Contains 13 films. Full data to be released in 2076.
Read MoreEssays/Features
Two Guns, One Mouth: Dual Adaptations of the Same Novel from the Same Director
Director Masaharu Take answers questions about his two films that came from Fuminori Nakamura’s novel The Gun.
Read MoreThe Forget-Me-Naught
Hidden Gems of the 2000s
A New and Exciting Form of War Profiteering
Revolutionary tactics to further monetize the work of monetized revolutions.
Read More2020//Favorites
Not even half a loaf of the great films of 2020. Arguably not even the heel of the loaf.
Read More50s and Sunny in Noirvember
Super Noirio Brothers
Read MoreJason's Favorites of 2018
Michael Myers and Mary Poppins returned, entertainment famine and brain cell death in the wake of the Infinity War despite record breaking war bonds sold, and the caps lock was turned on when writing on the whiteboard. Let’s all be frank about the good movies from 2018.
Read MoreJason's Favorites of 2017
A24 batted a thousand, but Neon is hot on their heels. Also: Edgar Wright rights his past wrongs with substance and superhero movies finally become good thanks to Amazonian golden bondage play. For All the Daddy's Love in the World.
Read MoreBook Review: Unchained Melody - The Films of Meiko Kaji by Tom Mes
Tom Mes' overview of Meiko Kaji's career is more than an overblown Arrow Video booklet even if it doesn't spend very much time in her post-Snowblood career.
Read MoreVideo Essay: Everyday
Every film that features the Buddy Holly song played at the same time.
Read MoreNYAFF 2017: Interview w/ Jung Yoon-suk and Bamseom Pirates
The filmmaker and his subjects discuss their punk-rock documentary.
Read MoreNYAFF 2017: Interview w/ Kei Ishikawa (Traces of Sin)
Kei Ishikawa discusses directing his first feature film.
Read MoreNYAFF 2017: Interview w/ Naoko Ogigami
We sit down with Naoko Ogigami during the NYAFF premiere of her newest film Close-Knit.
Read MoreInterview: Salima Koroma (Bad Rap)
The director of Bad Rap discusses documentary film making and the concerns of modern entertainers.
Read MoreColorado Dragon Film Festival 2017
CDFF returns for its second year, providing aid to the drought conditions for Asian film in the Denver area.
Read MoreEiga Joyū/Enigma: Setsuko Hara
A B-movie video essay/appreciation of Setsuko Hara.
Read MoreDouble Feature: Ryuhei Kitamura's English Language Work
Japanese director Ryuhei Kitamura has made two English language B-movies to date, both showing an A-level craft and will certainly become eventual cult classics.
Read MoreNick's Top 12 Films of 2016
by Nick Arno
The great thing about film that is one of my favorites is that it never disappoints. Contrary to saying that every film that is made shows quality, there will always be a new film that inspires and delights audiences, and that is a true gift. Aside from the never ending craziness of this year, 2016 has been yet another great year in film history. From the Hollywood blockbusters to the incomparable indie classics, there is a lot that we can take away from this year, and films that we will remember forever. Since we’ve entered into a new age of film where anything goes, I’ve added a Sensitivity Meter to assist those with delicate sensibilities.
12. Denial (Mick Jackson)
Just when we thought Spotlight might’ve been the most important film we’d see in a while, along came this one. With a delicate hand, Mick Jackson spins a web of lies, truth and overwhelming bigotry in this shocking tale of a woman attempting to prove that the Holocaust actually happened. Rachel Weisz plays the unmovable force that is Deborah Lipstadt, alongside riveting performances by Tom Wilkinson and Timothy Spall, that might actually earn them all Oscar Nominations this year. The film shows the world how the people who appear to have the most power and authority can fall under the hammer of good. With original pacing and cinematography, this film climbs the wall of tyranny and breaks it down.
Sensitivity Meter: 3/5
11. Moonlight (Barry Jenkins)
If you were ever concerned about the Academy’s diversity, this film will surly be up for several awards this season. The film takes place in three parts of a young gay man’s life, starting from his childhood, into his adolescence, and finally into adulthood. Although the last part of the film does an impeccable job bringing the story to a close, the first two parts are the core of this film. Growing up as a gay black man in a poor family has finally been brought to life in a shocking and intensely moving way.
Sensitivity Meter: 4/5
10. Nocturnal Animals (Tom Ford)
Tom Ford’s second film was a wild ride of triumph. After the success of his beautifully directed first film, A Single Man, the expectations were through the roof for this one, including it’s memorable ensemble cast lead by Amy Adams and Jake Gyllenhaal. The story behind this film was a brilliant rendition of two stories merged into one, with Amy Adams’ character living a life of doubt involving her second marriage and her talent as a failing artist, her ex husband Edward (Gyllenhaal), sends her a proof of his newest novel, dedicated to her. The story is reenacted as she reads, and the main character of the man who loses his family in a shocking turn of events is also played by Gyllenhaal, leading to an interesting crossover that makes you think hard about Edwards motivations for writing the story. The impeccable acting of the two leads is followed by the outstanding performances of Michael Shannon, who never seems to disappoint, playing the detective assisting the main character in the novel. The other stand-out performance was that of Laura Linney, who surprising plays Amy Adams’ mother, however being only ten years older than Adams in real life. Even though she is only in one five minute scene, her performance adds a the great flare that this film represents. There is sure to be a saying in the future referring to this film as being very “Tom Ford.”
Sensitivity Meter: 4/5
9. Arrival (Dennis Villeneuve)
Amy Adams has made it into another film on this list. As “out there” as can be, this Sci Fi flick takes the audience to a new level of paradox that seemed to start with Cristopher Nolan’s Interstellar. With Adams and Jeremy Renner leading the cast in this gloriously profound look into the universe, this film has made a mark on this year in a surprising way. After being released at Telluride this year, people began to understand why this wasn’t just another Hollywood alien flick. The style of the film is so enticing to it’s audience that it is hard to not feel as if you are there with the characters in the situation. This film is a great example of how odd flashbacks that seem to have no reason come full circle. Imagine a Hitchcock twist in a Christopher Nolan movie. There was no doubt with a director like Villeneuve that this would be a hit, after his dynamite thriller Sicario in 2015 that blew us all away.
Sensitivity Meter: 3/5
8. Hunt for the Wilderpeople (Taika Waititi)
If there was a movie that could have you leave perfectly satisfied, this is it. With fabulous humor, sadness and heartwarming exposition, this film has truly made Waititi a legend. With Sam Neill playing the unwilling adopted father of a criminal foster child, what could go wrong? With references to the continuing sadistic manor in which technology is taking over all of us, this film takes you into nature in a way that you never expected. Original, suspenseful and nostalgic, Wilderpeople will be on the minds of everyone for years to come.
Sensitivity Meter: 2/5
7. Hell or High Water (David Mackenzie)
A movie perfectly suiting a spot on this list. David Mackenzie’s breakout hit film is one of the most spot-on modern westerns of the age. With characters developed with grace and integrity, you could not find a better film this year with more grit and promise. Completed with stunning performances by Chris Pine and Ben Foster as two brothers finding they're place in a world that has wrong their family, as well as a type-cast role by Jeff Bridges, who actually pulls off an incredible feat. The screenplay is no less than genius, with dialogue that tugs at the heart strings and fills the audience with the emotions of it’s characters. There is no other film this year with a more epic and transcending finale.
Sensitivity Meter: 3/5
6. Jackie (Pablo Laurain)
It is difficult to re-create such a tragic moment in history and make it believable in a creative way, and this film goes above and beyond in that respect. From the immaculate production design to the impeccable Oscar-worthy performance by Natalie Portman, this film holds a solid rank on this list. The assassination of John F. Kennedy has never felt so real, and the writing of this piece brings it to the screen in such a delicate and sensitive way that it is hard to believe, and the woman who lived through it all comes closer than she ever has before. Portman’s performance is so raw and striking that you might forget that it is her and not the real woman. A must see for Portman fans and movie fans.
Sensitivity Meter: 3/5
5. Elle (Paul Verhoeven)
How sophisticated can you make sexual violence? In this twisted, over the top and meticulously crafted film by Paul Verhoeven, the audience comes up close and personal with the reality of humanity, sexuality and power. For Michèle, a character magnificently played by the gorgeous Isabelle Huppert, her life has kicked her ass for the last time, and she's ready to kick back. It takes guts to play such a complex and unique character, and man does Huppert pull it off swimmingly. With so many details to put together, this film has twists and turns and hilarious dark humor around every corner, and just when you think it doesn’t have anything else to throw at you, there’s the next punch. A static french film that shows without a doubt that woman have triumphed in film this year.
Sensitivity Meter: 5/5
4. The Neon Demon (Nicolas Winding Refn)
“No Holds Bared” earns it’s new eye candy in a film that transcends the idea of in-your-face human existence. Viewed as a combination of his first two films, Refn creates a world of mischief and magic that sends the audience into a trance, with stunning visuals and a subtle but equally groundbreaking style that can only be found in Refn’s films. With intoxicating performances by Elle Fanning and Jena Malone alongside the models Abbey Lee and Bella Heathcote, the film is a girl power movie like you’ve never seen it done before. In a world where beauty truly seems to lie only in the young, Refn concocts a story that tragically descends into madness amongst the four main woman.
Sensitivity Meter: 5/5
3. The Handmaiden (Park Chan-wook)
Scandalous and wildly thrilling, this film grants the audience a glimpse into the minds of two woman forced into the clutches of the dark and powerful men that suppress them. Played out in two parts in time, this story takes the audience on the ride of lifetime, delving into the realms of dramatic sexual desire and emotional torment. With a style that combines dark humor with the intoxicating beauty of intrigue, the film demonstrates a new voice to Korean cinema that brings woman into the eyes of the beholder, but in the case of these characters, the woman are the true voice to the strange but seemingly wonderful damage that has befallen them.
Sensitivity Meter: 5/5
2. Certain Women (Kelly Reichardt)
Of all the films on this list, none is more true to human existence than Kelly Reichardt’s most recent masterpiece. Starring a few of the greats such as Laura Dern, Kristen Stewart and Michelle Williams (who happens to be in the top two films on this list), three stories intertwine amongst the beauty of Northern Montana’s natural scenery. Highly subtle but equally emotional, the screenplay takes the most underlying physiological turmoils of women and exploits them on screen in a very sensitive way. With a color palette that emulates the plains and snow fall surrounding the characters, the cinematography speaks volumes to the unorthodox characters who must fight to keep themselves at bay. The film reveals an explosive breakout performance by Native American actress Lily Gladstone, who makes it painful to look at her face as she experiences the deep emotions of a lonely woman. The experience is aided by the silence that is only broken by small inserts of enticing music towards the end of the film. A fantastic piece of cinema that will be remembered long after its time.
Sensitivity Meter: 3/5
1. Manchester by the Sea (Kenneth Lonergan)
A true look into life that has never been represented more passionately on screen. Kenneth Lonergan’s first film in ten years takes us back to his beautifully rendered style that displays the crushing tragedy and turmoil of human existence. One of the most interesting things about modern cinema is that a lot of films are being created like paintings, and some are being written truer to life than they have been in many years. Lonergan’s writing and directing aid to an outstanding performance by Casey Affleck, who proves once again that he can surpass his brother with pure unadulterated talent. His performance may be the best of the year, and is one of the better representations of true pain that you will see in a long time. His character is utterly broken, and has become numb to the world, only to find himself lashing out at things he cannot control. Another piece of this movie not to be missed is Michelle Williams. With only about ten minutes of total screen time, her performance stands out more than most this year. Even the young man who plays Affleck’s struggling nephew, Lucas Hedges, proves his worth in a film that will no doubt launch his career to the next level. The screenplay is filled with heart wrenching detail and dialogue that has no boundaries in terms of true human connection. With a heartbreaking score by Lesley Barber, Lonergan’s go-to composer, and true artistry in the cinematography, this film makes it clear to the world that pain is real, and cannot always be beaten. Do not miss this film!
Sensitivity Meter: 4/5
Honorable Mentions" The ones that missed it by that much...
La La Land (Damien Chazelle)
This film is one that will leave you in a state of wonderment. Class-act performances by Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone combine with the beautiful cinematography that Chazelle brings to the table, along with music that fills you with love, laughter and pain. Many think that this film was one of the best of the year, but there are a couple reasons it did not make my list. I believe that the film’s storyline took a toll on its success, because of its cliché narrative and tough pacing. I also didn’t really feel it could decide if it was a musical or a regular movie. I think if you’re going to make a movie musical, you should go all in, and it felt forced at some points, and sometimes fell short. However, the film did have it’s redeeming qualities, which included the ending. Everything fell into place in the ending. It made you truly feel the statement about life that the film represented. It was beautiful and heartbreaking, and in a way, perfect.
Sensitivity Meter: 2/5
The Lobster (Yorgos Lanthimos)
Is “weird” or “shocking” a film genre? This black comedy takes the cake for most original film of 2016. Another terrific ensemble cast aids to this belligerent tale of a world where being single is actually illegal. The turbulent screenwriting adds a droll dialogue that creates a mischievous and gray atmosphere around the films story. The humor is the film is also fairly bland, but the dark side of the story is what really captures our attention, as well as an ending that adds new meaning to the phrase “up to interpretation.” Alongside Rachel Weisz, who has truly had an epically successful year, Colin Farrell comes back to the roots he developed in one of his crowning acting achievements In Bruges, and reminds us all that isn’t the douchebag that some of us thought he was.
Sensitivity Meter: 5/5
Ouija: Origin of Evil
There have been lots of horror films this year, and not all of them are necessarily gold. This one however has to be one of the most original Hollywood-style horror films I’ve seen in many years. Contrary to the flop that was Ouija, the film which this one is the prequel too, this one ultimately reigns supreme in style, production design and all around impressive scare tactics, that don’t rely entirely on the jump scares (finally), even though the jump scares actually do scare the shit out of you. For those who enjoy a great background story, this one is one for the books. The film is also very well put together in terms of dialogue and character development. There is also a tug at the supernatural that any classic horror fan would enjoy.
Sensitivity Meter: 4/5
Miss Sloane (John Madden)
A film filled with more intrigue and style than most this year, the director of Shakespeare in Love brings his smarts to the screen in this mind-blowing political thriller. The screenplay by first time screenwriter Jonathan Perera is very “Sorkin-esque,” and seems to take it’s rapid style of dialogue from that of The West Wing or The Social Network. It plays to all the strengths of the style, while still allowing for the actor’s interpretation. Speaking of acting…Jessica Chastain, anyone? Her stelar talent never seems to dissipate in any role she plays. Her leading role in this film is one of her best, and truly displays her ability to play the field in terms of emotion, triumph and loss by her own hand. With a story that sets the bar fairly low for politicians in terms of their worth, the impact of this film is perfect for this time in our history.
Sensitivity Meter: 3/5
10 Cloverfield Lane (Dan Trachtenberg)
The perfect combination of claustrophobia and crushing human emotion, this horror flick combines the creativity of it’s found-footage precursor Cloverfield, and applies it to a real-life post apocalyptic scenario. With only three characters in the film, the story harkens back to the era of horror that carries the claustrophobia and suspense to a new level. And with new versions of the aliens that we know and love from the first film of the franchise, what’s not to love? A true surprise that emulates the nature of hysteria and paranoia served beside a tasty twist.
Sensitivity Meter: 4/5
Retro2016: The State of Western Distribution for Japanese Film
Another slow year for Japanese film but there were some great highlights.
Read MoreJason's Top 13 Films of 2016
[insert way of relating below selections/year of film in general to current political landscape]
1. 'Being Good' If the sad reality of contemporary Japanese film is that the majority of festivals will cycle through the same names (Kore-eda, Kawase, Miike, Sono) then we can only hope that Mipo Oh will eventually be included in whatever that new vanguard may be. And she is shaping up to be. Being Good didn't receive the same awards buzz that her previous The Light Shines Only There did but it is superior on all accounts. Most importantly its soul is wiser than most films with an optimist slant: that the act of kindness is more important than the outcome.
2. 'Too Late' In a role that was written for him John Hawke's delivers what might go on to be his definitive performance, his take on the "alt-hardboiled" character we've seen in a film like Altman/Gould's The Long Goodbye. The film uses its love for 35mm to dictate narrative limitations but because it is done so deftly and is actually in service to theme it does not come off as gimmicky as other odes to physical film consistently do.
3. 'A Bride for Rip van Winkle' A return to live-action Japanese filmmaking for Iwai, this film is unmistakably his with sweeping camera to match the classical selection of the soundtrack. Gou Ayano is the perfect modern day Mephistopheles, Cocco should be in more movies, and Haru Kuroki is the drifting center of the contemporary malaise in what unfortunately seems to be a rare lead role.
4: 'Raiders! The Story of the Greatest Fan Film Ever Made' For anyone who has ever forced their friends to be in a cheaply shot backyard production this movie should resonate strongly. But more importantly for anyone who has put aside safety and comfort for the realization of a dream this documentary should hit hard. A story with real staying power, the filmmakers realized how beautifully broad this is yet still explore much of the specificity of this fan-film endeavor.
5. 'Nerve' A visually creative genre-hopper with a message. This film was a pleasant surprise on all fronts with depth where you wouldn't expect it; whether it's treating pop-culture references as serious forms of character development (used sparingly) to smartly incorporating the devices we're attached to. It's made with the audience it wants to preach to in mind but that doesn't stop it from being clever and exciting throughout. Dave Franco singing to Emma Roberts in a crowded diner all shot in a neon color palette is a thing of beauty. All that's missing is a like button in the corner of the frame.
6. 'Heart Attack' Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit's follow-up to Mary is Happy, Mary is Happy has bigger names (Thailand's The Voice contestant Violette Wautier steals her scenes by actively not trying) and a bigger budget but he still finds time for subtle experimentation. This is an exploration of a new generation of freelance workers that so desperately wants to be a rom-com if only it had the free time to do so when not trying to meet increasingly demanding deadlines.
7. 'The Lobster' Certainly his most accessible work, Lanthimos is able to draw humor out of the loneliness that comes from the institutions of society. It is his most accessible with a much stronger personal element to this film compared to the more obvious political allegories he's made before. Most should relate to the desperate acts of an individual afraid of being alone, and the kinds of feelings we convince ourselves of in order to be with someone. Social norms might contribute some to that pressure, but The Lobster shows the individual is as much to blame.
8. 'The Wailing' Since his previous two films were unpredictable masterpieces, it's only fitting that Na Hong-jin's long awaited follow-up to The Yellow Sea is also a masterpiece. It's also unpredictable on a story level and career level. Unlike the type of grounded crime thrillers that were his previous two films, The Wailing is a supernatural horror film loosely wrapped by a small-town serial killer investigation narrative with brief respites into (quite funny) zombie territory. The film is pleasantly exhausting and has an incredible supporting cast in Jun Kunimura, Hwang Jung-min, and Chun Woo-hee.
9. 'Emi-Abi' After penning the screenplay for Producers' Guild pick The Great Passage, Kensaku Watanabe returns to the director's chair for something less obviously crowd-pleasing. It should remind any fan of Fish Story of the joy that came during its final minutes as once you settle into its melancholy the film will find a way to surprise you what you thought was possible in its world. The film examines the value of the self in an artistic partnership, as well as the validity of an entertainer, by focusing on three manzai comedians: one reeling from the loss of his partner, the one who introduced the two of them (and whose sister died with him), and Tomoya Maeno as the one whose final moments we travel back to during the film.
10. 'Anti-Porno'/'The Whispering Star' This year saw the release of two supremely engaging films from Sion Sono. These two films couldn't be more different from each other, and to varying degrees from the rest of Sono's oeuvre. One was a passion project, a script written many years prior that he was finally able to realize and the other was a for hire job when Nikkatsu asked him to be one of five filmmakers to reboot their Roman Porno genre. It's a testament to the man that when he has something to say it doesn't matter if he is manic or tranquilly minimalistic, he can keep firing an audience's neurons.
11. 'The Nice Guys' Not as good as his previous two films but a lot of fun. An enjoyable throwback with a fair amount of nonchalance towards death, prostitution, corruption, and little's kids' dicks that recalls Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang.
12: 'Harmonium' Having not been especially taken a few years ago with Fukada's other film about how a stranger disrupts the lives of a family once they invite him into their home Hospitalite, I was especially surprised at the mastery on display with his latest film. It's continuously devastating, the end incorporating two successive call-backs that would wisely be labeled as mean-spirited. Truly haunting stuff.
13: 'Demolition' One of the films I can think of that successfully depicts the intrinsic link between music and destructive impulses. It's about the joy of destruction but when it counts, the idea that creating something new is better than trying to fix what you broke.
Also enjoyed: After the Storm (Hirokazu Kore-eda); The Edge of Seventeen (Kelly Fremon Craig); Ten Years (various); Nocturnal Animals (Tom Form); Our Little Sister (Hirokazu Kore-eda); Creepy (Kiyoshi Kurosawa); The Neon Demon (Nicolas Winding Refn); Hail, Caesar! (Coen Bros.); Mohican Comes Home (Shuichi Okita); What's in the Darkness (Wang Yichun); Zootopia (Howard/Moore); The Handmaiden (Park Chan-wook); The Mermaid (Stephen Chow); The Actor (Satoko Yokohama); Boy and the Beast (Mamoru Hosoda); Over the Fence (Nobuhiro Yamashita); The World of Us (Yoon Ga-eun); Suicide Squad (David Ayer); Lowlife Love (Eiji Uchida); Jack Reacher: Never Go Back (Edward Zwick); Captain America: Civil War (Russo Bros.); High-Rise (Ben Wheatley); In a Valley of Violence (Ti West); Men and Chicken (Anders Tomas Jensen); Green Room (Jeremy Saulnier); Oujia: Origin of Evil (Mike Flanagan); The Conjuring 2 (James Wan); The Age of Shadows (Kim Jee-woon); Tunnel (Kim Seong-hoon); Trash Fire (Richard Bates Jr.); Trivisa (various); Arrival (Denis Villeneuve); Collective Invention (Kwon Oh-kwang); We Are X (Stephen Kijak)