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2008 Film Poll Results

Best Film

1. WALL-E
(Andrew Stanton, U.S.)
237 points/35 mentions

Details

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Determined little whatsit saves Earth and rocks the vote. Shouldn't it be the other way around?

2. The Flight of the Red Balloon
(Hou Hsiao-hsien, France)
163 points/26 mentions

Great Chinese filmmaker remakes a 50-year-old French kiddie classic. Paris has never seemed more gloriously strange—nor has puppeteer Juliette Binoche.

3. Happy-Go-Lucky
(Mike Leigh, UK)
159 points/26 mentions

Insanely cheerful little earful teaches kindergarten kids (and the rest of us) how to work and play with others in normally dour British filmmaker's greatest crowd-pleaser.

4. Still Life
(Jia Zhangke, China)
147 points/23 mentions

Part archaeological dig, part science fiction, this is a documentary with actors—and Jia's latest report on China burying its past and entering the future.

5. A Christmas Tale
(Arnaud Desplechin, France)
146 points/24 mentions

Dysfunctional French family clusters around matriarch Catherine Deneuve. She's gravely ill and in need of a compatible transplant— the real infusion is the film's superabundance of cinematic brio.

6. Waltz With Bashir
(Ari Folman, Israel)
140 points/22 mentions

War is treated (and "treated") twice removed in Folman's animated documentary of the nightmares, memories, and fantasies suffered by Israeli soldiers a quarter century after invading Lebanon.

7. Milk
(Gus Van Sant, U.S.)
123 points/21 mentions

Van Sant goes straight . . . for the heartstrings, that is, in this wildly affirmative biopic of the San Francisco activist Harvey Milk, played with a controlled enthusiasm by Sean Penn.

8. Wendy and Lucy
(Kelly Reichardt, U.S.)
122 points/25 mentions

Boxcars, hobos, no money for gas—the Great Depression happening today: Stranded somewhere in Oregon, Michelle Williams is so lonesome she cannot cry.

9. Let the Right One In
(Tomas Alfredson, Sweden)
113 points/20 mentions

Bullied 12-year-old boy falls in puppy love with the androgynous 200-year-old child vampire next door, in this gritty, wintry, bloody adaptation of Sweden's equivalent of the Twilight novels.

10. Synecdoche, New York
(Charlie Kaufman, U.S.)
106 points/18 mentions

First-time director wrestles with the convoluted script he wrote for himself—it's self-reflexive to the max and beyond, with Philip Seymour Hoffman as Kaufman's alter ego.

Previous Winners

2007 There Will Be Blood (Paul Thomas Anderson)

2006 Army of Shadows (Jean-Pierre Melville)

2005 A History of Violence (David Cronenberg)

2004 Before Sunset (Richard Linklater)

2003 Lost in Translation (Sofia Coppola)

2002 Far From Heaven (Todd Haynes)

2001 Mulholland Drive (David Lynch)

2000 Beau Travail (Claire Denis)

1999 Being John Malkovich (Spike Jonz)

Best Actor

Sean Penn, Milk (86 votes): Reining in his mannerisms, Hollywood's moodiest male star triumphantly vanished into the role of community organizer–political martyr Harvey Milk—and could well emerge brandishing an Oscar.

Mickey Rourke, The Wrestler (74 votes): Gotta be the comeback performance of the decade—aging bad boy as an aging, almost lovable, broken-down professional wrestler.

Benicio Del Toro, Che (25 votes): A sometime showboat demonstrates his own brand of revolutionary discipline, playing the icon of icons as a dedicated professional.

Best Actress

Sally Hawkins, Happy-Go-Lucky (83 votes): Erupting out of the Mike Leigh ensemble, Hawkins riffs an indelible character into existence—a London kindergarten teacher, at once grating and irresistible in her boundless good nature.

Michelle Williams, Wendy and Lucy (60 votes): Williams performs a virtual solo as a young woman who loses everything when she loses her dog. No one this year held a close-up better.

Juliette Binoche, The Flight of the Red Balloon (55 votes): Encouraged by director Hou Hsiao-hsien to invent her own character, Binoche broke new ground playing a professional puppeteer as eccentric as the movie in which she found herself.

Supporting Actor

Heath Ledger, The Dark Knight (75 points): A no-brainer. Even had the release of Christopher Nolan's Batman sequel not been preceded by Ledger's untimely death, his turn as the anarchic Joker in Louise Brooks eyeshadow would have immortalized him among a generation of moviegoers and aspirant Method actors.

Eddie Marsan, Happy-Go-Lucky (43 points): As the dyspeptic yang to Sally Hawkins's ebullient yin, this pug-faced Mike Leigh regular proved a formidable test case for the limits of positive thinking and gave a bad name to driving instructors everywhere.

Josh Brolin, Milk (30 points): After playing Dubya for Oliver Stone, Brolin stepped down the political hierarchy to render an even more chilling impersonation of San Francisco supervisor and avid Twinkie consumer Dan White.

Supporting Actress

Penélope Cruz, Vicky Cristina Barcelona (42 points): Woody Allen's sun-drenched Spanish ménage à quatre is chugging along pleasantly enough, and then Cruz enters the frame as Javier Bardem's homicidal ex—and sets the whole thing ablaze like a raging comic fireball.

Viola Davis, Doubt (35 points): As the pragmatic mother of an allegedly molested boy at a Catholic high school, Davis has just one major scene, but it is the kind that stops an audience dead in its tracks and colors the absolutist logic of John Patrick Shanley's modern morality play with much-needed splotches of gray.

Rosemary DeWitt, Rachel Getting Married (30 points): Although Anne Hathaway has commanded the lion's share of press, it's DeWitt's less showboating performance as the titular betrothed that provides a welcome oasis of calm at the center of Jonathan Demme's big, fat U.N. wedding party.

Best Documentary

Man on Wire (16 points): A nonfiction film with the heart of a Hollywood caper, James Marsh's wildly entertaining docudrama revisited French provocateur Philippe Petit's 1974 tightrope walk between the twin towers of the World Trade Center and turned it into an eccentric valentine to imagination, risk taking, and creative self-expression.

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  • Greg Stewart 01/06/2009 5:50:00 AM

    What is this short list? Where is the list of 100 or more films from past years? The top ten docs, top ten performances? The ability to see each critic's choices separately? Each year I copy those 100 movies into a spreadsheet and save it as my ongoing list of the "good" movies from that year. I can use it then to rank my own favorites--now and years into the future. Give us the full detail, please!

  • t leyland 01/04/2009 10:30:00 PM

    As an enthusiast currently living far from an urban film hotspot, I'm greatly disappointed that the results of the poll were not listed in their entirety. The distillation of a "top ten" from the inherently prejudiced and opinionated is an insult to the participants. It's regrettable that the list was not extended to account for the aesthetic interests of the individual critics. Maybe I'm having trouble navigating the website, but if memory serves previous polls shared the results that did not muster a consensus. Furthermore, the apparent exclusion of the NAMES of the participants of the poll (and a selection of individual top tens) is downright neglectful. To offer an example, how would Ed Halter assess the cinematic events of the year? Was he invited to participate? That is a list I would read with great interest precisely for the unselfconscious eccentricity. As the sidebar article on indie distribution suggests, the economic limitations of the multiplex exurb world prohibit access to practically any film that is not rated below a PG-13. The 21st century audience relies on word of mouth post-theatrical DVD market. One would hope that the Village Voice/LA Weekly poll would be a crucial resource for digesting a years worth of films. I am truly saddened that the world of "professional" film criticism in the print daily and alternative weekly has deteriorated so quickly. All the more imperative that we preserve the network of "legitimized" film criticism and compile the results. It is truly a wasted opportunity. The yearly poll should showcase the diversity of expression. To consult a field of the cinematically ecstatic without celebrating the resulting dissonance is lamentably uneventful.

 

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