A bit of a break from expeditions today and an indulgence in another hobby: films. Here’s a list of my favourite six films. Why six? Well, it started with three and just kept growing. They are in no particular order.
1. Magnolia
This was the film that prompted me to start the list. The narrator opens with a befuddling story of a man who tries to kill himself but ends up being charged as an accomplice to his own murder. It’s cool, it’s quirky, it’s character driven and it’s filled with subtle references and clever links. It also features my all-time-favourite-actor: Philip Seymour Hoffman.
2. Garden State
A wonderfully angsty and funny coming-of-age movie written by, directed by and starring Scrubs man Zach Braff. Quite an achievement.
3. The Departed
I suspect this is the closest to an action movie that will ever feature in my Top X list. Matt Damon as a cop working for the mob and Leonardo DiCaprio as a mob man who’s actually an undercover cop. Throw in Jack Nicholson as a crazed mob boss, Martin Sheen as a police boss and an excellently abusive Mark Wahlberg and you’re onto a winner.
4. Jerry Maguire
Yeah, yeah, yeah, everyone laughs at this one but get past the cheese, embrace the feel-good and you’ll realise this is a top film from the Fleetwood Mac’s opening riff. Just try not to smile at Cuba Gooding Junior’s infectious character. In Rod We Trust.
5. Little Miss Sunshine
Mainstream indie comedy at its best. A cute dorky kid wants to enter a beauty pageant, trained by her dubious grandpa on a road trip with a brother who’s taken a Nietszche-inspired vow of silence, a failed motivational speaker and a suicidal scholar. It also features the only comic dance scene to come anywhere close to Napoleon Dynamite.
6. Once
A low-budget romantic musical about a busker starring non-actors? It’s hard to describe Once without it sound awful but it’s truly brilliant. The songs (written and performed by the lead actor-who’s-not-an-actor-but-actually-a-singer-songwriter) are ace, the story is not nearly as cheesy as it sounds and the low-budget/lack-of-actors gives an authentic feel. Critics like it and you should too.
Seen any of the above (or been inspired to)? Want to recommend me some more new films?
4 Comments
Alice
Good list! LOVE 2,5 & 6 and will check out Magnolia ASAP
andi
Interesting list, and I agree with ‘Once’ and ‘The Departed’! And, i don’t know, I was expecting to see the obvious choices such as ‘Touching The Void’ or ‘Into The Wild’ on there, but I guess that’s too predictable for us explorer types?
Tim Moss
As adventure films go, Into The Wild and Touching The Void are great but, for me, they are both lesser versions of a story originally told in words.
Pingback: Tribute to the Greatest Character Actor of His Generation