My ongoing list of 25 best new to me watches of 2024 ...
20. Affliction (1997)- A Paul Schrader movie which means we've got a loner wrestling with isolation and loneliness, personal and moral failings. This time it's Nick Nolte, giving the best perforrmance of his career, as a small town cop who becomes convinced a local hunting accident was murder. Yet he seems to be the only person who thinks this and his obsession with proving it goes beyond anything rational. This is a dark, cold neonoir and one of the best from the 90s. Standouts: I already mentioned the grizzly unhinged Nolte performance but even better might be James Coburn who won an Oscar for his portrayal of Nolte's abusive father.
19. The Pledge (2001)- I had pretty low expectations for this. I never remembered hearing much good about it and it's directed by Sean Penn. Figured this would be a mess or overly indulgent. But instead I found something really tight and focused. It makes a perfect double feature with Affliction. I am posting a review from a Letterboxd user because I think it's really the perfect review for a film that generally seemed to not be all that well received:
I find that describing The Pledge is easiest when saying what the film is not. The film is not noir, not a crime film, nor is it a thriller (although it touches upon all this genres); instead, The Pledge is a detective film. By that I mean that the film’s core focus is about how the central crime affects Jack Nicholson‘s character, the obsession the crime creates and the extreme lengths the character is willing to go for a solution. The crime is not the focus, the detective is the focus. The crime itself is pedestrian, nothing too thrilling. So if you watch The Pledge with your focus on the plot and the crime, then I can see how you would walk away from the movie thinking it was nothing special. The Pledge looks behind the crime, at the man trying to solve the crime and the obsession it breeds in him. The film is a warning to the viewer: dedication is admirable but obsession is devastating. https://letterboxd.com/rakgsr/film/the-pledge/
Standouts: Would it be any surprise to hear Jack gives a riveting performance? Yet, the person who most electrifies the screen and does something truly special is Mickey Rourke. He has one scene in a movie with a murderers row of great performers (Benecio Del Toro, Aaron Eckhart, Helen Mirren, Harry Dean Stanton, Robin Wright, Vanessa Redgrave, etc) and yet it is Rourke who leaves an impression to the bone.
18. Le Doulos (1963)- Jean Pierre Melville is the greatest crime director IMO. More than Michael Mann or Martin Scorsese or whoever else. The title is a French slang for an informant- released in the US as The Finger Man. A gangster recently released from prison is mixed up in a botched jewel heist and suspicions spread until they cover everyone in shadows and blood. It's intricately structured with twists and turns, leading to a tragic conclusion that questions whether people can escape their past actions. Melville has a minimalist approach but it works like a perfectly designed mechanism turning towards total destruction. Standouts: Belmondo. Jean Paul f'n Belmondo.
17. Poor Things (2023)- And now for something entirely different lol. I don't even know what to say about this. Poor Things is definitely not for everyone. Yorgos Lanthimos has made some movies that I strongly disliked but Poor Things was so surreal and bizarre that I kind of loved it. Funny and creepy but the world created for it is so delightful. A steam punk alternate world setting for a film that wonders what if Frankenstein made a Barbie doll instead of a monster? Love it or hate it, I am sure you've at least never seen anything quite like it. Stand outs: The whole production team knocked this this so far out of the park creating a totally unique world. Emma Stone just absolutely went for it here. The full development from baby to adult, the wild sex scenes, this woman truly gave herself up for this role.
16. Kagemusha (1980)- George Lucas and Francis Ford Coppola helped convince 20th Century Fox to cover some of the production costs and get Kurosawa's first color samurai film to the big screen. After a long period of financial difficutly, this dreamy (nightmare?) hit is widely regarded as one of the great movies in Japanese cinema. A lowly criminal is spared the death sentence in order to impersonate a dying feudal lord. Kagemusha (The Shadow Warrior) is one of the masterworks of late career Kurosawa. Standouts: Honestly, the color is what stikes me the most. Like I said, this is the first time Kurosawa did an epic color samurai film and the way he used saturated colors and muted colors, deep reds, vivid blues, and rich earth tones makes a stunning film to see. The horrors of war, the fleeting existance of even the greatest of men and the permanence of nature are all captured beautifully with color.
Check out this American trailer from 1980