View RSS Feed

A Mirror Floating in Water

The Best of Contemporary Cinema

Rating: 4 votes, 5.00 average.
Cinema as it seems has been regarded by some film critics as a lost art, in its prime once but now sold-out to endless Hollywood blockbusters and mindless rom-coms. But this is excessive cynicism for the film art has not died out and in a sense it has even been getting better at what it does, though only in small hidden layers of the film world, with a good deal of the talent coming from non-Hollywood sources. In order to acknowledge some of the best art the cinema has produced in the past 25 years, here is a list of the masterpieces of contemporary cinema:

Coincidently enough, my top two films were made exactly 25 years ago, in 1985.

1. Come and See (1985)- Elem Klimov

An utterly despairing look at war seen through the eyes of a 14-year old boy in the Russian army, who despite only aging a few weeks in the film by the end looks as if he has lived a lifetime. Along with Apocalypse Now, this is the greatest war film I have ever seen, and undoubtedly the most devastating, making Schindler's List or Saving Private Ryan seem fleetingly optimistic.



Never has war been more terrifyingly depicted and never has there been a more frightening depiction of evil than the village scene near the end. But what makes this movie one of the greatest ever made is that unsentimental but deeply profound final scene in which we discover that there still is a human face buried under absolute evil.


2. Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters (1985) - Paul Schrader

Based on the life of the controversial and charismatic Japanese militant Yukio Mishima, director Paul Schrader (writer of Taxi Driver) gives us one of the most unconventional and greatest biopics ever made. Mishima was clearly mildly crazy, his beliefs even crazier (his lifelong political dedication lied in "restoring" Japan to it traditional empire) and Schrader depicts him with not a hint of pathos; instead he gives us a detached and yet profoundly beautiful insight into the man's thought and life, without moralizing or demoralizing him.



Split up into three interweaving sections; scenes in the present on the final days of Mishima's life, scenes from his life (which are in black-and-white), and three adaptations of his short stories filmed with lush Brechtian theatricality (as seen in the picture above). The films masterful minimalist score by Phillip Glass and elegant cinematography is enough to see this film. But the most fascinating thing above all is observing the man himself with his sado-masochistic obsession with his own death, a theme which dominated his works, beliefs, and the film.


3. Werckmeister Harmonies (2000)- Bela Tarr

I have said quite a lot about Bela Tarr's film, calling it the best film of the past decade, but not enough can truly be said about this enigmatic and dream-like masterwork, and yet words always fail me. Running at 140 minutes and comprising of only 39 languidly paced shots, this is a meditative and hypnotic experience.



But more than just an exercise in style (as with all of Tarr's films) it is an allegory on Hungarian politics, and even more so, an atmospheric environment of coldness, dread and fear, examining the chaotic nature of man in a universe in which God has all but disappeared.

4. The Seventh Continent (1989) - Michael Haneke

The most painful and realistic portrait of suicide ever put on film, this Baudrillian examination of modern consumerist society is based on the true story of an Austrian family (a mother, father and daughter) who all commited suicide in home after systematically destroying everything they owned.



And this is what this movie is about. It is a nihilistic deconstruction of all our capitalist materialist values and ends with a quivering image of the modern man's dream, which is in itself, quite empty.

5. Hoop Dreams (1994) - Steve James

Just as Haneke's film is a ode to death, this uniquely American documentary is an ode to life and the American dream. Few films, fiction or non-fiction ever are able to display the wonderful rhythms, surprises, failures and character of life itself, this four-hour documentary does just that. This film has some of the greatest characters in recent cinema, and they are all real!



Basketball is the main subject of this documentary, as two African-American high school students try to make it to the NBA. Beneath the surface is a remarkable study about ambition, competition, race and class in our society.*

*Final sentence taken from Ebert's review.


6. Schindler's List (1993)- Steven Speilberg



7. Pulp Fiction (1994) - Quentin Tarantino



8. Tarnation (2003) - Jonathan Caouette



9. Synecdoche, New York (2008) - Charlie Kauffman



10. Do the Right Thing (1989) - Spike Lee



11. The Thin Red Line - Terrence Malick



12. Mulholland Drive (2002) - David Lynch



13. Crumb (1995)- Terry Zwigoff



14. Fargo(1996) - Joel and Ethan Coen



15. Goodfellas (1990) - Martin Scorsese



16. In the Mood for Love (2000) - Wong Kar-Wai



17. Drugstore Cowboy (1989) - Gus van Sant



18. The Darjeeling Limited (2007) - Wes Anderson



19. City of God (2002) - Fernando Meirelles



20. Le Fils (2002) - Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne



EDIT: This list was edited.

Updated 08-31-2010 at 04:04 PM by DanielBenoit

Categories
Uncategorized

Comments

  1. NikolaiI's Avatar
    But not Avatar? :D

    Cool list. I don't know most of them. I should watch a few someday...

    #20 I liked the first time I watched it a lot more than the second time.
    Updated 08-14-2010 at 04:51 AM by NikolaiI
  2. Lokasenna's Avatar
    Very interesting! I've seen five from the list, but I must admit to not having heard of most of them. Fargo is one of my favourite films, and I'll happily admit to being a big Coen brothers fan.

    But that last one? Seriously? I haven't seen it, but I do know it got poor reviews...

    Edit from Daniel: Here Lokasenna is referring to Where the Wild Things are, which is no longer on the list.
    Updated 08-31-2010 at 04:05 PM by DanielBenoit
  3. Virgil's Avatar
    I'm not a movie buff and certainly not an expert. I have to agree with the ones I've seen in your list, Schindler's List and Goodfellas. And Pulp Fiction is certainly under rated. I think I've seen parts of Where the Wild Things Are and I can't say I'm impressed. I loved the children's book though.

    I saw a critic comment that 2010 has been the worst movie year in the history of film making. Frankly I can't think of a 2010 single movie.
  4. qimissung's Avatar
    I think "Synedoche" got mixed reviews, didn't it? Although that's no real reason for you to not include this on your list.

    My sons love "Goodfellas." I wouldrather not have to watch it again for awhile.

    As to "Where the Wild Things Are" I'm pretty sure that the author,Maurice Sendak, is wild about Spike.

    But my personal favorite is "Days of Heaven" directed by Terence Malik. A movie sublime. Terence Malik spent some of his growing up years in my hometown of Bartlesville. I haven't seen "The Thin Red Line" but perhaps I will try to. Some of these movies I could not watch. Let's just say it's easy for me to go to the dark places.
  5. DanielBenoit's Avatar
    Quote Originally Posted by Lokasenna
    But that last one? Seriously? I haven't seen it, but I do know it got poor reviews...
    Well on the Rotten Tomatoes meter (used by all critics mind you) it got a 73% good reviews. It did get somewhat mixed reviews because it was considered "too dark" for children and since the script is by Dave Eggers one must not expect another Up.

    Also, prominent critic A.O. Scott named it the best movie of 2009 and placed it at number 5 in his best of the decade list. My opinion pretty much reflects his.

    Quote Originally Posted by Virgil
    I'm not a movie buff and certainly not an expert. I have to agree with the ones I've seen in your list, Schindler's List and Goodfellas. And Pulp Fiction is certainly under rated. I think I've seen parts of Where the Wild Things Are and I can't say I'm impressed. I loved the children's book though.
    Pulp Fiction underratted? It's only been the most influencial film of the best 25 years, launced Tarantino's career, and has undergone the most thorough critical analysis since 2001: A Space Odyssey. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulp_Fi...tical_analysis

    I saw a critic comment that 2010 has been the worst movie year in the history of film making. Frankly I can't think of a 2010 single movie.
    I suppose after following a truly great year we must always have a dud. And though I do find that critic's comment as a hyperbole, I can't think of any movies that I've willed myself to see this year, nor can I think of many film that critics have particuarly lauded over (the ones that come to mind are Inception and a few others)

    Quote Originally Posted by qimissung
    I think "Synedoche" got mixed reviews, didn't it? Although that's no real reason for you to not include this on your list.
    Just as with great movies like 2001: A Space Odysessy or any number of Buster Keaton's films, they too were met with mixed critical reaction, it was not until a few decades later that they were universally regarded as masterpieces. Synedoche I think will eventually find itself in this pantheon of flims.

    But my personal favorite is "Days of Heaven" directed by Terence Malik. A movie sublime. Terence Malik spent some of his growing up years in my hometown of Bartlesville. I haven't seen "The Thin Red Line" but perhaps I will try to. Some of these movies I could not watch. Let's just say it's easy for me to go to the dark places.
    I feel embarresed to say that I've never seen Days of Heaven nor any of Malick's other films besides The Thin Red Line.


    Hoop Dreams I think is one of the more accessible films on the list and I could not recommend it more highly than to everyone. Along with that, maybe City of God, which is like a Brazillian Goodfellas (though of course, it is much different in many ways). Both are to my mind easily findable at the local video store. But just as a shameless plug for netflix, all of these films are viewable on netflix, some even streaming instantly.
    Updated 08-14-2010 at 02:32 PM by DanielBenoit
  6. Virgil's Avatar
    Pulp Fiction seems under rated by people. I don't know. Perhaps it has received its fair due. I'm not a movie expert.
  7. Buh4Bee's Avatar
    There were several films on this list that I was glad to see like Goodfellas. I watched Werckmeister Harmonies with my husband and we were both slightly confused at the end. Our reaction may have been a such, because it is a foreign film. Despite this, we recognized that it is a good movie on several levels. Synecdoche, New York, for us, was weird. We did enjoy the physiological societal commentary. City of God and Chop Shop were both easy to watch and powerful. I will add a few more of these movies to my netflix. Please keep sharing films.
    Updated 08-15-2010 at 12:26 AM by Buh4Bee
  8. DanielBenoit's Avatar
    Quote Originally Posted by jersea
    There were several films on this list that I was glad to see like Goodfellas. I watched Werckmeister Harmonies with my husband and we were both slightly confused at the end. Our reaction may have been a such, because it is a foreign film. Despite this, we recognized that it is a good movie on several levels. Synecdoche, New York, for us, was weird. We did enjoy the physiological societal commentary. City of God and Chop Shop were both easy to watch and powerful. I will add a few more of these movies to my netflix. Please keep sharing films.
    Ahh nice to see you jersea! How's the baby?

    Werckmeister Harmonies is vexing I'm sure to the first viewer, but one best way of looking at it, and many films in fact, is not as a story or plot, but as an environment in which we discover things and experience things, kind of like a painting. I can never tire of quoting Tarr on the nature of narrative and how he uses it in his films; "I despise stories, as they mislead people into believing that something has happened. In fact, nothing really happens as we flee from one condition to another ... All that remains is time. This is probably the only thing that's still genuine -- time itself; the years, days, hours, minutes and seconds."