12/01/2015

2011 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED I]

The 10 Best Films


1. The Descendants - Alexander Payne + Best Dramedy of the Year + Best Hawaii Movie of the Year


2. The Artist - Michel Hazanavicius  + Best Los Angeles Movie of the Year




3. We Need to Talk About Kevin - Lynne Ramsay + Best Shooting Star Actor of the Year (Ezra Miller)




4. In Darkness/W Ciemnosci - Agnieszka Holland + Best War Movie of the Year + Best Polish Movie of the Year




5Haywire - Steven Soderbergh + Best Breakthrough of the Year (Gina Carano) + Sexiest Movie of the Year




6The Help - Tate Taylor + Best Mississippi Movie of the Year




7Corman's World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel - Alex Stapleton


8The Intouchables/Intouchables/Untouchable - Eric Toledano and Olivier Nakache + Best French Movie of the Year



9Bridesmaids - Paul Feig + Best Comedy of the Year


10Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol - Brad Bird + Best Action Movie of the Year + Best Blockbuster of the Year

Other great films of the year (in alphabetical order)


Albert Nobbs - Rodrigo García


The Bengali Detective - Philip Cox 


Bernie - Richard Linklater + Best True Story Movie of the Year  


The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel - John Madden




Carnage - Roman Polanski + Best New York Movie of the Year




Contagion - Steven Soderbergh + Best Disaster Movie of the Year




Hugo - Martin Scorsese + Best Family Movie of the Year + Most Expensive Flop of the Year




The Ides of March - George Clooney + Best Political Movie of the Year




J. Edgar - Clint Eastwood + Best Biopic of the Year




Jeff Who Lives at Home - Mark & Jay Duplass




Kill List - Ben Wheatley + Best English Movie of the Year




Killer Joe - William Friedkin




Machine Gun Preacher - Marc Forster




Martha Marcy May Marlene - Sean Durkin + Best Thriller of the Year + Best Debut Movie of the Year + Best Shooting Star Actress of the Year (Elizabeth Olsen)




 Moneyball - Bennett Miller + Best Sports Movie of the Year
 


Mr. Popper's Penguins - Mark Waters




My Week with Marilyn - Simon Curtis + Best Period Movie of the Year




Oslo, August 31st/Oslo, 31. August - Joachim Trier + Best Norwegian Movie of the Year



Red State - Kevin Smith + Wildest Movie of the Year




Scream 4 - Wes Craven + Best Horror of the Year




A Separation/جدایی نادر از سیمین - Asghar Farhadi + Best Iranian Movie of the Year




Weekend - Andrew Haigh + Best LGBT Movie of the Year


Good films of the year (in alphabetical order)


50/50- Jonathan Levine


Attack the Block - Joe Cornish + Best Monster Movie of the Year




The Beaver - Jodie Foster



Boy/Dreng - Peter Gantzler



The Details - Jacob Aaron Estes



 Drive - Nicolas Winding Refn + Best Car Movie of the Year + Best Gangster Movie of the Year


Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close - Stephen Daldry


A Funny Man/Dirch - Martin Zandvliet


 The Guard - John Michael McDonagh + Best Irish Movie of the Year



Headhunters/Hodejegerne - Morten Tyldum


Hobo with a Shotgun - Jason Eisener + Best Canadian Movie of the Year + Best Gore Movie of the Year


The Iron Lady - Phyllida Lloyd


Johnny English Reborn/Johnny English Returns - Oliver Parker


Kung Fu Panda 2 - Jennifer Yuh


Margin Call - J. C. Chandor


Melancholia - Lars Von Trier


Midnight in Paris - Woody Allen + Best Paris Movie of the Year


Mildred Pierce - Todd Haynes + Best Miniseries of the Year


The Muppets - James Bobin + Best Musical of the Year


Rango - Gore Verbinski


The Rum Diary - Bruce Robinson + Best Comeback of the Year (Johnny Depp and Bruce Robinson)


Shame - Steve McQueen


Silent House - Chris Kentis & Laura Lau + Best Shooting Star Actress of the Year (Elizabeth Olsen)


The Sitter - David Gordon Green


Super 8 - J. J. Abrams


The Tree of Life - Terrence Malick


Your Highness - David Gordon Green + Best Fantasy Movie of the Year

The 10 Worst Films


1. Arthur - Jason Winer


2. The Human Centipede 2 (Full Sequence) - Tom Six


3. The Turin Horse/A Torinói Ló - Béla Tarr


4. Fright Night - Craig Gillespie 


5. Hall Pass - Bobby & Peter Farrelly


6. Hostel: Part III - Scott Spiegel + Worst Poster of the Year


7. The Hangover Part II - Todd Phillips


8. The Mechanic - Simon West


9. Memories of My Melancholy Whores/Memoria de Mis Putas Tristes - Henning Carlsen


10Dolphin Tale - Charles Martin Smith


Other mediocre or poor films (in alphabetical order)

30 Minutes or Less 
Cedar Rapids 
Crazy, Stupid, Love 
A Dangerous Method 
Fast & Furious 5/Fast Five/Fast & Furious 5: Rio Heist 
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo 
Horrible Bosses 
Paul 
The Raid: Redemption/The Raid/Serbuan Maut 
Rise of the Planet of the Apes 
The Skin I Live In/La Piel Que Habito 
The Son of No One 
The Sunset Limited 
Take Shelter 
The Thing 
This Must Be the Place 
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy 
Tower Heist 
War Horse
X-Men: First Class 

Remarks

This the first updated post on the year 2011 in films and TV-series covers 89 reviewed titles, (up from 82),  which makes it the most comprehensive movie year on Film Excess so far. It will be elaborated and updated again yearly around this time.

Topping the year's list are 8 masterpieces: Payne's poignant The Descendants, Hazanavicious' silent B/W Hollywood homage surprise hit The Artist, Ramsay's uncompromising 'mother-horror' We Need to Talk About Kevin, Holland's gut-wrenching WWII sewer survival drama In Darkness, Soderbergh's (who also released the great Contagion this year) funky-cool martial arts actioner Haywire, Taylor's race-discussing Southern drama The Help, Stapleton's immersive, rollicking Roger Corman documentary, Corman's World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel and finally Toledano and Nakache's uplifting drama The Intouchables. These films are followed by Feig's female-headed comedy smash Bridesmaids and Bird's majorly exciting, perhaps the best M:I movie of the first 4, Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol, which rounds off the Top 10 list. In this yearly update, In Darkness and The Intouchables have pushed out Bernie and Albert Nobbs.
Moving on to individuals, George Clooney had a spectacular year with both The Descendants and his own great Ides of March. Johnny Depp made a dramatic comeback in even more 'come-backing' Bruce Robinson's free-spirited, fun Rum Diary, although it flopped. And Elizabeth Olsen made herself known in a big way with excellent, nerve-wrecking performances in both Silent House and the great Martha Marcy May Marlene. Ezra Miller cemented his position as one of the most talented and far-ranging young actors with his lead performance in Kevin, and Gina Carano broke the mold as a touch as nails female action star in Haywire.
Jason Segel also had a great year on the silver screen with fine work in both the hilarious Jeff Who Lives at Home and The Muppets. Jim Carrey made a refreshing return to great family comedy with Mr. Popper's Penguins.
2011 also offered very exciting films from Iran (A Separation), Norway (Oslo, August 31st), England (Kill List), India (The Bengali Detective and The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel), Sudan (Machine Gun Preacher) and many other countries.
Scorsese released his massively critically acclaimed, great Hugo, which is the film reviewed thus far that lost most money by far, despite all the praise heaped upon it.
We also got a fine, British monster movie (Attack the Block), an unusually dark Hollywood dramedy (The Details), a great baseball movie (Moneyball), a car movie that took the world by storm (Drive), a Canadian gore grindhouse homage (Hobo with a Shotgun), a really funny Irish movie (The Guard) and a really strange American one (The Tree of Life).
David Gordon Green released two major comedies that both fared well with Film Excess, The Sitter and Your Highness, but which also both lost millions of dollars. Green is one of the few commercially highly unstable if not downright unviable directors, who still gets to direct big movies in a freewheeling, steady pace today.
Others are less fortunate, as Winer with the year's undoubtedly worst film, Arthur. Followed by Six's next, preposterous Centipede movie and Tarr's last movie ever, Turin Horse, the worst films of 2011 also include the perhaps worst Farrelly brothers movie to date (Hall Pass), Spiegel's straight-to-DVD Hostel 3, Phillips' second Hangover sequel, Carlsen's also last film ever, Cuba-set Memories of My Melancholy Whores and Smith's sappy, flawed Dolphin Tale. Memories of My Melancholy Whores has pushed Spielberg's War Horse out of the Worst 10 list this year.
Some of the year's huge films were also not very memorable, as is often the case; namely Rise of the Planet of the Apes, X-Men: First Class and Fast Five were fast forgotten.
Cinema masters David Cronenberg (A Dangerous Method) and Pedro Almodóvar (The Skin I Live In) also premiered films in 2011 that didn't meet their high standards of yore.

Notes on the 2012 Oscars:

Billy Crystal hosted the ceremony for his 9th time, (he's only surpassed by Bob Hope's 12 times as host), following James Franco and Anne Hathaway's disastrous co-hosting job at the 2011 ceremony.
The Artist won 5 awards: Best Picture (ahead of Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close, (which was a little controversial for its 2 nominations, which some felt were undeserved), Tree of Life, Descendants, The Help, Hugo, Midnight in Paris, Moneyball and War Horse), Best Actor (Jean Dujardin), Best Costumes, Best Score (Ludovic Bource). - And Hazanavicious won Best Director ahead of Allen, Scorsese, Malick and Payne.
Meryl Streep won Best Actress for her portrayal of Margaret Thatcher in Iron Lady, which also won for Best Makeup, and Christopher Plummer won Best Supporting Actor for his performance in Beginners (2010), becoming the oldest recipient to date, at age 82. Octavia Spencer won Best Supporting Actress for The Help.
Allen won for his original screenplay for Midnight in Paris, and Payne, Nat Faxon and Jim Rash won for their adapted screenplay for Descendants. Robert Richardson won for his extraordinary cinematography in Hugo, which also won the art direction, visual effects, sound editing and sound mixing Oscars.
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo won its only Oscar, out of 5 nominations, for Best Editing. Bret McKenzie won Best Song for his Man or Muppet from The Muppets.
The shorts The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore (Animated), The Shore (Live Action) and Saving Face (Documentary) won awards. Undefeated, about a football team, won Best Documentary, and A Separation won Best Foreign Film, ahead of Bullhead, Footnote, In Darkness and Monsieur Lazhar. Rango won Best Animation.
Dignitary awards went to James Earl Jones, Dick Smith, Oprah Winfrey, Jonathan Erland and Douglass Trumbull

IMDb's Top 10 Most Popular 2011 Features:

1. Harry Potter and the Deadly Hallows - Part 2
2. The Help
3. X-Men: First Class
4. Captain America: The First Avenger
5. Thor
6. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
7. Warrior
8. Drive
9. Sucker Punch
10. The Intouchables   

Still on Film Excess' 2011 watch-list:

If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front, Hell and Back Again, Bullhead, Lorimer, Pina, Harvest, Jane Eyre, Undefeated, Busted Walk, Footnote,  A Better Life, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2, I Am Eleven, Monsieur Lazhar, Dark Horse, Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory, Twixt, Italy: Love It, or Leave It, American Horror Story, Puss in Boots, Margaret, Captain America: The First Avenger, Thor, Sucker Punch  and The Last Time I Saw Michael Gregg.

What do you think of Film Excess' 2011 lists?
What movies would comprise your best and worst of 2011 lists?
What missing 2011 movies and/or TV-series would you recommend?

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