The list
of movies this year looks quite promising I'm very sad that I can't attend, stupid college on a quarter system.
As I was updating The Big List just now, I got to wondering what were the
best movie years of all - time.
Seeing more than 100
new movies every year means strict adherence to the «gut instincts» policy of deciding which new movies to see, and which to avoid.
And that is just one movie from among 35 or 40 that make 1996 the greatest independent
movie year from the greatest independent movie decade.
As always, the rankings are not meant to be taken too seriously, I saw a lot of
great movies this year and would recommend each and every one of these.
2017 is going to be a fantastic
movie year when it comes to the number of great movies being released.
You don't have to listen to me though, just look at all the other reviews for 2014's highest
rated movie this year.
This is one of the best surprises of a still -
young movie year: a comedy that takes nothing seriously except fun.
Yet another terrific early
70s movie year, especially for foreign films, with some of the definitive films of world cinema in the decade released this year.
I will however be cheating in a few categories, because let's face it, there were so many
awesome movies this year that one category just won't work.
1996 — A couple more
good movies this year (there are films worth watching into the 60s) and the best movies are better as well.
Its power users, meanwhile, are going to dozens
of movies a year, each costing the company a small fortune.
A flat - out hilarious ensemble comedy that probably made me laugh out loud more than any
other movie this year.
It's mostly disappointing given the overall lackluster state of
animated movies this year, especially after such a great selection of them last year.
Alternatively, you can make it orbit around you, creating that awesome footage that was only seen in
movies some years ago.
The point of greatest interest is that Bolt represents the second
major movie this year after Tropic Thunder that has as its protagonist an actor who doesn't realize he's no longer on a soundstage.
I didn't see as many
movies this year as I have in the last few (blame that snooze - worthy first six months, I guess)
There have been quite a few
movies this year about young adults trying to escape small spaces, but none of them are quite as masterful and tightly paced as 10 Cloverfield Lane, the unofficial sequel to Cloverfield.
Following a domestic theatrical run more successful than any other non-IMAX limited
release movie this year, which still earned less than half of the movie's substantial reported production budget, Tree of Life recently made its home video debut exclusively in a Blu - ray + DVD + Digital Copy combo pack from Fox.
Getting a new Star
Wars movie every year makes it less of an event and more of a seasonal staple, like the Marvel movies have become, and practically all of those are a lot more entertaining and fun than Rogue One ever is.
I did a post on my favorite
Christmas movies years ago, but thought I'd do an updated edition today, and just narrow it down to my top five.
«Neon Demon» is the
only movie this year where the music feels like an unseen narrator for how we're supposed to feel.
As it approaches its great and terrible climax, every fear the film has suggested digging to the surface and clawing out to confront its characters, «Hereditary» takes on a power and resonance that it's hard to imagine any other
horror movie this year matching.
He's currently in production on The Magnificent Seven for release in 2016, which means he'll have released a new
movie every year since 2013.