The best movies of 2012?! I don't want to freak you out, but 2012 is half over. Wait, that's pessimistic! 2012 has half-begun! Wait, that makes no sense.
Either way, you catch my drift, the year is at its midway point and that means it has been six months since I've made a critical top 10 list – and I'm starting to twitch. To that end, I'm taking this opportunity to count down my 10 favorite movies of the first half of 2012, hence this early Best Movies of 2012 list.
I'm presenting this for a few reasons. One is that I'm curious to see how much this list changes by the end of the year. Will 'The Master,' 'Argo,' 'The Hobbit,' 'The Dark Knight Rises,' 'Prometheus,' 'Django Unchained,' 'Cloud Atlas' and others radically alter my picks? Also, I am getting this out in the open now so I can steel myself for the hackles of not having 'The Raid: Redemption' on my list in December. I liked the movie a lot, but it didn't stick with me. Just being honest.
Guideline: the movie has to have played in a regular movie theater where ordinary citizens could walk in and buy a ticket. Stuff I saw at Sundance but hasn't come out yet isn't eligible (which means I know of at least 2 films that'd change this up a bit.) Here goes:
10. Chronicle
Josh Trank
I claim to be sick of found footage, I claim to
be sick of superheroes, then this movie comes along and it absolutely
deserves a spot on this list of best movies. Don't tell anyone, but when
I went to bed the night after seeing 'Chronicle' I dreamt that I, too,
got magic space powers that let me whirl Flip cams around my head as I
took flight and smashed up Seattle.
Best part: The moment you realize you're watching an origin story of a super-villain not a superhero. (It's out on Blu-ray already, it's not a spoiler!)
Best part: The moment you realize you're watching an origin story of a super-villain not a superhero. (It's out on Blu-ray already, it's not a spoiler!)
9. Beyond the Black Rainbow
Panos Cosmatos
A spaced-out 'Eraserhead' for the younger
generation, this is a trip to an alternate universe 1983 where all that
was promised to us in Omni Magazine and Rush album covers has come true.
Cribbing from sources like 'The Brood, 'THX-1138,' 'Star Crash,' 'Blue
Sunshine' and a dozen other cult classics, this is a slow-burn, moody
bit of mind control that speaks of wonderful things to come from this
first time filmmaker.
Best part: Opening 16mm info reel of the Arboria Institute tied with line “Bring home the motherlode, Barry.”
Best part: Opening 16mm info reel of the Arboria Institute tied with line “Bring home the motherlode, Barry.”
8. Haywire
Steven Soderbergh
What if a drive-in exploitation picture were
crafted by our most fastidious filmmaker? That's kinda what 'Haywire,'
is – a direct, action-packed flick that hums along to its own definition
of perfection and it earns its spot on as one of the best movies of
2012 so far. Gina Carano wields the force of a Sherman tank, but is
still feminine enough to fill out the Black Widow outfit. I want her to
be in two action movies a year.
Best part: This one move she does in a hallway after chasing a guy, jumping up on a wall before crashing down on him – straight out of a video game.
Best part: This one move she does in a hallway after chasing a guy, jumping up on a wall before crashing down on him – straight out of a video game.
7. The Grey
Joe Carnahan
About three nights a week I have nightmares about
being in a plane crash and then stuck somewhere beyond rescue. (It's no
way to live! I have to start going to bed drunk more often.) Joe
Carnahan's 'The Grey' took survival horror to the next level by
balancing the emotional development of the characters with the physical
violence. When you have great actors like this, it's a bet that is going
to work… and keep your audience tied up in knots.
Best part: Tree-jump.
Best part: Tree-jump.
6. The Cabin in the Woods
Drew Goddard
A love-letter to late night movie lovers, this
whacked-out, paranoid, bloody comedy doubles-down on its own cleverness
and wins big. Anyone who tells you you can't mix genres clearly hasn't
watched this film and is missing out on one of the best movies of the
year.
Best part: Waiting for those elevators to ding open tied with the white board.
Best part: Waiting for those elevators to ding open tied with the white board.
5. 5 Broken Cameras
Emad Burnet and Guy Davidi
I know. There's nothing you want to see less than
a first person diary from one of the world's horrible war zones. I sure
as hell didn't want to see it and didn't anticipate it making a list of
the best movies of the year. But what '5 Broken Cameras' does so well
is mix in everyday life with the demonstrations and police state
brutality. There's also a built-in cinematic gimmick. We know at the
beginning that our central character gets five of his cameras busted.
With each hurled rock we wonder “is this gonna' be the one to take out
camera number three?”
Best part: If this were fiction, I'd cite the marital unrest or the murder of a comrade as dramatic high points. Can't really do that when it is real life.
Best part: If this were fiction, I'd cite the marital unrest or the murder of a comrade as dramatic high points. Can't really do that when it is real life.
4. Damsels in Distress
Whit Stillman
I still don't know where this one came from. A
surrealist romp through a fetishistically chaste (but then shockingly
NOT chaste!) coeducational college where the men are complete idiots and
the women are all suicidal. It's intensely silly, but once you get on
its wavelength the language becomes music and you can't help but dance.
Best part: Cathar beliefs.
Best part: Cathar beliefs.
3. The Avengers
Joss Whedon
Four years ago Marvel's head of production said
there would be an Avengers movie and I thought, “well, he's got to float
those stories in the press to keep interest going.” Then it happened
and I had to pinch myself. Its very existence was enough to make me
grateful, but the fact that it SO SO SO SO good is just something of a
miracle.
Both in front of and behind the camera, it is a team-up of Earth's Mightiest Heroes and not just a pop-culture phenomenon but actually one of the best movies of 2012.
Best part: It's a movie of 100 best parts, but I love when Tony Stark zaps Bruce Banner to playfully check if he'll Hulk-out. They're best friends! Science friends!
Both in front of and behind the camera, it is a team-up of Earth's Mightiest Heroes and not just a pop-culture phenomenon but actually one of the best movies of 2012.
Best part: It's a movie of 100 best parts, but I love when Tony Stark zaps Bruce Banner to playfully check if he'll Hulk-out. They're best friends! Science friends!
2. Sound of My Voice
Zal Batmanglij
A paranoid-as-all-hell leap into the world of new
age cults, 'Sound of My Voice' makes some of the best use of ambiguity
and cognitive dissonance yet put to film. Nothing about what Brit
Marling's character is pushing makes sense, yet she's able not only to
turn our investigators into believers, but the audience, too. And that
basement: with clean carpeting you can almost smell. So creepy! This
was my Best Movie of 2012 until I saw our #1 film…
Best part: Everything about Brit Marling's nuanced and contradictory performance.
Best part: Everything about Brit Marling's nuanced and contradictory performance.
1. Moonrise Kingdom
Wes Anderson
Everything Wes Anderson has ever done has been
leading to this. It's the most precise, mannered and art-directed movie
that's come along in quite some time, so if that in-camera preciousness
irks you, this will make your head explode. If you are a fan (and I am,
though I've parted with Anderson in the past) this is a gooey, syrupy
delight from the first frame until the last. 'Moonrise Kingdom' proves
that you can be playful and fantastic while expressing deep sentiment at
the same time. It's worthy of getting the title of Best Movie of 2012
(so far).
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