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Thread: SOME TOP TEN of 2014 Lists

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  1. #1
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    Individual lists (various sources).

    We had John Waters's ArtForum list earlier. Here are a few more from here.

    Eric Kohn: 10 Best Films of 2014 (as published by Indiewire)
    1. Boyhood – Richard Linklater
    2. A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night – Ana Lily Amirpour
    3. Manakamana – Stephanie Spray and Pacho Velez
    4. The Grand Budapest Hotel – Wes Anderson
    5. Leviathan – Andrey Zvyagintsev
    6. Ida – Pawel Pawlikowski
    7. Starred Up – David Mackenzie
    8. Only Lovers Left Alive – Jim Jarmusch
    9. The Double – Richard Ayoade
    10. Inherent Vice – Paul Thomas Anderson
    J. Hoberman: 10 Best Films of 2014 (as published by Artforum)


    1. Goodbye to Language 3D – Jean-Luc Godard
    2. Inherent Vice – Paul Thomas Anderson
    3. Ida – Pawel Pawlikowski
    4. The Americans (TV, FX) – various
    5. Under the Skin – Jonathan Glazer
    6. The Marx Brothers TV Collection (DVD) – various
    7. Die Farbe – Sigmar Polke
    8. Snowpiercer – Bong Joon-ho9.
    9. Maps to the Stars – David Cronenberg
    10. The Congress – Ari Folman

    Amy Taubin (ArtForum)


    1. Goodbye to Language 3D – Jean-Luc Godard
    2. Boyhood – Richard Linklater
    3. Whiplash – Damien Chazelle
    4. Dreams are Colder than Death – Arthur Jafa
    5. Tales of the Grim Sleeper – Nick Broomfield
    6. Timbuktu – Abderrahmane Sissako
    7. Level Five – Chris Marker
    8. White God – Kornél Mundruczó
    9. Stand Clear of the Closing Doors – Sam Fleischner
    10. The Knick – Steven Soderbergh
    David Edelstein: 19 Best Movies of 2014 [as published by New York Magazine’s Vuture]

    1. Boyhood – Richard Linklater
    2. Selma – Ava DuVernay
    3. The Babadook – Jennifer Kent
    4. Whiplash – Damien Chazelle
    5. Tales of the Grim Sleeper – Nick Broomfield
    6. Only Lovers Left Alive – Jim Jarmusch
    7. Citizenfour – Laura Poitras
    8. Mr. Turner – Mike Leigh
    9. Two Days, One Night – Jean-Pierre & Luc Dardenne
    10. The Immigrant – James Gray
    11. The Overnighters – Jesse Moss
    PLUS
    The Homesman – Tommy Lee Jones
    Rosewater – Jon Stewart
    The Hunger Games: Monckinjay – Part 1 – Francis Lawrence
    The Theory of Everything – James Marsh
    The Imitation Game – Morten Tyldum
    Love is Strange – Ira Sachs
    Low Down – Jeff Preiss
    Beyond the Hills – Cristian Mungiu
    Last edited by Chris Knipp; 12-16-2014 at 05:31 PM.

  2. #2
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    Film Comment poll

    Film Comment is edited and published by Film Society of Lincoln Center. Poll of 100 critics sent out by the editors. All details online here.

    1. Boyhood
    2. Goodbye to Language
    3. The Grand Budapest Hotel
    4. Ida
    5. Under the Skin
    6. Stranger by the Lake
    7. Citizenfour
    8. Birdman or The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance
    9. Inherent Vice
    10. The Immigrant
    11. Two Days, One Night
    12. Only Lovers Left Alive
    13. Mr. Turner
    14. Force Majeure
    15. Norte, The End of History
    16. Whiplash
    17. Stray Dogs
    18. National Gallery
    19. Manakamana
    20. Snowpiercer
    Last edited by Chris Knipp; 12-12-2014 at 02:15 PM.

  3. #3
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    Richard Brody's lists.

    Brody edits and contributes to The New Yorker's thumbnail reviews at the front of the magazine. He's a formidable commentator and champion of the offbeat, the indie, and of Godard. His lists with his comments are here.

    Best of 2014

    1. “The Grand Budapest Hotel” (Wes Anderson)
    2. “Thou Wast Mild and Lovely” (Josephine Decker)
    3.-4. “Goodbye to Language” (Jean-Luc Godard)
    3.-4. “The Last of the Unjust” (Claude Lanzmann)
    5. “The Immigrant” (James Gray)
    6. “American Sniper” (Clint Eastwood)
    7. “Listen Up Philip” (Alex Ross Perry)
    8. “Actress” (Robert Greene)
    9. “Memphis” (Tim Sutton)
    10. “Butter on the Latch” (Josephine Decker)

    11.-20., in alphabetical order:
    “Evolution of a Criminal” (Darius Clark Monroe)
    “Gone Girl” (David Fincher)
    “Happy Christmas” (Joe Swanberg)
    “It Felt Like Love” (Eliza Hittman)
    “Jimmy P.: Psychotherapy of a Plains Indian” (Arnaud Desplechin)
    “Life of Riley” (Alain Resnais)
    “Magic in the Moonlight” (Woody Allen)
    “Soft in the Head” (Nathan Silver)
    “Story of My Death” (Albert Serra)
    “Stranger by the Lake” (Alain Guiraudie)

    21.-30., in alphabetical order
    “Jealousy” (Philippe Garrel)
    “Jersey Boys” (Clint Eastwood)
    “Life Itself” (Steve James)
    “Manakamana” (Stephanie Spray & Pacho Velez)
    “Marvin Seth and Stanley” (Stephen Gurewitz)
    “The Missing Picture” (Rithy Panh)
    “Selma” (Ava DuVernay)“Tip Top” (Serge Bozon)
    “The Unknown Known” (Errol Morris)
    “What Now? Remind Me” (Joaquim Pinto)
    “One Day Pina Asked … ” (Chantal Akerman), which was released here this year but is from 1983; it would be eleventh in the top ten.

    Best Actress: Marion Cotillard, “The Immigrant”; Gina Piersanti, “It Felt Like Love”; Brandy Burre, “Actress”; Emma Stone, “Magic in the Moonlight”; Rosamund Pike, “Gone Girl”

    Best Actor: Ben Affleck, “Gone Girl”; Bradley Cooper, “American Sniper”; Benicio Del Toro, “Jimmy P.”; Jason Schwartzman, “Listen Up Philip”; Willis Earl Beal, “Memphis”; Vicenç Altaió, “Story of My Death”

    Best Supporting Actress: Elisabeth Moss, “Listen Up Philip”; Sienna Miller, “American Sniper”; Giovanna Salimeni, “It Felt Like Love”; Reese Witherspoon, “Inherent Vice”

    Best Supporting Actor: Robert Longstreet, “Thou Wast Mild and Lovely”; Joaquin Phoenix, “The Immigrant”; Theodore Bouloukos, “Soft in the Head”; Tony Revolori, “The Grand Budapest Hotel”

    Best Cinematography: Ashley Connor, “Thou Wast Mild and Lovely” and “Butter on the Latch”; Sean Price Williams, “Listen Up Philip”; Fabrice Aragno, “Goodbye to Language”; Darius Khondji, “The Immigrant” and “Magic in the Moonlight”; Willy Kurant, “Jealousy”; Claire Mathon, “Stranger by the Lake”

    Best Undistributed Films:
    “Hill of Freedom” (Hong Sang-soo) [NYFF]
    “Heaven Knows What” (Josh & Benny Safdie) [NYFF]
    “Da Sweet Blood of Jesus” (Spike Lee)
    “The Princess of France” (Matías Pińeiro) [NYFF]
    “Journey to the West” (Tsai Ming-liang)“Uncertain Terms” (Nathan Silver)
    “For the Plasma” (Bingham Bryant & Kyle Molzan)
    “Wild Canaries” (Lawrence Michael Levine)
    “Jauja” (Lisandro Alonso) [NYFF]
    “Young Bodies Heal Quickly” (Andrew T. Betzer)
    “La Fille du 14 Juillet” (“The Rendez-Vous of Déjŕ Vu”) (Antonin Peretjatko)
    “Tonnerre” (Guillaume Brac) [R-V]
    “La Bataille de Solférino” (“Age of Panic”) (Justine Triet) [R-V]

    And there’s still a backlog of unreleased films by Hong Sang-soo, including “Nobody’s Daughter Haewon” and “Our Sunhi”

    And the trailer for “Gaby Baby Doll” (Sophie Letourneur), which opens in France on December 17th, leaves something to anticipate eagerly.

    The Negative Ten: Not the worst films of the year (far from it—some of these movies have significant merit) but the ones that occlude the view toward the year’s most accomplished and daringly original work; I mention them here to clear the field.
    “Boyhood” (or, The Best Little Boy in the World)
    “The Homesman”
    “Mr. Turner”
    “Inherent Vice”
    “Citizenfour”
    “Birdman”
    “Whiplash”
    “Under the Skin”
    “Ida”
    “The Babadook”
    Last edited by Chris Knipp; 12-13-2014 at 01:50 PM.

  4. #4
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    Metacritic's 2014 lists.

    There are two. One is the top 2014 US-released movies "by score" -- the score they gave them based on reviews when they came out. The second is a ranking of movies that have so far come out highest in their collation of critics' annual 2014 best lists.

    There's also a list, The 19 Worst Movies Of 2014, According To Rotten Tomatoes on Huffington Post. Nicolas Cage starred in two of the top ten.

    1. Release date Metacritic high scorers (just the top 20)

    1. Boyhood (100) July11
    2. Leviathan (95) Dec. 25
    3. Virunga (95) Nov. 7
    4. Selma (95) Dec. 25
    5. Mr. Turner (93) Dec. 19
    6. Two Days, One Night (93) Dec. 24
    7. A Summer's Tale (91) Jun. 20
    8. National Gallery (90) Nov. 5
    9. Big Men (90) Mar. 14
    10. The Overnighters (90) Oct. 10
    11. Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) (89) Oct. 17
    12. The Tale of The Princess Kaguya (89) Oct. 17
    13. Ida (89) May 2
    14. Maidan (88) Dec. 12
    15. Citizenfour (88) Oct. 24
    16. The Grand Budapest Hotel (88) Mar. 7
    17. Tales of the Grim Sleeper (88) Dec. 26
    18. Whiplash (87) Oct. 10
    19. Last Days in Vietnam (87) Sept 5
    20. Life Itself (87) July. 4
    2. Best list high scorers

    Here are the movies mentioned most on critics' best lists according to the review aggregator's calculations, with their Metacritic rating indicating their original success in reviews. First is the Metacritic score, second the number of "points" for best-list mentions. Interesting to compare.

    1. Boyhood 100 (48 points)
    2. The Grand Budapest Hotel (88)(19 points)
    3. Under the Skin (78); Goodbye to Language (71) (both 16 points)
    5. Inherent Vice (88) (14 points)
    6. Whiplash (87) (13 points)
    7. Birdman (89) (13 points)
    8. Selma (95) (11 points)
    9. NIghtcrawler (76) (11 points)
    10. Gone Girl (79) (9 points)
    11. The Theory of Everything (72) (8 points)
    12. Foxcatcher (83) (7 points)
    More 7-pointers:
    13. Only Lovers Left Alive (78)
    14. Snowpiercer (84)
    15. Citizenfour (88)
    16. Ida (89)
    17. American Sniper (66) (6 points)
    And three more 6-pointers:
    18. Intersteller (74)
    19. Force Majeure (86)
    20. Love Is Strange (83)


    Last edited by Chris Knipp; 12-14-2014 at 01:43 AM.

  5. #5
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    Late December 2014 releases. Coming Friday the 19th.

    Big news is Mike Leigh's MR. TURNER comes out Friday. Also on a high level will be a late release of Eric Rohmer's 1992 WINTER, balancing the earlier this year late US release of his 1996 TALE OF SUMMER. Then we have the retreands, of the HOBBIT, NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM (for a last appearance of Robin Williams), and a black ANNIE. I have hopes for the new GAMBLER, starring Mark Wahlberg, but it's unlikely to match Karol Reisz's excellent one from the Seventies starring James Caan and written by James Toback. We have another NYFF film (besides MR. TURNER), Nick Broomfield's strong doc TALES OF THE GRIM SLEEPER, as well as a documentary called INSIDE THE MIND OF LEONARDO that is in 3D. There's something called LIFE ON AN ACTRESS: THE MUSICAL and a movie called (appropriately?) LOWLIFES, where troubled teens in a bootcamp situation clash with terrorists out to destroy a rural nuclear base. And there will be an Italian film, Andrea Pallaoro’s MEDEAS, an intimate family drama, which debuted at Venice, where Variety's Dennis Harvey called it "a primal tragedy rendered with exquisite imagery." The much anticipated THE IMITATION GAME, about Anal Turing and the Enigma code and starring Benedict Cumberbatch, the other Brit historical genius romance flick along with THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING, is already officially out, but I have not been able to see it. It is in San Francisco but not yet in the East Bay. Or Ridley Scott's poorly reviewed EXODUS (Metacritic 52%). Ceylan's Cannes film WINTER SLEEP is coming out in NYC.

    Last edited by Chris Knipp; 12-16-2014 at 05:37 PM.

  6. #6
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    David Denby (The New Yorker) ten best of 2014..

    His top choice is Ida. The rest in alphabetical order only:
    Ida
    American Sniper
    A Most Violent Year
    Birdman
    Boyhood
    Get On Up
    Mr. Turner
    National Gallery
    Selma
    Snowpiercer
    Richard Corless (Time) ten best of 2014.
    1. The Grand Budapest Hotel
    2. Boyhood
    3. The LEGO Movie
    4. Lucy
    5. Goodbye to Language
    6. Jodorowsky’s Dune
    7. Nightcrawler
    8. Citizenfour
    9. Wild Tales
    10. Birdman
    Last edited by Chris Knipp; 12-16-2014 at 05:31 PM.

  7. #7
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    Rotten Tomatoes' best list for 2014
    They list 100. Here are their top 20. I don't quite understand the system. The "fresh" ratings is the percentage, and the number is how many reviews they considered.
    1. 99% Boyhood (2014) 213
    2. 98% Life Itself (2014) 166
    3. 96% The LEGO Movie (2014) 201
    4. 96% Whiplash (2014) 181
    5. 99% Gloria (2014) 110
    6. 95% Nightcrawler (2014) 192
    7. 98% The Babadook (2014) 117
    8. 99% Starred Up (2014) 90
    9. 100% The Tale of the Princess Kaguya (2014) 56
    10. 98% Jodorowsky's Dune (2014) 99
    11. 92% X-Men: Days of Future Past (2014) 237
    12. 99% The Missing Picture (2014) 74
    13. 95% Snowpiercer (2014) 165
    14. 92% The Grand Budapest Hotel (2014) 228
    15. 97% We Are the Best! (2014) 112
    16. 91% Dawn Of The Planet Of The Apes (2014) 243
    17. 97% Love Is Strange (2014) 103
    18. 97% Citizenfour (2014) 101
    19. 96% Blue Ruin (2014) 115
    20. 96% Ida (2014)

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