Favorite and Least Favorite 2011 Movies

A few weeks back I weighed in on 2011 book releases.  This week it’s my annual round-up of films.

I saw a lot of movies this year, and I’d have to say it was a pretty even mix of films I loved, films I liked, and films that were disappointments, of varying degrees.

I narrowed it down to my top favorites, and bottom busts.

THE BEST

J.J. Abrams SUPER 8 has a quirky pre-teen cast (a la GOONIES and STAND BY ME), great intrigue and tension, and truly spectacular special effects.  Everything worked for me.  It was like going back in time and seeing E.T. or Poltergeist as a kid.

Maybe this was the year for good extraterrestrial films.  PAUL takes the genre from a totally different point-of-view, and sensibility, than SUPER 8.  I thought it was equally entertaining, with many laugh out loud moments and a clever skewering of sentimental films in the genre (while managing some tolerable sentimentality in the end).

I didn’t catch many notable gay films this year, but I thought this quiet, British indie drama was a huge achievement.  WEEKEND is about two guys who fall in love at the wrong time.  A one night stand turns into an intensely emotional connection, but one partner is leaving in two days to relocate to the U.S..  It’s a modern, honest portrait of gay love, making no apologies for the fast-paced, and at some times, drug-infused progression of the relationship.

In picking my favorite fantasy film of the year, I could have gone with HARRY POTTER & THE DEATHLY HOLLOWS PART II, or RISE OF PLANET OF THE APES.  Both were excellent.  But I’ll go out on a limb, and declare THOR the winner.  Many people I know hated the collision of the fantasy characters and a contemporary setting.  I thought it worked just fine, not taking itself too seriously, and the Norse mythology brought something fresh to the superhero genre.

THE WORST

Every time I’ve complained to someone about how bad Scream 4 was, they say:  “What did you expect?”  I guess I’d be hard pressed to name a movie franchise that held up its entertainment value on its fourth follow-up, but I really had hope for SCREAM 4.   The previous versions managed to add something new to the movie-within-the-movie, copycat killer schtick.  SCREAM 4 felt flat and gimmicky about five minutes in.

 

 

Kind of the antithesis of THOR, PRIEST was way too earnest and cliché-ridden, trodding the very familiar territory of vampire killers.  As I said to my partner half-way through, I really didn’t care what happened to any of the characters.

 

 

It pains me to pan mythology-based adventures, but unfortunately, they’ve just all been so bad on the silver screen.  IMMORTALS tried to be stylish, but ended up being a baffling, and unintentionally comical clash of fantasy perspectives.

Randomness

Squeezing in a quick post this week while I’ve been writing around the clock, mainly for work (grant proposal) rather than my own projects (sigh).

I thought I’d just talk about some random things that inspired me this week…

1. Thor, the movie.

I’m usually disappointed by big budget, action/adventure Hollywood films, but Thor was so good, on so many levels.

First level—a fantasy world that is not a thinly veiled allegory for America, at its freedom-loving, platitude-wagging, jingoistic best.   (I love freedom too, but I prefer it with a touch of subtlety).

Second level—a hero who starts off as a (believable) jerk, and ends up as a (believable) hero.   Chris Hemworth plays it just right:   a swaggering, single-minded hunk when he needs to be, and a broken outcast, later, who quickly gets himself back on track.   Bravo.

Third level—Natalie Portman.   There is no role too cliche or doofy that she can’t make work.

2. An Archie comics character comes out.

I haven’t read the series since, erm, 1985, but I’m feeling the joy.   Positive LGBT media representations!!

3. Beta readers.

Just got myself a new one and—wow—she’s good.   Not all writers are good critiquers, and the opposite is true as well.   But this new online friend (I can’t reveal her name because she’s shy) really made my week with incredible, thoughtful feedback on a short story I’m getting ready to submit.   Thank you (you know who you are).

4. French Open Tennis.

The most obscure Grand Slam event is also, kinda, my favorite.   Because it’s an underdog kind of event, and it’s weird playing on clay, and there’s longer rallies, and spins, and strategy, and it takes place in Paris for chrissake!

This year it’s an open field on the women’s side, and, arguably, up for grabs between the top three seeded men. And two of my favorite longshot female players are still in the draw: Marion Bartoli and Li Na. Awesome.