The start of the year was a continuation of 2023s strikes and the fallout from the affects of the on-going debate of Ai in our industry. Despite this, a number of films made their way to the big screen including Wicked part 1; a film I worked on and by most accounts was a resounding success critically and at the box office. within the 12 months I do seem to have seen less films this year than the previous few.
5. The Bikeriders - my bias to another time period is pretty evident in this years list. A bygone age of a time that at least appears to be of a simpler time (or is it?); the draw of taking a bike out on the wide American landscape is appealing to my British sensibilities that were at one time very enamoured with the US of A. But as this story shows, an idea can be born from an individual and escalate into something entirely different.
4. Poor Things - similarly to many other people, I found this film to be so quirky with its imaginative visuals. Admittedly, I think there's a point in the first 15mins that if you can 'go with it' then the rest of the film is a madcap Frankensteinian adventure.
3. The Substance - Demi Moore is great in this body horror attack on beauty, youth and stardom. It's dreamlike and nightmarish in equal measure. The glamour of industry is barely visible instead showing the lecherous grim reality of agents and their agenda's to find the next best thing. This films crawls and oozes into a finally that is frankly insane and extreme in physical effects. And I loved it the whole way!
2. Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga - speaking with a few people, I wasn't aware of this film being quite so divisive as it was (certainly nowhere near as much as Joker 2...). Whether it was expectation coming off the back of Fury Road or the fact it simply had no Max in it for the audience to put themselves within a recognisable landscape, the film supposedly didn't do what was hoped for it. And yet I hope and pray that George Miller gets to put the final part of his planned triptych of modern Max films on the big screen sooner than later. This film is indeed following, in my opinion, the greatest action film of the 21st century (so far). But with a strong character in Furiosa and an intensely wild world with equally colourful side characters, I was all over this film and ready to take a step into the harsh wasteland of tribes, Warboys and Bullet Town once again. Dont let anyone tell you this film is MEDIOCRE. It certainly isn't...
1. The Holdovers - cast your mind way way back to the start of the year and a movie I was anticipating for a Christmas 2023 release arrived on UK shores for a January date instead, hence it making my 2024 list. A film beautifully set in a snowy 1970s with equally beautiful 1970s film grain. There was a trailer which felt it had come from a different era and excited me from the get-go.
A cast led by the great Paul Giamatti tells such an engaging story with humour and heartfelt turns along the way. It's one of those films that just let's you hangout with the characters and move through their life with them as apposed being pulled along on a roller coaster. I loved every minute of it!
Shout out and honourable mentions to Society of the Snow, American Fiction, The Iron Claw, Juror #2.
No more bottom 5. Why point out things you didn't like. It takes an army of people to make these films at any scale and the intention is never to make a 'bad' film.
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