2012 Movies, Part 1: Top 5 Films

djangoblue
The Extraordinary
Fantastic movies of 2012

I’ve seen a lot of movies this year and wanted to discuss all of them in-depth, but realized that was way too much for one post.  So, to start with, this is a list of my ten favorite films of the year and a discussion of the problematic aspects of many of them.  It is possible, of course, to love a movie that has issues, and many of my favorite films of the year focus on the privileged.  So without further ado, my top 10 films and their strengths and weaknesses.

1. Django Unchained: The story of a slave and an enlightened German bounty hunting and seeking revenge in antebellum South.  This is my favorite movie of the year.  It deserves nods for Best Directing, Best Screenplay, Best Soundtrack, Best Original Music, Best Ensemble, Best Western Since Blazing Saddles, Most Brilliant Unnecessary Carnage, and Best Conversation Starter.

Representation: Bechdel Test: Fails. The beautiful and awesome Kerry Washington is the damsel in distress who, unfortunately, doesn’t do anything proactive.  Zoe Bell has a brief appearance, unrecognizable and badass as a villainess.  There are also several slave women who are there to be eye candy or Mammy and Leonardo DiCaprio’s character has a sister, who meets a wonderfully horrific end.  And, with the loss of Tarantino’s brilliant editor Sally Menke, there aren’t any women in above-the-line positions on the film.  On the other hand, the film makes strong use of African-American characters, who have complex interactions with the Institution, making it a surprisingly nuanced portrayal of slaves.

2. Hitchcock: The story of the making of Psycho and the relationship between Alma Reville and Alfred HItchcock.  I love Helen Mirren so much I would go see her in anything and she has some wonderful moments here.  Anthony Hopkins is good as Hitchcock, but it is really Mirren who steals the show, especially since so few know the story of the woman behind the man.

Representation: Bechdel Test: Pass, I think.  It’s a biopic about Hitchcock, who is a man, and nearly every conversation is about him.  But I’m fairly certain his secretary, played by the wonderful Toni Collette, and Alma discuss the script, which Alma rewrites for her husband.  The story is not strictly historically accurate, but it is fascinating, especially as an attempt to give credit to the woman who was so instrumental to Hitchcock’s success.  In a way, the film is very empowering in as much as it reveals just how much Alma contributed. There are, of course, no people of color in the film, arguably because that’s what Hollywood and Hitchcock’s circle looked like in 1960.

Great interview with Helen Mirren:

3. Silver Linings Playbook: The story of a man trying to overcome his bipolar disorder so that he can reunite with his wife who meets a young woman struggling with her grief from her husband’s death.  The trailer did not make me think that this movie was going to be particularly special, but the reviews were so positive that I went to see it anyway.  Although I have some issues with the end, it is an incredibly well-made movie and both Jennifer Lawrence and Bradley Cooper are perfect in their roles.  The scene-stealer of the movie, however, is Robert DeNiro, who I would give best supporting actor to in a heartbeat.

Representation: Bechdel Test: Fail.  Chris Tucker, John Ortiz, and Anupam Kher offer faces of color and interesting, complicated characters.  While they are not the leads, they have meaty roles that offer them more to do than most films give their secondary characters.  All three of them are incredibly charming and funny.  Lawrence is, of course, a fantastic and fun woman who is complex and, while she needs a little rescuing, she is also rescuing Cooper from his life as well.  She is strong and vicious and sweet in turns.  Jacki Weaver is also great as the mother.

Not the spitting image of Ben Affleck
Not the spitting image of Ben Affleck

4. Argo: The true story of a CIA agent pretending to be a Hollywood Sci-Fi movie’s location scouter to rescue 6 Americans from Iran.  I normally can’t stand Ben Affleck as an actor, but I love real-life intrigue stories and, it turns out, he was actually really good in this film.  Roger Ebert named this as his number one film of the year, and while it didn’t quite reach that for me, I understand why it did.  It is, as he says, the most “movie” movie of the year and, like Ebert, I am very much interested in popular movies as much as I am in high film, if not more.  John Goodman and Alan Arkin are brilliant as ever.

Representation: Bechdel Test: Pass.  This is very much the story of tricking the Iranians and Iranians hating Americans, so there’s not a lot of positive feelings given their way.  Affleck is also playing a person of Mexican heritage — on the one hand, it’s awesome that a movie got made with someone named “Mendez” as the hero and it never would have gotten made without Affleck, on the other hand it’s a shame that the movie plays down his heritage and didn’t have the ability to give the opportunity to someone who is Mexican American.

beasts

5. Beasts of the Southern Wild: The story of a little black girl living outside the levees in New Orleans and how she survives a big storm and her father’s illness.  I was fully expecting this to be my favorite movie of the year — I love magical realism stories about children.  Plus, Obama recommended it to Oprah, who named it her favorite film of the year — if that’s not endorsement, what is?  It didn’t make it to number one, but it is an incredible movie.  Quvenzhané Wallis is incredible in the lead.

Representation: Bechdel Test: Pass.  While I found this movie empowering and meaningful as a depiction of rural, Southern life, there has been substantial disagreement from others.  While Obama and Oprah loved it, bell hooks thought it was a portrayal of the noble savage and black matriarch stereotypes.  I personally think the entire movie subverts those stereotypes with a strong black single father who is fiercely devoted to his daughter, if not affectionate, juxtaposed against the strong teacher figure who helps her with her father’s illness but doesn’t ever take care of her — and I don’t see how a six-year old who is dependent on others to survive is a “matriarch”.

Honorable mentions: Brave (Bechdel Pass, no people of color); The Hunger Games (Bechdel Pass, strong secondary characters were people of color); Rise of the Guardians (Bechdel Fail, no people of color); Wreck-it Ralph (Bechdel Pass, no people of color); Zero Dark Thirty (Bechdel Pass, one minor character and bad guys were people of color)

Films on other people’s lists that I haven’t seen: The Dark Knight Rises, The Amazing Spiderman, Snow White and the Huntsman, The Perks of Being a Wallflower, The Oranges, Moonrise Kingdom, Safety not Guaranteed, Take this Waltz, Life of Pi, Amour

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2012 Movies, Part 1: Top 5 Films
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7 thoughts on “2012 Movies, Part 1: Top 5 Films

  1. 1

    1. Life of Pi (Really curious how fellow atheists have responded to this film)
    2. The Cabin in the Woods
    3. The Imposter
    4. Moonrise Kingdom
    5. The Avengers (yeah I know)
    6. Looper
    7. 21 Jump Street
    8. The Grey
    9. Silver Linings Playbook
    10. Once Upon a Time in Anatolia

  2. 2

    I am actually reviewing Life Of Pi but you have to wait for a bit… I am mid exams and I want to see it again!

    Oh as for Brave? It’s set in medieval highland Scotland (hence the accents) so no black people. I honestly would have been insulted if we throw in the token asian (You do realise we are the biggest minority in the UK?) into a movie where we have no place. There are no brown people in Braveheart either (Well that’s because Mel Gibson is allergic to melanin). That’s the thing. I don’t want tokenism. I liked life of Pi because being Indian was integral to some of the plot and Piscine’s upbringing. It meant something. He wasn’t brown and tamil (another thing that I am) for the sake of pandering to the tamil audience.

    Want to know something interesting? They represented a group of people who in the UK have it worse than asians for “racism”.

    Gingers. Red Heads. That alone gives them my vote… Ginger bashing is technically a form of racism (It’s the original gene pool of the UK and they don’t really have a good time going through life).

    So Brave gets my vote despite having no people of colour because it has a protagonist from a group of people who are normally side lined and often simply just ignored. A group of people who are often more bullied than people of colour. They had a heroine who had orange hair (A very scots thing to have…). They also didn’t put in people of colour which would have been stupid because there were probably no people of colour in medieval Scotland and the scottish (outside of moi and the Demoman) are considered “pasty and prone to catching fire in the sun”.

    (TLDR – Non white scots are a recent thing, putting us into movies like Brave isn’t sensible. It’s tokenism! Also? The biggest minority in the UK are not black people who make up just 1% of the UK it’s Brown guys like me. British asians are 4% of the UK.)

  3. 3

    Concerning your list of not-seens: At our house, Friday and Saturday are usually movie nights (via Netflix). Some recent weekend, the two were Safety Not Guaranteed and Moonrise Kingdom. Best weekend ever. I haven’t seen any of your top 5 so can’t comment, so I guess you can’t compare your taste to mine, but I recommend those two anyway.

    Also: Thanks for including the Bechdel info.

  4. 4

    Count me as another white bleeding heart who loved Django. In fact, I saw it with my mom who is far more averse to violent and exploitative films than I and we both agreed that it did more justice to our nation’s shameful history than that overwrought one dimensional Spielberg hagiograpy we took in a few months back.

    But I’m just a dumb cracker.

  5. 5

    Django Unchained may enter the pantheon of Best Westerns, but there have been MANY that have eclipsed Blazing Saddles since its release. Unforgiven is the most obvious, the re-make of 3:10 To Yuma, the re-make of True Grit, The Outlaw Josey Wales, Silverado, Dances With Wolves, Tombstone, Open Range, and, if you grant them membership in this genre, There Will Be Blood and No Country For Old Men. Blazing Saddles was an astonishment in 1973, but it really hasn’t aged very well, compared to, say, Young Frankenstein.

    I might add that my tastes are always correct, so no disagreement is possible here.

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