Friday, October 30, 2009
Friday, October 16, 2009
End of 2009 To-See List (Fox Searchlight Heavy)
It's no secret that I have always loved movies. I was raised on a wind-battered plain near Lake Michigan, and I spent my winters huddling under blankets in two pairs of socks, renting videos and sipping hot cider. I live in Atlanta now, so I don't have the excuse of long, cold winters anymore, but I remain hopelessly addicted, and I am very excited for a number of movies coming out in the nearish future.
1. Amelia - Mira Nair - 10/23
I am a story person more than a performance person, but despite that I cannot think of better casting for the lead role in this biopic. Hilary Swank has the horsey features and acting chops to play this girlhood hero of mine. On topic-iche, If you haven't read Jane Mendesohn's I Was Amelia Earhart, I highly recommend it.
2. Gentlemen Broncos - Jared Hess - 10/30
Let's just say I am always receptive to a certain brand of goofy humor, and I am quite sure that Gentleman Broncos, a movie about writing bad science fiction, will satisfy. Who doesn't like those yellow-brown Napoleon Dynamite aesthetics? Haters.
3. The Box - Richard Kelly - 11/6
There's room for debate, but Donnie Darko is one of the pivotal films of my generation. As an improvisation on Suburban teen themes, it was brilliant, unexpected, and gratifyingly funny. After that, Richard Kelly made not one but two completely unwatchable shit show films (Domino and Southland Tales). I am giving him this last chance to win me over.
The titular box contains a button- if a person chooses to push it, he or she will receive a million dollars- and effectively take the life of a stranger. Despite Cameron Diaz's starring role, I am intrigued.
4. Fantastic Mr. Fox - Wes Anderson - 11/25

When I first heard that Wes Anderson was doing a stop-motion animated film based on the Roald Dahl classic, I was less than excited. I thought I wanted more of his usual brand of whimsical, melancholic, Salingerian family drama. That was before I felt the vague disappointment of The Darjeeling Limited. With that behind me, I am more than excited for this movie. I'm delighted in advance.
5. The Road - John Hillcoat - 11/25
The Road is my favorite novel set in a post-apocalypse, because instead of expansive views of a demolished world, it takes the impact of a collapsed culture in microcosm. I am excited to see how this film scales the story of a father and son who journey to try to find a new life outside of a freezing husk North American civilization.
6. The Lovely Bones - Peter Jackson - 12/6
After typing the above, it's funny to relate that in this adaptation project I am excited for a grand Jacksonian vision. I think he'll do great with this story of a murdered girl who continues to observe the grief and recovery of her loved ones on Earth years after her death. And I have a fatal weakness for Marky Mark.
It's a great season for movies, I think. I didn't even mention Where the Wild Things Are and The Men Who Stare at Goats. It's definitely a fall to winter line-up I can get behind.
But how about I close this up with a rant on the one movie being being released this season I will definitely not be attending?
Antichrist - Lars von Trier
I hate everything Lars von Trier touches, but I sat through Breaking the Waves, Dogville, and Dancer in the Dark for the sake of cultural literacy. I think he's self-righteous, unfocused and shallow. His films are tantrums that point a vague accusation towards a general injustice by forcing an audience to watch women being tortured. Antichrist would probably provide me even more evidence, but I don't think I could make it through the entire thing, because it sounds like another wretched display of everything I dislike about the way he sees (and judges) the world.
From l'Agence France-Presse, via The Slog - "Cannes entered the final straight on Saturday with more controversy over Anti-Christ...Lars von Trier's film was declared 'the most misogynist movie from the self-proclaimed biggest director in the world' by an Ecumenical Jury, which....was so shocked by Von Trier's film—which closes with a shot of a clitoris being sliced off with rusty scissors—that it felt the need to award a special 'anti-prize.'"
Hey, Lars man, why you even got to do a thing?
1. Amelia - Mira Nair - 10/23
I am a story person more than a performance person, but despite that I cannot think of better casting for the lead role in this biopic. Hilary Swank has the horsey features and acting chops to play this girlhood hero of mine. On topic-iche, If you haven't read Jane Mendesohn's I Was Amelia Earhart, I highly recommend it.
2. Gentlemen Broncos - Jared Hess - 10/30Let's just say I am always receptive to a certain brand of goofy humor, and I am quite sure that Gentleman Broncos, a movie about writing bad science fiction, will satisfy. Who doesn't like those yellow-brown Napoleon Dynamite aesthetics? Haters.
3. The Box - Richard Kelly - 11/6
There's room for debate, but Donnie Darko is one of the pivotal films of my generation. As an improvisation on Suburban teen themes, it was brilliant, unexpected, and gratifyingly funny. After that, Richard Kelly made not one but two completely unwatchable shit show films (Domino and Southland Tales). I am giving him this last chance to win me over.
The titular box contains a button- if a person chooses to push it, he or she will receive a million dollars- and effectively take the life of a stranger. Despite Cameron Diaz's starring role, I am intrigued.
4. Fantastic Mr. Fox - Wes Anderson - 11/25

When I first heard that Wes Anderson was doing a stop-motion animated film based on the Roald Dahl classic, I was less than excited. I thought I wanted more of his usual brand of whimsical, melancholic, Salingerian family drama. That was before I felt the vague disappointment of The Darjeeling Limited. With that behind me, I am more than excited for this movie. I'm delighted in advance.
5. The Road - John Hillcoat - 11/25The Road is my favorite novel set in a post-apocalypse, because instead of expansive views of a demolished world, it takes the impact of a collapsed culture in microcosm. I am excited to see how this film scales the story of a father and son who journey to try to find a new life outside of a freezing husk North American civilization.
6. The Lovely Bones - Peter Jackson - 12/6
After typing the above, it's funny to relate that in this adaptation project I am excited for a grand Jacksonian vision. I think he'll do great with this story of a murdered girl who continues to observe the grief and recovery of her loved ones on Earth years after her death. And I have a fatal weakness for Marky Mark.
It's a great season for movies, I think. I didn't even mention Where the Wild Things Are and The Men Who Stare at Goats. It's definitely a fall to winter line-up I can get behind.
But how about I close this up with a rant on the one movie being being released this season I will definitely not be attending?
Antichrist - Lars von Trier
I hate everything Lars von Trier touches, but I sat through Breaking the Waves, Dogville, and Dancer in the Dark for the sake of cultural literacy. I think he's self-righteous, unfocused and shallow. His films are tantrums that point a vague accusation towards a general injustice by forcing an audience to watch women being tortured. Antichrist would probably provide me even more evidence, but I don't think I could make it through the entire thing, because it sounds like another wretched display of everything I dislike about the way he sees (and judges) the world.
From l'Agence France-Presse, via The Slog - "Cannes entered the final straight on Saturday with more controversy over Anti-Christ...Lars von Trier's film was declared 'the most misogynist movie from the self-proclaimed biggest director in the world' by an Ecumenical Jury, which....was so shocked by Von Trier's film—which closes with a shot of a clitoris being sliced off with rusty scissors—that it felt the need to award a special 'anti-prize.'"
Hey, Lars man, why you even got to do a thing?
Labels:
film
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
Top 10
Louis and I have recently been locked in conversation/debate regarding the recent Pitchfork list of the top 100 albums of the 2000s. The thing about lists, in my opinion, is that when they get longer than a top 20, the order and rank mean less and less. Is 83 really any better than 82? Am I really expected to consider the relative merits of numbers 148 versus 149?
That's why this girl is sticking with a Top Ten Albums of the 2000s, Love It or Leave It Edition. These are my ten favorite albums released during the past decade, every number counts, and it's a heartbreak to leave out some worthy contributions. That is how a list ought to be.
Be on your toes and you might spot:
Midwestern bias! A weakness for concept albums! White guys with guitars!
Regardless, I hope you'll write your own top 10- it's a fun project.
Number 10
The Dismemberment Plan - Change

There is a parallel universe where even at 26, my hair is Super Grover blue, my nose ring is sparkling, and "Time Bomb" is still my personal anthem. Meanwhile in this dimension, it's still one of those songs I like to shout along with and slap the dashboard to. Change is such a reflective album- the last the Plan would ever put out- it showed a kind of maturation while maintaining a wholly appealing angsty sensibility. It's loud, powerful, and lyrical- a timeless album which will always be one of my favorites.
Number 9
The New Pornographers - Twin Cinema

For sheer, bouncy, mob pop, this Canadian collective is my go-to choice. Twin Cinema is laced with joy, gorgeous vocals, and tremendous percussion. It's a whirling dervish of an album, and every song is gold. And Dan Bejar, you stole my heart the day I bought this cd at Criminal Records.
Number 8
Broken Social Scene - You Forgot It in People

I know, I know- more Canadians. Get used to it. When I grow up, I'm going to move to Montreal, eat fresh bread, live billingual, and room with Leslie Feist. Broken Social Scene was a revelation to me in my first year of college, and I would dance by myself in my dorm room in front of my goldfish. My E-Mac's speakers at their maximum, the songs didn't play so much as shimmer into the air. It is one of those albums everyone can agree is great, so let's leave it at that. If you haven't listened to it, you need to, and you also need to crawl out of the indie rock bunker you've been living in for the better part of a decade.
Number 7
Cursive - Domestica

Domestica is one of the great concept albums. It is the only record I feel truly captures the anxious and harrowing pain of domestic turmoil. It's an intelligent, examined, and terribly sad record. Domestica hits its stride with "The Martyr" where distrust is a refrain, "Sweet baby, don't you cry/ your tears are only alibis." Tim Kasher, the lead singer of Cursive, throws his gravelly voice into the wound, and in 9 songs takes you through a relationship to its bitter end, what I consider one of the great break-up songs of all-time, "The Night I Lost the Will to Fight." It is, from its opening, a explosion and a catharsis, and it leaves you feeling empty when it is gone. "I need a catalyst/to rekindle the flame/that once burned within these fists/where defeat remains."
Number 6
The National - Sad Songs for Dirty Lovers
I am an unrepentant fan of The National- I love the Smog-esque vocals, the pushy beats, and the ambiguous lyrics. Sad Songs for Dirty Lovers is a brilliant, cohesive, and occasionally creepy record. I would argue that the worst thing about indie rock is that bands so often do exactly what you expect them to do- Sad Songs for Dirty Lovers is full of little hiccups of dirge-y, dour sound that surprise.
Number 5
Radiohead - Kid A
Ok, I know I'm ranking it low, but it's a transformative, gorgeous, painfully good record. Thom Yorke is a genius, and Radiohead is the greatest working band of our time. That sounds begrudging, but it's not. If I didn't have Kid A on this list, I would feel like a phony.
Number 4
Arcade Fire - Funeral
Funeral hit me in the gut the first time I listened to it. The lyrics are beautiful, but it's all those lush layers of instrumentation and sound that make it remarkably distinct. There is something so youthful and poignant about the music of Arcade Fire, the way their voices earnestly soar over trumpets and accordians.
Number 3
Sufjan Stevens - Illinois

Sufjan Stevens is an angel brought to earth to sing the prettiest songs. Illinois is a wonderful exploration of the Land of Lincoln, and while everyone waxes fervently and rightly over "John Wayne Gacy, Jr." and the hallelujah chorus that is "Chicago," it is a record so laced with gems as to be ostentatious.
Number 2
Cat Power - The Greatest

If you know me, you knew Chan Marshall had to make my list and make it high. It is her voice, low and breathy, that makes her one of the great artists of the early 21st century. There is a nostalgic tone to this record with its jazz influences- it sounds like you could have unearthed it in a thrift store and had Cat Power all to yourself. The sad wistfulness of her lyrics breaks hearts when she opens and intones, taking on the persona of an aging pugilist, "Once I wanted to be the greatest/ no wind or waterfall could stop me." Because, what Cat Power gets that I don't think any other modern performer has tapped into is that for all the days a girl feels invincible, there is a corollary day when she is sure she will never feel that way again. Cat Power writes music to feel vulnerable to.
Number 1
Wilco - Yankee Hotel Foxtrot

Yankee Hotel Foxtrot is Wilco's magnum opus, an album so inspired and intricate that I have listened to it for years the way some scholars study Moby Dick. I am serious. I think this album is perfect. There are worlds inside of Yankee Hotel Foxtrot- boozy country lounges where fliddlers play, monuments to dead ideals, cities of lost voices. There are secrets inside it to unravel. Jeff Tweedy's musical vision is expansive and precise, and it is realized fully in Yankee Hotel Foxtrot.
That's why this girl is sticking with a Top Ten Albums of the 2000s, Love It or Leave It Edition. These are my ten favorite albums released during the past decade, every number counts, and it's a heartbreak to leave out some worthy contributions. That is how a list ought to be.
Be on your toes and you might spot:
Midwestern bias! A weakness for concept albums! White guys with guitars!
Regardless, I hope you'll write your own top 10- it's a fun project.
Number 10
The Dismemberment Plan - Change

There is a parallel universe where even at 26, my hair is Super Grover blue, my nose ring is sparkling, and "Time Bomb" is still my personal anthem. Meanwhile in this dimension, it's still one of those songs I like to shout along with and slap the dashboard to. Change is such a reflective album- the last the Plan would ever put out- it showed a kind of maturation while maintaining a wholly appealing angsty sensibility. It's loud, powerful, and lyrical- a timeless album which will always be one of my favorites.
Number 9
The New Pornographers - Twin Cinema

For sheer, bouncy, mob pop, this Canadian collective is my go-to choice. Twin Cinema is laced with joy, gorgeous vocals, and tremendous percussion. It's a whirling dervish of an album, and every song is gold. And Dan Bejar, you stole my heart the day I bought this cd at Criminal Records.
Number 8
Broken Social Scene - You Forgot It in People

I know, I know- more Canadians. Get used to it. When I grow up, I'm going to move to Montreal, eat fresh bread, live billingual, and room with Leslie Feist. Broken Social Scene was a revelation to me in my first year of college, and I would dance by myself in my dorm room in front of my goldfish. My E-Mac's speakers at their maximum, the songs didn't play so much as shimmer into the air. It is one of those albums everyone can agree is great, so let's leave it at that. If you haven't listened to it, you need to, and you also need to crawl out of the indie rock bunker you've been living in for the better part of a decade.
Number 7
Cursive - Domestica

Domestica is one of the great concept albums. It is the only record I feel truly captures the anxious and harrowing pain of domestic turmoil. It's an intelligent, examined, and terribly sad record. Domestica hits its stride with "The Martyr" where distrust is a refrain, "Sweet baby, don't you cry/ your tears are only alibis." Tim Kasher, the lead singer of Cursive, throws his gravelly voice into the wound, and in 9 songs takes you through a relationship to its bitter end, what I consider one of the great break-up songs of all-time, "The Night I Lost the Will to Fight." It is, from its opening, a explosion and a catharsis, and it leaves you feeling empty when it is gone. "I need a catalyst/to rekindle the flame/that once burned within these fists/where defeat remains."
Number 6
The National - Sad Songs for Dirty Lovers

I am an unrepentant fan of The National- I love the Smog-esque vocals, the pushy beats, and the ambiguous lyrics. Sad Songs for Dirty Lovers is a brilliant, cohesive, and occasionally creepy record. I would argue that the worst thing about indie rock is that bands so often do exactly what you expect them to do- Sad Songs for Dirty Lovers is full of little hiccups of dirge-y, dour sound that surprise.
Number 5
Radiohead - Kid A
Ok, I know I'm ranking it low, but it's a transformative, gorgeous, painfully good record. Thom Yorke is a genius, and Radiohead is the greatest working band of our time. That sounds begrudging, but it's not. If I didn't have Kid A on this list, I would feel like a phony.
Number 4
Arcade Fire - Funeral

Funeral hit me in the gut the first time I listened to it. The lyrics are beautiful, but it's all those lush layers of instrumentation and sound that make it remarkably distinct. There is something so youthful and poignant about the music of Arcade Fire, the way their voices earnestly soar over trumpets and accordians.
Number 3
Sufjan Stevens - Illinois

Sufjan Stevens is an angel brought to earth to sing the prettiest songs. Illinois is a wonderful exploration of the Land of Lincoln, and while everyone waxes fervently and rightly over "John Wayne Gacy, Jr." and the hallelujah chorus that is "Chicago," it is a record so laced with gems as to be ostentatious.
Number 2
Cat Power - The Greatest

If you know me, you knew Chan Marshall had to make my list and make it high. It is her voice, low and breathy, that makes her one of the great artists of the early 21st century. There is a nostalgic tone to this record with its jazz influences- it sounds like you could have unearthed it in a thrift store and had Cat Power all to yourself. The sad wistfulness of her lyrics breaks hearts when she opens and intones, taking on the persona of an aging pugilist, "Once I wanted to be the greatest/ no wind or waterfall could stop me." Because, what Cat Power gets that I don't think any other modern performer has tapped into is that for all the days a girl feels invincible, there is a corollary day when she is sure she will never feel that way again. Cat Power writes music to feel vulnerable to.
Number 1
Wilco - Yankee Hotel Foxtrot

Yankee Hotel Foxtrot is Wilco's magnum opus, an album so inspired and intricate that I have listened to it for years the way some scholars study Moby Dick. I am serious. I think this album is perfect. There are worlds inside of Yankee Hotel Foxtrot- boozy country lounges where fliddlers play, monuments to dead ideals, cities of lost voices. There are secrets inside it to unravel. Jeff Tweedy's musical vision is expansive and precise, and it is realized fully in Yankee Hotel Foxtrot.
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listen with lindsay
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