This year was a good year for movies. At least for me. These days I tend not to visit the cinema too often – it’s much easier, and less stressful to wait the few months until the movie comes out on DVD and rent or, in some cases, buy it and watch from the quiet comfort of my home with my flat panel and my surround sound and only my cats to disturb my enjoyment of the movie. As my brother pointed out to me, it’s often cheaper to buy a movie on Blu Ray than it is to go to a movie and pick up a soda.
But I digress. My point is that this year, I went to see only a handful of movies in the theater, and they were all amazing. 2009 was by far the least disappointing movie year I can remember.
My top 3 this year were easy to pick (though I don’t feel like ranking them). UP was one of the best movies I’ve seen in a long time and rose to the top of the already great Pixar lineup. Last year’s Wall-E hit my sci-fi tender spots, but was a bit heavy-handed with its message. UP on the other hand was tender and heartbreaking and yet filled with adventure and humor and I thought the relationship between Carl and Russell was handled really well. AND, it had a zeppelin, and dogfights (literally). As jaded as I sometimes feel I am, Pixar movies are always refreshing.
Inglourious Basterds was another surprise at the theater. I went to see Tarantino’s latest movie, but I didn’t expect to see what was perhaps his best. I was spoiled as to the certain surprise at the end before seeing it, but that didn’t really matter. And as fun as it was to watch the story of the Basterds themselves, far more engrossing was the story of Shosanna and her revenge.
Moon rounds out my top three, not just one of the best films of the year, but one of the best science fiction films I’ve ever seen. Twenty or so minutes into the movie, I thought I saw where it was going and was expecting disappointment, but the movie took a different turn, and I realized that it wasn’t about a twist or a plot point, it was about a man and his situation and that made the movie work. And despite a shoestring budget, the movie accounted itself well with the effects, building on predecessors such as 2001 and yet adding something to the canon.
As honorable mention, I’d add The Hangover to the list as the best comedy of the year. I went to see this in the theater and was laughing throughout the whole thing. It probably helps that I have a penchant for movies that take place in the space of one day or night, but it’s rare for a movie to make me laugh so much. I don’t really have a lot to say about it except for that.
So, now I’ll open this up to anyone reading this – what were your favorite movies of the year?