Film Listings

Wed Mar 17, 2010

Fri Mar 19, 2010

Wed Mar 24, 2010

Fri Mar 26, 2010

Wed Mar 31, 2010

Fri Apr 02, 2010

Fri Apr 09, 2010

Fri Apr 16, 2010

Wed Apr 21, 2010

Thu Apr 22, 2010

Fri Apr 23, 2010

Fri Apr 30, 2010

Fri May 07, 2010

Fri May 14, 2010

Fri May 21, 2010

Thu May 27, 2010

Fri May 28, 2010

Fri Jun 04, 2010

Fri Jun 11, 2010

Fri Jun 18, 2010

Wed Jun 23, 2010

Fri Jun 25, 2010

Wed Jun 30, 2010

Fri Jul 02, 2010

Sun Jul 04, 2010

Wed Jul 07, 2010

Fri Jul 09, 2010

Wed Jul 14, 2010

Fri Jul 16, 2010

Fri Jul 23, 2010

Fri Jul 30, 2010

Fri Aug 06, 2010

Fri Aug 13, 2010

Fri Aug 20, 2010

Fri Aug 27, 2010

Wed Sep 01, 2010

Fri Sep 10, 2010

Fri Sep 17, 2010

Fri Sep 24, 2010

Fri Oct 01, 2010

Fri Oct 08, 2010

Sun Oct 10, 2010

Fri Oct 15, 2010



IndieWIRE Critics: Summer Hours Best of 2009, Mulholland Dr. Best of Decade

Posted by Eric Lavallee on Dec 22, 2009
Source: IndieWIRE.com

I'm a huge fan of lists, especially those that include year end picks from film critic peers that I admire and respect. If there was an French version of IndieWIRE I'm sure their group of critics would be voting the same way as Olivier Assayas' The Summer Hours beat The Hurt Locker and A Serious Man by a nose as the Best Picture of the Year, and a film that took me a couple of tries to acknowledge it as genius in David Lynch's Mulholland Drive was claimed tops of the 00's over my favorite of the decade, WKW's In the Mood for Love. IndieWIRE have put together a great "critics" system over the course of the past year, which will only get better with time. It certainly rivals metacritic.com -- what I normally would refer to when I want a consensus vote. I suggest you take a look at the multiple categories they have this year including, the Best Undistributed Film chart.

Best Film of Year Indiewire Poll Summer Hours

I'm currently putting my own top 50 of the decade list, but with a good twenty-five titles on a must see/haven't seen list - (its the more obscure titles that I have trouble getting a hold of), I figured I would have found the time between the moment I thought about putting something like this together in February, and now, when just about everyone knows their top 20, 25 and 50 like the back of their hands, I'm realizing this ain't going to happen anytime soon. So in the mean time, I put together a top 10 here, which I think is safe from any further alterations, and I'll launch my own hopefully before the snow melts next year. For the record, I admired Before Sunset and think its one of the better sequels since they started making part twos, but number 7? Really?  

Best Film of Decade Indiewire Poll Mulholland Drive



Comments

ADD A COMMENT

 
 
    Remember my e-mail address

 

Zeina Durra

Zeina Durra

My casting director suggested her and I went to Paris to meet her. She loved the script and she's an amazing actress so of course I wanted to work with her. Playing an artist is very hard as it can come of as super fake, but Elodie is an artist in real life and that translated. Who doesn't like Dream Life of Angels?!

See My All Time Top 10 Films

deco

Reviews

Review: Police, Adjective

Patterned with minimalist surroundings, low-key performances and long takes that are filmed in real time, the almost mute Police, Adjective cleverly details how Romanian society has not entirely deposed of, or moved away from its past with this anti-thesis of a Michael Mann film.


Interviews

Interview: Actress Noomi Rapace (The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo)

I wanted to change my body. I wanted to be a little bit more masculine and get rid of my female body. I wanted to be more like a boy. I wanted to be able to do all the fighting scenes, so I wanted to go into martial arts training. I trained a lot in Thai boxing and kickboxing with this crazy Serbian guy five days a week. I did a lot of preparation, and I also took motorcycle driving lessons, and I cut my hair and pierced myself.


Festivals

festival photo

2010 Hong Kong Int. Film Festival (34th)

Screening over 250 titles from more than 50 countries in 11 major cultural venues across the territory, the Festival is Hong Kong’s largest cultural event that reaches an audience of over 580,000 including 4,500 business executives who attend Hong Kong Film and Television Market (FILMART), a concurrent event of the HKIFF.


festival link more

Community Film Ratings

community link more