Directors of the Decade

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Icesickle
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Directors of the Decade

Post by Icesickle »

Matt Zoller Seitz is writing essays about his directors of the decade for Salon. He's not even halfway done with the list, but I'm posting what he's done so far. The amount of thought and effort he puts into writing these essays is impressive.

You can find the link for this ever-evolving piece here:

http://www.salon.com/entertainment/movi ... index.html

[quote="Matt Zoller Seitz"]
Directors of the decade: No. 10 Michael Bay
You can love or hate the dumb, loud power of the man who typifies 21st-century Hollywood. But you can't escape it

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"Go! Go! Go!" "Incoming!" "Hit the deck!" WwwwwsshhhhhhhhSSHSHSHSHSH---KER-BLOOOOOM! "Lock and load!" 'Get some!" BUDDA BUDDA BUDDA BUDDA! Bleee-OWWW! BUDDA BUDDA BUDDA BUDDA! "Aim for the gas tank!" BUDDA BUDDA BUDDA BUDDA! Ker-BLANG! Splut! Gooooooshhh -- KER-BLOOOOOOM! "Yeahhhh!" "Woooo-hoooo!"

What Michael Bay movie is that from?

In spirit, all of them. But to truly experience the above you'd need to read it while riding a roller coaster. The car would have to be equipped with strobe lights, sparklers, a half-dozen monkeys battering you about the head and shoulders with ping-pong paddles and a boombox blasting the "Here comes the cavalry!" orchestral stylings of Bay's court composer, Hans Zimmer. The director of "Pearl Harbor" (2001), "Bad Boys II" (2003), "The Island" (2005), "Transformers" (2007) and "Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen" (2009) doesn't make movies, he makes rides. He's the filmmaker every studio boss dreams of -- the director as adrenaline pusher. He has a facile eye, staging terrific one-off sight gags (transfusion blood stored in Coke bottles in "Pearl Harbor"; the mini-droids morphing from kitchen appliances and Sam's brief trip to robot heaven in "Transformers 2") and tossing off dozens, even hundreds of gorgeous widescreen tableaux that most filmmakers would be lucky to compose once in a career.

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Yet Bay never respects the rhythmic integrity of any image, rarely holding a shot, any shot, no matter how lovely or functional or potentially powerful, for longer than three seconds, dicing hundreds of thousands of feet of 35mm film into celluloid shrapnel and firing it at the audience's face. One is tempted to say that you can't fast-forward through Bay's films because they're already on fast forward, but that's not accurate. They don't so much leave out what immature viewers call the "boring parts" (characterization, exposition, atmosphere) as destabilize and disorient the viewer by investing the "boring parts" with the same trashy momentousness as Bay's set pieces. The apple-pie-scented flashbacks to the heroes' childhoods in "Pearl Harbor" are staged and edited with the same apocalyptic brio as the titular act of infamy -- hyped-up orchestral cues, jumpy editing, swooping crane shots, lens-against-the-tonsils mega-close-ups. The first quarter of "Transformers," which establishes the hero and his dull suburban existence, recalls the analog era, Cheerios-and-Huffy bikes Steven Spielberg for about two minutes, after which point the charm vanishes and Bay brings in the editing WeedEater, the bathroom humor and the eardrum-rattling Dolby FX (not just for the noise of robots transforming, but for such ostensibly mundane sounds as doors closing and feet running up stairs).

The film theorist David Bordwell classified these tics as aspects of "intensified continuity," a type of commercial filmmaking that sacrifices classical Hollywood values -- meticulously staged camera moves, judicious edits, a build-and-release approach to pacing -- on the studio-hallowed altar of "energy."

But such academic classifications, however accurate, don't capture Bay's relentlessness. The man doesn't do intensified continuity; he does pregnant-women-and-people-with-pacemakers-shouldn't-ride-this-ride continuity. His films go to 11.

Bay's student thesis film was a Coke commercial set on the deck of an aircraft carrier. After a few years of making music videos and ads, he became a prot
Last edited by Icesickle on Wed Dec 23, 2009 12:46 pm, edited 2 times in total.

Icesickle
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Post by Icesickle »

Directors of the Decade No. 9: The sensualists
What do Lynch, Malick, Mann, Wong and Hou have in common?


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Other people, so I have read, treasure memorable moments in their lives: the time one climbed the Parthenon at sunrise, the summer night one met a lonely girl in Central Park and achieved with her a sweet and natural relationship, as they say in books. I too once met a girl in Central Park, but it is not much to remember. What I remember is the time John Wayne killed three men with a carbine as he was falling to the dusty street in "Stagecoach," and the time the kitten found Orson Welles in the doorway in "The Third Man." -- Walker Percy, "The Moviegoer" (1961)

The poignancy of that quote comes from the implication that the novelג€™s hero, Binx Bolling, is so alienated from his existence that films feel more real to him than life. But certain filmmakers -- I call them sensualists -- go Walker Percy one better. Through boldly expressive shots, cuts, sound cues and music, they suggest that we experience movies as moments because we experience life that way, too.

Michael Mann, Terrence Malick, David Lynch, Wong Kar-wai and Hou Hsiao-hsien -- the decadeג€™s great sensualist filmmakers -- accept this proposition as a given. Read a cable channel's one-paragraph schedule-grid summary of Mannג€™s "Ali," "Collateral," "Miami Vice" and "Public Enemies"; Malickג€™s "The New World" (all three versions, each of which is a different and equally valid film); Wongג€™s "In the Mood for Love," "2046," "The Hand" (a segment of the omnibus "Eros") and "My Blueberry Nights"; Lynchג€™s "Mulholland Drive" and "Inland Empire," or Houג€™s "Three Times" and "Millennium Mambo," and you would never guess that the filmsג€™ directors had anything in common.

But they share a defining trait: a lyrical gift for showing life in the moment, for capturing experience as it happens and as we remember it.

The sensualists are bored with dramatic housekeeping. They're interested in sensations and emotions, occurrences and memories of occurrences. If their films could be said to have a literary voice, it would fall somewhere between third person and first -- perhaps as close to first person as the film can get without having the camera directly represent what a character sees.

Yet at the same time sensualist directors have a respect for privacy and mystery. They are attuned to tiny fluctuations in mood (the character's and the scene's). But they'd rather drink lye than tell you what a character is thinking or feeling ג€“ or, God forbid, have a character tell you what he's thinking or feeling. The point is to inspire associations, realizations, epiphanies -- not in the character, although that sometimes happens, but in the moviegoer.

You can tell by watching the sensualists' films, with their startling cuts, lyrical transitions, off-kilter compositions and judicious use of slow motion as emotional italics, that they believe we experience life not as dramatic arcs or plot points or in-the-moment revelations, but as moments that cohere and define themselves in hindsight -- as markers that don't seem like markers when they happen.

The major phases of the hero's life in "2046" are circumscribed by the time he spent with a handful of lovely and amazing women, but he doesn't know this until he's reminisced; the film is itself an act of remembrance, a transcription of the contents of the hero's head. Wong's sublime re-creations of moments from each relationship have the elasticity of memory; Wong takes his cues from the hero's emotions, stretching or compressing time depending on whether the hero wants to gloss over a moment, scrutinize it or revel in it. Similarly, Pocahontas' life in "The New World" can be subdivided into birth/childhood (distilled into shots of Powhatans swimming in the ocean, then rising to the surface), the pre-John Smith years, the John Smith years, the life-after-John-Smith years, the heroine's marriage to John Rolfe and assimilation in England, and her death. The last event symbolically returns Pocahontas' spirit to its origin point in tandem with the ship that brings her son and husband to North America. The ship is photographed against bright sky that turns it into a cut-paper silhouette -- an iconic image that evokes the ferryman's boat crossing the Styx.

None of these associations or delineations jump up and announce, "Here I am!" while you're watching "2046" or "The New World" -- or "Miami Vice" or Hou's "Flight of the Red Balloon" -- for the first time. The films give you the pieces. You put them together. Sensualist films are composed of moments and fragments of moments -- bits of journeys, traumas, arguments, separations, romantic interludes; mysterious yet evocative shots of buildings, clothes and objects; images that seem like dream fragments, but which you're reluctant to classify as such because the whole film has a dreamlike feel. The fragments cascade across the screen. They don't reveal their significance until you've contemplated the whole film afterward -- and then only if you've reimagined the fragments not on your terms but through the eyes of the films' spiritually questing heroes. (The yearning, sometimes purplish voice-over monologues in Malick's last two films are all about trying to define the indefinable, describe the indescribable. They're about the inadequacy of words.)

Sensualists excel at composing images and moments that seem to stand apart from the films and be about nothing but their own beauty. Yet when you look at such images and moments in the context of the film as a whole they seem hugely significant, because they distill the film's preoccupations with haiku-like precision.

The shots of flowing waters and tall trees that end "The New World" aren't just pretty images of nature; they suggest the ebb and flow of personal and national history (the water) and the way that individual lives (the trees) derive nourishment from it and then root themselves in the memories of loved ones. Early in Wong's "In the Mood for Love," there's a shot of the married heroine, Su Li-zhen, briefly crossing an empty room dominated by a door frame. We don't get a good look at any part of her except her hand, which hangs briefly on the door frame before she leaves the room, and after she's gone, Wong holds on the empty frame. Like the final montage in "The New World," that shot from "In the Mood for Love" seems affected, pretty for the sake of prettiness, until you realize that the film tells the story of two married people who fall in love with each other's spouses. The most important thing in the shot is the wedding ring on the heroine's finger. The brevity with which it appears and disappears in the shot (maybe two seconds) tells you everything about these characters, this story, this director.

The sensualists are sometimes rapped as navel-gazers -- filmmakers who spotlight the ephemeral while ignoring or downplaying the basics: what happened, to whom and to what end. And their kind of filmmaking is not a route to box office glory. Hou is virtually unknown to American moviegoers; his films get brief theatrical releases, often on the coasts, if they play here at all. Wong is better known, but by the standards of Hollywood filmmaking still a curiosity. His great works of the past decade were probably seen by fewer people than saw "Live Free or Die Hard" on opening day, and his first English language feature, 2008's "My Blueberry Nights," was deemed a disappointment by U.S. critics ג€“ a misstep that prompted disillusioned fans to revisit his earlier Chinese movies and ask if they were as wonderful as they seemed or if they were graded on a curve because they weren't in English. ("My Blueberry Nights" is indeed minor Wong, small in scale and light in tone, but it's still major; it's the film equivalent of a great symphony composer dropping into a nightclub one Friday night and sitting in on piano.)

David Lynch is a brand name, a synonym for "weird," but he hasn't made a commercially successful film since 1999's "The Straight Story." His two masterpieces this decade, 2001's "Mulholland Drive" and "2006's "Inland Empire," induced rapture among certain cinephiles but bafflement among casual moviegoers. They continued the off-putting arc of Lynch's career, post-"Twin Peaks," which saw the director grow increasingly unsatisfied with merely being surreal and subversive, instead actively undermining, even attacking, narrative itself. Lynch's last three features (including 1996's "Lost Highway") are the closest viewers may ever come to having someone else's dream. The films change emphasis and direction and fuse (or swap out) characters without warning. They flow through the mind like water.

Michael Mann's only hit this decade was 2004's "Collateral," a thriller that was technically innovative (and sometimes eerily beautiful) but structurally tame. His other films -- the 2001 biopic "Ali," 2006's "Miami Vice" and this year's "Public Enemies" -- were in every way more adventurous; they met with wildly mixed, often harsh reviews, made squat at the box office and were derided by many viewers as obscure, meandering, indulgent and worst of all, artsy. Those words were likewise applied to Malick's "The New World," a film that has grown in popularity since its 2005 release, but which is still viewed (like Malick's other films) skeptically by those who distrust movies that aren't fueled by plot -- particularly films that show characters interrogating themselves via internal monologue and turning cartwheels in the grass. "What's the point of such silliness?" the skeptic grouses. "Let's get on with the story. Let's hear it for the good old missionary position."

Then again, let's not. To Binx Bolling's images of Orson Welles in the doorway and John Wayne in the street, let's add the ones cited above, plus more culled from a decade's worth of great sensualist filmmaking: the hero and heroine of "In the Mood for Love " passing each other on the stairwell and feeling the charge of forbidden attraction; the transitions to the neo-noir "future " in "2046" that reveal a sleek elevated train system, a special effect rendered so simply, even crudely, that it's unconvincing, yet which is somehow more dreamlike, more powerful, because it's unconvincing; the demon-man behind the dumpster in "Mulholland Drive," and the rabbits on the couch and the tiny couple and the heroine's nonsensical, nightmarish rushing-about in the disorienting final sequence of "Inland Empire"; the shock cut that reveals the black-painted Death figure sitting in the chair near Pocahontas' bed in "The New World"; the Holly Golightly-esque heroine of Hou's "Millennium Mambo" standing up through an open car roof as she rides through a tunnel at night, arms out, grinning, techno pulsing on the soundtrack; the shots of lovers' hands tentatively touching for the first time in Hou's 2005 triptych of shorts "Three Times." Of the latter, Salon's Stephanie Zacharek wrote, "Hou is less interested in strictly defined plots than he is in mapping the way time unfolds, exploring the varied, shifting textures of the hours of the day as they move along."

Mann, maybe the best-known practitioner of this type of filmmaking, produced countless indelible sensualist moments in the past decade. My favorites include Muhammad Ali sitting by himself in a subway car at night in "Ali," contemplating his true self before he steps into the ring or on TV and shows the world his constructed self; the assassin and the cabbie in "Collateral" watching a coyote lope across a Los Angeles street; the high-angled shot of Crockett and Isabella sailing to Cuba in a go-fast boat in "Miami Vice," and the subsequent cutaway, during their conversation in the bar, to a shot of children's legs running in front of a car's hubcap -- an image that hints at the domestic future that the lovers can't have because they're loners at heart. While we're at it, let's add three images from Mann's uneven but fascinating "Public Enemies": the streetlamps reflected in the hood of John Dillinger's sleek black car; the granite determination in the eyes of lawman Charles Winstead as he interrogates Dillinger's girlfriend, Billie Frechette, and his bemused respect as he realizes she's tougher than he thought; and Dillinger's awed and amused expression as he watches "Manhattan Melodrama," seeing his reality in the film's fiction, finding himself in the moment.

Commitment to the moment is the reason Mann's camera in "Miami Vice" creeps so slowly toward the face of drug cartel henchman Jose Yero as he watches Crockett and Isabella dance in a nightclub and realizes from their body language that they're not just having sex, they're in love. The moment isn't just about Yero realizing that Isabella's judgment and the security of his boss's operation have been compromised; it's about Yero's humiliation and rage at realizing that Crockett has won the heart of a woman who would never give Yero the time of day. Most filmmakers would duly note Yero's epiphany and get on with it. Mann stays inside the moment as long as he can, feeling Yero's rage build and crest like a wave. Yero's feelings are the point of the scene, just as the "Mulholland Drive" lovers' scorching desire to lose themselves -- their very identities -- in a moment is the point of the first lesbian tryst in Lynch's film, and just as the experience of being John Dillinger is the point of that sequence in "Public Enemies" where the gangster brazenly walks into a police station, looks at the evidence laid out against him on a squad room wall, and sees himself as others see him -- as a legend, a menace, an abstraction.

Village Voice critic J. Hoberman nailed the sensualist ethos in his review of Hou's 2007 reimagining of the classic French short "The Red Balloon" when he described Hou's version as "a movie that encourages the spectator to rummage ... contemplative but never static, and punctuated by passages of pure cinema. A medley of racing shadows turns out to be cast by a merry-go-round. A long consideration of the setting sun as reflected on a train window that frames the onrushing landscape yields a sudden flood of light."

In a sensualist film, the shape, color and pace of the world on-screen is informed, sometimes formed, by what the characters are feeling -- and by the filmmakers' determination to present those feelings as vividly and cinematically as possible. Which necessarily means that sensualist films often disregard or downplay elements that "good" movies are expected to prize: snappy dialogue; a three-act structure with a cause-and-effect plot that "raises the stakes," as hack screenwriters say, every 20 minutes or so, and a pop-Freudian sense of characterization that shows characters with a single overriding flaw identifying the cause of that flaw (moral compromise, a grim childhood) and struggling to heal, or win, or whatever. You know -- the shopping list.

Sensualists have no use for lists. They flip them over and write poetry on the back. They're quite comfortable with viewers asking, "Why did the character decide to do that?" or "Why did the film end where it ended?" or "What is this movie trying to say?" In fact, the opportunity to provoke such questions is a big part of why they make films. They want to spark identification and subjective response. They want to put you inside another time, another place, another life.
Last edited by Icesickle on Wed Dec 30, 2009 1:05 pm, edited 2 times in total.

Icesickle
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Post by Icesickle »

[quote]
Directors of the decade: No. 8: Robert Zemeckis and Wes Anderson
Robert Zemeckis and Wes Anderson are boys playing with their train sets -- and facing the limits of control


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When Orson Welles first stepped onto the set of "Citizen Kane," he exclaimed, "This is the biggest electric train set any boy ever had!" Think about that quote the next time you happen across Robert Zemeckis' "Polar Express" or Wes Anderson's "The Darjeeling Limited." While drastically different in tone, style and story, both features are built around characters taking a spiritual journey by rail. They're about as personal and obsessive as expensive Hollywood movies can get.

And taken together, they tell us a quite a bit about the state of the auteur in the age of digital technology. Cinema, like every art form, has always had an aspect of omnipotence. Art lets man play God -- or at the very least return to a childlike state of openness that lets the imagination run free. And many of the technological changes that marked this decade in film were all about building a bigger and better train set. From the use of CGI to create fairy tale landscapes and grotesque monsters in the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy and the "Star Wars" prequels, to David Fincher adding and subtracting years from Brad Pitt's face in "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button," flights of fancy don't seem so fanciful anymore.

I've just given myself a natural segue to start bashing Zemeckis as a soulless high-tech noodler -- a label hung on him by hostile critics who miss the 1980s showman who directed "Used Cars" and "Back to the Future" and think he's lost touch with his artistry, and maybe his soul. I can understand their dissatisfaction -- I loved the old Zemeckis, too. But I'm impressed with what Zemeckis has become. The three films he shot in the 3-D motion-capture process -- "Polar Express," "Beowulf" (2007) and this year's "A Christmas Carol" -- strike me as the most technologically, stylistically and tonally radical blockbusters to appear on U.S. screens since the heyday of Stanley Kubrick.

I'm not suggesting the two directors are philosophical birds of a feather or that they're equal in artistry -- in the cinematic firmament, Zemeckis is a star, Kubrick a galaxy -- but that they share a pioneer's mind-set. Kubrick was an inventor and an explorer as well as a storyteller, and so is Zemeckis. Kubrick was famous for coming up with a stunningly ambitious idea for a scene or image, being told by crew members that it couldn't be done because the technology didn't exist, then having them invent it, and even supplying them with sketches and reading material to get them started. From the groundbreaking miniature and optical effects in "2001: A Space Odyssey" through the dinners lit by candlelight in "Barry Lyndon" and the stunningly elaborate and expressive Steadicam shots in "The Shining," Kubrick didn't just make movies, he changed how movies were made. And whatever he didn't invent he improved. Part of the appeal of his films was that whether or not you liked the film as art, you could depend on Kubrick to surprise you -- by showcasing a fresh way of creating, photographing or manipulating an image, or by applying a risky tone to a tricky subject (think of the corrosive black humor of "Dr. Strangelove," which dares to see the absurdity of Armageddon, or the subjectively distorted visuals of "A Clockwork Orange," which externalizes the demented worldview of its sociopathic hero). Zemeckis shares Kubrick's determination to tell old stories in new ways.

He also shares with Kubrick -- and the great model-train aficionado Welles -- a world-builder's mentality. Zemeckis has spent much of his adult life creating or perfecting new devices, processes and even shots. You can see his restless curiosity at work in the dazzling optical effects in the "Back to the Future" trilogy and the integration of live action and animation in "Who Framed Roger Rabbit" through the innovative, digitally assisted camera angles in "What Lies Beneath" (the most astonishing of which starts very low, looking up through a seemingly transparent or nonexistent floor, then slowly rises to an overhead view that shows the floor fully intact). Now, thanks to motion capture, which can reproduce a moment from any angle the director wishes, Zemeckis is able to create whole worlds in his hard drive. He's no longer confined to stitching bits and pieces of reality and fantasy together and cleverly hiding the seams, as he did in his '80s and '90s movies. He can treat reality as if it were sculptor's clay. If he can visualize it, he can put it on screen.

While the motion-capture technology used by Zemeckis has improved with each new feature, the early complaints lodged against "Polar Express" -- that the world seemed too slick and inorganic and the characters too rubbery or PlayStation-like -- still resonate. And it's true that when Zemeckis' Beowulf leaps around the mead hall, there's no density to his movements. It's like he's being controlled by joystick (or by invisible marionette strings). One wonders whether Zemeckis made a tactical mistake that the chess master Kubrick would have avoided. Did he throw his artist's vision behind a technology that wasn't ready to achieve what he wanted it to?

Perhaps. But if we buy that reading of Zemeckis' career, we have to first accept that the whole point of the exercise was photorealism. And I don't think it was. I suspect instead that Zemeckis digs motion-captured imagery not in spite of its unreality but because of it. The "people" in his last three films are emblematic, archetypal, like puppets or figures in a mural; their "illustrated" look syncs up perfectly with the subject matter, which is dramatically very basic and general.

He's a mythmaker now.

"The Polar Express" is an enveloping (some would say oppressive) parable about the limits of rationality and the necessity of faith. "Beowulf" is a stark fable about the long-term consequences of sin, depicting its hero as a warrior-pillager who's both the figurative and literal father of his troubles; Neil Gaiman and Roger Avary's screenplay spikes the ancient poem with a dash of "Oedipus Rex" ("What caused this infernal plague on Thebes? Oh, wait a second, my bad -- it's me!"). His latest opus, "A Christmas Carol," is his most visually arresting movie since "Who Framed Roger Rabbit." It's a heartfelt and in some ways demented fusion of finger-wagging morality tale, up-to-the-minute social satire (the movie foregrounds the Cratchit family's economic deprivation and lack of decent healthcare, and pointedly shows Scrooge realizing his responsibility not just to the Cratchits, but to people like the Cratchits) and overscaled, psychedelic amusement park ride (the Ghost of Christmas Present hauls Scrooge from location to location in a disembodied flying room with a transparent floor; it's like a glass-bottomed Victorian hovercraft). And it continues the Zemeckis tradition, begun in the "Back to the Future" trilogy and continued in the motion-capture features, of enlisting a handful of actors to play multiple roles. (Tom Hanks in "Polar Express" and Jim Carrey and Gary Oldman in "A Christmas Carol" made like Peter Sellers in "Dr. Strangelove," appearing in multiple roles under digital makeup.) Zemeckis is the ultimate example of new-millennium moviemaking -- a total filmmaker who hasn't touched film in years; a sorcerer with an eyepiece, making his dreams come true.

But as is so often the case with Zemeckis, pre- and post-2000, the presentation in the recent movies is so overwhelming, such a spectacle in itself, that it simultaneously amplifies and undermines the subject. The movies are structurally very conservative -- linear in their storytelling, unambiguous in their symbolism, strikingly classical in their compositions and camera movements and sense of pace. It's the package that's revolutionary. And Zemeckis is only the most dramatic example of this kind of filmmaker; we've seen many of them this decade, from Peter Jackson (the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy, "King Kong" and "The Lovely Bones" ) to George Lucas and Steven Spielberg (who resuscitated both the "Star Wars" and Indiana Jones franchises, digitally rebooting them in ways that alienated fans of the analog originals) to Fincher (who applied digital world-building technology to the blockbuster adult drama in "Button" and "Zodiac"). All these directors have a touch of Welles about them; all directors do, granted, but digital technology has turned every movie, even medium-size ones, into opportunities to dream really, really big, and exercise near-absolute control over every scene, frame and pixel.

What's missing from all these movies is an awareness of the limits of control -- a self-aware, self-critical sense of what God complexes can do to an artist, or to anybody. You can sense of a bit of this temperament at work in Fincher's last two films -- which makes sense given the subject matter, namely the mystery of evil and the inevitability of death -- but for the most part Fincher's self-reflection is coded, at times deliberately camouflaged. It's there if you want to look for it, but it never comes looking for you. That's a defensible approach, but in an era of control-freak visionary filmmaking, a more challenging, confounding and emotionally intense vision is necessary.

That's where Wes Anderson comes in. The director of "The Royal Tenenbaums" (2001), "The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou" (2004), "The Darjeeling Limited" (2007) and this year's Roald Dahl adaptation "Fantastic Mr. Fox" is as much a train-set filmmaker as Zemeckis, Jackson and Lucas, and like Fincher, Paul Thomas Anderson ("Punch-Drunk Love," "There Will Be Blood"), Zemeckis and Spielberg, he's one of the few prominent Hollywood filmmakers working in the '70s auteur tradition -- and doing it with a style so distinct that it can never be stolen, only imitated. He's notorious for fretting over every aspect of his movies, from the texture of the clothes to the precise geometric motion of each shot and camera movement to the choice of on-screen font (he prefers variations of Futura). Detractors describe his style as fussy, overcomplicated, even airless -- and if one prefers a messier, more spontaneous kind of filmmaking, or a more "invisible" style of direction, Anderson is almost certainly the opposite of fun.

I won't mount a defense of Anderson as an exciting, imaginative and important filmmaker in this article, because I've already done it in a series of video essays. I mention him in this piece because of two particular aspects of his art. One is his commitment to analog moviemaking. He shoots on film and prefers to do everything, special effects included, on the set rather than create them after the fact. Even when he employs digital effects or processes, he calls attention to their artificiality; think of the obviously stop-motion sea creatures in "Aquatic" -- or, for that matter, the unruly, roiling fur on the creatures in "Fantastic Mr. Fox" -- which the director insisted be fabricated with hard-to-manage animal hair rather than more controllable synthetic hair, because he just liked how it looked.

Even more significant, in the context of Zemeckis and company, is Anderson's interest in depicting the emotional and social consequences of the control-freak, God-complex behavior that most directors (including Anderson, I'm sure) possess. Think of Max Fischer in "Rushmore" (1998) learning to redirect his self-aggrandizing talent into a poignant gesture of reconciliation, by dedicating his Vietnam play to Herman Blume, a Vietnam vet, and then contriving to have him sit next to his sometime lover and Max's unrequited love object, Miss Cross. Or the entire once-great family of geniuses coming to grips with their personal and professional failures in "The Royal Tenenbaums," specifically the major role that their charismatic but deeply selfish patriarch, Royal, played in the catastrophe.

Better yet, consider the title character of "The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou," a visionary stoner who designed his own boat and his crew's technology and uniforms, and runs a little movie studio producing documentaries that record his exploits and glorify his image. Zissou responds to his partner's death-by-jaguar-shark by vowing,
Last edited by Icesickle on Wed Dec 30, 2009 1:05 pm, edited 1 time in total.

drizzle
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Post by drizzle »

bay 10-2. coen bros 1.

wkw is for da gayz
http://www.steadybloggin.com - some of these are my thoughts yo

Icesickle
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Post by Icesickle »

[quote]
Directors of the decade: No. 7: Steven Soderbergh
He may be frustratingly opaque and comically prolific, but he isn't afraid to gamble -- or fail


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Steven Soderbergh has directed 17 features and produced two TV series in 10 years, often working simultaneously as director, producer, co-writer, cinematographer (under the pseudonym Peter Andrews) and editor (as Mary Ann Bernard). The sheer volume of his output, coupled with his technical daring, formal playfulness and versatility, beg a number of questions. To wit:

Is Soderbergh a great director making movies in order to explore life, art and his own tangled self, or a man who struggles to find things to say in order to justify making movies? Is Soderbergh's work united by strong thematic and conceptual threads or by sheer enthusiasm? How is it possible that Soderbergh could be so prolific without turning into a hack? Can any man this fearsomely productive have anything resembling an actual life? Or is the distinction between an actual life and a filmed life more or less moot in an age of surveillance, media and society-wide navel-gazing, an age in which every corner of reality has an aspect of the virtual? And if Soderbergh were ordered by some higher power to go 12 months without picking up a camera, would he emerge a stronger, deeper and more emotionally accessible filmmaker, or be found dead of liver failure in a skid row motel, the room's TV screen endlessly replaying the DVD menu for Jean-Luc Godard's "Contempt"?

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And why put Soderbergh on a list of important filmmakers when he hasn't made a paradigm-shifting, spotlight-grabbing conversation piece since 2000, when he released "Traffic" and "Erin Brockovich" and won fistfuls of awards for both?

I have a definite answer to that last question: Because Steven Soderbergh is, in every conceivable sense of the phrase, state-of-the-art. He's a total filmmaker, with all the splendor and baggage the adjective and noun imply.

The other questions I can't answer because I can't get a handle on Soderbergh. I'm not sure anyone can. To rework a great line from "The Limey," in some ways his vision seems less a vision than a vibe. And the elusiveness of every aspect of this multifaceted filmmaker -- the question mark at the center of his 20-year career -- seems inextricably bound up with the way that changes in technology and distribution have made filmmaking (now more often videomaking) a part of daily life.

From the high-profile output of some of Soderbergh's nearly-as-workaholic contemporaries (Clint Eastwood, Spike Lee, Michael Winterbottom and Takashi Miike are also lifetime members of Filmaholics Anonymous) through the rarely distributed microbudget indies cranked out by the thousands each calendar year on down to the home movies and amateur music videos and cartoons and found-footage mash-ups that dominate YouTube, we've become a society of filmmakers -- people who instinctively view life as if it had a frame around it, even if we're not consciously aware that we're doing so. Life and movies, documentary and drama, virtual and real have become a big blur.

Soderbergh anticipated all this in his semi-autobiographical 1989 debut, "sex, lies and videotape." That breakthrough indie was built around a drifter named Graham (James Spader) who punished himself for sexual and romantic sins by withdrawing into a voyeuristic cocoon, videotaping women's rawest sexual confessions and presumably jerking off to them. (I say "presumably" because Graham frankly admits that he's "incapable of getting an erection in the presence of another person," and he's never seen pleasuring himself while watching the videos -- just staring blankly at the screen as if hoping some cathartic meaning will emerge.) Many of Soderbergh's subsequent films were likewise concerned with the allure and consequences of voyeurism and self-deception -- with the thrill that comes from watching and the fear of being watched, and every person's daily struggle to present themselves as they wish to be seen and avoid confronting what they are. This fascination flowered in the aughts as the director embraced video (from consumer-grade digital to hi-def) and became a one-man band.

Soderbergh's semi-improvised 2002 feature "Full Frontal" could have been titled "more sex, lies and videotape," for its hand-held mini-DV visuals, its exploration of how the clich
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Directors of the decade: No. 6: Michael Moore
Whether you love him or want to punch him in the mouth, he is rallying the troops in the rhetorical civil war


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Michael Moore is the only documentary filmmaker besides Ken Burns the average American has heard of, and heג€™s more of an active presence in American life than Burns, because even when he's not making or promoting a new film, he's on TV and the Internet beating the drum for a cause or tormenting the foes of all he deems good and decent. He is a media-age phenomenon as well as a filmmaker, his presence on the pop culture radar screen a life-as-mass-media-performance-art-project in the vein of previous practitioners, some important, others merely shameless: Andy Warhol, Muhammad Ali, Madonna, Norman Mailer, Gore Vidal, Tiny Tim.

And whether you think Moore is a brave soul fighting the power or a self-aggrandizing blowhard whoג€™s mainly selling himself, itג€™s clear he has a knack for insinuating himself into the head space of all sorts of people -- those who have no opinion on him, those who are glad heג€™s alive, and those who fantasize about pouring a vat of beef stew over his head and tossing him into a pit full of wolverines. I suspect Mooreג€™s highly subjective, emotion-driven filmmaking and his career-long interweaving of self-promotion and self-expression (which started back in 1989 with his anti-General Motors jeremiad "Roger & Me") will one day be seen as epitomizing aspects of life in this grim, weird decade, just as Hunter S. Thompsonג€™s song-of-myself political writing helped future generations understand the '70s.

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When artists construct such a compelling public face, the art and the artist fuse, even loop back on themselves so that it's tough to tell where one begins and the other ends. It's a conundrum the modern artist can't escape, and maybe shouldn't; when an artist resists becoming the story, the media and the public tend to decide there isn't one. Moore knows vastly fewer people would talk about his movies, or even bother to see them, if he weren't out there on talk shows and in front of his own documentary lens raising hell, cracking wise, taunting the powerful, comforting the powerless and otherwise carrying on like the bastard spawn of Will Rogers and Amy Goodman.

In any event, Moore the director has been politically and artistically (and on the Internet, technologically) vital -- not to mention adept at identifying subjects of mass dread and getting films about them into the marketplace right around the time said dread achieves critical mass. In the last 10 years, Moore has addressed the self-perpetuating cycle of fear and violence in America ("Bowling for Columbine"), the Bush administration's conduct of the war on terror (ג€œFahrenheit 9/11ג€) and the arguments in favor of state-run, or at least state-assisted, healthcare (ג€œSickoג€).

Moore's latest, "Capitalism: A Love Story," might be the key Moore film, its title serving as an umbrella that shades every other subject he's tackled. The answer to every ג€œWhy?ג€ in a Moore film can be answered, ג€œBecause of money.ג€ Its arguments are too fuzzy and its thesis too broad to achieve the level of popular relevance to which Moore has become accustomed; Americans prefer ideas they can hold in their hands. But whatever "Capitalism's" reception, the fact remains that nobody else is making political films on such basic and important subjects and getting them so widely distributed and discussed.

None of Moore's films this decade were as prominent as ג€œFahrenheit 9/11,ג€ because none had a main character as charismatic and polarizing as President George W. Bush. It was the first feature that Moore tried to stay out of, to the extent that Moore can stay out of anything, and I wouldn't be surprised if his decision was motivated both by a desire to foreground the message rather than the messenger and an entertainer's understanding that you can't steal the spotlight from a child, a pet -- or W. himself. (Add to that the fact that Moore, who positions himself as the good guy in his own mythic narratives, hadn't had a truly intimidating adversary since GM boss Roger Smith.)

The prospect of making the president lose reelection, or at least lose sleep, formalized the (often contrived) underdog mantle that Moore has always wrapped around himself like a cape. And it encouraged Moore to spotlight his insult comic's vicious wit, setting one of the movie's expository passages about the president's youth to Eric Clapton's "Cocaine" and letting Bush's paralysis in that classroom on the morning of 9/11 play out at length. One rarely sees a documentary whose whole purpose is to tear down another person, and that dubious distinction made "Fahrenheit 9/11" electrifying -- if only to liberals who felt helpless in the face of the president's political, military and media machines and prayed that somebody somewhere would stand up, say something, do something.

Bush's brazenness post-Iraq seemed to crank up Moore's urgency and grandiosity. Around the time "Fahrenheit 9/11" came out, Moore declared that his goal was nothing less than the electoral defeat -- or re-defeat, as the bumper stickers said -- of the president (whether the film ultimately hurt or helped the president is an important, but unanswerable question). To achieve that end, Moore paints Bush's definitive negative caricature, presenting him as a hateful fraud, an ignorant brat playing with mass-murdering toys, a fake macho man whose cornball swagger was purchased with daddy's money and America's military might, and a bumpkin prince of darkness whose descent upon the Capitol following the electoral shenanigans of 2000 was a metaphysical as well as political catastrophe. And the film's opening credits are one of the decade's most powerful sequences: Bush and his Cabinet being made up for TV appearances while mournful, minor-key acoustic guitar plays in the background is a devastating marriage of image and sound, one that conjures sadness, rage and fear. The sequence is a liberal's dirge. Democracy is dead, and here are its murderers putting on their war paint and getting ready to finish off the rest of us. (Facing down the president ennobled Moore's asshole tendencies. His adversary was so powerful and so smug about his power that Moore couldn't go too far in attacking him ג€“ at least not as he did in ג€œBowling for Columbine,ג€ in which he trespassed on the property of the elderly, unprepared and clearly baffled NRA spokesman Charlton Heston and answered his gentlemanly incredulity with snotty contempt.)

"Fahrenheit 9/11" was arguably the documentary of the decade, a work that tried to change history as well as describe it and, if not a classic of logical argument, then surely a masterpiece of outrage, propaganda as formally skillful as it was emotionally opportunistic. (Moore's use of war veterans and their loved ones was the liberal flip side of W. treating uniformed soldiers as TV props to burnish his warrior bona fides.) And it was everywhere in 2004 -- in theaters, on TV, on the Web. Even if you hated Moore's guts and wouldn't see the movie if your life depended on it, you still ended up reading about it, hearing the film's merits argued and its errors and distortions catalogued. Moore shows the world what American liberal anger looks like -- a furious but ephemeral force that rarely stays roused for long, liberals being notoriously inclined to bitch rather than act unless it's a presidential election year. Elsewhere this decade he prided himself not just on participating in the national argument, but also on setting its terms. His films supplied liberals with talking points on gun violence, 9/11, the war on terror, healthcare and financial chicanery. His Web site, public speeches and coordinated e-mail campaigns endorse or oppose presidential decisions, political candidates and propose new laws. (Moore's "Letter From Mike" feature is written, quite effectively, in the jes' folks style of his movie narration. "It's not your job to do what the generals tell you to do," Moore writes, in an "open letter" to President Barack Obama urging him not to add more troops in Afghanistan, adding, "With our economic collapse still in full swing and our precious young men and women being sacrificed on the altar of arrogance and greed, the breakdown of this great civilization we call America will head, full throttle, into oblivion if you become the 'war president.'" For better or worse, Moore is one of a few filmmakers who could publish such a letter and rest assured that a president (or his people) might even read it.

He's the enemy the right deserves and probably craves. He is his own self-caricature, and craftier and more gifted than detractors care to admit. He's a standard-bearer in the rhetorical civil war that Mailer, in 1963's "The Presidential Papers," foretold as inevitable fallout from the end of the Cold War -- "the war which has meaning, that great and mortal debate between rebel and conservative where each would argue the other is an agent of the Devil."
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NOLAN should be top 3...

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Trademark wrote:NOLAN should be top 3...
i feel like at some point he'll have to pick between nolan and fincher and he will go with fincher. and he will be right
http://www.steadybloggin.com - some of these are my thoughts yo

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Trademark wrote:NOLAN should be top 3...
He probably will be because Seitz seems to be trying to be a little bit objective about making this list. I'm sure he wouldn't put Michael Moore as one of his personal top 10 directors list, but you can't deny the effect he's had on American film culture (making the documentary genre more profitable and relevant) and on American political culture.

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Directors of the decade: No. 5: Steven Spielberg
Love him or hate him, no American director has been so popular for so long and inspired so much debate


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Alfred Hitchcock plus Walt Disney equals Steven Spielberg. That equation ג€” offered by a friend of mine who's an admirer of all three ג€” is a decent starting place to describe the director of some of the most popular films ever made. Spielberg has Disney's business sense and uncanny knack for conjuring childlike awe and delight, plus Hitchcock's fondness for pushing visceral buttons and somehow making the experience more delightful than assaultive. But the equation doesn't adequately describe Spielberg's technical sophistication, narrative chops and uncanny popular touch, or his versatility; "A.I. Artificial Intelligence," "Minority Report," "Catch Me If You Can," "War of the Worlds," "Munich" and "Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull" are as arresting and imaginative (though not as widely satisfying, especially the last one) as his run of work in ... well, I started to write "the 1970s," until I remembered that Spielberg wasn't exactly coasting in the '80s or '90s, either.

Throw in Otto Preminger and Stanley Kramer (the premier "issue" filmmakers of an earlier era), a dash of John Frankenheimer (whom Spielberg once credited with influencing his editing style more than any other filmmaker) and splashes of David Lean, Frank Capra and Akira Kurosawa (three of Spielberg's acknowledged visual and dramatic touchstones) and you still haven't described his creative multitudes, much less factored in his apparent indestructibility. Spielberg has been cranking out first-rank blockbuster entertainments and visually imaginative adult dramas (sometimes operating in both modes simultaneously) since his 1971 breakthrough, the relentlessly exciting (and top-rated) TV movie "Duel." (If you haven't seen it, do; the title vehicle is "The Terminator" on wheels.) Except for a fleeting period in the late 1980s and early '90s when his pitching arm seemed to give out (really just two films, "Always" and "Hook") his vitality and popularity never ebbed.

No director has been as popular with viewers over a longer period and inspired such intense, seemingly endless arguments among critics about whether he's an artist or just a extraordinarily proficient middlebrow showman. (American critical consensus didn't begin considering Hitchcock a serious artist until Fran

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Directors of the decade: No. 4: The Dardenne brothers
The Belgian duo have almost no American profile -- but their visual and moral integrity speaks for itself


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So much of modern cinema is built on visual flourishes and technological gimmicks that it's easy to forget that the most enthralling special effect of all is the sight of characters moving through space, their body language, facial expressions and mundane actions telling you what they believe and feel. The Belgian filmmaking brothers Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne ג€” writer-directors of "The Son" (2002), "L'Enfant" ("The Child," 2005) and last year's "Lorna's Silence" (2008), believe this, and they've created a distinctive aesthetic around their conviction. They tend to tell stories about poor or working-class people. They employ long takes, existing locations, ambient sound and natural (or natural-seeming) light to connect the characters to their surroundings, and emphasize how the characters' physical environment and social conditioning shape their personalities and affect (sometimes dictate) their choices.

The Dardennes exemplify a type of filmmaking that's sometimes called naturalism, with all the patience and detached (but never cold) scrutiny that phrase implies. They study human beings in their natural habitat, hoping to understand and show why we are what we are. This kind of filmmaking is quite different from the kind practiced by the filmmakers I call the sensualists, because where sensualists revel in poetic subjectivity ג€” compiling entire features composed of little besides what the filmmaker Caveh Zahedi calls "the holy moment" ג€” the Dardennes' style of filmmaking goes the other way.

It's also different from the Dogme 95 movement spearheaded 14 years ago by Lars von Trier, Thomas Vinterberg and other Danish directors; that mini-school, which was based around a "vow of chastity" manifesto that even its creators didn't really follow, was mistakenly labeled naturalistic by some reviewers. It wasn't ג€” at least not in the deep sense in which the Dardennes' films are naturalistic. Dogme filmmakers did embrace small stories, available locations and simple shooting, the better to rescue cinema from the tyranny of scale and reconnect it with reality. But they also broke their own rules left and right and pretty much abandoned the movement a few years ago ג€” and their films tended to be grotesque, surreal and otherwise exaggerated, more connected to avant-garde drama than to everyday living. The reality of their movies was that of the bottom line: How exciting can we be if we don't have any money?

If the sensualists are poets and the Dogme filmmakers are shock-theater pranksters, the Dardennes are prose writers ג€” which isn't to say that they're unimaginative (quite the contrary) but they work in a radically different mode than the sensualists ג€” more like grubbily realistic yet subtly lyrical fiction. New York Times film critic A.O. Scott made this connection in his 2002 review of "The Son," an unsentimental but moving drama about a man named Olivier who teaches carpentry to juvenile delinquents, and who gradually realizes that his latest apprentice, a teen named Francis, was responsible for the death of Olivier's own boy and the subsequent grief that destroyed Olivier's marriage. The film, Scott wrote, "has the balked, minimalist force (as well as the working-class setting) of one of Raymond Carver's better stories. It is hardly surprising that the Dardennes put together their naturalist fable with such a fanatical, self-effacing sense of craft. They are obsessed with work in the way that some of their European counterparts are obsessed with sex: the textures and rhythms of manual labor are, for them, at once irreducibly physical and saturated with an almost spiritual significance."

These last two points are crucial to appreciating the Dardennes. In film criticism, "naturalism" is often treated as a catchall phrase meaning messy or unpolished, and applied to films whose only connection to life in the here-and-now is that the characters stumble through their sentences and are shown in depressing circumstances. The Dardennes' films do both. But they're not only naturalistic in that sense (the superficial sense). They're naturalistic in the 13th-century sense articulated by the natural philosophers who sought rational understanding of life not merely for its own sake, but to understand the spiritual world that they believed existed beyond the veil of this one.

Their films are marvels of documentary-like immediacy, the camera often following directly behind the head and shoulders of a character moving through a significant space ג€” a factory floor in "The Son," for instance, or the streets of the city in "L'Enfant," about a narcissistic petty criminal who seems emotionally incapable of taking responsibility for his newborn son. This type of shot ג€” so strongly associated with the Dardennes that director Darren Aronofsky was widely assumed to be aping the Dardennes in his rough-hewn "Wrestler" ג€” is both a visual and moral statement. It respects the singularity of a character by putting him at the center of the frame while simultaneously insisting that what matters most in the story isn't that one person, but the world he inhabits ג€” an overwhelming, perhaps oppressive world that bustles around him or looms over him as he ambles through it. Such a shot says, "This character is not the center of the universe, he just thinks he is ג€” and the same goes for you, the viewer." And it epitomizes the type of drama practiced by the Dardennes.

Most movie characters are pictured as free agents, existing apart from whatever living space they inhabit and whatever job they hold (if indeed they are ever pictured working). In the Dardennes' films, the drama's foreground (the characters) can never be separated from their background. Indeed, the "background" in a Dardennes film is both figurative and literal ג€” the characters' upbringing and social conditioning play as big a part in the story as their living conditions and jobs.

"Lorna's Silence," about a woman embroiled in a marriage-for-citizenship scam that requires her to be a party to the killing of her junkie husband, is the only one of their three films this decade that departs from their usual workaday mode. It's the weakest of the three, because the mobsters in the story introduce conventional elements of suspense and jeopardy that the Dardennes aren't used to dealing with ג€” and because, while international gangsters do of course exist, their reality is so far removed from that of most moviegoers that their mere presence in a film introduces an element of vicarious fantasy that's otherwise anathema to the Dardennes. But the two other 2000s films ג€” and their breakthrough 1990s films "The Promise" (1996) and "Rosetta" (1999) ג€” are great enough that the misstep of their last effort doesn't damage their claim on greatness. They've made two films this decade so perfect, and so significant for so many reasons, that they make more prolific filmmakers seem lazy.

The Dardennes are not the only filmmakers working in a naturalist vein. China's Jia Zhangke ("The World," "Still Life") is as significant a naturalist as the Dardennes and was far more productive in the last 10 years, dedicating himself to a portrait of China in a state of flux, its citizens' sense of themselves challenged by a rapidly evolving national economy and the seismic impact of globalization. In America, Richard Linklater ("Fast Food Nation") sometimes works in this tradition. On the documentary side, the greatest living naturalist is Frederick Wiseman, who's almost 80 years old and still making his signature epic-length, fly-on-the-wall documentaries, which show regular citizens interacting with the representatives of institutions and governments in minute detail, often in real time.

Wiseman's work this decade includes "State Legislature," about the day-to-day operations of the Idaho Legislature, and "Domestic Violence" and "More Domestic Violence," which explore the society-wide impact of spousal abuse by showing its victims and perpetrators dealing with counselors, judges and cops empowered to handle the problem. These Wiseman films and others are rewarding if admittedly difficult viewing, requiring a level of concentration that few films ask, and that few viewers are willing to summon.

I'm letting the Dardennes stand for all of this decade's notable naturalist directors, fiction and nonfiction, because the clarity and precision of their work set them apart ג€” and because their approach to drama is unique in its quest to discover something beyond (or inside) the observable world.

I wouldn't call them explicitly Christian filmmakers; the characters rarely invoke the Bible and spend little time in church, and if the films have aspects of the parable, it's more due to the directors' stripped-down style than any overtly literary signposts. But such a distinction might be moot in light of the Dardennes' fascination with guilt, sin and redemption, which is not expressed through hallucinatory imagery or intense scenes of physical and emotional brutality, but through a somewhat dry but never unfeeling quality of detachment. Olivier in "The Son" struggles to answer life's vicious unfairness with kindness, incidentally fathering the boy that was responsible for his own son's death. Bruno, the bottom-dwelling hero of "L'Enfant," travels an even longer road toward grace, selling his son on the black market and then concocting a desperate scheme to buy him back, all the while clumsily groping after a sensitivity that neither he nor anyone he knows ever thought he possessed. Bruno is such a twit, and so seemingly irredeemable, that the film tests one's patience right up until the end ג€” and even Bruno's burst of righteousness is depicted with a certain opacity. You can't be sure if he's done the right thing because he's discovered the father in himself or because he can't deal with having his girlfriend hate him.

But while there's never a sense that the Dardennes have it in for the characters ג€” that we're watching a highbrow version of misery porn, a fashionable indie mode during the last couple of decades. We never sense we're being strong-armed into sympathy, either. The Dardennes' films express a very different notion of the director as God than the one exemplified by the likes of Robert Zemeckis and Wes Anderson. They're like Spinoza's God ג€” creators as noninterventionists, setting their creatures loose in the world and trailing them with the camera, watching what they do and hoping they do right.

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[quote]
Directors of the decade: No. 3: The Coen brothers
Forget the snarky film-brat stereotype -- the Coens have consistently struggled with life's big questions


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Looking back over Joel and Ethan Coen's run of work this decade ג€” an output that produced such hits, conversation pieces and headscratchers as "O Brother, Where Art Thou?" "The Man Who Wasn't There," "The Ladykillers," "Intolerable Cruelty," "No Country for Old Men," "Burn After Reading" and "A Serious Man" ג€” I'm struck not just by its diversity, ambition and sense of craft but by its sincere engagement with the most basic and important struggles in life.

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This may seem an odd claim considering how reflexively the Coens are diminished, even in positive reviews, as brilliant pranksters ג€” snickering film geeks churning out high-grade pastiches so gripping and tactically opaque that some moviegoers mistake them for art. But if one sets aside the received wisdom about the Coens ג€” which, 25 years after their debut feature, "Blood Simple," and two years after their multiple-Oscar-winning "No Country for Old Men," still clings to their filmography like the dye that stained dunderheaded bank robbers Gale and Evelle Snoats in "Raising Arizona" ג€” I think their work bears out the assertion.

Luis Bu

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Directors of the decade: No. 2: Miyazaki & Pixar
Pixar's animation is loaded with beauty and feeling -- but Hayao Miyazaki's work disturbs and challenges us


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In the moments before the January 2001 New York Film Critics Circle got under way, the winner of the group's best-actor award, "Cast Away" star Tom Hanks, stood at the center of a circle of journalists and industry colleagues shaking hands and making small talk when a party guest approached, removed a microcassette recorder from his coat pocket and played a tape of his toddler-age child reciting a couple of Cowboy Woody's lines from "Toy Story 2."

"Yes, indeed," Hanks said. "I am America's babysitter."

He was only partly right. Thanks to repeat showings of the "Toy Story" films on DVD and cable, Hanks' animated alter ego has doubtless mesmerized millions of tots for untold numbers of hours. But America's true babysitter is Hanks' employer on the "Toy Story" films, Pixar, along with the other animation houses, including Disney and DreamWorks, that have competed for pieces of the family entertainment business that Pixar has dominated since "Toy Story 2" came out a decade ago.

Granted, Pixar wasn't created to crank out lovable time killers. The company's guiding lights ג€” president and co-founder Ed Catmull and longtime creative director (and sometime movie director) John Lasseter ג€” trumpet Pixar's ability to make commercial entertainment with charm, visual wit and a sense of moral responsibility, and with rare exceptions (the stupefyingly lame "Cars") they walk the walk. "A Bug's Life," "Monsters, Inc.," "Finding Nemo," "The Incredibles," "Cars," "Ratatouille," "Wall-E," "Up": We're not talking about Hanna-Barbera's Carter-era trash factory, but a studio that takes pride in its work.

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No, I'm calling Pixar "the Babysitter" for the same reason that I'm classifying a studio as a director in this series: For rhetorical purposes, the better to contrast their remarkably unified output (that is, the Pixar "brand") against the work of Hayao Miyazaki, the founder of Japan's Studio Ghibli and arguably the most innovative and accomplished mainstream animation auteur after Walt Disney himself.

Miyazaki, who turns 69 next week, is still underappreciated in the United States. His last four features, "Princess Mononoke," the Oscar-winning "Spirited Away," "Howl's Moving Castle" and "Ponyo" were released stateside by Pixar's parent company, Disney, in dubbed versions, earning critical praise but not a fraction of Pixar's usual box office haul. Worldwide, however, Miyazaki's last three features as director made about $700 million. That's a Hollywood-studio-level number that's noteworthy on its face, but it's even more striking for those who appreciate Miyazaki's willingness to depict situations, emotional conflicts and moral struggles that neither Pixar nor any of its U.S.-based competitors would dare touch. If Pixar is the Babysitter ג€” the smart, likable professional you can trust ג€” Miyazaki is the Grandfather: a wise and beloved elder who understands kids as deeply as (in some ways more deeply than) their parents do, and knows that while the ability to delight and comfort children is a rare talent, it's not the only one worth cultivating.

I'm not here to run down Pixar. Its films are consistently good, sometimes enthralling. They thrill and amuse. Sometimes they move (the "When She Loved Me" montage from "Toy Story 2" and the first few minutes of "Up" are as elegantly composed and edited as they are sentimental). On occasion, Pixar evangelizes; thanks to the green polemics of "Wall-E," generations of kids will subconsciously associate pollution and gluttony with apocalypse ג€” an agitprop victory that five decades' worth of Saturday morning TV messages can't claim.

And for sheer filmmaking craft, Pixar is tough to beat. Nearly every moment of its best work is both dramatically efficient and compositionally sturdy, sometimes gorgeous (the assembling of the fake bird in "A Bug's Life"; the chase through the dimensional door assembly line in "Monsters, Inc."; the wordless opening section of "Wall-E"; the action-packed and at times almost abstractly beautiful final stretch of "The Incredibles"). From Pixar's early, Oscar-winning short films to the "Toy Story" movies through this decade's unbroken string of hits, the studio has earned a deserved reputation for making features that feel at once polished and personal. Lasseter and his regular stable of filmmakers ג€” a group that includes Pete Docter, Brad Bird and Andrew Stanton ג€” have a knack for smuggling poignant or meaningful moments into otherwise light entertainment. Think of the fearsome critic Anton Ego in "Ratatouille" as he samples the title dish, flashes back to childhood and drops his pen on the floor, his momentary return to innocence showing young viewers what it means to be transported by art; or the title family in "The Incredibles" working in concert against their enemies, literally discovering powers they didn't know they had, and illustrating the idea that a family is stronger united than divided; or ace frightener Scully in "Monsters, Inc." realizing his power over children and seeming disturbed instead of proud ג€” an introspective moment that might help children understand parents, and parents understand themselves.

At the same time, though, Miyazaki's presence points up the limitations of Pixar, which are the limitations of American commercial entertainment generally. Pixar landed on this list, and in the penultimate slot, not strictly on its own merits (which are, as I've said, considerable), but because of its imaginative dominance of family entertainment, and its capacity to shape future moviegoers' sense of what animation (and entertainment) should be. Pixar represents the best of what American commercial filmmaking is. But Miyazaki shows what might be possible without Pixar's inhibitions (or constraints, take your pick).

Factor out the few dark and disturbing moments in Pixar's films this decade (there haven't been many, really) and you're looking at a body of work that's fairly easy for even the youngest children to grasp and process, and ultimately not challenging compared to Miyazaki. In Pixar films, good characters sound (and usually look) conventionally lovable. Good and evil are clearly defined, and no "good" character's goal is left unmet. And no potentially confusing or disturbing apparition, incident or twist is left unexplained for long.

Contrast this with Miyazaki's much freer and deeper approach to family entertainment, and you start to see the aesthetic gulf between his work and Pixar's (and, by extension, between the splendid array of animation that thrives internationally and the homogeneous, Pixar-inspired type that dominates U.S. screens). Miyazaki's films are just as visually imaginative as Pixar's and often more so ג€” more painterly and less beholden to the rules of "realism." More importantly, they are never content to define characters as good or evil, or even mostly good or mostly evil, and be done with it. Through a canny combination of sharp draftsmanship, clean animation and simple dialogue, Miyazaki throws children (and often adults) off balance, leaving them unsure what to make of a certain character or situation and forced to grapple with what Miyazaki is doing and showing.

The little spider servants, the white dragon and the giant-headed old woman Yububa in "Spirited Away" seem scary, or at least intimidating, on first glance, and never quite lose those qualities (especially Yububa) even after they're revealed to be benevolent creatures. In "Ponyo," about the friendship between a land-dwelling boy and a half-human, half-fish sea creature, we're primed to react to Ponyo's wizard father, who fears and loathes surface dwellers, as a killjoy who will eventually come around; but even at the end of the film, dad's apprehension hasn't been allayed, and Miyazaki has made such a point of showing us humanity's blithe poisoning of the sea (Ponyo's dad has dedicated himself to cleaning it up) that we can't root for a conventional, can't-we-all-just-get-along finale.

With its spindly chicken legs, clanking engines and scaly iron armor, the title structure in "Howl's Moving Castle" is classically nightmarish, but it's revealed as a wondrous place (albeit one staffed by neurotics such as the passive-aggressive and very needy fire demon Calcifer). But the title character is one of the most complicated heroes in mainstream animation this decade ג€” a teenager who's deeply insecure and lonely, and thus ripe for manipulation by competing kingdoms that recruit him as a warrior. Howl carries himself like an entitled prince, but he's a pawn.

In place of the conventional, reductive versions of morality and psychology shown in Pixar's films, Miyazaki gives us something closer to actual experience, treating good and evil not as a binary equation but as a sliding scale and presenting people (and characters) that often don't know why they do what they do and latch on to reductive explanations at their peril. Characters can be scary and then friendly, threatening and then reassuring, honest and then misleading; they can shift identities and change shape, succumb to spells and then break out of them. That Miyazaki built so much of the plot in "Spirited Away" around the mysterious presence of a character named No-Face (his visage an expressionless mask) is hardly accidental. It's what inside that counts, and Miyazaki takes the sap out of that formulation by making his characters' interiors as malleable ג€” and often as unformed ג€” as their exteriors. A boy becomes a dragon becomes a boy again in "Spirited Away"; the rooms change shape and size in "Howl's Moving Castle"; Ponyo becomes fond of the land (and develops a taste for ham!) and sprouts the budlike beginnings of legs. Watching Miyazaki's movies, one gets the sense of humankind (and its fantastical stand-ins) as creatures in a permanent state of evolution, able to transform from year to year, week to week, even moment to moment. In Miyazaki's work, people are what they choose to be, but they're also what other people have decided they are ג€” and the tension between those two definitions (plus the complicating factor of characters not having a strong sense of themselves, much less knowing what they want from life) makes Miyazaki's features more complex than almost anything being made in the American studio system, animated or live action.

Parents will testify that a child who sees his or her first Miyazaki film after a steady diet of Pixar and Disney is apt to experience a perhaps troubled reaction, much deeper than "That was fun" or "I liked it." Miyazaki challenges every preconceived notion about family entertainment that Pixar and its ilk conditions children (and adults) to have. Pixar's very best work this decade ג€” "The Incredibles," "Wall-E" and "Up," and moments of "Monsters, Inc." and "Finding Nemo" ג€” is wonderful; it gives children lots to see and a fair amount to feel. But Miyazaki's work does more than that. His art is engrossing and beautiful but also challenging. He urges children to understand themselves and the world, and then shows them how. The Babysitter mesmerizes children. Grandfather changes their lives.

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Post by Trademark »

WELL WHO THE FUCK WILL BE 1?

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Post by Employee »

Whoa.

Halfway through the first one. This is :ohsh:

Thanks, Ithe Ithe.

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Post by Icesickle »

Employee wrote:Whoa.

Halfway through the first one. This is :ohsh:

Thanks, Ithe Ithe.
Glad you like it man. This dude is :copy: film criticism with these essays.

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Post by Trademark »

Icesickle wrote:
Employee wrote:Whoa.

Halfway through the first one. This is :ohsh:

Thanks, Ithe Ithe.
Glad you like it man. This dude is :copy: film criticism with these essays.

I agree, that Pixar Miyazaki one is on some saying shit that would take me 18 pages to say type thing. ALl this stuff is good. I'd like to print them and put them by the toilet.

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Post by Icesickle »

Trademark wrote:WELL WHO THE FUCK WILL BE 1?
I'm thinking either Nolan because of his impressive critical and commercial track record or PTA (if Seitz likes TWBB as much as some critics, that is).

For a lot of these slots he's pairing several filmmakers though. It would be awesome if he gave the #1 spot to David Simon, David Milch, and David Chase and wrote an essay about how HBO's shows > the best films of this decade. I know they're not technically directors, but these shows are still a result of their vision.

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Post by Trademark »

Icesickle wrote:
Trademark wrote:WELL WHO THE FUCK WILL BE 1?
I'm thinking either Nolan because of his impressive critical and commercial track record or PTA (if Seitz likes TWBB as much as some critics, that is).

For a lot of these slots he's pairing several filmmakers though. It would be awesome if he gave the #1 spot to David Simon, David Milch, and David Chase and wrote an essay about how HBO's shows > the best films of this decade. I know they're not technically directors, but these shows are still a result of their vision.


:larry:

you can't be serious? You're Icesickle, of course you can.

first off comparing television SERIES and single films is like trying to paddle upstream on a shit log. Of course The Wire as a whole is better than No Country for Old Men...How the fuck could it not be? Seinfeld the series, is better than any comedy EVER made.... It would be arguing an installation art piece is better than a picasso, they are both art but COMPLETELY different creation,execution, distribution and consumption.....He would be better off writing an Essay about how anyone named David is likely to end up with a successful HBO series...

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Post by battlecatmeowstab212 »

#1 will be Daniel Clownes.
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Post by Philaflava »

good read

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Post by Icesickle »

Trademark wrote:
Icesickle wrote:
Trademark wrote:WELL WHO THE FUCK WILL BE 1?
I'm thinking either Nolan because of his impressive critical and commercial track record or PTA (if Seitz likes TWBB as much as some critics, that is).

For a lot of these slots he's pairing several filmmakers though. It would be awesome if he gave the #1 spot to David Simon, David Milch, and David Chase and wrote an essay about how HBO's shows > the best films of this decade. I know they're not technically directors, but these shows are still a result of their vision.
:larry:

you can't be serious? You're Icesickle, of course you can.

first off comparing television SERIES and single films is like trying to paddle upstream on a shit log. Of course The Wire as a whole is better than No Country for Old Men...How the fuck could it not be? Seinfeld the series, is better than any comedy EVER made.... It would be arguing an installation art piece is better than a picasso, they are both art but COMPLETELY different creation,execution, distribution and consumption.....He would be better off writing an Essay about how anyone named David is likely to end up with a successful HBO series...
Classic Trademark. :lol:

Wait for it....






















Directors of the decade: No. 1: Charlie Kaufman & David Chase
Yes, they're both writers first. But their brilliant work blew open industry doors -- and blew our minds

Image

David Chase, the creator of HBO's "The Sopranos," directed just two installments of the series' eight-year run, the pilot and the finale. Charlie Kaufman is mainly known as a screenwriter and has directed one theatrical feature, "Synecdoche, New York." Why are two people known mainly as writers sharing the top slot on this list of the decade's most important directors?

They're here because they spent the decade working within the same entertainment industry that otherwise prizes reassuring clich

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Post by drizzle »

good call icediggidy
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Post by Harco »

Haha, fuckin' psychic.
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Post by Trademark »

how does it change a single word I said? David Chase is not a director of the decade, in film. I didn't see the criteria of the list, or if there even was any, it's a subjective list so it doesn't really matter. The fact remains saying that a television show is better than a film is a fucking retarded asinine comment and the person speaking it is a moron. You can't compare a televsion SERIES to a SINGULAR film, it's not fair and it's stupid.

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Post by Trademark »

"No theatrical film released this decade sparked as many arguments about art as the last five minutes of 'The Sopranos.' "


this statement alone is asinine... OF COURSE a film can't spark that kind of argument, a series that has run for the better part of 10 fucking years, a product which has people invested FOR A GOD DAMN DECADE is going to spark more debate than the 3 hours of AntiChrist....

this guy, and you icesickle, are fucking morons, at least he is a good writer...

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Post by Trademark »

Also Christopher Nolan not even making the list is some gay fucking bullshit......The same props he gives David Chase and some of the themes he mentioned that went sideways to what industries expect could be said the same for the Dark Knight...A giant super hero movie full of the darkest parts of the human soul. On top of that the Dark Knight is second biggest film in the history of an entire INDUSTRY.... Nolan has quitely and methodically carved out a filmography that is unique and original all in this decade, at a very young age in his career.

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Post by ackbar »

no pta = no credibility (:lol:)

actually a cool list & i'm gonna read all 10 parts later

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Post by Captin Planit »

Wow, Ice, great call. Great read, too, even though I agree with TM.

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Post by Tommy Bunz »

Another director that is inexplicably missing from this list is Darren Aronofsky. No other director this decade made three movies as diverse in subject matter and appearance as Requiem for a Dream, The Fountain and The Wrestler. Not only that but all three managed to be huge successes both financially and critically despite all being rather difficult to digest thematically. He should also get bonus points for having a Cronenberg-like knack for drawing career making performances out of his leads (Connelly and Ellen Burstyn in Requiem, Rourke in The Wrestler and to a lesser extent, Jackman in The Fountain).

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