Saturday, 31 December 2011

10 Best films of 2011

I know, I know, I'm cutting it close to the wire. But still, 25 minutes until 2011 is over so without further ado . . . Movie Mazzupial's 10 best films of 2011.

10. Scream 4
What's your favourite scary movie? Of 2011 it was Scream 4, something I was both delighted and relieved about because lets be honest, Scream 3 was shite. Yet how, in the decade of horror movies since the last Scream movie, could Kevin Williamson and Wes Craven make a witty, sassy, self-aware statement on the genre again? By being darn clever, that's how. With an opening so dangerously meta to an ending poignantly commentating on our current fame obsessed society, Scream 4 proved an original spin can have endless worth in a genre drowning in remakes.





9. Blue Valentine
Love is glorious. Love is beautiful. And love is sometimes not enough. No one captured that better than Michelle Williams and Ryan Gosling as a married couple nearing the end of their relationship. Writer/director Derek Cianfrance spliced scenes of their disintegrating relationship with the story of how they first met and fell in love, making the inevitable conclusion all that more heartbreaking for the audience. Realistic, raw and unforgettable.


8. The Bang Bang Club
This gritty drama was based on the real life exploits of The Bang Bang Club - a group of four photojournalists capturing the final days of apartheid in South Africa. Like an underrated version of Blood Diamond, this was a hard hitting look at the civil unrest in Africa told through the stories of the notorious band of photographers who took some of the most famed images of all time. Jaw-dropping, action packed and shocking (even more so when you consider the truth of the story) this is one of the best movies on journalism. Period. The curve ball cast - which includes Ryan Phillippe and Malin Akerman - are also super impressive, none more so than Friday Night Lights alumni Taylor Kitsch. He gives a career best performance as Kevin Carter and illustrates his potential outside of the Hollywood blockbuster sphere.


7. Never Let Me GoKazuo Ishiguro's award-winning novel is flawlessly adapted by director Mark Romanek is this soul-shattering, breathtaking piece of cinematic art. Perfectly capturing the despair, the hopelessness and the black romance of the book, Never Let Me Go will leave you feeling like a shell of your former self afterwards. But it's worth it, partially thanks to pitch perfect performances from three of Britain's greatest young actors: Keira Knightley, Carey Mulligan and Andrew Garfield.


6. Jane Eyre

One of my favourite books of all time turned into one of my favourite films of the year thanks to the masterful direction of Cary Fukunaga and the powerhouse double act of Mia Wasikowska and Michael Fassbender. Jane Eyre and Rochester have already been explored countless times in modern pop culture, but these two great performers gave them new life and energy. Jane Eyre brought a passion to the big screen in 2011 unlike anything else I saw. Wistful sigh.


5. Drive

Originally a $100m action vehicle for Hugh Jackman, Drive proves just how important the singular creative vision of a director can be. Ryan Gosling, undoubtedly the actor of the year, gave a subtle yet powerful turn as a Hollywood stunt driver who gets on the wrong side of the local criminal underworld. Director Nicolas Winding Refn spliced together romantic moments of French New Wave with Tarantino-esque ultra violence and one of the best soundtracks of the year.


4. Agora

For those who saw Agora during its limited theatre run, it left a searing impression. Rachel Weisz plays famous female philosopher Hypatia during the rising tide of Christianity in Roman Egypt. Max Minghella and Oscar Isaac round out a trio of superb performances in this heartbreaking, soul-destroying and ultimately uplifting historical drama from acclaimed Spanish director Alejandro Amenabar (The Others, The Sea Inside).


3. HannaOne of the most underrated films of 2011, this fairytale parable starred Oscar-nominated teen actress Saoirse Ronan as a blue-eyed killing machine trained by her father (Eric Bana) and out to kill a sinister CIA agent (Cate Blanchett). A jaw-dropping, stylish turn from director Joe Wright (best known for his period pieces Pride & Prejudice and Atonement), this was an edge-of-your-seat action thriller with no safety nets. The Chemical Brothers haunting score is unforgettable.

2. Attack The Block

Few films made as big a splash in 2011 as the debut from British writer/director Joe Cornish. A homage to classic sci-fi /horror films of the eighties, it follows a teen gang forced to defend its South London housing block from a vicious alien invasion. Hilarious, scary and exceptionally original, Attack The Block instantly gained cult movie status among genre aficionados.


1. Midnight In Paris

A time travel film. From Woody Allen. On paper it sounds like a disaster, but the veteran filmmaker made something truly remarkable with this ode to nostalgia and Paris's golden age. Full of wit, beauty and more celebrity cameos than rehab, you couldn't help leave the cinema with a goofy grin on your face. Some have called it Allen's return to form. Yet for the diehards out there, one of cinema's longest lasting voices never went away.

Honourable mentions: the films of 2011

No explanations. No breakdowns. Just this; an honour roll of the films I dug this year. They didn't make my top 10 of 2011, but they were memorable enough they deserved a special mention. From guilty pleasures and smart comedies, to moving dramas and kick ass blockbusters, there's a bit of everything in here. Enjoy. Or not.


The Girl Who Kicked The Hornet's Nest

The Lincoln Lawyer
Rabbit HoleX-Men: First ClassRed State



Albert NobbsDrive AngryWe Bought A Zoo

Fright Night


The Adventures Of TintinThe Debt






















Paul


Brighton Rock


Snowtown


Bridesmaids

Beginners Super 8

Don't Be Afraid Of The Dark


Wasted On The Young


Horrible Bosses


Hereafter


The Way Back


Thor


Tangled


Priest 3D


The Hunter


Captain America: The First Avenger


Somewhere


Griff The Invisble


The Ides Of March


Burlesque

Friday, 30 December 2011

Movie Mazz looks back on 2011, a year in (movie) review

Warning: the following post is entirely self indulgent and reflective. If you're allergic to the word `I' then I suggest you stop reading now. Right now.

For those of you who remained, hello. 2011 has been a massively exciting year for me (like Liam Neeson's cock-level of massive) and I felt the need to get a touch reflective. Alas, here I am, breaking up my end of year lists with another list - Movie Mazzupial's top six moments of the blogging year.

I went to Comic Con

I fulfilled a lifelong dream and made the geek pilgrimage to San Diego in July to attend COMIC-FREAKIN-CON (official title). This is something I've wanted to do since I was a tween. It was everything I wet-dreamed and more. So, so, SO much more. The five 19-hour days were long and sure, I spent two days after the Con in a sleep coma. But when it was on, it was ON. I got to attend some of the biggest press conferences in the world (The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 1, The Adventures Of Tintin etc), interview some of the biggest names (Nic Cage, Danny Pudi, John Boyega, Peter Dinklage, Steven Spielberg, Peter Jackson, Taylor Lautner, Joe Cornish, Robert Pattinson, Kristen Stewart and more), meet some of my favourite artists (John Picacio and Scottie Young, the last who turned out to be a douche),

buy a total of 9 geek shirts and an entire suitcase of geek merch, see 13 heavily guarded Frank Frazetta originals, watch a festival worth of incredible films (including Attack The Block and Captain America: The First Avenger) and literally - physically - bump into Kristen Stewart, Guillermo del Toro and Adam Brody, the latter who was so lovely we sparked up conversation and he introduced me to his friends aka the red headed delight that is T.J. Miller. My Aussie accent also made me an amusing novelty at the amazeballs Comic Con parties and I got to meet a posse of rad movie bloggers from around the world - writers who I'm now lucky enough to call friends. The highlight? Ryan Kwanten recognising me in the middle of the Knights Of Badassdom press conference and pointing me out with a "hi Maria" even though I'd only interviewed once six months earlier. Yes, I did pee myself a little.


I met my hero . . . Robert Rodriguez This is really an extension of the Comic Con thing, but since he's been my hero since I was 13 I figured he deserved his own mention. Yep, I met Robert `he of the many Troublemaker hats' Rodriguez at Comic Con. How you ask? One of the things about the Con is once you're signed on as media you get invited to more parties, screenings and interviews than you can ever possibly attend in a month let alone five days. I was at the Rodriquez' post-panel after party at the Hard Rock (surrounded by the mentioned Frank Frazetta paintings) when I saw him arrive. It took me 15 minutes to work up the courage to approach him. But I did, sweaty palms and all. I said (and I shit you not): "Hi Robert, my name's Maria and you've been my favourite filmmaker since I was 13. I'm from Australia and I was wondering if I could get a quick photo with you?'' He agreed even though he said I made him “feel old” and the result is what you see above; the single greatest photo of my life. Did I mention my voice broke mid-sentence? It did. I was also so nervous that as soon as we got the photo I excused myself, ran to the bathroom, locked myself in a cubicle and cried like a Justin Bieber fan. I. Was. That. Happy.


You have to understand, the films of Rodriguez changed my life and made me the movie fanatic I am today. I rate his entire filmography amongst my all time favourites and I worship at his writing, editing, producing, directing, scoring, one-man-film-crewing altar. For the rest of the night I was terrified the camera would break or it would get stolen before I had a chance to upload the photo to my computer. I clung to it for the remainder of the party, after party, screening and car trip home. Go on, judge me.

I was quoted on the Thor movie poster It's funny, I always thought that the first time I'd be quoted on a movie poster it would be for some low-budget indie horror film that no one saw. Instead, it was the God Of Thunder. To be fair, it was a one word quote - "Thorsome''. However, seeing "Maria Lewis, Gold Coast Bulletin'' on the national print ad for Thor is the highlight of my film critic career. The above is a cartoon my talented artist pal Ant did for me in celebration.


I joined the Bloodydisgusting.com team When I was in high school I got detention once after my English teacher caught me looking at a "disgusting'' website. No, it wasn't www.ChrisBrownnude.com. It was Bloodydisgusting.com and Mrs Mullins had an issue with the blood-splattered background. Turns out Mrs Mullins was a bitch and I ended up joining the BD team this year as their Australian correspondent. The title is fancier than it sounds, but it sure is fancy. As someone who has been a lifelong fan of the horror genre I'm truly honoured to be able to say I write for these guys - the leader in online horror news.

I babbled the fuck on

While in the US I stopped in at Universal Studios to catch the best podcast on the internet - Hollywood Babble On - live with Kevin Smith and Ralph `Roger' Garman. After hours of listening to these guys, sitting down in the Jon Lovitz Podcast Theatre to watch them was . . .*resists the urge to use surreal* . . .wicked. Incredible. Memorable. All of the above. In summary, Garman called me a whore as Sean Connery and I was okay with that. Listen to the audio here. GARMY STRONG!


You

The readers, the tweeters, the commentators.

Favourite Movie Friday with Pendulum

Rounding out Favourite Movie Friday for the year are the choices of Gareth McGrillen, one sixth of Australian dance/rock outfit Pendulum (above). He says:


"I love so many movies; Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, Bronson – someone like Chopper (Mark `Chopper' Read) based his life on Charles Bronson - The Joneses, Sucker Punch and The Castle. "


Pendulum are playing around the country as part of the Summafieldayze 2012 line-up. For ticket info click here.

Thursday, 29 December 2011

10 worst films of 2011

When you run through the worst films of the year it's the kids who got the pointy end of the stick. Not only did the poor tykes have to put up with Zoo Keeper - where Kevin James raps to Flo Rida's Low with a GORILLA - they also had to endure dishonourable mentions such as Yogi Bear, Hop, Smurfs, Cars 2 and a heartless rehash in Kung Fu Panda 2. The poor, poor children. Us adults, on the other hand, still had some trash to put up with but the situation was marginally less dire. Marginally.

From cookie-monster talking werewolves in one of the most unnecessarily drawn out films of '11(Breaking Dawn Part 1), to an overlong, over-indulgent ode to depression and the first world problems of rich white people (Melancholia), there were some stinkers. Don't even get me started on the cliches of underdog story Real Steel which - even though it allowed me the opportunity to interview Hugh Jackman - had me seething in my seat as I watched robot hands clumsily reach for the heartstrings of the family market. Lets not even get started on the ridiculousness of Troll Hunter, whose point I totally missed, and end-of-the-world thriller The Divide which had me wishing the world would actually end so I could get the fuck out of the cinema.

Sigh. Alas, here they are; my pick of the 10 worst films of 2011. BYO tomatoes.

Zoo Keeper

The Next Three Days Green Lantern

The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 1

Melancholia

A Heartbeat Away

The Divide


Troll Hunter
Jack and Jill

Real Steel


Biggest disappointments: Sucker Punch and Red Riding Hood.


Stay tuned for the highly commended films of 2011 as well as the 10 best.
 

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