11 thoughts on “My Top 25 Films Of 2023: One Critic’s Best Of The Year List

  1. I’ve actually seen two of these this time!

    Guardians of the Galaxy 3 was a movie that I pretty much enjoyed during it but, afterwards, it became a meditation upon “how to lead the audience around through the nose”.

    How much more did we care about the walrus than the *ENTIRE* *PLANET* of animal people? How stupid and short-sighted did they have to make the High-Evolutionary? Ah, who cares. Oooh! Another flashback to the misfit toys! Grab the kleenex!

    Ah, it was fun in the theater and any problems were only a problem in the car on the way home.

    Oppenheimer was amazing and the trick that that movie pulled was an old pro-wrestling move: Have the heel tell the truth. Strauss explained what the movie was *REALLY* about at the end when he explained that Oppenheimer positioned himself to be the father of splitting the atom without being the father of Hiroshima. Quite a trick. Pity we can’t believe it because Strauss said it and not Senate Aide.

    I’m pleased American Fiction was good. That’s one I definitely want to see.

    Question about The Holdovers… from the trailer, it’s a movie I’ve seen a dozen times already (the made-for-TV one was starring Wilford Brimley). Is it just a particularly good version of this movie or is it actually a different one?Report

    1. “Is it just a particularly good version of this movie or is it actually a different one?”

      Should be 100% different unless there’s some plagiarism I’m not aware of given its an original screenplay.

      Should be available to stream on Peacock tomorrow by the way.Report

      1. “Original Screenplay”?

        It seems to be yet another retelling of the unpleasant old guy being forced into connecting with the unpleasant young guy at the behest of the Angelic Person Of Color. Everybody cries, everybody hugs, everybody laughs. The number of “F” words determines whether you can take mom to it.Report

  2. The only one of these I’ve seen was The Killer, which is probably my least favorite Fincher movie since Panic Room… which still made it well worth watching. Some good performances, aurally and visually impressive, etc., but ultimately it I had the same problem with it that I have with a lot of noir-influenced thrillers do: I could have cared less about the main character and what happened to him.Report

    1. Like, he’s a methodical murder guy who’s forced to go on the run and then methodically murder some other guys (mostly themselves more-or-less methodical murder guys), after screwing up one of his methodical murders?

      OK sure, but none of the elements really warrant investment.Report

  3. Loved the list. I saw Oppenheimer with my mum and found it surprisingly moving considering it was, in of itself, mostly a series of meetings and consultations between committees and scientists. The trinity scene was quite remarkable but was also one of the only times I didn’t find the music overbearing.Report

  4. Question for you, Luis: why is Barbie off your list? Didn’t even get an honorable mention. FTR I think there were better movies, but Gerwig’s use of stylization and motif to advance the narrative was remarkable and playful.Report

    1. I watched it twice because I thought maybe I didn’t see it with a proper mindset the first time, but I actually liked it even less on re-watch.

      It just wasn’t for me. I found it over-silly, I thought the themes that it tried to touch on were messily executed, the Gosling Ken character’s arc deserved better, etc. It just lost me the longer it went both times.

      However it is on my personal ballot for Production Design, Costume Design, and Hair & Makeup though all three of those are won by POOR THINGS for me.Report

    1. I’ve never seen her or Ryan Gosling in anything but Drive, and part of me is afraid to. I was just so blown away by their work, and that movie in general, that I don’t want to risk them being mere mortals.Report

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