2011 Bottom and Top 10
For a movie to be considered for
these 2 lists I have very few criteria: I should have seen it on the South
African big-screen circuit between 1 January 2011 and 31 December 2011, it’s
that simple.
Bottom 10
These 10 re-visits may be short,
but that’s because I seem to have repressed most of them, with good reason. Here
they are, the ones I really regret seeing, in reverse order:
10. The Dilemma
I can’t remember much of this
movie to be honest. Vince Baugh and Kevin James are supposed to be better than
this. They weren’t, and neither is this movie, as a decision must be made
whether a movie wants to be a comedy or a serious drama, only very few manage
to successfully do both.
9. Just Go With It
Another Sandler comedy, more of the
same each time. This one features a flat story and lifeless infantile humour as
Sandler continues an unimaginative run. I’m sure he’ll move even higher up this
list with his 2012 movie, Jack & Jill. That’s if I could be bothered to see
it, which I seriously doubt.
8. One Day
Yawn. The most boring movie by
far, the boredom isn’t even the worst thing about it. Terrible characters
struggle through years of denial to end up with a supposedly sad ending that
really makes my back itch. One Day should have gone straight to DVD to be
forgotten forever.
7. What’s Your Number
1st on this list of
many 2011gross-out comedies, this movie had a 13LS restriction while it should
have been 16 at the least. Anna Faris must love terrible morals and awful
justifications, as thinking it acceptable to sleep with 20 guys in a lifetime
and advertising it as such in a movie baffles me.
6. Gulliver’s Travels
Jack Black is an OK comedian, but
he often misfires terribly, my 2009 worst movie was Year One. Infantile scatological
humour is not my thing. This was a comedic catch-22, as the humour can’t be
appreciated by adults, but shouldn’t be seen by children – a movie for no-one
then.
5. Bridesmaids
Crass and vulgar, this was hailed
as good comedy in Hollywood. It isn’t. And the message we’re left with is that
overindulgence should be encouraged, in a boring way. With a lead character you
simply can’t like the movie lost me before it even started.
4. SCRE4M
Being a big fan of the first 3
movies, I was hoping for a return to form. This was nothing but a crass and
juvenile attempt at rehashing something better left alone. Adult characters are
given dialogue akin to that used when teenagers try to impress peers with
forced bad language; the plot nothing but an overwrought effort at
self-deprecation. Did the franchise an enormous disservice.
3. The Change-Up
An improved 2nd half
with some heartfelt moments doesn’t detract from the fact that its 1st
half is so deplorable I almost left the cinema. This isn’t what teenagers
should see, this is the kind of movie that undoubtedly makes the world worse. I
hope these actors don’t continue down this road and make more acceptable movies
in future. And is the need for nudity now so overwhelming that it must be
digitally added if the actress won’t show it? Really?
2. The Hangover: Part II
If you can deal with the fact
that not 1 out of 3, but all 3 of these guys are complete black-out drunks/drug
users, you still have to navigate the awful and completely amoral waters of a
script that encourages everything that’s wrong with this world to a staggering
degree. I want the time I missed watching this back, and I won’t watch another sequel.
1. Johnny English Reborn
The worst movie of 2011 by a long
shot, even though it was less insulting to the sensibilities than movies #2-5
on this list. The humour is terribly flat, the action awful. Everything about
this movie screams financial desperation, and it’s supposed to be a comedy. I
loathed every minute, as it didn’t even have the guts to offend me. Pathetic.
Top 10
And now for the Top 10. This year
did have it’s good movies too, with some great entertainment gained from five
4-star movies, and my favourite five 3.5 star movies for the year as follows:
10. The Concert
People longing for a past where
they were wronged manage to steal some fame back reliving their glory years.
What’s not to like about this movie? The plotting and scheming of the disgraced
leader of the Russian Bolshoi orchestra to play with his old comrades again and
reunite with his daughter is the stuff of fairy tales. And with such a strong
and emotional orchestral piece to close off the movie this one will be in my
memories for a long time to come.
9. Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol
The shiniest blockbuster of 2011,
the latest Mission: Impossible definitely doesn’t stand back when it comes to
dazzling action and crazy stunts. This movie is all about the action, the
blazing pace, and the global locations. Mission: Impossible is back with a bang
after faithfully entertaining viewers for so many years with only one weak link
in the franchise (the 2nd instalment).
8. 127 Hours
The word harrowing can’t begin to
describe some parts of this insanely claustrophobic movie. James Franco was
deservedly nominated for his role of a lost and trapped hiker who managed to
free himself from a boulder trapping his arm by severing said arm. The fact
that this actually happened, coupled with Danny Boyle’s brilliant direction and
the jarring music of A.R. Rahman makes this a movie that won’t be easily forgotten.
7. The Adventures of Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn
The best animation feature of the
year, Spielberg not only dazzles visually, but also viscerally. Tintin is
expertly brought to the big-screen in a daring adventure with visuals so
sumptuous they have to be seen to be believed. Pirates and treasure hunters and
adventures have never been so dazzling, and I found myself thinking during a
pirate ship battle: “Pirates of the Caribbean, suck on this!”.
6. Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows
Guy Ritchie burst back onto the
scene with his reimagining of the adventures of the legendary detective 2 years
back and has returned with something only rarely accomplished; a sequel just as
brilliant and endlessly entertaining as its predecessor. With stunning
set-pieces and fantastic action and exquisite humour coupled with brilliant
acting by all, but in particular Robert Downey Jr., this movie is incredibly
entertaining and sets the bar high for another sequel.
5. Hanna
Even though an esteemed friend of
mine has this as his worst movie of 2011, I can’t help but be enamoured with its
bleak visuals, its driving soundtrack, its harsh villains and its intense yet
different action sequences. The exhilaration I felt with Hanna was something I have
missed in cinema for a long time, with the brilliant Saoirse Ronan and Eric
Bana giving a chilling Cate Blanchett an exciting run for her money. Hanna is a
fantastic movie indeed.
4. Super 8
JJ Abrams is a force to be
reckoned with, he hasn’t disappointed me yet: creator of Alias, Fringe and the
mighty LOST on TV, Star Trek and Mission: Impossible III as director and
Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol as producer. He just goes from strength to
strength, and Super 8 is no exception. With Spielberg as producer, the movie is
a visual spectacle and probably the greatest blockbuster of the past few years.
Large scale destruction is deftly woven into an intimate story of a group of
kids making a movie while tragedy and disaster hits from all sides. Super 8 is
incredible.
3. The Adjustment Bureau
When a movie comes with a good
story and a good idea, something to change the way you think about things on a
grander scale, it deserves a place among my favourites. Free will is a gift you
never know how to use until you have to fight for it – an idea here opposed to
destiny, the plan, just living out your life as it happens. The Adjustment
Bureau is a pulse-pounding chase movie offering something much more profound
than what we have become accustomed to, a love story with depth that defies
belief. A truly great movie.
2. Warrior
Mixed martial arts fighting forms
the frame for a scintillating sports movie featuring some of the most touching
and emotionally raw family scenes to grace screens this year. Tom Hardy and
Joel Edgerton play estranged brothers who end up facing each other in a high stakes
final of a brutal fighting contest where no-one is a villain, where the viewer
only realises how things must be as the final bell rings. Warrior is a
phenomenal achievement.
1. The Tree of Life
“There are two ways
through life, the way of nature and the way of grace, you have to choose which
one you’ll follow.” Never before have I seen a movie so
thought-provoking, that stays with you for such an incredibly long time after
the credits roll. Framing philosophy and religion and life itself in an epic of
gigantic proportions, from creation to today, director Terence Malick uses a
slice of 50’s family life to linger on thoughts of existence, fear, sorrows,
love, peace, and so much more. Not for everyone for sure, but those whom this
resonates with will not get over it. A towering film, beyond imagination.
Comments
1. Tree of Life's value to me has grown over time (as discussed in person) and jumped from 3.5/4 to 4/4, and to #1
2. Source Code, Rango, and Tangled: while I still really appreciate all of them, the 4-star to me, in retrospect, felt too much, so I lowered them to 3.5/4.
I took a look at quite a few movies in compiling this list, and while King's Speech and Black Swan are both good movies (for me in particular Black Swan), I simply enjoyed watching 127 Hours more: the music, the feel, the claustrophobia got me. So that's the thing with this list, as you correctly say, it's such a subjective endeavour...