hidaniel wrote:*shrug* It didn't get a theatrical, non-festival, release in Canada until this year.aox wrote:good list, but 12 is a few years old.
:-"hidaniel wrote:Best of 2009 based on US release date
hidaniel wrote:*shrug* It didn't get a theatrical, non-festival, release in Canada until this year.aox wrote:good list, but 12 is a few years old.
:-"hidaniel wrote:Best of 2009 based on US release date
I'm glad somebody else loves 'Tokyo Sonata', although I was disappointed with 'Il Divo', and I haven't seen too many 2009 films, never mind the remaining 8 films in your listxavier110 wrote:Others of some value: The Hurt Locker; Goodbye Solo; Drag Me to Hell; The Girlfriend Experience
- Tokyo Sonata (Kiyoshi KUROSAWA, 2008)
- Inglourious Basterds (Quentin TARANTINO)
- Two Lovers (James GRAY, 2008)
- Summer Hours (Olivier ASSAYAS, 2008)
- Up (Pete DOCTER & Bob PETERSON)
- Public Enemies (Michael MANN)
- Adoration (Atom EGOYAN, 2008)
- In the Loop (Armando IANNUCCI)
- Il Divo (Paolo SORRENTINO, 2008)
- Duplicity (Tony GILROY)
Nice to see the love for the Bigelow but I'm astonished (and not in a good way) that Up garnered more votes than Bright Star. I would also question the inclusion of A Prophet and Let The Right One In: A Prophet is not showing in UK cinemas until Jan 2010 even though it is a 2009 film. But if they selected films on the criteria that they were released in their country of origin in 2009 as they seem to with their inclusion of the Audiard, then the Alfredson shouldn't be on that list. I'm not criticising their choices of the films as such but their criteria for selecting films is inconsistent unless S&S just told the UK critics to pick the favourite films they'd seen in 2009 and completely disregard whether they were festival only showings or theatrical runs.MichaelB wrote:Here's Sight & Sound's top ten:
1. A Prophet (Jacques Audiard)
2. The Hurt Locker (Kathryn Bigelow)/35 Shots of Rum (Claire Denis)
4. The White Ribbon (Michael Haneke)
5. Let The Right One In (Tomas Alfredson)
6. Up (Pete Docter)/White Material (Claire Denis)
8. Bright Star (Jane Campion)/Antichrist (Lars von Trier)
10. Inglourious Basterds (Quentin Tarantino)
Nice to see this appear on another's list! As far as I know, it (sadly) didn't get any kind of theatrical release in the states.swo17 wrote:10 Eden Is West (Costa-Gavras)