
1. Seeking a Friend for the End of the World
– Lorene Scafaria’s intimate and seductively layered comedic romantic
drama involving an apocalypse was easily one of the year’s most unjustly
maligned and forgotten gems.
Daniel Day-Lewis (center) Lincoln © DreamWorks

Ben Mendelsohn and Scoot McNairy in Killing Them Softly
© The Weinstein Company
3. Killing Them Softly
– Eviscerating satire of American consumerism and greed that’s as smart
as it is emotionally inflexible. A triumph for all involved.

Mark Duplass and Aubrey Plaza in Safety Not Guaranteed © FilmDistrict

Nothing is what it seems in Kill List © IFC Films
5. Kill List – Is it a horror film? Is it a hitman thriller? Is it a relationship drama? Discovering what Ben Wheatley’s Kill List
is ends up being the name of the game, the movie building to a
devastatingly brutal coda that is as disturbing as it is unexpected.

Rachel Weisz in The Deep Blue Sea © Music Box Films

Jennifer Lawrence in The Hunger Games © Lionsgate
7. The Hunger Games
– Jennifer Lawrence commands the screen in director Gary Ross’
stupendous take on the first volume of author Suzanne Collins’
best-selling trilogy. Magnificent.

Doona Bae in Cloud Atlas © Warner Bros
8. Cloud Atlas
– Andy Wachowski, Tom Tykwer and Lana Wachowski’s adaptation of the
surreal David Mitchell novel was one of the more audaciously ambitious
projects of the entire year, filled with highs and lows so spectacular
they simply must be seen, and experienced, to be believed.

Denis Lavant in Holy Motors © Indomina Media
9. Holy Motors – There was nothing else in 2012 quite like Leos Carax’s Holy Motors, the freewheeling, devil-may-care drama pirouetting threw genres with spectacular abandon.

The team organizes their next percussive attack in Sound of Noise © Magnolia Pictures

Arrietty and Shawn in The Secret World of Arrietty © Walt Disney Pictures
11. The Secret World of Arrietty – Studio Ghibli’s The Secret World of Arrietty, a reworking of Mary Horton’s The Borrowers,
is a beautiful animated treasure trove of imagination and emotion that
stirred my heart and made me want to do joyful backflips as I exited the
theatre.

Alicia Vikander and Mads Mikkelsen in A Royal Affair © Magnolia Pictures
12. A Royal Affair
–Nikolaj Arcel’s stupendous costume drama chronicling the affair
between a Norwegian Queen (Alicia Vikander) and her mentally ill
husband’s (Mikkel Boe Følsgaard) conscientious doctor (Mads Mikkelsen) a
delectable, emotionally fragile treat signifying the arrival of a major
directorial talent.

Kristen Connolly in The Cabin in the Woods © Lionsgate

Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Bruce Willis in Looper © Sony Pictures
14. Looper
– Filmmaker Rian Johnson takes sci-fi time travel thriller conventions
and then believably spins them on their head, building to a brutal,
emotionally satisfying climax that’s as good as it gets.

Michael Fassbender and Gina Carano in Haywire © Relativity Media

Helen Hunt and John Hawkes in The Sessions © Fox Searchlight
16. The Sessions
– John Hawkes and Helen Hunt shine in this based-on-fact drama of a
38-year-old poet and writer living in an iron lung attempting to have
sex for the very first time.

Brit Marling (center) in Sound of My Voice © Fox Searchlight

Nina Hoss in Barbara © Adopt Films
18. Barbara
– Nina Hoss commands the screen in Christian Petzold’s multifaceted
Cold War thriller about an East German doctor who must decide if the
price of freedom can come at the expense of her patients’ wellbeing.

Daniel Craig in Skyfall © Sony Pictures / MGM
19. Skyfall
– Sam Mendes takes James Bond and makes him his own while still paying
homage to the 50 years of history preceding his taking over the
directorial reigns. Awesomely entertaining.

Taylor Kitsch and Lynn Collins in John Carter © Walt Disney Pictures
WORTHY OF DISCUSSION (in alphabetic order)

Christoph Waltz and Jamie Foxx in Django Unchained
© The Weinstein Company
21 Jump Street, Bernie, The Brooklyn Brothers Beat the Best, The Central Park Five, Chasing Ice, The Dark Knight Rises, Django Unchained, Flight, The Grey, The Innkeepers, The Intouchables, Jeff, Who Lives at Home, The Kid with a Bike, Lawless, Life of Pi, Magic Mike, On the Road, ParaNorman, Rise of the Guardians, Smashed, Tonight You’re Mine, Wreck-It Ralph, Your Sister’s Sister
SIMPLY ENTERTAINING (in alphabetic order)

Seann William Scott in Goon © Magnolia Pictures
- Portions of this article reprinted courtesy of the SGN in Seattle
No comments:
Post a Comment