12/20/2016

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

The Top 10 Movies and TV-series of 2014


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




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



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



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




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




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




7. Silicon Valley S1 - John Altschuler, Dave Krinsky and Mike Judge (creators) + Best New TV-series




8A 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




9Winter Sleep/Kış Uykusu - Nuri Bilge Ceylan + Best Turkish Movie of the Year




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

Other great 2014 films and TV-series (in alphabetic order)


Alive Inside/Alive Inside: A Story of Music and Mind, documentary - 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


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



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

 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 San Francisco Title 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 and TV-series (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 + Most Expensive Flop of the Year




Sex Tape - Jake Kasdan




The Skeleton Twins - Craig Johnson




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 (creator)





Tusk - Kevin Smith + Strangest Movie of the Year



The Two Faces of January - Hossein Amini

The 8 Worst Movies of 2014



1. The Monuments Men - George Clooney




2. Sharknado 2: The Second One, TV movie - Anthony C. Ferrante




3. The Rover - David Michôd



4Mr. Peabody & Sherman - Rob Minkoff


5. Unbroken - Angelina Jolie



6Hercules - Brett Ratner


7Saint Laurent - Bertrand Bonello


8. She's Funny that Way - Peter Bogdanovich

Other failed, poor or mediocre 2014 movies:


Annabelle + Best Mega-Hit Movie of the Year
Dumb and Dumber To  
Pawn Sacrifice 
They Came Together  + Best New York Movie of the Year
While We're Young 
X-Men: Days of Future Past 

[58 titles in total]
 
Notes:

Adding 10 titles, this second updated edition of the 2014 lists gets the title count up to 58.
The top 10 already contains 6 masterpieces, making 2014 an impressive movie year already:  Richard Linklater's 12-years-in-the-making Boyhood ranks supreme, 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, Clint Eastwood's riveting American Sniper and John Altschuler, Dave Krinsky and Mike Judge's hilarious, clever Silicon Valley S1 are the remaining masterpieces reviewed so far. The last four slots are filled by Ryan Murphy's strong The Normal Heart TV movie, Roy Andersson's poignant, original A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence, Nuri Bilge Ceylan's epic drama Winter Sleep and Tommy Lee Jones' grueling, marvelous The Homesman. Gareth Edwards' fantastic Godzilla and Philippe Falardeau's hope-inspiring, great The Good Lie both leave the top 10 this year.
Other noteworthy, great titles gotten this year include Michael Lannan's Looking S1, John Michael McDonagh's religious crime drama Calvary, Woody Allen's marvelous romcom Magic in the Moonlight, Dan Gilroy's eerie crime thriller Nightcrawler, Christopher Nolan's spectacular Interstellar and Antoine Fuqua's effective revenge actioner The Equalizer.
While Richard Linklater, releasing masterpiece Boyhood and great Before Midnight, both critical and commercial hits, may be said to have had the best year of all, others were less fortunate:
On the worst-of list, George Clooney's awful The Monuments Men still takes the cake. Anthony C. Ferrante's Sharknado 2: The Second One follows suit and is joined by David Michôd's depressing, boring The Rover, Rob Minkoff's insipid Mr. Peabody & Sherman, Angelina Jolie's failed epic Unbroken, Brett Ratner's also insipid Hercules, Bertrand Bonello's inflated Saint Laurent and Peter Bogdanovich's overbearing She's Funny that Way.
Other great filmmakers that disappointed include Bobby & Peter Farrelly (Dumb and Dumber To), Noah Baumbach (While We're Young) and Bryan Singer (X-Men: Days of Future Past).

Notes on the 2015 Oscars:

The academy missed most of the year's best films pretty adamantly 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 the sound mixing and editing Oscars. Patricia Arquette won Boyhood's scandalously only Oscar as Best Supporting Actress.
Predicted 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 one 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.

IMDb's user-generated top 10 most popular movies of 2014:

1.  Interstellar
2. Guardians of the Galaxy
3. Transformers: Age of Extinction
4. Whiplash
5. The Theory of Everything
6. Gone Girl
7. The Amazing Spider-Man 2
8. The Expendables 3
9. Paddington
10. Dawn of the Planet of the Apes 
 
2014 titles still on the watch-list:

Selma, Ride, Skin Trade, Big Hero 6, Citizenfour, Iris, Trash, Inherent Vice, Elephant Song, Still Alice, Blackfoot Trail, Adult Beginners, The Theory of Everything, Song of the Sea, Big Game, Welcome to Me, The Boxtrolls, Far from Men, Goodnight Mummy, Wild, Heaven Knows What, The Salt of the Earth, Two Days, One Night, Wild Tales, How to Train Your Dragon 2, Mr. Turner, Virunga, We'll Never Have Paris, Break Point, Wild Canaries, Boys, What We Do in the Shadows, To Be Takei, Last Days in Vietnam, Whiplash, The Overnighters, Life Itself, Dead Snow 2: Red Vs. Dead, Cesar Chavez, Kelly & Cal, Zero Motivation, Rob the Mob, Walk of Shame, 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, Annie and Six Dance Lessons in Six Weeks, Salem S1, The Amazing Spider-Man 2, Transformers: Age of Extinction, Paddington, Dawn of the Planet of the Apes, John Wick, Kingsman: The Secret Service, Divergent, Into the Woods, Fury, The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies, Maleficent, It Follow, 22 Jump Street, Captain America: Winter Soldier, The Maze Runner, 300: Rise of an Empire, The Drop, THe Hunger Games: Mocking Jay - Part 1, Sin City: A Dame to Kill For, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Exodus: Gods and Kings, Noah, I Origins, Big Eyes, That Awkward Moment, Night at the Museum 3, The Other Woman, The Purge: Anarki, Clown, The Raid 2, A Most Violent Year, 99 Homes, Love & Mercy, White Bird in a Blizzard, '71, Lost River, Jersey Boys, A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night, The One I Love, Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day, Muppets Most Wanted, Madame Bovary, White God and Samba.

Previous annual lists:

2015 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess
2014 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED I]
2014 in films - according to Film Excess

2013 in films - according to Film Excess [UPDATED III]
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 III]
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 II]
2011 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED I]
2011 in films - according to Film Excess
2010 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED I]
2010 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess  


What do you think of the lists?
Which films need to figure on the next update?
What are your favorite and least favorite 2014 movie and TV-series?

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