I don’t get to the movies as much as I’d like to these days, so this list is by no means the kind of exhaustive, all-inclusive list one would expect to see from writers who do this sort of thing for a living. For every one of the movies listed below, good and bad, there are probably three or four others that my real life insisted that I skip, wait to catch on DVD later (that list gets longer every day!) or give in to my prejudices and preconceptions and just outright dismiss. And the list itself proved, more than any other year I can remember, to be a lot more elusive and ever-changing as I tried to pin down the rankings (next week it might look a lot different—hell, two minutes after I post this it might start to look different-- in fact, I updated this post on January 18 at 2:07 pm because I've already done a little waffling on my Best Actor pick*). But this is, for better or worse, how I saw the movie year in 2004. I apologize for all the important stuff I can’t write about here. But when I do catch up with those titles on DVD (and I will), at least this blog exists so I can attempt to make up for my deficiencies then.
MILLION DOLLAR BABY ****
Clint Eastwood truly inherits the mantle of Old Hollywood with this masterpiece, in which the skin of ostensibly time-worn material is filled with fragrant new wine; in its confidence, its devastating power and bleak emotional terrain, it’s like a pessimistic post-war drama retold for a new age of uncertainty, where the possibility of redemption exists but is by no means guaranteed. Eastwood’s own performance, a career best, squares him and the movie with the kind of brilliantly understated work most associated with powerful, reticent and underrated actors like Gary Cooper and Robert Ryan.
HOUSE OF FLYING DAGGERS **** / HERO ****Courtesy of Miramax’s inexplicable two-year shelving of
Hero, Americans were treated to the greatest one-two punch (and flying kick) in the history of martial arts cinema when these two brilliant works from Zhang Yimou were released within months of each other.
Hero is the more complex politically (and anyone who says it’s a sell-out to the oppressive Chinese government must have closed their eyes during the last half-hour), but
Daggers is even more lush, stunning and moving—aside from its one-of-a-kind action sequences, it may one day rank as one of the great movie romances of all time.
THE INCREDIBLES ****
Pixar goes six-for-six courtesy of the visionary expansiveness of writer-director Brad Bird (he of the neglected and equally amazing
The Iron Giant), who fashions his spectacular, and spectacularly funny, superhero family saga as a celebration of individuality amongst society-endorsed mediocrity. This movie, and the two described directly above, redefined the scope of visually imaginative and expressive storytelling in 2005; Bird rises to the ranks of the great animation directors with his work here, folding James Bond, the Fantastic Four and the Warner Brothers classic cartoons together to create a vibrant design and crackling sensibility all his own. Somewhere Chuck Jones and Albert Broccoli are smiling and shaking hands…
BEFORE SUNSET ****The most naturally, painfully romantic movie of the year. Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy reunite after nine years and a promise to meet again that was never kept. Viewers who remember this film’s predecessor,
Before Sunrise, are likely to be shocked by a brief flashback to that film that is a tidy economic lesson in how even beautiful people are subject to time’s craftsmanship and deconstructive qualities. And the dialogue, devised by the actors along with director Richard Linklater, is incisive, realistic, funny, but never precious, and takes on the subject of time, impermanence and missed opportunities with elasticity and fertility. Linklater shoots long takes filled with vibrant conversation between two intelligent people floating through the streets of Paris—eloquently simple filmmaking that compliments the eloquent struggle of old lovers grappling with the implications of that love in the light of lives that could have been and the reality of those that are.
DAWN OF THE DEAD ****
I recently revisited the first eight minutes of this movie (the unrated director’s cut) on DVD and was surprised at how easily the inescapable dread and panic that left me paralyzed with fear when I saw it at the local multiplex came flooding back, as if it had been floating around in my bloodstream all this time, just waiting for a prick of the skin. And I think, somehow, it probably has. I know grown men and women, jaded horror fans who’ve seen and shrugged at it all, brought low in their seats and desperate in their dreams by this vivid reimagining of George Romero’s vastly overrated and inferior original, and I can honestly say I’m scared to see the rest of the director’s cut. But not too scared—after all, honest fright generated by a horror movie is just too rare an experience these days, and
Dawn of the Dead offers dread and hair-whitening shudders that horror fans (and fans of good movies, period) will want to savor. No movie this year was as on fire with pure filmmaking fury as this one.
HARRY POTTER AND THE PRISONER OF AZKABAN ****Director Alfonso Cuaron delivers all the magic, the horror and the filmmaking wizardry so lacking in the first two films, which were textbook examples of how to be slavishly faithful to the novels and still be pedestrian and uninspired. The universe of Harry Potter looks and feels lived-in here, and the entire movie has a palpable texture, like the rough-hewn pages of a brilliantly illustrated fairy tale that envelop you in the silky, sinister imagination they convey. The three juvenile leads finally seem comfortable in their roles, which allow them to approach puberty, within the movie’s subtext, with sly humor and dread, and the rest of the cast is a who’s-who of brilliant British character actors who also seem more at home in the world according to Alfonso Cuaron than that of Chris Columbus. Cuaron is not directing number four, but we can hope that his influence will continue to be felt.
THE AVIATOR ****
Martin Scorsese’s vibrant biopic of Howard Hughes jauntily turns the conventions of the genre on its ear, orchestrating spectacular visual set pieces that function as the intimate moments in the billionaire’s increasingly recessive life (Hughes filming elaborate dogfights seems like a happy kid at play), while staging physically intimate encounters (between Hughes and a mesmerizing Cate Blanchett as Katharine Hepburn, between Hughes and a doorknob he cannot force himself to touch) that eventually assume the function that big, life-defining set pieces might in a more typical biographical approach. Leonardo DiCaprio is fairly amazing here, and the movie trumps another biopic convention by taking us and the actor to what might be the beginning of the third act—when Hughes finally begins to slide into full-time madness—and leaving us, and him, to stare into the abyss of what is come—the way of the future, the way of the future, the way of the future…
SIDEWAYS ****
Some critics, in their year-end polls, can’t distance themselves fast enough from
Sideways and the unprecedented swell of critical support it has managed to garner so far. And some have accused the movie of being condescending and mean-spirited, as if the very notion of showing people glorying in their obsessions (in this case, wine appreciation and sex), or showing overweight people boning with obsessive abandon, means you’re making fun of them—a curious prism through which to view social satire that, to my mind, speaks more about the prejudices of those raising the objections than it does about the film’s intentions.
Sideways is a movie that deals with characters in a framework—the raucous road movie—that is usually left to those about half the age, or younger, of its two lead characters, and it succeeds in suffusing that framework with enough middle-aged insecurity and desperation to offset the bitter laughs that run parallel with those desperate lives. Alexander Payne’s directorial hand makes it look easy, but this comedy is hard.
HIDALGO ****
This is the kind of family-friendly wide-screen action epic that doesn’t get made much anymore, and the sweep and excitement derived from this old-fashioned entertainment make you wish and hope it won’t be the last time director Joe Johnston gets a shot at making one. Johnston is not a vivid stylist, but he is at the head of a shrinking class of modern filmmakers rooted in American special effects spectaculars who have the hearts of storytelling classicists like Howard Hawks, William Wyler and David Lean.
Hidalgo, the story of a dangerous horse race across the Sahara desert, showcases Johnston’s storytelling chops admirably—it’s a thrilling, white-knuckle adventure—yet Johnston remains under the radar, perceived more as a hack-for-hire than the emerging showman-artist on display here. Here’s hoping that he and directors like David R. Ellis (
Cellular), Paul Greengrass (
The Bourne Supremacy) and John Moore (
Flight of the Phoenix) can continue fruitful careers making the kinds of films that may get precious little critical respect but fulfill the profound possibilities of pleasure of the best popular cinema.
HELLBOY ***1/2
Guillermo Del Toro’s deliriously vivid comic-book adaptation has visual conceits and constructs that stare down genre cliché and familiarity and twist away from its grip with impish sprightliness, leaving the viewer gasping with delight at its audacity, at the sheer unlikelihood that what he/she’s seeing could possibly feel so fresh, so electrically charged, so vital and, yes, unpredictable. Del Toro fuses standard genre tropes with grandiose Catholic iconographical allusions and torrents of emotion, and he knows how to stage action that breaks down your resistance to familiar CGI technology and thrusts you into the emotional core of the scene. Everything happens, as it did in his brilliant gothic
The Devil’s Backbone, at a slightly off angle; violence erupts in a fashion skewed by enough unpredictable rhythm to keep the adrenaline flowing and the audience’s emotional investment in a satanic, lovelorn, and somewhat reluctant red-skinned hero, very high indeed. The best movie of its kind in years.
The Second 11:SHAUN OF THE DEAD“I’m sorry, Shaun.” “Don’t worry about it.” “No… I’m
sorry, Shaun…” Then the disfiguring twist on Shaun’s face as he realizes his friend is apologizing (and none too sincerely) not for any misbehavior, but for his inability to control certain gaseous tendencies… Worse than any zombie!
THE BOURNE SUPREMACY
The car that blindsides Bourne and hits him squarely in the driver’s door—how the hell did they do that?
THE BLIND SWORDSMAN: ZATOICHI
The critical cliché of martial arts choreography and its connection to dance is not so much reimagined as literalized; I stared at the screen with awe, delight and utter amazement, thinking that thought we so often think but rarely really mean: “I’ve never seen anything like that!”
COLLATERAL
The wolf crosses the path of Jamie Foxx’s ill-fated cab, its silver eyes glinting from the headlights—the poetry of primal fear and power misplaced and loose on the streets of Los Angeles.
THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATEDemme never matches Frankenheimer’s visualization of the deadly brainwashing sessions as a malevolent ladies’ garden club, but he tells the story in an intimate way that emphasizes its plausibility while intensifying its political resonance. The second remake of the year that surpasses the original. Still, Meryl Streep never emerges from the shadow of Angela Lansbury.
CELLULAR
Alongside his previous feature,
Final Destination 2, the exceedingly clever
Cellular establishes director David R. Ellis as a perversely exciting talent to watch, an action director with a real eye and a intuitive understanding of how the pieces can fit together to make an audience sit up and watch.
MR. 3000
The best baseball movie in years not directed by Ron Shelton. Bernie Mac is alive and exciting in so many ways that never even occur to most actors to explore. But why, in a movie about a player for the Milwaukee Brewers, is there no Bob Uecker? Is the ghost of
Major League that imposing?
THE SPONGEBOB SQUAREPANTS MOVIE / TEACHER’S PET
Two surreal and brilliant big-screen debunkings of the notion that there’s no good TV for kids that’s also good for adults.
Teacher’s Pet casts a spell of escalating oddity and perversity, and
Spongebob, for this previously uninitiated adult, was a revelation of spastic slapstick and wacky wordplay.
SPIDER-MAN 2
Everything, in tone and pace, that the moderately successful first episode should have been. But I still object to Kirsten Dunst—she hasn’t the fire, the sassiness, the sex appeal I recall—no,
demand—from the Mary Jane Watson of my Marvel-ous memories.
KILL BILL VOL. 2
Oh, to see volumes 1 and 2 back to back someday. Where the first film is excitable and excessive in every way, the second film takes a more languid course (all things being relative, of course) and blindsides the viewer with unexpected and deeply felt ruminations on motherhood and, of course, killing the one you love.
Other Titles That Made Going To The Movies Exciting, Troubling or Otherwise Worthwhile In 2004:
THE FIVE OBSTRUCTIONS
SHAOLIN SOCCER
FAHRENHEIT 9/11
I (HEART) HUCKABEES
ETERNAL SUNSHINE OF THE SPOTLESS MIND
KINSEY
THE HUNTING OF THE PRESIDENT
ANCHORMAN: THE LEGEND OF RON BURGUNDY
FLIGHT OF THE PHOENIX
MARIA FULL OF GRACE
SUPER-SIZE ME
THE LADYKILLERS
BAADAASSS!
JERSEY GIRL
MIRACLE
13 GOING ON 30
HOME ON THE RANGE
STANDER
MAYOR OF THE SUNSET STRIPThe Worst Movies of 2004 (In Descending Order):P.S.
SILVER CITY
CATCH THAT KID
DODGEBALL: A TRUE UNDERDOG STORY
TEAM AMERICA: WORLD POLICE
THE TERMINAL
JOHNSON FAMILY VACATION
EXORCIST: THE BEGINNING
PAPARAZZI
STARKSY AND HUTCH
VAN HELSING
STILL TO SEE FROM 2004:
VERA DRAKEMOOLADEPRIMERTHE LIFE AQUATIC WITH STEVE ZISSOU
RAY
END OF THE CENTURY
BAD EDUCATION
NOTRE MUSIQUE
ENDURING LOVE
LOS ANGELES PLAYS ITSELF
A VERY LONG ENGAGEMENT
Z CHANNEL: A MAGNIFICENT OBSESSION
TARNATION
OCEAN’S TWELVE
IN GOOD COMPANY
FILMS I MOST REGRET NOT BEING ABLE TO SEE BEFORE COMPILING THIS LIST:VERA DRAKEMOOLADEPRIMER
LOS ANGELES PLAYS ITSELF
BAD EDUCATION
A VERY LONG ENGAGEMENT
PERFORMANCES:Clint Eastwood, Morgan Freeman, Hilary Swank,
MILLION DOLLAR BABY
Ziyi Zhang, Takeshi Kaneshiro, Andrew Lau,
HOUSE OF FLYING DAGGERSJet Li, Maggie Cheung, Tony Leung, Zhang Ziyi,
HEROCraig T. Nelson, Holly Hunter, Sarah Vowell, Brad Bird,
Jason Lee, Elizabeth Pena, Samuel L. Jackson,
THE INCREDIBLESEthan Hawke, Julie Delpy,
BEFORE SUNSET
Sarah Polley, Mehki Phifer,
Jake Weber, Ving Rhames,
DAWN OF THE DEADEmma Thompson, David Thewlis, Gary Oldman, Michael Gambon,
Daniel Radcliffe,
HARRY POTTER AND THE PRISONER OF AZKABANLeonardo DiCaprio, Cate Blanchett,
Alec Baldwin, Alan Alda,
THE AVIATORPaul Giamatti, Sandra Oh,
Thomas Haden Church, Virgina Madsen,
SIDEWAYS
Viggo Mortensen, Zuleihka Robinson,
Omar Sharif, J.K. Simmons, Elizabeth Berridge,
HIDALGO
Ron Perlman, John Hurt, David Hyde-Pierce, Selma Blair,
HELLBOY
Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, Penelope Wilton, Bill Nighy, Kate Ashfield,
SHAUN OF THE DEAD
Matt Damon, Joan Allen, Brian Cox, Julia Stiles, Karl Urban,
THE BOURNE SUPREMACY
Takeshi Kitano, Taramoru Asano, Guadalcanal Taka,
THE BLIND SWORDSMAN: ZATOICHIJamie Foxx, Jada Pinkett-Smith,
Irma P. Hall, Tom Cruise,
COLLATERALDenzel Washington, Liev Schreiber,
Jeffrey Wright,
THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATEKim Basinger, Jason Statham,
William H. Macy, Chris Evans,
CELLULAR
Bernie Mac, Angela Bassett,
MR. 3000Tom Kenny, Bill Fagerbakke,
THE SPONGEBOB SQUAREPANTS MOVIE
Nathan Lane, Debra Jo Rupp,
TEACHER’S PET
Tobey Maguire, J.K. Simmons, Alfred Molina,
SPIDER-MAN 2
Uma Thurman, David Carradine, Michael Madsen,
Daryl Hannah, Michael Parks,
Gordon Liu,
KILL BILL VOL. 2
Jorgen Leth, Lars Von Trier,
THE FIVE OBSTRUCTIONSLily Tomlin, Naomi Watts, Dustin Hoffman, Mark Wahlberg,
I (HEART) HUCKABEESJim Carrey, Kate Winslet, Elijah Wood,
ETERNAL SUNSHINE OF THE SPOTLESS MIND
Liam Neeson, Peter Saarsgard, Laura Linney,
William Sadler, John Lithgow,
KINSEYCatalina Sandina Moreno,
MARIA FULL OF GRACEDennis Quaid, Giovanni Ribisi,
FLIGHT OF THE PHOENIXWill Ferrell, Steve Carell, Fred Willard,
Vince Vaughn, Christina Applegate,
ANCHORMAN: THE LEGEND OF RON BURGUNDYTom Hanks, Irma P. Hall, Tzi Ma, J.K. Simmons, Marlon Wayans,
THE LADYKILLERSMario Van Peebles
, BAADAASS!
Ben Affleck, George Carlin,
JERSEY GIRLKurt Russell,
MIRACLE
Jennifer Garner, Andy Serkis, Judy Greer,
13 GOING ON 30
Thomas Jane,
STANDER
Maia Morgenstern,
THE PASSION OF THE CHRIST
Shawnee Smith,
SAWMarcia Gay Harden,
P.S., WELCOME TO MOOSEPORTGary Cole, Jason Bateman,
DODGEBALL: A TRUE UNDERDOG STORY
ACADEMY OF THE OVERRATEDETERNAL SUNSHINE OF THE SPOTLESS MIND
MARIA FULL OF GRACE
RIPLEY’S GAME
JU-ON
I’LL SLEEP WHEN I’M DEAD
TEAM AMERICA: WORLD POLICE
ACADEMY OF THE UNDERRATEDHOUSE OF FLYING DAGGERS
DAWN OF THE DEAD
HIDALGO
MR. 3000
CELLULAR
ANCHORMAN: THE LEGEND OF RON BURGUNDY
JERSEY GIRL
AROUND THE WORLD IN 80 DAYS
ACADEMY OF THE SIMULTANEOUSLY UNDERRATED AND OVERRATED
THE PASSION OF THE CHRIST
FAHRENHEIT 9/11
I (HEART) HUCKABEESLIKELIEST CANDIDATE FOR APPRECIATION 10 YEARS LATER
DAWN OF THE DEAD
THE STATION AGENT AWARD FOR BEST ENDINGBEFORE SUNSET
THE BLIND SWORDSMAN: ZATOICHI
BIGGEST MISSED OPPORTUNITY
TEAM AMERICA: WORLD POLICE
WHAT THE HELL WERE THEY THINKING?THE TERMINAL
P.S.
EXORCIST: THE BEGINNING
MOST ASININE CRITICAL BACKLASH
Harlan Jacobsen, in the most recent issue of
Film Comment (Jan-Feb 2005, “Chop Socky Soap Suds”), whining about how grindhouse martial arts cinema of the Bruce Lee variety has been appropriated by revisionists like Ang Lee and “lost-in-a-fog auteur and former Fifth Generation wunderkind” Zhang Yimou, not to mention critics who love to talk about action choreography as “ballet.” Listen to this, and know, if you loved
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, Hero and/or
House of Flying Daggers, just how deluded you are:
”With both (
Hero and
House of Flying Daggers) on stateside display in the same year, it’s become painfully clear that things have degenerated way past the point of ballet.
Bye-bye, Bruce! And welcome to the land of Harlequin romance, in which gorgeous hunks on either side of some Robin Hood revolution fight to the designer death over a fairy-tale princess, running to and fro in the color-corrected forest as in a Breck shampoo ad, ending it all in a decorous splash of red. We are not talking here about some form of feminist realignment. This is nothing less than the reconfiguration of an entire genre—once a form of meta-pornography for pimply faced geeks, for whom every
thud and
crrrack offered a form of virtual revenge on schoolyard bullies—as a Spanish TV soap opera, for our collective Inner Girl!!! Aaarrrggggh!”
Hell hath no fury like a pimply faced geek deprived of his meta-pornography, I guess. And while we’re at it, that Francis Ford Coppola has got a lot of nerve for mucking around with Mario Puzo and making some sort of “big statement,” when we really only want tommy guns and mother complexes from our gangster pictures.
BEST DEFENSE OF COMPUTER-GENERATED IMAGERY
(NON-PIXAR DIVISION)
HOUSE OF FLYING DAGGERS
THE AVIATOR
THE BLIND SWORDSMAN: ZATOICHI
I (HEART) HUCKABEES
SHAOLIN SOCCER
SPIDER-MAN 2
STRONGEST ARGUMENT FOR THE ELIMINATION OF COMPUTER-GENERATED IMAGERY AND RETURN TO RAY HARRYHAUSEN-STYLE STOP-MOTION ANIMATIONVAN HELSINGWORST DESECRATION OF A CINEMATIC LEGACYVAN HELSINGCANNIEST DEFENSE OF A CINEMATIC LEGACY
BAADAASS!
SHAUN OF THE DEADREMAKES THAT TOPPED THE ORIGINALSDAWN OF THE DEAD
THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATEBEST MOVIES NOBODY LIKED
JERSEY GIRL
ANCHORMAN: THE LEGEND OF RON BURGUNDY
BEST MOVIES NOBODY SAWHIDALGO
CELLULAR
FLIGHT OF THE PHOENIXWORST MOVIE EVERYBODY SAW?
MEET THE FOCKERS (I wouldn’t actually know, though, as I never saw it)
MOVIE I ONLY SAW ONCE THAT I’M ITCHING TO SEE AGAIN (I’m hoping a second-viewing might reveal to me more of what others seemed to see the first time)
ETERNAL SUNSHINE OF THE SPOTLESS MIND
BEST VOCAL PERFORMANCESSarah Vowell, Brad Bird,
THE INCREDIBLESIF I HANDED OUT THE OSCARS:
Best Picture:
MILLION DOLLAR BABYBest Actress: JULIE DELPY
Runners-up: KATE WINSLET, HILARY SWANK, ZIYI ZHANG,
JENNIFER GARNER, CATALINA SANDINA MORENO
Best Actor: CLINT EASTWOOD *
Runners-up: BERNIE MAC, ETHAN HAWKE, PAUL
GIAMATTI, WILL FERRELL, LEONARD DiCAPRIO, KURT
RUSSELL
(* See? I waffled already!)
Best Supporting Actress: CATE BLANCHETT
Runners-up: SANDRA OH, VIRGINIA MADSEN, IRMA P. HALL,
MAIA MORGENSTERN, SHAWNEE SMITH
Best Supporting Actor: MORGAN FREEMAN
Runners-up: DAVID THEWLIS, ALAN ALDA, J.K. SIMMONS,
JAMIE FOXX, MARK WAHLBERG
Best Director: CLINT EASTWOOD
Runners-up: ZHANG YIMOU, BRAD BIRD, RICHARD
LINKLATER, ZACH SNYDER, ALFONSO CUARON, MARTIN
SCORSESE, ALEXANDER PAYNE, JOE JOHNSTON,
GUILLERMO DEL TORO
Best Original Screenplay:
BEFORE SUNSETRichard Linklater, Ethan Hawke, Julie Delpy
Runner-up:
THE INCREDIBLES Brad Bird
Best Adapted Screenplay:
MILLION DOLLAR BABY Paul Haggis
Runner-up:
SIDEWAYS Alexander Payne and Jim Taylor
Best Art Direction:
HOUSE OF FLYING DAGGERSRunner-up:
HEROBest Cinematography:
HERORunner-up:
THE AVIATORBest Film Editing:
THE AVIATOR
Runner-up:
DAWN OF THE DEAD
Best Makeup:
HELLBOYRunner-up:
DAWN OF THE DEADBest Musical Score:
THE INCREDIBLESRunner-up:
SIDEWAYS
Best Sound:
THE BOURNE SUPREMACYRunner-up:
HOUSE OF FLYING DAGGERS
Best Sound Effects Editing:
THE INCREDIBLESRunner-up:
HELLBOY
Best Visual Effects:
HARRY POTTER AND THE PRISONER OF AZKABANRunner-up:
HELLBOY
BEST TOP-TEN LISTA year or so ago a bunch of coworkers and I went through a sort-of getting-to-know-you exercise in which we all exchanged lists of out top ten horror movies, Desert Island Discs
(CDs you’d taken along if you were stranded on a desert island), top ten comedies, top ten albums of the ‘80s, et cetera. When it came time for the top ten albums of the 90s list, one of the participants, Sean Newcombe, taking on the persona of Duncan MacLeod, the 600-year-old Immortal
Highlander of the movie and TV series, pretended to misunderstand the category and turned in a list of his favorite albums of the
1890s. The list has nothing to do with the movies of 2004, or movies in general, but it’s such a funny piece that I begged Sean to allow to me to include it in my article. He generously agreed, and so here, without further delay (it’s been put off far long enough already) is Duncan MacLeod’s list of the Best Albums of the 1890s:
Compiling a list of the top ten albums of the 1890s was a difficult undertaking-- but, also, a labor of love. I remember the decade well. As I told Teddy Roosevelt when we stormed San Juan Hill, "Ah, indeed, this is a splendid age." He, too, is a Highlander, and now lives in Passaic, New Jersey as a grocer.
By the way, in the 1890s we referred to them as "spools," as they came on cylinders.
TOP TEN SPOOLS OF THE 1890s1.
Never Mind the Fisticuffs, Here Now's the Bowery Lads - The Bowery Lads (1898)
The Bowery Lads were an audacious quartet that thumbed their noses at the blue blood establishment with such songs as "Did You See Her Ankles?" and "We Have Liquor on Sundays," to name only a few.
2.
Rabbi Feivel's Secret Klezmer Band - The Dreidels (1894)
This kabbalah-tinged effort was the first "concept" spool of its era and it featured the songwriting duo of Levitz/Malachi.
3.
O, Mighty Timber! - Mr. Paul Bunyan's Original Quintet (1894)
What today is called "folk" music, we called "backwoods pleasantries." The perfect spool after a long carriage ride.
4.
Manifest Destiny - John Philip Souza (1891)
This "Heavy Brass" effort was an ear-splitter from beginning to end.
5.
We'll Not Wear Bloomers - The Susan B. Anthony Singers (1897)
A true "protest" spool by a daring band of suffragettes.
6.
Two Games a Day - "Iron" Joe McGinnity (1899)
I know, I know, this was what would now be called a "novelty" album (we called them "curiosity spools"), but it still reminds me of going out to the Polo Grounds to watch Iron Joe pitch.
7.
My Lady's Private Rag - Scott Joplin (1899)
I loved this bawdy jaunt. I'd invite the ladies over to my parlor and dance the buckles right off of my shoes.
8.
40 Whacks and Fiendish Deeds - Lizzie Borden (1897)
You might call her an "Original Gangstress"-- or you might not.
9.
The Girl with the Big Balloons and Other Funnies - Giggles McGee (1892)
This was my favorite spool of jokes. We'd sit around with a bicarbonate of soda and laugh till our bellies ached.
10.
Through the Looking-Glass - The Charles Dodgson Homage (1893)
Really, The Charles Dodgson Homage was the first tribute band. They took the works of Lewis Carroll (born Charles Dodgson) and made them their very own. Wondrous.