Tuesday, January 7, 2025

Best of 2024 — Movies

 Here are my top picks from our year of viewing. It's a long list but to be fair we watched  around 130 movies last year.   I think it is partially because we came across so many unexpected gems in our Oscars watching series. Favorites are listed in the order we encountered them.

As always, the movies may be old, but my viewing was brand new in 2024. In no particular order.

I began my "Best of" lists way back in 2008. To see them, check the label cloud in the sidebar under "Best of ..."


2024 BEST MOVIES

Maanaadu

This is a really great time-loop thriller with fantastic action scenes and an unexpected twist that ratchets up the suspense and action.

A Tale of Two Cities (1935)

The final movie in our 1937 Oscar winner/nominees viewing. It is considered the best cinematic telling of that story and it blew us away. Ronald Colman was simply amazing and I will now watch him in anything.

Masquerade

I always enjoy a noble impersonation story, especially The Prince and the Pauper and The Prisoner of Zenda. This is the best I've ever seen. We know all the common twists and turns but this movie keeps you in suspense even as you fall in love with the imposter more in every scene.

Alienoid I

This movie's got a lot of genres goin' on. In 14th century Korea there's a magical-mystical-quest for a holy blade. And in 2022 it's got a Terminator vibe of sorts with sf-thriller-alien invasion action. They intersect through time travel and it works. In a hold-onto-your-seat, immerse yourself in the story, crazy way. I hear part II is just as good, if not better.

Polite Society

Really enjoyable, with a fresh, fun feel that made me think of Scott Pilgrim vs. the World and The Man Who Feels No Pain. With a touch of a Get Out vibe.

Oppenheimer

I thought this was going to be a really boring movie about a lot of stuff I didn't care about. I couldn't have been more wrong. Now I understand how a 3-hour long movie about talking scientists and politicians could make so much money, break so many records, and win so many awards. 

The Good Earth (1938)

The last of the 1938 Oscar winner/nominees movies we watched and the one we'd have given the award to. This is the sort of movie that doesn't usually appeal to me - long dramatic sagas of families struggling to survive, especially since I'd read the book long ago and hadn't liked it much. This sold it though. By the end I was loving it.

(My review here.)


Laapataa Ladies
(Lost Ladies)

When two identically dressed brides, with requisite scarves covering their faces are grabbed by the wrong groom at different train stations, how will they be restored to their rightful places? Especially when neither can remember the name of their groom's hometown?


Furiosa

This could be Gulliver's Travels, the Odyssey or Iliad. The characters are archetypal, the societies encountered each tell us something of basic humanity, the themes are simple but powerful, and the adventure keeps pulling us along.

(My review here.)


The Fall Guy
The Lost City

These are two movies whose only goal is to entertain. There have been precious few of those lately from Hollywood so we were thrilled to find them. Each is silly in its own way, but each one is fun in just the right way.

Maaveeran

The story of a coward who is forced to be a brave warrior fighting a prominent corrupt real estate mogul/politician. The device that prompts his eventual change is imaginative and I enjoyed the way that he continually bleated, "Sorry, sir!" while knocking out villains. It was a fun super-hero origin story and I hope there is a sequel.

Godzilla Minus One

It manages to combine the monster movie action thrills of a Hollywood-style movie with the introspection of the first Japanese Godzilla movie. The result is simply fantastic, something that keeps you on the edge of your seat.

Freaks (1932)

I've always been afraid to watch this but when I overcame my fears I discovered an amazing movie with a sympathetic depiction of the true humanity and community that the freaks share behind the scenes.

Hansan: Rising Dragon

The prequel to The Admiral which was on last year's list. A classic underdog movie where very few ships are trying to hold off an overwhelming Japanese invasion. Based on the true naval battle which most of us have never heard of.

Goodbye, Mr. Chips

A complete surprise. I've always had the impression that this is a namby pamby, sappy story. Au contraire. It is simply lovely and not to be missed. We watched it for our 1940 Oscar winner/ nominees viewing.

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