A Consensus Confusion [Top 10 of 2023]

I’ve made one of these wrap-up posts every year since 2016, which save for one or two cursory paragraphs merely acted as a repository for me to list all of the films that had a strong affection during that particular release year; over on The Film Stage I also wrote a few sentences that accompanied each film on my top 10 from 2017 to 2020. However, this year I felt like expanding this into a full-fledged feature. There are a number of reasons for this: first and foremost, I recently saw that Jonathan Rosenbaum reposted one of his yearly lists for the Chicago Reader on his website and decided it was another one of his great ideas that I could poach (cf. the titling system and rating blocks at the head of each review on here); Justin Chang’s Los Angeles Times roundups played a part as well. The fact that this exercise had started to feel de rigueur and needed spicing up for me to remain interested in it certainly helped matters.

But just as important is the quality of films this year, and how I and others have received them. By my estimation, this might be the very best year I’ve experienced for film (when taken by US theatrical release) since I started truly paying attention to it back in 2016. In terms of sheer number of truly great films, only 2016 and 2019 truly compare, and I generally feel a greater passion for this year’s selection that I can’t chalk up just to recency bias; this, despite the fact that I’ve gotten around too far fewer films than in those years. Part of this is simply canny prioritization, but part of it is a potentially worrying further step in my longstanding leniency—I avoided seeing a single film I flat-out didn’t like until the last few weeks.

And yet, despite this overall positivity, there’s been a whole spate of American films where my admiration is leagues more muted than the general consensus. I was rather sorely tempted to dedicate a large section of this post simply to Armond White-esque Better Thans, making comparisons just between these excellent but mildly-to-moderately overpraised works to films that I loved more and had a greater insight into a peculiar shared subject matter, yet didn’t make it onto my top 10, but I’ll just confine myself to listing and not explaining, some more readily explicable and commented upon than others: Priscilla > Killers of the Flower Moon; Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret. > The Holdovers; Occupied City > The Zone of Interest; Nobody’s Hero > Passages; Ferrari > Oppenheimer.

With those juxtapositions in mind, it’s at least a little frustrating to see some observations that have risen up about the nature of consensus with regards to this particular year. It’s true that, to take just my list as an example, that every film—with the perennially hazy example of Hong Sang-soo—has and will continue to appear on many people’s top ten lists, though some are inevitably vastly more popular than others. But the aforementioned multitude of films that people have praised inevitably causes certain gaps in what some publication voting blocs focus on compared to others. To take just the Film Comment list—a fairly widespread group of people (which I am a part of), close to if not fully representative of a person well-versed in this year’s offerings—as an example: I could very easily put together a list of ten films that have gotten an overwhelming deal of praise in one sector or another but which did not even make the published top twenty: Oppenheimer, Barbie, The Holdovers, Past Lives, Poor Things, The Taste of Things, All of Us Strangers, The Killer, Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret., Perfect Days. The fact that this list just on its own could be the entirety of a fairly average critic’s top 10 (not to imply that this is the case) speaks to the breadth of this year, as do the pointed exclusions from the above list of a moderately well-seen acclaimed work like The Delinquents or a more divisive effort like Maestro. Sure, there are still the ideas of over-generousness and conformity to contend with, and the lack of something like A New Old Play which got infinitely less recognition than anything on my list from last or this year (Locarno premiere notwithstanding).

But I would contend that this is nothing new, that listmaking when it comes to the best films of the year always risks the potential of repeating others (especially those with a marked influence on one’s own taste). Does the film culture landscape absolutely need yet another list with, say, the Todd Haynes on it? Absolutely not. But I know that my list would not be true to myself and what I love in film if it was absent, and that’s ultimately what these gratifying endeavors entail. So, from my vantage point enmeshed in far too many different areas of this cinematic landscape, to imply in such a year packed with brilliant films that it’s the same ten films over and over again is total nonsense.

As always, this list is merely meant to capture my feelings about the films I was able to see at this moment in time, strictly limited to the films that were theatrically released in New York City this year.

1. Walk Up. Admittedly, much of my total ardor likely rests in its synthesis of my favorite period of Hong Sang-soo, stretching roughly from Oki’s Movie to Yourself and Yours, and his current occupations with aging and mortality. Haunted is the word I’ve applied over and over again to it, and it also handily describes the way it hangs over my psyche; in truth it’s a hard film for me to write about, both because I saw it only once a year ago and because the emotions it stirs up within me are themselves elusive and unsettled. If it makes for an odder and less popular number one (and top-tier Hong) than, say, The Novelist’s Film or On the Beach at Night Alone, then maybe that’s for the better; when my favorite working director can shake and confound me, it’s all the more wondrous to behold.

2. Pacifiction. A film that, despite being resolutely atmospheric, seems to be filled with nothing but indelible moments. Still resoundingly the directorial achievement of the year, Albert Serra’s effort just looks and feels like nothing else I can recall seeing, fit for an examination of all things uncanny and defamiliarized. While it takes the ghosts of colonialism and militarism potentially resurrected as its subject, the settings and hazy glow are modern yet out of present time, as is Benoît Magimel’s still best-of-the-year performance. One in the great trilogy of white-suit outsider films from the past few years (alongside Joe Alwyn in Stars at Noon and Josh O’Connor in La chimera); I’ll never stop thinking about him fruitlessly searching for a submarine with a handheld flashlight at night, or surmounting a mammoth wave on the back of a jet ski, or standing in the rain at a stadium. The sights and sounds it offers can’t be encapsulated, only witnessed.

3. Showing Up. Such a forthrightly quiet and minor film, such that it’s become something of a deserved cause célèbre for those of us who adore “smallness.” I’d trade that quiet scene of sculpting arms for most anything this year, and Kelly Reichardt’s wry comedic sensibilities go hand-in-hand with the sense of negotiating one’s own way of life, one little action or word at a time. The corporeal weight of what in other hands might be caricature or heavy-handed metaphor grounds this in a way that represents a new apex for this American treasure: creativity struggles to free itself from drudgery for all of its characters with varying degrees of visibility, and its exhale offers such a sweet reprieve.

4. Anatomy of a Fall. The most misunderstood great film of the year. I must confess that it’s been a relief to see people actually familiar with Justine Triet’s interests broadly appreciate this more than those just seeing it as the prestige Palme d’Or winner/courtroom drama, but its virtues—a uniformly strong and cunning ensemble, a multivarious approach to various means of videography, a canny understanding of the limits of narrativity in both fiction and in ostensibly truth-finding endeavors—still feel undervalued to me, even apart from the more obvious virtues of Hüller’s performance and the engrossing screenplay. If only the average example of middlebrow filmmaking was even half as entertaining or intelligent as this.

5. May December. The word that keeps coming to mind with this unexpected consensus favorite is diabolical, which for me puts it in the same quality of emotional savagery as Orphan, which is a genuine compliment. Todd Haynes’s high-wire act straddling the nasty and the painful, the queasy and the tender—all often in the same scene—never yields its secrets or offers an easy explanation, and what emerges in its wake is a ferociously brilliant moment-by-moment interrogation of perception augmented by a great modulation of dramatic interrogations. Maybe it’s this mix of ruthlessness and generosity that is exciting so many people, maybe it’s the delicious sparring between two stars and the ingenue caught between them; whatever it is, I’m glad its place is secure.

6. Fallen Leaves. Admittedly, my general lack of firsthand familiarity with Aki Kaurismäki’s world might mean that I’m overvaluing this. But it’s also true that my ever-increasing passion for this film led me to overhaul the bottom half of this list just before I began writing this piece. More than anything it’s an elemental film, one that weirdly reminded me of nothing less than Letter From an Unknown Woman in terms of its sheer appeal towards me with respect to its purity of emotion and expression. The detail of work, the deployment of Ukraine-Russia war broadcasts and a future-dated calendar as counterpoint to the simple pleasures of a karaoke rendition or a postmodern zombie film, the sublime ease of a piece of paper blown into the gutter: such things are to be cherished, and that feeling has only strengthened.

7. Afire. Really a marvel of slow genre shift, from scabrous satire about the creative process and artist myopia to its rapprochement within the context of catastrophe. Even taking into account the protean nature of the films of Christian Petzold I have gotten around to, I wasn’t prepared for his willingness to dive into tragedy after making so many (deserved) jokes at his hapless protagonist’s expense, working on a series of quiet revelations with each character that more than earns its deliberate invocations of La Collectionneuse. That Sakamoto needle drop and sudden intrusion of voiceover herald a fraught relationship with fiction and swell of a blindsided, choked-up sensation that reminded me of nothing less than Romancing in Thin Air; I moved this up along with its predecessor and still might be underrating it.

8. De Humani Corporis Fabrica. Even allowing for my definite preference for the experiential documentary above all else, Véréna Paravel and Lucien Castaing-Taylor’s latest project got to me immediately. It isn’t just the abstract interior views of fellow members of our species; the corridors of the hospital are treated as every bit an object of aesthetic fascination as its purported subject. Indeed, the film continually expands outwards by focusing inwards; as the bodies accumulate, I felt only more aware of how weird it is that we’re alive and breathing at all, able to experience the hopeful betterment of others. One of the best, most mystifying final scenes of the year too, full stop.

9. Youth (Spring). Like with #6, I don’t know exactly how much of my appreciation for Wang Bing’s film comes from my total lack of experience with his work, which stings doubly considering I had meant to watch a lot of his work this year. Hopefully that’ll happen in the next half month, but purely based on this, the experience of his cinema is more legitimately engaging and invested in the interactions of individuals than I expected. The sly construction of mini-narratives, the rough-and-tumble camerawork to capture the motion of its subjects, the abbreviated epilogue; there’s a degree to which surprise can form an outsized influence on this list, but this formed three and a half of the most shockingly engaging hours I experienced all year.

10. Asteroid City. This was the other big adjustment on the list, which I’m already reconsidering. By far my favorite Wes Anderson since his masterpiece The Grand Budapest Hotel nine years ago, it’s not that I’ve come to love it significantly less than signified by its prior place just outside the top five, just that these other films have since taken up more space in my brain. There’s something almost too assured about its conceit that has eluded Anderson in the past, a delicate interplay between two strands of fiction still capable of the outpourings of feeling, complex blocking, and surprising cast configurations that will always be absent from his imitators. And the bass clarinets swelling as the camera soars skywards as the green-bathed spectators stare in awe at the spaceship is a thing of immense beauty.

As I’ve repeatedly made clear, this was a tremendous year for film, and I’m still surprised I couldn’t make room for the labyrinthine Argentine triumphs of Laura Citarella’s Trenque Lauquen and Rodrigo Moreno’s The Delinquents, Hong’s genuinely radical in water, or Michael Mann’s exquisitely thorny Ferrari. Some other extraordinarily worthy releases: Frederick Wiseman’s Menus-Plaisirs—Les Troisgros (finally one of his I can fully embrace), Alice Rohrwacher’s La chimera (myth as all-consuming quest), Miyazaki Hayao’s How Do You Live? (the masterpiece-hailers and totally confounded are both probably right), Steve McQueen’s Occupied City (my favorite of his films, a thoroughly considered structural marvel), Dustin Guy Defa’s The Adults (utterly gutting sibling dynamics and self-loathing), James N. Kienitz Wilkins’s Still Film (image interrogation as hilariously logorrheic auto-crosstalk x4), Ashley McKenzie’s Queens of the Qing Dynasty (a miracle of face and eye acting), Christopher McQuarrie’s Mission: Impossible—Dead Reckoning Part One (ludicrously fun in the spirit of Feuillade), Sofia Coppola’s Priscilla (curdled iconography as its own off-kilter glamor), Andrew Haigh’s All of Us Strangers (surprisingly fascinating and moving in its adaptation choices), Alain Gomis’s Rewind & Play (scintillating archival footage, equal parts indignant questioning and genius performance), Huang Ji & Otsuka Ryuji’s Stonewalling (one of the definitive films about the gig economy *and* pandemic), Soi Cheang’s Mad Fate (wonderfully insane spirituality, even if it isn’t as singular as his Limbo which I thought was eligible for much of the year), and Kelly Fremon Craig’s Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret. (genuinely felt studio filmmaking that engages with its period). May 2024 bring both just as many strong films and better results in the things and places that matter.

The People You’re Paying to Be in Cars [FERRARI]


Photo: NEON

Ferrari

Rating **** Masterpiece

Directed by Michael Mann

Ferrari, Michael Mann’s first film in eight years, begins with a sequence that I’m fairly sure is without precedent in his oeuvre. It is a prologue that captures Enzo Ferrari (Adam Driver)’s lesser-known beginnings as a racecar driver, made to look akin to a silent film (within the confines of Mann’s usual Scope frames). At least some of these images appear to be archival from the early 1920s, as cars barrel down at great speed and sometimes smash into each other as spectators eagerly look on. But a few images stick out: those that distinctively have Driver within the frame. It isn’t just his status as the star of the film or the oft-commented-upon odd (and very modern) appearance of his visage that “take” the viewer out of the action of the film: it is the introduction of what may be green-screen or some other form of visual effects to emulate images taken likely a full century before. The result is something thoroughly uncanny, not unlike the emulated photographs of the era in Martin Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon, but Mann’s heightened artifice (and lower budget) take things a step further: it becomes difficult to establish what belongs to then and what is inextricable from now.

Mann’s period films since the turn of the century and his switch to digital have often flirted with such concepts, from the startling insertions of digital footage of Will Smith as Ali jogging at night to the full-on, never not galvanizing HD cinematography in Public Enemies right at the cusp of its widespread adoption. But it’s worth enumerating the many ways Ferrari differs from virtually all of his past works, even as it remains to be seen whether this is a full-on creative reset for the octogenarian or simply a one-off moment of exploration. For one, this is the first film of his (with the exception of The Keep) that doesn’t take more than a quick stop in a major city. Set almost entirely within the city of Modena, Italy (population ~185,000), where Ferrari lived and made his work, it feels like a provincial town when stacked up against Chicago, Los Angeles, Hong Kong and the other metropolises that have populated his work, especially since Ferrari is such a dominant figure, either employing or begrudgingly enjoying notoriety from seemingly every person on screen.

For another, this is the first Mann film where the protagonist is not the main participant in the “action” of the film. Ferrari’s frequent moniker Il Commendatore (“The Commander”) cuts both ways: he wields an enormous amount of influence over how his men and cars behave, who’s in contention, and so on and so forth, but after the prologue—which pointedly comes before both the title card and intertitles explaining his situation at the beginning of the film—his driving is confined to the strictly quotidian, including most prominently his covert shuttling between his residences housing his wife Laura (Penélope Cruz) and his mistress Lina Lardi (Shailene Woodley) and son out of wedlock. For a Mann protagonist to no longer have access to the juice is a strange sensation, but one that is a) leavened by Driver and Mann’s customarily dynamic engagement with their material and b) in keeping with the different perspective that Mann adopts from his past work.

As scripted posthumously by Troy Kennedy Martin, Ferrari‘s narrative compression into a couple of weeks in 1957, as opposed to the grand sweep of past Mann biopics, applies doubly towards the juggling of his two home lives and his work stresses. As illustrated most vividly in an early scene where Ferrari and his employees time rival Maserati’s attempt at a record while across town at morning mass, the private and public things that must be done all flow into one continuous sense of drive, something which applies just as much to the commander as it does to his underlings. Ferrari, in explaining the competitive will to beat the other driver, utters the key quote of the film that “two objects cannot occupy the same point in space at the same moment of the time,” and indeed Mann’s films have always been a question of focus, of shutting out other considerations in any given moment to focus on the task at hand. Whether Ferrari is facing off against his wife for control of the company built together, or wrestling with Lina’s request for public acknowledgment of their child, he (and Mann) approaches it with the same level of hard-nosed negotiation and unerring pragmatism that he does a neck-and-neck race.

Ferrari ultimately builds to a cataclysmic bloodshed, putting a capstone on the death drive encapsulated by the media’s characterization of our Man as a “Saturn devouring his children,” and it’s oddly fitting that this film of constant motion just stops, recalling the deliberately incomplete All the President’s Men as strangely as its cemetery-set final scene is reminiscent of Elle. Other Mann films, most of all his most recent Blackhat, culminate with a certain transcendence, a triumphal act of physical and emotional boundary-pushing (Ali, Collateral) or an escape in life or death for at least one part of a coupling (Miami Vice, Heat, Public Enemies). But here, in a society and culture where everybody knows his name, Ferrari has no choice but to press on.

Favorite Film by Year

Favorite film per release year.
Favorite film per release year without films released more than two years after their premiere year.

1895: Workers Leaving the Lumière Factory in Lyon (Louis & Auguste Lumière)
1896: The Arrival of a Train at La Ciotat Station (Louis & Auguste Lumière)
1897:
1898:
1899:

1900:
1901:
1902: A Trip to the Moon (Georges Méliès)
1903:
1904: The Mermaid (Georges Méliès)
1905: The Black Imp (Georges Méliès)
1906:
1907: Tunneling the English Channel (Georges Méliès)
1908:
1909:

1910: The Unchanging Sea (D. W. Griffith)
1911:
1912: The Musketeers of Pig Alley (D. W. Griffith)
1913: Fantômas (Louis Feuillade)
1914: Kid Auto Races at Venice (Henry Lehrman)
1915: Les Vampires (Louis Feuillade)
1916:
1917:
1918: Tih-Minh (Louis Feuillade)
1919:

1920:
1921:
1922: Dr. Mabuse, the Gambler (Fritz Lang)
1923: Safety Last! (Fred C. Newmeyer & Sam Taylor)
1924: Greed (Erich von Stroheim)
1925: Seven Chances (Buster Keaton)
1926: The General (Buster Keaton & Clyde Bruckman)
1927: Napoléon (Abel Gance)
1928: Spione (Fritz Lang)
1929: Man With a Movie Camera (Dziga Vertov)

1930: Morocco (Josef von Sternberg)
1931: M (Fritz Lang)
1932: Shanghai Express (Josef von Sternberg)
1933: The Testament of Dr. Mabuse (Fritz Lang)
1934: The Goddess (Wu Yonggang)
1935: Ruggles of Red Gap (Leo McCarey)
1936: Rose Hobart (Joseph Cornell)
1937: The Awful Truth (Leo McCarey)
1938: Holiday (George Cukor)
1939: Only Angels Have Wings (Howard Hawks)

1940: His Girl Friday (Howard Hawks)
1941: Citizen Kane (Orson Welles)
1942: The Magnificent Ambersons (Orson Welles)
1943: Meshes of the Afternoon (Maya Deren & Alexander Hammid)
1944: Meet Me in St. Louis (Vincente Minnelli)
1945: The Clock (Vincente Minnelli)
1946: Notorious (Alfred Hitchcock)
1947: Out of the Past (Jacques Tourneur)
1948: Letter From an Unknown Woman (Max Ophuls)
1949: Late Spring (Ozu Yasujiro)

1950: La Ronde (Max Ophuls)
1951: Diary of a Country Priest (Robert Bresson)
1952: The Golden Coach (Jean Renoir)
1953: Duck Amuck (Chuck Jones)
1954: Seven Samurai (Kurosawa Akira)
1955: The Night of the Hunter (Charles Laughton)
1956: A Man Escaped (Robert Bresson)
1957: Pyaasa (Guru Dutt)
1958: Vertigo (Alfred Hitchcock)
1959: Rio Bravo (Howard Hawks)

1960: Breathless (Jean-Luc Godard)
1961: Last Year at Marienbad (Alain Resnais)
1962: La Jetée (Chris Marker)
1963: Muriel, or the Time of Return (Alain Resnais)
1964: Gertrud (Carl Th. Dreyer)
1965: Pierrot le Fou (Jean-Luc Godard)
1966: All My Life (Bruce Baillie)
1967: The Young Girls of Rochefort (Jacques Demy)
1968: Death by Hanging (Oshima Nagisa)
1969: L’Amour fou (Jacques Rivette)

1970: Zorns Lemma (Hollis Frampton)
1971: A Touch of Zen (King Hu)
1972: Out 1: Spectre (Jacques Rivette)
1973: The Mother and the Whore (Jean Eustache)
1974: Céline and Julie Go Boating (Jacques Rivette)
1975: India Song (Marguerite Duras)
1976: News From Home (Chantal Akerman)
1977: Eraserhead (David Lynch)
1978: Perceval le Gallois (Éric Rohmer)
1979: Dirty Ho (Lau Kar-leung)

1980: Simone Barbès or Virtue (Marie-Claude Treilhou)
1981: Spacy (Ito Takashi)
1982: Blade Runner (Ridley Scott)
1983: Sunless (Chris Marker)
1984: Shanghai Blues (Tsui Hark)
1985: Taipei Story (Edward Yang)
1986: Peking Opera Blues (Tsui Hark)
1987: Eastern Condors (Sammo Hung)
1988: My Neighbor Totoro (Miyazaki Hayao)
1989: A City of Sadness (Hou Hsiao-hsien)

1990: Trust (Hal Hartley)
1991: A Brighter Summer Day (Edward Yang)
1992: Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me (David Lynch)
1993: Naked (Mike Leigh)
1994: Chungking Express (Wong Kar-wai)
1995: Heat (Michael Mann)
1996: Comrades: Almost a Love Story (Peter Chan)
1997: Cure (Kurosawa Kiyoshi)
1998: The Hole (Tsai Ming-liang)
1999: Beau Travail (Claire Denis)

2000: A One and a Two… (Edward Yang)
2001: Mulholland Dr. (David Lynch)
2002: Femme Fatale (Brian De Palma)
2003: Goodbye, Dragon Inn (Tsai Ming-liang)
2004: Tropical Malady (Apichatpong Weerasethakul)
2005: L’Enfant (Jean-Pierre & Luc Dardenne)
2006: Syndromes and a Century (Apichatpong Weerasethakul)
2007: The Trap: What Happened to Our Dream of Freedom (Adam Curtis)
2008: Sparrow (Johnnie To)
2009: Oxhide II (Liu Jiayin)

2010: Mysteries of Lisbon (Raúl Ruiz)
2011: The Day He Arrives (Hong Sang-soo)
2012: Like Someone in Love (Abbas Kiarostami)
2013: Stray Dogs (Tsai Ming-liang)
2014: Phoenix (Christian Petzold)
2015: Mountains May Depart (Jia Zhangke)
2016: Yourself and Yours (Hong Sang-soo)
2017: Twin Peaks: The Return (David Lynch)
2018: La Flor (Mariano Llinás)
2019: Martin Eden (Pietro Marcello)

2020: Days (Tsai Ming-liang)
2021: Drive My Car (Hamaguchi Ryusuke)
2022: Walk Up (Hong Sang-soo)
2023: The Beast (Bertrand Bonello)
2024: Between the Temples (Nathan Silver)

2023 Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards Ballot

Career Achievement
(3) Nathaniel Dorsky
(2) Sammo Hung
(1) Nakadai Tatsuya

The Douglas Edwards Experimental/Independent Film/Video Award
(3) in water
(2) Youth (Spring)
(1) Where

Best Cinematography
(3) Pacifiction
(2) Limbo
(1) in water

Best Music/Score
(3) Asteroid City
(2) May December
(1) Afire

Best Production Design
(3) Fallen Leaves
(2) Asteroid City
(1) La chimera

Best Editing
(3) Anatomy of a Fall
(2) The Delinquents
(1) Priscilla

Best Animation
(3) The Boy and the Heron

Best Lead Performance
(5) Benoît Magimel, Pacifiction
(4) Sandra Hüller, Anatomy of a Fall
(3) Michelle Williams, Showing Up
(2) Laura Paredes, Trenque Lauquen
(1) Michael Cera, The Adults

Best Supporting Performance
(5) Hong Chau, Showing Up
(4) Swann Arlaud, Anatomy of a Fall
(3) Rachel McAdams, Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret.
(2) Pahoa Mahagafanau, Pacifiction
(1) Pom Klementieff, Mission: Impossible—Dead Reckoning Part One

Best Screenplay
(3) Walk Up
(2) Anatomy of a Fall
(1) May December

Best Documentary/Non-Fiction Film
(3) Occupied City
(2) Menus-Plaisirs—Les Troisgros
(1) Rewind & Play

Best Director
(3) Albert Serra, Pacifiction
(2) Michael Mann, Ferrari
(1) Justine Triet, Anatomy of a Fall

Best Picture
(3) Walk Up
(2) Pacifiction
(1) Showing Up

Best Film Not in the English Language
(3) Fallen Leaves
(2) Afire
(1) Anatomy of a Fall

New Generation
(3) Ashley McKenzie, Queens of the Qing Dynasty
(2) Dustin Guy Defa, The Adults
(1) Huang Ji & Otsuka Ryuji, Stonewalling