Movies

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I am not a movie buff, but, uh, here you go. I think I want to be a film person more than I currently am; I certainly have outgrown my television phase 1 but I don’t make a particularly strong habit of watching movies.

There is one exception to this, which is that almost every Sunday night for the past year my partner and I have watched a movie together. These come in phases — we had our Miyazaki phase, our pre-code screwball phase, and our Harry Potter phase — but it’s been a really nice tradition.

If you’re doing a similar thing with your movie reviews, please let me know! The only person I know of doing this is my friend Oliver 2 and I really don’t want to have to go through the whole process of creating a Letterboxd account. 3

(Also, be warned: my writeups will probably contain spoilers.)

Filter this:
Written by Wong Kar-wai
★★★★★★★★★☆
Made in 2000

This for so long had been a bit of an “amateur film buff bingo” film for me; I have been recommended it so many times, by so many people with disparate tastes, for so many reasons, that it took on a bit of a life of its own. So I came in with some preconceptions — mostly of its ostensible merits.

And boy did it live up to them!

The plot is sweet and melancholy and largely immaterial to my analysis of this film’s merit — it can be summed up in a sentence, as can perhaps the movie itself. (I thought it was a particularly inspired choice to never show the two philanderers, and to only hear their voices.)

What is stunning to me (someone who’s pretty poorly versed in HK cinema in general and Wong Kar-wai in particular) was the visual language. It’s probably a cliche to call this a ninety-minute tone poem, but that’s exactly what it was — deep, saturated hues, gratuitous shots of cigarette billows and skewed nested frames. There are so few staged shots: everything is obscured, obscured through doorframes and bars and desks and curtains. It was gorgeous.

And the acting was sublime. There are, in reality, two actors: Maggie Cheung and Tony Leung. Their performances were classical: reaction over emotion, quiet and subdued and again, I am repeating myself, sublime.

The ending intertitle reads:

He remembers those vanished years. As though looking through a dusty window pane, the past is something he could see, but not touch. And everything he sees is blurred and indistinct.

I think the cut from the dusty, smoke-filled shots of Hong Kong to Angkor Wat — more conventionally shot and lit, with Tony Leung looking briefly like he’s in an American film with Western sensibilities — is what will stick with me most in this film. This is clearly a story told not in the present day but as someone remembering the past, perhaps fondly and bittersweetly. Who does not have a story — told briefly, in vivid splashes of color and sepia and obscured by time — that they tell themselves like this, or to whom the memory is forced upon them when they catch a glimpse of something they had once forgotten?

(The highest praise you can afford a film is the ardent desire to see more of the auteur’s work; I can’t wait to watch [[2046]].)

★★☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
Made in 2022

It’s going to be hard to top the following description of Gray Man, a film that I was excited to watch without knowing many details based purely on an A.V. Club review:

“The Gray Man” exists “in the gray” of Hollywood action movies — not jaw-droppingly incredibly, not astoundingly bad, just there. It’s a movie that’s made to be half-watched on Netflix while scrolling on your phone. Its greatest disappointment is that it knows what it has — Gosling, a great cast, a lot of money — and it still ends up being less than the sum of its parts.

I will begin with what I liked: Ana de Armas’ new role as action heroine (picking up very much where she left off in [[No Time To Die]]) and Chris Evans’ relish with which he plays a villainous ham, bolstered in an insane mustache and a costuming department which, it can be said, is very much in on the joke.

That, I think, is the end of the list, and the movie’s sins are too numerous to hone in on any single one of them. This movie is incoherent in a literal sense, sure, but also every single line in the script feels demeaning to all involved. The direction and color grading is awful, but also there are gratuitous drone shots that appear to exist for no other reason than to spend a few extra million dollars. (How did this movie cost two hundred million dollars?, Haley and I asked ourselves a half-dozen times over the course of the two-hour runtime.) The CIA leads, characters so thin that calling them “cardboard cutouts” heaps undue praise, were in particular vying for the worst acting performances I’ve seen in years. And all of these terrible things swirl and enhance upon another, such that when you stumble from one scene to another you’re not entirely sure what to blame: is it the acting? is it the script? is it the direction? is it the sheer utter lack of sincerity? (We decided it was, more than anything else, the script.)


An addendum, from a week later — one of the things that we found remarkable about the film over the course of watching it though I forgot to mention due to the surfeit of other, uh, noteworthy shortcomings was its utter disregard for time and space. There was no sense of distance travelled or time elapsed: despite this taking place in around a half-dozen different cities, our protagonists fast-travelled with wild abandon, smash cutting from one locale to another with nary an establishing shot. I wonder if this is a bit of a code smell for narrative laziness: it reminds me of latter-era [[Game of Thrones]], where the showrunners abandoned all pretense of landscape and limitation and just let people kind of bop around as the plot demanded.

Written by Alfred Hitchcock
★★★★★★★☆☆☆
Made in 1955

Here is the actual tagline for this movie: watch Cary Grant and Grace Kelly be charming in the French Riviera. That’s really all you need to know about the film: it is soulless and a little predictable but you get to see two people to whom you are likely quite endeared be charmed with one another.

I sound like I did not like this movie; I in fact liked it quite a bit. It is certainly Hitchcock, though not Hitchcockian; the drama unfolding feels something more akin to that of [[The Thin Man]] or even [[Ocean’s Eleven]], where the central plot is less of a primary concern whose resolution brings thought and satisfaction and more of an at-times-flimsy vehicle to chaffeur our two leads from one very pleasant set-piece to another.

And on those grounds, it was marvelous! This is not a Sunday night film, so to speak: it’s meant to be watched on a lazy Wednesday, in between bites of pizza or sips of a Kingston Negroni. It’s a fun time that is not trying very hard and does not expect you to be, either.

★★★★★★★★★☆
Made in 2022

All I knew going into this movie was that a number of my friends and acquaintances (most of whom, it should be said, do not know what “A24” is) instantly called it their new favorite movie ever. I cannot blame them!

This movie reminded me a lot — a lot — of [[Legion]], and it was unsurprising to discover that Daniels were also co-directors of a Legion episode. That show remains criminally underrated; it did things, visually, that I had never seen a television show do nor have seen since.

Whereas Legion had fairly humdrum star performances anchored by an absolutely terrific supporting cast, the acting here was universally strong: the praise of course has been mostly (and deservedly) heaped on Michelle Yeoh but I thought Stephanie Hsu and Ke Huy Quan (and Jamie Lee Curtis’ wonderfully physical performance) were equally wonderful.

The script, like in Legion, was fine but more of an afterthought. The core narrative and message were solid but not exemplary; it was how the film used the medium to explore and exploit them that was exemplary.

This isn’t my favorite movie; I don’t think it’s my favorite movie I watched this year ([[Drive My Car]] still holds that belt). But it certainly was the most memorable, and most fun, and most audacious, and I loved it a lot.

(And of course I cried. I cried during the rocks scene; I cried during the [[In The Mood For Love]] homage).)

★★★★★★★★☆☆
Made in 2008

There are exactly three scenes that disqualify almost any criticism about this movie:

  1. The drunken, unhinged rant from Frank Langella which tie the two leads together and capstone what is one of the ten best acting performances I’ve ever scene (and I generally abhor biopic performances, where the best-case scenario so often feels like cosplay).
  2. The “it’s my birthday” delivery from Michael Sheen’s Frost, whose performance gets lost in all of Langella’s adulation but is perhaps even trickier (and certainly more dynamic).
  3. The subtlest of all: ten seconds of quiet astonishment, again from Michael Sheen, as the cameras briefly cut off when he has Nixon on the ropes, realizing dumbly that he’s Done It.

This is a film that you watch and instantly realize it is a theatrical adaptation, and I admire the filmmakers for leaning into it. There are parts of excess (the documentary-esque asides felt wholly unnecessary) and things that I think could have made the movie stronger (why is Rebecca Hall’s character necessary at all? What does she bring beyond a pretty face to tell Sheen “no, come on, you’ve got this!”) but, again, those three scenes.

★★★★★★★☆☆☆
Made in 1998

This was a lot of fun. Edward Norton being an absolute shithead; Matt Damon playing a very prototypical Matt Damon role; John Malkovich chewing up more scenery than I sincerely thought possible; even John Turturro doing, uh, John Turturro things. (Weird, and resonant, to see him so soon after watching his slam-dunk performance in [[Severance]]!)

This is a sport movie, and it’s a by-the-numbers one: the set-up, the guy who walks away, the reason to come back, the brink of defeat, the upset victory, the bigger and better things. I think what makes it a good sports movie is two-fold:

  1. There’s a lot of room to breathe. The score is sparse and well-deployed; Damon narrates but not too much; there are entire scenes of scene-chewery that are not exactly nimble but well-earned (the judge’s monologue in the bar feels like something out of an Aaron Sorkin production, and I mean that in a good way.)
  2. It’s lived in in a way that feels more organic than, say, [[Moneyball]] which is a sports movie that succeeds on the back of its surgical precision. We don’t need to know the names and backstories of the various bit players or rundown speakeasy gambling dens, and our time spent with them benefits from it.
★★★★★☆☆☆☆☆
Made in 1964

It’s interesting to read some of the contemporary reviews of this film, which peg it as perhaps a too self-serious Bond film with too dark of a subject matter and too high a body count. Gang, just wait fifty years…

It was a Bond movie of its era, and it didn’t age that well — maybe that’s unfair, but I think that’s a thing you have to level against Bond movies just like any superhero movie. (I don’t mean age well in terms of, like, morality — just the literal sense, the cinematics are poor.) It’s also hard not to judge Auric Goldfinger through the lens of today’s media: I actually liked that he was a bit of a foible guy with a distinct personality and tic unlike the boring walking MacGuffins that have plagued the Craig Bond movies (with the exception of [[Casino Royale]]’s Le Chiffre, a terrific marriage of character and performance), but hard not to have one’s mind get drawn to Austin Powers and all that.

The one thing that of course ages well: Sean Connery’s performance. I’m a Daniel Craig man through and through — he was my first introduction to the character, but he’s most interesting because he stands against the traditional Bond archetype, exemplified best by Connery. So smooth! So handsome! So self-assured!

I’m not sure what I got out of this movie, if anything — it was on because Prime Video autosuggested it after rewatching [[Skyfall]]. I’d be hard-pressed to recommend it as a film, but it was a fine way to spend two hours with a burger and a few beers. I think that’s all Bond movies of this era really aspire to be, and excepting any nostalgia factor that you might have for them that’s all you can really hope for.

★★★★★★☆☆☆☆
Made in 2021

The set-pieces were really good. Daniel Craig and Jeffrey Wright were really good. Ana de Armas was exceptional. I had a fun time!

And yet. Movies with the run time that this one had really need to earn that extra forty-five minutes. I don’t think this one did. It played around with two metatextual ideas that I am of course a sucker for:

  1. The idea of Bond (or, more broadly, all action stars) being obsoleted by technology & modernity;
  2. The idea of Bond being a sort of grim King Midas who brings grief & ruin to all he touches.

The first item has been discussed to exhaustion by a better firm in [[Skyfall]] and a better plot device in [[Spectre]]; the only difference I think No Time To Die offers is a much different denouement, which I’ll get to in a second.

The second item I think was handled with much more pathos in [[Casino Royale]] (my favorite, and in retrospect probably the greatest, Bond film.) I did enjoy the irony of making that subtext explicit with “nanobots”, and I’m sure the writers felt like they were being very clever when they figured out how to do that.

(A quick aside: Rami Malek’s character was a complete non-factor — a failure of the script, not of his performance, to be clear. I thought Billy Magnussen did a terrific job, and our ability to root for his death & understand his causes were much less opaque.)

About that ending… interesting, and probably the most interesting part of the movie! I don’t know how to interpret it as anything other than a partial admission of the sublimation of the ego into the superstructure (which I of course realize is an insane phrase to assign to a Bond film.) Bond dies, which is both a way for him to give up the ghost and to break once more from the mold of the Bond legacy of decades past. The mission couldn’t be done without him, but it couldn’t be done with just him.

It’s hard not to contrast this final act with [[Top Gun: Maverick]], a movie I watched a week prior to this one. That film’s thesis was, bluntly and exuberantly: Action movies are perfect; action heroes are here forever. Craig’s run as Bond has been a bit of a deconstruction of that, and this is the third such explicit deconstruction. I liked Top Gun: Maverick more, and at the end of the day I think it’s more because you need much more justification & license for melancholy and irony than you do for exuberance and joy.

Written by Alfred Hitchcock
★★★★★★★☆☆☆
Made in 1958

I’m surprised that this movie is held in such high esteem relative to other Hitchcock films. I liked it, and I thought there were very good parts of it, and I thought it was better than Haley did. But it didn’t strike me as one of his best films beyond the dolly shot which is now of course classic (maybe the infamy of that shot robs the film of some of its staying power, since its influence has now been diffused amongst the rest of cinema?) or the climactic two scenes: the rotating embrace between Judy and Scottie or the doomed ascent up the clock-tower.

What worked particularly well for me in the film (and I’d say less so for Haley) was the descent of Jimmy Stewart. I am a sucker for these sorts of meta-referential roles, the collapse of an American icon into a stalker and out-and-out shell. I think there is a message here that I need to sit and digest a bit more to understand completely (as opposed to, say, [[Rear Window]], which was pretty clear in its undertones about consumption & the role of the audience.)

Roger Ebert’s retrospective review was fairly kind to the film, and I think hinted at what I’m getting at but in a similar vague way: he describes this as a sort of ur-Hitchcock, with the message being in relation to how Hitchcock views the world and views women. I thought that was a useful lens, but again — it still escapes me somewhat.

A welcome piece of this film that I forgot to touch upon until just now, though: San Francisco. What a perfect choice of setting and location, and Hitchcock dotes equally on the steep neon-clad streets and the esoteric landscapes just out of the city.

★★★★★★★★☆☆
Made in 2022

I went into this movie equipped with two pieces of baggage:

  1. I had watched the predecessor the night before, so the plot beats, overt propagandizing, and rampant homoerotic tension was fresh in my mind.
  2. I knew from a friend that it was as much of a critical darling as could be hoped (at the time of my viewing, it was sitting at around a 97% on Rotten Tomatoes) as well as a crowd-pleaser.

For the first two thirds of the movie, I was a bit flabbergasted at the latter. It felt rote and plastic; yes, Tom Cruise was playing a twenty-year old at the age of fifty and clearly giving it his all, but — why? It felt like a cosplay of the previous film, down to replacing one inert love interest with another. And I so hate the tendency for these films to try and bridge the gap between “beloved old movie” and “hot new IP” by bringing back the star, having them mentor some folks, and then dying off or sailing into the sunset.

Where this movie turned the corner [^1] for me was the climactic two runs of what I’ll call the “Top Gun Kessel Run”. It was a very good choice to replace the “abstract competition with points” in the original film with a specific objective that the trainees fail in interesting and revealing ways, and then that choice is rewarded with both Tom Cruises’ hypersonic completion of the run (it’s much clearer to say “oh he did it in 2:15 instead of 3:00” than “uhhh he did a really cool maneuver”), but also the incredible action sequence of the live TGKR, which was just some of the best action filmmaking I’ve seen in my life.

This was not a mastery of film, and I think the critical gulf between reviews of this movie and reviews of the original is a bit of a make-up call for what was in retrospect a deeply odd and impactful bit of American mythos. But it was a better one, and it’s certainly very fun.

Some stray observations:

  • I assume an earlier draft of this script had more focus on the whittling down of 12 trainees to six, because boy did that have no impact on the actual plot. I’m honestly impressed with the surgical precision by which the eight redshirt trainees were excised from the actual film!
  • Glen Powell is a great actor, and the deployment of him as Waluigi Maverick was apt.
  • Speaking of deployments: I hated the Lady Gaga original track, but thought the use of the church bell from Take My Breath Away as a bit of a aural motif was brilliant.
★★★★★★★☆☆☆
Made in 1986

This is no retrospective of a beloved childhood film through adult eyes or anything like that: I know this movie for its myriad backwards-references, and I know this movie for Highway to the Danger Zone, and I know this movie for the volleyball scene (in reference, but having never scene it), and we wanted to watch it in preparation for its much-ballyhooed sequel.

It was…pretty good! It was what felt like an ur-machismo movie, for better and for worse. (Or to quote a character in the film: it does a lot of things better [than the average eighties film], and it does a lot of things worse [than the average eighties film]).

Leaving aside the filmmaking-versus-propaganda angle, what was by far the worst part of the film was the plot altogether, which was — what is this competition thing anyway? There’s no propulsion (see what I did there?) from scene to scene; it feels like you are ping-ponging between some very neat flights for which there’s little obvious rhythm or rule and some very sweaty scenes of post-combat posturing and retrospective.

I think what I liked about this movie and what I thought it did well was that it hinted at some truth about male camaraderie, whether its the wingman relationship or the RIO relationship. There’s an earnestness in how it depicts both Goose and Iceman’s relationship to Maverick that I think can be easily forgotten or recontextualized into oblivion; it is very sweet, and mostly a movie about brothers.

(The bolder version of this movie would have been excising the love interest altogether, which feels like some sort of contractual obligation to the viewing public. It’s remarkable how little that subplot brings to the table, besides the kitschy final scene.)

★★★★★★★☆☆☆
Made in 2021

This is more than a well-animated (though it is extremely well-animated, and the marked contrast in style between the real world and the digital world is impeccable executed) and well-conceived execution of “what if Beauty and the Beast but in VR?” I mean, it is that — this reminds me a bit of the early Makoto Shinkai work where there is a bit of a plot but you don’t really care about the plot, the plot is a vehicle for other interesting things, and I think the “interesting things” in this case is not “a bunch of beautiful shots of rain” but “a surprisingly realistic and mature representation of both the benefits and drawbacks of digital escapism.”

I don’t give a shit about the musical numbers — they were fine? kinda boring? — but had a great time. There were two scenes in particular (what I will describe as the “Civ 6 scene” and the “does that mean you have a crush on me? scene”) that were A++ moments that were worth the price of admission alone.

★★★★★★★☆☆☆
Made in 2009

Nothing wrong with this one, and it’s a clear descendant of the Ocean’s Eleven school of thinking: get a really talented cast, add some espionage, and let them have a whole bunch of fun together.

Unfortunately, it has the Ocean’s Twelve penchant for narrative confusion as substitute for narrative wit. I thought the slow reveal of parallel timelines was good (and the final twist at the end was nice, in an Agatha Christie “oh, that’s clever!” sense) but it made things a little tricky to actually keep together (for instance, how did Clive Owen’s character even get the formula given that they caught him with it?) or even care about / root for. A good way to spend a Sunday night because it is charming and well-crafted, but does not push the boundary in any particular way.

★★★★★★★★★☆
Made in 2021

The movie is really long. Three hours long! You know that I do not particularly enjoy overlong movies. This one felt like three hours: the opening credits, coming in thirty minutes and after the first act, was half-wink and half-nod at that.

This was a slow movie, but none of the padding — none of the languor — felt inessential. This is a movie about what it feels like to be in the passenger seat on a long car ride, in many respects, and the fact that a solid third of the runtime is quiet shots of the Saab 900 Turbo flitting around Hokkaido is testament to that.

There are a lot of really perfect moments in this movie. The one I will fixate on — the one that made me briefly consider putting this into my canon — was the penultimate one. If you know, you know.

★★★★★★☆☆☆☆
Made in 2022

This was…perfectly competent.

Branagh was okay as Poirot but could not match Suchet (who can?) The acting and cast were stellar in terms of renown and serviceable in terms of talent. The direction was nouveau and gorgeous. And the story (with some tweaks, I’ve gathered, from the original novel, but mostly just to frame this as a successor to Branagh’s previous adaptation) is a bloody classic.

This felt like a very good cover band doing a Poirot adaptation. It was neither a great movie nor a great Poirot adaptation, but wasn’t bad on either lens. If you’re craving a whodunit, this isn’t quite empty calories and is going to be entertaining.

★★★★★★☆☆☆☆
Made in 2021

I wanted to watch this movie first and foremost because of the long-take gymnasium scene that went viral on Twitter, knowing little about the original besides it being a slummy New York take on Romeo and Juliet. I still want to watch the original, but the most singular word I can use to describe this is production was competent: in direction, in choreography, in staging. The two leads do nothing for me (and the musical numbers do nothing to assuage my apathy towards Sondheim) but it was a pretty and smooth piece of work.

★★★★★★★★★☆
Made in 2021

Boy, I loved this. This was really really really well executed: a moody, bare, opinionated take on what a film adaptation should be.

I can’t think of a single quibble! The acting was uniformly delightful (Denzel struggled in the first two acts, I think, and then really got going as Macbeth descended further and further) and I now have a newfound respect for Alex Hassell who was a nadir amongst nadirs in [[Cowboy Bebop (2021)]]. The set design and cinematography was by far my favorite piece of the entire thing (just the right number of Dutch angles!) and I appreciated the light touch of whimsy when it came to choose who should portray the Third Murderer.

The only thing keeping me from giving this a perfect rating is an absence of, uh… this is going to sound cliche, but soul? Like this was a perfect stage adaptation of a play, but it was first and foremost a play. I spent the entire runtime agog at how well it was done, but it never turned into its own thing (which is fine — it never wanted nor tried to!)

Written by Wes Anderson
★★★★★★★★★★
Made in 2021

I wasn’t expecting to love this movie as much as I did, but it’s my favorite Wes Anderson. It grabbed my head and my heart by the collar and refused to let go.

I thought there was something a little poetic about his turn to animation in Isle of Dogs — the auteur who was so precious about treating his scenes like meticulous storyboards in a fitting medium at last! — but this actually works even better. He is at his most Wes Anderson-y: the set design is immaculate, the scripts are twee and that particular blend of irony-cum-earnestness, the plotting, rather than being sparse, is altogether absent.

A lot of hay has been made about how Aaron Sorkin’s ouevre only really works when he’s dealing with material that is as pretentious as he is. This is why The West Wing (smart people running the world) and The Social Network (people who think they’re smart and running the world) are fun scripts, and the likes of Molly’s Game & Studio 60 were not. I think something can be said for Wes Anderson: I (and his actors) will eat up his screenwriting regardless of the setting, but it only feels quasi-revelatory when you can put the words in the mouths of people believably precocious (see The Royal Tenenbaums and Rushmore).

And what’s more precocious than broad and loving caricatures of New Yorker staff writers? This choice, too, is great: what Wes Anderson loses in a sense of narrative propulsion he gains in the power of triptych: each story follows the same quiet little arc of “writer discovering themselves through their subject”, and being bookended by the paternal Bill Murray works really well.

I’m rambling: I might need to digest more of the movie to have anything more interesting to say. This is never going to be Wes Anderson’s most acclaimed movie but it is the one I loved the most, and I think I will remember it as my favorite even if I will never remember it as the best.

★★★★★☆☆☆☆☆
Made in 1961

The good: “Vip” is an incredible bit with a pretty solid payoff; the Hudson-Randall chemistry is impeccable (even if the Hudson-Day chemistry is less delightful than in [[Pillow Talk]]); Doris Day’s dresses; the gentle skewering of the advertising industry; the wisecracks.

The bad: Doris Day’s hats; a paint-by-numbers third act; a feeling of having seen this all before.

All in all, averages out. There’s no reason to watch this if you’ve already seen [[Pillow Talk]], but there’s no reason to run away from it screaming.

★★★★★★★☆☆☆
Made in 2021

The film is beautiful and appealing in every sense: the CGI and direction is masterful, and the audial design (both the soundtrack and then backing effects) are terrific. The acting is solid (even Chamalet, who feels a little too modern for this work, bring his A Game). I was riveted watching it.

But the entire thing is a trailer for another movie. Nothing happened, and what happened felt rushed, like a race to cover as many plot points as quickly as possible (is it unfair to accuse the film of both being too boring and too fast, like the Jewish grandmother who says of a meal “terrible — and such small portions!”? perhaps!) It’s hard to say how much of my experience is colored by having read the books, and getting to follow along the plot without much exposition needed (the only person I watched with that hadn’t read the books was Haley, who liked it enough to download the book after the fact.)

But it’s hard not to see a bit of [[Blade Runner 2049]] in this movie, which is to say a commitment to futuristic vibes without actually much of a gestalt tying many of the individually breathtaking settings together. I trust Villeneuve, and perhaps I am salty that one of the most exciting parts of the book — the revelation that the Bene Gesserit planted the messianic legend amongst the Fremen, and the implication that all savior narratives are manufactured — is a throwaway line twenty minutes into the movie.

These are all quibbles. I am eagerly anticipating the second part. But t

★★★★★★☆☆☆☆
Made in 2018

This movie didn’t have any reason to exist, but if the previous animated Grinch didn’t exist, I think people would like this one a lot! It was well-animated and well-voiced. Max the Dog (and of course Fred the obese reindeer) were very, very endearing. There were a bunch of solid visual sight gags. There’s nothing to really malign besides its lack of raison d’etre.

★★★★★★☆☆☆☆
Made in 2014

Some things were good: the “go back in time to change the future” conceit was surprisingly unmuddled (and, despite the conceit’s ubiquity, it felt…unadorned here!); the futuristic Sentinel designs were really, really great (it’s hard to imbue boring evil robots with a true sense of menace!); Fassbender is a terrific actor.

I think there were more things in the movie that I didn’t like than that I did, though. The final act is pretty non-sensical (why didn’t Professor X just control Trask? how come Magneto can control the Sentinels, which were explicitly mentioned as being non-metallic?); the 70’s setting and ham-fisted addiction allegory felt extraneous; a lot of non-Fassbender performances were pretty phoned-in.

Still, it was a romp. Superhero movies can have a lot of extraneous garbage and this was not one of them. There was a clear through-line to the entire enterprise, and the grounding of the melodrama not in Big Bads or anything too cosmic (looking at you, Marvel!) but in interpersonal relationships & agency are what make the X-Men stories so unique and resonant.

★★★★★★★☆☆☆
Made in 2019

This movie is entirely style over substance, but — what style! It is so fun to watch. The visual motifs are really, really well done, and the script is puerile and predictable but not necessarily bad. Mostly I am struck by how interesting and vivid the world is — and how many rote plot twists & evolutions you jump through — relative to the short runtime, and it really feels like a sixty hour JRPG compressed into an incredibly stylish film (not that I’m complaining — I think the script’s cliches would have been much more painful on something with a long runtime, but the movie was very good about lampshading all of them.)

Also, the music is incredibly solid.

★★☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
Made in 1998

I don’t begrudge people who like this movie, and I can understand why, but watching it for the first time as an adult….I mean, at least Hocus Pocus had Bette Midler and Sarah Jessica-Parker to chew the scenery.

★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆
Made in 1988

I think I was a little spoiled by [[Life is Short, Walk On Girl]] which took everything that the show did and amped it up to ten, rewarding (but not mandating) your understanding of the show’s context and visual language. This was fun — the set pieces were delightful, especially for the time — but the core of the drama revolved around Char and Amuro who I have never seen before. That’s on me, not on the film — but so much of the context felt prerequisite for the emotional arcs.

★★★★★★★★☆☆
Made in 1950

This was very, very well done. The Grahame-Bogart interplay was fantastic on both sides: the one shot of them in the throes of lust, sharing a cigarette at a crowded piano bar, is probably the most charming Bogart has ever been. The ending (in its wryness) was a little bit choreographed but I can’t really blame the film for that as much as I blame the film’s influence (or perhaps the fact that I’ve just seen so much noir at this point), and Bogart’s descent into — for lack of a better term — mania was really well done, and something you don’t see a lot of in his earlier work is the gradation in character: not just the stoic mercenary and not just the heartened madman but the whole spectrum ebtween the two.

★★★★★★★★☆☆
Made in 2017

This was really good.

It was a great rom-com, for starters. It is in the style of Linklater’s comedies: a long epic bender of a night filled with weird and endearing caricatures. The protagonists are odd and funny and in a timeless way.

But it was a really great OVA. It’s technically not an OVA, I guess? It exists outside of the Tatami Galaxy spectrum, but just in the right amount: it borrows the visual language and accoutrement of TTG without making it either a rehash or an epilogue.

It was fun to watch, and delightful, and having seen the anime didn’t feel like a “prerequisite” but like an added bonus.

★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆
Made in 2021

What is the goal of this movie?

I like bad movies whose goal is to be entertaining and they succeed at it; I hate good movies whose goal is to elevate and they fail at it. Or maybe I think the first bucket of movie is good and the second is bad: the goal is to accomplish your goal, truistic as that might be. This is why I think I love bubblegum pop so much: it is worth admiring something that is being itself as much as it can be.

F9 is not a particularly entertaining movie. There are lots of entertaining moments, but it seems so much more interested in spectacle than entertainment. There are nice things about it — a cozy and understated multiculturalism, an implicit understanding of plot armor, John Cena being absolutely fucking ripped — but the movie seemed more interested in playing with magnets than actually entertaining me.

Discovered via Sonny Duke
★★★★★★☆☆☆☆
Made in 2009

This was not a great movie, but it had one transcendent piece and one very nice piece that elevated it a bit in my mind:

  1. A depiction of a Second Life-esque universe that was legitimately awesome both in terms of aesthetics and creativity, complete with the kind of creative character design that I would associate with something closer to a JRPG.
  2. A very, very sweet (and Persona-esque) deus ex machina moment that served as the very anime climax to the movie.

I don’t think I’d handily recommend it to folks, but those parts were fun and inventive that it’s worth a positive score.

★★★★★★☆☆☆☆
Made in 2006
★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆
Made in 1985

The piece of work that this reminded me most of was [[Friends From College]], which recency bias aside makes a lot of sense — both are pieces that are centrally interested in how raw and bizarre close college friendships can be and how quickly toxic and deleterious they become after graduation (obvious the show is talking about a timescale of decades, whereas St. Elmo’s Fire is only really interested in a year or two’s distance). I think this film does hit on some core emotional truths: the melodrama & the frankness-bordering-on-after-school-special felt correct to me. Unfortunately, the movies foibles are, uh, painful: the “Emilio Estevez turns into a stalker” storyline went from something that I could charitably refer to as parodic/resonant into Purely Weird AnD Bad super quickly; Rob Lowe’s character was only granted growth and serenity offscreen. I did not like these characters: I knew them, but I did not want to spend time with them, and I don’t think I would have liked them any more if I spent any more time with them.

★★★★★★★★★☆
Made in 2008

I loved it! It was warm and sweet and gorgeous and there was nothing not to enjoy about it. The voice cast was solid, I loved all of the characters (even the miserly grandma throw-in who of course redeemed herself.) It didn’t hit the levels of, like, transcendence that Totoro did — but it was still so, so good.

★★★★★☆☆☆☆☆
Made in 2013

It was cute and nice but felt straight-up like a three-episode epilogue of the main series. In contrast, the Cowboy Bebop movie felt like more of a distillation of what the show was about into a tighter movie with a stronger budget. Maybe I am just not super into the concept of OVAs; less of an issue with this as a movie and more about my expectations of it.

★★★★★★☆☆☆☆
Made in 1959
★★★★★★★★☆☆
Made in 2020

This was a very well executed show. Great acting, direction, and cinematography. The plotline was predictable and each little twist and turn felt a trifle on the cheesy side, but I didn’t mind that much — I think it lowered the ceiling of the show to have the developments be as rote as they were, but it was still gripping and thrilling. I particularly enjoyed the warmth and humanity that the show gave to the bit roles: the druggist, the lovelorn former rival, etc.

(Oh, but the ceiling chess is dumb as hell.)

★★★★★★★★★☆
Made in 1938

Early-era Grant and Hepburn: charming(ly obvious) plot, dynamite script, 97 minute runtime. I don’t know what’s not to love. It is not as obviously wonderful as Bringing Up Baby (which is still, I think, the funniest in the era) or The Philadelphia Story but I think it’s carried equally by the strength of the supporting cast.

Written by Christopher Nolan
★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
Made in 2020

pros: beautiful shots of the amalfi coast; excellent costume design

cons: two and a half hours runtime; the single worst script I think I have ever experienced

★★★★★★★★☆☆
Made in 2017

I don’t think this movie quite succeeded at threading the line between satire and comedy-of-errors; the points where it wavered into what felt like gravitas (in particular the final act) felt like missteps. But the comedy — the script! the performances by Buscemi and Tambor! — was sensational, and I could have spent an extra hour listening to the insane banter.

★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
Made in 2020
Superhero

Good things about this movie:

  1. The Gadot-Pine chemistry is a lone bright spot in the vanilla hellscape of superhero romance.
  2. The “hey, we’re in 1984!” stuff was fun and silly (until they dropped it for no real reason in the second act.)
  3. Wiig was not bad!

Bad things about this movie:

  1. The plot doesn’t make sense. Why does Lord require more wishes? Because it makes him more powerful? But it was also killing him? Why doesn’t he just wish for immortality or whatever? Why is he trying to get more shit at all?
  2. “I’m touching them through particles!” Come on that it just the dumbest shit ever.
  3. The effects were particularly bad this go-round. Lasso-of-Truth-ing a lightning bolt was a nadir.
  4. TWO AND A HALF HOURS OF RUNTIME.
  5. The movie doesn’t even stop to examine the fairly intriguing premise of what happened to Not Chris Pine’s soul while Chris Pine was inhabiting NCP’s body!
  6. As mentioned above, the movie decided 1984 wasn’t interesting starting in the second act and so we had to settle for very boring set pieces.

I don’t know. I think you need something memorable and good to elevate a superhero movie into something bigger, and I grade on a curve! I thought Thor: Ragnarok was delightful because it leaned into its triviality. But this movie has nothing going for it, and lacked the pathos of its predecessor. Oof.

★★★★★★★★★★
Made in 1946

You can say whatever you want about this movie. You can say the plot is nonsensical, that every line is twice as maudlin as it needs to be, and any character that isn’t Stewart’s is a pastiche that makes A Christmas Carol look modern and nuanced. You can make fun of Jimmy Stewart’s delivery as much as you want. You — and everyone’s — criticisms are valid and fair.

But man, if you don’t tear up during Auld Lang Syne, I will probably call you a liar. I remember the first time this movie made me cry — 2012 — and it’s made me cry a little more every year since.

★★★★★★☆☆☆☆
Made in 2006

I think this is what a low-stakes, low-investment romantic comedy should be! There are, I guess, suggestions of conflict and stakes — will Cameron Diaz’s character stay in England? will Kate Winslet break free of her manipulative boss? — but you know exactly how every plot line will unfold and resolve within the first ten minutes of the film. The moments of genuine surprise — Jude Law’s character having two children, Dustin Hoffman randomly being in a Blockbuster — are joyous. All this movie is is a vehicle to let some charming people bounce around each other’s orbit and to make you feel slightly warmer, and it does that very well.

I think the two quibbles I have are:

  1. It is one hundred and forty minutes! That is too long for an airy romantic comedy. Cut out thirty minutes of the fluff (though I suppose one would argue that it’s all fluff) and it’s a much leaner enterprise.
  2. The movie suggests at some clever meta-commentary on romantic comedies, between the WGA playing a role and the (fairly well-done!) non-diegetic movie trailer shenanigans. It could have leaned into this like three degrees more and still gotten some mileage, I think.
★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
Made in 1993

Exactly three entertaining things about this film:

  1. Bette Midler and Sarah Jessica Parker absolutely chewing up the scenery and being legitimately entertaining.
  2. The visual gag of a witch using a vacuum cleaner as a broomstick.
  3. “Billy, the friendly zombie.”

Everything else is bad.

★★★★★★★☆☆☆
Made in 2006
★★★★★★★☆☆☆
Made in 2011

If there’s ever a movie that seems unfair to judge on its own terms its this one. Part 1 was tough to judge on its own terms because it existed purely as table-setting for this, but in many ways this entire movie is only legible to those who are well versed in the universe: and not just the universe of the movies, but the universe of the books. (This is one of those statements that seems impossible to contradict; I am sure there are people who have only seen the movies and they enjoyed this one, but I don’t know of any.)

So if the movie’s goal was to transmute a thrilling and satisfying ending to the books onto the screen, I think it did a really good job. The climactic battle was thrilling and wondrous; some of the manic set pieces, like the Gringotts’ heist, felt the appropriate mix of fun and dangerous. And, true to the book’s form, the epilogue sucked. It’s well acted, well directed, and well scored.

I don’t know what to say, then! It’s a movie you’ll enjoy if you’ll enjoy it. I had a good time.

★★★★★★★☆☆☆
Made in 1934

My understanding was that this was the ur-romcom in a lot of ways, and it felt like that! The chemistry between the leads was great — and not great in a “great for its time” way. I thought the framing of the entire movie through the Greyhound bus was fun, and it’s hard not to see the threads of this movie (upstairs woman, downstairs rogue) show up in so many of its successors (His Girl Friday! Roman Holiday!) while having that basic structure not cheapen or dullen it in any way. I don’t think there’s anything, like, exclamatory about the film — I wouldn’t peg it for a five-Academy-Award winner — but it was good and fun and easy to recommend.

★★★★★☆☆☆☆☆
Made in 2010

It’s interesting the extent to which this movie feels divorced from the ones preceding it “Hogwarts is the best and most important character” might be a stale take but it’s a true one, and while the cinematography of this film (the camp-outs are truly gorgeous!) tries to make up for the lack of turrets and parapets it feels impossible. Everyone is grimy and nobody is wearing robes: besides a few warm and entertaining scenes the film is straight up morose and Serious (which doesn’t bother me quite as much as the Order of the Phoenix’s lack of levity, because here at least it makes sense.)

It’s worth saying that this fails utterly as a stand-alone movie. There is no true climax or denouement; it ends on a bummer and the entire thing feels like the prologue that it truly is. But it still isn’t bad!

★★★★★★★★☆☆
Made in 2009

Okay, now this is what a fantasy movie should be. Absolutely gorgeous effects & cinematography (a marked improvement from the drab darkness and excessively cool tones of Order of the Phoenix), a script with a bunch of levity (the first and I think only Harry Potter movie that legitimately made me laugh more than once!), and a climax that, sure, is overwrought, but looks cool and seems important in the overall narrative.

★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆
Made in 2007

What a joyless two hours. Some notes:

  • An important test for a fiction is: does it imbue its villains and obstacles with any redeeming or interesting characteristics whatsoever? (The answer here, of course, is no.)
  • Helena Bonham Carter appears to be the only person in this movie who knows that it is a fantasy film and that it is okay to emote.
  • Nothing happens! There is so much angst and nothing interesting or useful happens that isn’t a death! Who gives a shit about the prophecy!
  • Okay, the final wizarding duel is pretty fun, and a marked step up from the tug-of-war climax of the fourth movie.
★★★★★★★★☆☆
Made in 1959

A very good low-stakes rom-com. There were just a lot of things I liked:

  • The return of Tony Randall, who was delightful (and perfectly weaselly) in Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? and even more so here.
  • A very charming opening credits
  • Incredible early-sixties set design and costume design
  • A very fun and of-its-time framing device (I was completely unaware of the concept of a “party line”!)
  • A generally winsome and tweak-y script and direction which made up for the lack of chemistry between the two leads.

And the only thing I think I disliked is the complete lack of climax/denouement — the last ten minutes seemed to melt away without conflict or actual resolution besides “well, they’re together now!”

★★★★★★★☆☆☆
Made in 1937

Just a really, really solid slapstick. Cary Grant is incredible (reading on Wikipedia this was the impetus for his launch into superstardom, which is totally earned); Irene Dunne, who is not my favorite, puts up a superlative back half (her scene as “Lola” is perhaps the best in the entire film.) The movie feels loose and improv-y in a way that few movies of its era do; there are a few bits that age it (my mind is drawn to the very cute and very advanced-for-its-time special effect with the cuckoo clock) but you could do a shot-for-shot remake of this and it’d be well-received.

★★★★★★☆☆☆☆
Made in 2008

You know, the conventional wisdom is that the Craig Bond movies have been in a tick-tock nature: Casino Royale is glorious, but Quantum is bad; Skyfall is glorious, and then Spectre suffers.

And this is true to an extent. Watching this for the first time, after having watched Casino Royale the night prior, highlighted its flaws in sharp relief. The cast is universally less interesting (with the exception of Fields, who I thought played her role superbly); the script is more muddled; the set pieces comically unrealistic.

But it also compared favorably in a few respects! The pacing of the film is, on the whole, better (it helps that it’s forty minutes leaner!); the climactic showdown in the erstwhile hotel, while grandoise in true Bond fashion, was dramatic in a way that I don’t think Casino Royale ever hit. And the general theme of the movie — Bond as an out-of-control widower — works having freshly seen the denoument of the previous film.

It’s not, like, a good film. But it is unfairly maligned, and fine by popcorn standards.

★★★★★★★★☆☆
Made in 2006

I rewatched this having watched it once a long time ago; I remembered liking it quite a bit, and I still do, though perhaps my patience/illusionment with Bond films has waned quite a bit. The cast is great and the setting & plot is superb, but I couldn’t help having two ornery thoughts, somewhat commingled:

  • How is this thing two and a half hours long?
  • Why do the action sequences need to be this long?

There’s probably a taut, superior version of this movie that clocks in at a hundred minutes. But it’s still the most vivid realization of what Bond movies are or can be (barring Skyfall’s slightly meta turn).

Written by Woody Allen
★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆
Made in 1986

I came in with high hopes: I like Allen’s ouevre and this was supposed to be one of his best.

And there were parts that I really liked: I thought Allen’s self-insert narrative was sort of silly and sweet, I thought the dynamic between the three sisters was vivid and real, and I thought the thesis of the film — the titular Hannah being the person to whom we’re afforded the least interiority despite her having a lion’s share of grief — was clever and interesting and, given a generous eye, an interesting inversion of the “model sitcom mom” trope so prevalent in the eighties. (Ah, and the music was good.)

But — and maybe it is unfair to say this, to view this film through a 2020 lens — parts of it were just gross! I can ignore the foreshadowing of Allen writing about a man who leaves his wife for a family member, sure, but everything Michael Caine touched in this movie felt despicable. I am okay with him portraying a flawed husband, but his chemistry with every single other character feels pained and alien, and his perspective affords no sympathy.

If I wanted a vaguely misogynist and beautiful film, I’d watch Midnight in Paris; if I wanted something sweet and a little mournful, I’d rewatch Radio Days. I have no desire to re-mine this movie.

★★★★★★★★☆☆
Made in 1958

Incredibly good if not revelatory. Heston and Welles (and even Leigh!) were all amazing. The script was great and the core plot was tight (even if the script wasn’t a world-beater.) The opening shot is just as great as all of the direction following it. My only complaint, such as it is, is that I think the best noirs have to leave you with a little bit of emptiness or melancholy: they have to shake your belief a bit. The ‘twist’ ending (Welles’ hunch was right!) was a bit of this, but…I dunno. Not quite enough.

★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆
Made in 2001

I am maybe being too harsh on this movie with its rating: if I watched it divorced of context, I would surely raise it higher. But, viewed in light of the series, it feels so devoid of so many of the sources of its greatness: interplay between the cast (Jet and Faye are all but absent), a coherent and timeless soundtrack, well-tuned pacing.

There are unquestionably good bits here: the animation and direction are wonderful and unambiguously improved, the Moroccan aesthetic is lovely, and the story of Vincent & Elektra feel very much “in the vein” of the melancholy themes of the show. But elevating this story into a film feels unfair: it would have been better as a two-parter.

★★★★★★☆☆☆☆
Made in 1957

It was…fine, bordering on solid! I definitely laughed at a handful of parts, and it was surprisingly meta/postmodern (I initially ascribed this to the fact that it was based on a play, but after reading more it sounds like this had absolutely nothing to do with the play itself.)

★★★★★★★★★☆
Made in 1989

I think my partner and I called this wholesome at least seven times over the course of the film. It was so good! I love Kiki; I love Jiji; I love the cast of characters whom are all universally warm and kind-hearted. I love flying as a motif, and even though the true arc of the movie (Kiki’s self-assuredness) came to a natural end I could have spent an entire series watching Kiki bop around this lovely world.

It’s tempting to compare this to Totoro, given that I watched it for the first time so recently as well. Totoro definitely hit me harder, and I think the purity and moral at the center of it is more potent; but unlike, say, the Pixar canon, it’s not that Kiki was a slightly lesser version — it had a completely different ambition and message.

★★★★★★★☆☆☆
Made in 1953

Gorgeous cinematography; really really lovely denouement; pretty fun and chill time overall.

And yet, feels regressive compared to, say, Bringing Up Baby (maybe I’m biased from having spent July watch Grant / Hepburn vehicles?) despite coming out fifteen years latter. Peck doesn’t play lighthearted well, and Hepburn is obviously luminous but there isn’t a tremendous amount of moment-to-moment chemistry (again, excepting those final scenes.)

★★★★★★★☆☆☆
Made in 1940

Objectively a fun, good movie. (I don’t know about “best romantic comedy of all time” — When Harry Met Sally still holds that crown in my opinion — but it’s up there.) The Grant-Hepburn-Stewart trifecta was great, though I was surprised to learn that this was late in the Grant-Hepburn partnership (their chemistry felt off, especially having watched Bringing Up Baby so recently); Hepburn and Hussey were honestly the standout performances, and the script was just the right blend of screwball and sly.

Written by Rian Johnson
★★★★★★★★☆☆
Made in 2012

In retrospect, almost a proto-Blade Runner 2049. I thought the acting and general plot was kinda milquetoast but the underlying setting was a hair above neat, and the depiction of an unevenly distributed future is probably one of the best realizations of science fiction I’ve ever seen on film.

★★☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
Made in 2020
★★★★★★★★☆☆
Made in 1938
★★★★★★★☆☆☆
Made in 2020

This movie was exactly what we expected: kind of clever, utterly predictable, very pleasant. I will probably not think about it other again but I recommend it!

★★★★★★☆☆☆☆
Made in 1978

There were a few particularly memorable bits to Connery’s performance — his scene peeling and eating an orange, and his absurd over-the-top double entendres — and there is of course a comfort that a Merely Good Heist Movie bestows, but that’s all this was: merely good. It was two hours that were entertaining and utterly predictable and that’s not a bad thing!

Written by Makoto Shinkai
★★★★★★★★☆☆
Made in 2019

My hot take is that this was wholly better than Your Name; the supernatural elements were more interesting, the romance was sweeter, and the auxiliary characters more vivid and profound.

★★★★★★★☆☆☆
Made in 1935

1935-era production is rough, mechanically speaking, but the core plot is fun and the climax is Peak Welles.

★★★★★★★★★☆
Made in 1963

Delightful! Felt like a spiritual predecessor to Knives Out. (The age difference between Grant and Hepburn did not age well.)

★★★★★★★★★★
Made in 1988

A perfect movie about warmth and innocence and what it means to be childlike (and what it means to be adult).

★★★★★★☆☆☆☆
Made in 1997

Watched in honor of the late Fred Willard. Pleasant and funny but never quite as, uh, ROFL-tier as I hoped.

★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆
Made in 2018

Great acting by Robbie and Ronan; inconsistent tonal bits and a lack of cinematic urgency; I can’t hold it against the film, but boy does Queen Mary frustrate me.

★★★★★★★☆☆☆
Made in 1936

Noticeably worse in every way than its predecessor save a delightful Jimmy Stewart against-type performance.

★★★★★★★★★☆
Made in 1934

inspired by my recent acquisition of nick and nora glasses: this was just….delightful? a noir with the sensibility of a light-hearted soderbergh movie and i will be appropriately binging all of the non-dashiell hammett sequels

★★★★★★★☆☆☆
Made in 2020

this was so fun. i am reminded of walter scott’s description of austen as a flemish painter: “[the] subjects are not often elegant and certainly never grand; but they are finished up to nature, and with a precision which delights the reader”

★★★★★★★★☆☆
Made in 1991

wonderful, wistful depiction of the conversations we have with our former selves (and beautifully animated.) unfortunately, though, ridley and patel are very bad voice actors

★★★★★★★★★☆

Haunting Welles performance, incredible lighting & camerawork, and a perfect ending scene. I can’t think of a single flaw.

★★★★★★★★☆☆

It is a very cute bear, Hugh Grant was terrific, and the scene of the cute bear showing his old bear aunt a pop-up version of London pulled me to tears.

★★★★★★★☆☆☆

Lead performance was bad; everything else (in particular the cinematography of a very different side of China) was great.

★★★★★★★★★☆

Worth the hype.

★★★★★★★★★☆

Great and honest performances that honor a great and honest script.

★★★★★★☆☆☆☆
Made in 2019
★★★★★★★★☆☆
Made in 2006
★★★★★★★★☆☆
Made in 1993
★★★★★★★★☆☆
Made in 1950
★★★★★★★★★★
Made in 2018
★★★★★★★★☆☆
Made in 2019
★★★★★☆☆☆☆☆
Made in 2019
★★★★★★★★☆☆
Made in 2019
★★★★★★★☆☆☆
Made in 1988
★★★★★★★★☆☆
Made in 2006
★★★★★★★★★☆
Made in 2011
★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆
Made in 2004
★★★★★★★☆☆☆
Made in 2019
★★★★★★☆☆☆☆
Made in 1987
★★★★★☆☆☆☆☆
Made in 2018
★★★★★★★★☆☆
Made in 2009
★★★★★★★★☆☆
Made in 2014
★★★★★★★★☆☆
Made in 1954
★★★★★★★☆☆☆
Made in 2019
★★★★★★★★☆☆
Made in 2018
★★★★★☆☆☆☆☆
Made in 2019
★★★★★★☆☆☆☆
Made in 2010
★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆
Made in 2019
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Made in 1987
★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆
Made in 2018
★★★★★★★★★☆
Made in 2012
★★★★★★☆☆☆☆
Made in 2019
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Made in 2019
★★☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
Made in 2004
★★☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
Made in 2015
★★★★★★★★★☆
Made in 2018
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Made in 2019
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★★★★★★★★☆☆
★★★★★★★★★★
★★★★★★★★☆☆
★★★★★★★★★★
★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆
★★★★★★★★★☆
★★★★★★★★☆☆
★★★★★★★★★☆
★★★★★★★★★★
★★★★★★★★★★
★★★★★★★★★★
★★★★★★★★★★
★★★★★★★★★★
★★★★★★★☆☆☆
Made in 2010

Probably can be viewed in retrospect as a bit of a pivot point for Adam McKay going from “dumb comedies” to “smart dumb comedies”, right? I watched this for the first time knowing the shtick and was genuinely entertained (we wanted, explicitly, a “fun dumb movie” after a few rounds of drinks.) There are a couple strokes of genius (the runner about TLC, for instance); the third act runs out of steam, as parodies tend to do. Overall, can’t really complain about what this movie was trying to do and it more or less succeeding at it.

Written by Woody Allen
★★★★★★★★★☆
Made in 2011
★★★★★★★★★★
★★★★★★★★★★
★★★★★★★☆☆☆
Made in 1997
★★★★★★★★☆☆
Made in 2001
Written by Nora Ephron
★★★★★★★★★★
Made in 1989

This, to me, is the ur-romcom — the gold standard against which all others are compared, and most are found wanting. The chemistry, the script, the everpresent autumn, the interstitials with old couples — it is all so good, and exactly what it is trying to be!

  1. You could find me in the 2012 A.V. Club comment section, vigorously debating the finer points of Mad Men. 

  2. Though at the time of writing this, he has only reviewed one movie. Come on, Oliver! 

  3. This isn’t meant to denigrate Letterboxd, which frankly strikes me as the best “content cataloging” service that I’ve ever seen. I just don’t want yet another account inevitably designed to the dustbin of history.