Hunt for the Wilderpeople (Taika Waititi)
“Me and this fat kid
We ran we ate and read books
And it was the best”
It really was.
Berberian Sound Studio (Peter Strickland)
The obsolete audio technology of the recent past, the demolished innards of violated vegetables and the exquisite, excruciating sounds of the unseen The Equestrian Vortex. Slippery, sickly, elliptical and absolutely gorgeous.
John Wick (Chad Stahelski / David Leitch)
Keanu Reeves gives one of the decade’s greatest physical performances in this flawless action movie masterwork as “the one you send to kill the fucking Boogeyman”. When he snarls emphatically through gritted teeth that he’s back, it's not just John talking. Keanu was back with a vengeance. My most endlessly rewatched film of the decade.
Get Out (Jordan Peele)
I don’t believe in the sniffy, apologist concept of “elevated horror”, but I do believe in Jordan Peele. Holy shit! Disturbingly chilling, depressingly topical and exuberantly crowd-pleasing, Peele hits all the right notes, like a spoon hypnotically scraping the side of a teacup.
One Cut of the Dead (Kamera wo tomeruna!) (Shin'ichirô Ueda)
I summed this up best in my Top Ten of 2018 list: “You will grudgingly admire the 37 minute non-stop single opening shot, but you won’t really understand what all the fuss is about. Hang in there. Your persistence will be rewarded. By the time you reach the end, you’ll get it, I promise. Pom!”
Faces Places (Visages villages) (JR / Agnès Varda)
I could wax rhapsodic about the penultimate feature of La Reine Agnès at length. And I did. Right here.
The Lone Ranger (Gore Verbinski)
I’ve been trying to convert people to the many pleasures of Verbinski’s much-maligned Western for years now (to varying degrees of success), mostly via this blogpost.
Scott Pilgrim vs. the World (Edgar Wright)
I’m still totally in lesbians with it.
Big Hero 6 (Don Hall / Chris Williams)
Killer Joe (William Friedkin)
If Friedkin never makes another narrative feature film, this is a helluva good one to go out on. Grungy, visceral, warped and with just the right amount of nastiness. It’s worth having a read of this Q&A that Friedkin did at the BFI Southbank around the time of the film’s release.
That’s the decade done, but I’ve still got one more list to unveil before the year fades to black. My favourite films of 2019...Coming Soon!
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