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Best of 2017: False Narratives and Barely Getting Out Of This One

January 1, 2018 john lichman
"Goatsenight, Moon"

"Goatsenight, Moon"

5/31/2019: Always make sure “Draft” is set to “Publish”

Six months into 2018 and I haven't published this until now in a spectacular display of "whoops." 2018 had a troubled vibe as those of us in the United States adjusted to "the new normal" narrative that was the official unmasking for a lot of ugly shit that found itself clogging every supposed drain in the D.C. area. It also happened to have a few strong narrative debuts (Lady Bird, Get Out) combined with unintentional and frankly unresolved cultural moments (the "live" reality show Live P.D. became a hit while the The Force, the documentary project that spent a year with an increasingly scandal-ridden Oakland Police Department, was a blip). It became hard to pin down what 2018 was doing to us both in theaters and on the streets. I spent all of it in a constant transient haze pumping out resumes and promising I would look forward to world-building with you.

The weird-but-common-over-time-thread in my favorite films: a sense of finding the accidental truth inside a creative false narrative that really wasn't the intention. In the case of Abacus it served as an unintentional precursor to the Harvey Weinstein story; Brigsby Bear couldn't have known it would mirror how "real fans" of Star Wars would react to Rian Johnson's The Last Jedi. And then that's the point in Marjorie Prime as our recounted narratives are constructed to lead away from the pain. The actual stories in our lives are so surreal they wind up being too painful or too shocking to comprehend. We'll have to remember that—and we can thanks to Walter Prime being on our phones.

So here's what I liked now that we're about halfway through 2018. From the top:


Brigsby Bear

1. Brigsby Bear

dir. Dave McCary, 2017

One of--if not the--strongest films relevant to 2017 is this dark comedy about a twenty/thirtysomething living out his days after the apocalypse with his father, mother and watching his favorite TV show that still (somehow) gets made: “Brigsby Bear,” the longest running show ever. Then the world comes crashing down for James (Kyle Mooney), who was kidnapped years ago by Ted and April (Mark Hamill and Jane Adams). It turns out Brigsby Bear was an extremely long con by Ted to both teach and condition his "son" to never go outside and even have modern experiences like being catfished by his Mom and Dad on the official Brigsby Bear IRC (Internet Relay Chat for you kids) fan group.

James is ushered into our world and completely overwhelmed when he learns despite thousands of channels and millions of shows there is no sign of his childhood hero. There's a great moment near the beginning as James shows his "adoptive" father Ted his own ideas for the Brigsby Bear-verse and Ted quickly shoots them down. Despite being finished before hand it would darkly mirror fans reactions to Rian Johnson's own culmination of The Last Jedi asking "why don't we move on to the next story here?"


Behemoth.png

2. Behemoth

dir. Zhao Liang, 2015

One of the older films to finally reach the U.S. in 2017, Behemoth toured the festival circuit starting in 2015 until its U.S. release earlier in 2017. Quoting the Bible as its camera wordlessly moves through tunnels, elevator shafts, dynamite explosions across cliff sides and ends in a sparkling utopia that no one can afford to live in.  Zhao Liang wordlessly follows coal miners as they toil, set explosives, and have their lungs drained as massive unpopulated cities sit miles away because no one can afford them nor want to live so far out. 


Marjorie Prime.jpg

3. Marjorie Prime

dir. Michael Almereyda, 2017

A year before the Internet drowned in fake Black Mirror pitches, Michael Almeryeda’s adaptation of Jordan Harris’ play looked into the lengths people would go to keep a memory alive. Told over three acts, Marjorie (June Smith) consoles herself with Walter Prime (Jon Hamm), a holographic artificial intelligence that sits across from her and relates stories and opinions as told to it. One night her son-in-law (Tim Robbins) gets drunk and relates to Walter Prime the truth about a family secret that the simulation dutifully responds, "I'll remember that next time."

This becomes the crux of each act as the next time comes at specific end points where the characters must then (figurati--er, literal...figuarliterally?) face their ghosts and determine how much they really want to remember next time.


Abacus.png

4. Abacus: Small Enough to Jail

dir. Steve James, 2017

In lieu of everything else, a fascinating look at how local elected officials were caught with their pants down and promised to make amends in the worst way possible. Steve James brings the Sung family’s connections with the Abacus Federal Savings Bank and how it had to defend itself against New York County District Attorney Cyrus Vance, Jr. who was desperate to find a scapegoat (and more importantly, an easy win) after the 2008 marketing crash. 

The Sungs are shown to be a collective that would make George Bailey appear stingy. But the subprime mortgages beast does sneak into their world through both Vance's team's interpretation of a culture they're not familiar with and employees that very much did extort customers seeking loans, leases, and to own property. Even this can be explained by Abacus Federal Saving Bank's rare accomplishment in that "[o]f the four thousand three hundred and ninety mortgages that Abacus held in 2009, only sixteen were in trouble, a delinquency rate less than a twentieth of the national average."


Mimosas.png

5. Mimosas

dir. Oliver Laxe, 2017

One of my preferred films from last year because it required almost four years of catch-up and happy accidents to complete. It’s such a slog to ever write or see the words “part of the cinematic universe” but such is the case as Mimosas ties into Laxe’s 2015 The Sky Trembles and the Earth Is Afraid and the Two Eyes Are Not Brothers. A man is sent to go find and accompany two others out of a valley, but that leaves aside every other narrative question you'll be asking yourself throughout this.

Vague and undefinable to an excruciating point Mimosas is perfect to watch and drift along with the journey. It works much better if you don't ask "when does this occur" or "what about that," as the MST3K adage of "you should really just relax" is the only narrative you need with Laxe.

Rat Film.png

6. Rat Film

dir. Theo Anthony, 2017

Since watching this last Apri (in Baltimore)l I’ve been desperate to tie a lyric from The Smashing Pumpkin’s “Bullet with Butterfly Wings” to this. I’ve agonized over wordplay and puns. So much as Baltimore itself can be tied to an endless study of vermin and failure of a structure as a whole, so can my lack of punmanship. I’ve failed myself on a professional and personal level. Which is fine since Theo Anthony’s experimental documentary combines footage, Google Earth, a simulator and snippets of Dan Deacon in a warehouse as he lays the thesis out that Baltimore survives its institutions because it simply has to.

Anthony does, at one point, bring everything to a gruesome head between the various ways Charm City deals with its localized infestation ranging from rat fishing (which is very real!), shooting them with pellet guns, poison and more.


7. T2 Trainsp-otting

dir. Danny Boyle, 2017

The greatest reminder after a decade you’ve probably failed miserably, have lied to others about your accomplishments, still aim for women you haven’t a chance with and there’s no judgement to be found built on the ground with your friends buried underneath. After a heart attack in the place that terrifies me the most Mark (Ewan McGreggor) returns to the old neighborhood to settle himself.

T2 is a humbling message after a generation were told to "choose life" and get fucked up along with it. Mark is trying to once again prove to himself he made the right choice due to his friends' own poor choices: Sick Boy (Jonny Lee Miller) is still grifting anyway he can, Spud (Ewen Bremner) struggles to stay sober and Franco (Robert Carlyle) has become the walking boogeyman with a mustache as he still pays for Mark's disappearance.  Even when 3/4s of the group return, other pockets form and each side conspires against the other all for the ultimate "get rich quick" scheme that simply can't work.


Princess Cyd.png

8. Princess Cyd

d. Stephen Cone, 2017

The most ringing endorsement I can give the Maryland Film Festival is “without it, I would not have seen Stephen Cone’s [enter film title here].” Cyd (Jessie Pinnick) visits her Aunt Miranda (Rebecca Spence) for a summer sightseeing trip to decide on where to apply for college. 


hermia & helena.png

9. Hermia & Helena

d. Matías Piñeiro, 2016

Matías Piñeiro’s tale of translation and searching for meaning expounds on wintery parks and briefly takes on snowy upstate as Camilla (Agustina Muñoz) and Carmen (María Villar) trade places at a New York-based arts fellowship. Camilla tries to work on her translation (“A Midsummer’s Night Dream”) interspersed with rekindling Carmen’s own trysts and piece-by-piece revealing her final hours in Argentia


busters mal heart copy.jpg

10. Buster's Mal Heart

d. Sarah Adina Smith, 2016

A sleeper entry that opened at the Toronto Film Festival in 2016 and had a brief release through (traditionally Asian distributor) Well Go USA Entertainment. Buster (Rami Malek) lives on a mountain, breaking into abandoned summer homes and using the facilities along with calling into a local radio show to announce the “Inversion” is coming. But then he wakes up alone, in a rowboat, sunburned and drifting. He wakes up again and now he's Jonah, a late-shift motel front-desk employee who never sees his newborn or his wife (Kate-Lyn Shiel). One night, he meets Brown (DJ Qualls), a gangly mess of conspiracy theories and paranoid exposition that hinges on the imminent arrival of the singularity.


The rest of the best of 2017: 

Best Opening: Ingrid at the Wedding | Ingrid Goes West

Best Segment: Slam Poet vs. Child | Ex Libris: The New York Public Library

Best Promotional Item: Ghost Costume | A Ghost Story

Best Surprise Film: Get Out

Best Use of Michael Fassbender: Alien Covenant

Questionable, But Okay Use of Michael Fassbender: Song to Song

Laziest Use of Michael Fassbender: The Snowman

Avant R----d Film of the Year: Roman J. Israel, Esq.

Runner Up Avant R----d: The Book of Henry

Best Mustache: Henry Cavill | Justice League

Best Length of Time Between Original Production and Unceremonious Dump to DTV: Cook Off! (est. prod./first screening: 2006-2007 | release: 11/17/17)

 

"The Waco Kid Tries His Hand at Photography"

"The Waco Kid Tries His Hand at Photography"

In Film, An Idiot's Favorite Thing Tags Best of 2017, Film, Brigsby Bear, Abacus: Small Enough to Jail, Marjorie Prime, Princess Cyd, T2 Trainspotting, Buster's Mal Heart, Hermia & Helena, Rat Film, Mimosas
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An Idiot's Best of 2013

December 31, 2013 john lichman

the 2012 suggestion still applies via Fandor.

This is undoubtedly available elsewhere on my Criticwire submission and Letterboxd. I figured with the added space--that I forgot to add to the IW/CW space--I may as well go into it with as much detail as one should.


Tribeca Film/Nerdist Industries

10) Zero Charisma

Dirs.  Katie Graham, Andrew Matthews 

The best joke in this tale of nerd semantics is when Miles reveals to a room of RPG players that he freelances for Geek Chic Daily, which now is better known as Nerdist News. But that's just a fortunate Easter egg in a film that breaks down creativity, roles and a 20-sided take on life that plays to the same notes as Inside Llewyn Davis if you're not keen on folk music.

Letterboxd

9) No

Dir. Pablo Larraín

Like Leviathan I watched this back at NYFF 2012 and then became obsessed with finding the original video. What you can watch above on YouTube is almost the exact same quality as the CVs in Larraín's film--sometimes literally the original video is used, which is why he shot around on U-matic tape.

Letterboxd

Campaña politica del NO

Paramount Pictures

8) Nebraska

Dir. Alexander Payne

I dunno, MacGruber punching out Stacy Keach is pretty fucking poignant. Maybe even stranger in this world of evolving media is hearing how Forte got the part.

Letterboxd

7) Computer Chess

Dir. Andrew Bujalski

Bujalski performs vintage ownage by taking Demon Seed, chess and programming paradoxes into a single Days Inn.

Letterboxd

kino loriber via netflix

20th Century Fox

6) The Counselor

Dir. Ridley Scott

D'Angelo summed it up best. Two things stand out to me:

The Fourth Barrel: This features a pop culture 1-2 combo when John Leguizamo takes a moment to explain to Dean Norris why Mexican cartels include a fourth barrel when shipping their drugs. It brings everything to a crashing halt, hundreds of miles away from the A and B plot to go into one of Corman McCarthy's nuances. 

The Car Fuck: Malikina (Cameron Diaz) fucks a windshield and whose terrifying vagina is literally displayed to Reiner (Javier Bardem) but this is unappealing. Or, girls are icky and shouldn't be mature, but they're the ones who can emotionally take control of say a drug exchange and be professional about it.

Letterboxd

5) Pain & Gain

Dir. Michael Bay

This is a "small movie" to Michael Bay. Keeping this in mind is a key part to enjoying the insanity when this is Bay "limiting" himself.

Also The Rock is a standout MVP throughout this film. 

Letterboxd

4) Leviathan

Dirs. Verena Paravel and Lucien Castaing-Taylor

This is many things. It is a look into the daily life of a fishing trawler off the coast of Massachusetts. It is a tone poem. It is a mutation of traditional documentary narrative. It is a cyclical example of tradition.

It also syncs up incredibly fucking well to Mastodon's Leviathan. If you listen closely, you can supposedly hear it from one of the deck hands.

Letterboxd

3) The Unspeakable Act

Dir. Dan Sallitt

I've managed to annoy Dan for almost as long as I've tried to seriously reevaluate my cinephile nature. Back when I co-ran a podcast from a bar in the Village, we had Dan on to discuss being featured at the Off-Camera Film Festival and later with the Siren to go over auteur theory.

But that's not important. The Unspeakable Act is quiet, darkly funny and examines how family deals with unseen tragedy, progression and love in their own way. Tallie Medel stands out for her performance along with Sky Hirschkron. 

It's on DVD and that is literally filled with more value if you're a cinephile, fake cinephile or idiot savant.

Cinema Guild

Poor Rich Kids

Poor Rich Kids

2) The End of Love

Dir. Mark Webber

I interviewed Webber back at Sundance 2012 about his film and I got floored by it.  In a year where This is the End was heralded by having Hollywood make fun of itself, End of Love would be if those same actors took themselves seriously to look at everything it's easier to make a joke about. 

1) Behind the Candelabra

Dir. Steven Soderbergh

Pure ownage from Soderbergh for his baby boys.

HBO

In Film, An Idiot's Favorite Thing Tags Pain & Gain, Leviathan, Behind the Candelabra, The Unspeakable Act, No, Zero Charisma, Nebraska, Computer Chess, The Counselor, The End of Love, Best of 2013, Film
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