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J. Hoberman's Favorite Films of 2009

The decade closes with a flashback to the medium's once-vaunted universal appeal, although The Hurt Locker's impressive consensus popularity comes more from critics than audiences. Sign of the times: The Hurt Locker is one of five war or war-related movies on my list, although the pair at the bottom are more like war fantasies. Those two movie-movies and the 3-D spectacular Coraline aside, the films that most impressed me this year have mainly been modest productions, self-contained and sharply focused—and in that, The Hurt Locker is exemplary as well.

Michael Fassbender, Hunger.
Blast! Films—Hunger Ltd.
Michael Fassbender, Hunger.

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1. The Hurt Locker (Kathryn Bigelow)

2. Hunger (Steve McQueen)

British video artist Steve McQueen's first feature is as visceral as it is formalist. Based on the jailhouse passion of Irish Republican martyr Bobby Sands, Hunger is an extreme drama, replete with suffering and pain, a reasoned political essay, and a cinematic icon with an awe-inspiring final movement that, informed by a thousand years of religious art, is something to experience even more than watch.

3. Police, Adjective (Corneliu Porumboiu)

A young detective in Romanian backwater places a trio of pot-smoking teenagers under surveillance, files reports, and deems the crime too minor to warrant prosecution—but who is he to judge? Staged for maximum objectivity, Corneliu Porumboiu's accomplished second feature has something of Jim Jarmusch's deadpan theatricality. But it's also a deadly serious, often brilliant analysis of bureaucratic procedure and the tyranny of language.

4. I'm Gonna Explode (Gerardo Naranjo)

Gerardo Naranjo proves the French new wave ever-young with this audacious transposition of Jean-Luc Godard's ultra-romantic Pierrot le fou (más o menos) to a Mexican high school. I'm Gonna Explode derives its essential pathos less by fetishizing Pierrot than by embracing that film's profoundly adolescent nature—Godard isn't pastiched or travestied, but poignantly downsized.

5. Coraline (Henry Selick)

The most obsessive movie of 2009, Henry Selick's fantastically labor-intensive fantasy is also the year's strongest adaption of a children's book and finest animated film, puppet or otherwise. For all its near-psychotic content, it's the most subtly calibrated 3-D movie made in Hollywood since Hitchcock's Dial M for Murder. In fact, if you haven't seen it in 3-D, you haven't seen it.

6. The Sun (Aleksandr Sokurov)

After portraying Hitler and Lenin, Aleksandr Sokurov concludes his 20th-century dictator cycle on an upbeat note, with a ruler who declines divinity—Hirohito of Japan. Set mainly in the emperor's makeshift bunker, The Sun is characteristically precise and almost droll, with Issei Ogata notable for his humanizing—and, in Japan, taboo-breaking—performance.

7. The Beaches of Agnès (Agnès Varda)

Now an octogenarian, Agnès Varda—the great idiosyncratic original of the French nouvelle vague—plays herself in this charming memoir, gleaning material from her films and photographs. Varda's playful psychodrama is fanciful but frugal, fey yet tough, as it explicates and enriches an entire oeuvre.

8. The Headless Woman (Lucrecia Martel)

Argentine writer-director Lucrecia Martel is one of the world's most inventive narrative filmmakers precisely because she is so stubbornly disinclined to spell out a narrative—her stories coalesce out of overheard dialogue, shifts in focus, and off-handed shock cuts. Martel's third feature is a dark comedy of disassociation in which the audience is compelled to share the opaque protagonist's mental state and, like her, live in the moment.

9. Inglourious Basterds (Quentin Tarantino)

Yo, Q! IG is energetic, funny, blithely fantastic, and blatantly stoopid—or do I mean fuckin' awesome? It's also amoral and a bit obnoxious, but I'll take Tarantino's essentially generous "Jewish porn" (as one participant crassly put it) any day over the mean-spirited "Nazi porn" (yes) of A Serious Man.

10. Red Cliff (John Woo)

The prodigal son returns . . . almost. Based on a 14th-century Chinese novel, John Woo's spectacular homecoming arrived here relatively unheralded and chopped to half its five-hour running time. Perhaps one of our local film festivals will see fit to present what looks like Woo's magnum opus in its complete version.

11. The Girlfriend Experience (Steven Soderbergh, U.S.) and, tied for 12th, 11 more honorable mentions: Antichrist (Lars von Trier, Denmark), Afterschool (Antonio Campos, U.S.), The Baader Meinhof Complex (Uli Edel, Germany), Brüno (Larry Charles, U.S.), Fantastic Mr. Fox (Wes Anderson, U.S.), The Limits of Control (Jim Jarmusch, U.S.), Me and Orson Welles (Richard Linklater, U.S.), Tony Manero (Pablo Larrain, Chile), Tulpan (Sergei Dvortsevoy, Russia), 24 City (Jia Zhangke, China), and The White Ribbon (Michael Haneke, Austria).

 
  • Jason 03/03/2010 5:28:00 AM

    I bet you idiots actually think Hoberman reads what you peon know-nothings "think" about his reviews.

  • kris 02/18/2010 11:41:00 PM

    Inglorious basterds better than A serious man?? I do not think so. A serious man is a masterpiece, a cinematic philosophy or philosopical cinema at its best. What I agree about the Quentin's latest is that it IS "blatantly stoopid". I was particularly impressed how the entire powerhouse of the Nazi Germany is easily locked in a shoddy theatre, by a girl and her friend, because they were such stoopid clowns u know, that's why they majorly scre**d with the entire world for at least 5 years. And of course the main characters bump into each other each other time after time in different parts of France, be it Paris or whatever, and of course Landa is tasked with Hitler's security in Paris, though before his job was hunting down Jews, out of Paris. And the best of all is how the shrewd Landa "negotiates" with his enemies his own safety after the war OVER THE PHONE. As if a 10-year old wrote the script, that's how poor and ridiculous that is. But maybe that is just me. I also disagrre wtih Mr. Hoberman' analysis of Up in the air, the fact thee people at first feel like they lose everything, especially the financial security, and then praise their families for the support, has no contradiction. And by the way, his favorite of the year: well that one said absolutely NOTHING new or profound at all. Well the war sucks, is brutal and some professional soldiers can become adrenaline junkies?? Wow, what a revelation, nobody knew that. And by the way, the rogue raid into the enemy territory after the bomb explosion, as a result of which they shoot one of their own in the leg, would guarantee an obligatory, unhonorable discharge from the Army. It is the US Army, not a band of scouts, and there are S.O.P. Bigelow took such serious liberties with the script they make it almost as realistic about war as "Matrix".

  • mshook12 01/16/2010 6:34:00 AM

    This list sucks. I can tell from the lack of comments regarding your lame critiques that nobody reads your articles anyways. Piece!

  • fielding 12/24/2009 6:16:00 AM

    "Nazi Porn"? This desperate need to be provocative is why people stopped taking Hoberman seriously. A long time ago.

  • Goofball Jones 12/24/2009 5:24:00 AM

    Meh...give Hoberman a break. He knows that he has to be "controversial" to stand out. So he threw the little "nazi porn" thing in there to illicit a reaction from people. He's trying to get people to do the "Did you read what Jim Hoberman wrote!!". Meh...just taking his queues from Howard Stern or Rush Limbaugh in that controversy sells....but for Hoberman now well enough as it's only gotten 4 responses. mwhahahaha. Try harder next time Jimmy! Maybe use the "N" word next time.

  • Jack Elam 12/24/2009 4:29:00 AM

    "Mean spirited Nazi Porn". Yeah. Either you're astonishingly stupid or you think we are. Which is it? Which?

  • Michael Levineowitz 12/24/2009 4:19:00 AM

    Nazi porn? How so? As a modern Jew born to midwestern Jewish parents, the film hit me really deeply. The word Nazi is not something to throw around without justification.

  • Chris 12/23/2009 10:28:00 PM

    Calling A Serious Man - a film about being Jewish, made by two Jewish men - "Nazi Porn," is crude and tacky. You can do better than that, J. Hoberman. Or maybe you can't.

  • z 12/23/2009 6:49:00 PM

    Didn't Hunger get a limited release in 2008?

 

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