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AV Clubs - The 20 best films of 2015

Posted on 12/17/15 at 10:48 am
Posted by RLDSC FAN
Rancho Cucamonga, CA
Member since Nov 2008
51708 posts
Posted on 12/17/15 at 10:48 am
quote:

Every year is a good year for movies, provided you’re willing to wander a little off the beaten path. But in 2015, it was hard to go more than a few steps without hitting something major, something essential. More even than usual, the year’s best films took different shapes, sizes, and routes to eyeballs. Multiplexes were unusually rich with adventurous big-budget movies, as Hollywood handed the keys to the castle to real artists. At the same time, fine smaller films from all over the globe made their way from festivals to theaters and on to streaming platforms, where any viewer with a working web connection could get a taste of something different. What the 20 films below have in common, beyond the strong impression they made on our ballot-filing critics, is a general habit of saying something significant about the here and now, even when transporting audiences to a subatomic there; a fantastically reproduced then; and a lawless, post-apocalyptic later.

20. James White
19. Mustang
18. The Martian
17. Approaching The Elephant
16. The Forbidden Room
15. Crimson Peak
14. 45 Years
13. Hard To Be A God
12. Bridge Of Spies
11. Inside Out
10. Anomalisa
9. Brooklyn
8. Carol
7. The Assassin
6. Sicario
5. The Look Of Silence
4. The Duke Of Burgundy
3. It Follows
2. Phoenix


1. Mad Max: Fury Road
Have we all died and gone to Valhalla? This is a movie—a grand, impossible blockbuster—that shouldn’t even exist. George Miller, an Aussie genre veteran in his 70s, somehow shook $150 million from Hollywood’s pockets, then spent it crashing cars in the desert to realize the demolition derby of his wildest dreams, the Mad Max movie he’s been working toward since the very start. Fury Road bucks just about every trend in big-budget franchise filmmaking: It’s a self-contained joy ride through its creator’s limitless imagination, an art movie stretched across the canvas of an IMAX screen. And beneath its layers upon layers of awe-inspiring imagery—a blitzkrieg of practical effects, whipped up into a two-hour car chase—beats the heart of a surprisingly subversive entertainment, one that dares to put its mythic hero (Tom Hardy, a fine substitute for Mad Mel) into the passenger seat, while a metal-armed Charlize Theron leads the charge against misogyny incarnate. That this super-charged passion project made it to screens fully intact, like some spectacle from another universe, is cause to keep grinning, with or without a mouth sprayed in a glorious shade of chrome.




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This post was edited on 12/17/15 at 10:56 am
Posted by Breesus
House of the Rising Sun
Member since Jan 2010
66982 posts
Posted on 12/17/15 at 10:51 am to
No Creed. No Jurassic World. No Star Wars. No care.

And Inside Out should be top 3.
This post was edited on 12/17/15 at 10:53 am
Posted by ell_13
Member since Apr 2013
85134 posts
Posted on 12/17/15 at 10:52 am to
Inside Out is top 5
Posted by OnCampusTiger
Baton Rouge
Member since Aug 2007
689 posts
Posted on 12/17/15 at 10:52 am to
How is Ex Machina not included.
Posted by WicKed WayZ
Louisiana Forever
Member since Sep 2011
31629 posts
Posted on 12/17/15 at 10:54 am to
No Creed? Damn, but I agree with No. 1 it's the best action movie I've ever seen and in my top 10 favorite films of all time.
Posted by cfish140
BR
Member since Aug 2007
7256 posts
Posted on 12/17/15 at 10:56 am to
Damn it follows was a good original horror but #3?? No way
Posted by Scruffy
Kansas City
Member since Jul 2011
72177 posts
Posted on 12/17/15 at 10:59 am to
Lack of Ex Machina makes no sense.
Posted by Broseph Barksdale
Member since Sep 2010
10571 posts
Posted on 12/17/15 at 11:03 am to
Inside Out is WAY too low. It might be #1
Posted by Brosef Stalin
Member since Dec 2011
39266 posts
Posted on 12/17/15 at 11:08 am to
The Assassin looks good. There's a few movies I haven't heard of. I liked Mad Max but putting it number 1 is a stretch.
Posted by LeonPhelps
Member since May 2008
8185 posts
Posted on 12/17/15 at 11:10 am to

20. James White - never heard of it
19. Mustang - never heard of it
18. The Martian - will see on DVD
17. Approaching The Elephant - never heard of it
16. The Forbidden Room - never heard of it
15. Crimson Peak - will never see it
14. 45 Years - never heard of it
13. Hard To Be A God - never heard of it
12. Bridge Of Spies - will see on DVD
11. Inside Out - loved, saw in theater
10. Anomalisa - never heard of it
9. Brooklyn - never heard of it
8. Carol - vaguely heard of it, will likely never see
7. The Assassin - never heard of it
6. Sicario - never heard of it
5. The Look Of Silence - never heard of it
4. The Duke Of Burgundy - never heard of it
3. It Follows - will never see it
2. Phoenix - never heard of it
1. Mad Max: Fury Road - hated the first 5 minutes, turned it off, will never watch the rest

So that is one I have seen, and 2 more I will ever see. Where do they get these lists? Some cafe in San Francisco with a bunch of Prius's parked out front?
Posted by Green Chili Tiger
Lurking the Tin Foil Hat Board
Member since Jul 2009
47672 posts
Posted on 12/17/15 at 11:19 am to
Just a handful of films off the top of my head that belong on that list in place of some others:

Ex Machina

Me and Earl and The Dying Girl

Amy

Beasts of No Nation

Creed

White God

Posted by lsusportsman2
Member since Oct 2007
27232 posts
Posted on 12/17/15 at 11:21 am to
Outside of Mad Max being #1, that is a garbage garbage list. They have The Martian behind Crimson Peak for crying out loud. What fricking morons.
Posted by Hoodoo Man
Sunshine Pumping most days.
Member since Oct 2011
31637 posts
Posted on 12/17/15 at 12:57 pm to
AV Club has gotten on my nerves over the years more and more.

I'm pretty sure they all fart into champagne flutes and smell it.
Posted by Big Scrub TX
Member since Dec 2013
33584 posts
Posted on 12/17/15 at 1:04 pm to
quote:

1. Mad Max: Fury Road
Have we all died and gone to Valhalla? This is a movie—a grand, impossible blockbuster—that shouldn’t even exist. George Miller, an Aussie genre veteran in his 70s, somehow shook $150 million from Hollywood’s pockets, then spent it crashing cars in the desert to realize the demolition derby of his wildest dreams, the Mad Max movie he’s been working toward since the very start. Fury Road bucks just about every trend in big-budget franchise filmmaking: It’s a self-contained joy ride through its creator’s limitless imagination, an art movie stretched across the canvas of an IMAX screen. And beneath its layers upon layers of awe-inspiring imagery—a blitzkrieg of practical effects, whipped up into a two-hour car chase—beats the heart of a surprisingly subversive entertainment, one that dares to put its mythic hero (Tom Hardy, a fine substitute for Mad Mel) into the passenger seat, while a metal-armed Charlize Theron leads the charge against misogyny incarnate. That this super-charged passion project made it to screens fully intact, like some spectacle from another universe, is cause to keep grinning, with or without a mouth sprayed in a glorious shade of chrome.


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