2012 Endy Awards

 A year ago, I gave out a bunch of awards for the best films of 2012. Of course, due to the vagaries of film distribution, many great films from that year were only released (or became available to me) within the past year. So here is an up-to-date accounting of my 2012 Endy Awards.

Other years can be found in the Rankings & Awards Index. Eligibility is determined by imdb date and by whether or not I’ve seen the movie in question. Nominees are presented in alphabetical order, the winner is bolded. And the Endy goes to. . .

Best Picture:

1. Drug War
2. Leviathan
3. Like Someone in Love
4. Lincoln
5. The Master
6. Moonrise Kingdom
7. Night Across the Street
8. Romancing in Thin Air
9. Viola
10. Wolf Children

Anderson’s dollhouse, DIY, 90 degree angle aesthetic is the ideal match for a children’s fantasy of adventure and escape. The need for the kids to create their own universe contrasts eloquently with the sad rigidity of the adults. Some of the other nominees are more mysterious, but no movie this year is more perfect.

Best Director:

1. Johnnie To, Romancing in Thin Air
2. Abbas Kiarostami, Like Someone in Love
3. Paul Thomas Anderson, The Master
4. Wes Anderson, Moonrise Kingdom
5. Raúl Ruiz, Night Across the Street

Best Actor:

1. Sun Honglei, Drug War
2. Denis Levant, Holy Motors
3. Tadashi Okuno, Like Someone in Love
4. Daniel Day-Lewis, Lincoln
5. Joaquin Phoenix, The Master

In the end, Levant’s versitility and centrality to the film edge out Phoenix’s remarkably physical, extreme-method performance, and Day-Lewis’s uncanny ability to breathe life into an impersonation, either of which would be more than worthy winners in any other year.

Best Actress:

1. Greta Gerwig, Frances Ha
2. Isabelle Huppert, In Another Country
3. Anna Kendrick, Pitch Perfect
4. Sammi Cheng, Romancing in Thin Air
5. Jessica Chastain, Zero Dark Thirty

Supporting Actor:

1. Samuel L. Jackson, Django Unchained
2. Louis Koo, Drug War
3. Yu Jun-sang, In Another Country
4. Philip Seymour Hoffman, The Master
5. James Franco, Spring Breakers

Supporting Actress:

1. Amy Adams, The Master
2. Samantha Barks, Les Misérables
3. Amy Acker, Much Ado About Nothing
4. Rebel Wilson, Pitch Perfect
5. Lola Créton, Something in the Air


Original Screenplay:
 

1. Abbas Kiarostami, Like Someone in Love
2. Paul Thomas Anderson, The Master
3. Wes Anderson & Roman Coppola, Moonrise Kingdom
4. Wai, Ka-Fai, Yau Nai-Hoi, & Jevons Au Man-Kit, Romancing in Thin Air
5. Mark Boal, Zero Dark Thirty

The seemingly innocuous structure of Kiarostami’s film, a series of apparently mundane conversations with wildly spinning depths that over time accumulate such weight, such possibility, that builds to a crescendo with the year’s most shattering momentum, wins out over Boal’s screenplay that is more than just the effective distillation of a decade of history, but a radical (for Hollywood at least) rethinking of character and a fascinating, open-ended exploration of what counts as evidence and certainty in the post-Iraq War world.

Adapted Screenplay:

1. Li Luo, Emperor Visits the Hell
2. Tony Kushner, Lincoln
3. Joss Whedon, Much Ado About Nothing
4. Raul Ruiz, Night Across the Street
5. Alain Resnais & Laurent Herbiet, You Ain’t Seen Nothin’ Yet

In a year with unusually great films about argument and reason, Lincoln, Zero Dark Thirty, The Master, it’s Kushner’s screenplay that is the best. He had me as soon as the President explained the complexities of the Emancipation Proclamation’s post-Civil War legal status in three minutes or less. The later rhetorical flourishes are wonderful (Stevens’s ripostes to his interlocutors, Lincoln’s powerful clothing) but the trust and clarity and efficiency of Kushner’s exposition is truly remarkable.

Foreign Language Film:

1. Drug War
2. Like Someone in Love
3. Night Across the Street
4. Romancing in Thin Air
5. Wolf Children

Documentary Feature:

1. The Act of Killing
2. Leviathan
3. People’s Park
4. Room 237
5. Three Sisters

Tremendously great year for both categories. It pains me how many great foreign language films don’t quite make the cut.

Unseen Film:

1. Beyond the Hills (Cristian Mungiu)
2. Gangs of Wasseypur (Anurag Kashyap)
3. Life of Pi (Ang Lee)
4. Passion (Brian DePalma)
5. No (Pablo Larrain)

Animated Feature:

1. Brave
2. It’s Such a Beautiful Day
3. Wolf Children
4. Wreck-It Ralph

Animated Short:

1. The Longest Daycare
2. Paperman

Live Action Short:

1. Lovers are Artists, Part 2 (Lu Fang)
2. My Way (Ann Hui)
3. Walker (Tsai Ming-Liang)
4. You Are More than Beautiful (Kim Tae-young)

Film Editing:

1. Drug War
2. The Master
3. Moonrise Kingdom
4. To the Wonder
5. Zero Dark Thirty

Cinematography:

1. Lucien Castaing-Taylor & Verena Paravel, Leviathan
2. Mihai Malaimare Jr., The Master
3. Robert D. Yeoman , Moonrise Kingdom
4. Inti Briones, Night Across the Street
5. Emmanuel Lubezki, To the Wonder

Using 70mm to film interiors and close-ups rather than, as was traditional, expansive vistas and landscapes was a stroke of genius, but The Master‘s images and the old school inventiveness of Night Across the Street‘s sepia tones and rear projections and Moonrise Kingdom‘s crystal-clear storybook aesthetic all come up short versus the “throw the camera on a fishing boat and see what weird horrors and beauties surround us” aesthetic of Leviathan.

Art Direction:

1. Blancanieves
2. Moonrise Kingdom
3. Night Across the Street
4. Resident Evil: Retribution
5. Tai Chi Zero

Costume Design:

1. Django Unchained
2. Holy Motors
3. Moonrise Kingdom
4. Night Across the Street
5. Something in the Air

Make-up:

1. Ace Attorney
2. Django Unchained
3. Holy Motors
4. Prometheus
5. Universal Soldier: Day of Reckoning

Sound Mixing:

1. Leviathan
2. The Master
3. Moonrise Kingdom
4. Neighboring Sounds
5. People’s Park

Rarely is sound design more important to a modern movie than in Neighboring Sounds. Kleber Mendonça Filho’s Recife is connected not by spatial geography, but by the way sounds bleed together in an urban environment, trumping class and racial barriers. But I’ve got to go with the revolutionary work in Leviathan. We’re in the midst of a golden age of sound experiment documentaries, and the Harvard Sensory Ethnography Lab is leading the way.

Sound Editing:

1. The Avengers
2. Django Unchained
3. Drug War
4. Skyfall
5. Zero Dark Thirty

Visual Effects:

1. Ace Attorney
2. Night Across the Street
3. Prometheus
4. Resident Evil: Retribution
5. Tai Chi Zero

Original Score:

1. The Master
2. Mekong Hotel
3. Moonrise Kingdom
4. Zero Dark Thirty
5. Wolf Children

I really want to give this to Moonrise Kingdom, for Alexandre Desplat’s suite that complements and builds upon the Hank Williams and Benjamin Britten music on the soundtrack. Or Masakatsu Takagi’s melancholically triumphant theme from Wolf Children that makes me tear up just thinking about it. But Chai Datana’s guitar score for Mekong Hotel, a meandering bluesy acoustic guitar melody that wanders and noodles and swirls back on itself, is fundamental to that film’s evocation of life by a river, where past and present, myth and reality fuse.

Adapted Score:

1. Holy Motors
2. Moonrise Kingdom
3. Pitch Perfect
4. Something in the Air
5. Tabu

2011 Endy Awards

After not being able to see many movies before Oscartime last year, due to baby-induced home-boundness, I’d always meant to come back and do a proper awards post for 2011, something I’d forgot about until putting together the awards for 2012 this past week. So with Endies on the mind, I guess now is as good a time as any to reward the best of what I’ve seen from 2011. As always, eligibility is determined by the date given by imdb. I’ll list the nominees in each category in alphabetical order and the winner will be in bold.


Best Picture:
1. Damsels in Distress
2. The Day He Arrives
3. The Deep Blue Sea
4. Don’t Go Breaking My Heart
5. Girl Walk // All Day
6. List
7. Margaret
8. Romance Joe
9. The Tree of Life
10. Wuxia

Best Director:

1. Hong Sangsoo, The Day He Arrives
2. Terence Davies, The Deep Blue Sea
3. Johnnie To, Don’t Go Breaking My Heart
4. Kenneth Lonergan, Margaret
5. Terrence Malick, The Tree of Life

Best Actor:

1. Jack Black, Bernie
2. Yoo Junsang, The Day He Arrives
3. Liam Neesen, The Grey
4. Michael Shannon, Take Shelter
5. Gary Oldman, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy

Best Actress:

1. Greta Gerwig, Damsels in Distress
2. Rachel Weisz, The Deep Blue Sea
3. Anne Marsen, Girl Walk // All Day
4. Anna Paquin, Margaret
5. Leila Hatami, A Separation

The actor category for this year is merely OK, but this might be the strongest group of actresses ever. Can’t believe there’s no room for Tilda Swinton in We Need to Talk About Kevin, Gao Yuanyuan in Don’t Go Breaking My Heart, Carlen Altman in The Color Wheel, Michelle Williams in Take this Waltz, Jessica Chastain in Take Shelter and Charlize Theron in Young Adult.

Supporting Actor:

1. Sonny Carl Davis, Bernie
2. Tom Hiddleston, The Deep Blue Sea
3. John Doyle, Girl Walk // All Day
4. Lau Ching-wan, Life Without Principle
5. Brad Pitt, The Tree of Life

Supporting Actress:

1. Megalyn Echikunwoke, Damsels in Distress
2. Carrie MacLemore, Damsels in Distress
2. Cécile De France, The Kid with a Bike
3. Denise Ho, Life Without Principle
5. J. Smith-Cameron, Margaret

Original Screenplay:

1. Whit Stillman, Damsels in Distress
2. Hong Sangsoo, The Day He Arrives
3. Milkyway Team, Don’t Go Breaking My Heart
4. Kenneth Lonergan, Margaret
5. Lee Kwangkuk, Romance Joe

Adapted Screenplay:

1. Richard Linklater, Bernie
2. Terence Davies, The Deep Blue Sea
3. Craig Schulz & Stephan Pastis, Happiness is a Warm Blanket, Charlie Brown
4. John Logan, Hugo
5. Lynne Ramsay & Rory Kinnear, We Need to Talk About Kevin

Foreign Language Film:

1. The Day He Arrives (Hong Sangsoo)
2. Don’t Go Breaking My Heart (Johnnie To)
3. Romance Joe (Lee Kwangkuk)
4. A Separation (Asghar Farhadi)
5. Wuxia (Peter Chan)

A great year for Johnnie To and his collaborators at his Milkyway Image studio, with two of my favorite films of the year. Unfortunately, they came up short awards-wise, barely beaten out in the supporting acting categories and edged by masterful work in directing and original screenplay. Foreign Language film was probably their best shot, but Hong Sangsoo’s The Day He Arrives is one of his best.

Documentary Feature:

1. All Watched Over By Machines of Loving Grace (Adam Curtis)
2. Crazy Horse (Frederick Wiseman)
3. Fragments: Surviving Pieces of Lost Films
4. Pina (Wim Wenders)
5. The Story of Film: An Odyssey (Mark Cousins)

Animated Feature:

1. The Adventures of Tintin
2. Happiness is a Warm Blanket, Charlie Brown
3. Rango
4. Winnie the Pooh

The best Peanuts special since The Great Pumpkin, seamlessly integrating the classic strips and characters into modern animation techniques (POV shots, computer-rendered crane shots) while respecting and preserving the unique stylization of Charles Schulz’s original drawings.

Animated Short:

1. La Luna

Live Action Short:

1. La belle epoque (Hou Hsiao-hsien)
2. Green Island Serenade (Hou Chi-jan)
3. Key (Leon Dai)
4. Ritual (Wang Toon)
5. Unwritten Rules (Cheng Yu-chieh)

These are all part of the Taiwan Film Festival’s compendium 10 + 10, a series of 20 short films by 10 veteran and 10 younger Taiwanese directors. A mild upset here as Hou Hsiao-hsien was the heavy favorite, but Hou Chi-jan’s swoon-inducing musical time travel picture won me over.

Film Editing:

1. A Dangerous Method
2. The Day He Arrives
3. The Deep Blue Sea
4. Life Without Principle
5. The Tree of Life

Cinematography:

1. Florian Hoffmesiter, The Deep Blue Sea
2. Gökhan Tiryaki, Once Upon a Time in Anatolia
3. Emmanuel Lubezki, The Tree of Life
4. Janusz Kaminski, War Horse
5. Saemus McGarvey, We Need to Talk About Kevin

Art Direction:

1. The Cabin in the Woods
2. The Deep Blue Sea
3. Flying Swords of Dragon Gate
4. Hugo
5. The Turin Horse

Costume Design:

1. The Artist
2. Damsels in Distress
3. The Deep Blue Sea
4. Hugo
5. Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy

Make-up:

1. East Meets West
2. The Grey
3. Super 8


Sound Mixing:
 

1. The Deep Blue Sea
2. Hugo
3. The Tree of Life
4. The Turin Horse
5. We Need To Talk About Kevin

Sound Editing:

1. Hugo
2. Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol
3. Super 8
4. War Horse
5. We Need To Talk About Kevin

Visual Effects:

1. The Cabin in the Woods
2. Flying Swords of Dragon Gate
3. Hugo
4. Rise of the Planet of the Apes
5. Wuxia

Original Score:

1. Damsels in Distress
2. Drive
3. The Muppets
4. The Tree of Life
5. The Turin Horse

Soundtrack:

1. Company
2. The Deep Blue Sea
3. Girl Walk // All Day
4. Midnight in Paris
5. The Tree of Life

I would have loved to give more awards to The Deep Blue Sea, but Davies’s screenplay and this for soundtrack will have to do. The group singalongs give the film’s love triangle a historic perspective, one of lives shattered in a community similarly shattered by the war. Hilary Hahn’s recording of Samuel Barber’s Violin Concerto makes up the rest of the soundtrack, and Davies times his camera movements and edits perfectly with the melodramatic swoops of the music. The film’s opening sequence is one of the great achievements in recent history.