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BlackFlagg

Rolling Stones Top Ten Movies of 2003.

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taken from rollingstone.com

 

 

1 Mystic River

Directed by Clint Eastwood

 

Why have I chosen Mystic River as the best movie of the year? Isn't The Lord of the Rings: Return of the King -- its closest rival -- more ambitious? Not really. Both films deal with souls damaged by the past, by greed, by sins of commission and omission. The difference? Nothing that pins you to your seat in Mystic River is generated by a computer. The main characters are three working stiffs from Boston, friends since childhood who have been scarred by an incident from that childhood. Now, as adults, Jimmy (Sean Penn) is trying to find out who murdered his daughter; Sean (Kevin Bacon) is the cop assigned to the case; and Dave (Tim Robbins) is the prime suspect. Brian Helgeland's adaptation of Dennis Lehane's novel becomes a blueprint for director Clint Eastwood to plunge deeper into the darkness of human nature that he probed so memorably in Unforgiven. All the actors do Eastwood proud, and in a just world Penn and Robbins will both win Oscars. Eastwood, showing a classical directing style worthy of comparison to John Ford, isn't interested in spectacle but in the moral warfare raging in the eyes of three men who are taking their own trip to Mount Doom, seeking redemption and finding only ruin. Eastwood, in the directing coup of 2003, shows how violence is hard-wired into the American character. Not a popular subject these days. Eastwood refused to soften his film's harsh reality for box- office gain. That's another reason Mystic River stakes a claim on greatness. It's that rare film that is truly uncompromised.

 

2 The Lord of the Rings: Return of the King

Directed by Peter Jackson

 

After the Matrix sequels imploded, you may have feared big-time for the final chapter of Rings. No worries. It's now official: Peter Jackson has created the mack daddy of all movie fantasies, and Return of the King brings the film version of Tolkien's trilogy to a combustibly exciting close. Prepare to be wowed by the giant spider, the charging Mumakil, the Army of the Dead and the battle of Pelennor Fields. Prepare also to have your emotions wrung out as you watch the coronation of Aragorn (fiery Viggo Mortensen), consider the fate of Frodo (Elijah Wood) and the fellowship, and then get deeper into the character of Sam (Sean Astin comes into his own with this brave, questing performance). The dominance of effects-driven spectacles hasn't been a boon to film -- hello, Haunted Mansion -- but in the hands of a master like Jackson, who respects Tolkien's passion for action and character, it's an art form. Jackson hits a grand slam.

 

3 Lost in Translation

Directed by Sofia Coppola

 

Bill Murray as a Hollywood star adrift in Tokyo gives the performance of his career. And Scarlett Johansson, 19, matches him step for step as a Yale grad who finds something in him that's missing in her careerist husband. But the real star of this movie is Sofia Coppola, who wrote the year's best original screenplay and directed with a delicacy and precision that belie her thirty-two years. In only her second movie -- The Virgin Suicides was her first -- Coppola has found a unique voice.

 

4 Master and Commander

Directed by Peter Weir

 

It takes a director as dogged and brilliant as Peter Weir to persuade a studio to spend $135 million on a sea adventure that doesn't go in for Hollywood heroics or romantic mush. Russell Crowe as Capt. Jack Aubrey and Paul Bettany as ship surgeon Stephen Maturin power their roles with non-bogus gusto as the good ship Surprise takes to the high seas, circa 1807, to bring down the French and taste sweet victory.

 

5 Cold Mountain

Directed by Anthony Minghella

 

This is one stunner of a movie. Charles Frazier's lofty novel -- it's really The Odyssey set during the Civil War -- could have been one of those dust-dry film versions of "great literature." (Remember the botch job on Snow Falling on Cedars?) But gifted director Anthony Minghella (The English Patient, The Talented Mr. Ripley), who wrote the well-judged screenplay, gives the story a hot-blooded urgency. Cold Mountain has it all: love, war, humor, suspense and a probing sense of what it takes for a divided America to heal its wounds. It's a triumph for Minghella, who casts the film with a keen eye. Jude Law gives a breakthrough star performance as Inman, a wounded Confederate soldier so tormented by the fighting -- the opening battle scene is authentically harrowing -- that he heads home on foot to the woman he left behind. She is Ada, and as embodied and eroticized by Nicole Kidman she is someone well worth the hike to North Carolina. Kidman lights up the screen. She and Law fire up the love story at the heart of this intimate epic. A remarkable feat, because the movie, like the book, mostly keeps these two characters apart. Inman's travels, interacting with characters such as a lonely war widow (Natalie Portman) and a lecherous preacher (Philip Seymour Hoffman), are interspersed with Ada working the farm with Ruby, a rough-spoken hellraiser played by a roaringly comic Renee Zellweger, who steals every scene she's in. But even Ruby has secrets. The specter of war haunts Cold Mountain, but you remember it for the heat of its romantic yearning and the mysteries that wrap themselves around you until you're lost in another world.

 

6 American Splendor

Directed by Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini

 

Here's the kind of indie gem that falls between the cracks when audiences rush out to the high-profile epics. This one-of-a-kind biopic about comic-book writer Harvey Pekar, indelibly played by Paul Giamatti, does not deserve such a fate. Harvey's relationship with his third wife, Joyce Brabner (the criminally underrated Hope Davis), makes for a whacked-out love story of blending neuroses. The idea of having the real Harvey and Joyce step in to comment on the action, plus using animation to bring Harvey's comic ideas to life, is the brainchild of Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini, married documentarians (Off the Menu: The Last Days of Chasen's) making the year's most promising debut in features.

 

7 Big Fish

Directed by Tim Burton

 

Arguably the most personal film Tim Burton has ever directed, this tall tale of a son (Billy Crudup) who wants to find the truth behind the yarns his dying father (a ferociously fine Albert Finney) tells him cuts to the way living in fantasy can hurt and heal. Ewan McGregor plays the father as a young man, a fantasist, like Burton, who finds comfort in a magical world of giants and freaks. There are bigger, more powerful films this year. There's none lovelier.

 

8 A Mighty Wind

Directed by Christopher Guest

 

Just looking at Mitch (Eugene Levy) and Mickey (Catherine O'Hara), a folk-singing duo split by Mitch's nervous breakdown, makes me remember all that's heartfelt and hysterically funny about Christopher Guest's wondrous satire of the Sixties folk world. Levy and O'Hara give the kind of tone-perfect performances that never get nominated for Oscars. That should be excuse enough to overhaul the whole corrupt system. Listen to them duet on "A Kiss at the End of the Rainbow," and let me know who else can make you crack a smile and shed a tear at the same time. Guest, who devised the story of a folk reunion concert with Levy -- the cast improvised the rest -- has shown talent for this game before in 1997's Waiting for Guffman and 2000's Best in Show. A Mighty Wind can take its place proudly in that classic company. It's the comedy of the year.

 

9 Kill Bill: Vol. 1

Directed by Quentin Tarantino

 

The balls! splitting your movie in half, releasing one part in October and then making us wait to pay for Vol. 2 in February. The thing of it is: Quentin Tarantino pulls it off, at least with Vol. 1. Uma Thurman rocks hard as a bride who avenges herself on her former colleagues (all part of the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad) for killing her groom and leaving her for dead on her wedding day. The bride's battles with Bill (the mostly unseen David Carradine), the mace-swinging Go Go Yubari (Chiaki Kuriyama) and the lethal O-Ren Ishii (Lucy Liu) belong in a time capsule. Tarantino turns his mad love for grind-house kung-fu into movie poetry.

 

10 Angels in America

Directed by Mike Nichols

 

This altogether astonishing adaptation of Tony Kushner's Pulitzer Prize-winning play isn't a legit movie at all. It's on HBO, starting this month, and is therefore ineligible for a movie ten-best list. Says you. Kushner, adapting his own play, and director Mike Nichols, working at the top of his game, have created a transfixing masterpiece, and I'm not about to ignore it on technical grounds. Running more than six hours, this fiercely funny, poetic and moving meditation on AIDS, politics, religion and hypocrisy during the Reagan years in Manhattan is a true movie event. Al Pacino is a mesmerizing monster (meaning he earns our reluctant compassion) as Roy Cohn, a lawyer with AIDS who won't admit he's anything as weak as a homosexual. Other major names lend their support to the project, including Emma Thompson as the angel you see in the ads and Meryl Streep, shining in several roles, including a bearded rabbi. But the film belongs to lesser names: Justin Kirk as Prior Walter, deserted by his lover (the excellent Ben Shenkman), who can't live with the ravages of Prior's disease. The revelatory performance comes from Patrick Wilson as Joe Pitt, a Mormon lawyer who arrives in New York with his wife, Harper (Mary Louise Parker). Joe blinds himself to corruption, his attraction to men and the fact that history, in Kushner's words, is "about to crack wide open." The film offers a view of the Twin Towers to remind us of what we were like in the mid-1980s as the millennium approached. Kushner was there to watch, and what he gives us in language, alive with beauty and terror, is a legacy for our time. This is what I call a real movie.

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Guest JumpinJackFlash

Why is Kill Bill lower(higher if you see it differently) than Master and Commander on the lsit? I've seen both, and though I think Master and Commader was one of the best films of the year, I don't think it was as good as Kill Bill. Return of the King hasn't even come out yet...how is that on the list? Has this dude seen it already?

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...were you on enough crack to actually believe that rolling stone, who thinks that jerry bruckheimer is the spawn of satan, would put 'pirates of the caribbean' on their top ten list?

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The complete lack of Pirates Of The Caribbean has made me bitter, as I LOVED that movie.

I'm totally unsure as to why, but i also really love Pirates of the Caribbean. It's the kind of move i'd usually hate, but i just can't help but love it so.

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Finding Nemo should've been in there too.

yes it should of

Same goes for X2: X-Men United. But that's just me.

 

Bleh...fuck that list.

X-2 was a good summer action flick. But it wasn't exactly a great piece of film history like LOTR is.

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Finding Nemo should've been in there too.

yes it should of

Same goes for X2: X-Men United. But that's just me.

 

Bleh...fuck that list.

X-2 was a good summer action flick. But it wasn't exactly a great piece of film history like LOTR is.

True, I agree with that. Still, like X1, I think it's a film that should last a long time. Not only because of the CGness, but of the obvious underlying message about discrimination and all that.

 

Besides, the list is for 'Top Ten Movies of 2003'...not 'great pieces of film history'.

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Finding Nemo should've been in there too.

yes it should of

Same goes for X2: X-Men United.

WTF?

 

It's a great popcorn flick sure, but it's not even close being one of the better FILMS of the year in terms of sheer quality.

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Finding Nemo should've been in there too.

yes it should of

Same goes for X2: X-Men United. But that's just me.

 

Bleh...fuck that list.

X-2 was a good summer action flick. But it wasn't exactly a great piece of film history like LOTR is.

True, I agree with that. Still, like X1, I think it's a film that should last a long time. Not only because of the CGness, but of the obvious underlying message about discrimination and all that.

 

Besides, the list is for 'Top Ten Movies of 2003'...not 'great pieces of film history'.

X-1 is good. But it's message is just the same as the one in the comic books. And the comic books make an even stronger message than the movie.

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Finding Nemo should've been in there too.

yes it should of

Same goes for X2: X-Men United. But that's just me.

 

Bleh...fuck that list.

X-2 was a good summer action flick. But it wasn't exactly a great piece of film history like LOTR is.

you haven't even seen the movie yet, how can you call it a great piece of film history?

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Finding Nemo should've been in there too.

yes it should of

Same goes for X2: X-Men United. But that's just me.

 

Bleh...fuck that list.

X-2 was a good summer action flick. But it wasn't exactly a great piece of film history like LOTR is.

you haven't even seen the movie yet, how can you call it a great piece of film history?

The other 2 are. Why should I believe this one is any different?

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Kill Bill at 9? What?

 

Most of these movies haven't even come out yet...Cold Mountain? What? Sure, it looks good, but one can hardly bank on what LOOKS good.

 

 

and I will agree that Mystic River was the best film of the year. The rest of the list, however, is complete and utter bull-shit.

 

 

Here's my list:

 

1. Mystic River

2. Kill Bill

3. Pirates of the Caribbean

4. Once Upon a Time in Mexico

5. Master and Commander

6. X2

7. The Missing

8. Elf ( :D )

9. Love, Actually (good movie for a date...plus Keira Knightley)

10. Flip "Really Sorry" (Hey, we never said THEATER Movies...)

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Critics get to see movies early.

 

I know that sucks, but why is everybody acting suprised by it.

 

 

And I assume that list belongs to Peter Travers, since he's Rolling Stones' critic.

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Guest Choken One

A Mighty Wind wasn't that good.

 

It's just Christoper "One trick pony" Guest doing the same story in a different environment.

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Finding Nemo should've been in there too.

yes it should of

Same goes for X2: X-Men United. But that's just me.

 

Bleh...fuck that list.

X-2 was a good summer action flick. But it wasn't exactly a great piece of film history like LOTR is.

you haven't even seen the movie yet, how can you call it a great piece of film history?

The other 2 are. Why should I believe this one is any different?

because you haven't seen it yet?

 

this is like me arguing that 'kill bill vol. 2' is already the best movie of 2004, or that 'untitled spike jonze/charlie kaufman project' is already the best movie of 2005.

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Finding Nemo should've been in there too.

yes it should of

Same goes for X2: X-Men United. But that's just me.

 

Bleh...fuck that list.

X-2 was a good summer action flick. But it wasn't exactly a great piece of film history like LOTR is.

you haven't even seen the movie yet, how can you call it a great piece of film history?

The other 2 are. Why should I believe this one is any different?

because you haven't seen it yet?

 

this is like me arguing that 'kill bill vol. 2' is already the best movie of 2004, or that 'untitled spike jonze/charlie kaufman project' is already the best movie of 2005.

I'm basing it off of the other two movies and what has been said of this movie. I have no reason to believe it won't be as good as the other 2.

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the only reliable thing you can base your judgment of a movie on is actually seeing it. all you're doing otherwise is making semi-educated guesses.

 

i could already call RotK an overrated piece of inflated mediocrity based on what i've heard and the first 2 movies, but it wouldn't be reliable, because i haven't seen it.

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Guest El Satanico

The list looks fine to me.

 

Nemo, POTC and X2 should be on this list? Are you people mad? It's not top ten summer movies or top ten box office hits.

 

I loved POTC, X2 was quite good and I haven't seen Nemo, but I'm not doubting that it's good. I have no problem with those movies, but they shouldn't be on a list like this. Besides, what would you replace?

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1. Kill Bill, Vol. 1

2. Lost In Translation

3. Mystic River

 

Eh, those're my top three, and they all made it, so I have no huge problems. I think that Intolerable Cruelty would be a nice addition though, as though it wasn't up to the usual Coen-standards, it was still quite a good and very underappreciated movie this year. Though if it made the list, I'd put it at like 10, but still.

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I thought that Kill Bill was the most overrated movie of the year. I thought that it was violent for the sake of violence and not for the sake of making a good movie. And, maybe I missed all of the dialogue while taking a piss break, but I'm going to say there was none.

 

Lost in Translation was my personal favorite movie of the year, but I didn't get out to that many.

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um... No Freddy VS Jason? Bahhhh

J/K

 

I do believe YOU must pick a movie AFTER you saw the movie, not based on the hype. Because remember the hype usually it could be both bad and good.

 

Godthedog got a point, YOU heard or YOU think both LOTR movies had been good, but how about the others who hate both movies? Same for Kill Bill.

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um... No Freddy VS Jason? Bahhhh

J/K

 

I do believe YOU must pick a movie AFTER you saw the movie, not based on the hype. Because remember the hype usually it could be both bad and good.

 

Godthedog got a point, YOU heard or YOU think both LOTR movies had been good, but how about the others who hate both movies? Same for Kill Bill.

I don't care if the others hate the series...I like it!

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