Films of the Decade

Films of the decade: “Almost Famous”

Cameron Crowe made a movie about his unlikely nonfiction story -- and mine

  • more
    • All Share Services

Films of the decade: A still from "Almost Famous"

April 1976. It’s the Bicentennial. Jimmy Carter is running for president against the likes of Scoop Jackson and George Wallace. I’m sitting in my first period Current Events class in Room 121 at Great Neck North Junior High School, hair flopping over my shoulders, a silly grin on my face. Celia Nissenbaum, in that peasant shirt I write poems about and smelling like chewing gum and being 14, has her desk turned toward mine and her feet in my lap. It’s as perfect a morning as a boy can have, until Jumbo Jim Johnson, our first-period teacher and a giant of a man, ruins everything.

“Get your feet on the floor,” he bellows at Celia, dragging her desk away from mine and pulling her legs with her. My delight left pretty much fully exposed, I sit up very straight and drop my copy of Rolling Stone magazine into my lap. “And what will you be doing for spring break?” he asks, leaning into me and functioning pretty much the way the moon does during an eclipse.

I look down at the magazine and tell him the truth: “I wanna be a professional journalist,” I say. “I’m gonna get a job being a writer.”

“Over spring break?” he asks, laughing in that way that makes his face jiggle. “Yes, I say,” pointing to the magazine. “Just like him.”

“Him” was Cameron Crowe, one of my personal heroes and a regular contributor to Rolling Stone. Every two weeks when the magazine arrived, I would comb through the pages to see if he had written anything new. And when he had, I was never disappointed. David Bowie, Led Zeppelin, Crosby, Stills & Nash — he wrote about all the music I loved, or started to love as soon as I read about it in his pieces. And best of all was the little italicized credit at the bottom of his articles: “Cameron Crowe is a 16-year-old contributing editor to Rolling Stone magazine.”

“He writes for Rolling Stone magazine,” I say to Jumbo Jim, “and he’s only two years older than I am. If he can do it, why can’t I?”

I spend spring break working the phones in my family basement until I finally find someone in the publishing industry amused enough by the idea of a cold-calling 14-year-old to grant me a meeting in Manhattan. I leave the meeting with an assignment from something called the Alternative Journalism Review: I will write an article about political radicals from the 1968 elections and how they’re faring eight years later. My career in nonfiction has begun.

Twenty-four years later, in the fall of 2000, I hear early praise for the new Cameron Crowe movie. It’s his follow-up to “Jerry Maguire” and I’m told it’s autobiographical — the story of how he became, yep, a teenage contributing editor to Rolling Stone. On opening night, I go to the local theater and check it out. It’s “Almost Famous,” and I can’t believe my eyes. It’s Crowe’s life story indeed — at least his life story as a kid. And guess what: It’s mine too.

Film Salon has invited a group of special guests to write about their favorite film(s) of the 2000s. To read the entire series, go here.

Films of the decade: “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind”

The devastating Michel Gondry-Charlie Kaufman "comedy" that captured the tragic beauty of relationships

  • more
    • All Share Services

Films of the decade: A still from "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind"

I have been thinking about movies, and while it’s hard to pick a favorite or a best, or whatever, “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind” keeps coming up. It captured something so tragic and beautiful about relationships, something that can’t even be verbally articulated — but it was articulated — through all of the different elements of the film. The first time I saw it, I couldn’t get up. I was reduced to a puddle. It affected me in a way that got inside.

Film Salon has invited a group of special guests to write about their favorite film(s) of the 2000s. To read the entire series, go here.

Films of the decade: The Pixar oeuvre

From "Monsters Inc." to "Ratatouille" to "Up," the growth of a cinematic moral philosophy

  • more
    • All Share Services

Films of the decade: The Pixar oeuvreA still from "Wall-E"

“Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon,” “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind,” “Brokeback Mountain,” “4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days,” “City of God” and even tiny, touching “Once” — I could happily make the case for any of them. But the truth is — if I may expand the parameters of the exercise a tad — nothing this decade has astonished me and fed my faith in film as a popular art form more than the inspired craftsmanship of the Pixar oeuvre: “Monsters Inc.,” “Finding Nemo,” “The Incredibles,” “Cars,” “Ratatouille,” “Wall-E” and “Up.” No one picture among them is at the level of the first films I cited, but together they represent a standard of consistent excellence with few historical precedents.

A couple of quick observations, and then I’ll leave it to any hecklers. Yes, of course, animation differs a great deal from live-action filmmaking. Freed from the constraints of a limited shooting schedule, the Pixar folks can rewrite, refine and edit for essentially as long as they like. But they do, and it shows in, among other things, the seamless moral texture of the films, the way each is gently undergirded by a coherent philosophical framework, whether the soft libertarianism of “The Incredibles” or the crunchy-con self-reliance of “Wall-E.” Even “Cars,” by far the weakest of the studio’s pictures this decade, makes its quiet case — scene by scene, shot by shot — about the tension between commerce and community.

Moreover, the Pixar crew approach their craft far more like conventional filmmakers than do most animators, with story and character leading the visuals rather than the other way around. The reverse shot that ends “Monsters Inc.,” the “married life” montage in “Up,” the marvelous “lighting” in the first half of “Wall-E” (on which cinematographer Roger Deakins consulted) — these aren’t the work of gifted animators (well, they’re that too), but of people who genuinely understand cinema.

Film Salon has invited a group of special guests to write about their favorite film(s) of the 2000s. To read the entire series, go here.

Continue Reading Close

Christopher Orr writes the "Home Movies" column for The New Republic at www.tnr.com.

Films of the decade: “A.I. Artificial Intelligence”

Kubrick? Spielberg? Never mind -- it's a misunderstood masterpiece

  • more
    • All Share Services

Films of the decade: A still from "A.I. Artificial Intelligence"

I’m not the only one to consider “A.I. Artificial Intelligence” a very great and deeply misunderstood film; others as disparate as Andrew Sarris and the late Stan Brakhage have more or less agreed with me, as well as my friend and favorite academic critic, James Naremore. (Click the link above to read my full review.) But it’s also clear to me that any ordinary auteurist way of processing cinema can’t begin to handle this masterwork adequately: Reading it simply as a Spielberg film, as most detractors do, or even trying to read it simply as a Kubrick film, is a pretty futile exercise with limited rewards, even though the fingerprints of both directors are all over it. Seeing it as a perpetually unresolved dialectic between Kubrick and Spielberg starts to yield a complicated kind of sense — an ambiguity where the bleakest pessimism and the most ecstatic kind of feel-good enchantment swiftly alternate and even occasionally blend, not to mention a far more enriching experience, however troubling and unresolved. As a profound meditation on the difference between what’s human and what isn’t, it also constitutes one of the best allegories about cinema that I know.

Film Salon has invited a group of special guests to write about their favorite film(s) of the 2000s. To read the entire series, go here.

Welcome to Film Salon!

Introducing Salon's new forum for debating the hottest topics in movies. Plus: My fave film(s) of the decade

  • more
    • All Share Services

Welcome to Film Salon!

Like almost everyone who grew up loving movies, I got hooked at an early age when I realized that watching them was both a private experience and a communal one. Whether it was seeing Hiroshi Inagaki’s three-and-a-half-hour samurai epic “Chushingura” at a repertory cinema with my parents, sneaking into “Diamonds Are Forever” with a group of overstimulated elementary-school pals, or sitting all alone, wrapped in a blanket and terrified, in front of “The Mummy’s Tomb” on my big brother’s black-and-white TV, watching a movie was at once something intimate and private, something that happened to me alone, and something I wanted to share with those I cared about.

According to many so-called experts (including the one writing this post), the communal element of moviegoing is in critical condition, with a downward-trending red zigzag, virtually on the verge of extinction. I suspect we’ve been overstating the case more than a little. Sure, as my reporting over the past few years has made clear, the delivery mechanism for motion pictures is shifting into all kinds of technologies undreamed of by Darryl F. Zanuck and Orson Welles, and certain sorts of films will probably be seen much less, if at all, projected on the screens of conventional movie theaters.

But the private-meets-communal nature of film — and of film culture — isn’t something that mere technology can destroy. Whether people are watching a Lillian Gish silent at a nickelodeon on Flatbush Avenue, watching a Lucas space opera at a shopping-sprawl multiplex or watching Joe Swanberg‘s latest micro-indie on a chip inside their skull doesn’t matter that much. As soon as the movie’s over they want to talk to someone about it, share their delight or outrage, compare favorite lines and favorite explosions (metaphorical or otherwise), discuss how the characters’ plight made them reconsider their own lives or filled them with despair for the future of humankind.

It’s in that spirit that we’re delighted to bring you Film Salon, a new collaborative forum that aims to bring together movie lovers of all kinds — bloggers, critics and academics; directors, screenwriters, producers and other professionals — to debate the most exciting topics in the film universe. Our contributors will come from all over the movie world and all over the Internet; some will become regulars (I hope), while others may show up once in a blue moon.

We invite you to join us. Obviously we’re looking for vigorous debate in the comments, and I hope our contributors will leap in there from time to time as well. If you’d like to become a Film Salon contributor, write me directly and we’ll talk about it. Another great way to join the conversation is to start blogging on Open Salon. If you tag your post “film salon,” we’ll be sure to notice it, and consider it for posting here.

For our opening salvo, I asked a select group of contributors to share a few thoughts about their favorite film of the 2000s, aka the Decade That Ended Without a Satisfactory Name. Today’s esteemed contributors are directors R.J. Cutler and Nicole Holofcener (in my non-humble opinion, two of America’s most important and most underappreciated filmmakers), Chicago Reader critic Jonathan Rosenbaum and the New Republic’s Chris Orr. I suggested that they avoid film-critic ideas like “best” or “most important” and discuss instead the movie released during the past 10 years that meant the most to them personally. Amazingly, we’ve had no duplicate selections among the first 30 or so submissions, although two directors (I think) have each landed two different films on the list.

As one director wrote back when I asked her to participate, this is a terrible thing to do to a person, asking them to choose a single favorite from a whole decade of movie watching. Reading all these submissions has been an amazing privilege, one that’s reminded me of so many wonderful movies (and reminded me of a few I badly need to see). I’ve also gotten several responses I never would have expected, and at least one that made me howl out loud with a mixture of laughter and outrage. I’d love to tell you about it, but that would be cheating; stay tuned as we roll out these responses over the days ahead.

I couldn’t in good conscience demand this terrible thing from people I respect without demanding it of myself; and in response I have decided to cheat egregiously. When I ask myself what movie of the last 10 years has meant the most to me, I then screw up my eyes at myself and ask, in calculated fashion, “What do I mean by ‘me’?” Do I mean as a human being, a family man in his 40s who has watched thousands of movies over the years? Do I mean as a critic who prides himself on discovering little-noticed gems half-buried in the mud of global film culture? Do I mean as a reporter obsessed with the changing marketplace, and ever-shifting aesthetics, of what we used to call “art cinema”?

For me and many other lovers of classic European and American cinema, this decade’s great discovery was the French director Arnaud Desplechin, and especially his ravishing 2004 “Kings and Queen,” a bittersweet ode to female beauty (as personified by the amazing Emmanuelle Devos), doomed love, familial pain and the movies that seemed to imbibe the spirit of Hitchcock and Bergman at their best and blend them into something that was distinctively modern and original. For pure cinematic enjoyment, nothing else this decade came close.

I could go on at great length on the subject of this decade’s undiscovered gems, films that I suspect almost no one besides me ever saw (or that hit home with me, and apparently with nobody else). As a matter of fact, that would make a great Film Salon topic. Your thoughts, please? But if I force myself to home in on one memorable selection, that would be “Innocence,” a troubling and enigmatic girls-boarding-school allegory from another French filmmaker, Lucile Hadzihalilovic. (Yeah, I’ve picked two movies from Frogland, and I know exactly how that looks. I can’t help being the guy that I am, OK? Now pour extra ketchup on the freedom fries.)

“Innocence” struck some viewers, including New York Times critic Manohla Dargis, as a pervy spectacle bordering on pedophilia, a perception that destroyed its already limited commercial potential. But Hadzihalilovic’s adaptation of Frank Wedekind’s novel, while deliberately dark and provocative, depicts no such thing, instead spinning a complicated, tragic and surpassingly beautiful fable about the arduous journey from girlhood into womanhood.

But when I ask myself what film of the “aughts” was both an artistic and commercial breakthrough, what film galvanized a global audience while blending pop fantasy, wrenching melodrama and historical-political relevance, then I arrive at a final answer that unites and satisfies all three of my personas. Both a heartbreaking tale of Spain under fascism and a soaring reinvention of fairy tale archetype, Guillermo del Toro’s “Pan’s Labyrinth” brought “Lord of the Rings” viewers to art-house cinema, and art-house buffs to a fantasy flick. The greatest film of the decade? Probably not. But as a film that carved out a rich and satisfying middle way between Hollywood pandering and cinephile obscurantism, a film that won awards and sold tickets without compromising its intelligence or daring, it might be the one that meant the most.

We’ll be rolling out lots of new stuff as Film Salon moves forward, including a series of essays from guest critic Matt Zoller Seitz on the most important image makers of the decade. (I can promise you’ll be delighted, surprised and potentially horrified.) Welcome to Film Salon. Jump in, the water’s fine!

Continue Reading Close

Page 7 of 7 in Films of the Decade