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MOVIE
REVIEW
My Favorite Films of 2007
by Stephen
Simon
Before we look at my
favorite films from 2007, I have a message for both the mainstream film
industry and its film critics: You have both lost all connection with
film audiences.
Hollywood has
seemingly decided that “quality” now equates with dark, violent and
depressing; consequently, 2007 was one of the bleakest years ever for
film distribution. To make matters worse and to illustrate anew the
fable of the emperor’s new clothes, film critics have fallen into
lockstep with film distributors. As I write this column on January 1,
2008, the film that has garnered almost every film critic group’s nod as
the best film of 2007 is No Country For Old Men, which centers around
one of the nastiest, most vicious and soulless serial killers ever
depicted on screen.
In the first ten
minutes of the film, a man is graphically strangled while the killer
looks positively orgasmic and then another innocent man is
cold-bloodedly shot between the eyes. And then it gets worse. Much
worse. Nevertheless, the film critic for the Portland Oregonian said
this about the film: “exact, spare, bloody, dark and unrelenting, it’s
superb.”
Excuse me?
While I respect
everyone’s right to say whatever they believe, I also reserve the right
to ask, “What are you folks smoking”? “Best film” means the one film
every year that is represented to the rest of the world as the premier
achievement in the American film industry. Focusing on the craft itself
is fine for categories like sound editing, costume design or
cinematography, but, when you’re talking about the “best film,” content
itself should be of paramount importance.
For studios and
critics, “superb” and “bloody, dark and unrelenting” may belong in the
same sentence but, fortunately, we in the audience don’t agree. The fall
season of 2007 produced the weakest box office results for that period
of time in the last ten years. The film industry is quite literally
awash in red ink. According to a November 26, 2007 article in Video
Business Weekly, the film industry lost a staggering six billion dollars
in 2006.
In short, the
business model of the film industry is broken. Creatively, it’s even
worse. The chasm between the insular, dark, violent and cynical tastes
of most studios and film critics and the desire of audiences to have
other choices is now deeper than the Grand Canyon.
I also think it
would be wonderful and more honest, if the Academy (of which I am a
member) changed the characterization of awards from “best” to
“favorite.” Factors such as both the film’s and the individual’s overall
popularity always factor into Academy voting anyway, whether members
want to admit it or not. Using “best” in regards to the art form of film
is not only unfair to all concerned but also simply impossible to gauge.
I have no idea what “best” means in films. My own list of favorite films
of 2007 consists of films that personally moved me, inspired me and made
me feel better about being human. When I post these choices on the
message boards for subscribers to the Spiritual Cinema Circle, I’m sure
our community will share some passionate opinions and disagreements of
their own. That’s the fun of it. Let the discussions begin.
1. Reign Over Me.
With bravura performances from both Adam Sandler and Don Cheadle,
the film is a beautiful paean to the powers of love, friendship and,
most importantly, healing. Sandler, in particular, is brilliant beyond
words. Unfortunately, like Jim Carrey in Eternal Sunshine Of The
Spotless Mind in 2004 and Will Ferrell in Stranger Than Fiction in 2006,
Sandler is seen as and I’m afraid somewhat resented for, being a
successful broad comedian and his incredible performance has been
unjustly ignored.
2. Enchanted.
What a delightful, whimsical and hilarious film! Putting some of
Disney’s classic fairy tale characters into a modern day context works
so well that my whole family just sat there smiling, laughing and
applauding throughout the film. Amy Adams’ fairy tale princess,
separated from her prince and sent to modern day New York by an evil
queen, is so pitch perfect that we were repeating her lines for days.
3. The Great
Debaters. A powerful and moving tribute to the courage of the
African-American Wiley College debating team and its coach in 1930s
Texas. Denzel Washington directs and stars in a film that reminds us of
what we can accomplish when we decide that it is we, not the world
around us, who define ourselves.
4. Juno. A
funny, poignant, searingly honest and loving story of a teenager’s
unwelcome pregnancy and her search for both herself and the most
appropriate adoptive parents. Ellen Page is simply brilliant as the
title character and the film has much to say about love, life and
responsibility. It also has one of the sweetest and most touching final
scenes in recent memory.
5. Waitress.
An offbeat, often hilarious and sometimes harrowing story about a small
town waitress and her unique talent for baking every kind of pie
imaginable. Keri Russell achieves superstar actress status with her
complex and nuanced portrait of a woman in an emotionally abusive
marriage that she yearns to escape. The film is also a loving tribute to
Adrienne Shelly, its writer/director/costar who was tragically killed
after the completion of the film.

Stephen Simon co-founded
www.spiritualcinemacircle.com and produced such films as “Somewhere
In Time” and “What Dreams May Come.” He also directed and produced both
“Conversations With God” and “Indigo” and is the author of “The Force Is
With You: Mystical Movies Messages That Inspire Our Lives.” |