Gold on the silver screen: 2012’s best movies

Advertisement

Advertise with us

It sure was easier picking a list of the best films of 2012 than it was in franchise-heavy 2011.

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Digital Subscription

One year of digital access for only $1.44 a week*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles

*Billed as $5.77 plus GST every four weeks. After 52 weeks, price increases to the regular rate of $19.95 plus GST every four weeks. Offer available to new and qualified returning subscribers only. Cancel any time.

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Add Free Press access to your Brandon Sun subscription for only an additional

$1 for the first 4 weeks*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles
Start now

*Your next Brandon Sun subscription payment will increase by $1.00 and you will be charged $17.95 plus GST for four weeks. After four weeks, your payment will increase to $24.95 plus GST every four weeks.

Opinion

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 28/12/2012 (4935 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

It sure was easier picking a list of the best films of 2012 than it was in franchise-heavy 2011.

This is encouraging, given that Hollywood always favours the familiar to the surprising. In this list, a few good filmmakers demonstrate they will not be deterred from creating something new and different… even in a Bond movie.

 

Best Drama: The Master

Writer-director Paul Thomas Anderson was not as interested in Scientology as he was in the loaded dynamic between an L. Ron Hubbard-like would-be prophet named Dodd (Philip Seymour Hoffman) and his would-be apostle Freddie (Joaquin Phoenix). The performances yield a beautiful harmony, particularly in a scene in which the two men find themselves in adjoining jail cells, acting according to their opposite instincts. The film’s final encounter between Dodd and Freddie yields to the happiest ending you’ll ever get in a P.T. Anderson movie: real carnality trumps fake spirituality.

 

Handout
Joaquin Phoenix in Paul Thomas Anderson's The Master.
Handout Joaquin Phoenix in Paul Thomas Anderson's The Master.

Best Superhero Blockbuster: Marvel’s The Avengers

This big-budget blast is a superhero movie elegantly punctuated with knee-slapping moments, whether a deft one-liner from Robert Downey’s cynical Tony Stark/Iron Man or a hilarious bit of comic-book slapstick courtesy of The Hulk. Writer-director Joss Whedon actually pulls off an impressive orchestration here, assembling the heroes of no fewer than four existing Marvel franchises and putting together a comic-book symphony.

Honourable Mention: The Dark Knight Rises

 


Disney / The Associated Press Archives
The Avengers.
Disney / The Associated Press Archives The Avengers.

Best Adaptation of a Classic: Coriolanus

Ralph Fiennes both stars in and directs of one of William Shakespeare’s more obscure classics about an arrogant military leader, adroitly adapted by John Logan in a contemporary setting. Barely released and haphazardly promoted, this felt like one of those best-kept-secret movies, but it’s thoroughly fascinating and also a rare opportunity for Gerard Butler to show he is still making movies worth seeing. (See: Worst films of the year.)

 

Best ‘toon: ParaNorman

This superbly animated feature mocks horror movie convention, yet delivers thrills of its own, utilizing some jaw-dropping stop-motion technology. It’s also great fun, and please note that even going up against old goth hand Tim Burton (Frankenweenie), it triumphs.

Honourable Mentions: Wreck-It Ralph, Brave.

 

Larry D. Horricks / The Weinstein Company / MCT
Coriolanus.
Larry D. Horricks / The Weinstein Company / MCT Coriolanus.

Best Horror Movie: Cabin in the Woods

It was a great year for Joss Whedon (The Avengers) who produced and co-scripted with director Drew Goddard a film that simultaneously provokes chills of dread even as it hilariously deconstructs the horror movie sub-genre by sub-genre. The upsetting dynamic of youth put through hell by blasé middle-aged technocrats is certainly more infuriating here than it was in The Hunger Games.

Honourable Mention: The wooze-inducing Brit thriller The Kill List.

 

Best Action Movie: The Raid: Redemption

While Hollywood is still churning out the same old same-old action (literally, in the case of Expendables 2), a Welshman named Gareth Evans went to Indonesia and blended an astonishing mix of martial arts action, political intrigue and a touch of psycho horror into a piquant, bloody stew.

Honourable mention: End of Watch, writer-director David Ayer’s cop movie evokes favourable comparisons to Joseph Wambaugh’s reality-based cop stories.

 

Best Franchise Blockbuster: Skyfall

In the 50th year of the franchise, Bond manages to be realpolitik-pertinent while paying discreet homage to the films of the past. It also comes as close as possible to taking Bond into the realm of a family drama, with Bond (Daniel Craig) and designated villain Silva (Javier Bardem) acting like feuding brothers battling over the recognition of a withholding parent (Judi Dench’s M). It’s all gorgeously shot by Roger Deakins and directed by, of all people, Sam Mendes (American Beauty).

 

Best comedy: Moonrise Kingdom

Director Wes Anderson offers up a drily funny, storybook-pretty tale of pre-teen runaways, and the adults who hunt for them. In the foreground, the movie is a celebration of youthful passion and purpose, but lurking behind that, the adults in the cast offering a wistful, sad forecast of estrangement, doubt and compromise to come.

Honourable mention: Safety Not Guaranteed, an eccentric comic meditation on second chances starring bad (mood) girl Aubrey Plaza; and Goon a raw, raucous hockey comedy that was also the best locally shot film of the year.

 

Best Horror-Action-Comedy Whatzit: Django Unchained

Quentin Tarantino finally tackles the western genre and creates a runaway stagecoach of a movie, suspenseful, shocking and grimly funny, playing off the violence and horror of slavery in the antebellum South. As usual, the multiple references to other movies add up to something entirely unique.

Honourable mention: Local film collective Astron-6’s hilarious/grisly B-movie double bill Father’s Day and Manborg.

 

Best Canadian Drama: Take This Waltz

Sarah Polley’s drama is an intelligent, sensitively rendered dissection of a dissolving marriage, with the added value is its on-the-money rendition of the heated erotic landscape of Toronto in summer.

 

Worst films of the Year

Playing for Keeps

The premise — a divorced soccer star dad tries to reconnect with his son by coaching his soccer team, only to find himself the object of prurient attention by assorted soccer moms — screams to be treated as a saucy adult sex comedy. Instead we get an insipid PG drama. Argh!

 

The Words

A literary drama by people who don’t apparently read, shot like a gauze-lensed lifestyle commercial sustained over 96 minutes.

 

Piranha 3DD

This down-market sequel to the infinitely more inventive 2010 film Piranha chews up all the rude glee out of the original. Crass and stupid — in a bad way.

 

What to Expect when You’re Expecting

This is an example of a Hollywood movie attempting to pretend familiarity with the movie-going public by playing up the common experience of first-time parenting. Unfortunately, the end product is so manipulative and so false, it ends up an exercise in sheer alienation.

 

The Raven

A nifty idea — a proto-serial killer at work in mid-19th century Baltimore is inspired by the works of Edgar Allen Poe, and it falls on the drunken, dissolute author to help track him down — is unconscionably botched by director James McTeigue. If you think a director can’t phone it in, watch this movie.

randall.king@freepress.mb.ca

Diyah Pera / Lionsgate / MCT
The Cabin in the Woods
Diyah Pera / Lionsgate / MCT The Cabin in the Woods
Randall King

Randall King
Writer

Randall King writes about film for the Winnipeg Free Press.

Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber.

Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

History

Updated on Friday, December 28, 2012 9:15 AM CST: Replaces photos

Report Error Submit a Tip

More Stories

Bring in the military now, Swan River mayor urges after unprecedented flooding

Chris Kitching 5 minute read Preview

Bring in the military now, Swan River mayor urges after unprecedented flooding

Chris Kitching 5 minute read 3:28 PM CDT

The mayor of a flood-hit town in western Manitoba is urging the federal government to move swiftly on aid for weary victims, who are seeking assurance more help is on the way.

Federal and provincial officials were scheduled to meet Friday after Premier Wab Kinew on Wednesday asked Ottawa to send military personnel to the Parkland region to assist with the response and cleanup of floods that have been described as unprecedented.

“In the days to come, and this may be within five days, the residents down there are going to need help,” Swan River Mayor Lance Jacobson said about neighbourhoods that remained under water Friday.

“They are going to need help with the cleanup. There will be volunteers, there are companies that will help to do this, too, but it’s going to be limited, and this is the reason why I said we need some military support.”

Read
3:28 PM CDT

Canada gets its chance ‘to go after a giant’

Jerrad Peters 5 minute read Preview

Canada gets its chance ‘to go after a giant’

Jerrad Peters 5 minute read 2:49 PM CDT

A very different Canada will take on Morocco in today’s World Cup rematch (12 p.m., TSN & CTV). Different in personnel; different in preparation. And very, very different in what it expects of itself.

Three-and-a-half years ago, the Canadian men’s soccer team wrapped up its group stage campaign with a 2-1 loss to the Moroccans in Qatar. Having already been beaten by Belgium and Croatia, it caught the next flight home. The Atlas Lions, meanwhile, roared into the semifinals.

Now, three-and-a-half years might not seem all that long, but when Canada takes the pitch just prior to noon in Houston its lineup will include two, possibly three players — tops — who started that game at Al Thumama Stadium.

Goalkeeper Milan Borjan has since retired from the national team, and defender Steven Vitória is assistant manager of Indonesia.

Read
2:49 PM CDT

Stony Mountain inmate sentenced to more than eight years for $1.2-M drone-delivered drug stash in cell

Erik Pindera 4 minute read Preview

Stony Mountain inmate sentenced to more than eight years for $1.2-M drone-delivered drug stash in cell

Erik Pindera 4 minute read Yesterday at 4:39 PM CDT

A Stony Mountain Institution inmate who was caught with a cache of illicit drugs worth more than $1.2 million behind prison walls played a high-level role in a “sophisticated operation” that used a drone to smuggle contraband directly to his cell window, a judge has ruled.

Read
Yesterday at 4:39 PM CDT

Police crackdown on Main a pointless, ineffective bit of street theatre

Dan Lett 5 minute read Preview

Police crackdown on Main a pointless, ineffective bit of street theatre

Dan Lett 5 minute read Yesterday at 1:48 PM CDT

Winnipeg has just taken an enormous step backward in the ongoing challenge to address the growing homeless, mental-health and addiction crises.

In a campaign that began June 24 and 25, the Winnipeg Police Service deployed significant numbers of officers to some of the roughest spots along Main Street, confronting anyone who appeared to be engaged in open drug use.

The WPS said that over the first two days, it “interacted” with more than 100 people, making 25 arrests — two for drug offences and 23 related to active warrants or breaches of court orders — and taking another 20 to hospital emergency rooms.

Three individuals were taken to the province’s controversial 72-hour detox centre, but they weren’t admitted.

Read
Yesterday at 1:48 PM CDT

Manitoba asks Ottawa for military help in ‘gargantuan’ cleanup to come in flooded Parkland region

Chris Kitching 10 minute read Preview

Manitoba asks Ottawa for military help in ‘gargantuan’ cleanup to come in flooded Parkland region

Chris Kitching 10 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 10:16 PM CDT

Evacuee Sevanna Delaronde was in disbelief after she and her partner returned to their flooded neighbourhood in Swan River to check on their home Thursday morning.

She estimated their basement was under more than a metre of water from the Swan River, which overflowed following heavy rains and forced the mandatory evacuation of several streets Wednesday afternoon.

“The water breached the windows in the night and the river is still surrounding our place,” an emotional Delaronde said.

“There’s just lots of devastation. I know a lot of people have lost more than me. They had no time to get out because it came too fast.”

Read
Updated: Yesterday at 10:16 PM CDT

The Bird River offers prime kayaking conditions in late spring

Photography by Mikaela MacKenzie 2 minute read Preview

The Bird River offers prime kayaking conditions in late spring

Photography by Mikaela MacKenzie 2 minute read 12:53 PM CDT

A two-hour drive northeast of Winnipeg, the lower Bird River is a popular draw for whitewater enthusiasts.

The water moves fast and the hazards — rapids, rocks and technical drops — are challenging.

This is not a beginner-friendly run. Paddlers need to keep their wits about them as they roll through Class 1 to 4 rapids.

The Bird River, flowing through the traditional territory of the Sagkeeng First Nation, stretches from the Ontario border, through Nopiming Provincial Park, before reaching the Winnipeg River, east of Lac du Bonnet.

Read
12:53 PM CDT