Click here for the 2007 edition and here
for 2008's Songs for Swingin' Cineastes.
I'm still working on a complete list, i.e. positions 21-30, top re-
issues, and other notable titles (I also look forward to catching up with Wendy and Lucy and The Wrestler before the end of 2008). In the meantime, here's the gist of my film year. Click the links be-
low for my Amazon and Siffblog reviews and/or interviews, plus Steven Fried's post on My Winnipeg. Where my pieces aren't avail-
able online, I've used excerpts from my Video Librarian reviews.
The Tops:
1. Deep End (Jerzy Skolimowski)
2. Milk (Gus Van Sant)
3. Man on Wire (James Marsh)
4. The Bank Job (Roger Donaldson)
5. Frozen River (Courtney Hunt)
6. The Edge of Heaven (Fatih Akin)
7. My Winnipeg (Guy Maddin)
8. The Secret of the Grain (Abdellatif Kechiche)
9. Encounters at the End of the World (Werner Herzog)
10. The Dark Knight (Christopher Nolan)
Note: Every year, I compile a top 50, counting documentaries and reissues, but if a non-narrative/pre-existing title impresses sufficient-
ly, it might make my top 10, as in the case of Deep End, My Winnipeg, and Encounters. Since the former never received a proper US release, it's almost like a new title, though Skolimowski finally issued a film
in 2008, Four Nights with Anna, which is making the festival rounds.
Wagner Moura in Elite Squad
Runners-up:
11. Elite Squad (José Padilha)
12. The Band's Visit (Eran Kolirin)
13. Let the Right One In (Tomas Alfredson)
14. You, the Living (Roy Andersson)
15. Waltz with Bashir (Ari Folman)
16. Reprise (Joachim Trier)
17. Happy-Go-Lucky (Mike Leigh)
18. The Last Mistress (Catherine Breillat)
19. Momma's Man (Azazel Jacobs)
20. Rachel Getting Married (Jonathan Demme)
Note: What an amazing year for Israeli film! Aside from The
Band's Visit and Waltz with Bashir, Jellyfish made my top 30
(of 2008's animated features, I also enjoyed Wall-E and Fear(s)
of the Dark). You, the Living is still seeking distribution.
Gonzo!
Top Documentaries:
1. Gonzo - The Life and Work of Dr.
Hunter S. Thompson (Alex Gibney)
2. Trouble the Water (Tia Lessin and Carl Deal)
3. The Order of Myths (Margaret Brown)
4. Surfwise (Doug Pray)
Not everyone is cut out to be a doctor, but few medical practition-
ers chuck it all to become surfers who sire nine children and travel
the world in a 24-foot camper. Doug Pray's admirably even-handed
portrait of Dorian "Doc" Paskowitz and clan immediately distinguishes
itself from surfing celebrations like Endless Summer and Riding Giants,
though pro boarders Kelly Slater and Taylor Knox stop by to pay trib-
ute (after all, Doc lived the dream, even bringing surfing to Israel).
Co-produced by son Jonathan Paskowitz, Surfwise is more of a charac-
ter study, and the salty-tongued Doc is quite a character. As his wife,
Juliette, puts it, "For 10 years I was either pregnant or breast-feeding."
As youngest child Josh quips, "We were born because Doc wanted to re-
populate the world with Jews." A tanned and fit 85 at the time of film-
ing, Doc doesn't see any of this as unusual, describing his family, in-
stead as "the most conventional people." (And they do seem surprising-
ly sane.) Nonetheless, all 11 members subsisted on a diet of health food
(including branches), home-schooling, and big waves. For cash, Doc
ran a surf camp and treated the occasional patient. Despite the lack of
creature comforts, it might sound like paradise, except for the cor-
poral punishment and the fact that the kids had to listen to their par-
ents having sex every night. The director behind the fine music docs
Hype! and Scratch, Pray never imposes his views on the narrative,
but rather allows his subjects to speak for themselves. He leaves it
up to viewers to decide whether Doc was genius, madman, or some-
where in between. Easily one of the year's most fascinating films.
5. Up the Yangtze (Yung Chang)
6. Wild Combination - A Portrait of Arthur Russell (Matt Wolf)
7. Billy the Kid (Jennifer Venditti)
8. At the Death House Door (Peter Gilbert and Steve James)
9. Wrangler - Anatomy of an Icon (Jeffrey Schwarz)
Blond, blue-eyed, all-American Jack Wrangler (née Stillman) was one of the top porn stars of the 1970s. Like John Holmes, he wasn't much of an actor, but he gave the people what they wanted: beefcake. Unlike Holmes, he specialized in gay porn, but by participating in Jeffrey Schwarz's perceptive documentary, he doesn’t seek to exploit—or even to condemn—his past, but to prove that there's more to Jack Wrangler than meets the eye. A self-effacing raconteur, he makes his case. Born to wealth and privilege (his father produced Bonanza), Wrangler be-
gan life as an inauspicious runt, but hobnobbed with Tinseltown roy-
alty and soon developed silver-screen ambitions of his own. As the years passed, he also found himself attracted to other men. Though his enthusiasm trumped his talent, he discovered his niche when he seg-
ued from dinner theater and bit parts to exotic dancing and the adult film industry. His improbable biography kicks into high gear when he marries Margaret Whiting, a singer 20 years his senior. As he speaks to the camera, it becomes clear that Wrangler isn't just a story about one man's life in and out of the porn business, but about popular con-
ceptions of masculinity since the 1950s. Throughout, Schwarz, the filmmaker behind Spine Tingler! The William Castle Story, cuts between stills, clips (some incredibly rare), and comments from 40 speakers, including gossip columnist Michael Musto, publisher Al Goldstein, composer Marc Shaiman, and author Bruce Vilanch. Frank words
and images aside, the unrated Wrangler is only marginally more explicit than That Man - Peter Berlin, a previous porn portrait emphasizing character and context over shock value.
10. Joy Division (Grant Gee)
Bonus: Patti Smith - Dream of Life (Steven Sebring)
Note: It's beyond me why The Order of Myths and Up the Yang-
tze weren't shortlisted for a best documentary Oscar. The Acade-
my Award nominating committee instead selected Patrick Cread-
on's I.O.U.S.A., which displays all the artistry of a PowerPoint
presentation. Ms. Brown's doc premieres on PBS next year.
The year's best cover art
Top DVDs:
1. Mishima - A Life in Four Chapters (Paul Schrader)
2. Touch of Evil - 50th Anniversary Edition (Orson Welles)
3. Le Deuxième Soufflé (Jean-Pierre Melville)
4. Class Tous Risques (Claude Sautet)
5. Pierrot le Fou (Jean-Luc Godard)
6. Miss Julie (Alf Sjöberg)
7. Fallen Women [box set] (Kenji Mizoguchi)
8. The Rabbit Is Me (Kurt Maetzig)
9. The Furies (Anthony Mann)
10. The Small Back Room (Michael Powell)
Click here for part two
Until next year!
Endnote: Cross-posted at Facebook and Siffblog. Images from
Buzz Sugar, Collider, J4HI, Marmalade Skies, and Nippon Cinema.
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