Published on Friday, December 18, 2009 .

Indeed, it is that time of year again when a cultural reckoning is required. Did you have any favourite films this year and what was cooking up a storm on the music front? Just like a friendly chinwag round the internet campfire, all are welcome to spend their two-pennies worth, please share your own Best Of’s for the Year 2009 and leave a comment.
I shall kick things off with my choices:
Best singles:

Laura Marling - Alas I cannot swim (came out in 2008)
Andrew Bird - Noble Beast
Grizzly Bear - Veckatimest
Richard Hawley - Truelove’s Gutter
The xx - xx
Wilco - Wilco
Wildbeasts - Two Dancers
Yeasayer- All Hour Cymbals
Bubbling under
Tunng- Good Arrows (came out in 2007) / The Decemberists - The Hazards of Love / School Of Seven Bells - Alpinisms / Yeah Yeah Yeahs - It’s Blitz / Polar Bear - Polar Bear / Yo La Tengo - Popular Songs / The Antlers - Hospice
Best Films(roughly in order, best first)
Fish Tank
The Damned United
Mesrine Killer Instinct
The Class
Moon
Caramel (2007)
Sleep Furiously
Coraline
Doubt
35 Shots of Rum
Frozen River
Let the Right One In
The Reader
An Education
Inglorious Basterds
Slumdog Millionaire
Syndoche new york
Public Enemies
State of Play
…. sadly there were others but they didn’t even make the cut.


Published on Thursday, January 8, 2009 in 2008,
Best Of,
World Cinema,
award,
cinema,
culture,
favourite films,
film,
film director,
links,
list,
movies,
photography,
prize and
talent .

I usually bore all my filmy mates with my favourite films of the year, but hey, now I have a blog I can be even more indulgent! My favourite music list will follow shortly, as soon as I’ve taken some more evaluative pills.
- There Will Be Blood /Paul Thomas Anderson, USA … ambitious, layered, passionate, engrossing, well acted. Old-fashioned parable, epic in a good way. Stunning cinematography. Needed a great central performance and thankfully we got a top of the range Daniel Day Lewis acting class. Powerful stuff. Just spoilt by a drawn-out ending.
- The Dark Knight /Christopher Nolan, USA … very enjoyable, disturbing, moody and magnificent, Heath Ledger’s Joker lifts it notches higher on the entertainment levels. Delve deeper and the messages are thick and potent.
- Juno /Jason Reitman, USA … original, funny, involving, imagine a comedy about abortion working so well. Great screenplay.
- No Country For Old Men /Ethan Coen, Joel Coen, USA … clever and creepy, vacuous, mans dark side exposed, not much hope on show. Always interesting but worryingly uninvolving.
- Happy Go Lucky /Mike Leigh, UK … just the antidote I needed post “Old Men” and “Will Be Blood”, light of touch, beautifully acted, jaunty, charming and sweet. A film with a heart.
- Lars & the Real Girl /Craig Gillespie, USA … I really loved this, its original, affecting and thoughtful. You are slowly drawn into a quite odd world which is brought to life wonderfully.
- Of Time and the City /Terence Davies, UK … rich, moving, interesting, thoughtful, individual, a very personal elegy and an essay on life.
- Charlie Wilson’s War /Mike Nichols, USA … entertaining, well acted, surprisingly better than I thought. Philip Seymour Hoffman should have won a Best Supporting Actor Oscar for this.
- Gomorrah /Matteo Garrone, Italy … realist and gritty, suffers a little being post-”Sopranos”, anti-gloss gangster deconstruction. Tight jumpy editing, visually strong and visceral. Deserves to be seen widely.
- Sweeney Todd /Tim Burton, USA/UK … rich in colour and pantomime, good fun, I closed my eyes sometimes but the sounds were even worse. Burton back on form.
- The Kite Runner /Marc Forster, USA … emotive, a strong visual hook tells a universal tale. Strong but slightly flat.
- Wall-E /Andrew Stanton, USA … innovative and exciting first 40 minutes, imaginative story then plummets to dullness. How could such potential diminish so quickly? Massively disappointing.
- Indiana Jones /Steven Spielberg, USA … couldn’t resist, my hero returns for more hokum. Better than Indy 3 nowhere near as good as Raiders. Old Harrison just about pulls it off, thankfully the laconic Bogart delivery doesn’t diminish with age.
- Gone Baby Gone /Ben Affleck, USA … well told crime tale, sturdy acting. Delayed release due to freakish parallel with real UK child abduction case in the news.
- Burn After Reading /Ethan Coen/Joel Coen, USA … poor, almost embarrassing acting and casting, the Coens back to coasting mode.
- Hellboy 2 /Guillermo del Toro, USA/Germany … what a let-down, the best bit by far (which produced the only audience laugh) is the singing of a Barry Manilow song. Save your pennies and watch that clip on YouTube.
Missed but heard good things on:
Hunger (UK), 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days (Romania), The Class (France), Waltz with Bashir (Israel), In Bruges (UK/USA), Man on Wire (UK/USA)

For the film fans amongst you, here are my two favourite sites for checking out reviews for movies old and new.

1) metacritic.com (”Metacritic compiles reviews from respected critics and publications for film, video/dvd, books, music, television and games. Features the nifty Metascore which shows the critical consensus at a glance by taking a weighted average of critic grades).

2) mrqe.com (”provides a searchable index of all published and available movie reviews.” Includes 69,993 titles and 684,131 articles).

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