the money making business it is today. Fascinating stuff for even the smallest fans of the sport. Great interviews from people who played and covered the game, their love coming through with every word they say. If you're interested in the history of baseball in the least, this is a must watch. Take a weekend to learn what it's all about!
That was the 1990's, and even though I watched a lot of movies during that decade, there are still some that I need to see. Those include:
- Three Colors: Red (1994)
- Three Colors: White (1994)
- Three Colors: Blue (1993)
- Raise The Red Lantern (1991)
- All About My Mother (1999)
- The Celebration (1998)
- Safe (1995)
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