Mon, May 21, 2012
The Faster Times
The Faster Times is an independent collective of journalists and writers who are looking to create a new model for the newspaper. Please support our work without spending a cent by signing up for email delivery and "liking" us on Facebook.
Email Delivery
Film

Ten Films of the Past Ten Years that I’d Like to Mention Now

Best? Top? Favorite? I don’t know what to call them. I had enough trouble narrowing it down to as many movies as years. These annual reflective round-ups always confound me (and you, probably), but the tyranny of ten becomes even more outrageous when dealing with a decade’s worth of material.

So there’ll be no proselytizing here, just a sort of blurred time-lapse snapshot of one man’s (evidently rather arty) moviegoing disposition.

You’ll notice a lot from Europe. And one American film set in Europe. And another that’s a documentary about an American made by a European. What can I say? By the time you read this, I’ll have left for a European vacation. I doubt that’ll get it out of my system.

You may also spot me feeling wistful about the relentless march of time. Well, as someone in a movie once said, “Memory is a wonderful thing if you don’t have to deal with the past.”

Alphabetically:

1. “Before Sunset” (2004)

beforesunset 300x197 Ten Films of the Past Ten Years that I’d Like to Mention Now

Writer-director Richard Linklater reunites the couple played by Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy in his 1995 film “Before Sunrise,” with profound and moving results.

2. “Caché” (2005)

cache 300x168 Ten Films of the Past Ten Years that I’d Like to Mention Now

A perfect little thriller that also happens to be a timely parable on colonial blowback and the inverse proportionality of surveillance and disconnection. Typically excellent actors Juliette Binoche and Daniel Auteuil rise to a typically pitiless challenge from the austere Austrian auteur Michael Haneke.

3. “Grizzly Man” (2005)

grizzlyman 300x168 Ten Films of the Past Ten Years that I’d Like to Mention Now

This exquisitely appropriate union of artist and subject — German madman moviemaker Werner Herzog reflecting on doomed Alaskan bear-watcher Timothy Treadwell — has been haunting me for years.

4. “Let the Right One In(2008)

let the right one in 300x199 Ten Films of the Past Ten Years that I’d Like to Mention Now

If I could see only one vampire movie ever again, or one coming-of-age movie, both would be Tomas Alfredson’s film of John Lindqvist’s script of his own novel. (Which is also to say that, Richard Jenkins notwithstanding, I can do without the forthcoming American remake.)

5. “Me and You and Everyone We Know” (2005)

meyoueveryone 300x199 Ten Films of the Past Ten Years that I’d Like to Mention Now

My first experience of writer-director-performance-artist Miranda July’s inspired, invigorating feature debut ranks high among decade-best movie memories. Its faith in artfulness and fellowship has since been guiding.

6. “Russian Ark” (2002)

russian ark 300x168 Ten Films of the Past Ten Years that I’d Like to Mention Now

At last, a film that Russian history buffs and tracking-shot fetishists can agree on. Filmmaker Alexander Sokurov’s technically and poetically astonishing stroll through St. Petersburg’s Hermitage Museum is a virtuosic correlation of content and form.

7. “Saraband” (2003)

saraband2 300x201 Ten Films of the Past Ten Years that I’d Like to Mention Now

The late, great master Ingmar Bergman reunites the couple played by Erland Josephson and Liv Ullmann in his 1973 film “Scenes from a Marriage,” with profound and moving results.

8. “Sexy Beast” (2000)

sexy beast 300x195 Ten Films of the Past Ten Years that I’d Like to Mention Now

Gangster chic had gotten tediously shabby when director Jonathan Glazer’s sinewy feature debut came along and revitalized it. Ray Winstone gives this brilliant black comedy its savory soul, and Ben Kingsley gives it a live-wire jolt. To borrow a line from the latter, “Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes!”

9. “Touch the Sound” (2004)

touchthesound 300x199 Ten Films of the Past Ten Years that I’d Like to Mention Now

You might expect a documentary about a deaf percussionist to get gimmicky or shamefully schmaltzy, but Thomas Riedelsheimer’s innately cinematic portrait of Evelyn Glennie takes its subject’s example and defies all conceptual limitations.

10. “You Can Count On Me” (2000)

you can count on me 300x195 Ten Films of the Past Ten Years that I’d Like to Mention Now

With serene intelligence, genuine warmth and great roles for great actors Mark Ruffalo and Laura Linney, playwright/screenwriter Kenneth Lonergan’s directorial debut sets a new standard for intimate character-driven drama.

share save 171 16 Ten Films of the Past Ten Years that I’d Like to Mention Now
Share


Jonathan Kiefer lives in San Francisco and @FasterFilm. ...

91

MORE FROM Jonathan Kiefer:

  1. “Sound of My Voice” Review in Brief
  2. “We Have a Pope” Review in Brief
  3. Faster Filmmaker Q&A: “God Bless America” Writer-Director Bobcat Goldthwait on Kindness Through Ultraviolence, Online Hecklers, and Banning the Bible
  • Max

    Totally agree with You Can Count on Me.. a wonderful film.. Definitely in the top 10 of the last decade..

Get our Newsletter