My Top 25 Movies of 2019
It is indeed time… or at least, as is tradition, it is indeed now overdue for me to dust off the cobwebs from my Tumblr account and post my Top 25 movies of the year.
This time for 2019.
Years 2008 through to present are available in the archive. Frequent visitors know that I’ll throw out a few special mentions to all the films that I wish I could’ve included but couldn’t make them fit yet believe they deserve a shout out regardless and then I get stuck in to what I think are the 25 best films of the year.
As always, films listed are based on their UK release date whether that’s in the cinema or on DVD, VOD etc.
And no, despite several attempts, repeated proclamations on social media AND owning the bloody thing outright for the last 6 months, I still never got round to seeing Ash is The Purest White in time for my self-imposed deadline for this so if you’re here to see that lauded, I will dash your expectations now.
Anyway, without further ado, here’s the ‘also-rans’ and ‘near-misses’ separated per genre that very nearly made the final list:
In terms of comedies, I very much enjoyed The Breaker Upperers, The Favourite, Always Be My Maybe, Mega Time Squad, Good Boys, Brittany Runs a Marathon and – as ultimately disappointing as it turned out to be in comparison to the original – yes, Zombieland: Double Tap.
Dramas I really liked this year were The 12th Man, The Old Man And The Gun, The Man Who Killed Hitler and then Bigfoot, White Boy Rick, Stan & Ollie, Deadwood: The Movie, The Sister Brothers, the first two thirds of Feedback, Hotel Mumbai, The Mule, Shadow, Thunder Road, The Clovehitch Killer, The Nightingale, Destroyer, Vice and, as uncomfortable as it made me, Ray and Liz.
Documentaries I rated highly in 2019 included Leaving Neverland, Free Solo, The Inventor: Out For Blood In Silicon Valley, Divide & Conquer: Roger Ailes and The Amazing Jonathan Documentary.
In terms of horror movies, rather controversially I seem to stand alone in saying I rather liked both Velvet Buzzsaw and The Dead Don’t Die. I also thoroughly enjoyed One Cut of the Dead, Happy Death Day 2 U and In Fabric, the last of which VERY nearly made the final Top 25 cut.
Action movies I was a fan of this year were both Triple Frontier and Triple Threat, The Quake (or The Wave 2: The Quake as it is inexplicably retitled in some countries), We Die Young which features a wordless and stellar Van Damme performance, Furie and Stuber.
On the blockbuster ‘stage’, I fully embraced the absolute utter insanity (or stupidity?) of The Wandering Earth, really liked Shazam! As well as Spiderman: Far From Home and Terminator: Dark Fate. Somewhat controversially, I also had a lot of fun with Jumanji: The Next Level, 6 Underground and Joker (a straight-up masterpiece that last movie most certainly is not!).
Finally, in terms of animation that I liked in 2019 I’d pay mention to How To Train Your Dragon 3, The Lego Movie 2 and Toy Story 4 – the last two being very likeable but totally unnecessary. And of course, Klaus which was a lovely, moving, visual joy that me and my family will return to a lot over the years.
Now… onto that Top 25:
25. BOOKSMART
I really loved this first time I saw it earlier this year. I found it very funny and thought the performances were delightful by the two main leads. I had issues with the clusterfuck that is the film’s third act but not enough that I didn’t hold a place for it in my Top 10 of the year for pretty much the last four months or so. Then I revisited it again recently and I’ve still got a huge amount of affection for it and there is still a large amount of it that makes me laugh out loud - but that third act REALLY rubs me the wrong way. Asides from the clunky plot developments that exist purely to give the film conflict and some sort of narrative ‘propulsion’ it doesn’t necessarily need AND on top of the fact that Billie Lourd’s entire thing is embarrassing and awful (are we allowed to kind of lean in together and whisper yet that she can’t act very well?), what really smarts is for a film that is meant to be this 'progressive’ and female-centred, it leans in on the laziest and most horrible of high school comedy tropes - the horny teacher who beds the student! And like cliche dictates it is always a female teacher and male student because even a film as allegedly “progressive” as this is self-aware enough to know that if the sexes were reversed they couldn’t / wouldn’t get away with it. In an age of #MeToo and #TimesUp the idea that a female filmmaker would go with this iffy fuckin cliche in her debut movie and have no problem at all leaves a horrible taste over the back end of an otherwise pretty great little film… But yeah, definitely still check out BOOKSMART. Its progressive, millennial bullshit stance is complete piffle. But its comedic set-pieces are a lot of fun.
24. IT: CHAPTER TWO
I don’t understand anyone who’s coming away from IT CHAPTER 2 complaining there’s a lack of scares. There’s not a lack of scares at all. The problem is there scattered across a running time that is not structured well enough to accentuate them. There were some moments where I very nearly jumped out of my seat and left because of their effectiveness - the pay-off to Bev returning home as teased in the trailer? Fuuuuuuck THAT! I think it is fair to criticise its flabbiness though… How the hell its director can talk about his intentions for a four hour cut of this pushed up alongside a three hour cut of the first chapter as some sort of hope for the future feels insane - FOUR hours? This thing is ten minutes shy of three and it feels excessive! The lack of discipline in the editing bay is quite possibly the reward that comes from delivering a $700.4 million return on a $35 million budget the first time round. That lack of discipline doesn’t make for a film as focused as it needs to be… Once you realise an hour in that the story structure is one in which each character is split off to revisit their past and then each character is then going to be given a 'teachable moment’, you realise that you’ve essentially got to watch the same plot point be repeated SIX times round each time. And from a narrative perspective that’s both annoying and exhausting, frankly. Hand on heart though, it’s a minor quibble overall because what is there is effective as hell and very entertaining. Think of it cinematically as too big a portion of a great frickin meal… It’s a hypocritical complaint also because ultimately there is so much joy in watching these actors go at playing these characters (Bill Hader is an absolute marvel in this and Jessica Chastain lives up to the 'dream casting’ suggestion the minute Sophia Ellis turned up in the first one!) It may well be overlong by a good thirty minutes but it is still an incredibly scary, funny ride… just with a denouement that, once again, shows how hard it is to deliver the climactic goods when Stephen King has given you such utter excrement to work with.
23. THE GANGSTER, THE COP, THE DEVIL
I watched this and flat-out loved it - yet another reminder that you can spin the dial and pick a genre, any genre, and the reality is that South Korea are delivering the best efforts in it nowadays. This is a big, broad, bombastic slice of action pulp that has its cake as a thriller/procedural and eats it as a blockbustery burst of car chases and violent dust-ups. The remake rights for this are with Stallone and that’s a scary prospect really coz if there’s one thing problematic about that guy is that he’s not ~great~ with playing “evenly” (the stories that came off the CREED II production are terrifying!).
22. AT THE HEART OF GOLD
I watched this with my wife and the both of us just kept shooting aghast and pained looks at one another the longer it went on. Forensic documentary studies like this are a big interest to me but this was a gruelling yet kind of inspiring watch because it did the right thing in putting the victims front and centre from the get go and throughout. Child abuse is an abhorrent thing. Doubly so on a scale like this. BUT when you’re watching the revelations that it was so commonly known to be going on and covered up to the extent and at the level it was? That is just… there’s just no words! Fantastic little documentary though. If you think you know the full facts on this, you don’t! And if the last 4 years are any indication, our generation have found our own Errol Morris coz Erin Lee Carr is responsible for 4 of the best documentaries in that time with this, I LOVE YOU NOW DIE, THOUGHT CRIMES and MOMMY DEAD & DEAREST.
21. ABDUCTED IN PLAIN SIGHT
I find that once in a while there’s a true crime documentary so flat-out, jaw-droppingly fuckin… out there, that most of its enjoyment isn’t in how utterly astounding it is but mostly the fun you have in telling people the details of it and watching them incredulously go “Fuck the fuck off! This didn’t happen? Surely not!” I saw this in early January when no one was talking a single word about it here in the UK and I spent roughly three months banging on and on about it to anyone and everyone and, sure enough, everyone looked at me like I was mad and kept saying “Fuck the fuck off! This isn’t a real thing, surely??”Then it landed on Netflix and… everyone went bonkers! It is a tight 90 minute uncomfortable, grim, totally incredulous jaw-dropper detailing what are two of the STUPIDEST parents and the most horribly manipulative paedophile you could imagine. You’ve GOT to check this out because without this documentary no one would EVER believe the story of… ** SPOILERS here on out ** … the most horribly manipulative paedophile you could imagine, who moves his family into the house next to a husband and wife with three daughters, befriends them, tricks the dad into giving him handjobs, seduces the mum into heavy-petting sessions - all with the intent of lowering their defences so he can get access to their youngest 11 year old daughter… who he abducts, manipulates by pretending to be an alien into believing there’s an alien invasion that can only be prevented by her having his baby and sneaks across to Mexico once she’s 12 so he can marry her. Then he gets arrested by the FBI, brought back to America, uses his previous intimate dalliances with BOTH parents to blackmail them into dropping the charges, re-seduces the mother into a long-term sexual relationship, reabducts the young daughter, hides her in a boarding school, poses as a CIA agent and… and… and… not one single element of this is UNTRUE! What the FUCK, right?!?
20. MIDSOMMAR
There’s issues to be had with this in the sense that at two and a half hours it is needlessly self-indulgent and from a storytelling point of view it suffers like many from that flaw of walking in the wake of THE WICKER MAN’s story beats without finding much in the way of variation. However, it is exceptionally well directed and the building of tension and concern (despite knowing exactly where it will inevitably go) is impressive. It basks in its weirdness and then seemingly delights in getting weirder… You can say you’ve heard this story before but you won’t have SEEN it told with imagery quite like this. The whole shebang wouldn’t work half as effectively if not for the performances and they really are great here. Florence Pugh is quite exceptional. She joins Toni Collette in what will clearly be Ari Aster’s roster of "Tremendous Performances That Deserve Awards But Won’t Get Them”. By the film’s end you come to realise the film is leaning into THE WICKER MEN comparisons purposefully - to show us what that movie would look like today, in Trump’s America: Obnoxious Americans pissing up against and fucking around with longstanding tradition and history.
19. Us
Ignore all of the bullshit 33,000+ deep dive 'think pieces’ spewed out across the internet about this and just judge it for what it is: a great horror thrill-ride with some terrific jump scares etc. but it’s not without its flaws. For one, it’s too strong a film to get landed with that big and lazy an info-dump conclusion… especially one that kind of clunks against what’s gone before - but then, as much as we’re clearly not meant to call Jordan Peele out on anything it seems, he IS a vastly superior director then he is a writer if this effort is anything to go by. Was it really, really requiring of those penetrative essays though on what it “really” means or what Peele’s hidden intent was? Could it not just be that the guy made a great horror film with all the very clear subtext of a Romero or Carpenter classic, and there’s just nothing more to it than that? Because that’s how I’m taking it. Because if I don’t and I do actually have to wade through all this internet word clunge about how US is “really” about “the effects of classism and marginalisation” or how the antagonists are “effigies of situational classism”, I’d write the film off as a failure of achieving its intent. To dress it up as more than a relentless, scary cat-and-mouse shocker is like trying to put a monocle on a pig and call it a professor.
18. WON’T YOU BE MY NEIGHBOUR
I went into this as a British person completely unfamiliar with Fred Rogers or any of his past work / impact on America and came away completely reverential to the man and what he stood for and achieved across generations. So much so that this documentary completely changed my outlook on a lot of things. It certainly changed the approach I take in how I communicate with my own children now. It’s a heartwarming, inspirational ode to a clearly great man and I urge everyone to watch it and allow Mr Rogers to give your jaded perspective on life a reinvigorating kick in the butt.
17. APOLLO 11
This really is magnificent. The 70mm archival footage makes the whole thing make it look like you’re watching a big studio blockbuster… and not actual real never-before-seen footage from decades ago. There’s moments within this that are just astounding and intoxicating, making you become completely engulfed in something even though you are well versed in what the outcomes are.
16. LONG SHOT
This was the surprise delight of the year. It was very lovely, fun and funny with a great cast being just thoroughly delightful. Charlize Theron is very rarely utilised in comedy (ARRESTED DEVELOPMENT Season 3 was so long ago) which is a shame coz she’s really gifted, as is proven here - the scene where she does hostage negotiation on molly is one of the funniest scenes of the year! Seth Rogen makes the sort of stuff that is just game-set-match for my particular sensibilities (40 YEAR OLD VIRGIN to SUPERBAD to KNOCKED UP to PINEAPPLE EXPRESS to OBSERVE & REPORT is in itself an all-timer run that puts him up there with Robin Williams, Eddie Murphy and Albert Brooks) and this is a further reflection of that. They should never have changed the title to something this generic. And it could comfortably lose 15 minutes here or there. But they’re minor niggles for a romcom that we’ll still be holding in high regard for years to come. And June Diane Raphael SHOULD get awards for the graft she puts in here. She won’t because films like this never get respect like that, but she totally should.
15. JOHN WICK: CHAPTER 3 - PARABELLUM
I flat out loved this (though I still maintain that I don’t even think the star and the director themselves have referred to the film by its 'full name’) and I would be more than happy to see an entry to this franchise every two years if they’re of this calibre. CHAPTER 2 had me worried because it looked like there was a limit to just how much 'throwing people down to the ground and shooting them in the head with CGI gunfire and blood added in on top’ you could push into a film before it felt tiresome but this completely circumnavigates all worry around that by dialling up the 'quirk’ factor which has always been this franchise’s most bizarro and interesting element. And the introduction of Halle Berry to 'the floor’ led to a stand-out set-piece that was nothing short of astounding! I WOULD however have preferred it if this film had adopted a bit of the ol’ VH1 Pop-Up Video Show (remember THAT??) approach and just stuck a bubble up during the motorbike sequence that said “We stole this wholesale from THE VILLAINESS because we know it’s unlikely you saw that movie!”)
14. READY OR NOT
I offer up the heartiest of recommendations for this - an absolutely first class horror comedy that finds a delightfully irreverent spin on the cat-and-mouse / slasher movie. It really is the ‘little movie that could’ of 2019 that offers up way, way, way more than its marketing and log-line suggest. It’s very funny and has some truly effective jump-scares and, best of all, it has a great ensemble cast doing great work. Double-bill it with KNIVES OUT and thank me later!
13. ARCTIC
This really worked as an effective, throw-you-into-the-mix survival thriller. Mads Mikkelsen is terrific and he really sells the hell out of it. You don’t know just how successfully it has burrowed under your skin and pulled you along on the ride until the final five minutes when you’re screaming “NO!” at the screen.
12. AD ASTRA
I still can’t believe this flopped. I genuinely can’t. It’s fair to say it doesn’t quite stick its landing in making the end of the journey as narratively thrilling as what it took to get there but it doesn’t matter - the journey itself is a sumptuous, thrilling and truly exquisite ride taking an easy “APOCALYPSE NOW in space” label and delivering something so, so much more. For anyone who grew up with any “sins of the father” issues this will act as a ten ton weight dropped onto their chest. … It also has space pirates and space monkeys!
11. MARRIAGE STORY
The plaudits are all well-earned and I’m saying this as someone who’s connected with very little of Baumbach’s work other than THE SQUID & THE WHALE.
It’s a genuinely enthralling watch due to a fantastic group of actors being set loose to do tremendous work; Adam Driver is superb and Scarlett Johansson raises her game considerably to go toe-to-toe with him but Laura Dern, Ray Liotta and Alan Alda deliver a trio of masterclasses under one roof. (If there’s ANY justice whatsoever in awards season Alda will split everything Best Supporting Actor related with Joe Pesci… He won’t, because there is no justice when it comes to the vast majority of awards season but that is not to say he doesn’t deserve it!) This is a delicately crafted piece - where your favoured side in a fight you feel you really shouldn’t be privy to, is expertly switched around - that comes from a very obvious place of truth.
10. STAND-OFF AT SPARROW CREEK
I really, really liked this. I can see it’s a film I’ll go back to quite a few times over the years and see if I can spot the 'turn’ because, first time round if I’m honest, I very much did not see the reveal coming. It’s a great little film. The performances are terrific (James Badge Dale is the best actor of our generation, frankly) and Henry Dunham has delivered a hell of an interesting film - all long shots into dark corners of a big dank space, scenes shot with natural torchlight and headlight beams. It’s never not interesting to look at. It’s essentially RESERVOIR DOGS re-spun so the diamonds are replaced with missing fire arms and the back alley warehouse in LA is replaced with a militia compound in backwoods America.
9. KNIVES OUT
I found this to be a tremendous amount of fun; the somewhat obvious result that is birthed from a great writer/director putting a terrific script in front of an exceptional cast, designing a fabulous set for them to let loose inside of and then stepping out of their way for quality to reign. There’s a barely tolerable Edgar Wright version of this where the filmmaking is of course “the star”, the editing is distracting and the music is purposefully kitschy. This very much isn’t that. It’s decidedly UNshowy and by being so comfortable in its own skin, emulating a classic style of storytelling not so much told anymore, it really stands out as an excellent piece of original cinema.
8. DOLEMITE IS MY NAME
I urge you all to completely buy the hype: DOLEMITE IS MY NAME is every bit as fantastic as everyone is saying and Eddie Murphy is like awards-worthy great in it. You don’t have to have seen DOLEMITE to have fun with this but having done so certainly accentuates it. It’s very funny, surprisingly moving and is a genuinely great ode to the importance of following your passions and not letting anyone stifle your creative aspirations… Hell, if this thing existed 25 years ago I myself would be as prolific as Lee fuckin Childs by now. Da'Vine Joy Randolph gives THE best supporting actress performance of the year. From straight-up out of nowhere. Genuinely can’t wait to watch this a few more times down the road.
7. AVENGERS: ENDGAME
I think there’s two ways of looking at AVENGERS: ENDGAME - as a film in its own right with an atypical start, middle, end, etc. AND as a piece of cinematic event-level entertainment. In the case of the former, it is pretty damn great though not entirely without its flaws: Give the narrative set up and logical lay out a single seconds thought and this entire thing crumbles to the ground. On top of that, it takes a while to bed down and get going and its tonal scattershot approach across the first forty-odd minutes is a little jarring. Quite literally you’re coming out of that first hour with your head-spinning from laughing and then getting whipped into sombre, dour moments… slapped with narrative leaps and 'we’re putting the team back together’ beats. Then the 'points of purpose’ settle in and quite frankly we’re off to the fucking races, man. Captain Marvel is a repeated, annoying goddamn useless 'deus ex machina’ and the entire use of Paltrow/'Rescue’ is just irritating. BUT everything 45+ minutes is so, so, so, so flipping ACE that shit like that can’t even destabilise it. There’s critics out there deriding this as 'Fan Service: The Movie’ and, you know what, damn fucking straight it is and there’s nothing wrong with that. (Although it could be argued that a clunky 'let’s put all the women together in one shot’ moment that lands with a thud is 'fan service’ taken too far and not pitched within proceedings well enough for it to be anything other than cloying.) The entire middle hour of these three hours is a play within a play; only the play its playing in just happens to be TWENTY-TWO OTHER MOVIES! They could have phoned this in haaaaaard by this point and it is so, so, so commendable that they didn’t. Hell, a lot of the films problems lie in the fact that they tried as hard as they did to really do doing something you wouldn’t be expecting with this! As an 'event’, there will never be anything like this again in my lifetime, I don’t think. I knew this walking out of it. There’ll be more JUSTICE LEAGUE type failed rip-offs. Marvel themselves will try and replicate it with the law of diminishing returns playing into effect. But there will NEVER be something so accomplished from something so long-form on such a grand stage as this again as far as I’m concerned.
6. CRAWL
I’ve went back for multiple viewings of this and absolutely LOVED it even more each time. It’s a lean, bullet-fast, brutal B-movie creature feature that does not fuck around: There is a complete lack of JAWS like foreboding, skulking around… This is straight-up, in your face, nasty, fast carnage. Anyone going in expecting a knowing, winking PIRANHA 3D / SNAKES ON A PLANE type deal is in for a hard slap. It’s pitch perfect entertainment in the sense that it grabs you and then just keeps turning the screws (“Oh, she’s battling an alligator in a flooded crawlspace!” “Aww, man! It’s a full on storm and there’s TWO alligators now!” “Holy Fuckballs - There’s MANY alligators and a hurricane now??”). The last 25 minutes alone are an all-out, relentless assault upon your ability to breathe steadily. This is the best B-movie of 2019!
5. DRAGGED ACROSS CONCRETE
4. MISSING LINK
I think this really is an absolute jewel and I can’t understand why more folk aren’t screaming about it. It’s very funny and visually wondrousness (that boat-in-the-storm INCEPTION homage action sequence is fabulous). The magnitude of talent that would have gone into making this via stop motion… knowing that it takes one week to complete one to two minutes of useable footage! The creases in the texture of each characters clothing as they move too? WOW! I’ve always adored Laika’s output but this was the first for me where the sheer care and attention to detail really shone! For one, it’s easily one of the funniest movies of the year. For another, it looks totally gorgeous. And best of all, it gives kids their very own GUNGA DIN / RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK cinematic adventure type experience.
3. FORD VS. FERRARI (aka LE MANS ’66)
I’m so glad in the same very year where ‘Film Twitter’ nearly blew itself up over the ‘Marvel / Tentpole Cinema / Scorsese / No original studio films anymore’ debate, I got to experience something as majestic and very nearly perfect as FORD VS FERRARI (aka LE MANS '66). It’s got such a tremendous old fashioned style to it that I hope they do what they did with LOGAN and give us a black and white edition and we have 60s era style movie credits to open and close it. It’s that kind of movie. Yet at the same time it manages to display all the high end technical filmmaking majesty backed up by wall-to-wall terrific performances (only Josh Lucas lets the side down with his inability to deliver anything above unsubtle, cartoonish panto villainy). It’s a gorgeous, kinetic, enthralling and by the end a surprisingly tender and moving piece of cinema. I completely adored it.
2. ONCE UPON A TIME IN… HOLLYWOOD
I fell in love hard with Tarantino’s ONCE UPON A TIME IN HOLLYWOOD straight-out-the-gate and fell harder with repeated viewings. It’s a beautifully shambolic, meandering 'day in the life’ sort of deal that plays out as a dry, knowing comedy with a sideline in impending, escalating dread… before becoming, well, something else entirely that’s so shocking and out of left field that it feels so courageous because of how swiftly it will divide a viewer. What’s so monumentally lush about it is that it is made by a cinematic craftsman who is essentially writing a love letter to everything he adores/adored about a very specific time in a very specific place within the industry that made him. It is framed, lit and shot with aplomb but on top of that every single thing inside of the frame is chockfull of things that are background noise to somebody and yet incredibly meaningful, funny and knowing to true TV and cinema fans.
If there’s any complaint to be made about this movie it’s that Tarantino’s continued insistence on shoe-horning Zoe Bell into his films is absolutely hurting his product: The woman can’t act, can’t judge the tone of a scene, is flat-out incapable of putting in a performance consistent with what is going on around with other actors and she is routinely a very hard, very annoying distraction that draws you straight out of the film. You could argue that it is a listless movie because, in the conventional sense people expect of a narrative, does anything truly happen in the atypical Act 1, Act 2 and Act 3 type of way. But I’d counter-argue that all the enjoyment is in just spending time watching these characters move around and interact with one another. Knowing the history of Sharon Tate and what happened to her at the hands of The Manson Family fills the entire proceedings with a sense of nausea-inducing nervousness about what we’re going to see and to what degree. It’s like a pressure valve sat in the background, slowly filling and expanding and just waiting to explode. That it eventually does but in the manner it does, is… well it’s audacious… and yet questionable… and still entertaining as hell.
1. THE IRISHMAN
Without a hint of exaggeration, at least once a day every day since I first saw this film I’ve found myself thinking back to both DeNiro’s “phone call” scene of which no words would convey its brilliance and Pacino’s final scene and the sound he makes in it. The former is genuinely just one of the most haunting, astoundingly natural pieces of acting you’ll see from a truly great actor you’d kind of forgot was capable of going to places like this.
This really is a straight-out-the-gate, instant, flawless, completely majestic work of art. It is a master craftsman signing off on a genre he revolutionised in much the same way Clint Eastwood closed down his connection to the western with UNFORGIVEN.
It is three and a half hours long and it doesn’t feel remotely close to that… and that’s saying something considering most of the film’s real awesomeness lies in scenes that are allowed to breathe and just sit or in points being driven home through the repetition in the mundanity of these characters’ lives. Because that’s the other thing that’s really terrific about it - it’s not a re-tread of GOODFELLAS or CASINO; there’s nothing remotely glamorous about this 'life’ - Scorsese presents it as this 'working class stiff’ gig where being the right-hand man to some of the most powerful crime figures and industry heads of the 50s, 60s, 70s, etc is really not all that higher up past being a truck driver in the same era.
The much-talked about de-ageing stuff on the actors is a little jarring at first (the first scene of DeNiro in his late 20s or something makes you squelch in your seat a little and think “Fuck, this is going to be bad isn’t it?”) but it settles in and gets much better as the timelines between character and actor shorten - the work on Pacino in particular is first rate.
The performances are across the board superb - DeNiro and Pacino in particular are so bloody brilliant here that it wakes you up to how fallow and shit they’ve been for so long. But really, this is Pesci’s movie. He gives what is the performance of the year by turning in a really human, considered turn… and in the process circumnavigating the expectations that comes from having this particular actor in this particular genre with this particular director.
Not enough reviews talk about how extremely fuckin funny the movie is - and it is very laugh out loud funny with some of the lines and interactions (Pacino and Stephen Graham together are hilarious!) - and no words accurately describe how truly sad and surprisingly moving it is in the final stretch.
… I don’t believe a single word of the source material it’s based on but it’s resolutely not important to have to buy into the ('fake’?) memoir in order to appreciate the film adaptation as this massive, majestic piece of cinematic myth making - one that I genuinely can’t wait to see again many times over the years!
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