Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Best Films of 2012 So Far (Midseason Report) -Bayley

Well Ladies and Gentlemen, we're back! It's July 2012 and that means it is time to rack up some of the best films we've seen so far this year.

When I first looked at the wikipage for "2012 List of Films", I noticed that this year had some of the most anticipated franchise names of all-time. I truly can't think of any other year where I could have been geeking out more for multiple films (The Avengers, Dark Knight Rises, Amazing Spider-man, Prometheus, etc.). But with that anticipation can come some disappointments. Some films excelled over others and some just flat-out missed the mark. But boy what a ride it has been!

Below are my TOP 5 FILMS OF 2012 SO FAR, with some brief reviews to wet your whistles. My main focus here will be the Dark Knight Rises, and I'll try to keep all the films as SPOILER-FREE as possible but if you would like to avoid any inclination of a spoiler, I suggest you avoid the following.






5. The Dark Knight Rises: While this may be some fans favorite entry into the Dark Knight franchise, this was easily my least favorite. Having seen it on opening night just a few days ago, it is still fresh in my brain and needs time to settle. But walking out of the theater did not leave me on the EPIC high of The Dark Knight nor the satisfactory fan-boy hustle I did walking out of Batman Begins. This is the darkest, largest-scaled cinematic example of what Christopher Nolan has done in all his films. He has made a film that has a vast scope, expansive range of trifled characters, and an overlying message that this time I honestly couldn't tell you what it is. Seriously, there are many political parallels running around this film, mirroring todays Occupy Wall Street movement, governmental downfalls, and very realistic terrorism ploys, but I wonder what message Nolan wants to convey, if any. Maybe he is just telling the story just to have us wonder farther than the eyes of a "Batman" film.

But anyway, we are introduced to a new villain this turn to bring in the mayhem: Bane. Tom Hardy takes on the task of not only making this character physically demanding, but having to convey all his emotions through his eyes with that crazy mask on his face. I can say he does so with flying colors. This is a manipulative, powerful villain that may not come close to the charisma and watchability of Ledger's Joker, but can still bring the goods. Around him we have new characters such as Joseph Gordon-Levitts' idealistic cop John Blake, Anne Hathaways' Selina Kyle/Catwoman, and Marion Cotillards' Wayne-Enterprise worker Miranda Tate. All are welcome additions to the cast but because of the pacing of the story, these characters get jumbled around so quickly, no one gets the full attention they deserve.

This leads to my main gripe with this movie. The pacing and the length (2 hours and 45 minutes). Why in the world did Christopher Nolan need to make a film this long if it was going to be told this way? In the first 10 minutes we are shown an impressive scene of Bane on a plane, then the Gotham police, Catwoman, the reintroduction of Bruce Wayne. All of these scenes have a very thin through line and are more or less jumbled for us to just check-in on the characters. But it takes a very good amount of time until our beaten down hero finally gets the chance to "rise" (the first time) and become Batman. In essence, I feel as though we hardly even see Batman be Batman in this movie. The film is more or less a story of a city crumbling and needing to pick itself up again, with more focus on the police versus the criminals and Batman as a "symbol" rather than an enforcer. And there are just too many characters that could have been avoided (Matthew Modine's Deputy Commisioner subplot could have EASILY been lost).

Bane comes in and out of the film and mostly speaks in monologue to large crowds of people or is enacting one of his schemes so we never really get to see him interact with the characters we love for more than 2 minutes at a time. His best scenes are when he acts opposite Bale's Batman and breaks the character down as we all knew Bane would after the "Knightfall" graphic novel. But it would have been nice to get more of an arch from this guy and have him be more of a demanding presence (which is diminished due to their being so many characters needing time here). And also his exit from the film is done in such a degrading way, which I won't mention, but it makes you almost lose all tension from his place in the movie and just disregard him entirely. This is gut-wrenching to me.

With the romances of the film never getting more than quick glances put upon them, lengthened subplots towards the middle, and an overall feeling of downtrodden mayhem throughout, the movie suffers because it is more hollow than the rest for too long. The Dark Knight was able to have three strong leading characters (Jim Gordon, Harvey Dent, and Batman) and show them all trying to save Gotham in their own ways and succeeding and failing through their journeys. When the boat scene climax is happening, you are on the edge of your seat because you watched the Joker lead higher and higher until a point of panic. With this, Bane's schemes peak early and we are just on a flat-lined ride of pain that stretches far. And two of our favorite characters (Jim Gordon/Bruce Wayne) spend too much time side-lined in pain rather than fighting in the action.

Now at this point you are probably saying, "Why the hell is this your Number 5 film of the year so far Dan?". It is because this is not a bad film at all. It is actually a pretty good film. Christian Bale gives his best performance as Batman/Bruce Wayne to date. His heartbroken Bruce reacting to scenes with Alfred and his love-interests really shine, as well as his "rise" towards the climax of the film in a prison in the middle of "hell on Earth". Anne Hathaway does, much to my surprise, a fantastic job with Selina Kyle/Catwoman as a cat burglar/crime fighter (seriously how did she learn to kick so much ass? Where are they teaching these skills on the streets of Gotham?), with a hidden heart and a forceful claw. She can surely make a Catwoman in the Nolan-universe purr here. It is also nice to see the Batcave return, the ambitious fight-scenes with the vast array of extras fighting on the streets of Gotham are beauty for the eyes to behold, and when the Dark Knight FINALLY rises to the occasion we are all rooting for him to succeed.

Richard Roeper was first to say that the last 5 minutes of this film are the best you are going to find in any this year and I agree. Nolan ties up his trilogy with a big red bow and gives the fans what they want. I just wish there could have been more focus on characters we watched grow over the course of that trilogy and less time running around with Matthew Modine/Juno Temple/"Wall Street"-esque characters/etc. I know many people who think this is the bees knees and would give it a 10 out of 10 in the blink of an eye so if you are that 1 person in the minority who is actually contemplating seeing this film and has not done so yet, I still recommend it to you. But PLEASE watch the other two first. That is not a request, it is a demand.

Sidenote: Not a lot of funny Batman growling lines here. ("I'm not wearing hockeypads", "You'll be in a padded cell forever"). I was hoping to get some comedy with that. But instead we at least get a Bane sounding like an over-amplified Sean Connery/Yoda mesh.

Also, Hans Zimmer's score here is his best Batman score by far. This soundtrack is phenomenal. The song "A Fire Will Rise" from the trailer as well as "The Fire Rises" from the soundtrack are some of the best he's ever done. He brings back Molossus and with the themes of the trilogy creates something original as well. A remarkable feat.


DKR: 3 out of 4 stars.



4. Seeking A Friend for the End of the World: If you had told me at the beginning of the year that Steve Carell and Kiera Knightley would have the best buddy film in years, I would've thought you mad. Their friendship and chemistry is so strong here it is insane. As Dodge and Penny, these two neighbors meet and are on a road-trip to see the people they care about before a meteor hits the Earth and kills everything. With this dark storyline surrounding them, they find the dark comedy tone just perfect enough for us to find time to laugh and cry for the people involved. This is a character story of a man who is completely emotionless about his demise and finding a reason to care through another. You will find the laughs you may be looking for and still have time to see the heart the writer/director Lorene Scafaria is trying for. I highly recommend this one.

Seeking a Friend: 3 1/2 out of 4 stars.





3. Moonrise Kingdom: I am a big fan of Wes Anderson films. He gives you a fantasy world of his making where semi-selfish people flourish around theatrical settings and find depth along their journeys around wondrous sets and colors on the films pallet. With Rushmore and Royal Tenenbaums as my two favorites from Anderson, this is my close third. Moonrise Kingdom introduces to new child stars (Jared Gilman and Kara Hayward) as Sam and Suzy who decide to run away from home together. As the ripple effect hits Sam's boy scout troop and Suzy's family, we have hilarious moments with characters played by Bill Murray, Edward Norton, Bruce Willis, Francis McDormand, and Tilda Swinton that are some of the funniest of the year. I also loved the feel of the island they live on itself. We see shots of the map of the island as well as watch Sam and Suzy venture around it and it feels like Wes Andersons world is controlled and livable within it. It is as though as an audience we are taking a vacation into this odd story of awkward young love. Anderson does not take too much time for slow-motion pop song moments as he has before, in fact there is basically no scenes like this here. The story simply flows on, which may make this film more accessible to mainstream audiences as the dryer toned comedies of Andersons may have not been in the past. This is fellow reviewer Michael Napoli's FAVORITE FILM OF 2012 so far, and I give it a huge thumbs up.

Moonrise Kingdom: 4 stars out of 4






2. Cabin in the Woods: Writer/Director Drew Goddard hit this one out of the park. If you think this is just a normal horror movie you can skip, you are sorely mistaken. I believe this to be the funniest movie of 2012 so far. It is hard to talk about without spoiling anything because the fun the marketing team had with this film was to just say "Go see it for the surprise" and that's how I want to leave it for you. While the surprise might diminish for you by the time this film hits DVD in September, the film about 5 teens going to a cabin in the woods for a weekend as a horror movie cliche-buster excels as having fun with the horror genre and almost completely turning itself on its head. You get all your favorite cliches torn apart, and lovingly so. With the humor of Joss Whedon sprinkled around thanks to his co-writing work here, Goddard gives the audience the slashings, the suspense, the thrills, and the best stoner character in years: Marty played by Fran Kranz. Go see this movie.

Cabin in the Woods: 4 stars out of 4







1. The Avengers: This movie meets all expectations and is a well balanced example of what a superhero movie can be and what a feat Marvel has achieved with building franchises over the course of 5 years and meshing our favorite superhero characters into one movie here. While I will most likely be reviewing this in more depth in the future, I will say that I have seen this movie 4 times (the most I have ever seen a movie in theaters) and that it holds great re-watch value. Iron Man/Captain America/The Hulk/Thor all get their due along with Black Widow/Hawkeye/Nick Fury and more. The performances are stellar, the action is shot gorgeously, the CGI is top-notch and Alan Silvestri's score when the Avengers finally assemble is still ringing in my ears. Joss Whedon and his team deserve credit for delivering one of the best superhero movies of all time and also balancing comedy, drama, and action in a monumental achievement that I still cannot believe was pulled off. I hope the academies and critics will remember this film towards the end of the year come nomination time because this film while enjoyable, I believe is still something worth noting. It is simply not just a dumb popcorn movie but a sight to be seen.

Sidenote: Can we all agree that this is the greatest interpretation of The Hulk of all-time? I never thought I would have enjoyed Mark Ruffalo's performance as the lovable and dorky scientist Bruce Banner and the comedy and rampage the Hulk produces in his scenes.


The Avengers: 4 out of 4 stars.



Thank you for reading and you can come and check out more reviews here at Bayley and Napoli At the Movie Theater. Here is a list of some of my other favorites and least favorites of 2012 and we hope to see you soon!

Other Movies to See: The Amazing Spider-man, Brave, John Carter (Now on DVD), Ted.

Movies to Skip: Prometheus, Dark Shadows.



-Bayley
























Sunday, March 18, 2012

The Greatest Movie Trailers of All Time List- By Daniel Bayley

Hello there! So if you're like me, you watch movie trailers on youtube all the live-long day. I re-watch movie trailers to get pumped for upcoming flicks (looking at you "Dark Knight Rises/Avengers/Spiderman/Prometheus/etc.), and watch old film trailers just to re-live the film in 2 minutes. That's what a good trailer should do: Give you the essence, tone, and mileu of the film without revealing too much. It should inform you of the narrative without spoiling anything that would ruin the film experience. I HATE when I see a clip of a scene in the trailer and I look for it in the film later. But that's the world we live in. I have to say though, some trailers really get me excited. Trailers truly have become somewhat of an artform. So I thought I would put together a list of my all-time favorites and supply you with the links to enjoy them yourselves. I didn't include some Hitchcock trailers (Psycho) or some Kubrick (The Shining/Clockwork Orange) but I do hope you will look those up as well because they are classics.  Enjoy!


11. Cloverfield
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7fCPoF6o5wA&feature=player_embedded
Although it is not my favorite movie by any means...the trailer is awesome. When I saw it in theater's it blew me away. Popularizing the "Found Footage" movement, this is the trailer that jumpstarted it all.


10. The Social Network
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=lB95KLmpLR4
"Creep" as done by Scale & Kolcany Brothers fits really well here with this story of an outcast who would become a huge social-networking billionaire. I love the buildup from the "Facebook" shots to the film scenes.

9. The Departed
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SGWvwjZ0eDc
I remember going home after school in high school and watching this three times in a row.

8.Terminator Salvation
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6GmLfivKQL8
This completely changed my mind about a new Terminator film being made. Even though this would end up being my least favorite Terminator film, I LOVED this trailer. "The Day the Whole World Went Away" by Nine Inch Nails added with Christian Bale's fully realized raspy voice....oh man.
"We are dead! We are ALL DEAD!".

7. Spider-man (2002)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FN3YaybNJ2s
They tell you the origin in 2 minutes. It's fantastic. "Pompeii" featured here would end up being a song over-used in sooo many trailers. It gets you crazy pumped.

6. The Dark Knight
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8jqq4j52Fb4
I remember waiting everyday for this trailer to come out. When it finally did, I was amazed. The epic reveal of Heath Ledger..."Evening, Commisioner". The Dark Knight Theme. It was just the perfect "Batman Vs. Joker" trailer for the Nolan universe.

TOP 5


5. Titanic
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l5gtS3pgA3Y
James Horners Music with all the epic-ness that is Titanic. That last shot at 2:12 is just NUTS.


4. Prometheus
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HHcHYisZFLU
This just came out and I feel it deserves to be regarded as one of the best trailers ever. It's homages to the original "Alien" trailer, with all the new CGI, Ridley Scott's amazing sci-fi vision, a notable cast, and music and cuts that will have you on the edge of your seat....I can't wait for this film!


3. Star Wars: Episode I The Phantom Menace
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uo5PYJvAAMI&feature=player_embedded
This is one of the greatest trailers ever. What did it tell you? That "Star Wars" is back. Anakin and Obi-wan would meet. That Oscar Schindler was wielding a light-saber. That the pod-race looked nuts. And that there would be a DOUBLE-BLADED LIGHTSABER!?!?!?! Blew my 9 year old mind.


2.Inception
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=66TuSJo4dZM
Introducing the Inception "BUUUUUUUUUUM" noise to the world. "Time" by Hans Zimmer is one of the best trailer tracks ever. The shot at 1:57 of Joseph Gordon-Levitt tying up the cast in mid-air was so mysterious and wild, I needed to know what that was all about.


1. The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo (2011)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WVLvMg62RPA
A clip-every-second trailer, this is the most impressive and enjoyable trailer I have ever laid eyes on. "Immigrant Song" covered by Trent Reznor and Karen O with this tone and story, this trailer shows you that the "Feel Bad Movie Of Christmas" was coming at you hard and it was going to be a crazy ride. Well done, Team Fincher.




Bonus Trailers:
1. Angels in the Outfield (1994)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PCXiGeM9Lqw
I remember seeing this trailer at the beginning of a Disney VHS tape and this music with this famous Disney Narrator has gotten me to just never forget this video. Joseph Gordon Levitt was in some good trailers!

2. Alien
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bEVY_lonKf4

Highly regarded as one of the greatest trailers of all-time. It really is. It was soooooo close to getting on my list but I wanted to focus more on modern trailers. CHECK THIS ONE OUT THOUGH. Especially as a reference to the new Prometheus trailer.

Saturday, January 28, 2012

Reactions to the Oscar Nominations 2012 (Napoli)

Well, this Tuesday as people are now aware were the nominations for the 2012 Academy Awards. I'd have to say some nominees were right on the money, where as others came from left field.


Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Reactions to the Oscar Nominations 2012 (Bayley)

Well the Oscar nominations are upon us!

This is just a quick post. I wanted to just say which nominations surprised me the most this year. It really is a wonderful event when  the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announce the nominations for the Academy Awards and celebrate a great year in film-going.

Surprises: 1) No nomination for Shame. In a way, I should have seen it coming. It is a NC-17 rated film that probably was disconcerting or uncomfortable for the average Oscar-voter but I would have had Michael Fassbender on my ballot any day.

2) Extremely Loud and Incredible Close for Best Picture??????????

3) Demian Bechir for Best Actor for A Better Life. I have to say I'm surprised but I haven't seen the film so I will reserve all judgements on this decision. All I can say is congrats to him.

4) No Albert Brooks for Drive. I had read a few blogs post about how this might happen so it wasn't the biggest of shocks but that really is so disappointing. He was fantastic in that film.


All in all, I can say I'm excited about this years Oscars. Only the #2 "surprise" I posted actually really upset me because I felt that film was mediocre among the rest. I would like to hear your thoughts on the nominations so please do respond with any comments you have.

Also, look out for BAYLEY AND NAPOLI'S OSCAR WINNER PREDICTIONS, coming soon, as well as MICHAEL NAPOLI'S REACTIONS TO THE OSCAR NOMINATIONS.

Thank you very much for reading.

Sidenote: This was the first year in about three years that my Oscar Nomination Predictions beat Napoli's. I have taken the lead!



-Daniel Bayley

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Predictions: The 2012 Academy Award Nominations! (Part 2)

Daniel Bayley and Michael Napoli make the predictions for Tuesday January 24th's Oscar nominations. Whoever gets closer buys the other man food (happens every year my friends). May the best man win! Let us know what you think of the picks.

Daniel Bayley's Predictions

Best Animated Film

1. The Adventures of Tintin
2. Rango
3. Arthur Christmas
4. Puss in Boots
5. Cars 2

Best Original Screenplay

1. The Artist
2. Midnight in Paris
3. A Seperation
4. Young Adult
5. 50/50

 Best Adapted Screenplay

1. The Descendants
2. Moneyball
3. Hugo
4. War Horse
5. The Help

 Best Supporting Actress

1. Octavia Spencer - The Help
2. Jessica Chastian- The Help
3. Bernice Bejo - The Artist
4. Janet McTeer- Albert Nobbs
5. Shaileene Woodley- The Descendants

Watch out for Melissa McCarthy.

 Best Supporting Actor

1. Christopher Plummer- Beginners
2. Albert Brooks- Drive
3. Kenneth Branaugh - My Week With Marilyn
4. Jonah Hill- Moneyball
5. Nick Nolte- Warrior

 Best Actress

1. Viola Davis- The Help
2. Glenn Close- Albert Nobbs
3. Michelle Williams- My Week With Marilyn
4. Meryl Streep- The Iron Lady
5. Rooney Mara- The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo

Tilda Swinton will get the 5th spot but I just gotta cross my fingers that the Academy will want to give Dragon Tattoo some lovin.



Best Actor

1. George Clooney- The Descendants
2. Brad Pitt- Moneyball
3. Jean Dujardin- The Artist
4. Michael Fassbender- Shame
5. Ryan Gosling- Drive

I actually would like to see Michael Shannon get a spot for Take Shelter but this is my prediction. I feel the Academy will award Gosling for two reasons: He only has one nomination after being overlooked for Blue Valentine AND this was a big year for him.

Best Director

1. Michel Hazanvious - The Artist
2. Alexander Payne - The Descendants
3. Martin Scorsese - Hugo
4. Woody Allen - Midnight in Paris
5. Steven Spielberg - War Horse


Best Picture

1. The Artist
2. The Descendants
3. Hugo
4. The Help
5. Midnight in Paris
6. Moneyball
7. War Horse
8. The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo
9. Ides of March
10. Drive



Napoli and I only agree on two categories as locks (Best Director and Best Adapted Screenplay). Let's see who comes closer!

Predictions: The 2012 Academy Award Nominations!

Daniel Bayley and Michael Napoli make the predictions for Tuesday January 24th's Oscar nominations. Whoever gets closer buys the other man food (happens every year my friends). May the best man win! Let us know what you think of the picks.


Michael Napoli Predictions

 Best Animated Feature

1. The Adventures of Tin Tin
2. Arthur Christmas
3. Puss in Boots
4. Rango
5. Winnie the Pooh

Watch out, because I have a feeling that Kung Fu Panda could steal a spot.

 Best Original Screenplay

1. The Artist - Michel Hazanivicius
2. 50/50 - Will Reiser
3. Midnight in Paris - Woody Allen
4. The Tree of Life- Terence Malick
5. Win Win - Thomas McCarthy

This is a tricky category, simply because we do not have any idea on whether the Academy will honor The Tree of Life. I'd would really hate if Bridesmaids got the nom, because people to seem to embrace a mediocre script. Plus it would a shame for it to be nominated this year where The Hangover didn't get it two years ago. I'd prefer to see Diablo Cody get it for Young Adult.

Potential Spoiler(s):
Young Adult and/or Bridesmaids

 Best Adapted Screenplay

1. The Descendants - Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon, Jim Rash
2. The Help - Tate Taylor
3. Hugo - john Logan
4. Moneyball - Steve Zaillian, Aaron Sorkin
5. War Horse - Richard Curtis, Lee Hall

This one is probably the most predictable. But I could be totally wrong. The problem with predicting the screenplay nominations is that the Writes Guild Nominations sometimes do not accurately predict sure fire nominees. Many screenplays are not eligible.

Spoiler: The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo


Best Supporting Actress

1. Berenice Bejo - The Artist
2. Jessica Chastain - The Help
3. Melissa McCarthy - Bridesmaids
4. Janet McTeer - Albert Nobbs
5. Octavia Spencer - The Help

Spolier: Shailene Woodley - The Descendants

I really, really, really, don't want to say this but I believe that Melissa McCarthy will get nominated. She has gotten enough support from critics, the Golden Globes and the SAG. It would be a real treat to see Woodley get the nomination.


Best Supporting Actor

1. Kenneth Branagh - My Week With Marilyn
2. Albert Brooks - Drive
3. Jonah Hill - Moneyball
4. Brad Pitt - The Tree of Life
5. Christopher Plummer - Beginners

I going to shoot a myself in the foot with this, but I do think that Pitt could sneak in with a nomination. He had an incredible year. The chances of him being honored for Moneyball is sub-par; But the Academy could honor him for his great performance in The Tree of Life proving that Pitt is continuing to grow as an actor.

Nick Nolte will probably get the nomination for Warrior. Many are calling it some of his best work of his career. I feel like he really didn't add anything. Just another alcoholic father type role. He was good, but not Oscar worthy.



Best Actress

1. Viola Davis - The Help
2. Rooney Mara - The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo
3. Meryl Streep - The Iron Lady
4. Charlize Theron - Young Adult
5. Michelle Williams - My Week With Marilyn

There are 7 women competing. Glenn Close and Tilda Swinton are favored more to get two slots than Mara and Theron. But something tells me that Swinton is vulnerable more that Close. Albert Nobbs is get polarizing reviews and I can see Close slip through the cracks.

Best Actor


1. George Clooney - The Descendants
2. Jean Dujardin - The Artist
3. Michael Fassbender - Shame
4. Brad Pitt - Moneyball
5. Michael Shannon - Take Shelter

There are four locks (Fassbender, Clooney, Pitt and Dujardin). I would not be surprised if the Academy pulled a wildcard like Shannon. They did when he was nominated in 2008 for Revolutionary Road. Plus last year they chose Javier Bardem over Robert Duvall or Gosling. DiCaprio lost a lot of momentum.

Best Director

1. Michel Hazanvious - The Artist
2. Alexander Payne - The Descendants
3. Martin Scorsese - Hugo
4. Woody Allen - Midnight in Paris
5. Steven Spielberg - War Horse

Spolier(s) - David Fincher, Nicolas Winding Refn, or Terrence Malick.

If the Tree of Life is good with the Academy, it would be a shame if Malick didn't get nominated for HIS film. If the Academy goes for Drive, then Refn could be an upset. I only think Fincher but the DGA usually nominates someone that is not in the top five at the Oscars (Christopher Nolan, Cameron Crowe, Bill Condon).

Best Picture



1. The Artist
2. The Descendants
3. The Help
4. Hugo
5. Midnight in Paris
6. Moneyball
7. The Tree of Life
8. War Horse
9. Drive
10. Bridesmaids

Spoiler(s): The Ides of March, The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo

Well, here is me attempting to shoot a fish in a barrel. I will most likely believe that the Academy will nominate 8 films for this year. It's the safest number of them all. But I chose nine because I am tossed up whether or not the Academy will embrace Drive and The Tree of Life. The other films are locked even though some films lost a bit of steam (War Horse and The Help).

These nine films I chose will almost be a perfect example at what 2011 was all about. Smart, challenging films or movies that paid homages to film itself.

I would really hate to see Bridesmaids get nominated. The Ides of March would be less of a blow. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo was nominated by the PGA, but I think because people are questioning The Tree of Life.


Monday, January 9, 2012

The Best Films of 2011

After much further ado and without any more hesitation, Daniel Bayley and Michael Napoli present their Top 10 Lists of the Best Films of 2011. Please comment with your favorites of the year as well as what you thought about our lists.

 Michael Napoli's Top 10 of 2011


 
10. The Descendants- Showcases George Clooney with a fantastic script. The best ensemble cast of the year. Has its moments of humor and then can have truthful dramatic moments that hit home.


9. War Horse- Proves Spielberg is still a master of telling stories with raw emotions. Breathtaking cinematography. Spielberg pulls off the relatable personification of a horse and creates an epic. 


8. Beginners- One of the more creative movies of the year. Christopher Plummer is fantastic. A real pleasant gem. Great moral, “anyone can restart their life again”. 


7. Hugo- Scorsese combined the astonishing new 3-D technology and old setting. It is Scorsese’s crowning achievement. It’s up there as one of his best movies. 


6. The Muppets- Jason Segel honors the Muppets and opens them up to a new audience. The music is fantastic. I cannot wait to see what will come next for these characters. 


5. The Artist- Seeing The Artist is like stepping into a time portal. It captures the magic and grace of the silent period. Dujardin and Bejo are brilliant. 


4. Moneyball- An unconvential sports movie with stand-out performances by Brad Pitt and Jonah Hill. A very smart movie, brilliantly written by Aaron Sorkin and Steve Zaillian. 


3. 50/50- The funniest movie of the year. 


2. Midnight in Paris- One of Woody Allens best films. A beautiful homage to art, love, and Paris. 


1. Tree of Life- The most polarizing movie of the year is the most beautiful, innovate, and creative film of the year. Every shot is beautifully crafted. Nothing is put out on the front and it challenges the audience to find the meanings within. Terrence Malick proves that movies can be beyond story and it can become pure poetry.


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Daniel Bayley's Top 10 of 2011




10. Hugo: The 3-D gave me a headache but that’s one minor fault in this otherwise wonderful film about Scorsese’s personal fondness for the birth of cinema. A great family film by the wonderful collective imaginations of Scorsese’s production team. Asa Butterfield is heart-breaking. 


9. Our Idiot Brother: The underrated comedy of the year. Paul Rudd gives the best performance of his career in a wonderfully endearing turn as Ned Rochlin. 


8. Take Shelter: Michael Shannon gives one of the top best performances of the year and deserves Oscar consideration. There is a real evident control of suspense by writer/director Jeff Nichols. 


7. The Descendants: The ensemble is strong, lead by George Clooney. It is nice to see Clooney break free of his usual “man in control” role into someone who is very relatable and flawed. 


6. War Horse: I respect the hell out of this movie. Every shot is breathtakingly well –crafted. Not one of Spielberg’s best, but his use of light and shadow, as well as his balance of multiple storylines, shows he still is one of the best directors alive.


5. 50/50: The best comedy of the year. You’ll laugh; you’ll cry. Joseph Gordon-Levitt is a very natural performer on-screen.


4. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2: Ended one of the best film series’ of all time in historic fashion. Alan Rickman IS my choice for Best Supporting Actor of ’11. 


3. The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo: Rooney Mara takes on the iconic role of Lisbeth Salander and hits it right out of the park. Her relationship with Craig on-screen is handled very well. “Immigrant Song” covered by Trent Reznor and Karen O is my most listened to film song of the year. Another hit for Fincher.


2. Super 8: My favorite film of the summer. It takes all of the Spielbergian elements of summer classics we all enjoyed and fuses them together in a summer adventure starring a great cast of child-stars. Michael Giacchino's score is beautiful, especially in the end scenes.


1. The Artist: The best film of 2011. Jean Dujardin and Bernice Bejo are multi-talented stars I would love to keep seeing. After the initial 2 minutes when you realize you are watching a modern film that will have no sound, you realize you never really needed it as long as the story is well told and the talent on and off screen is as clear as it is in this film. It is so wonderfully lovable and pleasant. I applaud the heart of this film and wish everyone to see it.






Be sure to stay tuned for our Oscar nomination predictions next week after the Golden Globes air on January 15th on NBC. Also, here are some of the films we enjoyed that just missed the cut...
Napoli
The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo
Win/Win
A Better Life
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2

Bayley
Ides of March
The Help
Drive
Source Code
Melancholia