And now we cut the shoot and write the piece that was
happening sooner or later. Not to mention it will completely write itself. Here
are my top five movies of 2018.
Avengers Infinity War
I wrote last year that seeing the first Avengers was
probably the most fun I’ve had in a movie theater and is probably one of my
favorite memories of my childhood. You got the feeling that you were watching
something that shouldn’t work, something that shouldn’t be allowed. Some
filmmakers got away with something that they should not have and we were lucky
enough to witness it.
I had a similar experience watching Infinity War. It felt like my teenage years were accumulating to
this moment; I was a giddy 12-year-old again watching the rules get broken. And
that ending- holy shit did the entire theater fall apart. Those Russo brothers
walked into the room and dropped their twin sets of balls on the table and told
us to deal with it.
Hereditary
I don’t usually like scary movies because I despise jump
scares. This movie had only one and my god did it earn that one. Hereditary terrified me and I loved it.
There was one moment in particular where it absolutely held me in the palm of
its hand and kept me there until I was shaking in my seat. It was awesome.
I like a good movie that misdirects me. (Semi-spoiler
coming) Hereditary makes you wait and
wait for something supernatural to happen and when you get about 75% through
the movie and nothing does, you accept that it’s not going to happen. And then it
does. In itself, having a horror movie that is perfectly scary without
employing supernatural elements is an impressive feat.
Blackkklansmen
In my college education so far, I’ve learned a little bit
about German playwright Bertolt Brecht whose thing was direct address (directly
addressing the audience, breaking the fourth wall, you get it) and denying the
audience of closure so that at the end of his plays they felt the burning need
to go out and fix the problem his plays presented. I’ve learned that Spike Lee
adopts this method in his films and the latter part about deny closure really
hits home in this film.
At the end, the protagonist has won and racism has been
conquered. Huzzah! But then there’s the final sequence that reminds the
audience that racism is very much not dead. It’s rampant and frankly not at all
better than you saw it depicted in the movie you just watched which takes place
decades earlier. What are you gonna do about it? Cut to black.
Annihilation
This one was particularly enjoyable because I got to smugly
enter and leave the theater being like, “I read the book y’know.” Again, I like
a good movie that tells me to go fuck myself. This was beautiful sci-fi that
denied the viewer of any satisfaction of explaining what they were seeing. All
you know is that whatever the hell is on the screen is beautiful, wild, and
terrifying. The ending of this movie kind of felt like some poems, where you
read it and it makes you feel some type of way but it isn’t exactly saying
anything specific. I can imagine some people would find that annoying but boy
was this a good poem.
Won’t You Be My Neighbor?
I walked out of the theater a kinder and more peaceful
person. My dad and I went to a restaurant right after and I was calm and cuddly
inside. Never has a film made me want to be so good. I’m too young to have been
of fan of Mr. Rogers during his peak and during his later years, but Neighbor inserted that cute man into my
childhood, present and future. I have found a new religion and my Jesus wears
cardigans.
Honorable mention: Ready Player One
It was fun and looked pretty. Mark Rylance is an
(inter)national treasure. “It was never about winning- it was just about
playing the game” really punched me in the heart. That is all.
I look forward to writing this piece yearly until I die. Get
amped.
Reed, I'm only seeing five of your top ten. Where's the rest?
ReplyDeleteAs someone who is also not usually a fan of horror films, if you haven't seen "A Quiet Place" already, I highly recommend. That's got a spot on my top 10 this year if only for Emily Blunt and Millicent Simmonds, but I loved how the story was told and how Krasinski respected his audience.
Never mind; I saw top 10 at some point in the process. My bad.
ReplyDeleteThe only one of these I've seen was Won't You Be My Neighbor? My son invited me to go with him. Mr. Rogers and Sesame Street were a big part of my kids' growing up years. Lovely movie.
ReplyDelete