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The Best and Worst of 2008

8740 2008: The Best and the Worst

It’s been a rocky old year, no two ways about it, and the quality of the movies has been every bit as up and down as the stock market. Just look at the year’s two Coen Brothers’ movies to see what I mean: on the one hand, the superb thriller No Country For Old Men, arguably their best movie for a decade… And on the other, Burn After Reading, a chilly, thrown-together farce that’s drastically short on laughs.

Lest we forget, the year began on a series of dramatic highs: Hollywood has no faith in its ability to reach an audience interested in serious drama without the hoopla of potential Oscar rewards. That means an unreasonable number of the year’s best releases were sandwiched into the first three months of 2008. There Will Be Blood, Juno and The Diving Bell And The Butterfly were all released on the same day, February 8th – and by then we’d already had No Country for Old Men, 4 Months, 3 Weeks & 2 Days, Sweeney Todd, Lust Caution, Charlie Wilson’s War, In The Valley Of Elah, The Savages, Before The Devil Knows You’re Dead and Cloverfield.

Imagine if every month was like this! Unreasonable, I know – so how about this modest proposal: why don’t the distributors stop putting their eggs in one basket and release these quality pictures more evenly across the year. Maybe, just maybe, those older audiences who have lost the moviegoing-habit could be lured back. Instead, the cinema business is pinning its hopes on 3D. We’ll wish ’em luck and snap up those Blu-Ray bargains, thanks.

Mind you, this summer was better than most. Indiana Jones And The Kingdom Of The Crystal Skull didn’t live up to expectations, but Iron Man set high standards in the blockbuster stakes, and Hellboy II: The Golden Army was another treat. Pixar came up with one of their very best films, WALL-E – one of several strong animated movies, some for the family (Horton Hears a Who; Kung Fu Panda), and some just for fans of graphic novels (Persepolis; Waltz with Bashir).

And then there was The Dark Knight, a phenomenal picture, not least because it combined must-see status with challenging themes and a deeply troubled intimation that society is teetering on the brink of anarchy. I don’t mean to take anything away from Christopher Nolan when I say that much of the film’s impact derives from Heath Ledger’s amazing performance as the Joker. What with Javier Bardem’s professional killer in No Country For Old Men and Daniel Day Lewis as the driven oil man in There Will Be Blood, it was a hell of a year for villains.

Ledger died in January, tragically early in his career. We also lost the directors Sidney Pollack and Anthony Minghella, Jules Dassin, and the actors Charlton Heston, Paul Newman, Cyd Charisse, Bernie Mac, Richard Widmark and Guillaume Depardieu, among too many others to mention. And your friendly neighbourhood film critic? He’s ailing fast.

The election of Barack Obama apart, 2008 hasn’t exactly been a time for optimism and good cheer, and more often than not, the movies have reflected that downbeat mood; some intentionally – some through sheer ineptitude (see my annual flock of Christmas Turkeys, below).

Which is all the more reason to cheer the success of comedy guru Judd Apatow. Scarcely a month went by without a new flick bearing his fingerprints, as writer, director or producer. Not all of them were good (Drillbit Taylor; You Don’t Mess with the Zohan) but between them, Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story; Forgetting Sarah Marshall; Pineapple Express and Step Brothers mustered enough laughs to throw the impending recession into relief. To these I would add Stephen Chow’s splendid children’s film CJ7, Garth Jennings’ Son Of Rambow and Jason Reitman’s Juno as desperately needed reminders that the movies have an important role to play in helping us through the tough times.

Now: more lists!

Send us your lists. Don't agree with ours? Fair enough. Send us your lists and your reasons why to lists@lovefilm.com

Tom Charity
Tom.charity@lovefilm.com

The Faces of the Year

  • Heath Ledger - (The Dark Knight)

    Heath Ledger

    (The Dark Knight)
  • Daniel Day Lewis - (There Will Be Blood)

    Daniel Day Lewis

    (There Will Be Blood)
  • Josh Brolin  - (No Country for Old Men; In the Valley of Elah; American Gangster; W; Milk)

    Josh Brolin

    (No Country for Old Men; In the Valley of Elah; American Gangster; W; Milk)
  • Philip Seymour Hoffman  - (Charlie Wilson’s War; Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead; The Savages; Synecdoche, New York; Doubt)

    Philip Seymour Hoffman

    (Charlie Wilson’s War; Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead; The Savages; Synecdoche, New York; Doubt)
  • Tina Fey - (Baby Mama; Sarah Palin)

    Tina Fey

    (Baby Mama; Sarah Palin)
  • James Franco   - Pineapple Express; In the Valley of Elah; Milk)

    James Franco

    (Pineapple Express; In the Valley of Elah; Milk)
  • Robert Downey Jr  - (Iron Man; Tropic Thunder)

    Robert Downey Jr

    (Iron Man; Tropic Thunder)
  • Tina Fey - (Baby Mama; Sarah Palin)

    Angelina Jolie

    (Changeling; Wanted)
  • James Franco   - Pineapple Express; In the Valley of Elah; Milk)

    Russell Brand

    (Forgetting Sarah Marshall)

Top 10 of the Year

  • 10 - Man on Wire

    Man on Wire

    The documentary of the year. A thrilling story about a 17-year-old Frenchman with a dream to walk along the top of the world.

  • 9 - The Dark Knight

    The Dark Knight

    It's too long and too much, sometimes, but no blockbuster has felt so punched in to the times or dared to risk such extremes.

  • 8 - Mad Detective

    Mad Detective

    The quirkiest cop thriller in yonks, a delightfully bizarre Hong Kong caper about a detective with second sight and a shaky grip on reality.

  • 7 - The Edge of Heaven

    The Edge of Heaven

    Terrific German movie with a Pulp Fiction structure. Mothers and daughters, fathers and sons explore the continental divide.

  • 6 - Appaloosa

    Appaloosa

    Not just the best Western in ages but a terrific, unpretentious piece of moviemaking all round, with stellar turns from Ed Harris, Viggo Mortenson and Renee Zellweger.

  • 5 - Hunger

    Hunger

    Stunning debut film by Steve McQueen, this tackles a difficult subject (IRA hunger strikers in the Maze prison) with singular and original force.

  • 4 - Persepolis

    Persepolis

    Proof that the mature content of the graphic novel can work just as well in movie form. Frank, funny and disarming autobiography from Iranian-abroad Marjane Satrapi.

  • 3 - No Country for Old Men

    No Country for Old Men

    The Coens' killer thriller was this year's Best Picture at the Oscars.

  • 2 - WALL-E

    WALL-E

    Movie magic from Pixar. Granted the second half is only really, really good, but the nearly wordless first 40 minutes or so is worthy of Charlie Chapin and Stanley Kubrick.

  • 1 - There Will Be Blood

    There Will Be Blood

    Talking of Kubrick and wordless openings, this genius movie from Paul Thomas Anderson covers those bases too. It's a formidable, ferocious picture, dominated by Daniel Day Lewis's indelible portrait of a deranged capitalist.

Tom's Christmas Turkeys

  • 10 - Fly Me to the Moon

    Fly Me to the Moon

    Could put 3-D back into the 1950s.

  • 9 - Eagle Eye

    Eagle Eye

    A big budget techy thriller that borrowed from all over but made no sense whatsoever.

  • 8 - 88 Minutes

    88 Minutes

    Al Pacino has 88 minutes to live… and this mindbogglingly dumb movie dies agonizingly slowly.

  • 7 - Sex and the City - The Movie

    Sex and the City - The Movie

    A toss up whether this is worse than The Women, but both should have been so much better.

  • 6 - Fool's Gold

    Fool's Gold

    Kate Hudson and Matthew McConaughey's vacation snaps would have been more amusing.

  • 5 - Australia

    Australia

    Epic romantic tosh from Down Under.

  • 4 - The X Files - I Want to Believe

    The X Files - I Want to Believe

    Cack-handed non-thriller, a sorry end for a beloved franchise.

  • 3 - The Mummy - Tomb of the Dragon Emperor

    The Mummy - Tomb of the Dragon Emperor

    It doesn't get much sloppier than this. A mummy movie without a mummy. Rachel Weisz gave it a wide berth too.

  • 2 - Incendiary

    Incendiary

    I guess it meant well, but this attempt to tackle the devastating effects of terrorism on your average South London slapper got it so so wrong.

  • 1 - Funny Games

    Funny Games

    Michael Haneke is a very talented filmmaker but this shot for shot American remake was an arrogant, pointless scold and the very worst reason to see a film all year.

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