Then the eyes of both were opened, and they knew that they were naked.
Genesis 3:7
Film blog originally about the themes behind Star Wars Episodes I, II, and III.
Jun Jong-Seo is a Korean actress whose star is rising very rapidly, and I think her three most American movies make an excellent, impromptu trilogy.
Yes, you should go see Dune 2 and form your own reading of it. It's a magnificent film that during its entire 2 hour 45 minute run I did not want to miss a single scene. So I am going to write this post as if you are fully spoiled, if spoilers mean anything with an adaptation. If that's an issue for you, please go see it.
Additionally, this quality creates a dearth of discourse. If the movie is simply objectively "very good" and it's 9 months till Oscar contention, what hot takes can we have?
The immediate answer to fill that vacuum was "compare this Dune movie to other forms", especially the novel and the 1984 movie by auteur David Lynch (with only a few geeks bringing up the Sci-Fi channel series or Jodorowsky's ill fated project.) Which is difficult because comparison invites judgment, and this movie is both a) obviously good and b) extremely different than those two versions at some fundamental levels.
Instead, I think we are discussing history.
For me, though, I have learned to relax and let it go. I remember the turning point moment. I was watching an episode of Buffy the Vampire Slayer with my roommates, and it went into a backstory flashback set in high medieval Germany. “Why are you sighing?” one asked, noticing that I’d laid back and deflated rather gloomily. I answered: “She’s not of sufficiently high social status to have domesticated rabbits in Northern Europe in that century. But I guess it’s not fair to press a point since the research on that hasn’t been published yet.” It made me laugh, also made me think about how much I don’t know, since I hadn’t known that a week before. For all the visible mistakes in these shows, there are even more invisible mistakes that I make myself because of infinite details historians haven’t figured out yet, and possibly never will.
...
Now, historians aren’t certain of Cesare’s birth date. He may be the eldest of his full siblings, or second.
The difference between Cesare as elder brother and Cesare as younger brother in the shows is fascinating. Showtime’s Big Brother Cesare is grim, disillusioned, making hard decisions to further the family’s interests even if the rest of the family isn’t yet ready to embrace such means. B:F&F‘s Little Brother Cesare is starved for affection, uncertain about his path, torn about his religion, and slowly growing up in a baby-snake-that-hasn’t-yet-found-its-venom kind of way.
Both are fascinating, utterly unrelated characters, and all the subsequent character dynamics are completely different too. Giovanni/Juan is utterly different in each, since Big Brother Cesare requires a playful and endearing younger brother, whose death is already being foreshadowed in episode 1 with lines like “It’s the elder brother’s duty to protect the younger,” while Little Brother Cesare requires a conceited, bullying Giovanni/Juan undeserving of the affection which Rodrigo ought to be giving to smarter, better Cesare. Elder Brother Cesare also requires different close friends, giving him natural close relationships with figures like the Borgias’ famous family assassin Michelotto Corella, who can empathize with him about using dark means in a world that isn’t quite OK with it.
Dune is a story so big, so poured over by analysts already, that these movies don't feel like artistic adaptations so much as differing historical interpretations. Both 1984 and the 2020's movies feel like they are actually trying to be about the same events, but have very different understanding and evidence. They're groping in the dark for monocausal patterns when the real truth was probably messy, contradictory, and inexplicable.
What is Dune 21/24 about?
Sometimes on Twitter people argue about whether Dune is appropriationist and centers a white savior, and other people say "no the entire point is that this is exploitative and a disaster waiting to that happens." Well if anyone has missed that nuance, Villeneuve hammers it home relentlessly.
For the first time we are introduced to political splits among the Fremen, with the Northerners being more worldly, civilized, and practical and the Southerners - who live in an uninhabitable sandstorm - being backwards and more fundamentalist. And this split is mirrored in the characters - Chani, her friends, Gurney Halleck, and Paul-before-he-drinks-Water-of-Life are all very firm on messiah-hood being a bad ending, and would only be the result of manipulation by the Bene Gesserit. Whereas Jessica, Alia, and Stilgar are arguing for messiah-hood against others, and not above using manipulation to achieve this.
Paul, in the most recent movie, is doing everything he can to stay secular, but feels historical currents pushing him towards taking the religious mantel. Until his hand is forced - he can either "go to the South" and follow his mother, or he can stay behind to be slaughtered (the inclusion of the scene where Feyd-Rutha kills one lone last-standing Freman is meant to show "what would have happened to Paul if he stayed.")
We get this same theme with the quotidian shots of the Emperor and his daughter in their garden, discussing politics. The currents of the great houses and the Bene Gesserit are forcing their hand, so they must play into Paul's hand even though they know it will spell the end of their imperial dynasty. Fate is cold and relentless, and about large forces not magic powers.
Paul most of all does not want to become messiah, and most of his point of view is speaking against it. But then he's maneuvered into drinking the Water of Life and... at that point he basically disappears as a viewpoint character. We don't have access to his internality anymore, he's just a machine for holy war. It was a very disturbing transition.
Lady Jessica is a villain almost as much as any Harkonnen, who tells herself she is doing all this just to keep her son safe, but by the end is just trying to spite the Bene Gesserit.
The biggest change from the novel is where Lynch's Dune swerves into all the "weird fantasy shit", this Dune avoids it as much as possible. That's right: there's no CHOAM representatives, no voice cannons, no special powers for the Fremen troops at all, Alia isn't even born during this movie (no "my brother is coming" creeper 4 year old harbinger), no mentats, no ghoula, no rain, no weirding way. Both Paul and Feyd come across as normal ass knife fighters who can defeat one other normal human in 1-on-1 combat, but not much better than that.
And... I still love the 1984 Dune. I suspect its memes will even surpass the Villeneuve version. It's not just cheesy but it buys fully into the cheese. Paul's messiah-hood is fully righteous and victorious! He's got a creepy blue-eyed 2 year old sister with sorceress powers! He summons the rain and the storms! And he's fighting not just against other humans, but monsters-in-fish-tanks controlling the throne.
To Lynch, the world of Dune is one where individuals matter - because they've got super weird powers, or just the sheer complexity of entities. But in the recent movie, there is merely a cold hand of history, more Marx than Tolkien.
And neither really makes sense alone. Even though the 2024 Dune "feels" more realistic, it simplifies the forces involved (no CHOAM presence, nor the other small organizations), and is so smooth in its progression there's no time skip. Which means less than 9 months of lower Spice production has toppled the imperial throne, instead of the 4 or so years in the book. Weak ass emperor.
And entire people have been removed from the Villeneuve narrative - like Leto, Paul and Chani's first son - because they would complicate the Paul/Chani antagonistic narrative that Villeneuve wanted to end with.
***
If you like this reading, I'd suggest you read the (much smaller) book "Elder Race", telling the same historical events from different ontologies.
Not a long post today. I wanted to write about the Starship Troopers discourse on Twitter, but only after the heat had died down. Someone very foolish wrote a long thread about why ST wasn't satire, including such shallow examples as "the fascist characters are good looking." The level of conversation went down hill from there.
But the sticking point that does have many people convinced of the rightness of the heroes in that movie is they are actually fighting bugs. Fascism is about starting wars of aggression, and genociding human beings or aliens that look cuddly, right? You can't be fascist if you are defending against an actual inhuman, implacable menace, right? It's one thing to call Jews bugs, but what about actual bugs?
Which reminded me of SMG paraphrasing Lacan back in the Gamergate days.
It doesn't matter if there is a conspiracy in reality or not. Paranoia is in how you yourself think.
In the classic example: a man can be paranoid that his wife is cheating on him, even if the wife actually is cheating. He might start obsessively documenting her activities, going on about a conspiracy by wives to cheat on their husbands, etc.
(As he contemplates his stolen suicide vest.) I have found a new form of prayer.
What did I do today, you ask? Well I moved all my movie reviews from various discords and blogs to Letterboxd finally, since that is a better place for them. If you want to read my more shortform movie thoughts and recommendations - or you're just really bored - you can keep track back here.
https://letterboxd.com/bambamramfan/films/reviews/
My rating system is:
1 star = didn't finish 2 star = mediocre marvel movie 3 star = actually good 4 star = i would recommend 5 star = one of my favs of all time
One of the things I enjoy on this blog is comparing two disparate movies to discuss their similar themes. I've decided to make this a regular feature, and I should clearly start with the Oscar nominated movies. So we have one movie praised as a the culmination of a legendary director's career, and one by a first (and only) time director with a 31% at Rotten Tomatoes. One movie I felt mediocre on, and one that is my secret fave that no one else has seen. One claims to be a historical retelling, the other is a very far fetched fantasy - though probably both are equally believable.
As always, this review will bare all spoilers. One of which has no spoilers, and the other of which whose entire plot is a spoiler.
What do these two have in common that compels me so?1. Whatever else you think of them, they have astounding levels of craftsmanship.
Martin Scorsese CAN in fact take a 3.5 hour tale of an Oklahoma community and make it a tense thriller that is enjoyable to watch. Leo DiCaprio and Robert DeNiro are still at the top of their game, and in particular DeNiro has made "kindly grampa who also orchestrates killing" into what will be a beloved trope. But neither of them touch on fucking first timer Lily Gladstone playing a cypher who is a clever, jaded Native American woman but falls into a trap of love anyway, and can always feel the jaws of death slowly clenching around her community. She absolutely deserves that Oscar.
Whereas Antebellum asks Janelle Monae to carry an entire movie on her back, which she absolutely can. And Jena Malone picks up the slack for the villainous side of things. The production design is so rich and luscious, especially in highlighting evil. The scene transitions between the different settings are creative and great. And everyone who watches this movie HAS to make mention of the opening 5 minute shot that takes us through all the parts of a slave planation.
These are both quality films that are fun to watch and demonstrate real beauty.
2. Both wrestle head on with the historical injustices of racism. And did so in a way that got them a ton of controversy.
This is a rough one. It is clear both movies wanted to tell stories they thought were undertold, of how generations past have suffered and how that still resonates to the present day. It goes without saying that the "anti-woke" part of society (ie. people who have never even consumed some media because someone told them it was social justicey) would avoid these movies.
But the "woke" condemn them too for "white people telling other people's stories" and the awkwardness that entails, and for "exploiting pain and violence of a minority" which becomes the only way that minority is seen. Having seen both movies, I understand where these points are coming from. I don't find these problems ring so loud as to ruin the entire work for me.
I honestly think KotFM suffers more for this. But really because I always have this problem from Scorsese that I can't tell what story he is trying to tell. All of Scorsese's criminal epics have this problem: there isn't an arc so much as a flat line.
"A normal white man is not in any way distinct, just wants to get ahead and make money. He drifts without much agency into making some money illegally, and it works fine because no one in authority cares. He has wild success and lives it up outrageously. Then... some people in authority suddenly do care. And because our criminal was a) an untalented idiot and b) didn't think anyone cared, their crimes are very easily untangled and exposed. Then they get sent to jail, but are unrepentant. In fact the psychology of the central character has never changed the entire time: they were a brute who got lucky until they were a brute who got unlucky."
What are we supposed to take from this? Is our criminal a unique specimen, driven to his misdeeds by special circumstance or tragic upbringing? No, no, the director insists he has no excuse. Ah, so is our criminal the everyman, and any of us could be like him if the dice had rolled differently? No, no, he is specially evil and deserves our spit.
In KotFM this applies to the whole town. The Hale family were killing dozens of Osage members because no one (with authority) cared, so they could get away with it. They would walk up to any homeless man on the street they had never met before and ask "Say, will you kill my sister in law for me?" The hired thugs were always cowards and idiots, so they'd be caught the second any real law enforcement turned up, and they'd flip on the people who hired them.
In fact, that becomes the most confusing part of the story. Some white people think the Native American life has no value, and will conspire about killing them and covering it up without a second thought. But other white people think this is a terrible crime, and will be unrelenting in pursuing it. And there is incredibly little difference shown between these people. The hardest part of this movie is keeping track of "is this white man one of the killers, or someone trying to stop the killers?" Who could tell the difference between Ernest's brother (bad) and brother-in-law (good)?
You could say "not being able to tell this is what makes being a person of color so scary" and touche, but this particular telling feels like more of a cop out than that. It wants to present both "white people are so casually evil..." and "... that other white people feel they have to stop them."
(This is made very explicit in the most comedic scene, where one white man is asking a lawyer on the legality of adopting two half-Indian children, becoming their next of kin, and then killing them to get the money. The lawyer is appalled and the criminal can't understand. But the directing bypasses the implication that the lawyer WAS a part of a healthy society that does not approve of the murder of children.)
Neither movie satisfies either the woke or anti-woke, and as such most ideologically-driven people in the ever churning culture wars won't end up watching it. Which really is a pity.
3. They are at heart stories of class envy.
The thing that struck me most about these tales of racism is how much they are about class. Both movies feature rich, or at least respectable and successful, minorities and show how much white people seethe at this wealth as unjust. They are not universalist movies about how "no person deserves oppression, every person has dignity" but are demands to "see that these people are rich and high-status, regardless of the color of their skin.
This is not to say anything in either movie DOES say you should degrade poor people. It's just they find it more important to say "how can you degrade this person? They're rich damnit!" (And all good imperial colonizers know, the way to control a population is to get their leaders more concerned with their own elite status than with solidarity with their own poor.)
My favorite part of Antebellum is dead in the middle, a classic Mike Yanagita scene that leaves you wondering what the point of that was. Janelle Monae, her black lady friend and her white lady friend, go out to a fancy restaurant. At some point a man sends them over a drink, and her black friend sends it back because it is too low class and "we are champagne ladies." Eventually they leave and take separate Ubers. Nothing else of note happens.
For one thing, it is deliciously tense. At this point we know Monae will be kidnapped, and we're waiting to see how. So every moment is filled with a little dread and anticipation as we wonder "is this how they get her?" And all three actresses are quite good at such comedic dialogue. Fun times.
But what really makes the scene fit with the movie is all the class security. They are trying to insist so hard to the world that "we are high status, even if we are Black!" (As part of the scene, the two Black friends comment that the hotel staff is brusque and rude to them. The white friend says she didn't notice anything rude. The two Black friends share A Look. No mention is made of how hotel staff would treat people who can't afford their fancy rooms.)
An editorial note to be clear: these characters are not wrong. Treating someone who is rich (or well educated, or talented) like they aren't just because of the color of their skin IS a form of racism. And if it happened to you, you'd be rightly furious. It's just also true that if we end the day just by treating rich Black people like rich white people, most forms of inequality will persist.
It's impossible to analyze these movies without being pulled to the dread specter of Tulsa. What caused the furious explosion of violence wasn't just racism, but racism mixed with "eat the rich" class envy. "You mean they drive fancy cars while cutting my wages, AND they're Black!!!!" Which is not to say "this is a righteous socialist act", but rather that "it will be very hard for a minority to get a foothold in the American power structure if we burn them down every time they get wealth like cutting tall poppies."
4. Both movies highlight the absurd denialism of a villain's fantasy.
This one is a bit of a stretch, but I could not resist.
One of the biggest controversies of KotFM has been the compartmentalized image of Ernest Burkhart. In the movie (and some historical tellings), he tenderly loved his wife while slaughtering her people. And I guess that sort of character, who learns the Osage language while raising his half-Osage children, but also participates in systemic oppression, could be an interesting contrast for a tragic character.
But for Ernest? Just no. He kills his wife's sisters. He poisons his wife too. Maybe that's a sort of love, but it's a creepy possessive love at the very most. These are not the actions of a tender or caring normal man. Which either means their marriage was pretty unhealthy, OR Ernest was several standard deviations from normality, which cuts against Scorsese's "we all are guilty" message.
Whereas the brokenness of Antebellum's fantasy is its most interesting part.
The secret of the movie's setting is that white supremacist Civil War reenactors are kidnapping "uppity" black people (professors, famous artists) and imprisoning them on a fake plantation, basically to fill out their Antebellum LARP.
... the quick-witted among you will notice that you can't have confederate soldiers AND be "antebellum."
And the movie is full of this. The reenactors are rich and obsessed enough to get all the set design details for their little fantasy, but there are so many ways the fantasy can not be sustained. Soldiers keep their cell phones on them and they ring at inappropriate times. The Black prisoners keep mentioning their real life even though it carries a penalty of death. The slaves are kept at night in wooden sheds with open doors.
... which is very dumb, because any of the kidnapped victims if they run away, know there's towns and news crews just a few miles away if they can just get there. The reason chattel slaves of the 19th century didn't run away, was because there was just nowhere to go. To keep people nowadays, you'd have to build an actual modern day prison. But that would ruin the genteel fantasy.
It's warped to say all these anachronisms are the funniest part in a movie where men watch their wives burned to death. It is often a godawful experience. But the grisly inhumanity of it, that makes no sense even on its face, is kind of the point.
Watched the classic 80's sports/sex comedy "Bull Durham" (with the fabulous talents of Kevin Costner, Susan Sarandon, and Tim Robbins) for the first time and I was gobsmacked at how openly and deeply pagan it was.
I believe in the Church of Baseball. I've tried all the major religions and most of the minor ones -- I've worshipped Buddha, Allah, Brahma, Vishnu, Shiva, trees, mushrooms, and Isadora Duncan... I know things. For instance -- There are 108 beads in a Catholic rosary. And -- There are 108 stitches in a baseball. When I learned that, I gave Jesus a chance. But it just didn't work out between us. The Lord laid too much guilt on me. I prefer metaphysics to theology. You see, there's no guilt in baseball... and it's never boring. Which makes it like sex. There's never been a ballplayer slept with me who didn't have the best year of his career. Making love is like hitting a baseball -- you just got to relax and concentrate. Besides, I'd never sleep with a player hitting under .250 unless he had a lot of R.B.I.'s or was a great glove man up the middle.
A woman's got to have standards.
And he's right! A ballplayer on a streak has to respect the streak. They don't happen very often. You know how hard this game is? If you believe you're playing well because you're getting laid or because you're not getting laid or because you wore red silk panties -- then you are!
Which is to say, you believe for belief's sake, and that makes it real.
It's also pagan in the sense that the different religions are all possible and don't necessarily exclude the truth of others, and it includes the more pagan side of Christianity. The "young priestess" figure who "sleeps with half the team" goes out with the devoutly Christian player and within 5 hours of talking to him about the Bible, she agrees to marry him. Everyone is happy for her, and as she tries on her wedding dress with Sarandon asks "do you think I deserve to wear white?" "Everyone deserves to wear white." It's a tender, universalist moment out of a cultural superstition about purity. She may have engaged in ritual sexual congress with the players, but she is still fundamentally *innocent* in this rite.
The meat of the matter though, is from the central parable of the story.
Sarandon is a team-groupie who picks one baseball player to bed for the season, and has more knowledge about baseball and player technique in her pinkie than anyone else on the team or their manager. She is a goddess figure. From Robert Graves:
The tribal Nymph, it seems, chose an annual lover from her entourage of young men, a king to be sacrificed when the year ended; making him a symbol of fertility, rather than the object of her erotic pleasure.
This particular year, two men catch her eye. One is the hot-shot new pitcher played by Tim Robbins. And the other is an over-the-hill catcher hired more to teach Robbins the ropes than for his own skill (Costner.) Costner is wise in baseball and has seen a lot, but he knows he is nearly finished and will in all likelihood be let go at the end of his 1 year contract.
The movie does a genuine job of making this a romantic triad. Each pair of those three have their own fleshed out dynamic with complex developments, AND they always reference the third person as something that defines their relationship. (Sarandon even invites both of them to her boudoir together, just to see how it plays out.)
But it's not a maiden/hero/monster triad, though you can make that work if you squint. No it's much more directly a second type of romantic triad. More from Graves:
Next, in amendment to this practice, the king died as soon as the power of the sun, with which he was identified, began to decline in the summer; and another young man, his twin, or supposed twin – a convenient ancient Irish term is ‘tanist’ – then became the Queen’s lover, to be duly sacrificed at midwinter and, as a reward, reincarnated in an oracular serpent.
As @baroquespiral says:
There is a bit of an inversion here, where the Goddess Sarandon *starts off* sleeping with the young stud, but then after he ascends to "the Show" she switches to the old and wizened man. But he too is sacrificed like a bull, with the team laying him off after he is no longer valuable.
This year I wrote two LARPs, went on more than a few road trips, started Lexapro, went to one con, and otherwise did not accomplish a lot that can be measured, except for watching a truly absurd number of movies. Fortunately Letterboxd makes it a lot easier to record that.
By my count, I watched 464 movies this year. This does not count rewatches. When this counts television, it is only for an entire series counting as one movie. Many of the movies - basically anything 1.5 stars or less - I did not finish because they weren’t worth my time.
The Viewing - 2022 - 4.5 stars |
Moonage Daydream - 2022 - 3 stars |
White Noise - 2022 - 3 stars |
TÁR - 2022 - 4 stars |
The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected) - 2017 - 3 stars |
Triangle of Sadness - 2022 - 3 stars |
Bad Lieutenant - 1992 - 3.5 stars |
Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call – New Orleans - 2009 - 3.5 stars |
Bridge of Spies - 2015 - 2.5 stars |
The Man Who Wasn't There - 2001 - 3 stars |
Twixt - 2011 - 1 stars |
Love - 2015 - 1.5 stars |
Assassination of a High School President - 2008 - 1 stars |
Pearl - 2022 - 3 stars |
Maniac - 2012 - 2 stars |
Hard to Be a God - 2013 - 1 stars |
8MM - 1999 - 4 stars |
Logan Lucky - 2017 - 3 stars |
Confess, Fletch - 2022 - 1 stars |
After Yang - 2021 - 2.5 stars |
The Disaster Artist - 2017 - 3 stars |
C'mon C'mon - 2021 - 1.5 stars |
The Trust - 2016 - 4 stars |
The Golden Child - 1986 - 2 stars |
Bernie - 2011 - 3.5 stars |
Kill the Irishman - 2011 - 1 stars |
Black Adam - 2022 - 2 stars |
Bodies Bodies Bodies - 2022 - 2.5 stars |
Blood Simple - 1984 - 2 stars |
Central Station - 1998 - 1.5 stars |
Communion - 1989 - 1 stars |
Border - 2018 - 3 stars |
All These Sleepless Nights - 2016 - 1 stars |
Possessor - 2020 - 4 stars |
House of Tolerance - 2011 - 2.5 stars |
The Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome - 1954 - 3 stars |
Silence - 2016 - 3 stars |
2046 - 2004 - 2 stars |
Caché - 2005 - 1 stars |
Me and Earl and the Dying Girl - 2015 - 4 stars |
Vox Lux - 2018 - 4.5 stars |
The Beach Bum - 2019 - 3 stars |
Mute - 2018 - 3 stars |
The Beta Test - 2021 - 3 stars |
The Godfather: Part III - 1990 - 2.5 stars |
Mindhorn - 2016 - 3.5 stars |
Elvis - 2022 - 3 stars |
To Leslie - 2022 - 2.5 stars |
Nancy - 2018 - 3.5 stars |
Honk for Jesus. Save Your Soul. - 2022 - 3.5 stars |
The Fall - 2019 - 3 stars |
The Stylist - 2020 - 3.5 stars |
Mass - 2021 - 4.5 stars |
Valley of the Gods - 2019 - 3 stars |
Tau - 2018 - 2 stars |
Kate - 2021 - 3 stars |
Compliance - 2012 - 3.5 stars |
A Ghost Waits - 2020 - 3.5 stars |
Still Processing - 2020 - 3.5 stars |
Okja - 2017 - 4 stars |
Please Speak Continuously and Describe Your Experiences as They Come to You - 2019 - 4.5 stars |
Copenhagen Cowboy - 2022 - 4.5 stars |
Warriors of Future - 2022 - 1.5 stars |
Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio - 2022 - 3 stars |
Lost in London - 2017 - 3 stars |
Duck Butter - 2018 - 3 stars |
Sherman's March - 1985 - 4 stars |
Scanners - 1981 - 3 stars |
Too Old to Die Young - 2019 - 4 stars |
Let the Corpses Tan - 2017 - 2.5 stars |
Life as a House - 2001 - 3.5 stars |
The Wailing - 2016 - 4 stars |
Bronson - 2008 - 3 stars |
The Painted Lady - 2012 - 4 stars |
Only God Forgives - 2013 - 4.5 stars |
Pusher - 1996 - 2.5 stars |
The Final Girls - 2015 - 4 stars |
Bottom of the World - 2017 - 4.5 stars |
Moonrise Kingdom - 2012 - 4 stars |
Bottle Rocket - 1996 - 3 stars |
The Fabelmans - 2022 - 2 stars |
All Quiet on the Western Front - 2022 - 3 stars |
Foxfur - 2012 - 2 stars |
1408 - 2007 - 4 stars |
The Damned United - 2009 - 4 stars |
Empire of Light - 2022 - 3 stars |
Encounter - 2021 - 3.5 stars |
Everything Is Illuminated - 2005 - 4 stars |
The Encounter - 2010 - 1 stars |
The Ritual - 2017 - 3 stars |
Valhalla Rising - 2009 - 2.5 stars |
Fast Color - 2018 - 3 stars |
Kumaré - 2012 - 2.5 stars |
The Slammin' Salmon - 2009 - 3 stars |
Deep Murder - 2018 - 3 stars |
The Invitation - 2022 - 2 stars |
Antiviral - 2012 - 4 stars |
Jodorowsky's Dune - 2013 - 3 stars |
Dark Star - 1974 - 1.5 stars |
Pooling to Paradise - 2021 - 3 stars |
Bones and All - 2022 - 3 stars |
Woodshock - 2017 - 3 stars |
Holy Motors - 2012 - 5 stars |
We Are Little Zombies - 2019 - 1.5 stars |
The Outwaters - 2022 - 2 stars |
Incantation - 2022 - 4 stars |
We Are Boats - 2018 - 1 stars |
The Whale - 2022 - 3.5 stars |
Pleasure - 2021 - 4 stars |
Margaux - 2022 - 1 stars |
Advantageous - 2015 - 1 stars |
Puss in Boots: The Last Wish - 2022 - 3 stars |
The Pale Blue Eye - 2022 - 4 stars |
Infinity Pool - 2023 - 4.5 stars |
Nymphomaniac: Vol. II - 2013 - 3 stars |
Victoria - 2015 - 1 stars |
Horatio's Drive: America's First Road Trip - 2003 - 3.5 stars |
The Survivalist - 2015 - 3 stars |
Memory 2.0 - 2014 - 2.5 stars |
The Living Wake - 2007 - 1 stars |
Shirkers - 2018 - 4 stars |
Next - 2007 - 2 stars |
Into the Wild - 2007 - 3.5 stars |
In the Hero - 2014 - 4 stars |
A Cure for Wellness - 2016 - 3.5 stars |
The Ruins - 2008 - 2.5 stars |
Fresh - 2022 - 3 stars |
A Cry in the Wild - 1990 - 2 stars |
Toad Road - 2012 - 3 stars |
In the Tall Grass - 2019 - 1 stars |
The Kitchen - 2012 - 1 stars |
Pink Hill - 2019 - 1 stars |
Strawberry Mansion - 2021 - 3 stars |
Chronic - 2015 - 1 stars |
Martyrs - 2008 - 3.5 stars |
Fantasia - 1940 - 3 stars |
Deep Water - 2022 - 1 stars |
Modern Whore - 2020 - 3.5 stars |
Maniac - 2018 - 2.5 stars |
Lucky - 2017 - 1 stars |
Love, Death & Robots: The Witness - 2019 - 3.5 stars |
Filth - 2013 - 1 stars |
Amer - 2009 - 3.5 stars |
Dreams - 1990 - 3 stars |
Imprint - 2006 - 4 stars |
Timelapse of the Future: A Journey to the End of Time - 2019 - 3.5 stars |
Last and First Men - 2020 - 3 stars |
Lake Mungo - 2008 - 2 stars |
Killer Joe - 2011 - 4 stars |
Antebellum - 2020 - 5 stars |
The Nightmare - 2015 - 3 stars |
The Nightmare - 2015 - 1.5 stars |
The Strange Color of Your Body's Tears - 2013 - 2 stars |
The Innocents - 2021 - 3 stars |
Knife+Heart - 2018 - 1 stars |
Eden Lake - 2008 - 1 stars |
Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom - 1975 - 1.5 stars |
13 Assassins - 2010 - 2.5 stars |
Videodrome - 1983 - 3.5 stars |
A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence - 2014 - 1 stars |
Kajillionaire - 2020 - 1 stars |
The Laughing Woman - 1969 - 3 stars |
Sword of Desperation - 2010 - 3.5 stars |
Jumbo - 2020 - 1.5 stars |
She Dies Tomorrow - 2020 - 3 stars |
Belladonna of Sadness - 1973 - 2 stars |
Natural Born Killers - 1994 - 3 stars |
Lars and the Real Girl - 2007 - 3 stars |
Orlando - 1992 - 3 stars |
Szamanka - 1996 - 3 stars |
I, Tonya - 2017 - 3 stars |
Gone Girl - 2014 - 3 stars |
Fright Night - 2011 - 3 stars |
A Field in England - 2013 - 2 stars |
Timecrimes - 2007 - 2.5 stars |
Crazy Samurai Musashi - 2020 - 2 stars |
Suzume - 2022 - 3.5 stars |
John Mulaney: Baby J - 2023 - 3 stars |
John Mulaney & The Sack Lunch Bunch - 2019 - 1.5 stars |
BEEF - 2023 - 1.5 stars |
Night Is Short, Walk on Girl - 2017 - 3 stars |
Patrick Melrose - 2018 - 3 stars |
The Duke of Burgundy - 2014 - 3 stars |
Thelma - 2017 - 3.5 stars |
After Hours - 1985 - 3 stars |
The Rusted - 2015 - 3 stars |
Inside Man - 2006 - 2 stars |
The Lair of the White Worm - 1988 - 2 stars |
American Animals - 2018 - 3.5 stars |
Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves - 2023 - 3 stars |
Babylon - 2022 - 3 stars |
Unstoppable - 2010 - 2.5 stars |
Hurlyburly - 1998 - 1.5 stars |
Venus in Fur - 2013 - 3 stars |
I'm a Virgo - 2023 - 4.5 stars |
Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse - 2023 - 4.5 stars |
Lux Æterna - 2019 - 3.5 stars |
M3GAN - 2022 - 1.5 stars |
Asteroid City - 2023 - 4 stars |
I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House - 2016 - 2 stars |
Barbie - 2023 - 4.5 stars |
Oppenheimer - 2023 - 4.5 stars |
Like Me - 2017 - 4 stars |
Megan Is Missing - 2011 - 4 stars |
Selfie from Hell - 2018 - 2 stars |
Cutter's Way - 1981 - 3 stars |
Marrowbone - 2017 - 3 stars |
Polite Society - 2023 - 4 stars |
Carmen - 2022 - 4 stars |
Splice - 2009 - 3.5 stars |
Exiled - 2006 - 4 stars |
Cam - 2018 - 4 stars |
Pulse - 2001 - 3 stars |
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo - 2011 - 3 stars |
Sunset Boulevard - 1950 - 3 stars |
Bug - 2006 - 4 stars |
The Signal - 2007 - 3 stars |
Thunder Road - 2018 - 1.5 stars |
A Scanner Darkly - 2006 - 3 stars |
Ratter - 2015 - 3 stars |
The Cremator - 1969 - 2 stars |
The Forbidden Room - 2015 - 1.5 stars |
Joy Ride - 2023 - 3 stars |
Barry Lyndon - 1975 - 4.5 stars |
Easy Rider - 1969 - 3.5 stars |
Hard Candy - 2005 - 1.5 stars |
The Last King of Scotland - 2006 - 2 stars |
Gotham - 1988 - 3 stars |
Some Kind of Heaven - 2020 - 3 stars |
Consecration - 2023 - 3 stars |
Broadcast Signal Intrusion - 2021 - 4.5 stars |
Before the Devil Knows You're Dead - 2007 - 3.5 stars |
The Gathering - 2001 - 2.5 stars |
Medusa Deluxe - 2022 - 3.5 stars |
Run Rabbit Run - 2023 - 3.5 stars |
No One Will Save You - 2023 - 3.5 stars |
The Venture Bros.: Radiant Is the Blood of the Baboon Heart - 2023 - 3.5 stars |
A Haunting in Venice - 2023 - 3 stars |
Medusa - 2020 - 3.5 stars |
Black Medusa - 2021 - 3.5 stars |
A Tale of Two Sisters - 2003 - 3 stars |
Medusa's Venom - 2023 - 3 stars |
Perfume: The Story of a Murderer - 2006 - 2.5 stars |
Ms .45 - 1981 - 3.5 stars |
Shiva Baby - 2020 - 2.5 stars |
Margin Call - 2011 - 4 stars |
Unfriended: Dark Web - 2018 - 2.5 stars |
The Rapture - 1991 - 4 stars |
Demonic - 2021 - 2 stars |
The Wolf of Wall Street - 2013 - 2 stars |
Take Shelter - 2011 - 2 stars |
The Fourth Kind - 2009 - 2.5 stars |
Don Jon - 2013 - 4 stars |
Deerskin - 2019 - 2 stars |
In a World... - 2013 - 3 stars |
Let the Right One In - 2008 - 3 stars |
Sling Blade - 1996 - 4 stars |
Monster's Ball - 2001 - 4 stars |
Paranormal Activity - 2007 - 3 stars |
The Gift - 2015 - 3 stars |
2 Days in New York - 2012 - 1 stars |
Glasshouse - 2021 - 3.5 stars |
The Countess - 2009 - 2 stars |
Have a Good Trip: Adventures in Psychedelics - 2020 - 1.5 stars |
The Devil All the Time - 2020 - 2 stars |
The Vietnam War - 2017 - 3.5 stars |
Stop Making Sense - 1984 - 2.5 stars |
Look Away - 2018 - 3 stars |
The City and the City - 2018 - 2.5 stars |
11.22.63 - 2016 - 2 stars |
Nathan for You: Finding Frances - 2017 - 3.5 stars |
They Cloned Tyrone - 2023 - 4.5 stars |
The Ninth Configuration - 1980 - 1 stars |
Deep Rising - 1998 - 2 stars |
Mud - 2012 - 4 stars |
The Borderlands - 2013 - 2 stars |
After Blue - 2021 - 2.5 stars |
Ghostbusters: Afterlife - 2021 - 3 stars |
Prisoners - 2013 - 3.5 stars |
Zodiac - 2007 - 3 stars |
The Girl with All the Gifts - 2016 - 3 stars |
Rabbit-Proof Fence - 2002 - 3.5 stars |
The Fall of the House of Usher - 2023 - 4.5 stars |
The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar - 2023 - 4 stars |
Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 - 2023 - 3.5 stars |
Poison - 2023 - 3 stars |
The Rat Catcher - 2023 - 2.5 stars |
The Swan - 2023 - 2.5 stars |
Knock at the Cabin - 2023 - 3 stars |
The Wait - 2013 - 2 stars |
Reptile - 2023 - 1 stars |
Ping Pong the Animation - 2014 - 4 stars |
Revenge - 2017 - 4 stars |
Searching - 2018 - 1.5 stars |
Undergods - 2020 - 3.5 stars |
Enemy - 2013 - 3.5 stars |
The Lego Movie - 2014 - 3 stars |
Man of Steel - 2013 - 3.5 stars |
Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle - 2017 - 3.5 stars |
Bound - 1996 - 3 stars |
Braid - 2018 - 4.5 stars |
The Ghoul - 2016 - 2.5 stars |
The House of the Devil - 2009 - 2.5 stars |
The Dark Tapes - 2016 - 3 stars |
The English - 2022 - 3 stars |
Pontypool - 2008 - 3 stars |
Antrum - 2018 - 3 stars |
The Myth of the American Sleepover - 2010 - 4 stars |
The Innkeepers - 2011 - 2 stars |
Dallas Buyers Club - 2013 - 4 stars |
Green Room - 2015 - 4 stars |
Sinister - 2012 - 3 stars |
Jacob's Ladder - 1990 - 3 stars |
Free Samples - 2012 - 4 stars |
Teeth - 2007 - 3 stars |
A Time to Kill - 1996 - 3 stars |
Two for the Money - 2005 - 3 stars |
Source Code - 2011 - 3 stars |
A Quiet Place - 2018 - 3 stars |
The Royal Hotel - 2023 - 2.5 stars |
Naked Singularity - 2021 - 3 stars |
Don't Breathe - 2016 - 2.5 stars |
Troy - 2004 - 2.5 stars |
Morgan - 2016 - 2 stars |
The Autopsy of Jane Doe - 2016 - 3 stars |
Lot 36 - 2022 - 4 stars |
Coraline - 2009 - 2 stars |
Listen Up Philip - 2014 - 1 stars |
The Book of Henry - 2017 - 2 stars |
Talk to Me - 2022 - 3.5 stars |
House - 1977 - 3 stars |
The Night House - 2020 - 3.5 stars |
The Killer - 2023 - 3 stars |
Chained for Life - 2018 - 3 stars |
Most Beautiful Island - 2017 - 3.5 stars |
Dumplings - 2004 - 2 stars |
The Burial - 2023 - 2.5 stars |
The Social Network - 2010 - 3 stars |
The Last Black Man in San Francisco - 2019 - 3 stars |
Hidden - 2015 - 3 stars |
Red Eye - 2005 - 2 stars |
In the Cut - 2003 - 3 stars |
Steve Jobs - 2015 - 4 stars |
Frailty - 2001 - 3 stars |
The Mandela Effect - 2019 - 2 stars |
Them - 2021 - 2 stars |
Tone-Deaf - 2019 - 3 stars |
The Fall - 2006 - 4 stars |
Excision - 2012 - 4 stars |
American Mary - 2012 - 3.5 stars |
My house walk-through - 2016 - 3.5 stars |
Swing Girls - 2004 - 3 stars |
No Hard Feelings - 2023 - 3 stars |
Medusa - 2021 - 4.5 stars |
Sin City: A Dame to Kill For - 2014 - 3 stars |
Stargate: The Ark of Truth - 2008 - 2.5 stars |
Star Trek: Nemesis - 2002 - 2 stars |
The Number 23 - 2007 - 2 stars |
Emma. - 2020 - 4.5 stars |
Cremaster 3 - 2002 - 3 stars |
Synchronicity - 2015 - 1 stars |
The Brotherhood of Satan - 1971 - 2 stars |
Mr. Nobody - 2009 - 1 stars |
Inside - 2023 - 2 stars |
Terminal - 2018 - 1 stars |
Franklyn - 2008 - 1 stars |
Mauvais Sang - 1986 - 1 stars |
Jennifer's Body - 2009 - 4 stars |
The White Room - 1989 - 2 stars |
Cosmos - 2019 - 1 stars |
Hard Eight - 1996 - 2 stars |
Hotel - 2001 - 1 stars |
The Lathe of Heaven - 1980 - 1 stars |
Lost River - 2014 - 4.5 stars |
Passage - 2009 - 3 stars |
Spring Breakers - 2012 - 4 stars |
Nightbreed - 1990 - 3.5 stars |
Hell House LLC III: Lake of Fire - 2019 - 2.5 stars |
Tell Me Who I Am - 2019 - 3 stars |
Vortex - 2021 - 2 stars |
His House - 2020 - 3 stars |
The Strangers - 2008 - 2.5 stars |
The Wonder - 2022 - 3 stars |
The Heroic Trio - 1993 - 3.5 stars |
Happy as Lazzaro - 2018 - 3 stars |
The Last Unicorn - 1982 - 2.5 stars |
Under the Shadow - 2016 - 2.5 stars |
A Monster Calls - 2016 - 3.5 stars |
A.I. Artificial Intelligence - 2001 - 2 stars |
Re/Member - 2022 - 4 stars |
Class Action Park - 2020 - 3 stars |
The Beguiled - 2017 - 4 stars |
Burning - 2018 - 4 stars |
The House - 2022 - 2.5 stars |
Superman II - 1980 - 3.5 stars |
Rush - 2013 - 4 stars |
Blackhat - 2015 - 2 stars |
He Never Died - 2015 - 1.5 stars |
6 Underground - 2019 - 1 stars |
Hellhole - 2022 - 3 stars |
Superbad - 2007 - 3 stars |
Spy Kids 2: The Island of Lost Dreams - 2002 - 1 stars |
Sunshine - 2007 - 2.5 stars |
Scarface - 1983 - 4.5 stars |
Gerald's Game - 2017 - 3 stars |
The Bridge Curse - 2020 - 2 stars |
Minari - 2020 - 1 stars |
Lady Bird - 2017 - 2 stars |
The Great Beauty - 2013 - 1 stars |
John Dies at the End - 2012 - 2.5 stars |
The Tree of Life - 2011 - 2 stars |
Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom - 1984 - 2 stars |
The Double - 2013 - 1 stars |
Snake Eyes - 1998 - 4 stars |
In the Mood for Love - 2000 - 4 stars |
Stigma - 1977 - 3 stars |
Black Widow - 2021 - 2.5 stars |
House of Flying Daggers - 2004 - 4 stars |
The Virgin Suicides - 1999 - 3.5 stars |
The Square - 2017 - 2.5 stars |
Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping - 2016 - 2.5 stars |
Black Orpheus - 1959 - 1 stars |
Bad Santa - 2003 - 1 stars |
Chernobyl Diaries - 2012 - 2 stars |
My Neighbor Totoro - 1988 - 3 stars |
Tombstone - 1993 - 2.5 stars |
Fire of Love - 2022 - 3.5 stars |
BLUE EYE SAMURAI - 2023 - 1.5 stars |
Poor Things - 2023 - 4.5 stars |
Love Has Won: The Cult of Mother God - 2023 - 4 stars |
Godzilla Minus One - 2023 - 3.5 stars |
The Dropout - 2022 - 3 stars |
Misery - 1990 - 2 stars |
The Incredible Burt Wonderstone - 2013 - 2 stars |
PVT Chat - 2020 - 1 stars |
The Last Emperor - 1987 - 3.5 stars |
Moonlight - 2016 - 3.5 stars |
Sanctuary - 2022 - 3 stars |
God's Time - 2022 - 2.5 stars |
She Will - 2021 - 4.5 stars |
See How They Run - 2022 - 3 stars |
Breaking the Waves - 1996 - 2 stars |
The Woman in Black - 2012 - 1 stars |
The Gambler - 2014 - 1 stars |
Minor Premise - 2020 - 1.5 stars |
The Man Who Killed Hitler and Then the Bigfoot - 2018 - 2 stars |
Gaia - 2021 - 3 stars |
Upgrade - 2018 - 1 stars |
The Mill - 2023 - 2 stars |
12 Hour Shift - 2020 - 3.5 stars |
Ready or Not - 2019 - 3 stars |
The Lost World: Jurassic Park - 1997 - 3.5 stars |
Something in the Dirt - 2022 - 3 stars |
The Deep End - 2022 - 3 stars |
Alita: Battle Angel - 2019 - 1 stars |
The Sacrament - 2013 - 2.5 stars |
From Here to Eternity - 1953 - 2 stars |
The French Connection - 1971 - 1.5 stars |
Ordinary People - 1980 - 1 stars |
Platoon - 1986 - 3 stars |
The Player - 1992 - 4 stars |
Saltburn - 2023 - 4.5 stars |
Red Cliff - 2008 - 3.5 stars |
Stolen Youth: Inside the Cult at Sarah Lawrence - 2023 - 3 stars |
The Beyond - 1981 - 2 stars |
I would say none of the movies I watched this year were truly great, S-tier movies, compared to last year which had two (EEAAO, and Vengeance.) However, I found this year had a good variety of movies at the A-tier below that (some of which I still need to see.)
But this makes choosing “the best” difficult. Instead I will hand out awards: