Tuesday, January 2, 2018

Rex Reed's 10 best movies of 2017



Let's do informal personality profiles. If you could only watch three of these, which would they be? And which one do you have the least interest interest in watching?

THE 10 BEST MOVIES OF 2017
'The Post' Reviews What Are Critics Saying
Meryl Streep in ‘The Post.’ 20th Century Fox
The Post. At a critical time for the future of journalistic integrity, Steven Spielberg’s polished plea for the vital importance and protection of freedom of the press as guaranteed by the United States Constitution in a Democratic process couldn’t be more relevant. Meryl Streep as creative publisher Kay Graham and Tom Hanks as passionate editor Ben Bradlee, who defied the law to publish the Pentagon Papers, head a perfect ensemble cast to recreate a historic chapter in the life of the great Washington Post that led to Watergate, the impeachment of a second-rate president, and the kind of truth in journalism that changed the course of American history. In the same vein as All the President’s Men, this is an exemplary film that blends facts, suspense, and entertainment value into not only the best film of the year, but one of the best films ever made.

Armie Hammer and Timothée Chalamet in ‘Call Me by Your Name.’ Sony Pictures Classics
Call Me By Your Name. Tender, heartbreaking study of first love by Luca Guadagnino about a sensitive, inexperienced teenager’s passionate crush on an older college graduate student who is spending a six-week summer apprenticeship with the boy’s archaeologist father at the family’s villa in Northern Italy. Lush, nuanced, emotionally believable and filled with wisdom and passion, it’s a rare film about feelings instead of action, devoid of cliches and dumb dialogue.
Lady Bird Saoirse Ronan Greta Gerwig
Saoirse Ronan shines in ‘Lady Bird.’ A24
Lady BirdActress Greta Gerwig’s hit debut as writer-director chronicles the keenly observed semi-autobiographical details in the painful coming-of-age years of a confused and desperate California teen with sharp insight and a fresh wit rarely found in American movies. Sealed with extraordinary performances by Saoirse Ronan as the girl who escapes the mundane by calling herself “Lady Bird,” Broadway’s Laurie Metcalf as her mother, Pulitzer-winning playwright Tracy Letts as her weak, sympathetic father, and Lucas Hedges and Call Me By Your Name breakout performer Timothee Chalamet as her boyfriend, this is a triumph on several levels at once.

Gemma Arterton as Catrin Cole in ‘Their Finest.’ STX Entertainment
Their FinestSkillfully directed, marvelously written and acted without a trace of artificial period self-consciousness, and a real eye-opener about how women were recruited to keep the British film industry alive during the London Blitz in World War Two, this exemplary film opened too early in the year to draw the proper attention and suffered the fate of being criminally overlooked. Too bad. It’s a much better film about the war than Dunkirk, including action sequences in the same setting that are better staged.

Ben Stiller in ‘Brad’s Status.’ Movieclips Trailer/Youtube
Brad’s StatusNot much rewarding jingle of coins at the box office, but this carefully written, directed and acted film about mid-life crisis showcased the most fully realized performance of Ben Stiller’s career as a Sacramento businessman who seems like a pillar of success until he tries to get his son into an Ivy League college, then sees the roads he didn’t take.  Shuttling between rejections at Harvard, Williams, Amherst and Tufts, he begins to think he’s not the role model his family thinks he is. At the end of a long, frustrating weekend, it’s his son who teaches him about his true status in life, and Brad discovers he’s luckier than the peer group he envies for all the wrong reasons. Writer-director Mike White is a big but subtle talent. His film really says something important about modern American life, and Stiller’s range and experience pay off handsomely in a performance of unexpected sweetness, naturalism and charm.

Margot Robbie as Tonya Harding in ‘I, Tonya.’ Neon
I, TonyaMargot Robbie’s career-transforming performance as disgraced champion skater Tonya Harding is honest, poignant, vulgar, two-fisted and laugh-out-loud funny. There is never a wasted moment in this headline-grabbing tale of American fame-chasing desperation on the ice, and the real facts behind the notorious case are riveting. Sebastian Stan as Tonya’s larcenous husband and especially a volcanic eruption called Allison Janney as the profane, chain-smoking white trash mother from Hell add vitriol and violence to a film as fascinating as a tabloid scandal.

Mary J. Blige and Carey Mulligan in ‘Mudbound.’ Steve Dietl/Netflix
Mudbound. The hardscrabble lives of two families of Delta sharecroppers—one white, one black—are interwoven through lean decades of poverty, challenge and farming barren land, while connecting the dots of racism, war, religion, adultery and murder. It’s a saga with an abundance of over-ripe narrative, but the firm hand and clear vision of writer-director Dee Rees gives the labyrinthine plot a balanced coherence that never flags.

Annette Bening in ‘Film Stars Don’t Die in Liverpool.’ Film Stars Don’t Die in Liverpool
Film Stars Don’t Die in Liverpool. The final tragic days of faded glamour girl and Oscar winning actress Gloria Grahame, dying of cancer in the care of a British family that took her in to protect her from the cruel scrutiny of Hollywood and give her peace and dignity at the end. A tremendous centerpiece display of vulnerability, disclosure and radiance by Annette Bening lifts a sad film above the status of a three-hankie tearjerker and leaves the viewer feeling moved and benevolent.

Melissa Leo in ‘Novitiate.’ Sony Pictures Classics
NovitiateAn enlightening and intelligently balanced study of life in a convent that is nothing less than boot camp for nuns, where one modern girl clashes with the harshness of antiquated Roman Catholic doctrine. It investigates with soulful searching and self-doubt the changing ideologies of the church, experienced by bewildered but dedicated postulants on the verge of womanhood struggling daily with spirituality under stress. A great performance by Melissa Leo as a stern, manipulative Mother Superior shattered and eventually disillusioned by the changing values of nuns who abandon their traditional roles as brides of Christ in favor of radical feminism.

Patty O’Neil, Jake Gyllenhaal and Miranda Richardson in Stronger. Lionsgate and Roadside Attractions
Stronger. Another solid, detailed character study in the ever-evolving career of Jake Gyllenhaal, about the sober, gimlet-eyed tragedy of Jeff Bauman, the 28-year-old blue-collar Costco employee who lost both legs in the terrorist bombing at the 2013 Boston marathon. I liked it because it was not so much about the actual event as the aftermath, which shows how an innocent victim fought back with physical and spiritual strengths he didn’t know he had in order to survive, the life-changing effects on the lives of the friends and family who loved him, and how he became a reluctant symbol of heroism, dignity and hope. I’m a sucker for these survival stories that show the best side of man’s humanity, and Mr. Gyllenhaal makes Stronger a stronger achievement than most.
And honorable mentions to Phantom Thread, BreatheVictoria and AbdulWonder Wheel, Maudie, and Wind River.
THE 10 WORST MOVIES OF 2017 need no additional comments, therefore I won’t make any. They are:
  1. Mother!
  2. The Disaster Artist
  3. Get Out
  4. The Layover
  5. The Cure for Wellness
  6. It
  7. Downsizing
  8. Suburbicon
  9. Colossal
  10. Fallen
  11. http://observer.com/2017/12/rex-reeds-10-best-movies-and-10-worst-movies-of-2017/ 

48 comments:

Dust Bunny Queen said...

I would watch:

Call Me By Your Name I like archaeology and the scenery would be interesting too. If the interaction between the characters is not overly done, it could be good.

Their Finest. WWII History is always of interest to me. Bletchley Circle the TV show was very fascinating. I recommend it for the story and all the costumes, decor and historical settings.

Mudbound I would hope it to be a study of how people in the same circumstances can come together or at least get some understanding. Again a historical setting.

Not interested in The Post I live through that crappy time and don't need to see any more political indoctrination movies. It would just piss me off....probably. I want to be entertained and not lectured to in a ham handed way.

deborah said...

Shoot. Originally I was going to say choose five movies, which is how many I am interested in. But I thought it would be interesting to whittle it down to see what choices would be made.

My five are

Ladybird...always up for a girl coming-of-age movie.

Brad's Status...I noticed Ben Stiller had grown in his acting abilities in the Netflix original movie, "The Meyerowitz Chronicles (New and Selected)," with Dustin Hoffman and Adam Sandler. (Sandler had grown also.)

I, Tonya...looks promising and funny.

Mudbound...interesting to see race play out in a share-cropper setting. Integration before red-lining and bussing

Novitiate...I like movies about the interplay in the convents. Old versus new ideas.

deborah said...

DBQ, in general I'm not drawn to historical works. I don't trust at all the Hollywood take. For example I would have liked to watch Streep do Thatcher, but I understand it was not politically accurate.

ndspinelli said...

Darkest Hour focuses on the few weeks following Churchill being made PM. The performance by Gary Oldham is outstanding. But, being an unabashed conservative, I will be surprised if he wins any awards.

Mumpsimus said...

I'd only heard of one of them. And having read the capsule reviews, you'd have to pay me pretty well to go see any of them.

I had no idea Rex Reed was still alive.

Amartel said...

I, Tonya and maybe Brad's Status are the only two that look worthwhile. The rest of them may be well made but, in each case, I've heard that lecture already and one too many times at that. This is the ENTERTAINMENT industry. So entertain. Find a way.
I have high hopes for I, Tonya but only so long as it skewers not just poor deplorable Tonya & Family but also the media deplorables who flogged that story for weeks and weeks for ratings. Tonya did an awful thing but she also bravely went along with her designated starring role as Disgusting White Trash Bitch in that particular circus. It doesn't make up for having Nancy Kerrigan literally whacked but it's something, and it makes her interesting. I wonder if they'll give her any credit and whether they'll take any of the blame.

ricpic said...

"....nuns who abandon their traditional roles as Brides of Christ in favor of radical feminism."

Well of course. That's the only way allowable. Abandoning radical feminism in favor of becoming Brides of Christ JUST ISN'T DONE!!!

Amartel said...

The Handmaid's Tale is about leftist feminists.
Shhhh. Don't tell them projectors project.

edutcher said...

Rex Reed's taste and mine are nowhere alike.

For which I am eternally grateful.

chickelit said...

Shrugs all around.

Did Bezos finance "The Post"? It sounds like a propaganda piece. I resented how Spielberg insinuated his movie "Lincoln" into the CA public school system.

Watching the Oscars used to be a big deal at our house. It was even a big deal online with different people live blogging or live tweeting it. Those days are gone.

It's hard for me to look at any of the reviews of these movies without seeing an agenda. That's how poisoned my opinion of Hollywood is.

Dear corrupt left, go F yourselves said...

12. Hillaryood dies in a fire, the end.

I'd see that.

Fr Martin Fox said...

Thumbs down:

The Post sounds awfully formulaic. As someone at NR (I think) pointed out, Nixon -- however much a villain he may have been -- was not particularly a villain in the Pentagon Papers. He wasn't protecting himself, but rather LBJ and JFK, and perhaps Ike too. Nixon didn't particularly like any of them, although perhaps he forgave Ike, I don't know. So his protecting their secrets was probably about protecting the country. So if The Post doesn't get this right, as some reviews say, then it'll go down a predictable road. No thanks.

Call Me By Your Name. This whole thing is repulsive; and no, I am not reacting mainly to the homosexual angle. It's the obvious special treatment for what would otherwise be a creepy premise. A grad student has a fling with a high school age kid. Nope, nothing problematic about that.

I might go see:

- The film about the women in WWII, the one about Tonya Harding, and the one about the Boston bombing victim. If they show up in my local theater. I had to drive 45 mins to see "Darkest Hour" -- it wasn't in my local place.

Methadras said...

I'm a little surprised that The Shape of Water wasn't included. I really liked that movie.

chickelit said...

@Dick: If Hollywood for once made an honest movie about the Rodham/Weinstein axis of political evil I'd go see it. There are probably several anti-Trump screeds approaching full gestation, due out instead.

Methadras said...

Dickin'Bimbos@Home said...
12. Hillaryood dies in a fire, the end.

I'd see that.


I'd pay to watch Hillary immolating for a couple of hours and then demand it wins an Oscar as the best film ever.

Fr Martin Fox said...

Oh, and maybe, just maybe I'll go see the Ben Stiller movie, because (this is convoluted, sorry!)...

I hate everything I've seen him in, and I figure, he can't always be terrible, right? He's usually doing comedy -- and that's what I didn't like. So maybe a dramatic turn is just the thing?

Who am I kidding? On a to-do list where I cross off maybe four or five items, that's down at number eight.

The Dude said...

Try as I might I can't remember the last movie I saw in a theater. I am pretty sure it was King Kong, the Second Remake! It was okay, well, actually it sucked, and I liked the previous two versions better, Fay Wray and Jessica Lange were the four reasons I liked those movies more than the 2005 one.

Funny story, though, at least from my perspective - I took my girlfriend to that movie, and for whatever reason I figured she was familiar with the story. Of course, as a youth, I had seen the 1933 version at least a half dozen times, it was just that good, and I saw the 1976 version, but apparently she hadn't seen either one. So she cried when the big monkey died. I know, it was an ape, and a CGI ape at that, but she didn't see that coming. Fascinating.

Thus ended my seeing movies in the theater career.

deborah said...

FMF, it's not a given the boy's crush is acted on or returned. It's likely a young man gently letting down a love-sick teen.

Meth, The Shape of Water is mentioned in the main article, but panned as weird, or the like. I thought Reed's description seemed intriguing, though.

I dislike seeing movies in the theater...too damn loud.

Fr Martin Fox said...

Deborah said:

FMF, it's not a given the boy's crush is acted on or returned. It's likely a young man gently letting down a love-sick teen.

The things I've read about the movie make it clear that the grad student and the high school boy have sex.

Fr Martin Fox said...

Deborah:

I would be delighted to see a movie in which a grad student "gently let down" a high schooler crushing on him.

From Hollywood? Not. Going. To. Happen.

Fr Martin Fox said...

So much of the Hollywood/entertainment/marketing crowd are perverts. They have been sexualizing kids for decades. That's what they do in public -- right in front of our eyes.

So I'm not in the least surprised to learn about the Nero-like behavior behind closed doors.

deborah said...

Amartel:

"This is the ENTERTAINMENT industry. So entertain. Find a way."

It does depend on what you find entertaining. I like some comedies, spy thrillers, psychological suspense, e.g., "Doubt," with Phillip Seymour Hoffman, which I have not seen yet, but want to, and all-around excellent dramas such as The Apostle, starring Robert Duvall.

Doubt: "A Catholic school principal [a nun] questions a priest's ambiguous relationship with a troubled young student."
-IMDB

Amartel said...

Hollywood is always messing about with religion and the religious then patting themselves on the back for being "brave" when it's not. It's really about cultivating new members for their secular religion, either peeling people away entirely from traditional religion or colonizing secular religion outposts within the church. The call is coming from inside the house!

Meanwhile, all this time they have behaved EXACTLY like the RC Church did (initially, anyway) with regard to allegations of not just sex harassment but underage sex. Lalalala. We meant well. Not acknowledging the institutional problem. Actually, the Church came around rather quickly for it's age and dignity and built-in conservatism. The entertainment industry is still in denial about it being a systemic problem and probably still protecting Very Important Perverts.

The movie about the grad student and the high school boy? They bang. (Per a review I read.) It's cinematic and uplifting and a rite of passage/invitation to barf. Blah blah blah. It's Lifetime for gays. Soft core porn. Brace for awards for bravely portraying the gay in scenic soft focus Italy.

Amartel said...

Doubt was just okay, and this was a movie starring Phillip Seymour Hoffman, one of my faves. RIP.
The problem with Hollywood now is that it has repackaged the same old tropes so many times that even interesting subject matter becomes dull. Doubt accurately portrayed how many of the pervert priests were so deep in their lies that it's hard to find them out. They lie to themselves. PSH was good at portraying that. That was the good part. The rest was just whining about male privilege. It's not a mistake that a nun is the one doing the questioning. That's the outrage off ramp to complaining about the unequal role of men and women in the church, a legitimate complaint, but it's been done the same way so many times that it falls on deaf ears. Not entertaining.

deborah said...

Thanks for the heads up, Am. I wasn't sure if maybe it was the nun imagining things, etc. But if it's just 'okay,' I won't worry about seeing it.

Yes, losing PSH was terrible. One of the greats.

Amartel said...

I'm an uppity, impatient churl with a short attention span so take that into account. If it was medieval times I would totally throw rotten produce at my would be troubador overlords. Boo! Get off the stage!!

deborah said...

Noted Amartel :)

Dust Bunny Queen said...

Call Me By Your Name. This whole thing is repulsive; and no, I am not reacting mainly to the homosexual angle. It's the obvious special treatment for what would otherwise be a creepy premise

I wasn't aware of the homosexual angle in that movie. I am not anti homosexual at all. I am anti having an agenda being shoved in my face, so I may have to read the blurbs about the movies a bit more carefully.

Actually, most of those movies that the reviewer thought were great don't really appeal to me.

The Shape of Water is mentioned in the main article, but panned as weird

I like weird movies. That is a movie that I can see myself being interested in watching.

deborah said...

re weird movies, me too. And Meth liked it.

chickelit said...

The things I've read about the movie make it clear that the grad student and the high school boy have sex

Then it's a shoo-in for a "Best Picture" nomination (or even a win) in the same vain as "Brokeback Mountain", MILK," and "Moonlight." Hollywood can never lecture us enough about sensitivity towards gays and ego-stroking the makers of such films with awards. They won't quit until every Academy member is anointed.

Dear corrupt left, go F yourselves said...

I'm talking about everyone at the Golden Globes- Oscars - THEY DIE IN A FIRE.

Just a pretend movie. Thumbs up!

Dear corrupt left, go F yourselves said...

I watched a cute little film about cats in Istanbul last night. Called "Kedi".
Good!

Dear corrupt left, go F yourselves said...

I agree -I don't want to see more gay male sex/love story. Enough already.

Dear corrupt left, go F yourselves said...

I refuse to pay for anything with STreep in it. She can actually die in a fire and I'd celebrate.

Dear corrupt left, go F yourselves said...

Hollywood is one giant 'shove the lefist agenda in your face" motivational poster.

Just say no.

Dear corrupt left, go F yourselves said...

There is a move you forgot. It's about our fine military vets. I will find the name.

>>>> I cannot remember.

Dear corrupt left, go F yourselves said...

Hillarywood steers you into the movies THEY want you to see. Crap with over-rated Streep or garbage movies called "Manchester by the sea" with bad acting from guys named afleck.

They ignore the ones they want you to skip.

Like this one: Thank you for your service

I have not watched it yet. Christian Toto, one of Hillarywood's non-leftist movie critics - liked it a lot.

Dear corrupt left, go F yourselves said...

Then it's a shoo-in for a "Best Picture" nomination (or even a win) in the same vain as "Brokeback Mountain", MILK," and "Moonlight." Hollywood can never lecture us enough about sensitivity towards gays and ego-stroking the makers of such films with awards. They won't quit until every Academy member is anointed.

After the award ceremony, they all get together and tag team the underaged in Harvey's hot tub.

Dear corrupt left, go F yourselves said...

Stronger looks promising. You know I hi-jacked the bottom so - I'm splashing out.
Waghahagjaaa~!

ndspinelli said...

Dick channeling Dennis Miller.

deborah said...

Dick's indicknant.

Laurie Metcalf is in Lady Bird...plays the mom...more than half the reason I want to see it.

Fr Martin Fox said...

Amartel --

Brave would be a no holds barred film about the founder of Islam.

Any day now.

Any...

Day...

Now...

Amartel said...

With a bunch of ladies standing around talking about their doubts about the prophet and his unusually close relationship with 8 year old girls. Hmm, I'm a loyal muslim but I have some suspicions, some ... DOUBT. Dunh dunh duuuuuuuuuuhn.

Amartel said...

I forgot there's also a racial aspect to Doubt. The child in question is the one black child in the class. THE ONLY ONE. And he's possibly being molested. Eleventy. Outrageramp. See, Doubt isn't really about the Church at all, or about doubts about religion, it's about being angry with men and white people and their patriarchal white church. Islam, which has dealt much more unfairly with women and nonwhite peoples worldwide, is unapologetic about its awful history and somehow it's not a "white" religion or problematically patriarchal and is above, or possibly below, reproach.

deborah said...

Is there any doubt left at the end...is it an ambiguous ending at all?

Methadras said...

Hollywoods obsession with how other fags stalk, induct, and recruit each other into their hall of gay is about as annoying and pretentious as the people who peddle that shit. We get it, it's the only way you can bring fresh meat into the fold because we breeders still make them for you.

Amartel said...

The doubt about religion becomes kind of a side issue as I recollect. The priest (PSW) steps down or resigns or gets moved to another posting in a move that's supposed to mirror the way some dioceses handled allegations of momestation. This allows the ladies a reason to condemn and talk about their doubts some more but I don't think the issue of guilt or innocence is fully decided. The priest doesn't confess but he doesn't have to because the movie lays it out for the viewer: circumstantial evidence + getting moved + being a white patriarch = guilt. Which is what they should have called the movie, Guilt. That's my memory but it has been a long time since I saw the movie.

deborah said...

Thanks, Amartel. It'll be fun to watch after this discussion.