Showing posts with label 2001. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2001. Show all posts

Monday, September 1, 2014

From My Collection: A Beautiful Mind Movie Review

The Academy has a great history of awarding the Best Picture Oscar to a generally lifeless, inoffensive work of mediocrity. I can hardly say that A Beautiful Mind is not a good movie (I regrettably put it on my top ten list for 2001), but it certainly isn’t great. It’s not even particularly memorable except in its simplistic depiction of mental illness.

I can’t say with any certainty to what degree John Nash suffered with schizophrenia or how it manifested itself, but I do know that the way Akiva Goldsman incorporates it into his screenplay, based on the biography by Sylvia Nasar, seems almost preposterous, designed specifically to aid the unsubtle viewer in understanding what Nash was going through. I guess I shouldn’t fault the movie for trying to reach a broader audience, but nor should we assume that it has anything new or interesting to say on the subject.

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

From My Collection: Ghost World Movie Review

It’s sort of a rite of passage of being a teenager that you think you’ve got the world figured out, have everyone’s number, and believe your own views to be absolutely right. I suppose it takes most people until sometime in early adulthood to realize that you didn’t know half of what you thought you did when you were seventeen. Some teenagers (I might have been one of them) take it a step further and believe there is an authentic way of living and that just about everyone walking this earth is a big phony. Think Holden Caulfield. It should suggest something important that he was my hero at fifteen and then a sad tragedy at thirty.

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Black Hawk Down Movie Review

As I rewatched Ridley Scott’s Black Hawk Down for the first time I more than a decade, two other war Berchtesgaden more than a year later. The similarities are numerous. Both are based on books that attempted to recount, in as much factual detail as possible, the events surrounding are large contingent of American soldiers in conflict. Both were released toward the end of 2001, coinciding with post-9/11 American jingoism. Both focus heavily on the responsibility soldiers in combat feel toward each other more than to the ideology or politics behind the war. And both unflinchingly portray some of the horrors and carnage of war. The other is the more recent Lone Survivor, whose primary focus is on the fact of soldiers in harm’s way pulling for each other. The latter film has faced criticism for being a form of war porn, which you could also say to some extent about Scott’s film. But I think the positives to take away from all three far outweigh any negative observations regarding the depiction of blood and guts in battle scenarios.

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Short Cut Movie Review From My Collection: Ocean's 11

Short Cut Movie Review is normally less than 400 words, but in some cases may go slightly over. This is my attempt to keep writing about as many films as I see without getting bogged down with trying to find more to say. They are meant to be brief snapshots of my reaction to a movie without too much depth.

I’m a total sucker for heist films. I’ve said it here before. I love the group of thieves each with some specialized skill, the plan, the execution, and the hitch, even though these are all generally tired clichés in the subgenre. Steven Soderbergh’s updating of Ocean’s 11, from a screenplay by Ted Griffin, is a slickly produced genre film that is far better than it has any right to be.

The original featured the epitome of 1960s cool, the Rat Pack, with Frank and Dean at the fore. Forty years later, the update features contemporary Hollywood’s biggest male stars and embodiment of suavity: George Clooney and Brad Pitt. Clooney is Danny Ocean, the brains behind the caper and plan to rob three Las Vegas casinos of $160 million. His closest confidante is Pitt’s Rusty. They’re bankroll is supplied by a fading Vegas hotel magnate played by Elliott Gould and they put together an ensemble of crooks and villains that includes Casey Affleck, Scott Caan, Don Cheadle, Matt Damon, Bernie Mac, and Carl Reiner.

Monday, November 12, 2012

From My Collection - The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring Movie Review

More than anything, I want movies to surprise me. I want to see something that I haven’t seen before, or see an old story presented in a unique way. I want my expectations to be exceeded. I never read J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings trilogy. I wasn’t interested as a child. To this day, the genre of fantasy fiction doesn’t particularly appeal to me. In December 2001 I went to see The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring because it was expected to be one of the biggest movies of the year. It was the subject of countless magazine and newspaper articles about the 15 month shooting schedule in New Zealand with Peter Jackson painstakingly creating a world on film that was already known to millions of loyal fans of the novels. I walked out of the theater both exceedingly surprised and deeply moved by both the story and the unbelievable craftsmanship involved in the making of the film.

Monday, April 2, 2012

From My Collection: American Pie 2 Movie Review

I’ll usually be the first one to rail against sequels that are nothing more than a retread of the first film. These films are cynical ploys to earn more money using the same formula a second or third time. And of course audiences tend to fall for it every time. This is especially true in the comedy genre: take a group of people in a comedic scenario, have them do funny things, wash, rinse, repeat. Then take the same group and put them in a slightly different scenario to repeat similar gags. I did not find this to be the case with American Pie 2.

Saturday, December 17, 2011

Moulin Rouge! Movie Review: Ten Years Later, It Still Does It

“Love Is Like Oxygen.” “Love is a Many-Splendored Thing.” Love Lifts Us Up Where We Belong.” “All You Need Is Love.” At least that’s what pop music tells us as well as Christian, the young penniless Bohemian writer looking for truth, beauty, freedom and love in turn of the twentieth century Paris in Baz Luhrmann’s kinetic marvel Moulin Rouge! It’s ten years ago this month I first saw this movie on DVD and shortly thereafter I sought it out in the one Manhattan theater that was still showing it. It simply astounded me even though I fully expected to be repelled by it. I’m not a fan of musicals in general, but it quickly became, along with West Side Story, one of only two examples of the genre I truly adore and landed on my list of favorite films of the first decade of the 21st century.

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Joy Ride Movie Review: Revisiting an Old Non-Classic

The director John Dahl had a fantastic start in feature films, making the neo-noirs Red Rock West and The Last Seduction back-to-back and then Rounders later. After a big-budget commercial fiasco in The Great Raid, Dahl has stuck mainly to television since 2005. He has directed several episodes each of “True Blood,” “Dexter” and “Californication,” all centered on subject matter that Dahl has been drawn to and executed quite well in his film career. It was mainly on the strength of his early work that drew me initially to Joy Ride, a fairly standard genre film that Dahl elevates slightly above the average thriller. Coming back to the film about a decade later, I’m somewhat disappointed, though not particularly surprised, to find it doesn’t hold up as well as I remember.

Thursday, April 7, 2011

The Score Movie Review: The Uniting of Three Legends of Their Time

This review was written in July 2001 and is presented here for the first time.

Who would have thought that one movie could assemble the three greatest method actors from three generations? Getting that perfect dream cast together to watch three men so skilled at their art working with, off and against each other? Director Frank Oz's new heist thriller The Score does just that with Marlon Brando, Robert De Niro and Edward Norton.

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

The Pledge Movie Review

This review was written in January 2001 and is presented here for the first time.

The commercials for The Pledge, a new psychological thriller directed by Sean Penn based on the book by Friedrich Dürrenmatt, suggest that it's a standard detective story. One might expect the hero of the film to hunt a crazed killer, who continues to feed on prey until he leaves enough clues for said hero to catch him. But it's more about the lengths to which this detective (recently retired) will go to stop the killing.

Jack Nicholson plays Detective Jerry Black, who gets involved in one last case three hours before his retirement officially begins. The crime is a gruesome one, in which a seven-year-old girl has been raped and mutilated, then left in the snowy wilderness for a young boy to find. Jerry makes a solemn promise to the parents of the deceased that he will catch the killer. This is the titular vow that motivates his every action throughout the film.

Monday, April 4, 2011

Snatch Movie Review

This review was written in January 2001 and is presented here for the first time.

If you're familiar with Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels – the feature film debut of director Guy Ritchie then you'll understand why the plot of his new film Snatch is far too complicated to explain. Besides that, the plots of his two films are not really what's interesting about them. They function more as clotheslines for stringing together myriad characters whose paths cross in unlikely and often hilarious circumstances.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Saving Silverman Movie Review

This review was written in Feburary 2001 and is presented here for the first time.

Some boy-meets-girl movies that aren't good are at least charming, or cute, or have characters that you want to root for and see come to a happy ending. Not so with Saving Silverman, a new comedy from director Dennis Dugan.

In this useless movie, we're supposed to feel something for three life-long buddies: Wayne (Steve Zahn), J. D. (Jack Black) and Darren (Jason Biggs). They became best buds in the fifth grade and remained together for...well according to the movie it seems to be that a mutual love for Neil Diamond is the only thing that has kept these three imbeciles together. Wayne and J. D. are basically dogs with human qualities - they slobber, drool, yell, make ugly bodily noises and have no idea how to tastefully interact with the opposite sex (or the same sex for that matter). Darren is a little more cultured, a little smarter, but he hasn't made much of his life.

Saturday, April 2, 2011

A.I. Artificial Intelligence Movie Review: The Meeting of Two Worlds

This review was written in July 2001 and is presented here for the first time.

The anticipation surrounding the release of A.I. Artificial Intelligence has been great because it is the melding of two minds: those of Steven Spielberg and Stanley Kubrick – two of the most influential filmmakers of the last forty years.

Much of the interest is no doubt a result of these two men having such different approaches to filmmaking. Spielberg is the sentimentalist, always drawing the audience in to emotional (and sometimes schmaltzy) scenes, while Kubrick's films are known for their cold detachment and claustrophobia. So we watch with a keen eye as Kubrick's pet project of the last twenty years unfolds in the hands of Spielberg.

Friday, April 1, 2011

Hannibal Movie Review

This review was written in February 2001 and is presented here for the first time.

There is an unfortunate stigma that comes with sequels: the belief that it must be as good as or better than the earlier film in the series. Comparisons are always inevitable in such cases, but if a sequel can stand on its own, why is that not good enough? I've always maintained that the third installment in the Godfather series would be an excellent movie had it not been the third in a series of fantastic films. Hannibal, the sequel to 1991's critically acclaimed Silence of the Lambs, now faces the task of being measured against its predecessor.

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Enemy at the Gates Movie Review

This review was written in March 2001 and is presented here for the first time.

Jude Law is an actor who exudes tremendous energy in any role he takes. He became a star and earned an Oscar nomination in The Talented Mr. Ripley as an American playboy living the high life in the south of Italy. In Enemy at the Gates, a new film by Jean-Jacques Annaud, he plays a Russian soldier during WWII elevated to hero status by his skills as an expert marksman. In every scene, Law boils with intensity and sinks deep within the story.

The story (based loosely on fact) is of a young soldier in the Russian army helping a tired nation fend off the Nazi regime at the Battle of Stalingrad. The opening battle sequence will warrant comparisons to Spielberg's harrowing invasion of Normandy in Saving Private Ryan. Both are bloody and seem to be completely futile attempts at victory even though we know that the Allies won at Normandy and that the Russians halted the German advance at Stalingrad.

Sunday, January 2, 2011

Important Cinema Anniversaries to be Celebrated in 2011

My "25 Years Ago This Month - January" post may come a little bit later. Instead I wanted to start off 2011 with a rundown of some of the big milestones and anniversaries that will happen this year.

2001
To begin with, can you believe that Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings trilogy started a decade ago this year. That's right, The Fellowship of the Ring was released at the end of 2001. Likewise, the Harry Potter film series will also celebrate its tin anniversary in November this year, ten years after The Sorcerer's Stone opened. Also ten years ago, Christopher Nolan (now the world-famous director of little films such as The Dark Knight and Inception) had his film debut Memento. And does it really seem like it's been 10 years since Steven Soderbergh's remake of Ocean's 11 was released?

Friday, October 22, 2010

Shrek Movie Review: The One that Started it All

This review was written in 2001 shortly after the release of Shrek. This is the first time it is being published.


It's quite remarkable that the recent advent of computer animated feature films has produced some excellent movies. Disney and Pixar started it with the two Toy Story films and A Bug's Life and now Dreamworks has picked it up with Shrek, the story of an ogre who goes on a quest to rescue a beautiful princess so that the Napoleonic Lord Farquaad (say it out loud) can marry her and become king. Not only is Shrek the next in a line of films that look fantastic, but, like its predecessors, has an engaging storyline.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Son of the Bride Movie Review: Hollywood Visits Argentina


Watching Juan José Campanella’s El hijo de la novia (Son of the Bride) it’s clear that he received a significant arts education at the Tisch School in New York. Nominated for the 2001 Academy Award for Foreign Language Film (from Argentina), it is structured like a standard Hollywood film. It’s unusual to recognize such formulaic tropes in foreign cinema. That’s an observation much more than it is a criticism.

Ricardo Darín stars as Rafael, the owner of a restaurant started by his father, who spends most of his time on his cell phone talking to purveyors and corporate reps who want to buy his family-owned business. He has little time to slow down and pay attention to those who should be most important to him – namely his girlfriend, his young daughter from a failed marriage and his mother who resides in a care facility suffering from advanced Alzheimer’s. When his father, Nino, comes to take Rafa to visit Norma it has already been a year since his last visit.

Already you can see the makings of a typical Hollywood morality tale and predictably two events occur which make him reevaluate his priorities. The first is the sudden arrival of Juan Carlos, an old childhood friend long absent. The second is a heart attack that lands him in intensive care for a considerably short stay. It is this second event which is the obvious catalyst for change. But when Juan Carlos reveals that he was married with a daughter until both died and then begins to insinuate himself into Rafa’s life, building a relationship with his girlfriend and daughter, there is a deeper revelation in Rafa of the need to make profound changes.

The title of the film refers to the new wedding that Nino wants to have with Norma. After more than 40 years of marriage, he wants to give her the gift he never gave her from the beginning which is to get married in a church. This plot development takes shape late in the film and provides the overly sentimental elements that may leave softer audience members a bit teary-eyed.

The sentimental plot isn’t the only aspect with Hollywood fingerprints on it. Juan Carlos serves as a kind of sad clown. Nearly every scene with him in it is played as comic relief, culminating in the wedding at the end in which, for reasons too complicated to get into, he plays the part of the officiating priest, giving a sermon that begins, “On the first day God created the Heavens and the Earth…” Surely it’s no coincidence that Eduardo Blanco, the actor portraying Juan Carlos, bears a striking resemblance to Roberto Benigni, the Italian actor who has made a successful career out of playing the clown.

It’s easy enough to see why Son of the Bride was so well received in the United States and how it was nominated for the Oscar. It reaffirms everything we want to believe about the world: that generally unpleasant people have the capacity to change; that human tragedy (in both a wife and mother with Alzheimer’s and a young man who lost his wife and child) can have its lighter moments and lead to better times; and that generally things always work out in the end even though it may not be exactly as planned. As pleasing an entertainment though it may be, I’m certainly pleased that Campanella went on to direct the far superior The Secret in Their Eyes.


Thursday, April 22, 2010

A Courageous and Bold Undertaking in Band of Brothers


The Onion A.V. Club has a regular feature I often enjoy called “Better Late Than Never” in which one of their pop culture correspondents takes a first look at a past-dated film, TV show, game, book, etc. through the prism of history that comes with it.

In that spirit I recently watched the 10 hour HBO miniseries Band of Brothers, which first aired in late 2001. I remember that it was a highly anticipated event, coming on the heels of the enormous success of Saving Private Ryan and produced by the director and star of that film, Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks. Somehow I never watched an episode (although in watching the series now there was one scene that was familiar to me, recalled from my days of channel-surfing no doubt) despite the critical and popular raves it got at the time.

I can’t quite remember what it was this year that prompted me to seek it out. Perhaps it was hearing about the new HBO series The Pacific which will focus on the war against Japan in the Pacific as opposed to the European theater that is gloriously rendered in Brothers.

My assumption in approaching this saga was that it would be more akin to SPR in terms of the kind of gung-ho bravura, small band of simple soldiers against the whole German army which was the focus of that previous project. What I discovered instead was a thoughtful and poignant study of a single company of elite paratroopers that follows their exploits from basic training at Camp Taccoa, Georgia, through their field training in England, the jump behind enemy lines on D-Day, their near defeat in the Battle of the Bulge, finally ending with their arrival in Berchtesgaden – Hitler’s Eagle’s Nest hideaway in Bavaria.

What I didn’t know about this series, based on the Stephen Ambrose book of the same name, was that it was culled from first-hand accounts of what happened and that the characters in the show are all based on the real men of Easy Company of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment in the 101st Airborne. Each episode opens (save the last, which closes the episode) with WWII veterans talking about the experience. It turns out that these men are the real life veterans of Easy Company portrayed on screen. It must have been a tremendous and daunting undertaking to turn this real life story into a piece of entertainment to be consumed by the public, but a remarkable job was done by all the screenwriters and directors involved to keep the story honest without pumping it up full of Hollywood clichés.

The most impressive aspect of the series is what the writers leave unsaid. There is nary any pontificating on the meaning of war, responsibility, love of country and honor in serving. No one ever discusses the horrors of the battle experience except to put replacement soldiers or those returning from the hospital and have missed out on combat in their place.

Above all I would say the show exhibits grace, both in its depiction of war in general (it rarely flinches from the nightmarish horror of combat) and of its characters. At the end of the first episode, “Currahee”, as the boys are preparing to load into the planes to jump behind enemy lines in Nazi-occupied France, there are no grand speeches made, there is no talk about what they might encounter when they land. This kind of quiet reflection defines the entire series providing it with verisimilitude.

The first combat sequence arrives in episode 2, “Day of Days”, which sees the 101st Airborne jumping into Normandy to help clear the way inland for the units preparing to storm Omaha and Utah Beaches. This sequence is unbelievably chaotic and gives a sense of the sheer magnitude of the D-Day operation. These were the first guys into that war, landing in enemy territory and surrounded by Germans on all sides. Not to mention that the planes they were flying in were taking copious amounts of anti-aircraft fire from coming in so low and the paratroopers had to take small arms fire while floating toward the ground defenseless. When you consider the opening landing sequence of Private Ryan in concert with the Airborne assault you realize what a miracle of strategy and execution D-Day truly was.

The central character in the series is Richard Winters (Damian Lewis), who starts as a platoon leader, becomes Company commander after the death of Lt. Meehan on D-Day and is later promoted to Battalion XO. His role as the man who ties the stories together is only one example of the many troops who invaded Europe and later episodes take the time to focus on other soldiers. This is reflected at the close of the first episode as Lt. Winters peers out the jump door of his C-47 transport plane and the camera zooms out and pans to reveal the dozens of other planes and ships below about to embark on the great invasion – a great visual representation of one man lost in a sea of a military expedition. We are left at once attached to a single character while being awed by the scope of the operation.

Winters is the very model of a great commander. He is not only a skilled combat leader, having earned the Distinguished Service Cross for leading an assault on a German artillery position in Normandy, but also a compassionate leader, always knowing when a soldier needs a short break or a hot meal to restore his energy and confidence. Episode 5, “Crossroads”, (directed by Tom Hanks) focuses on him and his leadership. It is perhaps the most introspective episode, but solely relying on the performance of Damian Lewis, the way the camera shows us his perspective on the aftermath of a skirmish and a narrative device that has Winters reflecting on the events while typing his report.

Winters stands in stark contrast to the Company’s first commander, Herbert Sobel (David Schwimmer), who is something of a tyrant during basic training and their stint in England. The casting of Schwimmer in the role of a belligerent nitpicking commander seems at first an odd choice until he is revealed to be nervous before a practice jump, and later jumpy and borderline incompetent in the field. He instills no confidence in his men, all of whom volunteered for the paratroopers specifically to fight alongside the best rather than an untrustworthy draftee. Schwimmer brings a history of playing the nebbish and socially awkward Ross Geller on “Friends” which makes it easier to accept him as a leader grossly overcompensating for a lack of courage and nerve.

One of the great things about this series is the way it focuses on the relationships these men forged which was itself a rather unique set of circumstances. The soldiers went through basic training together as a unit unlike other military units comprised of members who trained separately and were brought together in the field of battle or just before. Easy Company not only had two years together before D-Day, but sat on the front lines of some of the most harrowing fighting in northern Europe between June 1944 and April 1945.

If I have one complaint about the series, it is that it is very difficult to tell the difference between the soldiers early on. There are those characters who get more screen time early on and you very easily identify with, for example Lt. Winters and Sgt. Bill Guarnere (Frank John Hughes) as well as those played by recognizable actors, such as Capt. Lewis Nixon (Ron Livingston), Sgt. Malarkey (Scott Grimes) and Sgt. Carwood Lipton (Donnie Wahlberg). But as far as matching names and faces of other characters, it doesn’t really start to come together for many of them until about halfway through. This makes it difficult to connect during one of the big emotional climaxes of the Battle of the Bulge when Joe Toye (Kirk Acevedo) loses his leg to artillery fire and his good friend Bill Guarnere loses his own leg trying to drag him to a foxhole. For me, Toye was a brand new character in that episode (although Guarnere was well-known to me given his distinctive Philly accent), but looking back on the early episodes a second time I discovered that Toye was always there. However, by the end of the series there are several recognizable characters who you can easily identify with, bringing the long arduous ordeal to a satisfying, if rather sad, conclusion.

The series reaches its emotional pinnacle in episode 9, “Why We Fight”, when a patrol squad stumbles across a concentration camp. The men bear witness to the atrocities committed by the Nazis, heretofore unknown to the average foot soldier. They find hundreds of prisoners wandering about the camp, starved and near death. The shock registers on all their faces as they begin to understand what the war has really been about, even if no one comes out and says it. David Frankel, the director of this episode, allows the power of the images to convey the message. Some prisoners wander past the soldiers in a daze, others hug them with all their might, eternally grateful that someone has finally come to their rescue.


Tuesday, January 1, 2002

Top Ten of 2001

This list was made in early 2002, but posted on 11 November 2015 and backdated to 1 January 2002

1. The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring dir. Peter Jackson
2. Memento dir. Christopher Nolan
3. A Beautiful Mind dir. Ron Howard
4. Moulin Rouge dir. Baz Luhrmann
5. In the Bedroom dir. Todd Field
6. Black Hawk Down dir. Ridley Scott
7. Gosford Park dir. Robert Altman
8. Mulholland Dr. dir. David Lynch
9. Together (Tillsammans) dir. Lukas Moodysson
10. The Man Who Wasn't There dir. Joel Coen

All films seen from 2001 (based on U.S. commercial release date)
* review available on this site
+ from my collection
titles in bold received at least one Oscar nomination

61* dir. Bill Crystal
A.I. dir. Steven Spielberg
Ali dir. Michael Mann
Amelie (Le fabuleaux destine d'Amélie Poulain) dir. Jean-Pierre Jeunet
American Outlaws dir. Les Mayfield
*+American Pie 2 dir. J.B. Rogers
Bandits dir. Barry Levinson
*+A Beautiful Mind dir. Ron Howard
*Black Hawk Down dir. Ridley Scott
Bread and Roses dir. Ken Loach
Bridget Jones's Diary dir. Sharon Maguire
Bully dir. Larry Clark
The Business of Strangers dir. Patrick Stettner
Captain Corelli's Mandolin dir. John Madden
The Curse of the Jade Scorpion dir. Woody Allen
The Deep End dir. Scott McGehee and David Siegel
Dogtown and Z-Boys dir. Stacy Peralta
Donnie Darko dir. Richard Kelly
*Enemy at the Gates dir. Jean-Jacques Arnnaud
Evolution dir. Ivan Reitman
The Fast and the Furious dir. Rob Cohen
From Hell dir. Albert and Allen Hughes
Gaudi Afternoon dir. Susan Seidelman
Ghost World dir. Terry Zwigoff
The Golden Bowl dir. James Ivory
+Gosford Park dir. Robert Altman
The Grey Zone dir. Tim Blake Nelson
*Hannibal dir. Ridley Scott
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone dir. Chris Columbus
Hedwig and the Angry Inch dir. John Cameron Mitchell
+Heist dir. David Mamet
In the Bedroom dir. Todd Fields
In the Mood for Love (Fe yeung ni wa) dir. Wong kar-wai
Intimacy dir. Patrice Chereau
Iris dir. David Eyre
Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back dir. Kevin Smith
Jeepers Creepers dir. Victor Salva
*+Joy Ride dir. John Dahl
Jurassic Park III dir. Joe Johnston
Knockaround Guys dir. Brian Koppelman and David Levien
Der Krieger und die Kaiserin (The Princess and the Warrior) dir. Tom Tykwer
L.I.E. dir. Michael Cuesta
Lara Croft: Tomb Raider dir. Simon West
Last Orders dir. Fred Schepisi
Life as a House dir. Irwin Winkler
*+The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring dir. Peter Jackson
Made dir. Jon Favreau
The Majestic dir. Frank Darabont
+The Man Who Wasn't There dir. Joel Coen
+Memento dir. Christopher Nolan
Monster's Ball dir. Marc Forster
+Monster's Inc. dir. Pete Docter and David Silverman
*+Moulin Rouge dir. Baz Luhrmann
Mulholland Dr. dir. David Lynch
No Man's Land dir. Danis Tanovic
*+Ocean's 11 dir. Steven Soderbergh
Osmosis Jones dir. Peter and Bobby Farrelly
The Others dir. Alejandro Amenábar
Pearl Harbor dir. Michael Bay
Planet of the Apes dir. Tim Burton
The Pledge dir. Sean Penn
Rock Star dir. Stephen Herek
+The Royal Tenenbaums dir. Wes Anderson
Rush Hour 2 dir. Brett Ratner
Saving Silverman dir. Dennis Dugan
*+The Score dir. Frank Oz
Sexy Beast dir. Jonathan Glazer
Shallow Hal dir. Peter and Bobby Farrelly
The Shipping News dir. Lasse Hallström
*Shrek dir. Andrew Adamson and Joe Stillman
Sidewalks of New York dir. Edward Burns
Spy Game dir. Tony Scott
The Tailor of Panama dir. John Boorman
Taste of Others, The (Gout des autres) dir. Agnes Jaoui
Together (Tillsammans) dir. Lukas Moodysson
Training Day dir. Antoine Fuqua
Vanilla Sky dir. Cameron Crowe
Waking Life dir. Richard Linklater
The Wedding Planner dir. Adam Shankman
Wet Hot American Summer dir. David Wain
Zoolander dir. Ben Stiller

Everything I Saw in the 2nd Half of 2025

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