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In alphabetical order:
"Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious
Nation of Kazakhstan": Sacha Baron Cohen is drop-dead funny as Borat, an
outrageous caricature of a New World Eastern European with Stone Age values, but
this is more than simply a docu-farce. His wide-eyed sexism, racism and
anti-Semitism invites everyday Americans to confess the most revealing
prejudices -- which ends up revealing more about our own society than we
might care to admit. Watch a Clip
"The Death of Mr. Lazarescu": Cristi Puiu's black comedy on the state of socialized
medicine is as devastating as it is exasperating. The dignity of the titular
pensioner (Ion Fiscuteanu) is eroded over the long night as he is
bounced from hospital to hospital, deteriorating to a state of numb incoherence
along the way. The bitter humor is the only release for the audience trapped in
his nightmare.
"The Descent": Neil Marshall's claustrophobic survival thriller
-- set in a dank, dungeonlike cave Appalachian system -- tips its hat to the
action-horror tradition while reshaping the conventions to his own will. Watch
for the original British cut coming to DVD at the end of December. The haunting
additional seconds bring the film to perfect closure. Watch the Trailer
"Flags of Our Fathers" / "Letters from Iwo Jima": It is said that the ability
to hold in mind two contradictory notions at the same time is a sign of genius.
Clint Eastwood's drama about the iconic power of
images -- specifically the famous flag-raising photo on Iwo Jima --
and the human reality behind those symbols never sacrifices one for the other.
It is compassionate, thoughtful and as intelligent and astute as American cinema
gets. His companion film to "Flags" is a sympathetic and thoughtful portrait of
a military culture at war with itself through the ordeals of ordinary soldiers
sacrificed to national notions of honor that seem alien today. He proves himself
a powerful and compassionate storyteller who values all human life sacrificed to
the war machine, not merely those under the flag of our fathers. Watch the Trailer: "Flags of our Fathers"
"Old Joy": Kelly Reichardt's intimate and easygoing film
about old friends reconnecting after years captures the ephemeral pleasures of
the road trip with lucid simplicity. It stirs up lost dreams and youthful hopes
gone from their mundane lives, but for a few hours they recapture that soothing
spell of a lazy road trip where the journey is the destination.
"Pan's Labyrinth": In the dark fairy tales and
supernatural horrors of Guillermo del Toro, the evil that men do is far more
terrifying than the spooky shadow worlds of his imagination. He hews his
elemental fantasy world from the very Earth, like neglected spirits roused by a
girl's sense of wonder to give hope in a world of apathy and brutality.
"The Proposition": Guy Pearce is an outlaw forced to choose between his
brothers in the jagged Australian frontier Western in the key of Peckinpah, written by cult rocker Nick Cave. A savage social subtext rumbles under the austere
plotting, and director John Hillcoat stirs the fierce conflicts between justice,
social expediency and family duty in a sun-seared land baking in its own hate.
Watch the Trailer
"The Queen": Helen Mirren delivers the performance of the year as Queen
Elizabeth II, the professional monarch struggling to find her place after the
death of Princess Diana. Stephen Frears compassionately explores the awkward
relationship between the newly elected man-of-the-people Tony Blair (Michael Sheen) and the proud but dedicated queen who has
given her life in service to her country. Watch a Clip
"The Science of Sleep": Michel Gondry uses whimsy and fantasy to get at prickly
emotions, uncomfortable feelings and the sometimes painful divide between our
dreams and our lives in his bittersweet tale of an aspiring illustrator (Gael García Bernal) more comfortable in his head than in the
world. Gondry's scruffy, unkempt narrative has a messy authenticity that matches
Bernal's cardboard and cellophane fantasy world. Watch the Trailer
"Volver": There isn't a male filmmaker
working today who so richly and sensitively celebrates the complexities of
women's relationships as Pedro Almodovar. The mothers, daughters, sisters and devoted
friends of "Volver" form a society almost absent of men, and find the strength
to forgive, embrace and persevere. Watch the Trailer
Honorable Mentions "Army of Shadows"; "Stick It"; "Iraq in Fragments"; "13 (Tzameti)"; "L'Intrus"
Worst "Lady in the Water"; "The Celestine Prophecy"; "Lucky Number Slevin"
What are the year's 10 best movies? Write us at heymsn@microsoft.com
Sean Axmaker is a film critic for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and a
DVD columnist for the Internet Movie Database. He regularly contributes to
Amazing Stories, Asian Cult Cinema, Greencine.com and StaticMultimedia.com. His
reviews and essays are featured in "The Scarecrow Video Movie Guide."
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