Asides

The 25 best films of 2012: 10 through 6

By December 20, 2012No Comments

TabuTabu

10) Tabu, Miguel Gomes.

I did not get to see this until after I sent in sev­er­al poll responses (OK, two), and was sad for that reas­on that it turned out to be exactly as mira­cu­lous as many people I trus­ted had said it was. The Murnau link is not even a sixth of it, hon­est. The nar­rat­ive con­vo­lu­tions are as pur­pose­ful as they are expert, the imagery is nev­er not gor­geous, and this is about as per­fectly mod­u­lated in terms of humor, sad­ness, and genu­ine irony as movies ever get. (In a dis­cus­sion for anoth­er time, and soon, I was bit­terly dis­ap­poin­ted with Tarantino’s Django Unchained, and came out of Tabu say­ing “Now THIS is how you pull off a meta-movie!” And again, that’s not even a fifth of it.) Seriously, see this. 

9) Holy Motors, Leos Carax, con­sidered here and here

8) Looper, Rian Johnson, reviewed here

7) Lincoln, Steven Spielberg, reviewed here. Spoiler alert: the dance-contest movie is not in my top five. 

6) Cosmopolis, David Cronenberg, reviewed here. Tomorrow, if you’re good, I’ll put up a brief inter­view I did with the maes­tro the oth­er day. 

No Comments

  • 6. Moonrise Kingdom
    7. Bernie
    8. Laurence Anyways
    8. The Perks of Being a Wallflower
    10. Holy Motors.

  • Can’t wait to read the Cronenberg interview.
    10. Aita (de Orbe)
    9. Cosmopolis (Cronenberg)
    8. House of Pleasures (Bonello)
    7. The Master (Anderson)
    6. This Is Not a Film (Panahi)

  • Clayton Sutherland says:

    Wow, I’m sur­prised to hear your reac­tion to Django, Glenn; I figured, based on reac­tion to the film else­where, it was headed for at least your Top 10 of 2012. Interesting…I guess I’ll have to see the movie before read­ing your objec­tions to it. At any rate, it’s pretty clear, at this point, that Moonrise Kingdom (pos­sibly my favour­ite film of the year, though I haven’t watched it a second time yet…no Criterion Blu-ray) is right near the top of your list.
    I’m going to guess that Amour and The Deep Blue Sea (which I should be get­ting from my pub­lic lib­rary with­in a few weeks) are top­ping Mr. Ehrenstein’s list.

  • 10. Tabu
    9. The Master
    8. Cosmopolis
    7. Mekong Hotel (Apichatpong Weerasethakul)
    6. Red Hook Summer (Spike Lee)

  • lazarus says:

    Hey, instead of dis­cuss­ing the films them­selves, let’s just each post our own lists!
    This is Glenn’s blog, right?

  • Oliver_C says:

    As if the entire end-of-year exer­cise isn’t largely arbit­rary any­way (hand on heart, can a sig­ni­fic­ant dif­fer­ence in value be dis­cerned between the 17th and 18th movies, between the 12th and 13th?); as if the qual­ity of our nearby cinemas (and their pro­gram­ming) isn’t going to influ­ence one’s selec­tion as much as the films them­selves; as if, tal­ly­ing up every­one’s votes, the con­sensus is going to vary vastly from any single reput­able crit­ic’s list.
    With this in mind then, here’s my top 10 – the top ten black-and-white DVDs I’ve watched in 2012, chosen on the basis not just of filmic worth but transfer/extras qual­ity as well, and all avail­able only in SD (you’d think there was still a place here for the best of the format)…
    Bellissima (Visconti, 1951) Masters of Cinema R2
    Dark Days (Singer, 2000) Oscilloscope R1
    The Fugitive Kind (Lumet, 1959) Criterion R1
    Hobson’s Choice (Lean, 1954) Criterion R1
    Laurel & Hardy: The Essential Collection (vari­ous, 1929–40) RHI/Vivendi R1
    A Man Vanishes (Imamura, 1967) Icarus Films R1
    The Spy Who Came In from the Cold (Ritt, 1965) Criterion R1
    Strip-Tease (Poitrenaud, 1963) Mondo Macabro R1
    This Sporting Life (Anderson, 1963) Criterion R1
    The Virgin Spring (Bergman, 1960) Criterion R1

  • I’m going to guess that Amour and The Deep Blue Sea (which I should be get­ting from my pub­lic lib­rary with­in a few weeks) are top­ping Mr. Ehrenstein’s list.”
    Excellent guess. They’re near the very top – where you’ll find Ira Sachs’ “Keep the Lights On.” Ira is the REAL “Master” – not PTA.

  • Kevyn Knox says:

    Django!? Really?? Ah well, every­body can­’t love it – some of you have to be wrong. Ha! Just kid­ding, of course. Sorta. Anyway, nice to see Tabu on there. As for my top ten…that will come in due course (um, Jan 1st, to give such due course a more spe­cif­ic feel­ing) over at my old ratty place (and I think you know where that is). Happy Holidays, and all that jazz.

  • Viriato says:

    I dread these words. Tabu was fin­anced with Portuguese state money, and Miguel Gomes and his friends at Sound and Fury are now on the way to take the rein out of Oliveira for the biggest moochers off the Government. I loathe that way of mak­ing movies, and it has done noth­ing for no one work­ing in this coun­try any­more than mak­ing Gomes ask for the State for more money next year.
    I won’t even talk about how the money is dis­trib­uted. It’s open cor­rup­tion in plein air and no one does any­thing about it. It’s abso­lutely ridicu­lous, and although I gen­er­ally agree with your review­ing, this one is my first missive.

  • Hunh, had­n’t expec­ted Holy Motors to make your best-of list after your ambi­val­ent reac­tion. Now that I’ve seen it, I’d side with your reac­tion over this rank­ing; it’s got a lot of lovely moments, but the fash­ion pho­to­graph­er yip­ping “Beautiful… beau­ti­ful… beau­ti­ful… Weird! Weird!” seems like a pro­phy­lact­ic avoid­ance of the know­ledge that the film pretty much works accord­ing to the rules of fash­ion: nice light, con­text­less emotion-tweaking, some ref­er­ences for the pros, and less than meets the eye.