Thursday, December 29, 2011

2011 year-end wrap-up part V: The Runner-Ups

This is the fifth of several year-end essays detailing the year in film.  I'm cheating quite a bit here, as I originally did not plan on writing a 'runner-up' list.  But, upon reflection, I realized that I had ten films that were really quite good but nonetheless didn't make my absolute best-of list.  One could argue that writing about more films possibly dilutes the impact of the eventual 'best-of' list, but at the end of the day, I saw a lot of really good movies this year, and I see no reason not to celebrate as many of them as I can get away with.  So now, in alphabetical order, the ten 'runner-ups' of the year.  And yes, I'm stealing three of these from the earlier 'good films you missed' list, because I damn-well would have reserved them for a runner-up list if I knew I was going to have time to write one.  In their place I added one (Winnie the Pooh) that didn't get its proper glory.

Cedar Rapids
This was among my favorite films of the year for the first half of 2011, so it's a testament to how strong the rest of the year was that this didn't quite make the final cut.  Regardless, this wonderfully charming, witty, and openly moral character comedy absolutely merits discovery.  Ed Helms gives a terrific star turn as an isolated country bumpkin, so entrenched in his small corner of small-town USA that a trip to Cedar Rapids, Iowa feels like a bender in Las Vegas.  Director Miguel Arteta and writer Phil Johnston's surprisingly warm comedy never goes for the crass joke and never allows its characters to go over-the-top.  Anne Heche is allowed a three-dimensionality somewhat rare in female supporting characters.  Even John C. Reilly, as the token goofball, is allowed moments of humanity and genuine pathos.

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows part II (review)
I can only imagine how much better this series finale would have played for me had I not read the books.  If I had not seen the major emotional beats coming, had I not been expecting certain major deaths, had I not missed the major portions from the book that were not included in the film, would I have loved it as much as I expected it to?  I cannot say, but I will say that the film improved on a second viewing, that the awful 3D hurt the theatrical experience, and that most of my carping revolves around not what is in the film but what is not.  Judging purely by what is in the film, it is a splendidly emotional and sprawling finale, with a massive battle that never becomes bigger than the personal stakes of our main characters and major beats for nearly every minor supporting character.  Alan Rickman gets one of the finest scenes of his career, in a performance that in a more 'prestigious' picture would make him an Oscar front-runner.  It may not be the best Harry Potter film in the series, and it may not quite have achieved the levels of The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King, but by any rational standard, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows part II is a wonderful and powerful piece of fantastical fiction.    

The Lincoln Lawyer
(review)
I've talked here and there about how 2011 was a great year for mid-budget adult-centric genre fare, and this top-notch legal thriller was a shining example.  Matthew McConaughey delivers a wonderful star turn in this old-fashioned, star-filled legal thriller that was so good and so successful that it spawned a sequel and a television series.  Yes, the film tips its hand a bit too early, but what fun it was watching actors like Marissa Tomei, William H. Macy, Michael Pena, and a number of others digging their teeth into this genre material.  It's perhaps 'merely' a pulpy legal thriller, but by god it's an awfully good one.   

Martha Marcy May Marlene
This is the awkward part when I explain why a film that made a number of 'best-of' lists only ends up on my 'runner ups' list.  The answer is simply that it was merely a really good movie, if not quite a great one.  The lead performance by Elizabeth Olsen is being justifiably heralded, and John Hawkes shines yet again.  If the 'cult' material felt a little old-hat for a viewer that has actually seen a number of television movies about the subject, the sheer artistry and moody craftsmanship on display makes up for it.  This isn't the first film to deal with a young woman escaping from a religious cult.  But it is one of the best.

Moneyball (review)
Anchored by strong turns from Brad Pitt, Jonah Hill, and Philip Seymour Hoffman, this terrifically engaging and low-key drama is at its best when it focuses on Billy Beane's single-minded quest to use statistics in a relatively new way in order to craft a winning ball club.  It only falters when it includes moments of his family life in what felt like a pandering attempt to make him 'relatable' to audiences who aren't sports junkies.  But when it keeps its eye on the ball, it's a fine and thoughtful light drama that never inflates its importance or the importance of the story it's telling.

Puss In Boots (review)
This film is the kind of movie that made me want to do a 'runner-up' list.  It's not even the best Dreamworks cartoon of the year, but its unexpected quality makes me incredibly excited about the future of Dreamworks Animation.  What would have been a quick cash-in spin-off is a gloriously exciting, exceptionally witty, and often just-plain weird fairy-tale adventure that is absolutely beautiful to look at.  It's a film by and arguably for cat lovers, and it's the first movie that my four-year old daughter absolutely loved.  It may have been motivated by commerce, but it's absolutely a work of art.


War Horse
(review)
This one gets better the longer it lingers in my mind.  Yes, I'm not a big horse junkie and I can't say I was all that teary eyed during the moments of horse drama.  But hidden beneath this 'boy and his horse' fable is a brutally unflinching look at the madness and carnage that was World War I, delivered in a brutally violent but bloodless fashion that makes it not only a pretty great movie, but an educational one as well.  Spielberg may been knocked for the melodrama, but he also deserves credit for the horrifying and somber moments as well, and the fact that this works as a true anti-war picture if only by virtue of refusing to explain or justify why so many young men (and horses) were sent off to die.  That a film as good as War Horse ranks in the upper-middle of Spielberg's filmography is a sign of how impressive his nearly-40 year run has been.  And he's not anywhere close to finished.

Warrior
 (review)
This terrifically acted and thoughtfully written family drama is one of the best 'underdog sports' movies ever made.  Yes, Nick Nolte deserves an Oscar nomination and yes Tom Hardy is ferociously compelling as one of two brothers who hash out years of family bitterness in the lead-up to a MMA tournament, but the rest of the package is superb as well.  The characters, every single one of them, feel absolutely human and three-dimensional, and seemingly stock characters like Joel Edgerton's sympathetic wife (Jennifer Morrison) and a sympathetic school principal (Kevin Dunn) are given intelligence and opinions of their own that makes the film feel that much more real.  As odd as it may be to praise a film like Warrior for its dialogue, the sheer quality of the conversations that take place in this film (where adults discuss their problems and their feelings like adults) is what makes it more than just a well-acted TappOut movie.

Win/Win
Paul Giamatti shines in this thoughtful little drama about a struggling lawyer who commits a genuine wrongdoing in order to keep his business afloat and his family in the dark about his financial problems.  The plot thickens when the old man he has agreed to become a guardian for (Burt Young) is visited by his seemingly homeless nephew and the young man ends up taking up residence with the family.  Amy Ryan and Alex Shaffer deliver solid supporting turns in this pretty terrific movie that, yet again, probably deserved a wide release.

X-Men: First Class (review)
This is one of the best comic book films ever made, and a sterling comeback effort for the maligned X-Men franchise.  Using the prequel format as a way to play around with continuity, Matthew Vaugn and Jane Goldman fashion this 60s-set drama as a old-school 007 caper, with Kevin Bacon threatening the world with nuclear armageddon using the classic 'pit two countries against each other and clean up the mess' scheme that suddenly came back into fashion this year.  Michael Fassbender and James McAvoy are dynamite leads as the young Magneto and Professor X, respectively, and the emphasis of character over action makes this a gloriously engaging and often intelligent piece of pop entertainment.  So why is it only on the 'runner up' list?  Alas, a second viewing highlighted the seams of a rushed-production and the exclusion of any gender/race commentary in this 1960s fable was even more glaring the second time around.  It's still a terrific movie, but there is obvious room for improvement the next time around and there is another comic book adventure that I enjoyed even more this year.   

Okay, no more stalling.  The next list will absolutely be the best-of 2011 list.  As always, share your comments below.

Scott Mendelson

6 comments:

corysims said...

Another great list, Scott. Martha Marcy May Marlene and Deathly Hallows Part 2 made my top ten this year, while Warrior and First Class also made my runner-up list.

I feel you when it comes to Deathly Hallows Part 2 and pros and cons of reading a book before the film adaptation. This is one of main reasons why I didn't re-read the Potter books after Order of the Phoenix film was released in '07. I didn't have them memorized so I sort of went in fresh with the last three films. It's the same reason why I don't think I'll finish the Hunger Games Trilogy before the film adaptations are done. I've read the first but I want to go in cold for the last two. That'll anger the wife.

And I've got to see War Horse before the year's out. I've got 2 days left. I have a feeling that'll knock either Dragon Tattoo or Fast Five out of my top ten.

By the way, I think I've guessed you're top three; Kung Fu Panda 2 (which I just saw...it's in the runner-ups list), Young Adult, and 50/50. How close?

Liam_Ho said...

I agree that Nolte deserves that Oscar nod, the scene of him and Edgerton on the porch was heartbreaking; seeing Nolte's face as the door as shut on him.

Bill said...

That's a pretty good list.

But your knock against Moneyball doesn't make sense.
Without the connection to his daughter there would be no way to explain turning down $12.5 million from the Red Sox! And that part is actually true! By the way the scene in Press Box at Fenway Park was excellent. The actor playing John Henry, Arliss Howard, was spot on.

Bill said...

I think Nolte is one of the most underrated actors working today.

Scott Mendelson said...

I went into more detail in my full review, but the first major scene with his daughter worked to establish their connection and the 'threat' of what failure would mean for said family (it also provides an important moment that is called-back in the finale). The extra moments, the 'Gee, dad, are you going to lose your job?" scenes, felt padded.

Scott Mendelson said...

I still say he should have won the Best Actor Oscar for Affliction back in 1998 (especially as Jim Carrey wasn't even nominated).

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