Best Movies of 2023!
Hi, this is Daniel Garber at the Movies for culturalmining.com and CIUT 89.5 FM.
It’s almost the end of 2023 — good riddance! — so it’s time for my annual best movies of the year. Since I see so many movies every year, in order to keep my “best of” list to a manageable size, I don’t include animated films — such as the amazing The Boy and His Heron, and the very good Spiderman Across the Spiderverse. Nor do I include short films, or documentaries or TV movies, many of which are great. And I’m only including films that played either theatrically or as part of a film festival, and, of course, only films I’ve actually seen.
I am trying to include both indie and big-budget films, as well as genre films — comedy, romance, sci-fi, horror and fantasy — which are often given short shrift in lists like these.
The films I choose have to have be a good movie, but also have something special about them — shock value, surprise, novelty, great acting, important stories, or beautiful production values. Also keep in mind I always forget to include some films I love, and only remember after I record this — so my apologies in advance for leaving out some great movies. (I realized, immediately after taping, that I accidentally left out Monster from the first list, and Rotting in the Sun and May December from the second list; see below).
Some of these are already available on streaming sites, others are still playing in theatres, and a few have not yet opened.
Ok, with no further ado, here is my list of the best movies of 2023, in no particular order:
1 Are You There God? It’s Me Margaret,
Dir: Kelly Fremon Craig
is a nostalgic, coming-of- age story about a pre-teen girl who moves from New York to a small town in New Jersey. Based on the YA novel by Judy Blume.
2 Beau is Afraid
Dir Ari Aster
…is a complex, psychological fantasy about a man named Beau (Joaquin Phoenix) trying to leave the hell-hole he lives in to attend his rich but controlling mother’s funeral (Patti Lupone). Some people find this movie overwhelming, but that’s part of its attraction.
Talk to Me
Dir: Danny and Michael Philippou
Is a Australian horror movie about a teenager party game involving a mummified hand that takes users into a world between the living and the dead. This is one of the scariest movies I’ve seen in years.
4 The Holdovers
Dir: Alexander Payne
is a drama set in a New England prep school in 1969, where some students, a teacher and the cook are staying there over the Christmas holidays.It’s a compelling story with superb acting by Paul Giamatti, Da’Vine Joy Randolph — primarily a stage actress — and Dominic Sessa in his first role.
5 The Movie Teller (La Contadora de Películas)
Dir: Lone Scherfig
…is a wonderful romantic melodrama set in a company town in a Chilean desert in the 1960s. It’s about a family who need to find a new source of income when their father is injured in a mining accident.
6 The Promised Land
Dir: Nikolaj Arcel
…is an epic, historical drama about a former soldier (Mads Mikkeksen) who is trying to tame the soil of unsettled Jutland, Denmark, but has to deal with a cruel aristocrat who wants total control.
7 Poor Things
Dir: Yorgos Lanthimos
… is a brilliant picaresque fable about an adult woman (Emma Stone) with an infant’s brain transplanted in her head, as she discovers sex, morality and economics in Victorian Europe.
8 The Anatomy of a Fall
Dir: Justine Triet
…is a gripping courtroom drama set in the French Alps about a middle aged writer (Sandra Hüller) who is accused of killing her husband who fell out of a window. It’s also an intensely moving story about a mother and her young, blind son.
9 The Nature of Love (Simple comme Sylvain)
Dir: Monia Chokri
…is a delightful comedy/drama about a married, bourgeois intellectual from Montreal who falls in love with a redneck building contractor who is renovating her cottage.
10 Green Border
Dir: Agnieszka Holland
… is a harrowing drama about a group of asylum seekers caught in a hellish cycle of deportation and abuse in the area between Poland and Belarus. A moving and intricate story told through the eyes of very different characters.
11 Showing Up
Dir Kelly Reichardt
…is a deceptively simple comedy about an irritable sculptor at an art college in Portland Oregon (Michelle Williams) who is trying to put on a one-woman show at a local gallery.
12 Killers of the Flower Moon
Dir: Martin Scorsese
…is an historical drama set in Oklahoma in the 1920s where the Osage nation discovers oil, but have to fight off the swindlers, criminals and murderers looking for their piece of the pie. This one stars Robert De Niro, Leonardo Dicaprio, and Lily Gladstone.
13 Fallen Leaves
Dir: Aki Kaurismaki
…is a dark romantic comedy about a working class man and woman in Helsinki whose paths keep crossing but — because a series of accidents — can’t seem to realize their destiny as lovers and soulmates.
14 Monster
Dir: Kore-eda Hirokazu
And here are the runners-up, which are more or less as good as the list I just finished:
1 Godland — a moving historical drama about Danish settlers in a remote part of Iceland
2 Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves
A fantasy action/adventure based on the game
3 The Eight Mountains
A story of friendship in Piedmont Italy
4 Blackberry
The rise and fall of the Canadian cel phone company
5 Afire
A tragicomedy about a struggling writer in a summer home in Germany
6 Oppenheimer
Historical drama about the Manhattan Project and its aftermath
7 After the Fire
A Parisian-Arab family reacting to the police after the death of their brother.
8 Do Not Expect Too Much of the End of the World
A biting social satire about workplace injuries in Bucharest
9 Kidnapped
A melodramatic retelling of Pope Pius IX’s kidnapping of a 5-year-old boy in 19th century Bologna
10 Perfect Days
A simple story about a kind and loving man who works as a public toilet cleaner in Tokyo
11 Evil Does Not Exist
A remote town fighting back against a developer who wants to build a glamping spa — by the director of Drive my Car.
12 The Iron Claw
A biopic about the Von Erichs —a family of pro-wrestling brothers — plagued with misfortune.
13. May December
14 Rotting in the Sun
Once again, my top movies off the year:
Monster
Fallen Leaves
Killers of the Flower Moon
Showing Up
Green Border
The Nature of Love
The Anatomy of a Fall
Poor Things
The Promised Land
The Movie Teller
The Holdovers
Talk to Me
Beau is Afraid
Are you there, God? It’s Me, Margaret
This is Daniel Garber at the Movies, each Saturday morning, on CIUT 89.5 FM and on my website, culturalmining.
A New World? Films reviewed: Going In, Poor Things
Hi, this is Daniel Garber at the Movies for culturalmining.com and CIUT 89.5 FM.
December is supposed to be a time for fun and relaxation, so this week, I’m looking at two new movies that you might find fun to watch. There’s a comedy/action movie set 40 years ago in Toronto, and a wild comedic fable set a century ago in Europe.
Going In
Wri/Dir: Evan Rissi
It’s the late 1980s in Toronto. Leslie Booth (Evan Rissi) is a young lecturer who waxes eloquent about Hegelian dialectics to bored college students. He doesn’t smoke, drink or cuss and stays away from drugs. He even goes to bed early if his on-again, off-again girlfriend isn’t spending the night. But everything changes when a strange man, all dressed in black, starts showing up everywhere he goes. Reuben (Ira Goldman) is a Jamaican-Canadian who wears a huge Star of David around his neck. He used to be Leslie’s best friend, going out on the town every night, but haven’t seen each other for five years. And Leslie has been on the straight and narrow ever since.
But Reuben needs his help, and is calling in a favour. His brother has disappeared, and he suspects it’s the work of a Toronto drug kingpin named Feng (Victor D.S. Man). Feng has cornered the market on a highly-addictive pill hitting the streets known as Pearl. Users love the experience, but addicts end up looking like zombies with solid white eyes. Reuben wants to penetrate this Triad and save his brother’s life, but the only way to do it is to get hold of a pair of tickets to Feng’s annual tournament. So Leslie joins with Reuben
and finds himself falling into old habits, snorting coke and frequenting sleazy bars to get more information. But the closer they get to their target the more dangerous it all looks. What is that tournament about? And can they rescue Reuben’s and get out unscathed?
Going In is a Toronto action/comedy movie set in — and in the style of — the 1980s. It’s also a buddy movie with a black guy and a white guy, like Lethal Weapon, Beverley Hills Cop or Silver Streak. But unlike those Hollywood hits, Going In is a micro- budget movie — we’re talking tens of thousands not hundreds of millions — with unknown actors and minimal special effects. Evan Rissi
wrote, directed and stars as Leslie, while Ira Goldman who plays Reuben also produced it. And Victor D.S. Man as the villain looks like he walked straight out of an old Hong Kong flick.
Surprisingly, this movie works. It’s clearly low-budget but it doesn’t seem slapdash. While it plays into a lot of film conventions and stereotypes, there are some very original scenes that I’ve never seen before — like the tournament they’re trying so hard to get into (no spoilers) It also has a good soundtrack, a b-ball match, some fight scenes and even a psychedelic out-of-body experience. And it’s not afraid to have the CN Tower constantly popping up in the background, to remind us that it’s Toronto, not NY, Detroit, Boston, Phillie or any of the other cities Toronto usually pretends to be in movies shot here. Keep in mind that this is a DIY movie, not from a big studio, and you might get a kick out of it.
Poor Things
Dir: Yorgos Lanthimos
Max McCandles (Ramy Youssef) is a medical student in Victorian England. He regularly attends surgical demonstrations by Dr Godwin Baxter (an unrecognizable Willem Dafoe) a controversial scientist with outrageous ideas. Baxter’s face is grotesque, like something that was cut into pieces and sewn back together. But the doctor takes a liking to shy Max, and hires him to live in his home and look after his daughter Bella (Emma Stone). Bella is a beautiful woman in her late 20s, but who behaves like a recently-hatched duckling just learning to walk. She has a vocabulary of just six words, and is given to stabbing, tearing or biting anything put in front of her. But with Max’s help, she quickly learns to speak and think, and is full of questions about the world. She is not allowed out of her home — it’s too dangerous, they say. You see, Bella is an adult woman with a baby’s brain implanted in her skull, one of the mad scientist’s latest experiments. As she matures, she and Max fall in love and plan their wedding — though still in a strictly patriarchal relationship (she refers to her father/creator Godwin Baxter as God for short.) But before they can marry, a scoundrel named Duncan Wedderburn (Mark Ruffalo) shows up on the scene. He sweeps Bella off her feet with the introduction of something new into her vocabulary — sexual pleasure — which she greatly enjoys. He
promises endless sexual satisfaction and rollicking new adventures if she follows him on his trip. Bella realizes Duncan is a cad and a rake but agrees to go with him anyway, postponing her marriage to Max indefinitely or at least until after she sees the world.
She sets off on this journey with Duncan aboard an ocean liner docking in various ports which she naively explores and learns from what she sees. She’s the ultimate fish out pf water, a novelty to all she meets, because she speaks so frankly and forthrightly. Bella has yet to learn basic societal rules about class, money, capitalism, sex, nudity and modesty. She explores this strange world scientifically and logically, much to Duncan’s dismay. Who is she really and where did she come from? Is sex a market commodity or something more personal? Will her naivety lead to disaster? Or will she return,
triumphant, to London with her innocence intact?
Poor Things is a brilliant social satire about sex, class, feminism, and society. It incorporates elements of 18th century novels like Fanny Hill, Tom Jones and Candide. It’s surreal, absurdist and psychedelic, but ultimately comes across as a fable or a morality play. It’s all filmed on an elaborate set (shot in Hungary), in a weird, steampunk Europe that never existed beneath a sky filled with blimps and zeppelins. (It looks like Terry Gilliam’s movie Brazil.) The costumes are outrageous — Bella has enormous shoulder pads bigger than her head. Emma Stone is amazing as Bella, though Mark Ruffalo overdoes it as Duncan — teetering between funny and ridiculous.
I’ve been following Yorgos Lanthimos’s films since Dogtooth in 2009, and this one revisits many of his earliest themes: absurdist humour; adults who speak awkwardly like small children, and who grow up isolated, never
allowed to leave their home, by a dictatorial, god-like father figure. It feels like Dogtooth Part Two: The Outside World. But now he commands a big enough budget to build ornate sets, costumes and wigs, with dozens of fascinating characters. I’m sure some of you will hate this movie, or be offended by it, but I think it’s absolutely brilliant.
Poor Things opens this weekend in Toronto; check your local listings. Going In is available digitally online across North America, from December 19th.
This is Daniel Garber at the Movies, each Saturday morning, on CIUT 89.5 FM and on my website culturalmining.
1 comment