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There Will Be Blood

With releases like There Will be Blood, No Country for Old Men, Michael Clayton, Charlie Wilson’s War, Atonement, Eastern Promises and Juno, 2007 is one of the most memorable years for movies in the last few decades, and the previous list is just the main Academy Award nominees. It also doesn’t hurt that 2007 gave us 28 Weeks Later, Rescue Dawn, Superbad, Knocked Up, In the Valley of Elah, and Gone Baby Gone.

One film that is often lost in the award-shuffle of 2007 is David Fincher’s Zodiac, a film released on March 2nd of 2007, rivaling a film like Wild Hogs, one with more problems than it takes one-hundred minutes to remedy. While such a lost weekend could have propelled Zodiac to the top, instead, it was quickly forgotten about and overshadowed by other great releases. Does the acting rival Daniel Day Lewis’ portrayal of Daniel Plainview? No, but not many performances have or can. Likewise, the screenplay isn’t as riveting as the quiescent pace of McCarthy’s No Country for Old Men or Sorkin’s Gatling-gun dialogue in Charlie Wilson’s War. But, after watching Zodiac again for the first time, I was just as shaken as I was in a dark theater in March of 2007, particularly because the film, like the case, has no closure. In a testament to the idyllic fairness – and inherent flaws – within the justice system, there is a pile of circumstantial evidence fingering Arthur Leigh Allen as the Zodiac Killer, but there is no proof, only assumption and logic, two things that are hardly admissible in court.

And this lack of closure is what makes Zodiac a great film, not because it leaves the viewer hanging like the top in Inception, but because the lack of closure is the plight of every character in the film, a common affliction that persists from December 1968 through 1991, which fashions Zodiac as less of a crime-thriller and more of an investigation into the constants within an ever-changing world. In other words, amidst the political, social, personal, and emotional chaos exhibited in and alluded to within Zodiac, the one element that remains unchanged is the Zodiac Killer, and this further helps to build, define, and ultimately prophesy the destruction of the main characters.

The opening scene of Zodiac is set in 1969, a year rife with conflict that signifies the recent assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., the height of the Vietnam War, the resurgence of Richard Nixon, and the eventual Manson murders before entering a tumultuous decade of social and civil unrest culminating in Nixon’s resignation, gas crises, and the Iranian conflict.

From the outset, the connotations of the time period are ripe from which the viewer can pick and choose, but amidst all of this chaos, the Zodiac Killer methodically makes his mark, toying with the police and the public by using three newspaper publications, the Vallejo Times-Herald, the San Francisco Chronicle, and the San Francisco Examiner, to promote and recap his late-night – and at times daylight – escapades through San Francisco, Napa, and Vallejo. The Zodiac’s direct contact with the three newspapers is established through three separate cryptographs that he sends and challenges people to decipher. While the puzzles are solved by a schoolteacher and his wife, the rudimentary nature of them creates a false persona of the Zodiac, which is what ultimately throws each character into chaos.

As a society, we praise the predictable, that which we can see coming, and that which we can negotiate, so the quickly solved cryptographs imagines the Zodiac as a nutjob destined to falter under his own sloppiness, creating the illusion that inspectors David Toschi (Mark Ruffalo) and Bill Armstrong (Anthony Edwards) are in step with the serial killer; however, as more “NIXON” buttons appear, headlines chart the troop-withdrawal from Vietnam, and sky scrapers are erected through time-elapsed footage, the years drip on, and the Zodiac letters keep pouring in, but the inspectors and the press are still stymied by the killings, unable to cross-reference enough of the gathered evidence with any suspect to fortify a solid lead. And this is one of the more interesting elements within Zodiac: the outside world is placed in the shadow of the killings, suggesting that perhaps in a decade of tumultuousness, society needs a constant focus, and if that focus is a serial killer, so be it; it still allays the impending collapse of society and the self, which is illustrated most prominently in Troschi’s downfall, Graymith’s divorce, and Avery’s submergence into bottles of booze and mounds of cocaine.  

However, this manhunt also fosters senses of self-implosion, particularly when the prime suspect Arthur Leigh Allen, who also happens to be the lone, real-life suspect in the open cases in Vallejo, Napa County, and Salano County but who died of a fatal heart attack in 1992 before he was questioned, is interrogated by inspectors Armstrong and Troschi as well as Sargeant Mulanax. Throughout the questioning, everything seems to fall in place, from the killer’s ambidextrousness, Allen’s possession of a Zodiac-brand watch, and the very size and make of shoes worn by the killer, but this potential arrest dissipates when the time needed to procure a warrant is prolonged because the standing judge cites a lack of physical evidence, deeming everything circumstantial, allowing Allen to move to a trailer park in Santa Rosa and ditch anything that might implicate him in the crimes. This turn of events ultimately drives Armstrong to transfer and Mulanax and Troschi to focus on other cases.

The Zodiac Killer had previously been the impetus for Dirty Harry, and while the film is not a direct telling of the case, the plot points of a serial killer named Scorpio ripping his way through San Francisco and ultimately threatening to blow up a bus full of children allegorically moors to the two together. While the tones of the two films are rather different, one plot point that stands out is the man who ultimately fingers the villain. The ending of Dirty Harry is classic, and has prompted us all to spur another to “make [our] day,” but the characters of Harry Callahan and Robert Graysmith (Jake Gyllenhaal) are similar in that they both symbolize the vigilante justice-seeker who goes outside of their dictated realm in order to uncover justice. Granted, Callahan is a San Francisco inspector, but as his sobriquet suggests, he plays with less regard for the rules than most, but in the end, this issue is negated because he gets results. Similarly, Graysmith, who was originally a cartoonist for The Chronicle and ultimately went on to pen the bestselling books Zodiac and Zodiac Unmasked: The Identity of America’s Most Elusive Serial Killer, works outside of the law – and without any sort of legal permission — on his quest to uncover the killer’s identity. Often, his lack of access to files disrupts his investigation, but those bound to serve and protect aid him by decrying “I certainly can’t tell you to talk to Captain Ken Narlow. N-a-r-l-o-w.” While Callahan is much more of a badass, he and Graysmith are both working outside of established parameters to get results.

In that sense, Zodiac and Dirty Harry are also thematically linked in that they both look at the impediments created by jurisdictional territory. Clearly, this is not to suggest that neither David Fincher nor Don Siegel are suggesting a dismantling of the legal system, but rather that a fluidly mobile serial killer capable of spilling blood over two hundred miles of the California coast can often out-maneuver three departments mired in bureaucratic and territorial red tape that often keeps evidence out of the other’s hands – not so much intentionally, but by default of the system itself. This is made quite clear as David Toschi, Captain Ken Narlow (Donal Logue), and Sgt. Jack Mulanax (Elias Koteas) communicate through phone conversations that invariably include a variation of the line “Why didn’t you give us this information?” In Zodiac, the lack of communication between law enforcement in amplified, particularly when it is the rogue newpaper reporters, particularly Paul Avery (Robert Downey Jr.) who seems to uncover much of the evidence that is being withheld from other precincts and departments. The unfortunately snag here is that the public announcement of evidence, particularly anything identity-related promotes the likelihood of a mistrial for any suspect accused of being the Zodiac.

In the end, the mobility of the Zodiac and the jurisdictional tether on each of the inspectors allows the killer to perpetuate chaos in the face of a system established to prevent the spread of chaos, dichotomously exposing the social benefits for the wrongly-accused, but the numerous loopholes and left open for rational criminal in an irrational environment.

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Daniel Plainview Art

by Jared Wade on December 21, 2010 · 0 comments

This is excellent.

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This is pretty much the best idea going. The Alamo Drafthouse (along with jeans-maker Levi’s) is showing nine different classic flicks in (or around) the locations where they take place. Some settings are more spot on than others — Jackie Brown in LA’s Del Amo Fashion Mall is perfection — but the whole concept is just fantastic.

I believe they have done this in past years as well, but this is the first I’m hearing of it and, I believe, this is the most ambitious, nationwide tour. (The 2008 lineup, for example, was all pretty local to Tejas.)

Here’s the full list of movies (each of which got one of the sweet “alt posters” shown above), dates and location:

  • August 6 JACKIE BROWN, at Los Angeles’ Del Amo Fashion Mall
  • August 7 DIRTY HARRY, at San Francisco’s Washington Square Park
  • August 8 THERE WILL BE BLOOD, at California’s Kern County Museum
  • August 8 CONVOY, at the Ft. Davis drive-in in Las Vegas, N.M.
  • August 13 THE BLUES BROTHERS, at Chicago’s Joliet Prison
  • August 14 ROBOCOP, at Detroit’s Russell Industrial Center
  • August 19 ROCKY I-III, at the Philadelphia Art Museum
  • August 20 ON THE WATERFRONT, at Hoboken’s Pier A
  • August 27 THE GODFATHER PART II, on a Manhattan rooftop near Little Italy

I’ve seen all except Convoy (which is playing in a double feature with Red Dawn, which is horrible) and would probably go to see any of the others if they were local. Rest assured, I will definitely be enjoying The Godfather II, easily one of the finest ten movies ever made, atop a roof in Little Italy. Vito-style.

Hell, I may even break my personal code of ethics and step foot into New Jersey to watch Marlon Brando fail at being a contender.

* … and Red Dawn

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I’m only calling this “The 20 Best Movies of the Decade” since that’s what everyone else is calling their lists. Because more than attempting to rank the “best” films objectively, this is probably closer to something that should be called “My 20 Movies of the Decade.”

I mean, I’m not just putting random movies on here that I really like yet probably aren’t good (e.g., Death Race, The Fountain or Step Brothers), so the overall quality of the film-making is very important. But I’m also not someone who is going to sit down and watch the Lord of the Rings trilogy again anytime soon, so that’s not going to outrank something that is both really well made and I like better (like, say, A History of Violence) even if Peter Jackson had the greater achievement in the canon of cinematic history.

(Meanwhile, this obviously isn’t a exhaustive survey of movies since I’m just one dude and haven’t even seen stuff like Pan’s Labyrinth, Wall-E, Spider Man 2 (hated the first one though), Oldboy, In Bruges, Brick or The Prestige, among many others.)

On to the list…

#20. Amélie (2001)

Directed by Jean-Pierre Jeunet

I’m only including this ahead of 25th Hour, Charlie Wilson’s War, Thank You For Smoking, Iron Man, Requiem for a Dream, I Heart Huckabees, 28 Days Later…, Michael Clayton, Memento and The Hurt Locker so that chicks don’t think I’m some misogynist. I suppose I shouldn’t call them “chicks” if I want this plan to work though, eh? Still, I feel like there has to be some sort of venn diagram intersection between (a) chicks that don’t mind that I call them chicks, (b) chicks that think I’m sensitive and deep for calling Amélie one of the best movies of the decade, and (c) chicks that dig the clever way I was able to add 10 honorable mention movies to this list because I was too much of coward to just narrow it down to 20.

#19. Snatch (2000)

Directed by Guy Ritchie

A have a theory that whichever of Snatch or Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels you saw first is the one you like more. And according to some survey results that I just made up, it’s been true among 85% of the people who have seen both movies that I’ve brought this up to at a bar (with a margin of error of ± 2 Jameson shots). There’s a similar theory that applies to Hot Fuzz and Shaun of the Dead, but I’m not a huge fan of either of those so I haven’t bothered surveying that many people. Although, I saw Hot Fuzz first and think it’s better so … case closed.

#18. Zoolander (2001)

Directed by Ben Stiller

Complete absurdity. Done about as well as complete absurdity can be done.

#17. The Savages (2007)

Directed by Tamara Jenkins

If not for Gust Avrakotos from Charlie’s Wilson’s War, this might be might favorite character ever played by Philip Seymour Hoffman, who probably gets my vote for Actor of the Decade. The Savages is just a small movie about one theme (the modern guilt/difficultly surrounding elder care decisions) that stays on point, doesn’t meander at all and is done really well. Compared to all the other clusterfucks of complexity that embarrass everyone involved by attempting to make sweeping, pretentious proclamations that sum up the totality of our modern world with a neat little bow on top (like, say, Syrianna or Crash), a film like The Savages is just a pleasure to watch. As Einstein said: “Make things as simple as possible, but not simpler.” I hear he was a smart dude.

#16. Up in the Air (2009)

Directed by Jason Reitman

I hope this isn’t just recency talking, but I just saw this last week and was floored. George Clooney and Vera Farmiga couldn’t have been better and Jason Reitman’s extremist look at the balancing act we all must maintain between self-fulfillment/career advancement and the other people in our lives makes one of the better comic tragedies you’ll ever see, even if the real-life interviews at the end were misplaced and unnecessary.

#15. Ocean’s Eleven (2001)

Directed by Steven Soderbergh

I’m not sure glib has ever been done better. And that plus a cool, intricate caper plot and an ensemble cast full of enjoyable characters equals good times for all.

#14. The Wrestler (2008)

Directed by Darren Aronofsky

Staples to back? Check. Razor blade to the forehead? No problem. Treating a deli counter job like it’s Wrestlemania XIV? Why not. Being completely unable to change as a human being, forfeiting any chance you will ever have at forming a relationship with your daughter and brazenly ignoring the last potential vestige you have at living a meaningful existence with another human just so you can instead double dog dare your heart not to explode in the ring? Definitely.

#13. X2 (2003)

Directed by Bryan Singer

I love me some Iron Man, but the second X-Men flick is still the best superhero movie made to date and none of you Dark Knight or Spiderman dorks will ever convince me otherwise. Adamantium claws, bitches.

#12. Inglourious Basterds (2009)

Directed by Quentin Tarantino

Bonjourno. Whether you wanna classify it as revenge porn or just a fantastical romp set in Nazi-occupied Europe, you have to admit that this is the most delightful World War II film where one of God’s chosen people makes a Ted Williams reference as he caves in a guy’s skull with a bat.

#11. Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004)

Directed by Michael Gondry

I didn’t see this until like 2007 and was uber-skeptical of all the hype. “Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet in a chick flick about amnesia? That sounds retarded. There is no possible way it could be as good as you all are pretending it is.” Well, it is.

#10. Old School (2003)

Directed by Todd Phillips

This movie is worth three-and-a-half million dollars that the government knows about — and it can barely read.

#9. The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford (2007)

Directed by Andrew Dominik

I can totally see why some people might think this movie sucks. And I probably wouldn’t really even put up much of a fight. For a Jesse James movie, nothing particularly exciting happens. It’s long as hell. And it could be argued that it’s more a collection of pretty pictures than an actual good movie — which, as it so happens, is the exact phrase I use to describe Terrence Malik’s The New World. But unlike that flick, I think the story, acting and stunning visuals in Jesse James work on every level. The epilogue of Bob Ford crawls along for like a half-hour after the jealousy-motivated climax that we all know is coming concludes, but to me that slow fade out creates a perfect book end effect that reinforces the utter banality of Ford — and it is exactly what makes this movie so great rather than being a dragging, “my God why isn’t this movie over?” attribute like it is in, say, Return of the King or The Hurt Locker. It’s also Casey Affleck’s best performance and certainly near the top of Brad Pitt’s resume.

#8. American Psycho (2000)

Directed by Mary Harron

It would be impossible for me to like this movie any more than I do. It’s a shame that Christian Bale sucks at life now, but I don’t think there was another person on this planet that could have given a performance as great as we got with his take on Patrick Bateman. And because of this alone, me and Bale will never be entirely done professionally. Now if you’ll excuse me, I have to return some videotapes.

#7. There Will Be Blood (2007)

Directed by Paul Thomas Anderson

Even to me — on my own list — seventh feels a little low for PTA’s best film to date. But the fact is that I have some real issues with the final 20 minutes of There Will Be Blood — whereas I would change literally nothing about any of the top six flicks on this list. That said, Daniel Plainview might be the most iconic character I’ve ever seen portrayed in film and I’m not sure there are five acting performances more impressive than what Daniel Day Lewis gives here. In short, the peaks of TWBB might be higher than any other movie of this decade. But the lows are a little silly, frankly, and distract me from staying entirely engaged in what otherwise might have been the best movie of the 2000s. Sick score, colors, visuals, lighting and all that jazz, too.

#6. Children of Men (2006)

Directed by Alfonso Cuaron

I don’t know a ton about cinematography, but I know that Emmanuel Lubezki’s camera work on this unique dystopian tale is stunning — and given that he is the same guy who filmed other visually impressive flicks like The New World, Sleepy Hollow, Ali and Y tu mama’ también, it’s probably not a fluke. (FYI, Lubezki has also paired up with Terrance Malik again for The Tree of Life, which stars Brad Pitt and Sean Penn and is slated for release this year.) We also have Clive Owen acting at his absolute apex as a character being forced to disregard hopelessness for heroism. Throw in the fantastic story, and some great outings from Michael Caine, Clare-Hope Ashitey, Julianne Moore and Chiwetel Ejiofor, and it makes it difficult to find a flaw in this picture. I’ve watched Children of Men close to 10 times and it improves on each viewing.

#5. The Lives of Others (2006)

Directed by Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck

I just caught this last week on the recommendation of a few people who knew I was making this list. And, god, am I glad I did. It’s ostensibly the tale of a member of East Germany’s Ministry of State Security (the Stasi) who is tasked with surveilling a writer/actress couple struggling to express themselves as artists behind the Berlin Wall in the 1980s. But what unfolds is both a great character study for the Stasi member who becomes entwined in the life of these artists as well as a profound statement about apathy in the face of tyranny. Given the surveillance-themed plot, it quickly reminded me of Francis Ford Coppola’s The Conversation, but The Lives of Others has a ton more to offer and, ya know, isn’t boring as shit and full of comically bad exposition.

#4. No Country for Old Men (2007)

Directed by the Coen brothers

The Coen brothers made a flawless film. And I’m not even sure what’s more impressive: That this might be the third time they’ve done so (see: Lebowski and Fargo) or that they turned a dude with a woman’s haircut from the ’70s into “the ultimate badass.” There’s nothing not to like about this flick and if you tell me “yeah, it’s good, but I don’t really like the ending” then I probably don’t really like you.

#3. Adaptation. (2002)

Directed by Spike Jonze

Unquestionably the cleverest movie I’ve ever seen. It’s a film within a movie within a popcorn flick wrapped in a parody. It’s so meta that it should be really pretentious and dumb — like Being John Malkovich, for example. But all the cleverness in this Charlie Kaufman joint is half tongue-in-cheek and more just a structural gimmick for the creators to do what they “unsuccessfully” set out to do in the first place: bring “that sprawling New Yorker shit” to the silver screen. And as it turns out, Hollywood, disappointment and “amazing” flowers can indeed be so happy together.

#2. Anchorman (2004)

Directed by Adam McKay

The only thing stupider than trying to quantify art in list form is trying to quantify comedy. Whatever makes you laugh is funny and whatever doesn’t isn’t. It’s that simple. Still, I do believe that there is some level of objectivity to humor — at least in the technical aspect of joke-making anyway. And Anchorman, even more so than Old School before it (and Airplane! waaaay before it), takes the concept of “it’s not the actual punchline that’s funny but all the peripheral stuff that happens on the way to the joke” to a new level. And that is what has been “funniest” brand of cinematic comedy over the past 10 years. Humor is pretty ephemeral for the most part. Aside from Airplane!, Dr. Strangelove, Caddyshack, a few Mel Brooks flicks and maybe Monty Python if you’re into that kind of thing, how many pre-1985 movies are actually still funny today? Like, not funny to you in a nostalgic, “I remember laughing at that before” way, but funny to people who are just now seeing them? Not many. So I’m not sure even something I obviously adore as much as Anchorman will still be funny in 20 years. But what I am sure of is that the brand of comedy in Anchorman is the exact type of comedy that was the most humorous to the most number of people during the 2000s. Like pornography, I can’t define the exact components of “2000s humor,” but I know it when I see it. And I see it more in Anchorman than I do anything else. (And, no, I’m not taking points away just because every annoying frat boy in the country quoted this for five years straight and it spawned a ton of watered-down follow-ups and wannabes. That would be like blaming Michael Jordan for Isaiah Rider and Ricky Davis.)

#1. City of God (2002)

Directed by Fernando Meirelles & Katia Lund

City of God is a masterpiece. Perhaps it’s because I’m a naive American who has never been to Rio and will never understand the bleak lives of those in these favelas, but this is among the truest-to-life-feeling flicks ever made. It has great verisimilitude, for those of you into the whole multisyllabic thing, and makes things like Slumdog Millionaire (which I don’t particularly like) and Blood Diamond (which I actually do like for the most part) feel more like condescending cartoons that belong in a double feature with an episode of Captain Planet than meaningful depictions of life in the developing world. Lil’ Zé is one of cinema’s greatest villains, and the entire tale is both entirely compelling and visually stunning. City of God is filmed, scored, acted, constructed and devised to perfection. In my world, it is easily the best film since the 1990s ended, and ranking it number one was the easiest choice I had to make for this list.

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