Showing posts with label movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label movies. Show all posts

Sunday, March 30, 2025

2024 Box Office Top Ten

A somewhat meaningless tradition in my blogging has been reporting on the top box office successes each year, which is what this post is about, to clear up any potential confusion...Results are valid as of today, as reported at The Numbers.

  1. Inside Out 2 ($652 million) The surprise huge hit Disney, under its Pixar studio, these days kind of really, really needed.  A somewhat belated sequel to the 2015 original, bagging close to double the haul in this market.  I haven't seen either one.
  2. Deadpool & Wolverine ($636 million) Another big Disney hit, for its MCU division, which has also been struggling with recent years to find popular, lucrative material.  This was the first real step at integrating the X-Men franchise previously handled by Fox, technically the third Deadpool, certainly the first R-rated superhero film under its new umbrella, and also Hugh Jackman's return to the role that made him famous after a much-celebrated bow in 2017's Logan.  This was the biggest success for any X-Men film to date.
  3. Wicked ($432 million) The first of two films adapting Gregory Maguire's take on The Wizard of Oz, based on the Broadway musical.  Somewhat also belatedly (that's really the story of all three films so far listed) on the heels of the similar Frozen.
  4. Moana 2 ($404 million) Reportedly cobbled together from a previous incarnation as a TV series.  Actually, Disney did quite well in 2024, all considered.
  5. Despicable Me 4 ($361 million) Actually the sixth in the franchise, after three previous under this title and two under Minions.
  6. Beetlejuice Beetlejuice ($294 million) A very belated sequel!  The first was released way back in 1988.  Like Harrison Ford, Michael Keaton's been enjoying revisiting old roles (including Batman in The Flash) recently.  The first didn't quite make this kind of money, although it finished in the top ten for its year, too.
  7. Dune: Part Two ($282 million) Denis Villeneuve successfully launched a film series on a book that had previously produced a somewhat notorious dud of an adaptation back in 1984.
  8. Twisters ($267 million) I'm gonna go ahead and declare this the closest to an original film the top ten enjoyed this year.  Technically related to the 1996 film Twister, it features new characters in what is essentially a remake, and serves as a vehicle for budding new star Glen Powell.  
  9. Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire ($196 million)  Dating back a decade to the release of this franchise's Godzilla, this is somehow the fifth in the series.  
  10. Kung Fu Panda 4 ($193 million) Yeah, the caveat for Twisters is really an attempt to rationalize the fact that every single movie this year is part of a series.  That's just how it is these days.  For what it's worth, the fifteenth and sixteenth entries are either merely based on a book (It Ends With Us) or...also based on a book (The Wild Robot).  But the twenty-first, IF, second to last on the list to score at least a hundred million, is entirely original!
Here's, for slight comparison, what it looked like at the global box office:

  1. Inside Out ($1.6 billion)
  2. Deadpool & Wolverine ($1.3 billion)
  3. Moana 2 ($1 billion)
  4. Despicable Me 4 ($971 million)
  5. Wicked ($743 million)
  6. Mufasa: The Lion King ($719 million) The first of two different entrants, and another win for Disney.
  7. Dune: Part Two ($714 million)
  8. Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire ($572 million) 
  9. Kung Fu Panda 4 ($547 million)
  10. Sonic the Hedgehog 3 ($491 million) And here's the other big difference.  If you're ever confused as to why some movies that did okay here in the States don't seem to be popular online, or movies that did well internationally but poorly here have bad reputations, or simply did bad everywhere...That's just how things are.  Reputations are built on box office.  The phenomenon of cult classics rehabilitate movies that made small amounts of money (or none).  If you're wondering, the eleventh entry on this list is from China, which is also why I started using The Numbers rather than Box Office Mojo, which decided a few years back to ignore Chinese numbers.  The country also nabbed thirteenth and fourteenth
As always, I post this here these days mostly as a window into my interests.  I love movies.

Sunday, April 7, 2024

2023 Box Office Top Ten

I've been blogging these results here in one of my efforts to make it not just a chronicle of my writing but as a suggestion of my other interests (although I have a blog I've maintained since 2002 it used to be featured in, and a whole blog about movies, but here's to recent consistency!), and it seems movies released in 2023 have reasonably slowed enough to provide an accurate look at the top hits, both nationally and globally...As always, numbers are from Box Office Mojo, are good as of the date this post is published, and are registered either in millions or billions of US dollars...

Top Ten U.S. Box Office

  1. Barbie ($636 million) The biggest surprise hit in years, probably, as well as a clear indication that audiences are interested both in something new and familiar, plus enduring interest in Margot Robbie, one of the clear defining actors of this generation at this point, and finally a lead role that proves it.
  2. The Super Mario Bros. Movie ($574 million) The fall of Disney as the blockbuster machine across multiple studios led to another nostalgic hit at the box office.  My nephew was certainly among its biggest fans.  Can we finally move past that earlier version that most people still can't admit was just a knockoff of Beetlejuice?
  3. Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse ($381 million) My favorite Spider-Man movies remain the least popular ones, the Andrew Garfield/Marc Webb duology.  These animated ones are a little too akin to the spastic entertainment I wish weren't so prevalent these days.  Also, get off my lawn!
  4. Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 ($358 million) This belated conclusion to the trilogy is once again proof that the MCU never met a story it didn't really want to end.  As standalone stories not really a lot of complete storytelling going on in these films.
  5. Oppenheimer ($329 million) Standing close to toe-to-toe with Barbie over the summer, this was the film that finally allowed critics to appreciate Christopher Nolan as much as the rest of us.
  6. The Little Mermaid ($298 million) Disney's biggest claim, besides the MCU entry above, was this latest live action remake.  
  7. Wonka ($218 million) Timothy Chalamet is one of this generation's leading talents, so it's nice to see him score in something other than Dune.
  8. Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania ($214 million) I loved the first two in the series, but am ambivalent about this one, which seems less interested in the title characters than setting up a villain whose actor ended up canceled.  But even that was botched, giving Kang way too much attention and allowing him to be...defeated, in a much more decisive fashion than Loki prior to Avengers...Confounding, as the MCU frequently is for me...
  9. John Wick: Chapter 4 ($187 million) This is one of those movies whose value only seems to increase the more I think about it, and I'm also glad it performed well.
  10. Sound of Freedom ($184 million) Here's the other original piece of filmmaking to crack the chart, a word-of-mouth success story that suggests we're not as lost in modern blockbusters as we sometimes seem.
Global Top Ten
  1. Barbie ($1,445 billion) It tends to be a consensus at top, but it's doubly rewarding for a surprise like this to mark the achievement.
  2. The Super Mario Bros. Movie ($1,356 billion) International audiences ate up the same animated hijinks, too.
  3. Oppenheimer ($965 million) The first significant difference in the charts is greater appreciation for Nolan's masterpiece.
  4. Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 ($845 million) Online we don't often think of how our opinions are being swayed by other countries.  When it's a hit elsewhere, too, that's often how you'll see the truly positive reception.
  5. Fast X ($704 million) The biggest difference is this one, where it was much more popular elsewhere.  I'm glad the series continues to be enjoyed somewhere.
  6. Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse ($690 million) At some point someone'll care how terribly all these modern Spider-Man movies have been titled.  There're future generations that'll have no real way to tell 'em apart.
  7. Wonka ($632 million) It's nice that we're in an era where at least we aren't complaining there's another movie with this guy...
  8. The Little Mermaid ($569 million) The elephant in the room is that this is the one everyone complained online played the diversity card too hard.  At work I had colleagues who were genuinely happy to see themselves represented.  It's mermaids, people.  
  9. Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One ($567 million) After the huge success of Top Gun: Maverick, I think a lot of people expected this to be a much bigger success.  Internationally it was.
  10. Elemental ($496 million) Pixar still has clout in other countries!  For me, this just seemed like another of the studio's rehashes.  They've got a lot of those.

Friday, November 11, 2022

My Sherlock Year

A little over a decade ago I had what I called my Trojan Year. I’m an amateur enthusiast of the Trojan War. That year I read a number of books that revolve around it. A few years ago I had my Quixote Year, in which I read and watched a number of works concerning Don Quixote. This year ended up being my Sherlock Year, in which I ended up experiencing a number of works featuring Sherlock Holmes.

The first was the complete stories by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. I had bought a two-volume box set some years back and it took time to reach it in my reading adventures. Years ago this was because I would set up a reading list, but eventually it was because of how books fell on my bookshelves. I’ve got a lot of books, folks, and am always adding to them.

My only previous experience with Doyle’s material was the best-known Holmes story, The Hound of the Baskervilles, which I read for a class in high school. That was, at this point, a relative long time ago, and by 2022 I had only vague memories of it, as I discovered when I reached it. 

Holmes casts a large shadow in modern fiction, not the least because he’s one of the most frequently adapted characters in film and television. The most recent high profile films featuring Holmes are the ones directed by Guy Ritchie and starring Robert Downey, Jr. I had never seen the second one. By coincidence I ended up buying the set of them and of course watching them this year. The second, Game of Shadows, depicts Doyle’s famous attempt to kill off his own creation in the hopes of being able to move on to other material. Reading Doyle’s work, it is very evident how Holmes, and Doyle’s relationship to writing him, evolves, where it’s not merely the case of a brilliant detective solving mysteries, but Doyle constantly struggling to keep things interesting for himself. In the beginning he clearly was using Holmes as an excuse to tell stories, so that Holmes was basically a featured element rather than the sole purpose of the stories, and later it’s clearly very much Doyle trying to prove he definitely has plenty of material to fill out a career worthy of Holmes, even though most of it is clearly being made up on the spot (you can see the exact point he realizes a character’s name can be adopted for Holmes’ brother, Mycroft, who shows up in fact and practice soon after).

I had picked up a volume of the Benedict Cumberbatch TV series at a library sale, and put it aside very much in the manner of my reading habits, but of course now was as good a time as any to finally get around to it. This was of course the role that thrust Cumberbatch to prominence (previously he’d been laboring at a career of no distinction; after he was always a featured if not star actor), so I had always meant to watch at least some of it.

Created by a producer of the modern Doctor Who, upon seeing this Holmes it was no surprise, since creatively it was approached in the very same manner. Like Game of Shadows the material I reviewed features the showdown with Moriarty, whom Doyle and apparently everyone else since (Shadows seems to be an exception) failed to identify basically as a precursor to the modern gangster, to finally put him in some proper context, rather than simply as Holmes’ natural rival.

I also revisited some vintage screen material, including a lucky find I had previously experienced where an actor playing Watson sounds like Darth Vader, decades before Vader, for one brief expository moment. It took some doing to identify the exact material where this happens, as I had no intention to watch all of the material (although I did try and cover the adapting work), but the results are spelled out in a post elsewhere concerning much of the stuff George Lucas likely drew on to come up with Star Wars in its final form that seems to have eluded visible fan notice (somehow!!!).

Anyway, none of this is ever planned. That’s three theme years now. I have no plans to write detective fiction of my own, although I’ve touched on it now and then, more in the manner of Roberto Bolaño than Doyle. 

Saturday, January 8, 2022

A Journal of the Pandemic #30

We are now in the third year of the pandemic.  I say this at the start of 2022, since we are in an apparent surge as the Omicron variant has once again forced the conversation back into the forefront.  I say this as my dad has recovered from his own bout with COVID-19, and in acknowledgment at the loss of Gene Pelletier, a close family friend who with his wife suffered through it at the same time.  I say this as my place of work has elevated its response level back to where it was, nominally, at the pandemic's peak.  I say this knowing that vaccines and boosters and masks remain sources of deep contention.  I say this knowing I had plans to travel this year.  I say this knowing, even though I've known many people who have traveled, as far back as 2020 (which indeed seems like a long time ago, somehow), that one of the clearest ways to combat the spread, as far I'm concerned, is not to travel.  I say this as someone who wants to travel, who wants to see family, in person, again...

Gene and his wife were key figures in my mom's battle with cancer.  When she died in 2015, they were certain sources of support.  When I spent my year with my niece, they were again pillars of my life.  Gene was the kind of person who I didn't know very well, but for whom it didn't matter.  He was my kind of guy.  He knew his way around a joke.  I'd known him, tangentially, before ending up living in the same park, when he was not only friend but neighbor.  

His memorial service was yesterday.  I wish I could have been there.  If I owe anyone that it would be Gene and his wife.  

I'm kind of sick of the pandemic.  I don't honestly know how anyone wouldn't be.  I'm sick of it.  I think even those morbidly fascinated with being "right about it" have lost steam.  They want to move on, too.  Obviously the American/global box office somehow managed to find enough people to make history with Spider-Man: No Way Home, so there may yet be an end in sight.  Hopefully.  

Hopefully.  And, again, we're nowhere close to a true reckoning with the experience.  It's barely begun.  There will be pandemic stories for the rest of our lives.  Fifty years from now there will be generations for whom it's only a matter of history, something they're forced to learn in school, and for most of whom it will barely register as real.  But for us, it's an everyday fact that will remain fact, something we are going to have to deal with, long after we've sorted out all the immediate fallout, the ramifications, and yeah, the virus itself.  Probably it's a shot we're going to get annually.  Probably?  Definitely.  It's the next flu shot.  Of course it is.  

In my blogging community, everyone seems to have remained pretty steadfastly silent on the subject.  I guarantee, in a few years even these bloggers will be talking endlessly about it.  In fifty years it might be the only thing anyone knows about this era.  Except those pesky students.  Doing whatever delinquent things kids will do in the (20)70s...

To get there, to see that, I would have to live into my nineties.  This is hardly impossible.  I've known a few people who did.  

I've already taken a stab at writing pandemic fiction.  I imagine I probably will again in the future.  But perhaps once life has decided normal looks like normal used to.  If that's even possible anymore...

Sunday, April 4, 2021

2020 Box Office Top Ten

The strangest year yet at the box office thanks to the pandemic, obviously the results will always look weird, so let’s have a look, via Box Office Mojo as of today, for the top ten movies released during 2020:

  1. Bad Boys for Life - $206 million - For a year that also ended up known for the second wave of Black Lives Matter protests, it’s surely an irony that the third Will Smith/Martin Lawrence buddy cop flick ended up the highest grossing film at the US box office.
  2. Sonic the Hedgehog - $148 million - I prefer to think of this as a Jim Carrey movie, his big mainstream comeback, and by far his biggest box office success in years.
  3. Birds of Prey and the Fabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn - $84 million - Here’s where the skewed box office really sets in. You’d have to go back decades to find a year where a film made the top ten without having reached at least a hundred million (1995, Die Hard with a Vengeance at seventh place with $92 million). And this is the highest grossing superhero movie! 
  4. Dolittle - $77 million - Stop me if you would’ve predicted this: Robert Downey Jr. starring in a movie that is quickly forgotten that somehow still ranks as one of the top box office draws of the year. Only in 2020, folks.
  5. The Invisible Man - $70 million - One of the modern horror hits that I couldn’t care less about.
  6. The Call of the Wild - $62 million - A movie released just before the pandemic hit that probably would’ve made about as much after theaters reopened.
  7. Onward - $61 million - Likewise. A minor Pixar effort later eclipsed by Soul.
  8. Tenet - $57 million - Christopher Nolan drew criticism insisting that it be released in theaters. Managed to be the biggest hit post-shutdown anyway.
  9. The Croods: A New Age - $56 million - Family movies were an obvious boon in the pandemic era.
  10. Wonder Woman 1984 - $46 million - Closing out the list is the biggest superhero release post-shutdown.

Friday, April 3, 2020

2019 Box Office Top Ten

With movie theaters closed, now’s a great time to continue my tradition of chatting about the biggest hits of a particular year, which in this case is last year. I usually give at least a month into the new year to help late releases finish up their runs (last year I blogged about it here for the first time, apparently as late as July!), which if this whole thing had played out a little differently (we heard about COVID-19 as early as January, remember) might have produced different results. Anyway, like last year I will list domestic and international results, with numbers rounded out from Box Office Mojo. As with last year, I’m talking about this here on my author’s blog both in an effort to incorporate my personal interests and as a reflection of popular tastes, which between books and movies, is far easier to do so with movies, which more people are liable to have seen than readers are to have experienced the same books. (Believe me: as a regular participant of Goodreads.com, overlap is rare, and critical response tends to be fairly worthless.)

2019 Domestic Top Ten

  1. Avengers: Endgame ($858 million) This one came as no surprise. The MCU was a whole phenomenon built in part on the gradual build toward, well, this moment, a direct sequel to Avengers: Infinity War. This is a formula that will likely never be successfully duplicated.
  2. The Lion King ($543 million) Disney’s extended family was responsible for the vast majority of major box office success throughout the year, and in the last few years as well. That success model will likely be winding down. The hype that led to Lion King’s success, for instance, didn’t really lead to the mind of widespread response the original animated version earned.
  3. Toy Story 4 ($434 million) The third one was a cathartic moment for a lot of fans, culminating a central thesis that had been building since the first one, about the inevitability of leaving childhood behind. This one was more or less received as a victory lap.
  4. Frozen II ($430 million) Another big success, but it’s impact is considerably muted compared to its predecessor (sensing a theme yet?).
  5. Captain Marvel ($426 million) Aside from once again demolishing the notion that mass audiences won’t turn out for a blockbuster with a female lead, this one proved how invincible the MCU phenomenon had become at this point.
  6. Star Wars: Episode IX - The Rise of Skywalker ($390 million) Was probably always going to lag behind the MCU climax in the popular imagination. But the thing is, the MCU won’t be producing something forty years from now like this. (Annoyingly, Box Office Mojo changed how it listed yearly totals. Including 2020 grosses, Rise of Skywalker made $515 million, and up to third place. The only other film in the top ten that has a similar adjustment is Frozen II, which bumps up to $477 million.)
  7. Spider-Man: Far from Home ($390 million) Considering that 2002-2007 Spider-Man was a headlining blockbuster act, this can only be considered disappointing, but on the other hand, he has more sustained viability than probably anyone else will have in the MCU. 
  8. Aladdin ($355 million) Will Smith cleverly used this as a launching pad to an eventual popular comeback. That’s where the real value is in these things. Even Toy Story 4 was, for some fans, merely another vehicle for Keanu Reeves’ popular resurgence.
  9. Joker ($333 million) The closest this year came to a traditional blockbuster, a version of the classic Batman villain as seen through a Martin Scorsese type lens, fueled by a widely acclaimed lead performance from Joaquin Phoenix.
  10. It Chapter Two ($211 million) The first one may have gotten all the acclaim and buzz, but the second one was still enough of a success to reach the top ten. 
2019 International Top Ten
  1. Avengers: Endgame ($2,797 billion) Obviously still the top box office draw. 
  2. The Lion King ($1,656 billion) Still no variation.
  3. Frozen II ($1,450 billion) Here you can see wiggle room for a property of more recent relevance.
  4. Spider-Man: Far from Home ($1,131 billion) Here you can see Spider-Man’s vast continuing appeal more clearly.
  5. Captain Marvel ($1,128 billion) The MCU was an unstoppable juggernaut.
  6. Joker ($1,074 billion) Here you can see how significant this one’s cultural impact really was.
  7. Star Wars: Episode IX - The Rise of Skywalker ($1,074 billion) I think the popularly of Star Wars may have been more limited to Americans than it might have otherwise seemed, and the more the international perspective was taken into account, the more it affected perception, a phenomenon that has increased in recent years without anyone realizing it.
  8. Toy Story 4 ($1,073 billion) Case in point: This is a franchise that began in the comparative distant past of 1995. 
  9. Aladdin ($1,050 billion) On the one hand, it’s ridiculous to say a movie that made a billion dollars is somehow not wildly successful. But we’re literally at the point where it sounds like, “That’s all?” Coupled with the fact that Disney ploughed through its popular animated back catalog for these live action remakes, it suddenly doesn’t seem like the wisest course of action. It’s going to be very difficult for the umbrella studio to match this level of success again anytime soon.
  10. Jumanji: The Next Level ($796 million) Back when the first one was released a few years ago, Dwayne Johnson also had a Fast & Furious movie out, and both came close to scoring a billion internationally. The same was true this year: the next movie on this particular list was Johnson’s Fast & Furious spin-off, Hobbs & Shaw. That’s the definition of modern movie star, folks. The twelfth and thirteenth biggest international releases were both Chinese (making the vast majority of their profit in China), including The Wandering Earth.

Sunday, July 14, 2019

2018 Box Office Top Ten

This is something I've been blogging about for years.  This year (rather late) I decided to movie it here, just to give readers some insight into what interests me.  I used to make ridiculously extensive lists, but I'm going to limit it this time, as the title indicates, to just the top ten, and then again, because I figured it'd be interesting to do it for the US and international box office results.  All numbers are derived from Box Office Mojo, as of today (7/14/19).

US 2018 Box Office Top Ten
  1. Black Panther ($700 million) This was a surprise phenomenon that sort of caught on with cultural developments, went well beyond merely the typical MCU response. 
  2. Avengers: Infinity War ($678 million) Having now seen Endgame, I think I prefer the setup, with Captain America's dramatic return being the highlight.
  3. Incredibles 2 ($608 million) I'm the rare movie fan who doesn't obsess over every Pixar movie, and who didn't get swept up in the hoopla for the first one (which everyone claimed "was what the Fantastic Four ought to look like in the movies").  I still haven't gotten around to seeing this one.
  4. Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom ($417 million) I actually haven't seen any of the films in this franchise past the first one.  I did read the Michael Crichton books back in the day, however.  Crichton is a rare common factor between me and my dad, and I remain a big fan.
  5. Aquaman ($335 million) I adored Justice League and thought Jason Momoa's performance in it was the highlight, so I was eager to catch this one.  It was amusing, but there's room for improvement.
  6. Deadpool 2 ($318 million) I wasn't wild about the first one, but this one (and I loved how there was a "family friendly version," called Once Upon a Deadpool, released later) I really got behind.  Highlights include Domino (best superpower ever!) and the Brad Pitt cameo.
  7. Dr. Seuss' The Grinch ($270 million) I'm a huge fan of Jim Carrey, so I admit partisanship with the live action version, but the vocal performance from Benedict Cumberbatch was an intriguing hook for me.
  8. Mission: Impossible - Fallout ($220 million) Henry Cavill steals this one, even if he ultimately can't beat Tom Cruise.  But that's kind of to be expected, right?
  9. Ant-Man and the Wasp ($216 million) I think the Ant-Man films are going to age incredibly well, possibly better than most of the rest of the MCU.  Wait for the Luis recap!
  10. Bohemian Rhapsody ($216 million) I still haven't seen it, but it's still funny to me that the Rami Malek performance that was the consistent source of buzz for this one kind of got lost in the shuffle of everyone complaining that the movie wasn't faithful enough to Queen history. 
International Box Office Top Ten
  1. Avengers: Infinity War ($2,048 billion)
  2. Black Panther ($1,346 billion)
  3. Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (1,309 billion)
  4. Incredibles 2 ($1,242 billion)
  5. Aquaman ($1,148 billion)
  6. Bohemian Rhapsody ($903 million)
  7. Venom ($856 million) Tom Hardy is another of my favorite actors, and I'm happy he got this successful spotlight.
  8. Mission: Impossible - Fallout ($791 million)
  9. Deadpool 2 ($778 million)
  10. Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald ($653 million) Made more than 75% of its international haul outside of the States, which is a fairly common figure when movies are bigger hits this way.  I keep saying this is one of my favorite Harry Potter franchise films, and I absolutely mean it.  Johnny Depp's Grindelwald is a perfect representation of the poisonous kind of politics we're currently enduring, with a chilling finale matched only by Ralph Fiennes's debut as Voldemort in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, which remains my favorite of the film franchise.

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Music is the key to 12 Years a Slave

I finally saw 12 Years a Slave, and...you know what?  It isn't even necessarily a movie about slavery.  How about that?  It's more about a person who endured a terrible experience, about anyone who has suffered indignity, repression.  And you know what?  There are three elements to the movie you will need to keep in mind in order to understand it.

The first is that, as I said in the title, the music is the foremost key to understanding it.  Solomon Northrup played the violin.  This fact alone certainly caught my imagination, since I played it myself.  It becomes astonishing, then, that this skill means absolutely nothing to the white men who keep him in slavery, that it doesn't appear to be any indication that he or anyone else of his color may be worth more than their estimation.  There's Paul Dano singing, too.  Dano used to be on the verge of becoming a pretty big deal.  He was one of several breakout stars in Little Miss Sunshine.  He was the other notable star in There Will Be Blood.  And now, if you haven't seen 12 Years, you probably had no idea he was in it until I just mentioned him.  Listening to him sing (if you've seen it you know exactly what I'm talking about), it's a perfect encapsulation of the extreme nature of the cognitive dissonance that certainly Solomon had to endure for the span of his experience, that any of the white men who made it happen had to have, that even Dano's character had to have.  The ability to hold two disparate beliefs together.  That he could sing that song and expect the very people it denigrated to clap along.  As if it meant nothing at all.

Of course, there's also the beginning of the blues as the slaves sing in the fields.  Everyone knows that about slavery.  But it's important to have that as an element, too, especially in a film where you don't truly understand it without hearing how important music is to it, encapsulating the contradictions without beating the audience over the head with it.  There are other elements, elements that don't work as well.  But this understated one, it elevates everything.  It defines everything.

Another element is the extended sequence of Solomon's near-hanging.  Like the music, it is astonishing, the signature image for anyone who has seen the movie.  I have no idea how anything else could be.  He attempts to find footing in the mud.  This lasts for him for hours.  For the viewer, several minutes.  I can't think of another movie moment that's anything like it.  Life goes on around him.  Slave children play in the background, even.  Another slave runs up to give him some water.  The whole thing happens after Dano has finally had enough of this contradiction of a slave, and attempts, of course, to hang him all the way.  Another white man stops him.  But doesn't cut Solomon down.  He leaves him there.  This happens in clear daylight.  It's dusk by the time Solomon is finally cut down.  His feet barely touching the mud the whole time, barely able to keep himself from suffocating.

Finally, there are the three crucial white men.  The first is played by Benedict Cumberbatch.  In my experience, it's a rare performance where Cumberbatch does not entirely rely on his famous baritone.  This has a way of softening him so that his voice matches his face for a change.  Yet he's the master who gives Solomon his violin back.  Saying it'll do them both good.  Does it?  Later, we see Solomon finally smash it.  I'd expected Dano to do it.  The second master is Michael Fassbender.  This character is a fool.  He's supposed to be notorious for breaking slaves.  And yet he's completely pathetic.  At one point he and Solomon come so close to fighting, it's ridiculous.  Fassbender has it in his power to do whatever he likes to Solomon.  He already has him whipped regularly because Solomon doesn't pick cotton to the day's average.  He certainly has his way with the slave portrayed by Oscar winner Lupita Nyong'o.  Yet it's hard to take him seriously.  That's two masters who are pathetic.  The third white man is Brad Pitt.  He uses a voice very similar to the one his character from Inglourious Basterds speaks with, and I think this is a deliberate choice.  Pitt in the other movie was another Southerner who was up to mischief.  He at some point gained the unexplained slash across the throat that leaves a visible scar.  Sort of like what he would later do to the Nazis.  There's material that explains why he got it, just not in the movie.  It's immaterial.  I choose to believe that it was a reminder of his own prior activities in some positive way.  And so the Pitt in 12 Years relates to the Pitt in Basterds very handily.  That's as much sense as I can make out of that.

There are two other white men worth mentioning.  The first is Paul Giamatti.  Here he's dismissively part of the problem.  In his other role from 2013, he's certainly part of the solution (Saving Mr. Banks).  I just wanted to make note of him.  The one that matters a little more is Garret Dillahunt.  This is an actor I know best from the sitcom Raising Hope, where he plays the father, or I guess the grandfather.  In other words, I know him as a comedic actor.  His character in 12 Years sounds just this side of comedic, and in fact is one of the things that goes horribly wrong for Solomon that comes closest to seeming like a real farce.  (Dillahunt, it might be mentioned, also appeared in No Country For Old Men, another Best Picture winner.)

Why am I writing about the movie here, at my writers blog?  Because it's a unique kind of achievement in storytelling.  I think it's an imperfect movie.  But, it actually benefits from its imperfections.  The three elements I've just listed are about as much as you could need to consider it about as good as anyone said it is.  And yes, it won Best Picture at this year's Oscars, so there are plenty of people who think it's pretty good.

I haven't mentioned the actor who plays Solomon yet.  That would be Chiwetel Ejiofor.  I was excited about this movie initially because I thought it would finally give Ejiofor a chance to claim an undivided spotlight.  Having seen 12 Years, I wonder if he seized the opportunity.  I also wonder if I'm wrong in questioning that.  Like Nyong'o, his best moments aren't really in spoken word.  I like actors who can be expressive outside of dialogue.  The moments where Solomon is processing his experience, those are the ones where Ejiofor truly shines, and I think that was a deliberate choice.  There are scenes where the movie attempts to explain how Solomon could possibly endure becoming a slave, but it's more how he conducts himself, not so much in his attempts to rise above, but when he realizes the depths to which he has been cast.

He becomes a universal figure.  And so I say a movie that everyone has called difficult to watch, a movie about slavery, is also a vicarious experience.  Vicarious because Solomon's experience is more translatable than it might seem.  He is not merely a slave.  He's not really a slave at all.  He endures by cognitive dissonance, keeping his true self hidden, as much as possible, from the perception of those around him.  The music, the near-hanging, the white men who hardly present themselves in their best light, all reflect how Solomon has become an object.  Has become less than human.  An element.  It's one thing to be told from history books how slavery was justified.  How black people were considered, needed to be considered just another piece of property.  When Pitt explains to Fassbender the ludicrous intellectual fallacy he's been living by, it's another understated moment in the movie.  Something that isn't stated in bold letters.  But is clear all the same.  All these things that happen to Solomon happen because like so many black people, he was no longer considered capable of understanding his own circumstances, of existing at the same level as the rest of American society.

As a writer, as someone who writes his thoughts on the craft to other writers, a movie like 12 Years becomes something more than what it seems, too.  For some people, it is a powerful experience.  Something that should have happened years ago.  Or maybe just something that needs to exist but is just too hard to watch.  But watching it, 12 Years becomes a portrait of humanity, flaws and all.  And because of those flaws, it becomes more than what it is, more than it seems.  I don't see a perfect movie.  But I see one that's the better for it.  Its best features are better, and its message more bold because of it.

What kind of lesson is there in that?  As writers, we are constantly told we must strive for perfection.  It seems to me, though, that some writers don't really try.  I don't mean that in a judgmental sense.  It's just not what's important to them.  James Patterson, for example, famously decided he'd rather make money than critical admirers.  I wouldn't describe 12 Years as a movie that was only interested in making money, because it hasn't made a huge amount of that, but in Hollywood terms, critical praise can sometimes be the same as money.  There are movies that are described as Oscar bait.  Critics typically sneer at them.  And in some respects, 12 Years was classic Oscar bait.  And yet, the critics never even stopped to consider that.  They saw it as the slave movie, the one that they'd been waiting years to see happen.  And so they patted themselves on the back to acknowledge it.

When you're told something is supposed to be good, you expect it to be good.  And when you find that it isn't quite as good as suggested, you feel cheated.  But maybe that's not the only way to view it.  Often, when I feel cheated I try to look for redeeming elements.  Those elements don't usually actually redeem what disappointed me.  In this instance, they did.  And they led to these thoughts, all of which will probably leave the impression that I am after all giving 12 Years a glowing endorsement.  In a way I am.  In the only way it means for a writer, I guess I am.  In the sum of its parts, 12 Years is perhaps even more impressive than it was made out to be.  It creates, for me, a whole new dynamic by which to judge things.  As a writer, I can only hope to be capable of something like this.  As a viewer, I've been humbled.  I can only wish I were as strong as Solomon Northrup, to be as brave as the filmmakers who put this movie together, warts and all.

Sometimes we mistake our snap judgments for whatever we ultimately think of something.  When something isn't perfect, that's all we ultimately end up thinking about it.  We stop thinking critically.  I'd much rather, as a writer, be able to find something like 12 Years a Slave, that contradicts my expectations, transcends them.  It inspires me.  And that's what every writer should be looking for.
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