Friday, June 6, 2008

Best Movies of 2005

Finding a list of movies was a bit harder for 2005 than it was for 2006. Though I haven't seen the most popular film at the Oscars that year: Brokeback Mountain or any foreign film it seems. Nevertheless...

  1. Match Point (Woody Allen)
  2. Serenity (Joss Whedon)
  3. Me & You & Everyone We Know (Miranda July)
  4. Good Night & Good Luck (George Clooney)
  5. Sin City (Robert Rodrigeuz & Frank Miller)
  6. Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit (Nick Park & Steve Box)
  7. Batman Begins (Christopher Nolan)
  8. Capote (Bennett Miller)
  9. The Squid & The Whale (Noah Baumbach)
  10. The Hitchiker's Guide to the Galaxy (Garth Jennings)

Top Movie of 2010?

I'm going to make a bold useless prediction right now. The Yiddish Policemen's Union is going to be the best movie of 2010.

Fresh off watching the awesome No Country For Old Men, I was reading up on the Coen Brother's next film: Burn After Reading (trailer below - looks promising) when I found out that a couple of projects down the line, the Coen Brothers intend to adapt Michael Chabon's The Yiddish Policemen's Union which I'm in the middle of reading. I must say, that this is a match made in heaven - I was thinking as I was reading how perfect it will be if the Coen Brothers made a movie from it - it's scheduled to be released in 2010 but knowing reality will probably be delayed - especially as two of their movies will be released before we get to see this. This is one project I'm excited about.

Best Movies of 2006

Looking back at 2006 I think it was a pretty good year for movies. I've managed to come up with a nice big list of cool movies that I quite liked from that year - and still plenty of quality movies I'm sure are out there. Of course these movies all have the benefit of being fresh to me. Most of them I saw only last year. It'll be interesting to see if these movies can handle five years of time.

  1. Little Miss Sunshine (Jonathan Dayton & Valerie Faris)
  2. Thank You For Smoking (Jason Reitman)
  3. The Science of Sleep (Michel Gondry)
  4. The Prestige (Christopher Nolan)
  5. Day Watch (Timur Bekmambetov)
  6. The Departed (Martin Scorcese)
  7. Scoop (Woody Allen)
  8. The Lives of Others (Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck)
  9. Casino Royale (Martin Campbell)
  10. Brick (Rian Johnson)
  11. The Bothersome Man (Jens Lien)
  12. A Prairie Home Companion (Robert Altman)
  13. V For Vendetta (James McTeigue)
  14. Stranger Than Fiction (Marc Foster)
  15. Cars (John Lasseter & Joe Ranft)
  16. Running With Scissors (Ryan Murphy)
  17. Fast Food Nation (Richard Linklater)

Best Movies of 2007

One thing that obsesses me is the constant battle of ranking my favourite things. So I've decided to embark on a journey of ranking my favourite movies of all time. I'm going to do this at a painfully slow pace - year by year. I'll start with last year - not that this list means much as I've yet to see a lot of 2007 movies. I rarely venture to the theatre and mainly watch movies by renting them on $3 or $1 days at the rental places. I've seen a few though - enough to put together a collection of more than ten movies that I enjoyed last year. So I haven't started too badly.

  1. No Country For Old Men (Joel & Ethan Coen)
  2. Ratatouille (Brad Bird)
  3. Juno (Jason Reitman)
  4. Sweeney Todd (Tim Burton)
  5. There Will Be Blood (Paul Thomas Anderson)
  6. Eagle vs. Shark (Taika Cohen)
  7. Planet Terror (Robert Rodriguez)
  8. Death at a Funeral (Frank Oz)
  9. Sunshine (Danny Boyle)
  10. The Bourne Ultimatum (Paul Greengrass)
  11. Zodiac (David Fincher)

Favourite Movies Project

This is going to be an index page for my favourite movies project. Where I intend to track my favourite movies of all time. I'm going to go year by year. I can't remember why anymore... but here's all the links...

Decade by Decade
The 2000s

Best Movies By Year
2007 - No Country For Old Men (Joel & Ethan Coen)
2006 - Little Miss Sunshine (Jonathan Dayton & Valerie Faris)
2005 - Match Point (Woody Allen)
2004 - Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (Michel Gondry)
2003 - The Triplets of Belleville (Sylvain Chomet)
2002 - Adaptation. (Spike Jonze)
2001 - Amelie (Jean-Pierre Jeunet)
2000 - O Brother, Where Art Thou? (Joel & Ethan Coen)
1999 - Being John Malkovich (Spike Jonze)
1998 - The Big Lebowski (Joel & Ethan Coen)
1997 - Deconstructing Harry (Woody Allen)
1996 - Fargo (Joel & Ethan Coen)

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Linky. Well. One Link.

Awesome post on Brain Stab.

Clean Day.

One exam down!

Yesterday saw me finish off my first exam - Economics of Health and Education - and I now have a nice week and a half before my next three - which occur in two days, otherwise known as hell.

So today is Clean Day, my room needed a good clean and it now smells like vacuum cleaner and spray and wipe. My axolotl, Napoleon also needed a clean so I spent an hour doing that. He's now completely stressed out as he hates anyone interfering with his kingdom.

It was also cool how Barack Obama secured the nomination last night. About time - now we got to get onto the election - what an epic one that shall be.

Finally, Arrested Development quote of the moment from the third season. By my favourite character Tobias: Okay, Lindsay, are you forgetting that I was a professional twice over— an analyst and a therapist. The world's first analrapist.

Sunday, June 1, 2008

May in Movies

I watched a lot of movies in May. 21 to be exact, that brings my total for the year up to 86. The best movie I watched was The Triplets of Belleville which scored a perfect 10/10 for me.
Coming up next would be the Akira Kurosawa film The Hidden Fortress. This is only the third Kurosawa film I've seen and I must watch some more.
Coming up in third place tied with a 9/10 rating are The Lady Eve (review), To Be or not to Be and No Country For Old Men.
And some special consideration for: Planet Terror (review), Raiders of the Lost Ark (review) and There Will Be Blood.

Happy June

I woke up this morning to the news that we have hit a new month: June. This fact scares the shits out of me. What the hell am I going to do when this month is over? I'm going to be so fucked.

I watched Hairspray last night. I must say that I admire the campy fun, everything else just seemed so forced - the acting, the script, the songs, the computer generated helicopter shot at the start. How are you supposed to have fun when you're being forced to?

Friday, May 30, 2008

Murder

Former University of Otago lecturer Clayton Weatherston has been committed for trial after pleading not guilty to murdering ex-girlfriend Sophie Elliott.
From the ODT.

Depositions are over for the Sophie Elliott murder which I've been following since day one. As an economics student at Otago myself I found this quite shocking.

It's interesting that Weatherston has elected to plead not guilty. I'm no lawyer but the evidence seems pretty damning and everyone I've talked to seems convinced of his guilt. It'll be interesting to see how it plays out.

This could be quite dull

Mr English raised the issue in Parliament today, and said if Mr Benson-Pope urged people to vote for Labour it would amount to election advertising under the Electoral Finance Act.
From the ODT.

You know. I really hope that this election isn't all about violations of the Electoral Finance Act. I can't think of a more boring way to conduct an election.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

My Favourite Paragrah of the Moment.

I would have just said, "the man was fat" but I guess that's why I'm not a novelist.

Rabbi Heskel Shpilman is a deformed mountain, a giant ruined dessert, a cartoon house with the windows shut and the sink left running. A little kid lumped together, a mob of kids, blind orphans who never laid eyes on a man. They clumped the dough of his arms and legs to the dough of his body, then jammed his head down on top. A millionaire could cover a Rolls-Royce with the fine black silk-and-velvet expanse of the rebbe's frock coat and trousers. It would require the brain strength of the eighteen greatest sages in history to reason through the arguments against and in favor of classifying the rebbe's massive bottom as either a creature of the deep, a man-made structure, or an unavoidable act of God. If he stands up, or if he sits down, it doesn't make any difference in what you see.

From Michael Chabon's The Yiddish Policemen's Union. A book I picked up at the library randomly based solely on the cover. I hadn't even heard of Michael Chabon at the time. I was then further convinced by all the praise and the crazy sounding plot.

I've been very impressed so far.

Saturday, May 24, 2008

The end of one particular kind of madness.

It's over.

Internal assessment is over. Such a thing just makes me so happy.

This essay I wrote ended up being one I just couldn't care about. I am so bored with a topic like "media imperialism". It's my own fault really, what could I expect after doing papers like "understand contemporary media", "political communications in new zealand" and "theorising digital media". I'm burned out on the media after doing my fourth paper on it.

It's a relief that this is my final semester (providing nothing awful happens.... again.). Though it should be added I still find all aspects of microeconomics to be fascinating - macro bores me.

I stayed up until 4am writing before deciding to go to bed, I think I should have just done what I did last week and stay up all night fueled by unhealthy amounts of coffee but I decided to sleep. I woke up and felt ruined for the rest of the day. And today. I felt pretty good last week - I'm clearly not up for sleeping 4-5 hours at a time. It's either none or nine.

After handing in the essay I was so tired that I made my way to the AV center in the library and just watched Battlestar Galactica for four and a half hours. I had recently found out it was in the library and heard it was good so I thought I'll give it a shot. I don't know if it was the crazy talking but it was pretty fucking good. I totally want to watch more.

The way home was surreal, it was raining and everything just seemed weird, from the polynesian singers who had hidden themselves in some crevice of the postmodern library outside to the pot smokers who meet every friday at four o'clock or something who were just standing there - smoking in the rain. Just seemed weird to me.

The next couple of days will be dedicated to relaxation. Before I start getting into exam prep. The madness has only just began.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Review: Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)

Well, the new one has had its premiere in Cannes so I thought I'd give the first one a watch. Introduce myself to the whole Indiana Jones thing. It's good for someone who studies pop culture to actually acquaint myself with some of it.

The most interesting thing about the movie for me though, watching it 27 years after it's been released was that I felt that I had watched it all before - everything seemed so familiar. My theory is that the entire movie has been parodied and referenced by so many different people that you could actually reconstruct the entire movie from them. The first place you'll start would be The Simpsons and then you'll move on.

The movie itself was great - everything you could want from an action film really. And what most action films have been aspiring to do since. I'll have to grab a copy of the second and watch it as soon as I can me thinks.

8.5/10