Posted December 28, 2016
I think it's time for my traditional summary of the year's movies. However, I have to first admit that I have not seen quite as many of the movies that came out this year as I usually do, for various reasons. Therefore such movies as for example A Monster Calls or the new Ghostbusters (likely candidates for the "best" and "worst" cathegories respectively) weren't in the running. Without further ado:
Best Movie of the Year: Hunt for the Wilderpeople - fresh, original, touching and hilarious, it's a superbly directed and acted little gem of a movie. It's no sweeping epic, not milestone to go down in cinema history, but still an immensly enjoyable and also poignant film. The premise is simple- a national manhunt is ordered for a rebellious kid and his foster uncle who go missing in the wild New Zealand bush, but it's the imaginative direction and great cast that make it great. Sam Neill is wonderful as the gruff but likeable Hec, but it's young Julian Dennison who steals the movie, noe mean feat with an actor like Neill sharing the screen with him.
Runner-Up: Free State of Jones
Biggest Positive Surprise: Warcraft- I expected it to be a total disaster, but it turned out to be a immensly fun, if shallow movie. It's just great B-movie fun, with surprisingly great visuals. There are some moments when the CGI still doesn't quite cut it, but overall it's quite impressive, and the film definately felt like Warcraft to me. I could not have went into it with worse expectations, and yet I had a lot of fun. Definately the best video game movie to date. A pity we won't get a sequel due to poor box office.
Runner-Up: The Huntsman Winter's War
Biggest Disappointment: Independence Day: Resurgence- I wasn't expecting much, but I was expecting it to be fun. Big, dumb fun. Well, big and dumb it is, but fun was nowhere to be found. It's boring, bland, full of way to many characters who contribute nothing and unfocused loose threads that never come together. It lacks the fun performances of the original, and doesn't pack nearly the punch and excitment of that movie in scenes of action and destruction. The humor falls flat, the new cast is forgettable, the visuals never really impress. The sad thing is, it really could have easily worked with a better script and cast, but that's not what we got.
Runner-Up: High Rise
Worst Movie of the Year: Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children- I'm sure there were some worse, but I have not seen them, and this one is plenty bad. It is in fact I think the worst Tim Burton movie yet, even worse than Dark Shadows and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. The book wasn't grea, but it was ok and had some interesting aspects that set it apart from the run of the mill young adult novels. The movie however threw all that out the window, and instead focused on the most unoriginal elements of the book, making it into a bland X-Men copy, messing up characters for no apparent reason along the way. Even forgetting about the book, it's still a hopelessly dull movie, with unimpressive CGI, thinly sketched characters and worst of all- a poorly written plot full of holes that pretty much entirely falls apart in the final act. It's a failure as an adaptation and a fialure as a movie in it's own right, and perhaps for the first time in his career, it's a movie that feels like Burton did not give a shit. It feels like he just wanted it over with, just rolled with whatever the first take was like, with whatever the special effects artists and concept art guys could turn out quickly. An utter waste of everyone's time, and everyone involved seemed to know it.
Runner-Up: Captain America Civil War
Best Movie of the Year: Hunt for the Wilderpeople - fresh, original, touching and hilarious, it's a superbly directed and acted little gem of a movie. It's no sweeping epic, not milestone to go down in cinema history, but still an immensly enjoyable and also poignant film. The premise is simple- a national manhunt is ordered for a rebellious kid and his foster uncle who go missing in the wild New Zealand bush, but it's the imaginative direction and great cast that make it great. Sam Neill is wonderful as the gruff but likeable Hec, but it's young Julian Dennison who steals the movie, noe mean feat with an actor like Neill sharing the screen with him.
Runner-Up: Free State of Jones
Biggest Positive Surprise: Warcraft- I expected it to be a total disaster, but it turned out to be a immensly fun, if shallow movie. It's just great B-movie fun, with surprisingly great visuals. There are some moments when the CGI still doesn't quite cut it, but overall it's quite impressive, and the film definately felt like Warcraft to me. I could not have went into it with worse expectations, and yet I had a lot of fun. Definately the best video game movie to date. A pity we won't get a sequel due to poor box office.
Runner-Up: The Huntsman Winter's War
Biggest Disappointment: Independence Day: Resurgence- I wasn't expecting much, but I was expecting it to be fun. Big, dumb fun. Well, big and dumb it is, but fun was nowhere to be found. It's boring, bland, full of way to many characters who contribute nothing and unfocused loose threads that never come together. It lacks the fun performances of the original, and doesn't pack nearly the punch and excitment of that movie in scenes of action and destruction. The humor falls flat, the new cast is forgettable, the visuals never really impress. The sad thing is, it really could have easily worked with a better script and cast, but that's not what we got.
Runner-Up: High Rise
Worst Movie of the Year: Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children- I'm sure there were some worse, but I have not seen them, and this one is plenty bad. It is in fact I think the worst Tim Burton movie yet, even worse than Dark Shadows and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. The book wasn't grea, but it was ok and had some interesting aspects that set it apart from the run of the mill young adult novels. The movie however threw all that out the window, and instead focused on the most unoriginal elements of the book, making it into a bland X-Men copy, messing up characters for no apparent reason along the way. Even forgetting about the book, it's still a hopelessly dull movie, with unimpressive CGI, thinly sketched characters and worst of all- a poorly written plot full of holes that pretty much entirely falls apart in the final act. It's a failure as an adaptation and a fialure as a movie in it's own right, and perhaps for the first time in his career, it's a movie that feels like Burton did not give a shit. It feels like he just wanted it over with, just rolled with whatever the first take was like, with whatever the special effects artists and concept art guys could turn out quickly. An utter waste of everyone's time, and everyone involved seemed to know it.
Runner-Up: Captain America Civil War
Post edited December 28, 2016 by Breja