Eagerly anticipating this week ... (17-24)

Eagerly anticipating this week ... (17-24)
Johnny Depp's Modi: Three Days on the Wing of Madness (2024)

12/30/2015

The Boss of It All/Direktøren for Det Hele (2006) - Von Trier's hilarious absurd comedy



+ Best Comedy of the Year + Best Experimental Movie of the Year + Most Under-appreciated Movie of the Year

The US poster for Lars Von Trier's The Boss of It All


QUICK REVIEW:

Mr. Ravn is the boss of an obscure IT company, but for ten years he has pretended that the company had another boss above him. Now he wants to sell the company, so he hires an actor to do his dirty work.

Danish master writer-director Lars Von Trier's (Breaking the Waves (1996)) comical talent is here on its freest display; Boss presents intelligent plays with clichés, perceptions and prejudices, shot in a curious mechanized system named Automavision, which lets a computer randomly select where the camera should be placed.
The very Danish urge for unification and being in agreement socially is dramatized poignantly throughout the film with coldblooded, sharp-toothed glee.
Jens Albinus (The Idiots/Idioterne (1998)) and Peter Gantzler (Italian for Beginners/Italiensk for Begyndere (2000)) and the scenes with the Icelanders are hilarious.
Von Trier's clever, great sense of humor makes one wish he would return to comedy, but his next project is still announced to be the serial killer series, The House That Jack Built, tentatively set for a 2016 release.

Related posts:

Lars Von Trier:  Nymphomaniac (2013) short version, vol. 1 & vol. 2, or, Lars Von Trier's Suck It

Melancholia (2011) - Von Trier's heightened reality doomsday reflections 
Antichrist (2009) - Von Trier's cabin-in-the-woods psycho-horror 

2006 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED III]

2006 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED II] 

2006 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED I]

Dear Wendy (2005) - Vinterberg and Von Trier's unpopular, gun-themed megaflop (writer)  
Dancer in the Dark (2000) or, Selma the Immigrant 



Peter Gantzler and Jens Albinus in Lars Von Trier's The Boss of It All


Cost: 4 mil. $
Box office: 3.1 mil. $
= Huge flop
[Boss was released in Denmark in December to poor reviews and 18k+ admissions, making it 1.1 mil. DKR. It made 51k $ in North America. Its 3 biggest markets were Italy (1.2 mil. $/38.7 % of the total gross), Spain (0.6 mil. $/19.4 %) and Sweden (0.2 mil. $/6.5 %). The rights to a remake have been in development at Universal Pictures since 2011. The Boss of It All is certified fresh at 75  % with a 6.6 critical average on Rotten Tomatoes.]

What do you think of The Boss of It All?

12/27/2015

2014 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED I]

The Top 10 of 2014


1. Boyhood - Richard Linklater + Best Coming-of-Age Movie of the Year




2. Mommy - Xavier Dolan + Best Canadian Movie of the Year + Best Youth Movie of the Year



3. The Look of Silence - Joshua Oppenheimer + Best Danish Movie of the Year



4. The Grand Budapest Hotel - Wes Anderson + Best Ensemble of the Year + Best Adventure of the Year




5. American Sniper - Clint Eastwood + Best War Movie of the Year




6. The Normal Heart - Ryan Murphy + Best TV Movie of the Year  + Best Adaptation of the Year




7. A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence/En Duva Satt På en Gren och Funderade på Tillvaron - Roy Andersson + Best Swedish Movie of the Year



8. Godzilla - Gareth Edwards + Best Kaiju Movie of the Year + Sexiest Screen Couple of the Year (Elizabeth Olsen & Aaron Taylor-Johnson)


9. The Good Lie - Philippe Falardeau + Best True Story Movie of the Year





10. The Homesman - Tommy Lee Jones + Best Western of the Year

Other great 2014 films (in alphabetic order)


Alive Inside/Alive Inside: A Story of Music and Mind - Michael Rossato-Bennett


The Babadook - Jennifer Kent + Best Horror Movie of the Year + Best Australian Movie of the Year


Before Midnight - Richard Linklater



Calvary - John Michael McDonagh + Best Irish Movie of the Year
 


The Equalizer - Antoine Fuqua


Force Majeure/Turist - Ruben Östlund


 Interstellar - Christopher Nolan + Best Science Fiction Movie of the Year


The Lego Movie - Phil Lord and Christopher Miller



Looking season 1  - Michael Lannan, creator + Best New TV-Series of the Year



Magic in the Moonlight - Woody Allen + Best Romcom of the Year



Nightcrawler - Dan Gilroy


Non-Stop - Jaume Collet-Serra


Obvious Child - Gillian Robespierre + Best Independent Movie of the Year


Pride - Matthew Warchus + Best English Movie of the Year + Best LGBT Movie of the Year


The Salvation - Kristian Levring 


Speed Walking/Kapgang - Niels Arden Oplev 
 
Good 2014 films (in alphabetic order)


A Most Wanted Man - Anton Corbijn




Birdman - Alejandro Gonzáles Iñárritu




The Duke of Burgundy - Peter Strickland + Sexiest Movie of the Year



The Expendables 3 - Patrick Hughes



Guardians of the Galaxy - James Gunn + Best Blockbuster of the Year




The Imitation Game - Morten Tyldum




In Real Life/Det Andet Liv - Jonas Elmer



Love Is Strange - Ira Sachs



Sabotage - David Ayer



Sex Tape - Jake Kasdan




St. Vincent - Theodore Melfi




Timbuktu - Abderrahmane Sissako + Best Political Movie of the Year + Best Mauritanian Movie of the Year



True Detective - season 1 - Nic Pizzolatto




Tusk - Kevin Smith + Strangest Movie of the Year



The Two Faces of January - Hossein Amini

The Worst of 2014



1. The Monuments Men - George Clooney



2. Mr. Peabody & Sherman - Rob Minkoff



3. Hercules - Brett Ratner


4. Saint Laurent - Bertrand Bonello

Mediocre 2014 movies:


Dumb and Dumber To  
While We're Young 
X-Men: Days of Future Past 

Remarks:

Adding 22 titles, this first updated edition of the 2014 lists gets the title count up to 48. The next edition will be even more comprehensive. 
The top 10 already contains 5 masterpieces, making 2014 an impressive movie year already: Remaining in top is Richard Linklater's 12-years-in-the-making Boyhood, followed by Xavier Dolan's propulsive Mommy and Joshua Oppenheimer's deeply stirring documentary The Look of Silence. Wes Anderson's fabulous The Grand Budapest Hotel and Clint Eastwood's riveting American Sniper are the two remaining masterpieces. The last five slots are filled out by Ryan Murphy's strong The Normal Heart TV movie, Roy Andersson's poignant, original A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence, Gareth Edwards' fantastic Godzilla, Philippe Falardeau's hope-inspiring, great The Good Lie and finally Tommy Lee Jones' grueling, marvelous The Homesman. Falling from the top 10 this year are Michael Lannan's Looking season 1, John Michael McDonagh's Calvary, Woody Allen's Magic in the Moonlight, Dan Gilroy's Nightcrawler, Christopher Nolan's Interstellar and Antoine Fuqua's The Equalizer.
At the other end of the scale, the worst of list only comprises 4 titles so far: George Clooney's awful The Monuments Men, Rob Minkoff's insipid Mr. Peabody & Sherman, Brett Ratner's equally insipid Hercules and Bertrand Bonello's inflated Saint Laurent.

Notes on the 2015 Oscars:

The academy missed most of the year's best films pretty spectacularly this year, as it threw most of its love on the just good Birdman:
Birdman won 4 awards, for Best Picture, Director (Alejandro Gonzáles Iñárritu), Original Screenplay and Cinematography (Emanuel Lubezki).
Eddie Redmayne won Best Actor for The Theory of Everything; Julianne Moore Best Actress for Still Alice. J. K. Simmons won Best Supporting Actor for Whiplash, which also won sound mixing and editing Oscars. Patricia Arquette won Boyhood's scandalously only Oscar as Best Supporting Actress.
Favorite The Imitation Game only won Best Adapted Screenplay (Graham Moore). The Grand Budapest Hotel won for Costumes, Hairstyling and Makeup,  Score (Alexandre Desplat) and Production Design, equaling Birdman's 4 wins, though in lesser categories. American Sniper, another of the year's absolute best films, won only won award, for sound mixing. Interstellar won for visual effects and Selma for Best Song (Glory). 
Best Animated Short was Feast, Live-Action The Telephone Call, Documentary Crisis Hotline: Veterans Press 1. Best Feature Documentary was Citizenfour. Best Foreign Film, ahead of Tangerines, Leviathan, Wild Tales and Timbuktu, was Poland's Pawel Pawlikowski's great Ida. Disney won Best Animated Feature for Big Hero 6
Honorary awards went to Hayao Miyazaki, Maureen O'Hara, Jean-Claude Carrière and Harry Belafonte
Neil Patrick Harris hosted the show and wasn't nearly as funny or classy as most people had hoped. All in all the 2015 Oscars were very unmemorable.
 
2014 titles still on the watch-list:

Selma, Ride, Skin Trade, Big Hero 6, Citizenfour, Iris, Trash, Inherent Vice, Gone Girl, Elephant Song, Still Alice, Blackfoot Trail, Adult Beginners, The Theory of Everything, Song of the Sea, Big Game, Welcome to Me, Before I Go to Sleep, The Boxtrolls, Far from Men, Goodnight Mummy, Wild, She's Funny That Way, Heaven Knows What, Leviathan, The Salt of the Earth, Two Days, One Night, Wild Tales, The Fault in Our Stars, How to Train Your Dragon 2, Mr. Turner, Virunga, We'll Never Have Paris, Break Point, Wild Canaries, The Way He Looks, Boys, What We Do in the Shadows, To Be Takei, Last Days in Vietnam, Whiplash The Overnighters, The Skeleton Twins, Life Itself, Dead Snow 2: Red Vs. Dead, Cesar Chavez, They Came Together, Kelly & Cal, Zero Motivation, Rob the Mob, Walk of Shame, Grace of Monaco, Mr. Turner, Maps to the Stars, Kick, Tammy, Hector and the Search for Happiness, The Humbling, This Is Where I Leave You, I Am Ali, Serena, Sex Ed, Selma, Annie, Unbroken and The Interview and Six Dance Lessons in Six Weeks.

Previous annual lists:
2014 in films - according to Film Excess 
2013 in films - according to Film Excess [UPDATED II]
2013 in films - according to Film Excess [UPDATED I] 
2013 in films - according to Film Excess
2012 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED II]
2012 in films - according to Film Excess [UPDATED I]
2012 in films - according to Film Excess
2011 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED I]
2011 in films - according to Film Excess

What have been your best and worst 2014 movie experiences?
What has surprised positively and what has disappointed you?
Any 2014 movie or TV-series that isn't yet but needs to be on Film Excess' watch-list?

12/24/2015

2013 in films - according to Film Excess [UPDATED II]


The 10 Best Films of 2013:



1. 12 Years a Slave - Steve McQueen


2.  Like Father, Like Son/そして父になる (Soshite Chichi ni Naru) - Hirokazu Koreeda + Best Drama of the Year + Best Japanese Movie of the Year


3Finding Vivian Maier - Charlie Siskel & John Maloof




4. Inside Llewyn Davis - Joel and Ethan Coen + Best Music Film of the Year


5Blue Is the Warmest Colour/La Vie d'Adèle - Chapitres 1 & 2 - Abdellatif Kechiche + Best French Movie of the Year


6. The Great Beauty/La Grande Bellezza - Paolo Sorrentino + Best Rome Movie of the Year + Best Italian Movie of the Year


7Only God Forgives - Nicolas Winding Refn + Best Danish Movie of the Year


8The Conjuring - James Wan + Best Horror Movie of the Year


9. All Is Lost - J. C. Chandor + Best Survival Movie of the Year



10. The Wolf of Wall Street - Martin Scorsese

Other great movies of 2013 (in alphabetical order)



20 Feet from Stardom - Morgan Neville



August: Osage County - John Wells + Best Ensemble of the Year



Begin Again/Can a Song Save Your Life? - John Carney + Best New York Movie of the Year


Behind the Candelabra - Steven Soderbergh


 Blue Jasmine - Woody Allen + Best San Francisco Movie of the Year



Despicable Me 2 - Pierre Coffin & Chris Renaud



Don Jon - Joseph Gordon-Levitt + Best Debut Movie of the Year


Enough Said - Nicole Holofcener + Best Los Angeles Movie of the Year


The Hundred-Year-Old Man Who Climbed out the Window and Disappeared/Hundraåringen Som Klev Ut Genom Fönstret och Försvann - Felix Herngren + Best Swedish Movie of the Year


Ida - Pawel Pawlikowski + Best Polish Movie of the Year

 

The Incredible Burt Wonderstone - Don Scardino + Best Comedy of the Year


 Lone Survivor - Peter Berg + Best War Movie of the Year


Monsters University - Dan Scanlon


Nebraska - Alexander Payne


Side Effects - Steven Soderbergh + Best Thriller of the Year

Recommendable, good movies of 2013 (in alphabetical order) 



Anchorman: The Legend Continues - Adam McKay + Strangest Movie of the Year


Dallas Buyers Club - Jean-Marc Vallée


Evil Dead - Fede Alvarez



Fading Gigolo - John Turturro


Fruitvale Station - Ryan Coogler



Gravity - Alfonso Cuarón + Best Science Fiction Movie of the Year


The Last Stand - Kim Jee-Woon + Best Comeback of the Year


Mama - Andrés Muschietti


Northwest/Nordvest - Michael Noer


 Nymphomaniac - Lars Von Trier + Wildest Movie of the Year + Best Poster of the Year


Oz the Great and Powerful - Sam Raimi


Pacific Rim - Guillermo Del Toro


Star Trek Into Darkness - J. J. Abrams


Stranger by the Lake/L'Inconnu du Lac - Alain Guiraudie



This Is the End - Evan Goldberg and Seth Rogen



Tom at the Farm/Tom à la Ferme - Xavier Dolan + Best Canadian Movie of the Year + Best LGBT Movie of the Year


White House Down - Roland Emmerich + Silliest Movie of the Year

The 7 Worst Films of 2013:


1. A Good Day to Die Hard - John Moore + Worst Poster of the Year



2. Stoker - Chan-wook Park



3. The Last Exorcism Part 2 - Ed Gass-Donnelly


4. Keeper of Lost Causes/Kvinden i Buret - Mikkel Nørgaard


5. Odd Thomas - Stephen Sommers



6The Bling Ring  - Sofia Coppola


7. Gangster Squad - Ruben Fleischer + Most Expensive Flop of the Year

Mediocre 2013 movies:

The Heat
The Kings of Summer/Toy's House 
Omar

Remarks

The second edition of updated 2013 lists raises the amount of reviewed films from 40 to 52 and adds two masterpieces, several great movies, some good and a couple of mediocre ones
Running through the list from the top:
2013 have given 5 masterpieces (so far) in Steve McQueen's amazing, multi-Oscar-winning 12 Year a Slave, newly added family-themed drama Like Father, Like Son by Japanese master filmmaker Hirokazu Koreeda, Charlie Siskel and John Maloof's slightly overlooked, incredible documentary Finding Vivian Maier, Joel and Ethan Coen's music drama pearl, Inside Llewyn Davis and the also newly added Paolo Sorrentino's colorful ode to Rome, The Great Beauty.
The rest of the top 10 includes Abdellatif Kechiche's incredible French love story Blue Is the Warmest Colour, Nicolas Winding Refn's strange, trippy Only God Forgives, James Wan's phenomenal horror The Conjuring, J. C. Chandor's newly added, amazing lost-at-sea drama All Is Lost and Martin Scorsese's super-charged, rambunctious The Wolf of Wall Street. Falling out of the top 10 this year are Woody Allen's magnificent Blue Jasmine, the sensationally stimulating space-thriller Gravity and Alexander Payne's poignant Nebraska.
2013 had many other great and wonderful films, as well as some painstaking duds, most prominently Die Hard 5, A Good Day to Die Hard, Chan-wook Park's pretentious, boring and unpleasant Stoker and the dubious, befittingly titled The Last Exorcism Part 2. These 'top' the Worst 7 movie list of the year, which also includes Danish crime movie The Keeper of Lost Causes, Stephen Sommers' jumbled Odd Thomas adaptation, Sofia Coppola's disappointing The Bling Ring and Ruben Fleischer's deafening Gangster Squad.
2013 was characterized by a jump towards almost ruthless realism in some of the year's most interesting films, from the biggest winner (12 Years a Slave) to the more arthouse-bound European films like Nymphomaniac, Stranger by the Lake and Blue Is the Warmest Colour, all of which feature explicit sex scenes galore. Film Excess warmly welcomes this new trend, which only heightens already good films, (but will hardly save films that are already shabby.)

Notes on the 2014 Oscars: 

The academy favored 12 Years a Slave and Gravity, as well as Dallas Buyers Club:
12 Years a Slave won 3 awards, for Best Film, - and is still the only Best Film Oscar winner to also be recognized by Film Excess as a year's best film, - Best Supporting Actress (Lupita Nyong'o in her startling break-out performance) and Best Adapted Screenplay (John Ridley). Dallas Buyers Club won 3 awards, for Best Actor (Matthew McConaughey), Best Supporting Actor (Jared Let), and Best Makeup and Hairstyling. The night's biggest winner was Gravity, with 7 awards, for Best Director (Alfonso Cuarón), Best Cinematography (Emmanuel Lubezki), Editing, Sound Mixing, Sound Editing, Visual Effects and Score (Stephen Prince).
Cate Blanchett won Best Actress for Blue Jasmine; Spike Jonze won Best Original Screenplay for Her; Disney's Frozen won Best Song (Let It Go) and Best Animated Feature; Baz Luhrman's The Great Gatsby won Best Costumes and Best Production Design.
Mr Hublot won Best Animated Short; The Lady in No. 6: Music Saved My Life won Best Documentary Short and Anders Walter and Kim Magnusson won the short film Oscar for Helium. Twenty Feet From Stardom won Best Documentary, and Paolo Sorrentino's The Great Beauty won Best Foreign Film, ahead of The Broken Circle Breakdown, The Hunt, The Missing Picture and Omar.
Honorary awards went to Piero Tosi, Steve Martin, Angela Lansdale, Charles 'Tad' Marburg and Angelina Jolie.
 
2013 movies still pending on the watch-list:

Grudge Match, Black Nativity, 12-12-12, Gimme Shelter, The Galapagos Affair, The Green Inferno, The Railway Man, The Last of Robin Hood, Blood Glacier, The Sacrament, Labor Day, Visitors, Of Horses and Men, The Butler, The Wind Rises, Jodorowsky's Dune, The Past, The Last Match, Frozen (seen - great), Let the Fire Burn, Adult World, All Is Bright, Mistaken for Strangers, Not Today, The Necessary Death of Charlie CountrymanKill Your Darlings, Escape From Tomorrow (seen - OK), American Hustle, Ender's Game, Her, Saving Mr. Banks, Captain Phillips, Mom (TV-series), Insidious: Chapter 2, Enemy, Prisoners, Bad Words, Wolf Creek 2, Salomé, Antarctica: A Year on Ice, Escape Plan, The World's End, A Field in England, Only Lovers Left Alive, The Lunchbox, Borgman, Blue Ruin, Monster Pies, G.B.F., Oblivion, Pain & Gain, I'm So Excited, The Croods, The Inevitable Defeat of Mister & Pete and Upstream Colour.

Previous annual lists:

2014 in films - according to Film Excess 
2013 in films - according to Film Excess [UPDATED I] 
2013 in films - according to Film Excess 
2012 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED II] 
2012 in films - according to Film Excess [UPDATED I] 
2012 in films - according to Film Excess 
2011 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED I] 
2011 in films - according to Film Excess 

What do you think of Film Excess' 2013 lists?
What films would comprise your lists?

Eagerly anticipating this week ... (16-24)

Eagerly anticipating this week ... (16-24)
Ridley Scott's Gladiator II (2024)