TOP TEN TUESDAY: Kirk’s Top 10 of 2009

2009, for any number of reasons, was a long year.  It had its definite ups and its definite yada-yada-yada.  I’m not worried about that last part right now.  I’m more concerning myself with the happier times, the times I left the theater thinking to myself, “My God, this is why I love doing what I do.  This is the reason I love movies, and I cannot wait until the moment I have this invigorating feeling yet again.”  All of these movies gave me that feeling, some of them more than just once.  Here are my choices for the top 10 movies (my favorite or what I consider the best, take your pick) of 2009.

10. THE HANGOVER

When I left the theater the first time seeing THE HANGOVER, I knew I had just watched a very funny movie, a great comedy that made me laugh more and harder than any film I had seen in years.  What didn’t occur to me until I viewed the film a second time is just how nuanced and successful it is as a film.  The relationships between the characters are superb, and the dynamic of the group as a whole is what makes just about every aspect of the film work wonderfully.   Here are four guys, three goofballs of varying degrees and one straight man, the glue, if you will, who holds it all down to some kind of socially acceptable level.  Now take the straight man out and force the other three to find him.  It’s such a basic idea, and one that writers Jon Lucas & Scott Moore and director Todd Phillips execute with stunning clarity.  Besides, any film that features Mike Tyson air drumming to Phil Collins can never be bad in my book.

SCOTT’S FULL REVIEW

9. DISTRICT 9

If you were not sold that DISTRICT 9 was going to be something not to miss when you heard Peter Jackson had taken it and writer/director Neill Blomkamp under his wing, you had to have been when you saw that first teaser.  Just that awe-inspiring (and it inspired awe in me a great deal) first shot of the teaser when you saw the ship hovering above Johannesburg was selling point enough.  We knew we were in for an exciting thrill ride.  What we weren’t expecting was one of the most enjoyable and unforgettable action films to come along in ages.  Blomkamp’s film has so much more going on under the surface of the surface-level and highly bloody action.  2009 was a stellar year for sci-fi, and DISTRICT 9 was just a very important part of that.  Blomkamp and star Sharlto Copley are going to take off huge in the coming years, but it is going to be extremely difficult for either of them to top the work they put into this film.

MY FULL REVIEW

8. THE COVE

Before seeing THE COVE, all I knew was that it was about a dolphin massacre in Japan and that some considered it a horror film in the truest sense of the word.  What I didn’t realize until I sat down to watch the film was just how moving and incredibly executed an informative story it turned out to be.  Director Louie Psihoyos is not a film director by choice.  He is an activist, and his passion for what he does is seeped into every frame of this film.  It touches on so many aspects of the central story, renown dolphin trainer Ric O’Barry and his crusade to make aware the brutality going on Taiji, Japan.  The film is so  heart wrenching, particularly the final 10-15 minutes, which some animal lovers may not even be able to stomach.  Eye-opening, moving and even quite suspenseful in some places, THE COVE is a film that effortlessly succeeds in the areas every documentary should be aiming.

7. A SERIOUS MAN

I have to be honest, I was not a huge fan of Joel & Ethan Coen’s follow-up to NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN.  I felt BURN AFTER READING was comical in places, very stupid in others, and an outright let-down in even more.  With A SERIOUS MAN, they craft a thinking man’s comedy, one that has so much going on just under the surface and hands you very little in the area of tangible narrative.  It is a film that digs deep into the nature of theology, of the eternal questions that make up the universe and the overlying equation that holds us all together.  We aren’t supposed to know the answers.  We aren’t supposed to figure things out.  Just when we think we have some sort of grasp on what the universe is going to throw our way next, a tornado comes out of nowhere, and our world cuts to black.  It’s the difference between knowing the answer and understanding the equation.  The Coens get that, and that, among other things (the casting in this film is spot-on brilliance) is what makes A SERIOUS MAN such an amazing film.

TRAVIS’ FULL REVIEW

6. UP

Can we just accept the fact that, every year, without question, whatever film PIXAR has to offer will instantly go somewhere on the best of the year list?  I’m sure others have grasped that concept long before I have.  I was a naysayer.  I remember hearing about UP and its premise, seeing the first trailer, and thinking it was going to be an ever-loving borefest.  I love, love, love when I find myself wrong on that side of the coin upon seeing a film.  UP is such a heart-warming picture, an adventure of the mind, the body, and the spirit that is made for anyone who has ever dreamed of something greater.  I’ll give you a little hint about that.  Everyone, at some point in their life, has had that dream.  PIXAR knows this, and that is why they make such effortlessly brilliant films for everyone.  An adventurous and moving piece of film making, UP is yet another grand success from a an animated studio who seems able to churn out brilliant story ideas like an assembly line.

MY FULL REVIEW

5. AWAY WE GO

I knew very little about this film going in, just that it was Sam Mendes, a director who I have been following like a loyal dog since 2002’s ROAD TO PERDITION graced before my eyes, and it starred Maya Rudolph and John Krasinski.  Coming out the other side, I knew I had just seen the most uplifting and genuinely optimistic film I had seen all year.  Most “feel good” films are saccharine beyond belief, so full of fake emotion and blithesome idiocy that their hold on the audience is never more than past the first knuckle.  AWAY WE GO takes hold of you, charges you, and spits you out with an ear-to-ear grin across your face.  It does it, too, without false promises, without the hammy movie magic that makes up most films that are considered heartfelt.  It does it with three, simple things: heart, heart, and heart.  The compatibility between Krasinski and Rudolph is astounding, and they embody characters who are the ultimate antithesis to Frank and April Wheeler, the couple in Mendes’ last film, REVOLUTIONARY ROAD.  AWAY WE GO is yet another clear-cut home run from a film maker who knows how to grasp his audience and simply make them feel.  Whether that feeling is going to be cheerful or not is up to him, but, whatever he decides to do, he succeeds.

TRAVIS’ FULL REVIEW

4. FANTASTIC MR. FOX

Say what you want about the controversy surrounding how Wes Anderson handled the direction on FANTASTIC MR. FOX.  What he has achieved here is a next level, in my opinion, in stop motion animation, beautifully crafted characters and environments that aid a truly hilarious screenplay.  What’s more, FANTASTIC MR. FOX is a great film for the family, not a “family film.”  It is, in no way, dumbed down to be more user friendly or acceptable for general audiences.  If you don’t get the humor found in this film, then you simply don’t get it.  Personally, I thought it was non-stop hilarity throughout, and the voice work by actors like George Clooney, Meryl Streep, Bill Murray, and Jason Schwartzman, in particular, is just one more element of FANTASTIC MR. FOX that makes it the best, cussing, animated movie of the year.

TRAVIS’ FULL REVIEW

3. MOON

If your personal tastes in movies run parallel to mine in any way, then you love it when an independently backed science fiction film is on the horizon.  They have to rely more on story than the complex special effects that  overburden  even the simplest of narratives.  Writer/director Duncan Jones’ MOON is one such film, an incredibly compelling and emotionally driven science fiction story that is aided in no small part by luxurious yet practical effects and a hauntingly staggering performance by Sam Rockwell.  This is one film that benefits from going in blind.  The less you know about it before viewing, the better, as every twist and turn Jones’ story takes is both conceivable and unanticipated.  As confidently crafted a film as MOON is, you would not think that A) it is considered a low-budget film and B) it is Duncan Jones’ first attempt at feature film making.  Be on the lookout for this man in the future, because, dare I say it, I feel we may have another Christopher Nolan on our hands.

MY FULL REVIEW

2. INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS

After watching, or should I say “experiencing”, INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS for the first time, I couldn’t help but think I had just seen Quentin Tarantino’s best written film since PULP FICTION.  Now, some months and a few more viewings of the film later, I am of the opinion that this could easily be the best film yet of an auteur who holds back on nothing.  INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS is an outstanding film driven by both amazing dialog (as if there was any question of that) and visually stunning action.  The scenes Tarantino crafts in his first endeavor into the genre of war are filled with so much suspense and anxious expectation that he often teases you with the notion that nothing may happen.  He’s also a film maker who loves playing with his audience, and just as you are about to rest comfortably, all hell breaks loose.  Without revealing too many spoilers for the film, I will say that, for a man who loves bending and breaking the rules of film making, I cannot imagine the look of glee on Tarantino’s face when it dawned on him to break the rules of history, as well.  INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS is an amazing achievement in film craftsmanship from a writer/director who seems poised to top himself every time out of the gate.

SCOTT’S FULL REVIEW

1. 2012

Shit blowed up real good!

REAL #1. (500) DAYS OF SUMMER

If there were 1000 words that all meant emotional and genuine, I would use each and every one of them here to describe (500) DAYS OF SUMMER, probably the most authentic and moving look at a relationship in years.  Director Marc Webb, another first-time director, and screenwriters Scott Neustadter and Michael H. Weber have created and executed a luring and eloquent tale of the real way we think back on past loves.  We don’t remember them from beginning to end, from meeting to the final look upon one another.  Past loves are remembered in fits and starts, happy times here and gloomier days there, and, sometimes, even the same moments are remembered differently depending on our own attitudes at the time.  The film makers behind (500) DAYS OF SUMMER get this.  They know that, somedays, you feel like dancing in the street, like everyone around you is dressed in the same shade that matches the eyes of the person you love.  Other days, you feel like standing in your kitchen and unemotionally smashing every dish in your cupboard.  What’s more, the performances of Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Zooey Deschanel are flawless, and they are easily two of the best actors working today.  Throw in a few, exquisite songs by Regina Spektor and one of the most revealing and realistically affecting scenes that compare real life to expectation, and you have not only my favorite film of the year, but, perhaps, one of the most amazing films about love I have ever seen.

MY FULL REVIEW

Also, check out this music video that is not found in the film, but serves as a brilliant companion to it:

Review: FANTASTIC MR FOX

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FANTASTIC MR FOX is very mildly fantastic. That’s not a knock. The film is great, but it’s great in a subtle kind of way. It’s an understated comedy that can satisfy audiences both young and old. Adapted for the screen from Roald Dahl’s classic children’s book. He’s also the writer who concocted such great classic tales as CHARLIE AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY and JAMES AND THE GIANT PEACH, both of which have had their moments on screen as well.

The film also takes on the uniquely awkward and quirky dimensions that form within the mind of writer-director Wes Anderson. In case you have no idea who that is, Wes Anderson is the marvelous filmmaker who began with BOTTLE ROCKETS (some of you may still have puzzled looks on your faces) but went on to make RUSHMORE. There we go! That’s the big “Aha!” I was hoping for. Anderson went on to make THE ROYAL TENENBAUMS, THE LIFE AQUATIC WITH STEVE ZISSOU and most recently DARJEELING LIMITED.

FANTASTIC MR FOX tells the story of the title character, voiced by George Clooney. Mr. Fox is fantastic, or at least everyone thinks he is and he plays into that role… but, at what cost? Mr. Fox is good at one thing, besides being fantastic, and that one thing is stealing birds from farmers. The problem is, Mr. Fox promised his wife Mrs. Fox (Meryl Streep) he would stop the dangerous vocation of stealing birds and instead becomes a newspaper columnist, a job at which he is less suited and one that he otherwise has no passion for.

As the now not-quite-so-fantastic Mr. Fox seeks a new tree home for his family in an effort to feel more fantastic again, he discovers the perfect home… which just so happens to be conveniently located nearby the three farms, owned by three of the meanest farmers in the land. Thus begins Mr. Fox’s secret pursuit of his glory days reborn, but not without the help of his opossum friend Kylie, voiced by Wally Wolodarsky.

Initially, life is grand once again for Mr. Fox, living the high life of foul larceny, but in time allows his passion to take control of his life leading to unintended circumstances. His actions have cumulative consequences that boil to a head, putting his and other fellow wildlife families lives in danger. Will Mr. Fox be the cause of misery and destruction, or will his true fantastic nature emerge when it’s needed most?

FANTASTIC MR FOX is an altogether new kind of film for Wes Anderson, in that it is filmed using stop-motion animation. That is to say, intricately animated clay characters constructed on jointed metal armatures, a la A NIGHTMARE BEFORE CHRISTMAS, WALLACE & GROMIT, et al. However, this is not your typical Tim Burton-esque animated fantasy extravaganza. The animation in this film is splendidly old school. The style and technique used in this film is purposely rough around the edges, giving the film a familiar but fresh nostalgic charm.

On the surface, the animation in FANTASTIC MR FOX may appear a bit too simple, but what becomes immediately apparent is the attention to detail Anderson underwent in conveying facial expressions and gestures that speak volumes. The hurky-jerky motion fits in well with the dialogue, written to feel exactly like a Wes Anderson film. In fact, much of this film feels similar to elements from THE ROYAL TENENBAUMS. Both are stories about dysfunctional families, a common theme in Anderson’s films.

Some may feel like Clooney’s voice as Mr. Fox stands out a bit more than the rest of the cast, but that’s fine because it is Mr. Fox’s story after all. However, the interesting thing I noticed about this is that I did notice his voice distinctly as a recognizable voice more readily than the others… and it didn’t bother me. My theory is that Mr. Fox is very much a character similar to many that Clooney has portrayed, and has done so with great success. Clooney’s recognizable cadence and vocal tendencies served Mr. Fox extremely well.

Mr. Fox’s son Ash, voiced by Jason Schwartzman, is an awkward and different young fox, sharing many similarities in character to Richie (Luke Wilson) in TENENBAUM, who feels unloved and replaced by the arrival of Eli Cash (Owen Wilson). Eric Anderson (brother of Wes Anderson) voices cousin Kristofferson, who arrives to stay with the Fox’s and proves to be good at everything he does, causing Ash to feel overshadowed. Schwartzman’s performance as Ash is perhaps the best part of FANTASTIC MR FOX. He is funny, but is a sort of way that we can relate to and also feel a bit sorry for. Anderson does a wonderful job at bringing that certain quality about Schwartzman’s voice and delivery to life in the animation of Ash’s expressions and body language.

The cast of FANTASTIC MR FOX rounds out well, featuring Bill Murray as Badger, Owen Wilson as Coach Skip, Michael Gambon as farmer Franklin Bean and a very entertaining performance from a certain brilliant actor as Rat, who serves as Mr. Fox’s non-human nemesis. The film is filled with great dialogue, witty and smart. The humor is a type that has the audience undergo frequent but comfortable chuckles and giggles, with a wink-wink sensibility.

FANTASTIC MR FOX delivers a distinctly story book style and feeling, one of which I haven’t seen an equivalent since JAMES AND THE GIANT PEACH. The screen is filled with warm, Earthy colors and tiny, well-placed details in the set design add depth and curiosity to the experience of watching the film. Whereas Wes Anderson’s previous films are strictly intended for adult audiences, FANTASTIC MR FOX is accessible to children as well as adults. Kids will get the general idea of the story and much of the humor while also being fascinated by the animated animal characters, while adults will enjoy the life humor and human intricacies that can be read between the lines.

Top 10 Tuesday: The Best Stop Motion Characters in Movie History

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Stop motion animation, like most animation, really, is an art-form, one that has been perfected by only a chosen few.  Ever since 1898’s THE HUMPTY DUMPTY CIRCUS, the usage of stop motion animation in film has brought characters to life in far better ways than modern technology can provide.  Today, in honor of Wes Anderson’s usage of it in FANTASTIC MR. FOX, we give you our list of the 10 best stop motion characters in film history.

10. Talos from JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS
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JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS is usually cited as the high-water mark of Ray Harryhausen’s career and there is so much to justify that call. The climactic skeleton battle is the most celebrated sequence, but for sheer awe, there’s nothing like the encounter with the 200-foot-tall bronze colossus Talos. After landing on the island of Bronze, the goddess Hera, in masthead form, instructs Jason to have his men collect food and water and nothing else. Naturally, when Hercules and Hylas take one souvenir from a giant trove of gold treasures, they wake the colossal bronze statue who’s been perched on his pedestal for thousands of years guarding it. From the dramatic moment it slowly turns to look down at Hercules to Jason’s discovery of it’s literal Achilles’ heel, the battle with the titan Talos is one of Harryhausen’s finest moments. His facial expression barely changes but his cold blank stare is chilling and he walks with a rusty, arthritic gait that highlights Harryhausen’s amazing ability to instill in all his animated creations a sense of personality that is lacking in much of today’s computer-generated sludge. Clearly inspired by the legendary ‘Colossus of Rhodes’, Talos truly feels like one of the Seven Wonders of the World come to life.

9. Large Marge from PEE-WEE’S BIG ADVENTURE
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It doesn’t take the entire running length of a film to introduce a great character — the same rule applies for stop motion. Tim Burton’s directing debut, PEE-WEE’S BIG ADVENTURE, is perhaps most memorable for a five second glance at the horrific stop motion beast that is Large Marge, a truck driver who seems hell bent on scaring Paul Reubens to death and scarring many a childhood in the process. Something about the design of Marge (Just look at her! I still remember my childhood nightmares!) and the sudden nature of her appearance has seared her into my memory as much as any character on this list, so surely her place in history is well deserved.

8. The Cyclops from THE 7TH VOYAGE OF SINBAD
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THE 7TH VOYAGE OF SINBAD, the first in Ray Harryhausen’s timeless Sinbad trilogy, melds all the magical-monster-adventure-movie moments you could ever want into one amazing fantasy epic. Sinbad is heading home to Baghdad when he and his crew stop off at the isle of Colossa.   There they discover a pair of giant cloven hoof-prints and decide to follow them back to their source.  This begins the first encounter with the one-eyed titan who pummels Sinbad’s men with trees and roasts one on a spit. Harryhausen gives the fierce Cyclops an amazing sense of character. From the obvious pain on its face when Sinbad impales it in the eye with a burning spear to the way it clumsily stumbles about and is led over a cliff, the Cyclops is animated with a realistic sense of weight and balance. Both scary and thrilling, it’s the Cyclops (actually they are two) that has perhaps come to be Harryhausen most iconic creation.

7. The Kraken from CLASH OF THE TITANS
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Essentially the main antagonist for Perseus in CLASH OF THE TITANS, the Kraken remains one of the most intriguing and most memorable creatures created by the Harryhausen brand of stop motion animation.  Taken from the mythology of the Kraken from Scandinavian lore, the creature designed for this film is far different from the ancient beliefs that the creature was a giant octopus (a notion later revisited for PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN).  The Kraken found in CLASH OF THE TITANS is so monstrous and so awesome that it takes the head of Medusa to defeat it.  Don’t worry.  We’ll get to her momentarily.  The design of the Kraken is amazing, but what works to the effectiveness of its memorability even more is how little is seen of the creature until the final scene of the film.  In the early parts, when the creature is simply reeking havoc on innocent people and pushing whole cities into the sea, all we see is a giant, underwater gate and a scaly tail passing by the god Poseidon.  It is pretty much a weapon of mass destruction at the beck and call of the gods, and they use it to prove their point time and time again.  Seriously, if JAWS didn’t put most kids off swimming in the ocean (or even the deep end of a pool for some of us), this level of trauma was achieved by the Kraken.

What pains me more than anything about the remake of CLASH OF THE TITANS coming out next year is how they are going to handle the Kraken.  Medusa, Calibos, and most of the other villains of the film are sure to have similar features from the original film, even though they will mostly be CG.  What I’m fearful for with the Kraken is that it is going to be a wall of messy CG, and the design is going to be overly complicated.  Let’s hope I’m wrong.  Nonetheless, whatever they come up with will never stifle the memorability and grand achievement Harryhausen accomplished with his giant, sea creature in 1981’s CLASH OF THE TITANS.

6. The Skeleton Swordsman from THE 7TH VOYAGE OF SINBAD
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While master of effects work Ray Harryhausen would take his skeletal animation to new heights with JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS, the creepy skeleton swordsman was first seen in the 1958 film THE 7TH VOYAGE OF SINBAD. This little bugger shows up to battle Sinbad after Princess Parisa gets returned to her normal size (she’s a little smaller than a grapefruit for most of the film) and is quickly dispatched by our hero. Harryhausen has many brilliant characters tied to his name, but the skeleton swordsman is one of his most memorable, due to its creepy silence and rigid animation style. Years later, Sam Raimi paid homage to this film by including many stop motion skeletons in his ARMY OF DARKNESS. It’s also one of the best effects in Harryhausen’s career simply because it works so well within the jittery nature of stop motion itself — if skeletons did rise from the grave, I’d guess they’d move a little bit like this beastie here.

5. Ymir from 20 MILLION MILES FROM EARTH
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TWENTY MILLION MILES TO EARTH was not the first film in which Ray Harryhausen was solely responsible for the stop motion special effects but its central monster, the ‘Ymir’ (never referred to by that name in the film, it’s what Harryhausen called him and it’s stuck) is his first to generate both horror and sympathy. Starting out as Jell-O encased embryo from Venus, the Ymir lands in Italy, grows astronomically, and winds up battling tanks and an elephant. Of course, what would any good Harryhausen monster movie be without the creature getting to topple a recognizable landmark? 20 MILLION MILES TO EARTH allows the monster to run amok on top of the coliseum in Rome, which provides an epic climax for the movie. Though obviously dangerous, the half-reptile, half-human Ymir is a sad and confused monster, never intentionally hurting anyone until it’s attacked. The remarkable animation of the creature’s facial expressions communicates rage and disorientation and it’s personality set the standard for many of Harryhausen’s future creations.

4. Medusa from CLASH OF THE TITANS
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Of all the fascinating and utterly amazing, imaginative claymation creature creations from the legendary Ray Harryhausen, there is but one that was truly frightening to me as a young boy having first seen CLASH OF THE TITANS… the slithering snake-haired, ugly and scary Medusa. A woman scorned, left deformed and repulsive to the extent that if any man look upon her face they be turned to stone. Now, you try watching this at the tender age of 8-10 years right before bed and then tell me you slept soundly! Harryhausen brought ancient Greek mythology alive for me and Medusa was one of his most effective renderings of the lore borne to life on the big screen. The entire, drawn-out scene in which Perseus must out-wit the deadly Medusa is a real nail-biter. As was the same brilliant approach in films like JAWS, Medusa is not flaunted. Instead, she is hidden from view, building suspense and fear of the dark and unknown as Perseus struggles to guard himself from certain death while conjuring a way to cheat that very death. Medusa’s shrieking face, the tangled mess of serpents writhing from her disfigured head and the massive reptilian tail on which she moves… it’s all a bit much for a youngster, and even as an adult, this stop-motion character feels very, unnervingly real.

3. Wallace & Gromit from various movies
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Wallace and Gromit have been around for literally 20 years, and are two of the most loved characters in British film culture. Four short films, a handful of adventure based video games, a feature length movie, and several spin offs lead to Wallace and Gromit’s huge success. The Academy Award nominations for Best Animated Short Films as well as the eventual wins for two of the 4 short films made these characters instant classics. Their adventures are always amazing and incredibly funny. Whether it’s a trip to the moon to taste some great cheese, a penguin using their mechanical pants to perform a diamond heist, a huge run in with a lot of sheep, an evil curse putting a fun spin on werewolves, and finally a insanely funny murder mystery, Wallace and Gromit are always funny, and always a good watch.

Nick Park, their creator has made two of the best characters in animated history, the medium of stop motion simply added to their charm. Of all the entries on this list I (Kent) personally feel that these two are the best characters on it, as they’ve stood the test of time with film after film, holding up over the years with universally funny comedy. Hell… NASA has named one of it’s prototype Mars explorers after Gromit… I think it’ll be a while before King Kong is getting space craft named after him!

2. Jack Skellington from THE NIGHTMARE BEFORE CHRISTMAS
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Few stop-motion animated characters have penetrated the minds and imaginations of so many from so vast a cross-section of age, culture and influence as Jack Skellington and the world of A NIGHTMARE BEFORE CHRISTMAS. We should expect nothing less from the mind of Tim Burton and the inventive creativity of director Henry Selick. Jack Skellington remains to this day a popular holiday favorite, both in the US and abroad, consistently re-emerging in various forms of merchandise and paraphernalia. The movie is even got a 3D re-release in theaters and will certainly spawn midnight screenings for years to come. Jack Skellington is a tall, lanky skeleton in a strange tuxedo with a creepy big smile. What makes Jack such a fascinating character is that he’s torn. He’s split between his own world and the mysterious world of another that he envies, but only comes to love and appreciate both worlds after nearly ruining the other. While Jack’s body itself is a fairly limited physique, it does convey a charming and child-like air of a marionette. This in turn is in contrast to Jack’s exceedingly expressive and telling facial animation that truly makes the character come to life, bringing the more mature, adult emotions and darker moods alive on screen. While Jack Skellington makes our list, due respect must be given to the entire cast of intricately animated stop-motion characters in A NIGHTMARE BEFORE CHRISTMAS.

1. King Kong from KING KONG (1933)
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How do you inspire a master?  Actually not just one master but several, but Ray Harryhausen is the name for the day.  Willis O’Brien, the man behind the stop motion animation for KING KONG, certainly knows.  The titular character of the 1933 film is one of, if not, arguably, the, most iconic character in motion picture history, giving characters like Frankenstein and Darth Vader a run for their money.  It, without a doubt, is the most memorable creation in stop motion animation history.  Neither beast nor man, as described by the film’s adventurous director, Carl Denham, O’Brien and Merian C. Cooper’s vision of Kong made the creature ape-like but with humanistic features, as well.  He walks upright and has a somewhat human look in face and head.  The 1933, original film is the only time Kong was crafted via the usage of stop motion, though, for the sequel, SON OF KONG, released the same year, O’Brien used many of the same models to bring to life the titular offspring.  The delicacy and intricacy used in bringing King Kong to life keeps him firmly in people’s memories nearly 80 years after being shown to the public for the first time.  Simply put, the creation of the film’s centerpiece is a masterpiece, and Willis O’Brien and his crew did a brilliant job completing it.  It’s the kind of work that gives someone like O’Brien, who had previously worked on films like THE LOST WORLD and CREATION, the title of pioneer.  Willis O’Brien is a pioneer of the art-form of stop motion animation, and King Kong is his crowning achievement.  That is how you inspire a master.

‘Fantastic Mr. Fox’ Poster Debuts

fantastic mr. fox poster

Our boy Alex over at First Showing debuted this bright, new poster for Wes Anderson’s animated feature, ‘Fantastic Mr. Fox’.   While the trailer didn’t do a whole lot to amuse me, mainly due to the obviousness of its A-list voice cast, I’m still excited to see anything Anderson has in store for us.   The poster is fine.   It introduces the main cast of characters, something I’m sure we’ll be getting even more of in the character posters that are sure to come our way fairly soon.

‘Fantastic Mr. Fox’ is set for release on November 13th.

‘The Fantastic Mr. Fox’ Trailer Goes Live

fantastic mr. fox

Wes Anderson’s venture into full-fledged stop-motion filmmaking sure has a lot of stars in it.  George Clooney, Meryl Streep, Cate Blanchett, Bill Murray, Jason Schwartzman, and Own Wilson just to name a few. In fact, it’s a lot of those names that seem to keep ‘The Fantastic Mr. Fox’ from seeming like it’s going to be… well… fantastic.  The star power of the voices involved, particularly Mr. Clooney, seem to betray the quirky fun the film seems like it could be.

You can see for yourself right here:

All-in-all pretty good, but nothing worth a whistle and a click.

‘The Fantastic Mr. Fox’ is set for release on November 13th, 2009.

Source: Yahoo! Movies