Black Panther
I loved the comic in the '70s. It was great to see him come
to the screen this year. Though his costume has been modified to the point that
he seems to be just another Iron Man, I had to roll with it and accept the changes
since I had read the book. A cool soundtrack and a group of strong women just
as powerful as the titular hero made for a satisfying debut. I was caught up in
giving the Wakanda forever salute as well.
Avengers: Infinity War
Someone asked me how I felt about this film, and my response
was, "I'm just glad I was alive to see it." Sounds grandiose, I know,
but it juggled so many of my childhood heroes with such a deft touch. It also
subverted the usual supervillain trope by making Thanos's aim something that is
an unresolved, and seemingly unresolvable, problem in the real world. I felt
sympathy stirring in my heart for the big guy. It all ends with a truly epic
battle and a lump in the throat.
Leave No Trace
A dad with PTSD and his daughter choose life off the grid,
and struggle when they are caught and forced by society to rejoin the
mainstream. The daughter warms to it, but the dad has trouble adjusting. The
film shows us that there are pitfalls on either side, and that maybe the choice
is not so clear. By the end, I wasn't sure who had it better. Good performances
by Ben Foster and Thomasin McKenzie.
Zama
A tale of Argentina during the colonial era. Zama is a
magistrate in a small village who yearns for an assignment in a larger town
with more opportunities. Promises to send his request to the King are always
delayed. He assaults a colleague and is exiled to a remote area among the
native population, with one of whom he has had a child. To escape this
situation, he joins a party that is sent out to the countryside to find a notorious
bandit, who apparently was not executed as originally thought. There he meets
with the consequences of colonial abuse and oppression. The incessant bird
calls serve as the main soundtrack, almost to the point of distraction, but the
atmosphere is palpable. The air is haunted by a dark history, not to mention
the spirits of the oppressed.
Blackkklansman
My favorite film of the year. Spike Lee's adaptation of a
true story about a black law officer who penetrates a Colorado chapter of the
KKK, with the help of one of his white colleagues. The story takes place in the
early '70s, when it was difficult enough for a black person to lead an everyday
life without being pushed down. The payoff at the end, with Ron Stallworth
telling off David Duke over the phone, was one of the most satisfying moments
of the year.
In This Corner of the World
My favorite anime this year. A tale of Japan during World
War II on the home front. Suzu, a
young woman with artistic talent, loses her
drawing hand to an American bomb. She struggles with the loss, and the
increasing bombing raids by B-29s as the progresses. We get a real feel for
what it was like to be on the receiving end of such power. In the end, the film
shows us that our enemy is as human as we are, and that war is ultimately a human
failure. Though one side may win, it's a life of peace that loses, and war just
continues.
The Florida Project
The days of a resilient young girl and her flawed mother as
they find shelter in a somewhat run down hotel. The child roams the area with her
friends, begging money for ice cream and getting into trouble. Her mother
doesn't have a steady job and resorts to selling perfume at first, then her body.
It's all set in the fever dream of tourist Florida, with its Disney-inspired
flights of commerce and its lush green spaces behind the artificial facade. You
get lost in this atmosphere until Brooklynn's luck runs out. The final scene
represents Brooklynn's ultimate escape.
Fahrenheit 11/9
Michael Moore strikes again. Yes, it's about the election,
but it's also about how we got there. Clinton and Obama are not spared in his
film, she for her ignorance during the campaign of swing states Michigan, Pennsylvania,
and Wisconsin (which all went to Trump), and he for his bungled response to the
Flint water crisis. I was particularly shocked at how Flint was used by the US
military for simulated urban war games. Buildings were bombed from above, and
troops and tanks flooded the city. You can hardly believe it's happening here,
but Mr. Moore shows us again why we need him, and why he's the true American
populist.
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