The Best Films of 2005
09 Tony Takitani
Any attempt to take on the mundane but bizarrely mystical world of Haruki Murakami is worth a viewing – and this adaptation demonstrates that Murakami can be made not only palatable but penetrable for film audiences. The film is based on a short story about a man who finds the ideal wife, only to discover that she has a fatal obsession with designer clothing. Jun Ichikawa’s elegant direction perfectly captures the tale’s postmodern conceit and, more impressively, the ineffable sadness that is the hallmark of Murakami’s work.
08 A History of Violence
Crononberg nearly out-Mamets Mamet with this small but creepily effective film. Viggo Mortensen plays Tom Stall, a small-town family man whose dark past suddenly and violently catches up with him. At times, the storyline – involving men in black suits and the Philadelphia mob (!) – borders on comic, but there’s a surprising dramatic heft to the whole affair, mostly due to the pressures put upon Tom’s marriage and family. It also doesn’t hurt that his wife, Edie (Maria Bello), is easily the hottest soccer mom in film history. Their confrontation, where Mortensen transforms from innocent nice-guy into scary-ass killer, is particularly well-done. Sadly, the film also features Ed Harris and William Hurt (phoning in yet another lugubrious cameo) but is gracious enough to dispense with them in particularly bloody ways.
07 Millions
Taking a break from junkies and surprisingly limber zombies, Danny Boyle opts this time for the sort of sweet family film normally relegated to the later stages of a storied career. Adorable newcomer Alexander Etel plays Damian, a pious little boy whose mother has recently died and who happens upon a bag of cash when a bank robber’s plans go awry. Damian takes it as a divine call to charity, but like all would-be saints, he finds that doing good can be a surprisingly difficult endeavor. A series of ingenious plot turns and Boyle’s whimsical direction make this a consistently delightful film.
06 Capote
The one exception to the recent plague of shitty Hollywood biopics. Its success is almost entirely due to the astonishing performance put in by Philip Seymour Hoffmann, who is easily the most talented ugly man working in movies today. His Capote – limp-wristed, nasal-voiced, and decked out in Bergdorf – is nicely contrasted with the barely literate killers of a Kansas family, and the bleak Midwest landscape could not feel more remote or desolate.
05 Nobody Knows
The true story of four school-age siblings abandoned by their mother in a small Tokyo apartment. Kore-eda’s unmistakable style – an almost hyper-real appreciation for the beauty in the day-to-day – takes on a greater immediacy than in his previous outings, as we watch the kids struggle for food, money, and any semblance of the stability or comfort so keenly needed in childhood. Needless to say, this is truly heartbreaking stuff, and the film continues to prove why Kore-eda’s work is more original and affecting than almost anything anyone in Western cinema is doing today.
04 Me and You and Everyone We Know
Believe me, I fought the good fight against this one. Artist-cum-director Miranda July’s suffocatingly saccharine vision of the world won’t sit well with everyone, but in the end, it couldn’t help but win over one cynical critic. The film has the feel of Todd Solondz-meets-Amelie: A mixed bag of angsty suburban characters remotely connected to one another, each searching for love. The sordid details – online chat rooms, scatological sex talk, fantasies of child molestation – are sweetly infused with July’s whimsical ideas of art, love, and an almost spiritual faith in mankind. This trick could easily backfire in other, more egotistical hands, but her efforts are greatly aided by the talents of her cast, who make her stubbornly optimistic view of the world seem unique to each character – and by the end, the film succeeds in evoking something akin to life-affirming.
03 The Squid and the Whale
A minor but perfect film by a Wes Anderson partner-in-crime (surely they have matching blazers), Noah Baumbach. The semi-autobiographical film details the demise of a dysfunctional Park Slope family and gets everything right, from the ’80s setting (the cars, the hair, the stonewashed jeans), to the family’s pseudo-intellectual dinner-table chatter while the younger brother furtively shoves pistachios up his nose. Jeff Daniels is unexpectedly wonderful as the megalomaniacal patriarch, and even I am forced to acknowledge Laura Linney’s excellent turn as the pathologically adulterous mother. Naturally, the two sons also have issues – the older one pawns off Pink Floyd as his own at a high school talent show, while the younger one masturbates in school and spreads the goods over library books. None of this really qualifies as life-altering, soul-scorching, Bildungsroman-type stuff, but the film hits just the right notes of humor and heartache so reminiscent of adolescent crises. William Baldwin is also amusingly smarmy as a washed-up tennis instructor, and Anna Paquin plays jailbait for the 20th time.
02 Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit
Watching a new W&G flick with a running time thrice as long as any of their previous shorts almost feels too good – surely penance of some sort should be paid for such pleasure. With his latest endeavor, Nick Park single-handedly puts to shame the legions of computer-animated, pop-culture-fueled kids’ movies of recent years. Gromit’s eyebrows alone could warrant a feature-length film, which makes this affair an embarrassment of riches – bunnies floating captive in the Anti-Pesto rabbit chamber, an encounter between Wallace and Lady Tottington full of truly immature double-entendres in an oversized vegetable garden, and a staggeringly entertaining plane chase that manages to outdo the train chase of A Close Shave.
01 Junebug
A masterful variation on the well-worn theme of the family reunion. A man returns to his North Carolina roots with his glamorous new wife in tow and finds that nothing has changed in his absence – his brother’s jealousy, his mother’s implacable adoration, and his father’s stiff inwardness. The film does a beautiful job avoiding the tiresome stereotypes so common to the genre, but its master-stroke is all that, in the end, goes unsaid about these characters. We inevitably fall short of really knowing the people we love, even those with whom we should share something as vital as blood. Junebug effortlessly captures this, and offers one of the most intelligent assessments of the notion of “family” I have ever seen in film.
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- Published:
- 12.31.05 / 9pm
- Category:
- features
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