What follows is the first part of the hideously overdue rundown of my Top 100 favourite films of the last decade. Not a Top 20, not a Top 50 but a Top 100. You can see why I’m doing this in installments.
Most lists like this are published in late-December or early-January, but most lists like this don’t contain lovingly hand-crafted haiku summaries. You get what you wait for. This delay has also given me the chance to catch up with films released in 2009 that I didn’t manage to catch last year. That helps to explain why some films included in this list didn’t appear in my Top 10 Films of 2009. That, and the fact I’m pathologically fickle.
Of course, strictly speaking, the first decade of the twenty-first century started in January 2001 and ends later this year. In that sense, then, this list has actually come early. The only problem with following that line of thought, however, is that I’d have to reconfigure the chart to include films that haven’t been made yet. That’s too much hassle.
The dates I use are UK theatrical release dates, which are often later than US release dates. As a result, this list contains films you may think belong to the previous decade.
I sympathise with these films. I’m often accused of belonging to a previous decade, too.
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100. 3:10 to Yuma (dir. James Mangold, 2007)
Cowboys Crowe and Bale
Evoke a simpler era
(Train arrives on time)
99. Moebius Redux: A Life in Pictures (dir. Hasko Baumann, 2007)
French comix legend’s
Influence is everywhere
We live in his world
98. Watchmen (dir. Zack Snyder, 2009)
Caped Citizen Kane?
Not quite, but it sure does try
Heroic attempt
97. The Fog of War: Eleven Lessons from the Life of Robert S. McNamara (dir. Errol Morris, 2004)
War and remembrance
From US politics giant
Life lessons linger
96. Infernal Affairs (dir. Wei-keung Lau/Alan Mak, 2004)
Hong Kong cop and crook
In deep cover collision
There will be bullets
95. Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai (dir. Jim Jarmusch, 2000)
Urban warrior
Finds Zen in a pigeon loft
(He could have found worse)
94. Sin City (dir. Robert Rodriguez/Frank Miller, 2005)
Miller’s comic noir
Faithfully cut-and-pasted
Rourke’s Marv steals the show
93. Tropic Thunder (dir. Ben Stiller, 2008)
Actors’ film folly
As they stumble into war
Year’s funniest film
92. Casino Royale (dir. Martin Campbell, 2006)
James Bond is re-Bourne
Exchanges gadgets for grit
He’s blonde now, you know
91. Big Fish (dir. Tim Burton, 2004)
Shaggy dog story
Brings the best out in Burton
(Sequel: ‘Cardboard Box’)
90. Public Enemies (dir. Michael Mann, 2009)
Mann’s gangster epic
Is a fedora-clad ‘Heat’
(The film, not the mag)
89. Insomnia (dir. Chrstopher Nolan, 2002)
Sleep deprivation
Prevents scenery-chewing
At least I think so
88. Avatar (dir. James Cameron, 2009)
J.C. rose again
With pulp sci-fi eye-popper
Tangled up in blue
87. Gran Torino (dir. Clint Eastwood, 2009)
It’s flawed, but who cares?
Clint’s in front of the camera
And that makes our day
86. Coraline (dir. Henry Sellick, 2009)
Neil Gaiman’s kids book
Becomes stop-motion delight
Sinister buttons!
85. American Splendor (dir. Shari Springer Berman/Robert Pulcini, 2004)
Not a cape in sight
As comix artist laid bare
Underground classic
84. Rocky Balboa (dir. Sylvester Stallone, 2007)
Italian Stallion’s
Final return to the ring
A Sly-con swansong
83. Lost in Translation (dir. Sofia Coppola, 2004)
Platonic affair
What’s so funny about that?
It’s Big in Japan
82. The Orphanage (dir. Juan Antonio Bayona, 2008)
Twisty Spanish yarn
With a very sad middle
Behold the sack mask!
81. Million Dollar Baby (dir. Clint Eastwood, 2005)
Clint tugs at heart strings
In girl boxer tearjerker
That still packs a punch
80. Death Proof (dir. Quentin Tarantino, 2007)
Best half of ‘Grindhouse’
Left many moviegoers cold
(Like I give a shit)
79. The Departed (dir. Martin Scorsese, 2006)
Jack’s shows a mean streak
On Marty’s gritty Mean Streets
Infernal remake
78. A.I. Artificial Intelligence (dir. Steven Spielberg, 2001)
Neo-Pinocchio
As Spielberg channels Stanley
Beautifully bleak
77. Brokeback Mountain (dir. Ang Lee, 2006)
Ang Lee’s ‘Giant’ became
A shorthand for homophobes
But what do they know?
76. Burn After Reading (dir. Ethan Coen/Joel Coen, 2008)
Coen’s strike again
Dumb idiots hatch dumb plot
It’s sadistic fun!
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