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Blue Glow Spending the holidays in front of the tube
"Hurlyburly"
"A Civil Action" ___________________
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"The Cruise" "You've Got Mail" "The General" "The Prince of Egypt" Safe Haven |
m e t__e x p e c t a t i o n s
If pleasure and drama and emotion are what draw us to the movies -- and, finally, I believe that's why anybody goes to the movies -- then it always seems a little strange to me to sum up the year past by talking only about movies when those qualities were also present elsewhere. For me the most dramatic and affecting moments of the year would include Victory Gallop snatching the Triple Crown away from Real Quiet in the final seconds of the Belmont Stakes; the perverse Gothic romanticism of "Buffy the Vampire Slayer," which has been as thrilling and affecting as anything at the movies this year; the stubborn principled defiance of President Clinton's grand jury testimony; the inexplicably moving juxtaposition of Jay-Z's boasting with the sample of the little orphan girls from "Annie" on the single "Hard Knock Life." But the list that follows has to concentrate on the movies, for which it's been a pretty good year. The fall's sparse pickings did sometimes make it seem that we were paying the price for a summer in which there was always something to go see, if not top-notch pictures like "The Truman Show," "Out of Sight" and "The Mask of Zorro," then pleasing diversions like "Six Days, Seven Nights," "Dance with Me," "Blade" and "How Stella Got Her Groove Back." Unlike in some years, I actually had to winnow down my list. The movies I've regrettably left off are Lisa Cholodenko's impressive debut "High Art," Richard LaGravenese's lovely, melancholy comedy "Living Out Loud," Nick Gomez's startlingly original "illtown" and Andy Tennant's Cinderella charmer "Ever After." Their absence is entirely due to the arbitrary number assigned to 10-best lists; all those films certainly deserve mention with the best of 1998. I think it's fruitless to attempt to divine overall trends from a list, and so I won't try. I'm grateful that good work continues to get made and disappointed that, far too often, it doesn't manage to get seen. There's no point in claiming we are in a golden age of moviemaking, and equally little point in proclaiming, Sontag-like, the death of the art. The movies below, and numerous moments and performances in others not mentioned here, are what made me feel privileged to be a film critic. 1. "The General"
2. "Babe: Pig in the City"
3. "Great Expectations"
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