A couple of years into the second decade of the 21st century and some good movies have emerged. Although I've only seen 89 films (all from 2010 or 2011), enough of them are good enough to make a list of the top 20 potentially worthwhile. Of course, the list will change dramatically as the rest of the decade unfolds. Nevertheless, here's the twenty best I've seen from this decade so far (score in brackets; in alphabetical order when scores are identical):
1. All Watched Over By Machines of Loving Grace (91)
Adam Curtis is the great documentary storyteller, conveyor of ideas by audiovisual means, and moralist of our times. This series ranges widely but always purposefully through material including Ayn Rand, Buckminster Fuller, Norbert Wiener, John Von Neumann, William Hamilton and many others, tied together by an investigation of mechanistic conceptions of life and cognitivist conceptions of human thinking and behaviour. Immensely pleasurable viewing.
2. Black Swan (91)
Aronofsky's first masterpiece poses the question of ballet itself, as a form of psychic and physical torture, as a symbolic and melodramatic medium, and as an artform demanding dangerous obsession and infinite control. These questions are posed by rethinking the kinematic relation of cinema and dance itself, taking the viewer inside the dancer's experience rather than "showing" choreography. Aronofsky is a risk-taker unafraid of pushing limits, and in this case he succeeds spectacularly.
3. Nostalgia for the Light (90)
An excellent movie and the best kind of cinematic essay.
4. Cave of Forgotten Dreams (85)
Very evocative presentation of the timescale of the human individuation process, and of the very long aesthetico-technical circuit unfurling from the cave paintings of the Paleolithic era to the 3D camera of Werner Herzog. The offhand reflections of the interviewees are often as interesting as their accounts of their scientific work and findings. Saw this in 2D. Also: http://www.screeningthepast.com/2011/08 ... -stiegler/
5. Certified Copy (85)
Beautiful and captivating. It is fascinating to see what Kiarostami does with his first European feature. There are some almost Rohmeresque elements, but movie still shows Kiarostami's singular style. Nobody can marry intellectual and emotional concerns in the way Kiarostami seems to achieve so effortlessly. Binoche is superb.
6. Pina (85)
Extremely well-done dance film and obituary. The very impressive and imaginative use of 3D really does enhance the viewer's sense of how corporeal dance is, and how visceral Bausch's choreography is, and in general makes it seem not only that this movie establishes new ground for the nexus of cinema and dance, but also suggests how much more can still be done in this field. Some remarkable choreography.
7. Elite Squad: The Enemy Within (80)
Remarkably successful attempt at portraying the extreme complexities of the situation while at the same time maintaining a meaningful story. Attempting social critique in the guise of a genre film has been done before, but very rarely this well. Even serves as an Iraq War metaphor...and all in the form of a sequel, too. The all-time ticket sales and box office record-holder in Brazil is an intellectual and sociological essay! Both his features and documentaries make Padilha a great director.
8. Greenberg (80)
Low-key, downbeat, indeed frequently uncomfortably awkward, but very honest, realistic and thoughtful character study that never stoops to convention and seems to be striving to interpret certain unfortunate directions the world appears to be heading in. Interesting to compare with the superficially similar "Two Lovers," which, while itself not without interest, is not in the same class as this effort. Only my second Baumbach, but he seems a very talented filmmaker. Excellent soundtrack.
9. Hugo (80)
Some clunkiness and schmaltz is more than made up for by a celebration of the magic of cinema that is also (in muted fashion, perhaps, that is, subtly) an investigation of the fabrication of dreams and its relation to the Unheimliche and to Spalanzani's (that is, Hoffmann's) Olimpia, and the relation of all this to the world's becoming a machine, such that behind the adoration of the cinematic fantastic can be detected hints of a coming global infernal. 3D at times impressive but distracting.
10. Inception (80)
Long, serious, bananas. That said, films about dreams are always also about that third area (of which cinema is an especially significant example, given the cinematic structure of consciousness itself), neither the internal world of the psyche nor the external "real" world. In fact, these first two areas are really composed by way of the third, and in the case of this movie, both thematizing and exemplifying these questions, this occurs via Welles, Kubrick, Tarkovsky, James Bond, Memento et al.
11. Secrets of the Tribe (80)
Extremely interesting documentary about a crisis in anthropology, a field that has been in more or less perpetual crisis from the beginning, for reasons that animate the specific problems emerging here. The willingness of the protagonists to continue their war means that the filmmaker can hold back and simply allow viewers to enjoy the spectacle of each of the players stabbing one another and hanging themselves. Padilha is a director who deserves to be better known.
12. The Social Network (80)
Very well done and mostly very enjoyable exploration of the way in which so-called social networks may in fact be functioning anti-socially. Although in the guise of a Shakespearean (or Charles Foster Kanean) tragedy for the digital age, this is as much a history and a genealogy of an important aspect of this age itself. Easily this director's best work to date.
13. Take Shelter (80)
Very well-done and interesting film, that both creates great tension and handles its themes with subtlety and nuance. It is more than either a psychological and sociological account of mental illness, or a generic apocalyptic tale. Rather, it is an investigation of contemporary collective feelings of anxiety and foreboding, and it takes these feelings as genuine questions, rather than as either evidence of insanity or signs of prophetic truth. The first work I have seen by a promising director.
14. The Tree of Life (80)
Ambitious, complex, and with numerous remarkable elements, but it seems less surefooted than the director's previous work. Where the earlier films energetically blended visual and aural mastery with intellectual concerns that utterly recontextualize the narrative foundations, here the story and characters are rather amorphous and the atmosphere persistently trancelike. The religiosity is at times too overt, and the symbolism too transparent, for this viewer's tastes. Another viewing is needed.
15. Animal Kingdom (75)
Very tense, with an air of menace throughout, excellent performances, photography, and soundtrack. A very impressive directorial debut.
16. David Attenborough's First Life (75)
Very interesting and well-done series that does not quite do what it says in the title, since it is not in fact concerned with the first origins of life, but instead begins with more complex lifeforms. Even so, there is much to interest non-specialist viewers, and it probably contains greater scientific content than some of Attenborough's more celebrated series that have a greater emphasis on photographing the living.
17. Enter the Void (75)
Cinema as dream. Nobody tries harder than Noé to ask, not what cinema is, but what it could become. His most ambitious venture to date, and one of the most daring and inventive movies of all time, but it is not without problems (including, for example, some questionable casting). Still, there are numerous remarkable aspects and sequences. It is, therefore, very difficult to attach a numerical value to the film. First viewing should be nowhere other than at a well-equipped large-screen cinema.
18. Inside Job (75)
Admirably clear summary account of the criminal greed of the financial sector. This kind of historical narrative should be supplemented by a more systematic theoretical approach that penetrates beyond the relation between politics, economics and individual, corporate AND ACADEMIC greed and corruption, to interpret these through the spectrum of an analysis and critique conducted at the level of the psycho-socially destructive tendencies afflicting the current global technico-industrial model.
19. Project Nim (75)
Very interesting documentary that raises complex questions on a number of levels. The film itself appears heavily influenced by the style of Errol Morris, the various characters are all interesting, and the tale of Nim is moving and sad. The scientific significance remains ambiguous.
20. The Skin I Live In (75)
Superb production values and a complex presentation of interesting themes make this melodrama about transformation and reinvention yet further confirmation that Almodóvar is the contemporary director who has most transformed and reinvented himself, from a talented but rather sensationalist perpetrator of farces in the 20th century to the masterful cinematic craftsman he has become in the 21st (well the change may have taken place in 1999 with "All About My Mother," but you get my point).









