Sunday, December 2, 2012

Six From Six Different Decades

It's getting harder to find movies to watch, but over the past few months I have been able to find them where I can.  Six more movies has moved me up to 420, my goal is to be at 425 by the end of the year and I think I'll make it.

A Touch Of Class (1973) - A romantic comedy of that era.  Starring George Segal and Glenda Jackson about an American businessman who is married but meets a divorced English woman and they decide to have an affair.  After a disaster of a trip to Spain and everything that could go wrong, they somehow decide to keep the affair going back in England.  A silly comedy of errors and a predictable ending but something that you would expect to see in the early 70's.

I am now at four out of five for the year and so far The Sting was still the best.  While it was impressive to see the Exorcist nominated and since I just watched it again recently reminding me what a real horror film it is, it wouldn't win.

Lost Horizon (1937) - The great Capra masterpiece.  The film that cost an incredible amount for it's time.  The story of a man and a group of people he has saved taken to Shangri-La and how they learn to live in utopia.  Everyone except for his brother whom he leaves with and after realizes what he gave up, fights to get back.  The best part is that they found lost footage, the audio at least, and put it back into the film with still shots.  A rare film to see but so good that it's worth it.

I have now seen all ten movies from 1937 and the part I dread the most about years from this era, trying to pick the best film.  It was very hard, but I'll go with the academy on this one and agree that The Life Of Emile Zola was the best film.  The problem is that at least five others would be second best including Captain Courageous, The Good Earth, Lost Horizon, Dead End, and A Star Is Born could all have possibly won as well.  The remaining are all tied for third.  Proving again that the late 30's to the early 40's was a great time for Hollywood.

Precious (2009) - To be honest I didn't expect this film to be good.  I was wrong it was very good.  A very depressing tale about an sexually, emotionally and physically abused teenager trying to better herself.  The acting was very well done and the screenplay a bit sappy at times, still was done very well and told a good story.  I would consider it a modern day Sybil.

Now seeing nine out of ten my mind still hasn't changed, A Serious Man was still the best film, The Hurt Locker has fallen lower.  Precious was a much better film, it was a better acted film, better told story, better edited than The Hurt Locker.  And even after I see the last film I am confident that my opinion will not change.

Moneyball (2011) - The semi true story about the Oakland A's rise with no money back in 2002.  Brad Pitt is a great actor and carries the film.  If you are a baseball fan you will enjoy it.  If you are a Seattle Mariner fan like me, you will have to relive the nightmare of that lousy 20 game winning streak that knocked Seattle out of first place.

Almost half way through this year, five more to go.  Moneyball is up there, not as good as The Artist or Midnight in Paris but third for now.

Coal Miners Daughter (1980) - The life story of Loretta Lynn wonderfully acted by Sissy Spacek who truly earned the best actress award for her acting.  A typical bio-pic showing how she became a musician and her climb to fame and the trials and tribulations she faced.  An enjoyable film even if you can't stand county music.

I am now in the majority of this year and I am thoroughly confused.  The remaining nine years of this decade were some of the worst films ever made to be nominated for best picture.  But so far of the three I have seen from 1980, all are really great films.  I am still troubled by Ordinary People beating Raging Bull, but it was better.  While Coal Miners Daughter was not better than Ordinary People, if was made anywhere from 1981 to 1989 it would have won best picture.  But it came out in 1980 and right now sits in third place.

Anne Of The Thousand Days (1969) - A biographical film about Anne Boleyn.  Very similar to A Man For All Seasons, but this covers a bigger time frame.  And not as good.  The acting was respectable, Richard Burton is Richard Burton, you get your money's worth.  He plays a decent Henry VIII but nowhere near as good as Charles Laughton.  Genevive Bujold was good as Anne Boleyn but the film was long and felt longer.

This now wraps up the 40th year where I have seen every film.  And without blinking an eye, Midnight Cowboy was the best film.  Not so much that it was such a good film, more to do with the competition.  Anne of The Thousand Days falls securely into second.  Hello Dolly is third, a good musical but still not a great film.  Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid is more hype than movie and is only saved from last because Z was nominated.  I have no idea why they nominated such a boring and meaningless film, but it is last for the year and the decade.

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

83 Out Of 84

That's right; I've seen 83 out of 84 films for best picture.  This leaves Schindler's List, which ironically I stated that before I even started this project that I don't ever want to see the film because I know how depressing it will be.  I will have to see it, but there is still time.  I also watched a few other film now putting me only 80 films left at the current moment.  It's been getting harder to find movies that I haven't seen, but what do you expect when you've seen over 400 nominated films?

Shakespeare In Love (1998) - A romantic comedy about Shakespeare trying to write Romeo and Juliet.  No one knows if it is true or not, doesn't matter.  It's the same style as The Girl with the Pearl Earring, taking a historic event and creating a story about it.  Well acted and enjoyable a good film to see.

This has now completed 1998 and the best film was Saving Private Ryan.  This is one of the finest war movies ever made and clearly was the best quality film.  Shakespeare In Love is second, a good film but not as good as Saving Private Ryan.  Third would be Elizabeth, another film from the same era as Shakespeare In Love, although a bit dry, falls perfectly in the middle.  Fourth is The Thin Red Line, another good war movie, not as good as Saving Private Ryan and too many characters like too many chefs, a little less would have made it stronger.  And last is Life Is Beautiful a film that attempts to tell a heartfelt story but comes across creepy.

The Mission (1986) - A drama about Jesuit missionaries in South America in the 18th century.  Good acting performances by Robert De Niro and Jermey Irons, great scenery, interesting story.  A typical 80's drama, good film but nothing that great or to write home about.

This makes four out of five for the year and so far Platoon is still the best film.  It came out at the right time and was slightly better than The Mission.

Test Pilot (1938) - What a film!  Clark Gable, Myrna Loy and Spencer Tracey.  And if that's not enough add in Lionel Barrymore.  It's like ordering fried chicken, bacon and smoked sausage and lets just add a filet minion to that plate.  Clark Gable is a ace pilot who flies planes for the military and attempts to set speed records.  He had trouble, lands in Kansas, falls in love with Myrna Loy and takes her back to New York City.  Spencer Tracey is his co-pilot and tries to keep him sober and from spending money as soon as he gets it.  The great Lionel Barrymore is the owner of the company who tests the planes and plays the part as amazing as he always does.

This film is from the great era in Hollywood.  This year is only surpassed by 1939.  So far every film, nine out of ten for this year, have been incredible.  So is this film better than You Can't Take It With You?  Some movie algebra will have to be done.  First using the Lionel Barrymore formula gets us to a tie since he was in both.  The next equation is the director formula.  Test Pilot was directed by Victor Flemming, You Can't Take It With You by Frank Capra.  Normally using the Capra formula will solve the equation, but not this time since Flemming went on to direct Gone With The Wind the next year.  The next formula is best director formula, Flemming won one, Capra won three and one of them was for You Can't Take It With You.  Therefore You Can't Take It With You is still the best film of the year, mathematically proven.

Gosford Park (2001) - A Robert Altman film, you can't go wrong with that.  A mystery that takes place in the early 1930's on an English estate with a cast of characters spending the weekend hunting.  A murder takes place, other skeletons in the closet are revealed amongst multiple storylines.  Stylish a very classy film, costumes hit the mark, very good acting, what you would expect from Robert Altman.

This now completes 2001 and the best film is still A Beautiful Mind.  A great drama that none of the other films can ever come close to.  Second is Lord Of The Rings since it is a great fantasy film with great special effects and really well done.  Third is almost a tie between Gosford Park and In The Bedroom, but since Robert Altman directed Gosford Park it goes into third and In The Bedroom fourth.  Last and least is Moulin Rouge, glad I will never have to watch that again.

Extremely Loud And Incredibly Close (2011) - Should be titled Extremely Obnoxious and Incredibly Sappy.  The film revolves around an obsessive child who a year after losing his father in the World Trade Center on 9/11 tries to find who owns a key he finds in a vase.  To be fair there is good acting, Max von Sydow is really good, and the film is well done.  You can tell the goal was not to make the best picture, just one good enough to be nominated.  And that they succeeded in doing.  It generates buzz about the film and insane people like myself will have to see it since it was nominated.  It's worth watching, you don't feel cheated or like you want your money back after seeing it, but it's not going to be remembered as one of the best films of the decade.

Was this better than The Artist?  What planet are you from?  No way.

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

No One Smashes Up a Research Lab Like a Welsh Miner

That's right you should have guessed that I saw The Citadel and a bunch of others.  Closed out three more years as well.  I'll start with a classic from the 1930's.

The Citadel (1938) - A King Vidor directed film with Robert Donat and Rosalind Russell about an English doctor who first starts working for Welsh miners in their form of a HMO and tries to research how to cure tuberculosis.  They start getting angry since he won't just give them unnecessary prescriptions or claim them unable to work when they can, so they destroy his lab and research.  He goes to London and falls into the very comfortable trap of getting paid a lot to do basically nothing.  After a terrible accident he questions his morals and fights for his principles, better late than never.

1939 is considered the apex of the early film industry, therefore the years before and after are almost as good.  Again this film did not disappoint.  The acting is amazing, my guess Robert Donat's best actor for 1939 was partially to make up for his performance in this film.  Its not as good as You Can't Take It With You or Grand Illusion, but definitely up there with the best for the year.

On Golden Pond (1981) - Henry Fonda, Katherine Hepburn, Jane Fonda and Dabney Coleman in a somewhat slow moving drama about a daughter dropping off her soon to be step child with her parents in their summer home.  Her father is old, angry and has never liked anyone but bonds with the kid over fishing.  When his daughter comes back she is jealous of the relationship that the kid has that she never did and cries.

This reminded me of In The Bedroom in that there are great actors and actresses with a really boring script.  You replace the actors and you have a really, really bad film.  There isn't much to this film and it's too safe and boring, but with good acting you can make it watchable, or nominated in a weak year.  Not good enough to win best picture though.

Love Story (1970) - Love is never having to say why did I watch this movie.  It is one of the king of the tearjerkers about a young couple getting started in life and the wife gets sick and dies.  Very sappy and melodramatic but a popular film and I will admit since I have watched my wife twice go through life threatening illness, it is very hard to watch someone you love suffer.

Compared to the other movies, it's not the best picture by far, but since I have the last film of that year to review next I can properly rank this movie.

Airport (1970) - The epic everything that could go wrong in a day at a Chicago airport movie.  An all star cast with Bert Lancaster, George Kennedy, Dean Martin and many others.  All of the personal conflicts of each person with a vicious snowstorm and a crazed man with a bomb on a flight to Rome.  Good drama and funny to see people smoking on an airplane.

Since I have now seen all of the films for 1970 this year can be closed out.  Patton was the best film miles above the rest.  You could combine all the other films and they still would not be as good as Patton.  Second would be Five Easy Pieces another strong film that shows the period of time as a photo in an album.  Third is very close but I would give the slight edge to M.A.S.H over Airport, even though both went on to have life during the decade, eleven years on television for M.A.S.H and at least three sequels for Airport, but M.A.S.H was funnier and that will give you an edge.  And last is Love Story.

Atlantic City (1981) - A small film at the time called low budget, now would be called independent, about a gangster who is a legend in his mind who falls into a drug deal and is able to get away with the money.  Burt Lancaster plays the part very well and is supported by Susan Sarandon a woman down on her luck trying to become a blackjack dealer.  They are surrounded by Atlantic City's rebirth that started in the late 1970's and eventually came back to life, as good as you can in New Jersey, by the mid 80's.  So it shows the historic background mixed with the conflicts of the characters.  This is a really good film that does not get enough notice.

Seeing this has now helped me close out 1981.  And Chariots of Fire was the best film, although it was a weak year.  Second I would put Atlantic City since it was such an interesting film, third is the now classic Raiders of the Lost Ark, fourth is On Golden Pond due to the acting and last is Reds which dragged on way to long and seriously who cared?

Smilin' Through (1933) - Norma Shearer, Fredrick March, Leslie Howard star in a sad and confusing story about a man raising his niece who ends up falling in love with the son of the man who killed his wife to be during their wedding fifty years earlier.  I know everyone can relate to this, it happens all the time.  But even though it is a somewhat sappy drama, it moves well and the acting is great.

Now I have seen this film I can attempt to close out 1933.  This will be difficult since I don't think I've ranked a year with ten movies with the exception of 1939 where I copped out and said all were worthy, can't do that this time.  Best picture overall was Cavalcade, dry as it was it was still done really well.  Second is I Am a Fugitive From a Chain Gang since Paul Muni was amazing in it.  Third is Little Women, the acting was terrific and the classic story just moves you.  The rest would then be 42nd Street a funny musical, then The Private Life of Henry VIII for Charles Laughton's great acting, Smilin' Through as a sold film, next State Fair for being a wholesome movie, Lady for a Day a Capra classic, She Done Him Wrong the great Mae West vehicle and last A Farewell to Arms, acted wonderfully but written by Hemingway will always get you to the back of the line.

Sunday, July 1, 2012

400 and Counting!

That's right, I've now have seen more than 400 films that have been nominated for Best Picture.  And I was able to add in another Best Picture, narrowing down that list to only two movies I haven't seen yet.  And a bunch of other reviews, but I'll start with the 82nd best picture.

Out Of Africa (1985) - Not only is the 82nd film I've seen, I have completed the 1980's and have seen every best picture from 1928 to 1992.  The last two Schindler's List (1993) and Shakespeare in Love (1998) are all that remain, until next year of course.  You may be asking why am I spending time talking about statistics and other films?  That's because this is more interesting than Out of Africa.  Talk about boring.  The cinematography was great, the musical score was wonderful, costume design was amazing.  The acting, ugh.  The script, yawn.  It goes on and on and you wonder why I should care about a Dutch woman who moves to Africa and gets stuck with a coffee plantation that ends up burning down, the processing plant that is.

I have now seen all of the films for 1985 and without a doubt the best movie was Out of Africa.  As horrible as it was, nothing else was as good.  It was a very weak year and this film had the luck to be made at the right time.  Witness will stay second only because it had some action, but was not a great cop movie.  Third is Prizzi's Honor since it had a good cast.  Fourth is A Color Purple very narrowly beating out Kiss of the Spider Woman, both lucky to be nominated.


Finding Neverland (2004) - What a surprise, another bio-pic!  This one is loosely based on J.M Barrie and his inspiration on writing Peter Pan.  The acting was good, it is an enjoyable film but if you read the real history, it wasn't as happy as an ending as the movie would imply.  The child whom Peter Pan is named for eventually committed suicide and commented that he despised the story.  The time line in the film is also wrong as to what happened in real life.  But it still is a good movie to see.

Another year completed and the best film was Million Dollar Baby.  It is a strong powerful drama and Clint Eastwood did a great job.  Second is The Aviator a great Martin Scorsese movie and great acting by Leonardo DiCaprio.  Finding Neverland is third, Ray comes fourth and Sideways is fifth only because it is the weakest of the movies this year.

Lady For A Day (1933) - The 400th movie I've seen so far on this project.  I was debating which of the movies I have on the DVR to watch for the 400th and I went with the oldest produced movie.  And it's a Frank Capra movie so it sealed the deal.  A typical Capra fairy tale type of story about a poor woman who sells apples and has a daughter she left in Europe as a baby to be raised in a convent.  She has been lying to her in letters saying how she is a wealthy socialite in New York City, but now her daughter is coming to visit with her fiancee who is from royalty.  A mobster who buys apples from her for good luck agrees to make her appear to be a wealthy socialite, spends a ton of money and eventually convinces the police, the mayor and the governor to go along.  A truly unrealistic movie, but that's what Capra was great at, the modern urban fairy tale with the happy ending.

Now that I've seen nine out of ten films nominated this year, it appears that Cavalcade is still the best picture.  Lady for a Day was good, but it doesn't crack the top five.

Dead End (1937) - A gritty drama about a dead end street in Hell's Kitchen and the conflicts that go on during one summer day.  Joel McCrea in one of the few non westerns he did and a young Humphrey Bogart play oppose each other.  McCrea is guy who never escaped from his poverty and still lives in the neighborhood.  Bogart is a gangster who got plastic surgery and comes back to see his mom and old girl friend.  His mom rejects him, his old girl friend is a diseased prostitute, not a great reunion, don't think they have a Hallmark card for that.  One notable item is that this was the first appearance of the Dead End kids who became the Bowery Boys and made a ton of movies for the next twenty years.

A great film from a great year.  1939 has been the apex of great movies from this era , which means the years leading up had great movies as well, this year is no exception.  While The Life of Emile Zola is still the best picture, and Dead End is a great movie, it falls to the bottom of the pack.  This year was so strong, so many good films, that if it came out ten or twenty years later it could have won.  The story is somewhat timeless, but it earned it's spot as one of the ten best.

One Hundred Men And A Girl (1937) - Be careful what you click if you do an Internet search for this movie.  A warmhearted musical staring a teenage Deanna Durbin and the great Adolphe Menjou as a father and daughter trying to find a venue for their orchestra.  Not much of a story, very good music and Deanna Durbin was an amazing singer.  A good film overall.

Compared to other movies from 1937, see my comments from Dead End above if you skipped to this film.  This one falls to the bottom, not because it was a musical, but because there really wasn't much meat to the film.  But they did perform some Wagner in the movie, so it is definately worthy of best picture status.

Seabiscuit (2003) - Another movie from the decade of bio-pics.  Based on the story of the famous horse who raced back in the late 1930's.  Not interested?  Neither am I.  If you love horse racing then this is a movie for you.  Otherwise it was a well done film, big budget, rather popular, but not much more than that.

And now I have seen all the films for 2003.  In fact I have completed thirty two years now as well.  And still the best picture was The Return of the King.  It was an overall award for The Lord of the Rings, but it also better film than the others.  Second would be Master and Commander a great action film reminiscent of the old swashbuckler films of yesteryear.  Third is Mystic River, a very strong drama and great acting.  Fourth is a close call, but Lost in Translation squeezes in mainly for the original quirky nature of the film.  Last is Seabiscuit mostly for the unnecessary commentary that was full of political opinion and distracted from the film, thankfully it stopped about half way through the movie, but not enough to save it from last place.

Saturday, June 9, 2012

How ofter do you get to see Red Buttons at 40 pretend to be 25?

You can when he won his Oscar for best supporting actor in 1957.  Yes and along with Sayonara, two more to put me closer to 400.

Saynonara (1957) - Marlin Brando and Red Buttons are solders in post WWII Japan who end up falling in love with Japanese women.  This is at a time where it was illegal to marry a Japanese woman as an American and bring her back to the US.  More of a social commentary yet still a good drama.  Brando is in his prime and is great to watch.  Red Buttons and Miyoshi Umeki won supporting actor and actress awards were great, even though he was a bit too old for the part he was playing.  Get past that and you'll appreciate his acting.

Now I have seen all the films for 1957 so I can now make a final assessment of that year.  The Bridge on the River Kwai was the best picture in a very strong year, somewhat of a rarity of this decade.  Second would be 12 Angry Men, a classic drama with an all star cast.  The rest are in a very tight race, I could call it a three way tie for third but that would be a cop-out.  So Witness for the Prosecution gets third with Tyrone Powers eyebrows and all, Saynonara fourth and Peyton Place fifth.

Mary Poppins (1964) - This was a great movie and my 396th.  I am not a fan of musicals.  I am not into kids movies.  But this film is done so well that you can't not enjoy it.  If you don't, you don't have a soul.  Great special effects for its time, catchy songs but not as good as the sequel Sherry Bobbins.

This puts me at four out of five for this year.  And seeing how two of the films I couldn't stand and the other two are musicals, there is still a chance that I might find Becket the best film.  Otherwise My Fair Lady is still first and Mary Poppins is second.

Midnight In Paris (2011) - Another great Woody Allen film.  I love Woody Allen.  His movies, his books, anything he does.  Even his obscure attempt to do drama in the late 70's and in the 80's, its all good.  An interesting story about a screenwriter in Paris with his fiancee and her family having doubts about his relationship and his work.  He finds himself each night being transported back to Paris in the 1920's and hobnobbing with well know artists and writers of the time.  After a while he wants to stay there because he thinks this is the best time in history to be.  He ends up in the 1890's and a women he is in love with from the 1920's wants to stay in this time era because she thinks it's the best.  And the artists from the 1890's want to be in the Renaissance era.  The moral of the story is that the time you are in now is the best, stop romanticizing about the past, enjoy the now.

As I start to see the rest of the films for 2011, so far the first two have been great.  This is not as good as The Artist but it is in second and will take a lot to move it further down.

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Revenge in Maine

That actually sounds pretty cool as a movie title, but viewers had to settle with In The Bedroom.  That and two others helped me reach the 394 mark meaning I only have 100 films left to see.  Of course until next year when more movies are nominated, but unless I take a decade or two off, I'll always be in double digits or less (hopefully) of films to see.

In The Bedroom (2001) - What if you take a very slow moving script and mix up so-so actors with a few incredible acting performances?  You get a film that is good, at times great and others like watching paint dry.  The movie is about a young man in love with a divorced or soon to be divorced mother who's ex-husband, or soon to be ex-husband, ends up killing him.  The parents are distraught, the guy is going to get a slap on the wrist and the parents can't live with that.

Why didn't this film win best picture?  It's because if you take away Sissy Spacek, Tom Wilkinson and Marisa Tomei this film would be horrible.  The three of them were outstanding, the rest were no where in their league and it showed.  The story creeps along at times and falls into the age old trap of making the "villain" inhuman at times to help justify the actions of the "heroes" of the film.  A Beautiful Mind was clearly better done but the acting is very close.

The Human Comedy (1943) - Young Mickey Rooney and even younger Van Johnson and Donna Reed in a typical WWII film about life at home.  Very similar to movies of this era during the war, at times more propaganda and education than entertainment.  And while it is classified as a comedy, it is more dramatic and slightly depressing at times.  The story is about a young man getting a job while his older brother is at war and his father has already passed on.  Again as I've posted before, movies during WWII had no knowledge when the war would end, so the films are filled with hope and inspiration for the movie goers not to be depressed when they left the theater.  It differs from films made after the war ended, then you can give a happy or sad ending, but people already know what the final result was.

This film is great more for the mood and the slice of time it portrays.  It's a great example of using art to reflect a specific time and place in history.  And the acting was great and the movie really does pull you in, it's a good story that is entertaining to watch.  Yet it was matched up against Casablanca and ended up losing.  It's only the seventh film I've seen that year, three more to go, but I would put it in the top three right up there with The Ox-Bow Incident.

Life is Beautiful (1998) - One of the few foreign language films to be nominated and win three Oscars.  Roberto Benigni ends up in a concentration camp during WWII and tries to hid it from his child.  Not as awkward as The Day The Clown Cried, but rather unrealistic.  I wouldn't go as far to say it was disrespectful, but it is hard to make a comedy about such a depressing subject.  While I admire the attempt it wasn't that good.  I should also note that I didn't see the original version, the one I saw was dubbed.  And while dubbed films have gotten a bit better over time, they still are not as good as a movie in the language it was filmed in.

I would like to compare it to the best picture of the year but this is one of the three years that I haven't seen the best film yet.  And like 1985 I have now seen all the other films that were nominated and didn't win.  So for now I can say that this wasn't the best film, Saving Private Ryan is still holding the top spot.

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Did anyone ever really trust a Romanian Count before WWII?

And as you see in Watch On The Rhine you couldn't trust them during the war either. As well I added Room at the Top and Talk of the Town to my list, creeping closer to 400.

Watch On The Rhine (1943) - Bettie Davis and Paul Lukas who won best actor, are refugees from Europe at the start of WWII. They are committed Fascism fighters raising money to send back to Europe so they go back to Bettie Davis's family in Washington DC. And as my post title hinted, a Romanian count is living there spending all his time playing poker at the German embassy. He tries to sell Paul Lukas out, fails and is killed by Paul Lukas who takes all of his fundraising and flees back to Europe.

This film is more of a propaganda film, it was made during the war and without knowing how it will end (obviously) this film has a interesting characteristic to it. Like Mrs. Miniver a year earlier, movies about WWII made during WWII are more intense than those made after the war. But it did go up against Casablanca, so it wasn't the best film, but worthy of the top ten, even in the top five.


Room At The Top (1959) - English film from the new era of movie making that occurred in the late 1950's in England. A gritty drama about a man who will do whatever it takes to succeed right after the end of WWII. He keeps angling for a better job and looks to marry a rich man's daughter. Along the way he falls in love with a married woman who he promises to be with, but then goes with the rich girl. She gets drunk, dies in a car accident and he gets himself nearly beaten to death but is brought to the wedding on time and marries the rich girl he got pregnant.

It reminded me somewhat of A Place in the Sun, but not as good. That and you can't compare Laurence Harvey to Montgomery Clift, or the rest of the cast for that matter. Since this was the last film to see for 1959, and the 390 film I saw overall, here is the final verdict for the year. Ben-Hur is still the best picture, a classic epic. A Nun's Story would be second from fine acting from Audrey Hepburn, close third is The Diary of Anne Frank, depressing but still a great drama. Anatomy of a Murder gets fourth because Otto Preminger is a great director, with the exception of Skidoo, and Room at the Top fifth since it was a tough year.

The Talk Of The Town (1942) - A somewhat preachy movie that has an incredible acting team with Carey Grant, Jean Arthur and Ronald Colman about a man being framed for arson and murder. Carey Grant is the town anarchist and all around angry guy. He's framed for burning down the factory and killing a night watchman. He flees from jail and hides out at Jean Arthur's rental home who she is preparing for law professor Ronald Colman. While there he thinks Carey Grant is the gardener, gets into great philosophical discussions with him, all the while Jean Arthur is trying to get Ronald Colman to take up Carey Grant's case but wouldn't do it anyway since he is going to be nominated for the Supreme Court.

As you can guess it all works out for the best, but a good film anyway. It did lose to Mrs. Miniver and rightfully so.

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Does proving that a German Psychiatrist doodles mean him diagnosing you as a manic depressive invalid?

In the world of Frank Capra it sure does! I'm sure you've guessed by now that I have seen Mr. Deeds Goes To Town and two other classics including a strong eyebrow acting role from 1946. But first...

Mr. Deeds Goes To Town (1936) - The Frank Capra classic that won him his second best director for the 1930's. A typical Capra style like Mr. Smith Goes to Washington or Meet John Doe, this time it's a small town poet from New England who inherits 20 million dollars from a long lost uncle and moves to New York City. Not only the typical fish out of water story, but everyone is out to con him from his money or to embarrass him in public. Yet as the hero he is not the bumbling fool people take him for and when he decides to give his money away they try to declare him insane. A unrealistic trial by the state, he wins over everyone and is the hero who gets the girl.

Is it sappy? Yes. Is it unrealistic? Yes. Is it a great movie? Yes. The story may be annoying at times, but Gary Cooper is great and you will enjoy every minute. As compared to The Great Ziegfield, as I've said before nothing was going to beat that movie because of what Florenz Ziegfield meant to the entertainment industry and he was missed.

The Smiling Lieutenant (1932) - A classic from before the self imposed censorship from the movie industry came about. A silly musical about an officer in the Austrian army winking at a visiting princess who is offended. Trying to avoid an international (or continental) incident, he has to be their escort while visiting Austria and ultimately has to marry her. Maurice Chevalier, Claudette Colbert and Miriam Hopkins are comical and lustful in a well acted film. Even though I don't like musicals, the songs relate to the story, the songs are rather comical and the sexual situations are what you would seed about forty years later in films, not what you expect when you think of movies from the 1930's.

This is a great film, but you can't use basic movie math to compare it to the best picture of 1932, Grand Hotel, you will need to do movie calculus. In this case you would apply the Lionel Barrymore algebraic equation. Did Grand Hotel have Lionel Barrymore? Yes. Did The Smiling Lieutenant have Lionel Barrymore? No. The answer is Grand Hotel was the best film of 1932, it just as simple as that.


The Razor's Edge (1946) - Based on the W. Somerset Maugham's novel, where he is one of the main characters. Does that mean he's not real or it's not a novel???? And Tyrone Power's eyebrows, Gene Tierney, Tyrone Power, Anne Baxter and Herbert Marshall all make up an all star cast. About a WWI vet who decides to find himself by traveling around Europe and Asia and finds enlightenment in India starring at a mountain. In other words, he became a hippie after the war and traveled like a bum trying to become a zen master. Gene Tierney is shallow and loves him but wants the life of luxury in Chicago (joke's on her) and then becomes bitter when his eyebrows show up ten years later.

It was a very good movie, but nothing could beat The Best Years of Our Lives the year after WWII ended. I don't think Gone With The Wind could win, so there is no need to compare it but just say it was one of the better films for the year.

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

It's been awhile.......

It's been awhile since I have posted and I have seen a bunch of movies. Nothing like taking a few days off to watch movies.



Darling (1965) - Julie Christie staring in her Oscar winning role, and besides that there wasn't much to this film. She was fantastic, the movie, eh. It's the story of a model who is bored with everything around her and chronicles her rise to royalty.



This means that I have finished 1965 and my mind has not changed, The Sound of Music was the best picture. As much as I don't like musicals, this is a really, really good one and a good film. Second is A Thousand Clowns for being such a great dramatic comedy. Doctor Zhivago in all of it's depression is third, Darling is fourth and fifth is Ship of Fools.



Foreign Correspondent (1940) - A Hitchcock film that competed against itself for best picture with Rebecca. It doesn't have the great Laurence Olivier, it has Joel McCrea. It's a spy thriller about a journalist who is sent to Europe and gets tangled up in a murder mystery conspiracy.


The film is a Hitchcock film, so it is good. Not as good as Rebecca, or other movies that year, but good suspense as you would expect from Alfred Hitchcock that doesn't disappoint.


The Long Voyage Home (1940) - Based on four plays by Eugene O'Neill about sailors on a ship in early World War II in the Atlantic. Directed by John Ford and staring John Wayne is all you need to know that this is a film worth watching. The stories blend into one another so that they are one film, but unless you knew the film was based on four different plays, the story seems a bit choppy.


This makes the ninth out of ten films for 1940, so I can't make an official assessment, but this one is up near the top.


State Fair (1933) - Staring Janet Gaynor, Will Rodgers and Lew Ayres, a non musical version of an Iowa family spending a week at the state fair and all of the drama, romance and comedy that comes with this. It's a light hearted film that is very enjoyable, very funny at times. To be honest I am glad I didn't see this movie when I was younger, I would not have understand it as a kid growing up in New York City. But I have been to state fairs and know what significance they hold, especially to people in rural areas.


It's not as serious as Cavalcade or other films nominated that year, so I can see why it didn't win best picture. But never-the-less a good classic film. See it before it falls apart even more and is lost forever.


The Thin Red Line (1998) - An all star WWII film about the battle of Guadalcanal. Very violent and gritty, good qualities of a war movie. A few too many characters makes it hard to follow the multiple story lines and to be honest Steven Spielberg did a better job with Saving Private Ryan. Some great acting though, but a rather long movie.


I still haven't seen the best picture of 1998, Shakespeare in Love, so this will sit in a holding comparison pattern. So far all the films I've seen make 1998 a very strong year.


Trader Horn (1931) - They don't make movies like this anymore, and probably for good reason. If you attempted to make a remake and keep the integrity of the original you wouldn't stop being sued. A "Many animals were harmed" disclaimer could also be used for this film. It's a story about a trader adventurer who ends up "saving" a white queen, a young girl who was taken from her missionary parents as a baby in Africa. From a standpoint on race it makes Birth of a Nation look like Remember the Titans.

Still the footage is amazing, it was filmed in Africa in the early 1930's. It's worth seeing it just for that. Doesn't come up to the level of Cimarron which was a bit of a mini epic, but still a good movie.

In Old Arizona (1929) - Don't mess with the Cisco Kid. Somehow Army sergeants from Brooklyn don't get this. The film is very old, one of the first major sound films. It's about Arizona before it was a state and how the Army is trying to track down the Cisco Kid who steals horses, gold, women, ham steaks and anything he gets his hands on. Typical Western storyline, action and scenery, but good enough to be one of the few Westerns to get nominated for best picture. It's hard to compare films from this time period to modern films, but there is something so cool to see a movie from over 80 years ago.

1929 was a mixed year, not counting that stock market thing. It was bad because President Coolidge left office, but my paternal grandmother was married that year which was good since further actions allowed me to post my ramblings on the Internet. I've only now seen two films from this year, so I still can't determine which was better, I'll leave it in second for now next to Broadway Melody which won best picture.

Blossoms in the Dust (1941) - A bio-pic about Edna Gladney, the woman who started the Texas Children's Home and Aid Society staring the beautiful Greer Garson. Not the most accurate portrayal, but most movies do take liberties. A very enjoyable movie, warm and heartfelt, makes you realize how tough it was to be an orphan back in the day. Things that we take for granted today were not the same ninety years ago. Does make you appreciate and honor those who work to get children adopted.

Now to try and compare this movie with the best picture of 1941 is a fruitless venture since the movie that won for best picture was NOT the best picture. This is the infamous year of Citizen Kane being snubbed, so the best that this film could do is second best, but so far seeing eight out of nine, it's falling in the middle.

Song of Bernadette (1943) - The story of a teenage girl who in the 1850's in France believed she saw the Virgin Mary and dug up a underwater well of mineral water. The film does do a good job to balance the religious overtones with reality. If you believe in the story as true then the film shows you it happened. If you question the truth the film also presents it from the logical perspective to show that it was circumstance and not a miracle. That is the sign of a good movie that can bring both sides together. Otherwise it is very, very long and you get the point rather quickly. Also France in the 1850's looks just as filthy as today, some things never change.

This film is good enough to be in the top ten of the year, but nowhere near to Casablanca.

The Right Stuff (1983) - The 385th film I have seen so far. The epic film based on the Mercury Seven and Chuck Yeager during the dawn of the space age. Star studded cast, good special effects, very well done movie. Reminds you how brave the first Astronauts were and how great of an American Chuck Yeager is.

Since I have now seen all films nominated for 1983 I can finally say that this was a very weak year for movies. As I posted before I considered this a year where all the films had a losing record. Well one film hit the .500 mark (or at least 9 and 7) which would be The Right Stuff. Not that it is a great film, but it is good and better than the others. Second would be Tender Mercies, mainly because of Robert Duvall and not because of the film. Third would be The Dresser, fourth is Terms Of Endearment and fifth is The Big Chill. Glad this year is over with.

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Oscar Results

My streak has been ended. For the past five to six years I have won, maybe a tie somewhere in there, but this year my wife won. Here are some interesting statistics:

92% is the combined correct picks, between us we got 22 out of 24 correct. The two we missed Best Editing and Live Action Short Film;

83% was what my wife got, 20 out of 24;

67% was my score, 16 out of 24.

Here is a breakdown of each category.


Visual Effects

Chris - Rise of the Planet of the Apes
Adam - Hugo
Winner - Hugo
Adam - 1
Chris - 0

This is one of the few that I got right that my wife didn't. My guess of Hugo winning the technical awards payed off.

Sound Mixing
Chris - Hugo
Adam - Hugo
Winner - Hugo
Adam - 2
Chris -1

Another of the five technical awards won by Hugo.

Sound Editing
Chris - Hugo
Adam - Hugo
Winner - Hugo
Adam - 3
Chris - 2

Looking pretty smart, ain't I? S-M-R-T!

Cinematography
Chris - Hugo
Adam - Hugo
Winner - Hugo
Adam - 4
Chris - 3

From what I've seen, this is going to be a very enjoyable film to watch.

Makeup
Chris - The Iron Lady
Adam - Albert Nobbs
Winner - The Iron Lady
Adam - 4
Chris - 4

This is one of the first gambles that I made that didn't work out.

Costume Design

Chris - Hugo
Adam - The Artist
Winner - The Artist
Adam - 5
Chris - 4

This gamble paid off, my theory was that The Artist will win most of the categories it's running for.

Art Direction
Chris - Hugo
Adam - The Artist
Winner - Hugo
Adam - 5
Chris - 5

This was a toss up, but one of the many technical ones that Hugo won. I was right on Costume Design, wrong on this one.

Film Editing
Chris - The Artist
Adam - The Artist
Winner - The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo
Adam - 5
Chris - 5

What the? This is one of two that neither of us would have guessed. That includes the two guys who won the award. My only guess is that they wanted this film to get some recognition so this was the one award. They were the same ones who won last year for The Social Network, maybe they are in good with their crowd.

Music Original Song

Chris - The Muppets
Adam - The Muppets
Winner - The Muppets
Adam - 6
Chris - 6

Like I said, who is going to vote against The Muppets. Watching the two nominees my wife commented after they showed the song from Rio that it couldn't lose enough.

Music Original Score
Chris - The Artist
Adam - The Artist
Winner - The Artist
Adam - 7
Chris - 7

No-brainer on this one, it's a silent movie.

Writing Adapted Screenplay

Chris - The Descendants
Adam - The Descendants
Winner - The Descendants
Adam - 8
Chris - 8

I called this one, it was rather obvious. People wanted to recognize the film, this is one award that is commonly used. And I was right, it was the only award the film won all night.

Writing Original Screenplay
Chris - Midnight In Paris
Adam - Midnight In Paris
Winner - Midnight In Paris
Adam - 9
Chris - 9

I was glad to see this since Woody Allen is one of the greatest comedic filmmakers of all time. And of course, he wasn't there.

Short Film Animated
Chris - The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore
Adam - La Luna
Winner -
The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore
Adam - 9
Chris - 10

These awards I consider to be the wild cards. There is no real way to know who will win unless you have seen all of the films and are involved in this community. Otherwise it is a pure guess and one I wasn't lucky on.

Short Film Live Action
Chris - Tuba Atlantic
Adam - Raju
Winner - The Shore
Adam - 9
Chris - 10

The only other category that neither of us was able to get right.

Documentary Short Subject
Chris - Saving Face
Adam - Incident in New Baghdad
Winner - Saving Face
Adam - 9
Chris - 11

Maybe I should have researched these a bit, but still they are a lottery and I guessed wrong. I've been lucky in the past, this year it went to my wife.

Best Animated
Chris - Rango
Adam - Rango
Winner - Rango
Adam - 10
Chris - 12

Back in the winning momentum, but still two behind my wife.

Best Documentary
Chris - Undefeated
Adam - Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory
Winner - Undefeated
Adam - 10
Chris - 13

Now I am in trouble, this is the last of the wild cards and I was 0 for 4, the wife was 3 for 4.

Best Foreign Language
Chris - A Separation
Adam - A Separation
Winner - A Separation
Adam - 11
Chris - 14

Not much of a surprise here. Of course seeing the new Rassmussen polls we should be at war with Iran by the end of the week.

Best Supporting Actress
Chris - Octavia Spencer
Adam - Octavia Spencer
Winner - Octavia Spencer
Adam - 12
Chris - 15

Everyone knew this, if you didn't I would like to sell you a bridge.

Best Supporting Actor
Chris - Christopher Plummer
Adam - Christopher Plummer
Winner - Christopher Plummer
Adam - 13
Chris - 16

Would you like to buy a second bridge?

Best Actress
Chris - Meryl Streep
Adam - Viola Davis
Winner - Meryl Streep
Adam - 13
Chris - 17

This is the empty net goal. I had a feeling that I may be losing and would need a desperate attempt to try and tie or pull ahead at the end.

Best Actor
Chris - Jean Dujardin
Adam - Jean Dujardin
Winner - Jean Dujardin
Adam - 14
Chris - 18

Getting towards the end and it's looking all The Artists from here on.

Best Director
Chris - Michel Hazanavicius
Adam - Michel Hazanavicius
Winner - Michel Hazanavicius
Adam - 15
Chris - 19

The fourth out of five, rather obvious.

Best Picture
Chris - The Artist
Adam - The Artist
Winner - The Artist
Adam - 16
Chris -20


And the 84th best picture is The Artist.

Saturday, February 25, 2012

Picks for the 2011 Oscars

Normally my wife and I have our annual death match when it comes to picking the Oscars. This year she printed my ballot with her picks already there. This avoids the controversy many years ago when she looked at my ballot just before they started, erased her picks, copied mine and won. This is why I wouldn't show my picks until a few minutes before the Oscars started and would agree not to change our choices.

So here is what each of us will be rooting for, starting with the lower tier of course.

Visual Effects
Chris - Rise of the Planet of the Apes
Adam - Hugo

I have heard that Rise of the Planet of the Apes has amazing effects, but I think Hugo will win all of the technical awards. And you will see that we have picked many of the same films in most categories so I have to differentiate occasionally.

Sound Mixing
Chris - Hugo
Adam - Hugo

As I said on the previous award I am sticking with Hugo.

Sound Editing
Chris - Hugo
Adam - Hugo

Technical award, go with Hugo.

Cinematography
Chris - Hugo
Adam - Hugo

Another technical award, in my opinion, so again I'm going with Hugo.

Makeup
Chris - The Iron Lady
Adam - Albert Nobbs

I can see why The Iron Lady was nominated, Meryl Streep really looks like Margaret Thacher. But Albert Nobbs made Glenn Close look like a man. Only three nominated so one of us is right or we both lose.

Costume Design

Chris - Hugo
Adam - The Artist

This could be a toss up, but I think the Artist will win in almost every category it's nominated in.

Art Direction
Chris - Hugo
Adam - The Artist

At this pace one of us will be way into the lead or both desperately tied.

Film Editing
Chris - The Artist
Adam - The Artist

If you think a movie is going to win best picture, it's probably going to win film editing too.

Music Original Song

Chris - The Muppets
Adam - The Muppets

There were only two songs nominated and one of them is from The Muppets. Who would you vote for?

Music Original Score
Chris - The Artist
Adam - The Artist

If The Artist only wins one award it has to be this one. Hello, it's a silent movie! You have to have a good score.

Writing Adapted Screenplay

Chris - The Descendants
Adam - The Descendants

I think this will be the only award The Descendants will win. It's one of the biggest movies of the year but I think will lose in every other category and people don't want it to go away empty handed.

Writing Original Screenplay
Chris - Midnight In Paris
Adam - Midnight In Paris

Woody Allen is long overdue for another Oscar, and even though he won't be there, the buzz is that he is a shoe in for winning it.

Short Film Animated
Chris - The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore
Adam - La Luna

No idea who will win, just a pure guess. There is no way to know who will win these, these awards are the wild cards. So I picked a different film to try and move ahead.

Short Film Live Action
Chris - Tuba Atlantic
Adam - Raju

I would have picked Tuba Atlantic because the name sounds so cool, so I had to settle for Raju. Again just a blind guess.

Documentary Short Subject
Chris - Saving Face
Adam - Incident in New Baghdad

No research done on this, so my guess is that something involving Iraq should get enough votes.

Best Animated
Chris - Rango
Adam - Rango

In a year with no Pixar films, this one seems to be the one mentioned the most likely to win.

Best Documentary
Chris - Undefeated
Adam - Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory

Besides having the coolest name of the other nominees, I fell asleep watching the Documentary Channel the other day. Just before I nodded off I saw the director of this movie being asked a question or something. Or did I dream that?

Best Foreign Language
Chris - A Separation
Adam - A Separation

I've heard that this is the one to beat. It's from Iran and seeing how our President will most likely declare war on Iran sometime in September when he is polling behind the Republican nominee, it's a good shot to win.

Best Supporting Actress
Chris - Octavia Spencer
Adam - Octavia Spencer

This is one of the most obvious ones to pick, she has won every award so far.

Best Supporting Actor
Chris - Christopher Plummer
Adam - Christopher Plummer

This is the other most obvious one to pick. I don't think he has ever won before so this will be more of a lifetime achievement award.

Best Actress
Chris - Meryl Streep
Adam - Viola Davis

I could be wrong here, but The Help is a very popular movie and it won't win much besides Best Supporting Actress.

Best Actor
Chris - Jean Dujardin
Adam - Jean Dujardin

The Artist will win the big awards, he won the Golden Globe, and most of all he was terrific.

Best Director
Chris - Michel Hazanavicius
Adam - Michel Hazanavicius

The Artist once again, although I have heard rumors of Martin Scorseese.

Best Picture
Chris - The Artist
Adam - Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close, just kidding, The Artist

The first time since 1960 a full black and white film will win and the first since 1928 for a silent film to win. That and I have already seen it. And I won't need to reorder my academy award list since it is in alphabetical order. Oh yea, and it's a great movie.

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Is it necessary to see a silent film in a THX theater?

Saw The Artist this weekend in the theater that had THX sound. The music was good (translation: loud) but the moments of silence sounded just like silence! Besides going to the wonderful Cornelius 9 theater, got to see a bunch of movies this weekend.

The Artist (2011) - This is a great movie. Done in the style of a classic silent film, it's about an actor who doesn't want to accept that sound is replacing silent movies. It is also a throwback to the classic film era with touches of A Star is Born, Asta from the Thin Man series and Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. I'm sure there are many others, I'll need to watch it again closer to find more references.

Will this film win best picture? I hope so for a number of reasons. Besides it being the top runner currently and I plan on picking it on my ballot (see this post for an explaination), I hope that it will get people to become more interested in older films from the 1930's and the silent era. That and it would only be the second time that I saw a film that won best picture in the theater before it won, last time 1988.

Cleopatra (1934) -The Cecil B. DeMille epic with Claudette Colbert as Cleopatra. The old story of Julius Ceasar saving the queen after concurring Egypt and then tries to marry her. Just before the wedding he goes to a knife party, but since he is the last to arrive the party goers follow tradition and stab him to death. Mark Anthony, angry that he wasn't invited, blames Cleopatra, wants to kill her, instead falls in love with her, goes back to Egypt and then tries to fight the entire Roman army himself. He comes very close, no not really, and Cleopatra allows her pet snake to bite her. This was told in about an hour and forty minutes, seventeen hours less than the Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton remake about thirty years later.

A grand film, done well for the time. Today you would have more special effects and more elaborate sets, but enjoyable, much more than the remake. Not as good as It Happened One Night, but good enough to be in the top twelve.

Black Swan (2010) - About every thirty years a film with ballet in the storyline gets nominated (Red Shoes 1948, The Turning Point 1977) so I would get ready in about 2039 for the next ballet film to be nominated. More of a suspense film about a dancer getting the lead role in Swan Lake and her losing her mind trying to get ready for the part. Has elements of American Psycho where you are not sure what is reality or fantasy, but doesn't leave it up to the viewer which in a way weakens the film. Natalie Portman was exceptional and earned the best actress award.

I heard that this film wasn't very good, I would disagree. It wasn't as bad as 127 Hours but not as good as The Kings Speech.

The Lion in the Winter (1968) - A story about a disfunctional family getting together for Christmas. The twist is that it is 1183 and the family is King Henry II's. He allows his wife out of jail to see the King of France and invites his three sons who are all vying for being the next king. Epic style drama, drags a bit, good screenplay and strong acting. Peter O'Toole, Katharine Hepburn who won half best actress, Anthony Hopkins and Timothy Dalton's first film.

Since I have seen all films from 1968 now I can give a final analysis. I saw Oliver when I was a teenager so it's not fresh in my memory as some of the other movies from this year. But seeing how it was a musical and awarded in a socially tough time, I can see why it won. In a tie for second would be The Lion in the Winter since it has epic quality and Rachel Rachel since it was the standard of what would win during the 1970's. Romeo and Juliet is in fourth place because you can't put Shakespeare in last place, and Fanny last.

Viva Villa (1934) - Wallace Berry as Pancho Villa, it doesn't get better than this. Not sure how accurate but he plays the part like he was the John Gotti of Mexico. The story of how he took his bandits and fought in the Mexican Revolution, how he had to flee to Texas and then how he came back to overthrow the government once again.

No comparison to It Happened One Night, but very enjoyable.

The Gay Divorcee (1934) - Whole lotta of 1934 going on this weekend and this is film 375. Ginger Rogers, Fred Astaire, the cast of regulars, typical story of mistaken identity. And they always find a way to get Fred Astaire to dance, just like a Jim Brown film always found a way to get him to run. Not much on plot but a grand musical that I like to call escape from the failing of the Roosevelt economic policies.

A good film, good enough to be part of the top twelve, not good enough to bump off It Happened One Night.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

I wonder how many times did Gene Kelly accidently step on the mouse during rehearsals?

Of course Jerry aka Itchy has had worse from Tom aka Scratchy, so I'm sure he was a professional. Along with Anchors Aweigh I also saw Love is a Many-Splendored Thing and finally getting me back to 75% after adding this years nine movies dropped me down by two percent.


Anchors Aweigh (1945) - A standard light hearted musical done well. Staring Gene Kelly and Frank Sinatra as two Navy sailors who get a four day pass in Hollywood after earning the Silver Star. Somewhat comical and clever and as someone who really doesn't like musicals, I didn't hate this film. It's not going to make my top 100, but it is a very good film. If you love musicals then this is a film for you.


This lost to The Lost Weekend, no pun intended, and understandable so. Even though it was around the end of WWII, The Lost Weekend is such a powerful movie that few others could beat it. This could have won in the 1950's, but it came out when it did. I've seen three from 1945 and while this sits in third, it is only slightly edged out by Mildred Pierce.


Love is a Many-Splendored Thing (1955) - A slow moving love story about a half Chinese half English woman who is a doctor in Hong Kong in the late 1940's. Did I mention it was slow? Compared to modern films where there is instant gratification, this film very gradually moves along and tells the story of the heroine falling in love with a American corespondent. Great acting by Jennifer Jones and William Holden, not much beyond that, but they have great chemistry together.


Overall it could have been told in 15 minutes, but the extra 85 minutes allowed some nice cinematography and the theme song played a few times. Not a terrible film, but an above average film. Which is why it is a thousand times better than Marty. So now Marty which was in third place, since I had seen three films from that year, goes to fourth, soon on it's way to last place.

Monday, February 6, 2012

Apparently it's Illegal to impersonate a Gondolier in Italy

And when arrested by all means don't make fun of the police officer. Got around to seeing a few more movies on my list, one of them as the title suggests was Top Hat. Things were tough during Mussolini, wonder if they have eased that restriction?

Top Hat (1935) - Film number 365 was the famous Fred Astaire / Ginger Rogers musical that featured Cheek to Cheek. Realized that Edward Everett Horton was the narrator for Fractured Fairy Tales on Rocky and Bullwinkle years later after saying to myself, why do I know that voice? The film is basically a dance film that they built a script around. Just as it was described in the Robert Altman film The Player, they take two stars and let the film write itself. The plot is based on mistaken identity, no different than any sitcom, think Three's Company. It's the type of movie that someone would go to in 1935 to forget about the failed economic policies of FDR. Great dancing scenes but the rest of the script has jokes that fall flat and lots of unrealistic conflicts. Otherwise it is a great film if you enjoy grand dance scenes.

Was it the best film of the year, no far from it. But it is a classic.

Libeled Lady (1936) - This is one of the funniest movies I have seen in a long time. And not just funny for 1936, great comedy from very talented actors and actresses and a great script. Staring Jean Harlow, William Powell, Myrna Loy and Spencer Tracy, this film is terrific. Its defined as a screwball comedy about a newspaper that publishes a false story about a socialite played by Myrna Loy and the newspaper editor played by Spencer Tracy trying to do damage control. He brings in William Powell to help create a real scandal with Myrna Loy and forces his girlfriend played by Jean Harlow to marry William Powell. The chemistry is great, enjoyable all the way through, really a great film.

Should this film won best picture? As I have posted before, The Great Ziegfeld must have had a powerful emotion over the academy voters. 1936 is the starting point of a great run of excellent years in Hollywood, peaking in 1939. I have now seen eight out of ten films from this year and all of them have been great. I wasn't alive then and so I can only imagine that nothing was going to beat The Great Ziegfeld.

Witness for the Prosecution (1957) - From the Agatha Christie play staring Charles Laughton, Marlene Dietrich, Tyrone Power and his eyebrows. A murder mystery done from the courtroom setting. Great acting by Charles Laughton, Marlene Dietrich and Tyrone Power's eyebrows. But the movie moves like a typical English mystery, about the same speed as my grandmother would drive in the 45 mph lane. A suspenseful film that's good, not the greatest ever, but worth watching.

Could this have beaten The Bridge on the River Kwai, no who are you kidding?

Monday, January 30, 2012

Don't Mess with Israel

Saw another three films. You should be able to guess from the title that one of them was Munich. Also the original Heaven Can Wait, which is not the same as the sequel which was another film redone, I'll explain when I get to it. And not to forget Captain Blood, that's why I'm running around with a sword today, not because of my overdose of meth.

Munich (2005) - The 362nd film was also the last film I needed to see for 2005 making that the 25th year I have completed. The film is a historic drama based on the events at the 1972 Olympics when Israeli athletes were killed by terrorists and the Israeli government developing a secret opps group to kill the organizers of the attack. It's loosely based on one of the people involved with the assassinations, but it truly can't be confirmed. Like Confessions of a Dangerous Mind, there is no way to disprove Chuck Berris's claim of being a CIA agent, the same is with Munich. There is no way to confirm the validity of the film, but it still was a very well done drama. It follows a team as they hunt down the terrorists throughout Europe and their cold blooded assassinations of them. Great action and once again reminding you that Israel is a country you don't want to mess with.

Now that I have seen all films from 2005 I can confirm that Crash was the best with Munich coming in as a close second, mainly since the film dragged a bit but still had a great ending. If you match Crash with Munich they both appear to be as equally good but as you go further into each film Crash just comes out slightly better. Third would be Capote, mainly due to Philip Semour Hoffman. Fourth is Brokeback Mountain and last is Good Night, and Good Luck. that is good luck trying to watch it without your eyes bleeding.

Heaven Can Wait (1943) - Here is my confusion, there is a 1978 film nominated for best picture called Heaven Can Wait but its based on Here Comes Mr. Jordan and not the original Heaven Can Wait which is a different movie. This would be like if I decided to remake Apocalypse Now but call it Raiders of the Lost Ark. Then once you find out that it was co-written, directed and produced by Warren Beatty, you realize that he is an idiot.

The Heaven Can Wait from 1943 is about a man who just died and is with Satan in his fancy art deco office making his point that he is supposed to be there. Satan is not sure and hears his life story. Turns out he was a womanizer who stole his wife from his cousin, always cheated on her, kept chasing women after she dies, salt of the earth type. And then Satan tells him that he belongs in heaven and not hell. My guess is that the screenplay wasn't written by a council of ministers or the Catholic Church. Does have Don Ameche and that old Technicolor that looks like footage from the 1939 World Fair.

A cute film, not bad, but compared to Casablanca? Nowhere in the same class.

Captain Blood (1935) - The classic swashbuckling film with Errol Flynn as Captain Blood, a mild mannered doctor who is arrested for treating a revolutionary in late 1600's England and sent to the Caribbean as a slave. This is the first half of the film, he escapes with his crew when the Spaniards attack, steal their ship and becomes a pirate. An honorable pirate who fights Basil Rathbone for the always beautiful Olivia de Havilland. You know Basil is evil because he has a French accent and a thin mustache. Great battle scenes, sword fights and not stop action. Still holds its own after all these years. But to go against Mutiny on the Bounty, another sailing film, it couldn't win. That and Mutiny on the Bounty was better.

Saturday, January 28, 2012

Dinner with Nck and Nora and Asta

Got around to seeing the classic comedy The Thin Man, finally. All I knew of this film previously was Asta and that's because its a common clue in crossword puzzles.

The Thin Man (1934) - The 361st film I've seen so far. Staring William Powell, Myrna Loy and a young Cesar Romero. Also has Nat Pendleton who stared in many of the Dr. Kildare films as the oaf orderly who always gets Lionel Barrymore angry at him. The film is a murder mystery, but a great comedy. Really funny throw away lines, sight gags and William Powell and Myrna Loy have great chemistry, they look and act like a married couple.

I've now seen almost half of the films nominated for 1934 and have been lucky to see three great comedies (It Happened One Night, The Thin Man and Here Comes The Navy). There are two types of comedy films, films that are relevant to their time making fun of pop culture and films that have lasting comedic value. This is one of them. Seventy five years later and you are still laughing makes it one of the top films of that year. Not good enough to beat out It Happened One Night, but definitely in the top three right now.

78% Accuracy

I guessed 7 of the 9 films that were nominated for best picture of 2011. The two that I missed are ones that nobody would of guessed, they came out of left field. So the films I picked were:

The Artist
The Descendants
The Help
Hugo
Midnight In Paris
Moneyball
War Horse

and the two that were not on my list:

Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
The Tree Of Life

Seeing how there are nine films and not the maximum of ten, leads me to believe that there won't be much competition this year for best picture. Will a 51 and 84 year drought be broken? Can Woody Allen win a fourth Oscar? Why was Albert Brooks snubbed for supporting actor?

I'll post my predictions a few hours before the award ceremony. This is because the love of my life, my beautiful wife, have a fierce competition every year when it comes to picking the Oscars. It first started as a fun competition but now has grown into civil war. The winner used to get great prizes, never mind you what they were, but it grew more into moral superiority as all marriages do. But since she does read this blog, I won't give her any clues, otherwise I might lose.

If you are reading my wonderful wife, I'll give you one clue: The Muppets have a 50-50 chance of winning best song.

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Two more from the 40's

Got around to watching two more films a few days ago. It so happened that they were from the 1940's, one was the oldest film on the DVR and now all films taped in October are done. The other was three hours long and it's much easier to watch it on a Sunday than during the week. I hate splitting up a movie over two, sometimes three days. I would rather watch it in one sitting, even if I pause it, I hate waiting to the next day to finish a film.

The Little Foxes (1941) - The 359th film was an adaption of Lillian Hellman play based on a southern family in the early 20th century who is slipping financially. Terrific acting by Bettie Davis, Charles Dingle and Patricia Collinge. The story has each sibling fighting each other for power and money. The film is well done, great costumes, felt that the script was a bit dry and dragging at times. Otherwise a good film. Not as good as Citizen Kane, or How Green Was My Valley, but worthy of Oscar nominations.

Since You Went Away (1944) - Film number 360 was a standard WWII drama, kind of an American version of Mrs. Miniver. Claudette Colbert is a mother who's husband has just gone off to war and it shows how she keeps her family together. Even has the great Lionel Barrymore in a cameo piece, who's on the screen less than two minutes, but you won't forget him. Joseph Cotton, Shirley Temple, Jennifer Jones, Robert Walker and even Agnes"Endora" Moorehead. A full all-star cast. While most period films usually don't keep relevance over time, like Forest Gump, this film really makes you fell like it's 1943. I didn't live during that time, but the feeling you get from watching this movie is that you are there with them. Someone commented that this film is so good you don't want it to end, I have to agree. Even though it's three hours, it goes very fast. I would say almost as good as Going My Way, maybe even better. Still got two more films to compare to, I'll have to wait until then.

Sunday, January 22, 2012

My Oscar Predictions

Since whatever gets nominated I will need to watch, I guess it's a good idea to try and predict which films will be nominated for best picture. In the past I wouldn't pay attention but just going on what was advertised in late December as a big movie and not think about it until they were announced. Seeing how I am doing a blog now and my goal is to see every film nominated for best picture, I have been watching a bit more closely this year.

Since 2009 the rules have been changed allowing up to ten films that can be nominated. There will always be a minimum of five, but it doesn't have to be ten. A film needs to get a minimum of five percent to be eligible. The academy sends out ballots in late December allowing voters about two and a half weeks to vote. They take a week and a half to tabulate and will be making the announcement this year on Tuesday January 24th. Beginning of February ballots are mailed, about three weeks to get them in and at the end of the month the big show.

My guess is that there will be ten nominees this year, there appears to be enough good films out there to garner enough votes to make the threshold. I should mention that I have not seen any of these movies since I prefer to watch films in the comfort of my house as opposed to going to a movie theater. The only film I did see in the theater last year I know won't be nominated, Atlas Shrugged Part I, but I'm glad that at least it was made.

The following I am very confident will be nominated:

The Artist
The Descendants
Hugo
Midnight in Paris
Moneyball

All of these have been nominated for other awards, The Artist and The Descendants both winning Golden Globes for best Musical/Comedy and best Drama. Hugo is Martin Scorsese so he will also get a best director nod as well. Midnight in Paris is Woody Allen so he will also get a best screenplay nod as well, not too sure if he will get a best director, but just might. Moneyball has been mentioned as one of the best films of the year, it seems like a natural fit.

The remaining films on the list are a bit of a guess:

50/50
Adventures of Tin Tin
The Help
J. Edgar
War Horse

I don't think any of these will win, but they will get enough votes to put them on the ballot. I know 50/50 is a film about someone dealing with cancer, that will tug heartstrings and get nominated. There is always a kids film on the list, seeing how Adventures of Tin Tin won the Golden Globe, seems like a good guess. The Help I'm rather confident it will get in the top ten and very confident it won't win. J. Edgar is a bio pic, usually good for a nomination, and is a Clint Eastwood film which may get him a best director possibly. I would be confident that Leonardo DiCaprio will get a best actor nomination. War Horse is a Steven Spielberg movie, so it will get a nomination based on that I believe.

In a few days I'll know how correct I am, and then try to figure out who will win.

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Vicki Lester? Vicki Lester. Vicki Lester!

As you can guess from the title I just watched A Star Is Born. I have an update of four films that I have just recently seen, I'll start with the 1937 classic.

A Star Is Born (1937) - This is film number 355 I have seen of the 485 nominated so far. This is the original version that was remade two times later. I haven't seen the others but I vaguely remember the 1970's one with Barbara Streisand and Kris Kristofferson, I think it was a musical or probably had some singing. All I can remember was that I think it was on channel 4, Kris Kristofferson had his shirt off and I think he fell of a motorcycle. Not sure if that was in the film and don't plan to verify it any time soon. I know Babara Streisand is a talented actress and sings well, but I did see Prince of Tides and that is enough of her for a long time. Kris Kristofferson was a singer who became an actor or the other way around, but not that great ether way. He was good in Heaven's Gate except when he looks like 50 at his college graduation.

The film is a classic Hollywood success story of a girl from the mid-west going to Hollywood and becoming a star. The film is in technicolor so it has that faded retro look of old WWII films done in color. Janet Gaynor is the bright eyed young woman who wins her way into the arms of Fredrick March, a leading actor who is a massive drunk. Am I crazy or did Fredrick March look like a young Robert Duvall? Also the great Andy Devine who was a staple in many westerns and some classic John Wayne movies. And not to forget Adolphe Menjou whom I had not seen before I stated this project, but I am beginning to see in many of the films I have been watching, and he was a great actor.

This is from a very different time, a time when the media didn't cover all the mishaps of actors. The studios would pay off police and the newspapers to keep their actors from public embarrassment. Not saying this was better or worse than today, just different. Lionel Stander, mostly known for the butler on Hart to Hart in the 1980's plays the studio publicity director who has to clear these things up.

Overall it is a great movie. It's listed as a drama but it very much like a comedy with great throw away lines and funny scenes. Much better than I though it would be, but still not as good as The Life of Emile Zola, but close.

Broadway Melody of 1936 (1935) - The second film I saw was Broadway Melody of 1936, doesn't look like it was a sequel of the 1929 Best Picture, just a standard depression era film. Full of songs, dance scenes and great costumes, this was the type of movie you would go to see and forget the failings of the incompetent Roosevelt economic policies. Even though it is a musical, I was surprised to see Jack Benny as one of the lead actors, and he made it worth watching.

Just like A Star is Born, this too is from a different time. Jack Benny is a newspaper reporter who constantly is attacking Robert Taylor who is producing a new Broadway play. How does he handle this, he goes to Jack Benny's office and beats him up after each article is negatively written about him. Try and see that happen today. And how does the editor of the newspaper handle this, he gives Jack Benny a raise for being so hated. Yep, a different time.

Otherwise there isn't much plot except for making up a famous singer to fool the producer who's high school sweetheart then pretends to be. It is neat to see Buddy Ebsen tap dancing, man was he tall. Doesn't match up to Mutiny on the Bounty at all, but it does have the big musical finale that is expected.

Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (1954) - How did I get stuck with another musical? Simple, I watch movies in the order that I tape them. The oldest film on the DVR after Broadway Melody of 1936 was this one. A movie from a simpler time in Oregon, when a trapper could go to town and trade his pelts for flour, molasses and a wife. The film also shows that marriage by capture is the only way to get a wife. Just kidnap the woman you want, keep her on your farm until the pass melts and when her family arrives she won't want to leave. Just like real life, except that you'll be in jail for the rest of your life.

Lavish dancing scenes, obviously from ballet dancers dressed as woodsmen, but rather comical at times. Not a great film, especially when compared to On The Waterfront, but what you would expect from the 1950's.

Bound for Glory (1976) - I jumped on the list and watched Bound for Glory right after it taped, mainly since it was the last film of 1976 that I need to see. The Woody Guthrie story as preformed by Kung Fu David Carradine and Melinda "You'll shoot your eye out" Dillon, the mom from A Christmas Story.

The film covers the late 1930's part of Woody's life, years before Arlo was born, as he leaves Texas to go to California and becomes a folk music star. You could watch this film and see that he was an artist who wanted to perform his music how he wanted. You can also see that he was an adulterer who would abandon his family and sabotage his career when things would be going good for him. Lot of well known music and does drag on pretty long, but most films of the 1970's were longer than usual.

To make a final comparison of 1976, the best picture was Network. A film that 35 years later is still relevant and such a great drama. Right up next to it in a very close second is Taxi Driver, a powerful, intense, gripping movie that is so good. Solidly in third is Rocky, a good movie that could have won other years, say 1983, but not this year. Forth is All The President's Men about Watergate and fifth would be Bound for Glory. Not because it was bad, but it went up against four really good films.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

2000/2010's

The last of my summary posts. The 2000's is a decade where films are more professional than ever. Special effects are the best they've ever been. The movies are as good as the 90's, a bit better I would say, so it looks like there is a continuous upward trend in quality. So far the 2010's have continued the trend and there is a good chance we will catch up to the 1970's one day soon, I hope.

And here is the last of what I've seen so far. Look close, there may just be a bio-pic hidden in there.

2000
Films I have seen - Gladiator (Best Picture), Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon, Erin Brockovich, Traffic
Films I have not seen - Chocolat
Analysis - Gladiator is a action drama in the epic style of Spartacus or other Roman era films, great fighting scenes. Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon is the first martial arts film to be nominated and much better than the cheesy low budget films that are common to this genre. And great special effects too. Erin Brockovich is a nice drama bio-pic based on the true story of a woman who helped a community that was effected by polluted ground water. Traffic is an attempt to be like Magnolia in telling multiple stories about the drug war, but is still a good drama. It jumps a bit too much, but very interesting in the color tinting that is used for each story line.
Verdict - Gladiator was better, it had the epic feel, looked better than the rest, but overall not a week year from what I have seen.

2001
Films I have seen - A Beautiful Mind (Best Picture), The Fellowship of the Ring, Moulin Rouge!
Films I have not seen - Gosford Park, In the Bedroom
Analysis - A Beautiful Mind is a powerful drama about the life of John Nash and his bouts of insanity. The Fellowship of the Ring is the first in the Lord of the Rings series and a great fantasy film with great special effects. Moulin Rouge is a flaming cat turd that is unwatchable. Using popular music in a 1890's setting is obnoxious. Even though they used Nirvana, it is a horrible film. That is unless you are a 14 year old girl, then this is the greatest movie ever made.
Verdict - Of what I've seen, A Beautiful Mind is the best of the three, a depressing drama, but a very good film.

2002
Films I have seen - Chicago (Best Picture), Gangs of New York, The Hours, The Two Towers, The Pianist
Films I have not seen - None
Analysis - Chicago is a movie version of the famous musical. If you like the musical then you liked the film. If you don't like musicals then you would rather have your toenails removed. Gangs of New York is a powerful epic by Scorsese that is one of his best. The Hours is an interesting film based on the life of Virginia Wolfe and people who are effected by her writing in two different time lines. Nice stylish film and very good acting, but since I haven't read Virginia Wolfe I don't think I appreciated it enough. The Two Towers is probably the best of the trilogy of the Lord of the Rings, same as the last one, just them further on in the journey. The Pianist is a bio-pic about Wladyslaw Szpilman and how he survived in Poland during WWII. It is a Roman Polanski film, but since he has spent some more time in jail and suffered a bit, I was able to watch this film. A more interesting subject would have been about Wilm Hosenfeld, the German officer who saved Szpilman.
Verdict - Once again Martin Scorsese was cheated out of best director and best picture. I can only guess that after 9/11 a movie such as Chicago, like Tom Jones after President Kennedy assassination, could win. I would put Gangs of New York as the best picture, The Two Towers as a very close second, The Hours, The Pianist and Chicago far last.

2003
Films I have seen - The Return of the King (Best Picture), Lost in Translation, Master and Commander, Mystic River
Films I have not seen - Seabiscuit
Analysis - The Return of the King is the last of the trilogy of the Lord of the Rings. Lost in Translation was an interesting drama with Bill Murray playing one of his finest, or only finest, dramatic roles of a actor making a commercial in Japan and his mid-life crisis. Master and Commander is a great action film in the style of swashbuckler colonial era boating films, as if there is a genre for that? Great acting, keeps you interested all the way through. Mystic River is a powerful drama with great acting by Sean Penn and Tim Robbins of a community dealing with a murder and other skeletons in closets.
Verdict - The Return of the King was given an overall Oscar for all three of the movies and to be honest, I understand why. It wasn't the best of the trilogy but it was a very good film that deserved to win.

2004
Films I have seen - Million Dollar Baby (Best Picture), The Aviator, Ray, Sideways
Films I have not seen - Finding Neverland
Analysis - Million Dollar Baby is a intense drama and a very depressing film about a female boxer. It is a Clint Eastwood film and his quality is generally very good, this time is no exception. The Aviator, another well done Scorsese film, is based on the life of Howard Huges. Great acting by Leonardo DiCaprio, worth watching. Ray is another bio-pic about the life of Ray Charles, great acting by Jamie Fox who won the best actor for the role. Sideways is a dramatic comedy about a man's passion for wine and his attempt to fix his life. Interesting film but not great.
Verdict - While The Aviator was very stylist and well done, Million Dollar Baby was the best overall film. It finally got Morgan Freedman his long overdue Oscar that Tom Hanks stole from him ten years earlier.

2005
Films I have seen - Crash (Best Picture), Brokeback Mountain, Capote, Good Night Good Luck
Films I have not seen - Munich
Analysis - Crash is a powerful movie that deals directly with racism in our society, great drama, follows the Magnolia style of jumping between multiple story lines. Brokeback Mountain is a love story about two people who can't be together because of the obligations they have in their lives, so they can only be together on vacation. Sounds like Same Time, Next Year, right? So why was this film nominated, because the the main characters are men. Otherwise from that it is just another romance film. If it was a story about a man and a woman, would it had been nominated for best picture? Capote is another bio-pic, rather popular during the early party of the decade, about Truman Capote doing research for In Cold Blood. Not a great film but perfect acting from Philip Seymour Hoffman who easily won the best actor Oscar. Good Night Good Luck was a failed attempt to show Edward R. Murrow smearing and attacking Senator Joseph McCarthy that just falls flat.
Verdict - Thankfully the academy got it right this year, Crash was the best and nothing came close of what I've seen so far. I'm rather confident that Munich won't be better, but I'll know for sure when I see it.

2006
Films I have seen - The Departed (Best Picture), Letters from Iwo Jima, Little Miss Sunshine, The Queen
Films I have not seen - Babel
Analysis - The Departed is a exact remake, with the exception of the ending, of a Hong Kong film called Infernal Affairs. Not Scorsese's best, good acting with an all star cast though. Letters from Iwo Jima is a fascinating film about WWII but from the side of the Japanese army. Really makes you respect what a powerful enemy we were fighting back then. Little Miss Sunshine is a waste of time that goes nowhere very slowly about parents taking their child a beauty pageant. It shows just how dangerous it is to give everyone a participation trophy or play sports without points or without winner and losers, this film is not best picture worthy. The Queen is a dry drama about Queen Elizabeth during the death of Princess Diana. If you are caught up in the soap opera of the royal family, then this is a great film. If you are like any normal American and don't care what a bunch of tyrants do in another country, then this is like watching paint dry.
Verdict - While I have seen about half of Babel, I never saw the end so I will wait to give a full assessment until then. Letters to Iwo Jima was the best movie, but because it is practically a foreign film, spoken in Japanese with subtitles, it wouldn't win. And this is a shame. But the academy wanted to make it up to Martin Scorsese for missing out on Taxi Driver, Raging Bull, Gangs of New York, and others and gave The Departed the Oscar. Martin Scorsese deserves an Oscar, many Oscars, but not for this film.

2007
Films I have seen - No Country for Old Men (Best Picture), Atonement, Juno, Michael Clayton, There Will Be Blood
Films I have not seen - None
Analysis - No Country for Old Men is one of the best movies I have ever seen, the best of the decade. The Coen brothers nailed this one on the head. A simple, but very well acted and told story about a man who finds money after a botched drug deal and his attempt to escape with the money. Javiar Bardem is so amazing, so great as the villain in this film, just terrific. Atonement is a drama that takes place in England in the 30's and during WWII. Never gains traction even with the amazing ten minute (or something in that time frame) continuous shot of the beach at Dunkirk. Juno is a clever comedy drama about a teenager deciding to carry her baby through to term. Michael Clayton is a suspenseful drama about a lawyer who people are trying to kill or something. Too many plot twist and turns gets annoying and fast. There Will Be Blood is a great drama about an Oil Baron and his rise to power.
Verdict - No question here. Nothing, even if you combined the remaining films together twice, would come anywhere close to No Country for Old Men. Second would be There Will Be Blood. Third would be Juno. Fourth is Michael Clayton and Atonement is fifth.

2008
Films I have seen - Slumdog Millionaire (Best Picture), The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Frost/Nixon, Milk
Films I have not seen - The Reader
Analysis - Slumdog Millionaire is a very, very depressing movie about a young man who is on the Indian version of Who Wants to be a Millionaire. Even though he is uneducated, all of the horrible events in his life help him answer the questions. The Curious Case of Benjamin Button is based on a F. Scott Fitzgerald story about a man who is born looking like an 84 year old man who gets younger as he ages. Very good acting by Brad Pitt and amazing makeup and special effects. Frost/Nixon is based on the David Frost interview of Richard Nixon after he resigned as President. A bit slow and boring at times. Milk, another bio-pic, about Harvey Milk and his assassination.
Verdict - Of the four, nothing really climbs to the top so I'll go with Slumdog Millionaire and agree with the academy. Note that this is the last year of only five nominees.

2009
Films I have seen - The Hurt Locker (Best Picture), Avatar, The Blind Side, District 9, Inglourious Basterds, A Serious Man, Up, Up in the Air
Films I have not seen - An Education, Precious
Analysis - The first year since 1943 when more than five films could be nominated for best picture. The Hurt Locker is a badly done war film about soldiers in Iraq dismantling bombs. Avatar is the big budget film with amazing special effects. Too bad they ran out of money and couldn't hire someone to write a screenplay. The Blind Side, another bio-pic about a homeless boy who is taken in by a loving family and taught how to play football. Not the best film you will ever see, but enjoyable and worth watching. District 9 is a sci-fi film about aliens who have landed on earth and are currently quarantined in South Africa and how their community is a ghetto. Inglourious Basterds is a horrible film with one exception, Christoph Waltz does a great acting job and earned best supporting actor. A Serious Man is a funny Coen brother's film about a physics professor dealing with his life falling apart. Up is a Pixar film that is so well done as a cartoon, you don't think of it as just a cartoon, but an interesting fantasy about a balloon trip to the lost jungles of South America. Up in the Air is a drama about a professional who fires people and his attempt to find love and happiness. If you have ever been laid off, don't watch this film. I tried to watch it right after I was laid off and got five minutes into it and had to stop. I waited until I finally got a job and it was still difficult to watch.
Verdict - The Hurt Locker was not the best film, that should have gone to A Serious Man. Maybe because No Country for Old Men won two years earlier it didn't get it, but the academy messed up in my opinion. I know there was a desire to give an Oscar to an Iraqi war film but they should have waited until a good one came along.

2010
Films I have seen - The Kings Speech (Best Picture), 127 Hours, Inception, The Kids Are All Right, The Social Network, Toy Story 3
Films I have not seen - Black Swan, The Fighter, True Grit, Winter's Bone
Analysis - The Kings Speech, don't be surprised but another bio-pic, about King George the stammer trying to learn how to give a radio address without stammering. 127 Hours is a painful film about a mountain climber who gets his right arm pinned under a rock and has to cut it off. This film could have been 25 minutes, not over 90. He gets his arm stuck and for an hour that's all there is! I feel bad for the guy losing part of his arm but at the same time you see he was a daredevil who got was coming to him. Inception is one of the finest sci-fi films that gets you thinking after it's done. The idea that dreams can be controlled and to go layers of dreams within dreams is an amazing concept. The Kids Are All Right is a film about a couple who's children seek out their birth father. The twist is that they are two women and one of them has an affair with him. Nothing great about this drama just that because it wasn't a man and a women was the only reason why it was nominated. The Social Network, get this another bio-pic, about Facebook. It was popular because there are 12 billion people on Facebook, but it was a very good film with good acting and the story flow goes good jumping back and forth with different time lines. Toy Story 3 is another Pixar film that is again so well done it's like watching a regular film but with animated actors. Even if you haven't seen the first two films you can still watch and enjoy this one.
Verdict - The Kings Speech was a great film but I really like Inception the best so far.