OT: My Favorite Film of 2021
We're two years into the 2020s...and it sure has been hard for me to pick a "personal favorite" film for each of the two years of the decade so far.
So little was released in COVID year 2020 (I think only Unhinged and Tenet made it to theaters) that I chose the 60 Year Anniversary Re-Release of Psycho as my favorite of 2020. I DID see it at a theater, and it DID have some new footage (30 seconds worth), so...there you go. Psycho ends up being the only movie on my entire 70 or so year long list(I don't do the 30s or 40s) to land there TWICE.
I'm "mainstream movie snob" enough to say that, seventies personal best lists sure had a lot more masterpieces and/or hit great films that my 2000s list. Behold:
1970: MASH the Movie
1971: Dirty Harry
1972: The Godfather
1973: American Graffiti
1974: Chinatown
1975: Jaws
1976: The Shootist
1977: Black Sunday
1978: Animal House
1979: North Dallas Forty
vs:
2000: The Perfect Storm
2001: Moulin Rouge
2002: Chicago
2003: Love Actually
2004: Sideways
2005: King Kong
2006: The Departed
2007: Charlie Wilson's War
2008: The Dark Knight
2009: Inglorious Basterds
Well, maybe, now...I dunno...pretty good movies on both lists I guess.
Anyway, the 2020s have started with my having to "stunt cast" Psycho for 2020(where it will stay) but I got one for 2021, I think:
Licorice Pizza.
The movie attracted a lot of rather desperate ink because the maker is a bona fide auteur named Paul Thomas Anderson -- "PTA" for short to avoid confusion with the ultra-twee Wes Anderson and assorted lesser Andersons out there.
Rather like Quentin Tarantino, PTA had a low-profile first film (Hard Eight/Reservoir Dogs) followed by a big deal, Oscar-grazing Sophomore Big Hit(Boogie NIghts/Pulp Fiction)
Boogie Nights which was mainly about the porn industry, but also about the shift from the 70's to the 80s.)
With film after film, PTA "made his bones" as an auteur to be respected, and, most of the time as a maker of "art films," which means (to me) ...incomprehensible, but worth pondering and digging into.
Critics (and me) love to organize a filmakers work, and I think with PTA we get:
"The San Fernando Valley of LA Stories" (Boogie Nights, Magnolia, Punch Drunk Love, Licorice Pizza)
The period art films (There Will Be Blood, The Master, is The Phantom Thread period? I've never seen that one.)
and...what else? Well, Inherent VIce is set in parts of LA largely OTHER than the San Fernando Valley so...close enough.
And I can't remember WHERE Hard Eight is set (I saw it many years ago.)
I suppose when one removes the truly monumental art film "There Will Be Blood" from the mix, and The Master, and The Phantom Thread..one is left with a "quirky 70's nostalgia art films set in Los Angeles." Which is good enough for me.
Until 2021 and Licorice Pizza, none of PTA's movies were really mainstream and/or traditionally entertaining to me to make my personal favorite list.
That said, Magnolia of 1999 comes close. I remember being somewhat awed both by the beginning of the film(a treatise on real-life coincidental events) and the nutcase finale( a rain of frogs from the sky who land on the many disparate characters and change all of their lives.) I loved Aimee Mann's songs and soundtrack. Bought the album and drove around listening to it like ALL the time in 2000.
I was astonished by Tom Cruise's willingness to play a "part of the ensemble role" as the most suprisingly foul-mouthed movie star since Paul Newman in Slapshot. HIs character was a wild self help guru who could NEVER exist in real life(unless he did)...out not simply to show men "how to pick up girls" but how to sexually dominate and destroy them. Helluva character; proof that Cruise is a GREAT villain(see also his hitman in Collateral.)
But Magnolia is forever flawed to me by its Two Caterwauling Women(the movie has two of everything, it seems) -- Julianne Moore(atrocious) and Melora Waters (worse.)
Boogie Nights has a Caterwauling Woman in it, too -- Mark Wahlberg's mother played by Joanna Gleason. A weakness in that film, too.
Happily, "Licorice Pizza" has no caterwauling women in it. Its set in the San Fernando Valley of Los Angeles in 1973 and --because these are my PERSONAL favorite moves of the year -- that was one of my PERSONAL favorite years in my life, and I DID live in LA then and so...I'm into this thing like right from the get go(Boogie Nights saw 1979 into the 1980s...and those years were different, adulthood and paycheck-earning came along with the lifelong burden they represent.)
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