Podcast: Best of 2020

Together again are Frank, Tim, Kyle, and Nate to discuss not just our top ten films of 2020, but also the current state of cinema, and what 2021 may hold.

Frank’s Top Ten:

  1. ANOTHER ROUND dir. Thomas Vinterberg
  2. TOMASSO dir. Abel Ferrera
  3. MANK dir. David Fincher
  4. TENET dir. Christopher Nolan
  5. VFW dir. Joe Begos
  6. SIBERIA dir. Abel Ferrara
  7. DA 5 BLOODS dir. Spike Lee
  8. POSSESSOR dir. Brandon Cronenberg
  9. 40 YEARS OF ROCK: A BIRTH OF A CLASSIC dir. Derek Wayne Johnson
  10. BIRDS OF PREY AND THE FANTABULOUS EMANCIPATION OF ONE HARLEY QUINN dir. Cathy Chow

Nate’s Top Ten:

  1. THE EMPTY MAN dir. David Prior
  2. ANOTHER ROUND dir. Thomas Vinterberg
  3. WANDER DARKLY dir. Tara Miele
  4. UNDERWATER dir. William Eubanks
  5. CAPONE dir. Josh Trank
  6. THE INVISIBLE MAN dir. Leigh Whannell
  7. SOUL dir. Peter Docter and Kemp Powers
  8. ALONE dir. John Hyams
  9. VFW dir. Joe Begos
  10. HIS HOUSE dir. Remi Weekes

Kyle’s Top Ten:

  1. THE WANTING MARE dir. Nicholas Ashe Bateman
  2. BLOODY NOSE, EMPTY POCKETS dir. Turner Ross, Bill Ross IV
  3. BACURAU dir. Kleber Mendonca Filho, Juliano Dornelles
  4. POSSESSOR dir. Brandon Cronenberg
  5. DA 5 BLOODS dir. Spike Lee
  6. THE DEVIL TO PAY dir. Ruckus Skye, Lane Skye
  7. THE DEVIL ALL THE TIME dir. Antonio Campos
  8. THE OUTPOST dir Rod Lurie
  9. I’M THINKING OF ENDING THINGS dir. Charlie Kaufman
  10. COLOR OUT OF SPACE dir. Richard Stanley

Tim’ Top Ten

  1. POSSESSOR dir. Brandon Cronenberg
  2. DA 5 BLOODS dir. Spike Lee
  3. THE INVISIBLE MAN dir. Leigh Whannell
  4. HORSE GIRL dir. Jeff Baena
  5. DICK JOHNSON IS DEAD dir. Kristen Johnson
  6. TENET dir. Christopher Nolan
  7. THE DEVIL ALL THE TIME dir. Antonio Campos
  8. I’M THINKING OF ENDING THINGS dir. Charlie Kaufman
  9. BORAT SUBSEQUENT MOVIEFILM dir. Jason Woliner
  10. BIRDS OF PREY dir. Cathy Chow – WONDER WOMAN 1984 dir. Patty Jenkins

Christopher Nolan’s Tenet

I never thought I’d say I was even slightly underwhelmed by a latter day Christopher Nolan film, but such is the case with Tenet, a new pseudoscience mind bending espionage barnstormer from the filmmaker that didn’t so much blow my mind as tie it’s proverbial shoelaces in a knot. That’s not to say I didn’t enjoy it, there’s plenty to get excited by here, but swaths of the narrative feel dry and uninvolved, the central premise that should be rich and tantalizing is painfully underdeveloped and the main character is less a character than a blank game piece scooting around a chessboard of intrigue and action. He’s ‘The Protagonist’, given the ironically opaque title and played by John David Washington in a performance that is sadly devoid of much life or expression. Tasked with playing a vital part in an incoming Cold War whose implications reach beyond science and physics, he’s teamed up with 007-esque operative Neil, played by Robert Pattinson in a turn that’s blessedly engaging, subtle and picks up Washington’s slack. I don’t want to give too much away because the film’s secrets are pretty fun, as they race all over Europe smoking out vague intel, having fierce gun battles and car chases and trying to prevent… what, exactly? There’s a spectacularly nasty Bond villain played by Kenneth Branagh who is a genuinely scary, fascinating piece of work, and I greatly enjoyed his arc and that of his long suffering wife (Elizabeth Debicki, solid) as well as some well mounted, intricate action set pieces. There’s a quick Michael Caine cameo that exists purely so Nolan can seat him at a table for all of two minutes to deliver clipped exposition, and appearances from Martin Donovan, Fiona Dourif, Aaron Tyler Johnson and Clemence Poesy. Nolan makes his paradoxical concept so dense and intricate that by the time the scintillating finale rolls around, parts of it are so much in the clouds that you just raise your arms in defeat and go “ok bro” and trust that he knows what he’s doing, because I sure didn’t, yet perhaps will with some more viewings a lá Inception. That isn’t the bone to pick here though, it’s mainly the fact that the narrative feels rushed, staccato, unnatural in places and doesn’t possess the fluidity, grace, cohesion or focus of his earlier works. Half the time the dialogue and editing during interaction scenes is so brisk, so chopped up and so hurried that its tough to really be drawn in, before you’re off to the races in a flurry without a proper roadmap to prep you for the fun. There are some very exciting sequences involving the premise which I won’t spoil, some terrific character work courtesy of Branagh, Debicki and Pattinson. But man, Washington is just not a dynamic actor and can’t carry the weight expected of him, while much of the film’s setup isn’t strong enough for payoff later on that isn’t strong enough either. I loved the super sonic, unconventional score by Ludwig Göransson, the action is neatly photographed and intensely realized when its good, and somewhat incomprehensible when it falters, especially in a hectic third act paramilitary incursion that I’m sure made sense to Nolan on the drawing board, but comes across as pandemonium on film. There’s a lot to enjoy here, but I have to be real and say this could have been so much more, especially for an artist as accomplished as Nolan.

-Nate Hill