KNEEJERK REACTIONS TO THE OSCAR NOMS AND THE FINAL WORD ON 2017
Even when you
live in Los Angeles, as I do, if you’re not in the network of critics groups
and press screening and screener DVDs it can be a challenge to keep up with
everything you tell yourself you have to see before attempting an informed
roundup of the year currently in the rearview mirror. And I also try to not let
more than a couple of weeks of the new year go by before checking in, regardless
of how many of the year’s big presents I have left to unwrap, though in past
years I have not lived well by this dictum—let’s just say that if I’m still
posting stuff on the year’s best after even Oscar has thoroughly chewed over
the goods, as has happened in the past, well, I’ve overstayed my welcome.
2016 was, in most
ways, a disaster of a year, but in terms of setting your glazzies in front of
some high-quality cinema it was anything but, and it might have been better
than most of late. The pickings were so good that rather than subject myself to
the masochism of a strict roster of 10 choices, when I published my list two weeks ago, I allowed my list to expand into a Top 13, followed
by a “Next 10” which during the average year would have easily been good enough
to make the top echelon, and then an even longer list of other movies that I
thought were varying degrees of keen.
Well, since the
initial posting of my choices I’ve managed to see seven other films—Florence Foster Jenkins, Gleason, Hidden Figures,
Love and Friendship, Paterson, Silence and Train to Busan (on tap for a Saturday night just past my deadline, Jackie)—three of which, had I seen them
two or three weeks ago, would have caused me to thoroughly rearrange the
scenery in the penthouse of my list. And since I’m not quite through bloviating
about the year past just yet, let me give you a taste of my ch-ch-ch-changes.
Ted Melfi’s Hidden
Figures is the sort of popular movie that will likely be just as well
thought of 30 or 40 years down the line as it is today, a picture which honors
its subject and its true-life African-American female protagonists with
confidence and a sharp eye for historical context instead of pandering to the
mainstream through synthetic trickery, audio-visual overstimulation and
over-the-top histrionics. It’s a crowd-pleaser in the very best sense of the
term.
In Silence,
Martin Scorsese and co-scenarist Jay Cocks have crafted a sublime,
demanding meditation on faith, colonial imperative and the complexities of
East-West relations that reveals its genuinely spiritual nature through its engagement
with the internal ambiguities and struggle of perspectives that can inform even
the most genteel pursuit of religious fulfillment—it’s of a piece with the
complex vision of faith that informs Scorsese’s other great religious films, Kundun and The Last Temptation of Christ. And Andrew Garfield’s tortured
repose as Fr. Rodrigues can well be imagined as the end point in a journey that
links this 16th-century seeker with the self-doubting Catholic impulses
of another of Scorsese’s wandering flock, Harvey Keitel’s Charlie in Mean Streets.
But best of all
is undoubtedly Jim Jarmusch’s sublime Paterson, a movie in which every unobtrusive moment seems to matter. I’ve always run hot and
cold on this director’s brand of analog-only, deadpan observation—Stranger Than Paradise, Night On Earth and
Dead Man are better than fine, but I
find movies like Down by Law and Coffee and Cigarettes close to
insufferable, the nadir being The Limits
of Control, in which the director precisely locates the dead zone of his
title and practically disappears in a black hole of Eurotrash cool. But Jarmusch’s
next movie was the dazzling, achingly muted Only
Lovers Left Alive, and the analog-only sensibility of the vampires in that
film feels strangely of a piece with this new work, and it looks an awful lot
like a masterpiece to these eyes. Paterson
isn’t so much a hipster’s evocation of the working-class as it is one
imbued with a poetry which illuminates, with a precision that’s never precious,
the modest and poetic pursuits of its title character, played by Adam Driver, a
Paterson, N.J. bus driver also named Paterson. (The movie has an offhanded
fixation on twins that remains as ephemeral as its overall effect is
overwhelming.) The Italian poster for the movie features the catchphrase “La bellezza
spesso si trova nelle piccolle cose,” which translates to “Beauty is often
found in the little things,” which is a lovely distillation of Paterson’s, and
Paterson’s beating heart, the story of a man who searches for, and
eventually finds, a measure of fulfillment in work, and in love, and simply by keeping
his eyes and ears and soul open to the wonders of the everyday.
So, considering
all that, and acknowledging that there are still many left to see, including the
big Oscar contender Fences, here is are
my final amended lists, now restricted to the “Top 10” and (you’ll see why) the
“Next 11,” my 21 favorite movies of 2016:
THE TOP 10
O.J.: Made in America
O.J.: Made in America
Paterson
Silence
Moonlight
The Witness
Elle
One More Time
with Feeling
13th
Hell or High
Water
Krisha
THE NEXT 11
The Witch
Hidden Figures
La La Land
Lo and Behold:
Reveries of the Connected World and Zero Days
Loving
Indignation
Eat That
Question: Frank Zappa in His Own Words
Don’t Breathe
Everybody Wants
Some!!
Dog Eat Dog
And now, here are just a few random,
kneejerk reactions I had on Tuesday morning in response to the announcement of
the 2016 Academy Award nominations. (Feel free to click here for a full list of the
nominations.)
Well, I wonder if #OscarNotQuiteAsWhite
will have as much traction as #OscarsSoWhite did last year. For the first time
ever, African-Americans are represented in every acting category, as well as in
the screenwriting and directing categories. And for the first time ever, an
African-American woman, Joi McMillon,
has been nominated in the Best Achievement in Film Editing category, for Moonlight. It remains to be seen just what effect the Academy’s newly adopted rules meant to encourage inclusion and expand
the diversity of the voting body will have on future scores of nominations—it
seems unlikely that they would have significantly moved the needle on this year’s crop. But
one thing seems undeniable—if movies with diverse casts are made, and they get
sufficient distribution, and people actually seem to like them, then the
possibility of honor on Oscar night will be evident every year. A year when Fences, Moonlight, 13th, Hidden Figures
and Loving are out there is
necessarily going to be a year tailor-made for celebrating the contributions of
African-Americans. If those movies were not on studio rosters, or came out to
public and critical indifference, then we’d likely be facing another year of
dissatisfaction, resentment and criticism of the Academy. It seems that the
onus of making sure we have a diverse pool of work from which to choose Oscar
honorees falls not to the Academy, but to the industry itself to have more faith in filmmakers
and green-light more projects which tell the stories of people who have been traditionally
underrepresented on screens and during award shows. That said, when each year
we can finally talk not only about African-Americans nominated in every
category, but when Asians or Latinos or Native-Americans also so amply present,
then we’ll know that real progress is being made.
Congratulations to Ruth Negga and Isabelle
Huppert on Best Actress nominations for Loving
and Elle, respectively! It’s
great to see two actresses in terrific movies which were not otherwise
nominated manage to fight their way through the noise and wrangle some
recognition, especially actresses who have been so off the Oscar radar— Negga
is a relative newcomer (I wrote something about spotting her in World War Z almost four years ago), so I salute what I hope will be the first of
many nominations to come. But somehow, this is Isabelle Huppert’s first Oscar nomination…
So, 20 nominations for Meryl Streep now. The Academy’s love apparently knows no
bounds. And make no mistake: she’s very good in the entertaining, if slight, Florence Foster Jenkins. It’s just
unfortunate that including Streep means taking up a spot that would more
righteously be occupied by Taraji P. Henson as pioneering NASA mathematician
Katherine Johnson in Hidden Figures. This
has to rank, if one must rank them, as one of the year’s most egregious Oscar omissions.
Though it’s been brewing for a month or so, the official La La Land backlash can now begin. By the time the movie cuts a
swatch through the PGA, DGA and Screen Actors Guild awards on its way to Oscar
night, just about everybody will be sick of hearing about it and likely
unembarrassed to say so. Even those who love the movie (like me) seem a little
taken aback by the Academy’s historic endorsement—certainly for Best Picture I
would pick Moonlight or Hell or High Water or Hidden Figures before I’d cast a
first-place vote for this lovely movie. Oscar pools are going to play a bit
tighter now—there’s the whiff of a juggernaut in the air, which makes La La Land the go-to choice in most
categories, and the prospect of upsets at the actual awards show seem to be
largely limited to the arena of who will do/say what during their acceptance
speech, especially in regard to the regime currently occupying the White House.
But even though it will reign supreme, I don’t expect anything close to a La La Land sweep on Oscar night.
Off-the-cuff prediction: seven wins for Damien Chazelle’s musical.
So Silence
was, Rodrigo Prieto’s completely deserved nomination for Best Cinematography
aside, virtually silenced, and the closest Rules
Don’t Apply will make it to the Dolby theater on Oscar night is the Best
Screenplay nomination for 20th
Century Women, a movie which stars Annette Bening (also overlooked), who
happens to be married to the director of Rules
Don’t Apply. My friend Larry Aydlette
had one of the best comments on this year’s Oscar’s I’ve seen so far, so of
course I’ll steal it from him, paraphrased from memory: Warren Beatty and
Martin Scorsese now know for certain that the ‘70s are over.
The Best Original Score nominees are among the most interesting,
Oscar-unfamiliar names I can recall ever seeing gathered in any one category.
Thomas Newman, who is fast becoming legendary for his inability to score a
statue in this category, is nominated for the 14th time for Passengers, a movie apparently designed
to be forgotten. The rest are a grab bag of talent who have never seen much in
the way of the spotlight before, the highest profile of which, Justin Hurwitz
for La La Land, will be the
inevitable winner. But it’s encouraging that Oscar found room for Dustin O’Halloran
(Marie Antoinette) and Volker Bertelmann
for Lion, Nicholas Brittell (The Big Short) for Moonlight, and most especially for Mica Levi for Jackie—Levin
also wrote the dissonant, unnervingly beautiful score for 2013’s Under the Skin.
From Most Hated Man in Hollywood to a Best
Director nominee who snagged the honor without an accompanying DGA nomination,
a feat even Martin Scorsese couldn’t manage—he won’t win, but Mel Gibson has to
come away thinking it’s his year anyway.
Casey Affleck will probably win (although given his recent bad press and some high-profile and outraged reaction to his nomination, I’m not prepared to
say he’s a lock), but all of the sudden Manchester
by the Sea doesn’t look like the unstoppable force many thought it was
going to be back in December. Its only other solid chance is in the screenplay
category, where I’m hoping Kenneth Lonergan will be the victim of an upset at
the hands of Taylor Sheridan and Hell or
High Water.
Kubo
and the Two Strings isn’t the first animated movie to
score a nomination for Best Visual Effects—that honor goes to The Nightmare Before Christmas. But it’s
an unusual honor nonetheless, undoubtedly a nod, as Nightmare’s was, to the painstaking craft of stop-motion animation,
for which Laika Studios, the producers of Kubo
as well as Coraline, Paranorman and The
BoxTrolls, have repeatedly distinguished themselves.
Finally,
no group seems as absent of head-scratchers as the Best Documentary category. Life, Animated seems the slightest of
the five, and it’s still remarkable. But from Fire at Sea’s singular examination of the refugee crisis, to the
complex and illuminating examinations of race and American history at the heart
of I Am Not Your Negro, 13th and O.J.: Made in America, the rest of the
category is populated by movies that seem seized by this moment in American and
global history. I know which one I would pick, and I think I know which one the
Academy will pick, but that does not mean that anyone faced with it would find
this one an easy choice. My hat is off to directors Gianfranco Rosi, Roger Ross
Williams, Raoul Peck (and James Baldwin), Ava DuVernay and Ezra Edelman, and
hell, to the Academy in this case, for keeping it real.
And
while we’re here, congratulations also to the Academy for issuing this
statement in regard to Ashgar Farhadi, Oscar-winning Iranian director of A Separation who is again nominated in
the Best Foreign Language Film category for his latest film, The Salesman:
“The Academy celebrates achievement in the art of filmmaking, which seeks to transcend borders and speak to audiences around the world, regardless of national, ethnic, or religious differences. As supporters of filmmakers—and the human rights of all people—around the globe, we find it extremely troubling that Asghar Farhadi, the director of the Oscar-winning film from Iran A Separation, along with the cast and crew of this year's Oscar-nominated film The Salesman, could be barred from entering the country because of their religion or country of origin."
“The Academy celebrates achievement in the art of filmmaking, which seeks to transcend borders and speak to audiences around the world, regardless of national, ethnic, or religious differences. As supporters of filmmakers—and the human rights of all people—around the globe, we find it extremely troubling that Asghar Farhadi, the director of the Oscar-winning film from Iran A Separation, along with the cast and crew of this year's Oscar-nominated film The Salesman, could be barred from entering the country because of their religion or country of origin."
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FOR FURTHER RECOMMENDED READING:
FOR FURTHER RECOMMENDED READING:
Freelance critic and journalist Kevin Courrier on the end of the Obama era and how
the changing times are reflected in films like Moonlight, Hidden Figures and Southside
With You.
Critic Charles Taylor brilliantly extrapolates Paterson's rich tapestry.
Odie
Henderson, film critic for RogerEbert.com, on the power of 13th.
And finally, two
from one of my favorite critics currently writing, the Los Angeles Times’ Justin
Chang: first, a typically thoughtful piece on how the Academy chose to honor the lesser of the two big religious epics of 2016, and then Chang’s original review of Silence, which
he picked as the best movie of 2016.
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