Tuesday, June 9, 2020

The Top 200 Films of my Movie Life


By Mark Pukalo


While stuck at home alone for more than three months during these surreal times, there was plenty of time to sit down and watch a lot of movies - for the first, second, fifth or 100th time.

The entire collection was viewed - all 253 of them, including VHS tapes - as our country was dealing with a dangerous virus, more criminal police brutality against African Americans (also peaceful protesters) and an incompetent, racist President.

Sorry. We have a right to be angry these days.

Julie Kavner put my current feelings into words as she gazed out at the searchlights looking for German planes during the late 1930s in Woody Allen's "Radio Days."

"What a world," Kavner says. "It could be so wonderful if it wasn't for certain people."

Still, this wicked Pandemic has had a few positives. Little money has been spent on gas, a few pounds were lost and it gave me a chance to update the list of my favorite all-time movies from the original top 150 that was put together in 2017.

Not sure I can ever get it perfect but, after moving films around for the last few weeks, here is the updated list of my top 200 - dating back to 1968 when I was 5-years-old and "Planet of the Apes" along with "2001" came out.

The rating is based on being able to watch a film frequently, its historic significance and how it has stood the test of time in my opinion.

I don't expect total agreement. No one can. But here it goes.

Honorable Mention: A Beautiful Mind, All the Right Moves, Apocalypse Now, A Star is Born, Belfast, Beyond the Lights, The Big Lebowski, Blinded by the Light, Bridget Jones' Diary, David Byrne's American Utopia, Deadpool, Divergent, Do the Right Thing, Draft Day, Dreamer, Edward Scissorhands, Election, Everybody Wants Some!, Fahrenheit 11/9, Fried Green Tomatoes, Frost/Nixon,  The Irishman, I Tonya, Jaws, The Last Days of Disco, Mo Better Blues, Mulholland Drive, Never Rarely Sometimes Always, Nomadland, No Way Out, OJ: Made in America, One Night in Miami, The Player, The Razor's Edge, Room, Saturday Night Fever, Scarface, Secretariat, The Secret of My Success, Silent Running, The Silence of the Lambs, Sound of Metal, Star Trek, Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith, Terms of Endearment, The Two Popes, The Usual Suspects, Vice, The Way Back, We Bought a Zoo, Yesterday.

Have never seen all the way through for some reason: Alien, Annie Hall, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, My Cousin Vinny, Dirty Dancing, Fight Club, the Harry Potter Trilogy, The Lord of the Rings Trilogy, The Princess Bride, Roadhouse, Rosemary's Baby, Sin City, Taxi Driver.


205. American Beauty - This odd, exhilarating and sometimes depressing film about dysfunctional families won Best Picture in 1999. Kevin Spacey plays the frustrated Lester Burnham, who finds happiness by rejecting his average life and burned-out wife (Annette Bening) while crushing on his daughter’s friend (Mena Suvari).

204. JFK - Director Oliver Stone tells the story of Jim Garrison (Kevin Costner), the only attorney that brought a criminal case around the death of President John F. Kennedy. It is long and takes liberties, but the film makes you think.

203. Parenthood -

202. Logan Lucky -

201. Ruby Sparks -


TOP 200

200. American History X  - Derek Vinyard (Edward Norton) is a smart kid who evolves into a skinhead after living with a racist father and enduring a tragic incident. Vinyard must reform his life in prison - not without some rough moments - during this powerful, sad and honest film.

199. Game 6 - The 2006 independent film stars Michael Keaton as playwright Nicky Rogan, who is stressing over his play opening in New York while his beloved Red Sox sit one win away from a World Series title across town in 1986. Robert Downey Jr. portrays an evil critic.

198. The Spectacular Now - Sutter Keely (Miles Teller), a popular high school kid living in the now with an attractive girlfriend and a partying lifestyle, is forced to reassess his life with the help of an average girl named Aimee Finecky (Shailene Woodley).

195. Iron Man - The first of a trilogy always seems to be the best and this follows the pattern with Robert Downey Jr. leading the way in his metal suit. Two words to say real fast: Pepper Potts.

194. Midnight Express - American student Billy Hayes is arrested for smuggling drugs in Turkey and endures a long run in the worst of prisons before escaping. His attempt to get through the airport in the early stages of the movie is one of the most spine-tingling scenes of all time.

193. The Wedding Singer - Perhaps Adam Sandler's finest comedic performance as Robbie Hart - a likable wedding performer who falls for a girl planning to marry a rich, self-centered buffoon. Billy Idol makes a terrific cameo near the end.

192. The Post - Tom Hanks and Meryl Streep star in the 2017 drama about the Washington Post's fight to publish the Pentagon papers. It is incredibly well acted as expected and a strong study of what newspapers once were.

191. Wind River - Jeremy Renner should have been nominated for Best Actor in this 2017 movie as he plays a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service agent who finds an 18-year-old girl dead in the frozen tundra of an Indian Reservation in Wyoming. The mystery of her death takes several turns into a violent, but compelling and emotional ending.


190. Ghostbusters - Scientists Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd and Harold Ramis get slimed while vacuuming up ghouls and ghosts in the 1984 classic comedy. The sequels never could reach the level of the original.

189. The Martian - Mark Watney (Matt Damon) is stranded on Mars and makes the best of it as his crew races back to save him. Yep, the ending probably couldn’t happen, but it’s still entertaining. David Bowie’s “Starman” is well used.

188. The Way, Way Back - A coming of age film based on Cape Cod during the summer as shy Duncan (Liam James) finds comfort while working at a water park with wacky Owen (Sam Rockwell). Top-notch cast, great setting, cheeky film.

186. Anchorman - Will Ferrell kills it as the virtuoso news anchor in (stay classy) San Diego, whose life is forever altered by the arrival of Veronica Corningstone (Christina Applegate) in this epic comedy. The sequel was nowhere near as humorous and somewhat inappropriate in my opinion.

185. Mumford - Under-rated Lawrence Kasdan film. Loren Dean plays a man faking it as a psychiatrist in a small town to hide from the law, but he proves to be pretty good at it while falling in love with a patient (Hope Davis).

184. Logan's Run - A futuristic society does not allow you get any older than 30 in this 1976 film. Beautiful Jenny Agutter and Michael York find a way to escape through the tunnels all the way to what they hope to be "Sanctuary."

x183. Million Dollar Baby - Boxing films always seem to be compelling in some way and this is one of the best as Hilary Swank plays a young Irish woman named Maggie Fitzgerald, who builds herself from nothing into a champion. Morgan Freeman and director Clint Eastwood play heady old boxing veterans in the 2004 film that won Best Picture. The ending is both heartwarming and heartbreaking.

182. Star Wars Episode VII: The Force Awakens - Flawed in some ways, but still a thrilling long-awaited renewal of the great series. Han Solo faces his son and Rey (Daisy Ridley) joins the cast. It’s always great to see Chewy again, too!

181. Love Actually - Several intertwining stories that all have a heart. Hugh Grant, Emma Thompson, Laura Linney, Colin Firth, Adam Rickman, Bill Nighy and Liam Neeson add spice to cast while Keira Knightley's smile in one all-time great scene caps it for me.


x180. Charlie Wilson’s War - Tom Hanks plays Texas Congressman Charlie Wilson, who takes a break from jumping into Jacuzzis with playboy models to help the Afghans kick Russia out of their country. An All-Star cast with Julia Roberts, Amy Adams and the great Phillip Seymour Hoffman make it a fun, informative journey.

179. Contact - The 1997 film is based on a book by Carl Sagan about trying to make contact with extraterrestrials. Jodie Foster is the lead and Matthew McConaughey adds a religious edge to the unique story.

178. Bohemian Rhapsody - The story of the historic rock group Queen and its amazing front man Freddie Mercury is hated by some critics, but it won Best Picture at the Golden Globes. I call it a beautiful mess. While it is far from perfect and some of the time line changes can annoy you, I was incredibly entertained for more than two hours.

177. School of Rock - Substitute Jack Black pushes aside the textbooks to teach his class rock and roll, and they warm to the task. It is funny, smart and has a great ending at a battle of the bands contest.

176. The Wrestler - Mickey Rourke plays a past-his-prime wrestler named Randy "The Ram" Robinson, who is dealing with health and family issues as his standout career comes to an end. Rourke should have won Best Actor at the 2008 Academy Awards for his believable performance - over Sean Penn, who took the Oscar for "Milk." Marisa Tomei shines as a stripper.

175. Primary Colors - John Travolta and Emma Thompson play Bill and Hillary in this humorous, interesting film that captures the dilemma for a campaign with a very flawed, but also at times brilliant candidate.

174. Dodgeball - Vince Vaughn battles Ben Stiller on the court and Christine Taylor wins. "If you can dodge a wrench, you can dodge a ball." That's the motto of Hall of Fame Dodgeballer Patches O' Houlihan in his hilarious comedy.

173. Smokey and the Bandit - Burt Reynolds and Sally Field star in this fun chase movie that I first saw on my eighth grade class trip to the Statue of Liberty and Radio City Music Hall. Afterward, we witnessed the Rockettes!

172. Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle - Stoners Harold (John Cho) and Kumar (Kal Penn) get a hankering for some tasty sliders late at night and enjoy quite a wild journey in the 2004 film. They encounter pretty British girls with stomach problems, a cheetah, the police, some bullies, an odd couple and drugged-out Doogie Howser (Neil Patrick Harris) before reaching their destination.

171. All the President’s Men - Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman play Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, who uncover the Watergate scandal. The newsroom scenes and the drama of historic events were well portrayed.


170. Jersey Girl - Love this Kevin Smith film even though he apparently wasn't happy with the final product. Ben Affleck takes care of a their child after J-Lo dies and Liv Tyler's character ignites the movie, which has a heartwarming ending.

169. Saving Private Ryan - I am not a huge fan of war movies, which pushes this down the list a bit, but the first half hour of this film depicting the Invasion of Normandy at Omaha Beach was very powerful. Tom Hanks goes in search of Private James Francis Ryan (Matt Damon), whose three brothers had already become casualties of war. Steven Spielberg won Best Director in 1998 for the film, which lost out to “Shakespeare in Love” for Best Picture. 


168. The Infiltrator - One of the best films of 2016 stars Bryan Cranston as Robert Mazur, who goes deep undercover to try and take down Pablo Escobar’s drug network. The ending is well-planned and dramatic.

167. Beneath the Planet of the Apes – Beneath was a strong follow up to the original classic as James Franciscus, Charlton Heston and the beautiful Nova (Linda Harrison) encounter an underground race of men worshiping an atomic bomb. There is plenty of symbolism in this one and a strong plot that provides a powerful ending.

166. Grosse Pointe Blank - John Cusack plays a high-priced hit man who returns to his high school reunion and connects with his old flame (Minnie Driver) in the unique 1997 movie. It's a mix of humor and crazy action.

166. Shiva Baby -

165. Go - A series of wacky, sometimes raunchy, intertwining stories revolve around grocery clerk Ronna (Sarah Polley) needing to find a way to make some money to pay her rent. Pre-Cruise Katie Holmes produces her best performance while Jay Mohr and Scott Wolf show up as squabbling gay lovers. Tim Olyphant also shines as a heady drug dealer.

164. American Pie - Humorous high school comedy that has produced several much-used phrases such as MILF. Jim (Jason Biggs) courts frisky Nadia (Shannon Elizabeth) and Steve Stifler (Seann William Scott) is one heck of a character.

163. An Officer and a Gentleman - The 1982 romantic drama was somehow not even nominated for Best Picture, which was later won by "Ghandi" over "ET." Richard Gere or "Mayo-naise" falls for a local girl (Debra Winger) at boot camp and is worked into shape by drill sergeant Louis Gossett Jr., who won Best Supporting Actor. The ending is triumphant and emotional.

162. One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest - Jack Nicholson produces one of his all-time great performances as a new patient at a mental institution after serving time in prison. Randle must deal with Nurse Ratched (Louise Fletcher).

146. Vanilla Sky - Tom Cruise suffers brutal injuries to his face in an accident and Sofia (Penelope Cruz) nurses him back to life. Or does she? There are plenty of twists and turns in this Cameron Crowe thriller, which can be interpreted in many ways.

161. Beyond the Lighted Stage - The best documentary of a rock band ever made, in my opinion, on the fantastic Canadian trio Rush. It tracks their progress from modest beginnings through many different styles in their Hall of Fame career.


160. For the Love of the Game - Kevin Costner plays a talented veteran pitcher who has one great game left in him. Vin Scully adds his golden commentary on Billy Chapel's last appearance on the mound while his lifetime love prepares to leave the country at the airport.

159. Brian’s Song - Make sure you have some tissues available for this TV movie about the unique friendship between Chicago Bears running backs Gale Sayers (Billy Dee Williams) and cancer-stricken Brian Piccolo (James Caan). The 1971 film won an Emmy for Best Dramatic Program and was one of the first I ever watched. Billy Dee’s speech at the end is one of the most emotional scenes I can remember.

158. One Good Cop - Under-rated 1991 film stars Michael Keaton as Artie Lewis, a talented detective who loses his partner. Lewis and wife (Rene Russo) take care of his fallen partner's three young daughters while dealing with a nasty criminal named Beniamino Rios. Benjamin Bratt shows up as a new partner and the ending is heartwarming and unique.

157. The Departed - Martin Scorsese won his only Best Director honor at the Academy Awards with this 2006 crime drama that is apparently a Boston-style remake of the 2002 Hong Kong film "Internal Affairs." Leonardo DiCaprio goes deep undercover to try to find evidence on mob boss Frank Costello (Jack Nicholson) and Matt Damon plays the slimiest of police moles.

156. Dead Poets Society - The 1989 film is based in an elite Vermont boarding school where an English teacher named John Keating (Robin Williams) inspires a group of students. Keating's unorthodox methods lead to his demise at the conservative school, but his legacy lived on. Captain my Captain!!

155. Gladiator - The film won Best Picture and Russell Crowe took Best Actor at the Academy Awards in 2000 for his role as Maximus, a man who rises up to avenge the murder of his loved ones during the Roman Empire. The movie had its detractors (Roger Ebert) and is far from perfect, but it boasts many powerful scenes. “Are you not entertained?”

154. Better off Dead - Sure, it is somewhat formulaic and Siskel & Ebert hated it, but this zany 1985 romantic comedy still makes me laugh. John Cusack plays Lane Meyer, a man "who knows how to ski" but develops a death wish after his girlfriend Beth dumps him. French exchange student Monique (Diane Franklin) tries to save Lane, but can't help when the paperboy stalks him. Two Dollars!

153. Field of Dreams - The mystical 1989 film might be higher on many lists of the top sports movies of all time, but it is still a classic in my mind. “If you build it, he will come.” Kevin Costner creates a pristine baseball field near a cornfield in Iowa after hearing voices and a miracle occurs. You want to have a catch?

152. Goodfellas - Martin Scorsese's brilliant 1990 mob drama stars Ray Liotta, along with Robert De Niro and Joe Pesci, and was based on the book by Nicholas Pileggi named "Wiseguy." Pesci won Best Supporting Actor at the Academy Awards and will always be remembered for one incredible scene.

151. Midnight Run - Robert DeNiro, as bounty hunter Jack Walsh, is assigned to find and bring in accountant Jonathan Mardukas (Charles Grodin) after the embezzler skips bond in this fun romp from 1988.


150. Crazy Rich Asians - The romantic comedy based on a best-selling novel is fun and emotional from the first minute to the last. Constance Wu is dazzling as she takes on her fiance's snooty rich mother when the couple travels to Singapore for a friend's wedding. The best love story of 2018.

149. United 93 - The minute-by-minute account of the hijacked flight, which crashed in Shanksville, Pa. on 9/11, and what it was like for the passengers - many of them who become heroic. There are no stars. It’s understated, sad and gripping.

148. While You Were Sleeping - Sandra Bullock in probably her best and most underappreciated role as subway token collector Lucy, who finds love in a roundabout way. Lucy is one of the most likable female characters of all time.

147. The Lookout - Joseph Gordon-Levitt plays a young man dealing with the aftermath of a horrific accident that he caused and a head injury that allows people to take advantage of him. “I wake up. I get dressed. I take my meds.”

145. When Harry Met Sally - The first time I saw Bethel High graduate and one-time UConn student Meg Ryan was on the soap opera “As the World Turns,” and you could tell she was going to be a star. Ryan burst on the scene with her performance in this 1989 romantic comedy written by Nora Ephron and directed by Rob Reiner. She was in charge with Billy Crystal in every scene, including the famous one in the diner (look it up on youtube).

144. Zero Dark Thirty - Pulsating drama about the killing of Osama Bin Laden, with Jessica Chastain’s powerful performance as Maya (a composite character) - the driving force behind the plan. Don’t care about some of the arguments about the facts. It was a good watch.

143. Juno - Ellen Page was deservedly nominated for Best Actress for her performances as a witty, pregnant 16-year-old girl dealing with things "way beyond her maturity level" in the 2007 film. Reportedly, both pro-life and pro-choice groups mostly approved of the film that examined the impossible decisions Juno was faced with.

142. Shut Up and Sing - Terrific 2006 documentary about how a portion of the American society over-reacted to a simple anti-war statement by Natalie Maines of the Dixie Chicks at a 2003 concert in London. The controversy led to death threats, a backlash from country radio stations and corporations, and spawned a powerful album with songs about the trio's ordeal called "Taking the Long Way."

141. Spaceballs - Mel Brooks’ goofy, but creative and smart, parody of the Star Wars movies from 1987 is a laugh a minute. Dark Helmet’s ship moves at “Ludicrous Speed.” May the Schwartz be with you! Dick Van Patten and Joan Rivers join an all-star crew.


140. Any Given Sunday - Oliver Stone’s loud, bold look at the glory and the vices of professional football works despite some over-the-top scenes. Al Pacino plays an aging coach under fire with a beat-up veteran quarterback (Dennis Quaid) and a new-wave signal caller (Jamie Foxx) with talent finding his way on and off the field.

139. Grindhouse - The movies were sold separately on video, but I saw Robert Rodriguez's humorous zombie story "Planet Terror" and Quentin Tarantino's intense "Death Proof" consecutively in the theater like the old days as Grindhouse. Gorgeous Rose McGowan shines in both, especially in PT with her machine-gun leg - "Two against the world baby." Kirk Russell plays a creepy stunt man who dishes it and takes it big time in DP.

138. Searching for Sugar Man - A fascinating documentary about Sixto Rodriguez, a sort of Latin Bob Dylan from the streets of Detroit who did not make it in America but became a superstar in Apartheid-infested South Africa without knowing it. Two fans from Cape Town attempt to unlock the mystery of Rodriguez and tell an incredible story that is sad and ultimately uplifting. It won the Oscar for Best Documentary of 2012.

x137. Little Miss Sunshine - A family that is going through many issues loads into a failing vehicle for the drive from New Mexico to Redondo Beach, California to allow Olive (Abigail Breslin) to participate in a beauty pageant for pre-teens. Their journey encounters many problems, but brings them closer together. Rick James' most famous song is brought to life by Breslin.

136. The American President - Aaron Sorkin wrote the romantic comedy and Rob Reiner directed as a widowed president (Michael Douglas) - up for re-election - courts a beautiful lobbyist (Annette Bening). Bening plays Sydney Ellen Wade with grace and power while the film mixes plenty of humor with a little politics. You wonder what would happen if we had a single president.

135. Splash - The 1984 romantic comedy stars a young Tom Hanks, who falls for a beautiful mermaid (Daryl Hannah) off Cape Cod. Don’t we all, in our dreams? His brother (John Candy) has the best lines in the movie, and works with Eugene Levy to free the loving couple from the aquarium. “If something works for me, I stick with it.” Words to live by.

134. Live and Let Die - My second favorite Bond film (1973) was the first for the late Roger Moore, who took over for Sean Connery and saves the mystical and beautiful Solitaire (Jane Seymour). Bond uncovers a heroin trafficking ring through Harlem and a Caribbean Island, fighting off some strange characters. It was all topped off by Paul McCartney's brilliant song.

133. Begin Again - A brilliant songwriter (Keira Knightley), about to head back to England after a breakup, and a down-on-his-luck record producer (Mark Ruffalo) meet by chance and make wonderful music together in New York. It is imperfect at times and the music is simple, but there are so many great heartfelt scenes.

132. Da 5 Bloods - Spike Lee's latest joint came out on Netflix in 2020 and it had to be added to the list immediately. Four African-American Vietnam vets return to the place where their friend died in battle and a box of gold bars were buried some 40 or 50 years earlier.

131. Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back - The second movie in the series is a favorite for many. It comes in a close third for me. There is plenty going on for sure with the introduction of the great Yoda and Lando Calrissian, while Luke meets dad. It sets the table well for the next one.


130. The Shawshank Redemption - The 1994 film follows the story of Andy Dufresne (Tim Robbins), a man wrongly-accused of a double murder who finds a way to cope with prison life and wins in the end. The movie was not a huge hit out of the gate, but became more popular as time went on. It might be higher on many lists, but I understand the power of the film and Morgan Freeman's performance is amazing. "Hope is a good thing."

129. Truth - Cate Blanchett plays Mary Mapes with vigor and Robert Redford portrays Dan Rather in a film about the controversy surrounding the 60 Minutes report on George W. Bush’s military service, which gets tangled in a web of corporate scum and partisan politics. Blanchett’s pulsating speech, defending journalism, at the end is one of my favorite scenes of all time. FEA!!

128. Top Gun - The iconic 1986 film was one of Tom Cruise’s first big roles as he plays Maverick, a reckless but talented Naval aviator. Cruise’s battles with Ice Man (Val Kilmer) and the forbidden courtship with teacher (Kelly McGillis) are classic. The music pushes the intensity of the movie, especially Kenny Loggins’ “Danger Zone.”

127. Life is Beautiful - Roberto Benigni won Best Actor in 1997 and directed this Italian comedy-drama. Benigni plays a Jewish man who uses his imagination and humor to save his son from death at a German concentration camp. It was the first film that I enjoyed thoroughly despite dealing with subtitles, and the ending is both sad and triumphant.

127. Don't Look Up -

126. After Hours - Martin Scorsese's odd, but riveting, 1985 film follows Paul Hackett (Griffin Dunne) when he decides to go out to a diner after a very ordinary day at work sitting at the computer. Hackett meets a pretty, but very crazy, woman named Marcy (Rosanna Arquette) and sets sail on a strange journey through the New York City night. Surrender Dorothy!

125. Black Panther - Marvel provides another unique and compelling super hero with Chadwick Boseman taking over as king of Wakanda - only to be challenged by his evil cousin. The story and the characters are rich.

124. Up in the Air - George Clooney plays a man who lives his life on the road, working for businesses who don't have the guts to fire workers themselves. His regimented routine changes when he meets two different women (Anna Kendrick and Vera Farmiga). I enjoyed this movie and it also makes you think about what's most important in life.

123. The Town - Director Ben Affleck co-wrote and stars in the 2010 crime drama based on Chuck Hogan's book "The Prince of Thieves." A group of long-time friends from Charlestown, Mass. rob banks in the area and Affleck falls for one of the managers (Rebecca Hall), who may be able to identify them. Jon Hamm and Jeremy Renner are also terrific in their roles.

x122. Groundhog Day - Pittsburgh weatherman Phil Connors (Bill Murray) lives the same day over and over and over again until he gets it right with Rita Hanson (Andie McDowell). The great Harold Ramis directed this comedy classic with a masterful performance from the groundhog. What if there were no tomorrows?

121. Saved! - Mary (Jena Malone), who attends a devout christian high school, gets pregnant after trying to "cure" her boyfriend of his gayness. Mandy Moore, Patrick Fugit and Macauley Calkin join a solid cast in this satirical comedy with a strong message.


120. Breaking Away - The 1979 film, based in Bloomington, Ind., follows a group of young townies who enter "The Little 500" bicycle race against the snooty college teams. Dennis Quaid is one of the kids and Dennis Christopher is the talented lead cyclist for the "Cutters" in this likable, humorous slice of life. The movie was nominated for Best Picture and won a Golden Globe.

119. Mystery Alaska - It is a far-fetched story with some corny scenes, but there's just enough old time hockey and solid performances to make the 1999 film quite enjoyable. Russell Crowe is the veteran leader who captains an amateur team from remote Mystery that takes on the New York Rangers in an exhibition game that the NHLPA would never approve. Burt Reynolds channels John Tortorella.

118. Serendipity - Apparently it means "a fortunate accident." Talk about fortunate, how about having a choice between Bridget Moynihan and Kate Beckinsale? You...can't... lose. John Cusack has that tough decision in this likable romantic comedy. Jeremy Piven also plays a key role as Cusack's friend in the film that ends on the ice in New York City.

117. The Hate U Give - Black Lives (do) Matter. This film does not scream that, but the sentiment is clear and it shows the temptations and the impossible decisions minority youths in the inner city have to make. I truly believe this movie should be watched and discussed in schools. Let's talk about how we treat each other and how the police can deal with minorities and situations better.

116. The Hurricane - I was captivated by William Nack's amazing 1992 story on Rubin "Hurricane" Carter in Sports Illustrated and was anxious to see the movie in 1999. While some of the facts were fudged, as usual in the films such as this, it did not disappoint with Denzel Washington producing one of his best performances as a boxer who was wrongly-convicted of a triple murder. "Hate put me in this place. Love's gonna bust me out."

115. Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery - Mike Myers killed it in the first and - by a mile - the best of the series in 1997 as the goofy English spy and the sinister Dr. Evil. Austin's flirting with Vanessa (Elizabeth Hurley) and Alotta FFagina (Fabiano Udenio), along with his meeting with the Fembots are comedy history. And Danger.... is Austin's middle name.

114. Argo - The intense film is based on the escape of six US diplomats from Tehran during the Iran hostage crisis from 1979-81 and it won Best Picture at the 2012 Academy Awards. Ben Affleck plays CIA operative Tony Mendez, who helps get the people out with the help of the Canadian Embassy. While the final scene was not how it actually happened, it is spine-tingling. If you don't like the drama added, Argo Fuck yourself.

113. Boogie Nights - Paul Thomas Anderson's 1997 film explores the porn industry of the 1970s through the eyes of young star Dirk Diggler (Mark Wahlberg). Burt Reynolds provides the best performance of his career as a film maker who finds Dirk while Heather Graham, Don Cheadle, Phillip Seymour Hoffman and Julianne Moore add to an amazing cast. The scene at the druggie's house with the young Asian setting off firecrackers is one the weirdest, intense scenes of all time.

112. BlacKkKlansman - Director Spike Lee's powerful film based on the true story of a black cop, who infiltrates the KKK over the phone in Colorado. John David Washington is brilliant as the real Ron Stallworth and Flip (Adam Driver) shines as the fake Stallworth with the white supremacist fools.

111. Guardians of the Galaxy - The 2014 film from Marvel Studios is an action/comedy romp with a motley crew of superheroes, led by Peter Quill (Chris Pratt). Bradley Cooper provides the voice for the cheeky raccoon-like character Rocket, whose buddy "Groot" steals the film. It's just a load of fun and the sequel is almost as good.


110. The Tillman Story - The amazing, but disturbing, 2010 documentary follows the tragic death of Pat Tillman and the controversial aftermath. The former Arizona Cardinals defensive back, who gave up his NFL career to join the army, was found to be killed by friendly fire in Afghanistan - a fact that was originally covered up before his family helps to reveal it.

109. Lord of War - The under-rated 2005 film stars Nicolas Cage as Yuri Orlov, an illegal arms dealer from Brighton Beach who becomes a major player in the world. Orlov makes deals with horrible dictators, along with his drugged-out and conflicted brother (Jared Leto), while fooling his dream woman (Bridget Moynihan) into marrying him. An agent (Ethan Hawke) is constantly on his tail.

108. Jurassic Park - Developing a remote island with cloned dinosaurs from the DNA of very old frozen mosquitoes - what could go wrong? The 1993 Steven Spielberg film was the best of the series by far and won for sound and the amazing visual effects at the Academy Awards. Sam Neill, Laura Dern and Jeff Goldblum lead a solid cast, who try to avoid those pesky raptors.

107. We Are Marshall - The emotional 2006 film depicts the aftermath of the tragic plane crash that killed 75 people in 1970, including 37 players from the Marshall football team. Matthew McConaughey plays charismatic coach Jack Lengyel, who starts from scratch to help lift the Thundering Herd from the ashes.

106. Bend it Like Beckham - While the soccer action isn't particularly well shot, this film is about culture, tradition, tolerance, family and friendship. An 18-year-old Sikh named Jess (Parminder Nagra) secretly joins a girls soccer team in England against her parents wishes, befriends Jules (Keira Knightley) and falls for her coach. If nothing else, you get to hear Keira say "Sohnta Clahhhra."

105. Chasing Amy - Kevin Smith's off-beat film stars Ben Affleck as a comic book artist who falls in love with his lesbian friend (Joey Lauren Adams) and both go through soul-searching issues. Basically, it's just about how difficult love and relationships are. Some critics thought it was too stereotypical and narrow, but in my mind it was thought-provoking, unique - sometimes crude - and hilarious.

104. Fever Pitch - The Farrelly Brothers' 2005 film is loosely based on Nick Hornby's book "Fever Pitch, A Fan's Life" about his time rooting for Arsenal in the English Premiership. The Farrellys adapted it to the life of "one of God's most pathetic creatures" - Boston Red Sox fans - with Jimmy Farrell in the lead role. The movie concludes with end the Curse of the Bambino. "Remember when Roger Moret went catatonic?"

103. Into the Wild - Sean Penn's gripping 2007 film follows the journey of Chris McCandless, who leaves his family and a normal life to travel across the country without a car on his way to the Alaskan wilderness. Emile Hirsch is outstanding as McCandless and Hal Holbrook earned a Best Supporting Actor nomination as one of the people he meets along the way. You go through many different emotions through this film and there's some great Eddie Vedder music as background.

102. Elizabethtown - Cameron Crowe's most under-rated film stars Orlando Bloom as a young man, embarrassed by a huge failure in business, who must deal with death in many different ways. His journey leads him to the realization of what life is all about. Kirsten Dunst has never been cuter as friendly stewardess Claire Colburn. Some think her character was not real, that she was supposed to be an angel that saves Bloom. So many great scenes.

101. War Games - The 1983 film stars Matthew Broderick as an innocent young hacker, who easily works his way into a government computer and plays a dangerous game. Every guy in my age group's crush Ally Sheedy plays Broderick's girlfriend as he rushes to save the world from "thermal nuclear war." Words to live by from computer Joshua - "A strange game. The only winning move is not to play."

101. Birdman - Former super hero star Riggan Thompson (Michael Keaton) tries to find legitimacy on the Broadway stage in this fast-moving, unique "black comedy" directed expertly by Alejandro Inarritu. It won Best Picture in 2014 and Keaton should have won Best Actor after his masterful effort, but Emma Stone and Edward Norton also make the movie go with their performances.


100. Meet the Parents - Gaylord Focker (Ben Stiller) makes a comedy of errors in an attempt to impress his scary future father in law, played by Robert De Niro. Losing the beloved Jinxy and a fated pool volleyball spike don't help Focker join the "circle of trust." Naomi Watts was originally slated to play Pam, but Teri Polo proved perfect for the role - and in Playboy afterward.

99. Short Term 12 - A terrific cast that includes Brie Larson, Rami Malek, Kaitlyn Dever (she hasn't seemed to age since then) and John Gallagher Jr. weave an interesting story about a residential treatment center for young people.

98. Independence Day - The science fiction film won an Academy Award for best visual effects in 1996, but it was ultimately just a fun ride with a great cast. Will Smith and Jeff Goldblum blow up and punch the nasty-looking creatures while Bill Pullman makes impossible decisions as President before a rousing final speech. The sequel was not good, but the original was one of the most entertaining of its genre.

97. National Lampoon's Vacation - The 1983 road trip romp was the first of the series and by far the best with Chevy Chase and Beverly D'Angelo loading up the Family Truckster and heading to Wally World. When it came out, it was unique and one of the best comedies ever, but many have passed it along the way. Chase's encounter with Christie Brinkley is sure memorable though.

96. 50/50 - Joseph Gordon-Levitt, one of my favorite actors, plays a young man who is forced to deal with a rare form of cancer. Anna Kendrick is adorable as a young hospital therapist finding her way and Seth Rogan's humor does not screw up the movie, which was nominated for a Golden Globe. It is an emotional journey and the story is very intelligently told.

95. Fletch - Chevy Chase reportedly said this was his favorite movie role as a crack investigative reporter for the LA Times working on a drug trafficking story before getting embroiled in a devious plot. Irwin Fletcher's witty remarks make the movie, especially in his romance with a millionaire criminal's wife (Dana Wheeler-Nicholson) at the club. Just charge your next bill to the Underhills' tab.

94. Birdman - Former super hero star Riggan Thompson (Michael Keaton) tries to find legitimacy on the Broadway stage in this fast-moving, unique "black comedy" directed expertly by Alejandro Inarritu. It won Best Picture in 2014 and Keaton should have won Best Actor after his masterful effort, but Emma Stone and Edward Norton also make the movie go with their performances.

93. Say Anything - Cameron Crowe's directorial debut is this romantic comedy that revolves around an average high school student named Lloyd Dobler (John Cusack), who boldly asks out the pretty valedictorian Diane Court (Ione Skye). The complicated relationship has its ups and downs until Dobler puts a boom box above his head to play Peter Gabriel's "In Your Eyes."

92. Mallrats - Love, smart and goofy comedy, bad language, Claire Forlani, a hidden sailboat and a Hartford Whalers victory. What more would you want in a movie? Jason Lee is at his crude best as he tries to repair a relationship with Shannen Doherty at the mall with a lot of things going on in Kevin Smith's film. Silent Bob's quote to remember: "Adventure, excitement, a Jedi craves not these things."

91. The Bourne Identity - The first and best of the spy drama series with Matt Damon playing brainwashed soldier Jason Bourne, who must be eliminated after his black ops mission fails. Damon befriends a beautiful German woman (Franka Potente) and he uses his special talents to evade the bad guys. Bourne apologizing to the Neski girl is amazing scene.


90. Wedding Crashers - Owen Wilson and Vince Vaughn have fun crashing weddings and finally meet their matches at the ceremony for a congressman's daughter. Rachel McAdams and Isla Fisher draw the two goofs out of their fantasy world and make them better people, but there is plenty of comedy to be had along the way. Will Ferrell makes perhaps his best cameo performance as Chazz, who crashes funerals to meet women.

89. Across the Universe - A young Irishman named Jude (Jim Sturgess) travels to America to find his US serviceman father and meets a diverse group of people, including the love of his life (Evan Rachel Wood). Julie Taymor's unique musical drama is told through Beatles songs and with a backdrop of the Vietnam War in the 1960s. While it veers off course a few times, it produces one of the best endings in movie history.

88. Remember the Titans - The 2000 film produced by Jerry Bruckheimer is based on the story of Herman Boone (Denzel Washington), who takes over as football coach at a recently-integrated high school in Alexandria, Va. Hayden Panettiere, Kate Bosworth and Ryan Gosling show up in supporting roles in this emotional story.

87. Jackie Brown - Director Quentin Tarantino's third film is a crime caper about "colorful low-life characters" as Roger Ebert put it. Samuel L. Jackson uses flight attendant Jackie Brown (Pam Grier) to smuggle his money in from Mexico. Jackie outsmarts everyone by teaming with smitten veteran bail bondsman Max Cherry (Robert Forster), who was deservedly nominated for Best Supporting Actor. A just-out-of jail Robert DeNiro and a ditsy Bridget Fonda add humor.

86. The Man With the Golden Gun - Bond films get rated vastly different by the critics, but this is my favorite as Roger Moore hunts down Francisco Scaramanga and battles him on a small secluded island in Chinese waters. You're not going to find many better Bond girls than Maud Adams and Swede beauty Britt Ekland, who plays the aptly-named agent Mary Goodnight. It is 007 fun from start to finish.

85. Sleepless in Seattle - OK, a little sentimental here, but director Nora Ephron co-wrote this appealing little romantic comedy starring Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan. Sam (Hanks) is a widower whose son Jonah (Ross Mallinger) calls a radio show to see if he can get help finding his dad a new wife and picks Annie (Ryan). The ending on the top of the Empire State Building still makes my eyes water. I can admit it.

84. Philadelphia - It's rare when a movie has the ability to adjust your philosophy on issues - even slightly - and late director Jonathan Demme's film about a man dying of Aids is one. Tom Hanks took Best Actor for his portrayal of Andrew Beckett, a gay man who is fired after his disease is discovered, and Denzel Washington provides one of his best performances as his lawyer. The movie is filled with powerful scenes and beautiful music.

83. Avengers: End Game - Yeah, it's Marvel and it's about cartoonish superheroes, but this three-hour action film had more heart than most of the similar movies put together. It begins with our heroes splintered and beaten, and ends with an uprising to remember. The last scene is both heartbreaking and heartwarming.

82. Platoon - Oliver Stone's Vietnam War drama won Best Picture at the Academy Awards in 1986 and provided some incredible images along with strong performances. The story follows Charlie Sheen through his first tour of duty and the horrors he encounters while trying to stay sane. The scene where dead bodies are pushed into a hole by bulldozers is one of the most numbing few minutes in movie history.

81. Hoop Dreams - The amazing 1994 documentary follows the journeys of William Gates and Arthur Agee - two African American youths recruited to play at a private, catholic school near Chicago to play basketball. It was originally supposed to be just a 30-minute short on PBS and it grew into a classic. Hard to beat as the best sports documentary of all time.


80. Once - Director John Carney's first of three brilliant films (also Begin Again and Sing Street) is about a Czech immigrant and an Irish street singer who meet by chance and make beautiful music together. Non-actors Glen Hansard and the gorgeous Marketa Irglova add authenticity to the story with outstanding performances. "Falling Slowly" won Best Original Song at the 80th Academy Awards.

79. Ex Machina - A creepy rich recluse (Oscar Isaac), who owns a search company, recruits a programmer (Domhnall Gleeson) to his secluded mountain home to give the Turing test to his new creation - a beautiful AI. Alicia Vikander should have won the Best Supporting Actress for her portrayal of the amazing Ava instead of  for "The Danish Girl." It is a fascinating, unique, science fiction film with one heck of a stunning ending.

78. The Replacements - It might not be a masterpiece of cinema, but who hasn't watched this fun football farce about 100 times on late-night TV? Keanu Reeves' best two roles, in my opinion, are as washed up college quarterbacks who make good and he shines as Shane Falco, the leader of the motley crew. Pretty Brook Langton rocks as Falco's love interest and Gene Hackman as his heady coach.

77. Apollo 13 - Tom Hanks plays astronaut Jim Lovell in the true story of a 1970 mission to the moon that had to be aborted, and the daring route home. One of director Ron Howard's strongest efforts was masterfully detailed and filled with tension, especially on re-entry, and earned a Best Picture nomination in 1995. "Houston, we have a problem."

76. Bulworth - Warren Beatty plays a burned-out California Senator (Jay Bulworth) who has planned to stage his own murder, but he changes his mind after meeting a young Halle Berry and discovering his talent for rap music. Bulworth finds his soul when he realizes honesty is the best policy. Wouldn't it be nice if politicians could all do that?

75. The Descendants - George Clooney produces his best career performance as a man dealing with an emotional roller coaster in Alexander Payne's film. Clooney's wife, who he finds out was cheating on him, is on her death bed after a boating accident while he must make a decision about whether to sell his large family's beautiful stretch of ocean land on Hawaii and deal with two young daughters. Shailene Woodley is outstanding as Clooney's oldest daughter.

74. The Hunger Games - The first of four in the trilogy of adapted novels from Suzanne Collins is based in a post-apocalyptic society of the haves and have nots. Jennifer Lawrence shines as the heroic Katniss, who volunteers in the last-person-standing brutal contest in place of her younger sister. While the sequels are solid, the debut of the series was shocking, powerful and heartwarming.

73. Malcolm X - The first of two Spike Lee films in the top 100 is a three-hour, 22-minute epic. Denzel Washington is extraordinary as the controversial Nation of Islam leader, evolving from small-time hustler to a powerful figure before his death in 1965 at the hands of some of the very people he led. The final scene in which he moves toward the site of his murder to Sam Cooke's brilliant song "A Change is Gonna Come" is breathtaking.

72. Sing Street - Director John Carney provides another enjoyable movie with music as the theme. A young Irish lad (Ferdia Walsh-Peelo) puts a band together starting from scratch to impress a complicated, beautiful girl (Lucy Boynton). Mark McKenna is brilliant in a supporting role. It is fun, smart and heartwarming.

71. Bowling for Columbine - While director Michael Moore can be polarizing and push the envelope at times, his portrayal of our country's baffling gun culture in his 2002 film was right on target. The Academy Award-winning documentary is chilling, sad - and occasionally humorous - as he tries to find answers to why many Americans live in constant fear for no reason. The Columbine footage is heartbreaking and shock rocker Marilyn Manson is one of the most sane people interviewed.


70. Fast Times at Ridgemont High - Cameron Crowe wrote this 1982 classic California high school comedy which touched on many different issues while making us laugh. Sean Penn was Spicoli while Jennifer Jason Leigh, Judge Reinhold and, yes, the great Phoebe Cates, were outstanding. Jackson Browne, Joe Walsh, Don Henley and others contribute to a strong soundtrack as well.

69. The Sum of All Fears - The 2002 spy drama is based on a book from Tom Clancy by the same name. The story concerns a Neo-Nazi group attempting to start Nuclear War between the US and Russia while Jack Ryan (Ben Affleck) works to uncover the truth. Apparently the reviews for this film were not great overall, but I thought it was powerful and quite believable.

68. The Commitments - A young music fanatic Jimmy Rabbitte (Robert Arkins) puts together a soul band with some diverse characters to play on the north side of Dublin. Imelda Quirke (Angeline Bell) and Natalie Murphy (Maria Doyle) grace the screen as part of the Commit-ettes and Joey "The Lips" Fagan (Johnny Murphy) gives the group cred. Joey says when the band breaks up abruptly, "Sure, we could have been famous and made albums and stuff. But that would have been predictable. This way, it's poetic."

67. Silver Linings Playbook - Jennifer Lawrence and Bradley Cooper star as two people going through different types of mental issues before forming a unique relationship. Robert DeNiro shows up as Cooper's gambling father, who is very superstitious about his beloved Philadelphia Eagles. Director David O. Russell (The Fighter, American Hustle, Joy) allows J-Law and Cooper to produce their career-best performances.

66. 2001, A Space Odyssey - Director Stanley Kubrick's science fiction drama, based on a story by Arthur C. Clarke, is a psychological journey through the universe and the origins of humanity. The depiction of space travel in the 1970 film is way ahead of its time. You are forced to interpret the mysterious things that occur, including the mental breakdown of the unforgettable computer named Hal.

65. Best in Show - Eugene Levy and Christopher Guest co-wrote this hilarious mockumentary of a national dog show with some crazy characters. The late Fred Willard makes the film go with his goofy commentary on the show and Levy shows off his two left feet, literally. Parker Posey also shines as the neurotic owner of a beautiful competitor in the show.

64. The Breakfast Club - John Hughes directed this memorable high school movie from 1985 about a group of five teenagers who spend Saturday detention together and form unlikely friendships. Ally Sheedy, Molly Ringwald, Anthony Michael Hall, Judd Nelson and Emilio Estevez were apparently nicknamed the "Brat Pack," at the time. None became superstars, but two show up in movies higher than this on the list.

63. Armageddon - No, you probably couldn't land a spacecraft on an asteroid, drill a hole, load a nuclear weapon in there and split it perfectly in two. But, heck, who cares? It's a movie and it is fun from start to finish as Bruce Willis leads a motley crew to try and save the world. The ending is quite emotional and Liv Tyler's pouting face gets me every time. "Permission to shake the hand of the daughter of the bravest man I've ever met." Tears.

62. The Social Network - David Fincher directed this film written by Aaron Sorkin based loosely on the making of facebook, with Jesse Eisenberg starring Mark Zuckerberg. Andrew Garfield and Justin Timberlake add outstanding performances while Dakota Johnson and Rooney Mara steal their scenes. The film is more about entertainment than accuracy, but most are and it is fun to watch.

61. Point Break - The 1991 film, directed by Kathryn Bigelow (The Hurt Locker, Zero Dark Thirty), has gotten more popular with age and fans can recite the best lines. "He's not coming back." Keanu Reeves stars as FBI agent Johnny Utah, a former college quarterback, who infiltrates a group of surfers/adrenaline junkies led by Patrick Swayze that rob banks. Utah jumps out of a plane without a parachute, but gets the girl (Lori Petty) and his man.


60. Major League - A bunch of rejects and has-beens lead the Cleveland Indians to the pennant in this lovable 1989 sports comedy. Charlie Sheen brings the Wild Thing to life and Tom Berenger plays the cliched heady catcher who leads the team. There were sequels that didn't match the humor and spirit of the original when the great Bob Uecker coined the phrase "jusssst a bit outside."

59. Airplane! - The wacky comedy parody still draws the same amount of laughs as it did when it first hit the big screen in 1980. Julie Hagerty and Robert Hays play the lead roles, but the automatic pilot steals the show. Kareem Abdul Jabbar puts forth his finest movie performance while Leslie Nielsen is hilarious with every line or facial expression as the doctor, and don't call him Shirley.

58. Radio Days - "Sleeper" made me laugh while "Annie Hall" and "Hannah and Her Sisters" were memorable, but my favorite Woody Allen movie is this old-style classic. The 1987 film has a great cast and remembers the days when radio was king. Mia Farrow is strong as Sally White and Larry David even makes a cameo as a communist.

57. Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi - My second favorite in the Star Wars saga as it brings to a close the legacy of Darth Vader. Vader ends his life by departing the dark side to help his son Luke live on to lead the Jedi. The action scenes on Endor with the rebels and Ewoks fighting the Emperial forces are some of the best in the series.

56. Ferris Bueller's Day Off - Bueller? Bueller? Bueller? Crafty Ferris (Matthew Broderick) skips school and sets off on a strange, fun journey through Chicago with his girlfriend (Mia Sara) and best buddy (Alan Ruck) in another great John Hughes film. "Life moves fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it."

55. The Godfather Part II - No doubt the greatest sequel - and prequel - in movie history, isn't it? You can make a case that it may be better than the original, but it is hard to match the intrigue and power of director Francis Ford Coppola's first epic film. This story moves from Italy to New York to Nevada to Cuba and all points in between, but ends on the Lake with poor Fredo.

54. The Hangover - The first and, by far, the best installment of the series follows a group of friends who take their bachelor party to Vegas where chaos reigns. A tiger, Mike Tyson, a stripper with a baby, a stolen police car, a satchel, a stun gun and a chicken (still haven't figured that one out) are all part of the fun. The "wolf pack" retraces their steps to try and find the lost groom.

53. Moneyball - The 2011 film is based on a book by the same name from Michael Lewis about the 2002 Oakland Athletics, who won 20 in a row, and their general manager Billy Beane. Brad Pitt provides one of his best performances as Beane, who tries a new style of scouting through statistics (sabermetrics) to help put together a competitive team with a limited budget while battling his manager and old-school scouts.

52. Some Kind of Wonderful - The 1987 film was written by John Hughes and directed by Howard Deutch, who later married the star (Lea Thompson) and the duo produced a good little actress named Zoey Deutch (Everybody Wants Some, Buffaloed). It's the story of an average student named Keith (Eric Stolz) as he dares to ask out the popular and newly-available Amanda Jones (Thompson). The rest is a smart, fun journey through high school life.

51. Back to the Future - In the first of the memorable series, Marty McFly (Michael J. Fox) is transported back to 1955 where he must make his parents fall in love again after the time continuum is messed up. Marty has to fight off the advances of his mom, the bully Biff and he introduces the kids to some classic Chuck Berry music ahead of its time. Eric Stolz was supposed to be Marty, but the switch was made during filming.


50. Dances With Wolves - Kevin Costner starred and directed the beautiful and emotional 1990 film about a disconnected Union Army lieutenant who befriends an Indian tribe while alone on the American frontier. The movie won seven Academy awards, including Best Picture, and re-invigorated the Western genre. It is still a lesson in how people with different cultures can live together in peace, if effort is made. And what about the Tatanka?!

49. Sixteen Candles - John Hughes wrote and directed this 1984 high school comedy that is most movie lovers' favorite of its genre. Molly Ringwald provides the best performance of her career as average high school sophomore Samantha Baker dealing with parents forgetting her 16th birthday and a major crush on heart-throb senior Jaaaaaaaake Ryan - played by Michael Schoeffling, who apparently beat out Viggo Mortensen. Anthony Michael Hall shines as the king of the geeks.

48. Promising Young Woman - Cassie (Carey Mulligan) carries out mental vengeance on manipulative men and others to avenge her best friend, who was sexually assaulted at a party when they were both in medical school. The best film of 2020 is gripping, humorous and smart.

47.  JoJo Rabbit - A cheeky comedy-drama which both loudly and in subtle ways shows the lunacy of hate and fascism. Taika Waititi writes, directs and stars in the film while amazing 12-year-old Roman Griffin Davis plays the Hitler Youth "JoJo" Betzler, who must deal with finding out his mother (Scarlett Johansson) is a member of the resistance and is hiding a young Jewish woman (Thomasin McKenzie) in the wall at the end of World War II.

46. Clerks - It's crude, somewhat inappropriate, but Kevin Smith's film based on life along the Jersey shore is one of the most humorous of all time. The movie revolves around Dante (Brian O'Halloran), who "wasn't even supposed to be working today!" and his day running the Quick Stop as he juggles girlfriends. Jay and Silent Bob show up and Randal (Jeff Anderson) probably has the best lines while 37 becomes the operative number.

45. Jerry Maguire - Cameron Crowe's 1996 romantic comedy stars Tom Cruise as a sports agent trying to do the right thing in a profession that has gone off the rails. Renee Zellweger is brilliant as the accountant that follows him out the door of his agency and makes him a better man. Cuba Gooding Jr. won Best Supporting Actor basically for one of the most iconic scenes of all time when he asks Cruise to "Show me the money!"

44. The Big Short - Some people quibble with the facts or say they are exaggerated (NOT ME), but director Adam McKay (Anchorman) does a strong job turning Michael Lewis' book about the horror of the 2007-2008 financial crisis into an entertaining film. Steve Carell, Ryan Gosling, Brad Pitt and Christian Bale hit home runs with their performances while telling the story of fund managers and a banker who predicted the collapse of a still fraudulent system.

43. Once Upon a Time in Hollywood - A movie about movies. That doesn't sound that great, but director Quentin Tarantino uses all his talent to create compelling characters who weave a story about a period of time in the Hotel California. Leonardo DiCaprio is actor Rick Dalton on the downside of his career, Brad Pitt is his driver and former stunt man Cliff Booth and Margot Robbie plays likable Sharon Tate - a real-life actress who was murdered by the Manson cult.

42. Notting Hill - The romantic comedy was written by Richard Curtis - his second of two brilliant screen plays in the 1990s. The film stars Hugh Grant as a small-time shop owner who enters into an on-again, off-again relationship after a chance meeting with a superstar actress played by Julia Roberts. It's smart, humorous, thought-provoking and heartwarming. The ending is one of the best ever for this genre.

42. CODA - 

41. Rocky - Sylvester Stallone wrote and starred in the epic drama that led off the series, introducing one of the most iconic characters in movie history - Rocky Balboa, the small-time boxer from Philadelphia who takes on world champ Apollo Creed (Carl Weathers). The movie won Best Picture in 1976 while Stallone and Talia Shire, who played his lovable geeky girlfriend Adrian, were both nominated along with Burgess Meredith and Burt Young. The final fight scene is as emotional as it gets.


40. Beautiful Girls - Willie Conway (Timothy Hutton) is going through a period of life issues when he decides to leave NYC to go home to the small Massachusetts town where he grew up. He meets an adorable 12-year-old Natalie Portman and Uma Thurman - two angels who both solve his problems in a way. It is a sweet, authentic and humorous story about relationships and small-town friendships that last forever.

39. Magnolia - Paul Thomas Anderson's three-hour epic film pieces together several intertwining stories, primarily about the relationships between parents and children, with great Aimee Mann music as background. Tom Cruise provides his most powerful and controversial performance as a male supremacist with a dying father that he has not seen in many years and John C. Reilly is the conscience of the film as a cop who falls for a pretty drug addict (Melora Waters). This is a movie that is in the category where people love or hate it. Ebert and I loved it. Siskel didn't.

38. Forrest Gump - Tom Hanks won Best Actor for his wonderful depiction of a slow, but sweet and big-hearted man who lives an amazing life after humble beginnings. The 1994 film is a history lesson following Gump through the Vietnam War, his athletic triumphs in football and ping pong, a successful shrimping business and Watergate before finding his grammar school sweetheart Jenny (Robin Wright) again.

37The Big Sick - Kumail Nanjiani hits a home run with his sly humor "you're the Pakistani Sammy Sosa," playing himself in the true-to-life story and Zoe Kazan was the perfect casting as Emily "I don't date time nerds," but the big surprise was Ray Romano's perfect deadpan performance. Everything seems to come together perfectly for this film, which you can watch over and over and still smile throughout.

36. 25th Hour - Director Spike Lee's best film stars Ed Norton as Monty Brogan, a broken man headed to prison after getting caught selling drugs for the Russian mafia. The story follows Monty as he spends the final day with his girlfriend, wonderfully named Natural Rivera (Rosario Dawson), along with long-time buddies. Monty calls out everyone in NYC to the mirror in a powerful, controversial scene (go see it on you tube), but the final finger is pointed at his greed.

35. 10 Things I Hate About You - The 1999 romantic high school comedy was reportedly written as a modern day version of Shakespeare's "The Taming of the Shrew." The late, great Heath Ledger attempts to tame Julia Stiles and a young Joseph Gordon Levitt courts Stiles' cute, quirky sister Bianca. Larry Miller (the girls' father) has the best lines in the film. When Bianca whines, "It's just a party daddy." Miller retorts, "and Hell is just a sauna."

34. Seabiscuit - The magical story about a banged up little horse who is turns into a great champion and provides Americans with something to feel good about during the Great Depression. Jeff Bridges is outstanding as the horse's owner and Chris Cooper as the unorthodox trainer. Jockey Red Pollard (Tobey Maguire) says to end the film, "You know, everyone thinks that we found this broken down horse and fixed him, but we didn't. He fixed us. Everyone of us. And I guess in a way, we kinda fixed each other, too."

33. ET - Director Steven Spielberg's charming 1982 film is about a goofy-looking, abandoned extra-terrestrial who befriends a young boy named Elliott (Henry Thomas). We were introduced to a tiny Drew Barrymore as Elliott's little sister in the epic movie that makes you laugh, cry and want to "phone home." It won four technical awards, but was beaten out for Best Picture by "Ghandi."

32. Miracle - Kurt Russell steals the 2004 film with his strong portrayal of Herb Brooks, who coached a group of college kids to the gold medal in men's hockey at the 1980 Olympics against all odds. While it is difficult to re-create the action of the greatest upset in sports history, the story about how the team came together and Brooks' mad genius is told expertly. I love watching this movie again. ... and again. ... and again. ... and again ... and again.

31. Nebraska - I'm still disappointed that Bruce Dern didn't win Best Actor (Matthew McConaughey did) for his work in this delightful, humorous slice of life that was directed by Alexander Payne. Dern plays a fading veteran who thinks he has won a million dollar sweepstakes and his son (Will Forte) decides to take him on a journey to Lincoln, Neb. despite knowing it is just a scam. The trip takes Woody through his old town before coming to a touching conclusion.


30. The Big Chill - Director Lawrence Kasdan's 1983 comedy-drama brings together a group of college friends from the University of Michigan after one of the group suddenly commits suicide. Great music of the 60s and 70s is the backdrop for the film that features an amazing cast, led by Glenn Close and Kevin Kline. Kevin Costner was cast as the late Alex, but he was never shown in the movie.

29. Office Space - Mike Judge (Beavis and Butt-Head) directed one good movie to add to his career resume and it is on the list of the best comedies of all time. Peter Gibbons (Ron Livingston) is a bored computer programmer stuck in a cubicle whose life changes when he is hypnotized into total relaxation, leading to a promotion, humor and chaos. Waitress Jennifer Anniston, who doesn't wear enough "flair," is Gibbons' dream girl and a printer gets justly tortured.

28. Raiders of the Lost Ark - The 1981 epic adventure film directed by Steven Spielberg stars Harrison Ford as archaeologist Indiana Jones, one of the most iconic characters in cinematic history. Jones goes in search of the Ark of the Covenant, which held the Ten Commandments, and must fight Hitler and his army for it. The power of the Ark is unleashed in an amazing final scene.

27. 500 Days of Summer - Director Marc Webb tells the story of boy meets girl - and both end up driving each other nuts - in a nonlinear fashion that works brilliantly. Summer (Zooey Deschanel) is the your basic appealing, but impossible-to-read young woman, while Tom (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) cannot fight through his expectations and her conflicting signals despite the early proclamation that she "doesn't want anything serious." It all adds up to a fun, thought-provoking and unique film.

26. Wall Street - Director and co-writer Oliver Stone's 1987 drama takes a look at greed in the stock market through the eyes of a young broker Bud Fox (Charlie Sheen) and corporate raider Gordon Gekko (Michael Douglas). Douglas won Best Actor as one of the great villains in movie history and Sheen provided his best-ever performance. "Man looks in the abyss, there's nothing staring back at him. At that moment, man finds his character. And that is what keeps him out of the abyss."

25. Lion - My pick for the best film of 2016 is a heartwarming true story that follows the journey of Saroo Brierley, who is trapped on a train that takes him hundreds of miles from his home in India when he is just 5-years-old. The amazing Sunny Pawar plays the young Saroo in the first hour of the film and Dev Patel takes over as the 25-year-old Saroo in the second half as he desperately tries to find his home. It is a movie about the power of family and I have never balled more during a final scene.

24. Good Will Hunting - Robin Williams won Best Supporting Actor for his role as a therapist working with a damaged young man from South Boston, who is a mathematical genius working as a janitor at a prestigious school. Williams is brilliant in the 1997 film while battling an old colleague for control of the treatment for Will Hunting (Matt Damon). How do you like them apples?

23. Titanic - James Cameron's epic disaster drama/love story won Best Picture in 1997 with Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet providing memorable performances. It is a story about the haves and have nots who had the honor to board the great ship and the terror of the aftermath when an iceberg gets in the way. The scene where the row boat comes back too late to find most of the people frozen and dead is one of the most bone-chilling of all time.

22. The Right Stuff - The epic 1983 film, adapted from the best-selling book by Tom Wolfe, follows America's first test pilots whose courageous efforts led to the first manned spaceflights. The late Sam Shepard plays the most heroic of them all - Chuck Yeager - as he breaks the sound barrier, but never gets to become one of the first astronauts. The three-hour, 12-minute movie is powerful, entertaining and provides an interesting history lesson.

21. Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope - The first in the epic series introduces Luke, Leia, Darth, Chewy, Han and the whole gang as the Rebellion takes on the Empire. The story begins at the end of spinoff  "Rogue One," as the Rebels have stolen the plans to destroy the Death Star. The characters are iconic and writer/director George Lucas reportedly mixed elements of myth and religion from Beowulf and King Arthur with Flash Gordon among other classics.


20. Planet of the Apes - The original and best of the epic science fiction series stars Charlton Heston as an astronaut who crash lands on a strange planet where intelligent apes rule over humans. The 1968 film holds up today and the apocalyptic story line comes to a close with Lady Liberty on the beach in one of the greatest scenes of all time. Chimp scientists Cornelius (Roddy McDowell) and Zira (Kim Hunter) give the movie heart.

19. Slap Shot - The 1977 comedy about a wacky minor-league hockey team, with the great Paul Newman as its player-coach, still makes you laugh uncontrollably. The Charlestown Chiefs become a winner and draw big crowds when they change their style to violence - led by the lovable Hanson Brothers. The characters are rich, somewhat believable, and Dickie Dunn just "tried to capture the spirit of the thing."

18. Die Hard - One of the best action movies of all time stars Bruce Willis as the charismatic New York cop John McClane, who springs into action when visiting his wife at a Christmas party in Los Angeles. The late, great Alan Rickman plays one of the best villains of all time - Hans Gruber - the leader of the bad guys. Not usually a fan of shoot 'em up movies, but this one has appeal. Is it a Christmas movie or not?

17. A Few Good Men - Probably the movie I have watched the most in my life on television as it is constantly on late at night and never gets old. Rob Reiner directed Aaron Sorkin's screenplay about the coverup after a marine dies when he is disciplined within the unit. Jack Nicholson produced one of his best performances as the evil Colonel Jessup while Tom Cruise and Demi Moore make it fun.

16. Caddyshack - Golf was never the same after the 1980 comedy directed by the great Harold Ramis and written by Brian Doyle Murray, Ramis and Douglas Kenney. The epic battle between Rodney Dangerfield and Ted Knight is an all-timer while Chevy Chase produces his best performance in a movie. It is one of the top movies ever for producing lines that are used daily. "I don't think the real heavy stuff's going to come down for quite a while."

15. Bull Durham - A comedy about minor league baseball turns into a unique love story. Kevin Costner could not have played Crash Davis, a minor-league veteran, any better as he grooms the hard-throwing bonus baby Nuke LaLoosh (Tim Robbins) and falls for the local gal (Susan Sarandon). The opening monologue is one of the best in film history.

14. Four Weddings and a Funeral - You might think this a little high, but the 1994 movie has always been special to me. It is four parts smart comedy with one part drama and is basically about love, family and friendship in jolly old England. Andie McDowell's acting is a bit awkward at times, but perhaps that is what her character was supposed to be - an American puzzle for Hugh Grant. The film was nominated for Best Picture and Richard Curtis' screenplay was also up for an Oscar.

13. Lost in Translation - Sofia Coppola may have ruined The Godfather 3 as an actress, but she wrote and directed a masterpiece with this 2003 film. A washed up, lonely famous actor (Bill Murray) has a chance meeting with a confused, curious and beautiful young woman (Scarlett Johansson) in Tokyo and they develop a unique friendship far from home. It is subtle, simple, funny, bittersweet and smart.

12. Spotlight - An impeccably directed (Tom McCarthy) and acted drama about the Boston Globe's investigation of child abuse by Catholic priests, which was covered up for decades in the area. It brings back memories of the reasons why I got into the journalism business, what it was like in the newsroom and what the profession can mean to a community. Michael Keaton, Mark Ruffalo, Liev Schreiber, John Slattery and Rachel McAdams produce perfect performances in the Best Picture of 2015.

11. Garden State - Zach Braff wrote and directed this 2004 quirky cult classic about a heavily-medicated young actor who returns to his hometown after his paraplegic mother dies. Andrew Largeman (Braff) re-unites with his old townie friends and meets a cheeky young epileptic woman named Sam (Natalie Portman), who he falls in love with. It is smart, hilarious at times, wacky and heartwarming all in one fun film.


10. Inglourious Basterds - Director Quentin Tarantino tells the fantasy story of the triumphant attempts to assassinate Hitler by a group of Jewish American soldiers with wishful "alternative facts" and intense, intriguing dialogue. Brad Pitt plays the witty and deadly Lt. Aldo Raine while Christoph Waltz won Best Supporting Actor for his depiction of the devilish German Colonel Landa. Melanie Laurent is also great as Shosanna/Emmanuelle, especially when she puts on her war paint to a David Bowie song.

9. The Godfather - The original and best in the series from 1972 stars Marlon Brando as Vito Corleone, the leader of a fictional crime family that is in the midst of a war during the 1940s and 50s. The epic film, which won Best Picture, follows the health demise of Vito, the murder of his son Sonny and the emergence of his youngest son Michael - who was supposed to be a senator. It is what all mafia movies are judged by.

8. High Fidelity - Had never seen a preview for this film before choosing it between the morning skate and a hockey game in New Jersey one day, then went to see it about four or five more times. John Cusack stars as a music store owner who can never settle down, but is driven to irrational behavior when his latest girlfriend (Iben Hjerjle) leaves him. It is based on a book by Nick Hornby, with the setting changed from London to Chicago where Lisa Bonet and Jack Black show up among others in the smart, hilarious movie.

7. Animal House - The 1978 classic comedy was directed by John Landis and turned into a tour de force for the late John Belushi, who had the majority of the best lines in the film. Every time I watch the movie, it brings back memories of college and fraternity fun at UConn. The best scenes and lines will live forever. "My advice to you is to start drinking heavily."

6. Pulp Fiction - Quentin Tarantino's pulsating black comedy burst on the scene in 1994 as it portrayed the criminal underground in Los Angeles with many intriguing, unique characters. John Travolta made a triumphant comeback as Vincent Vega, who is asked by the big boss (Ving Rhames) to take out his wife (Uma Thurman) in one of the best and weirdest scenes in movie history. Samuel L. Jackson, Bruce Willis, Eric Stolz and Harvey Keitel also hit home runs in the crude, but fun, impeccably-written film.

5. Hoosiers - The 1986 film, inspired by tiny Milan High's run to the Indiana state basketball title in 1954, is an old-school, mystical movie that is well detailed and full of heart from start to finish. Gene Hackman plays a brilliant basketball coach with a dark, hidden past who gets one more chance in small-town Hickory and falls for the guarded local gal (Barbara Hershey). The best sports movie of all time ends with Jimmy Chitwood going one-on-one at the top of the key.

4. Stripes - The best pure comedy of all-time stars Bill Murray and Harold Ramis as two bumbling men who decide to join the army to introduce discipline to their lives. John Winger and Russell Ziskey add leadership to a group of sad-sack soldiers that includes the late John Candy, who has joined the military to lose a little weight and become a "lean, mean fighting machine." Some have said the second half of the movie ruins it, but Hansel, Gretel, calm down. It's still a classic, Uncle Hulka.

3. Swingers - Just minutes before watching this movie, the flimsy lid on my cup came off and soda flowed down the theater floor as my friends laughed at me. Then my night got much better as I watched this thoroughly enjoyable comedy-drama about young unemployed actors living life in Hollywood. Jon Favreau wrote and starred in the 1996 film as Mikey, who is "money," while Vince Vaughn broke through as the duo went to "Vegas baby!!" It is smart, hilarious and I could watch it every night.

2. Braveheart - Mel Gibson directed and starred in the epic film based on William Wallace, a Scot who led the rebellion for freedom from the wicked King of England. The powerful story is about love, revenge, betrayal, loyalty, courage and the will to fight against tyranny. There is emotion in every scene and moments when you cheer or cry. There has never been a better war drama than the Best Picture of 1995.

1. Almost Famous - Cameron Crowe directed and won best original screenplay for what he termed was his "love letter to music" in 2000. The film was semi-autobiographical as William Miller (Patrick Fugit) is based on Crowe, who was a teenage reporter for Rolling Stone - covering the Eagles, Led Zeppelin and the Allman Brothers among others on the road. Kate Hudson brings the story together with her portrayal of "bandaid" Penny Lane while Jason Lee, Billy Crudup, Frances McDormand and the late Philip Seymour Hoffman shine. It pulls at the heart strings and makes you laugh throughout with wonderful dialogue and music.


Saturday, May 30, 2020

Best Movie Characters of All-Time


By Mark Pukalo


If you don't have compelling characters that the audience either cares about or dominate the screen, you probably won't produce a good movie.

A script can be technically brilliant, but if you don't have strong acting performance bringing interesting or humorous characters to life you won't be winning any awards.

Some you love, some you love to hate. But memorable characters are what turn good movies into great ones. The wrong casting can ruin a strong story. When an actor fits a role perfectly it is beautiful to watch.

In more than five decades viewing thousands of films, many characters stand out. In a three-month study I came up with 52 in 52 years that I liked more than any others for various reasons. No list is perfect, but all of these characters moved me or made me laugh in some way over time.

Here's a look at what I came up with, starting with honorable mention:

Honorable Mention: Shane Falco (Keanu Reaves) - The Replacements; Harry Stamper (Bruce Willis) - Armageddon; Monty Brogan (Ed Norton) - 25th Hour; Samantha Baker (Molly Ringwald) - Sixteen Candles; Steve Stifler (Seann William Scott) - American Pie; Brodie Bruce (Jason Lee) - Mallrats; Natural Rivera (Rosario Dawson) - 25th Hour; Jack Dawson (Leonardo DiCaprio) - Titanic; Peter LaFleur (Vince Vaughn) - Dodgeball; Star Carter (Amandla Stenberg) - The Hate U Give; Tiffany Maxwell (Jennifer Lawrence) - Silver Linings Playbook; Bridget Jones (Renee Zellweger) - Bridget Jones Diary; JoJo Betzler (Roman Griffin Davis) - JoJo Rabbitt; Emily (Zoe Kazan) - The Big Sick; Deadpool (Ryan Reynolds) - Deadpool; Willie Beamon (Jamie Foxx) - Any Given Sunday; Sgt. Elias (Willem DeFoe) - Platoon; Mikey (Jon Favreau) - Swingers; Cliff Booth (Brad Pitt) - Once Upon A Time in Hollywood; Lt. John Dunbar (Kevin Costner) - Dances With Wolves; Black Panther (Chadwick Boseman) - Black Panther..


TOP 52

52. Andrew Largeman (Zach Braff) - Garden State - Large goes from a prescribed drug stupor to finding himself and a girlfriend in this great film.

51. Jeff Spicoli (Sean Penn) - Fast Times at Ridgemont High - Penn steals every scene, including when he orders a pizza for Mr. Hand's class.


50. Marty (Natalie Portman) - Beautiful Girls - Natalie was 15 when she played Timothy Hutton's 13-year-old next door neighbor, who was intelligent beyond her years.

49. Taylor (Charlton Heston) - Planet of the Apes - He escapes the damn dirty apes and gets a kiss from Dr. Zira before finding his destiny on the beach.

48. Ellie Arroway (Jodie Foster) - Contact - Jodie has taken on much bigger roles, but the look in her eyes throughout made this character so appealing.

47. Rob Gordon (John Cusack) - High Fidelity - The brooding record store owner takes almost the whole movie to figure out how to show Iben Hjejle how he feels about her.

46. Libby Parsons (Ashley Judd) - Double Jeopardy - Libby is relentless after her husband fakes his murder and steals their son.


45. Jo Galloway (Demi Moore) - A Few Good Men - Jo is all passion and no street smarts, but she gets it done.

44. Bob Harris (Bill Murray) - Lost in Translation - Bill's best dramatic effort brings out his versatile talent without losing his humor.

43. Irwin Fletcher (Chevy Chase) - Fletch - Thank you very little. Just put it on the Underhill's tab.

42. Dr. Zira (Kim Hunter) - Planet of the Apes series - The lovable chimp kisses Charlton Heston goodbye, even though he was so damned ugly.

41. Frank J. Mackey (Tom Cruise) - Magnolia - Cruise kills it with this very crude male supremacist character.


40. Ferris Bueller (Matthew Broderick) - Ferris Bueller's Day Off - Bueller can do no wrong on his trip to the city.

39. Rod Tidwell (Cuba Gooding Jr.) - Jerry Maguire - Show him the money. Cuba plays the diva wide receiver role to the hilt.

38. Dr. Evil (Michael Myers) - Austin Powers series - He is worth one milllllllion dollars.

37. Claire Colburn (Kirsten Dunst) - Elizabethtown - Smart, friendly, very perky and attractive. She's the perfect date.

36. Hans Landa (Christoph Waltz) - Inglourious Basterds - That's a bingo! Waltz has never been and will never be better than in this role.


35. Carl Spackler (Bill Murray) - Caddyshack - The groundskeeper's groundskeeper was determined to get rid of all the gophers, not golfers.

34. Forrest Gump (Tom Hanks) - Forrest Gump - Life's a box of chocolates and Forrest endured while enjoying every bit of it.

33. Senator Jay Bulworth (Warren Beatty) - Bulworth - The depressed California senator turned rapper revived his career and zest for life by telling the truth.

32. Kat Stratford (Julia Stiles) - 10 Things I Hate About You - The Shrew is tamed by Heath Ledger, but she had plenty of fun terrifying people along the way.

31. Colonel Jessop (Jack Nicholson) - A Few Good Men - The evil military man cannot handle the truth when it is presented.


30. Lester Bangs (Phillip Seymour Hoffman) - Almost Famous - The late great Hoffman gave plenty of life to the real-life music journalist.

29. Reggie Dunlop (Paul Newman) - Slapshot - Player coach of the Syracuse Chiefs turned his team in a feared bunch of hockey players and placed a bounty on the head of Tim McCracken.

28. Hans Gruber (Alan Rickman) - Diehard - The coolest voice and personality of all evil criminals, but John McClane bests him in the end.

27. Jules Winnfield (Samuel Jackson) - Pulp Fiction - Philosophical hit man had style, humor and intellect.

26. Darth Vader (James Earl Jones) - Star Wars series - Movie villain for the ages still had some good left in him at the end to help son Luke.


25. Michael Corleone (Al Pacino) - The Godfather - He took care of business when needed.

24. Rocky Balboa (Sylvester Stallone) - Rocky series - The Italian Stallion goes from bar room brawler to champion.

23. Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill) - Star Wars series - His slow process from anxious child to master of the force is exhilarating.

22. Ron Burgundy (Will Ferrell) - Anchorman - Popular newsman's world changes when Veronica Corningstone shows up. Stayed classy in San Diego.

21. Johnny Utah (Keanu Reaves) - Point Break - Former Ohio State quarterback becomes a courageous detective. Vaya Con Dios.


20. Tris (Shailene Woodley) - Divergent series - Tris leaves her family to join Dauntless and does not stop until her unique Divergence saves everyone.

19. Sean Maguire (Robin Williams) - Good Will Hunting - Williams' greatest performance as a therapist who helps a street-wise, troubled genius find himself.

18. Lane Meyer (John Cusack) - Better off Dead - Downtrodden after Beth broke up with him, but the man knew how to ski.

17. Sofia (Penelope Cruz) - Vanilla Sky - The angel that tries to save Tom Cruise and says things like, "I'll see you in another life, when we're both cats," with a wonderful accent.

16. William Wallace (Mel Gibson) - Braveheart - Lost his girl, fell for a queen, fought for his country, died for his native Scotland's freedom.

15. Rick Vaughn (Charlie Sheen) - Major League - The "Wild Thing" was at his best in the biggest spots for the Tribe.

14. Peter Gibbons (Ron Livingston) - Office Space - Hypnotized into the perfect employee, sort of. Impressed the Bobs and Jennifer, who did not wear enough flair.

13. Lucy (Sandra Bullock) - While You Were Sleeping - Sandra won an Oscar for "The Blind Side," but this is her best career performance in my opinion.

12. Gordon Gekko (Michael Douglas) - Wall Street - The top "evil" character on the list. While he is fun to watch and quite compelling in this film, people like Gekko have made this country worse.

11. Katniss Everdeen (Jennifer Lawrence) - The Hunger Games - J-Law fit this role perfectly and was on target from the first and best movie of the series to the finale.


10. Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford) - Raiders of the Lost Ark - While the sequels were not close to being as good as the original, Indy was an iconic figure throughout.

9. Amanda Jones (Lea Thompson) - Some Kind of Wonderful - The pretty girl from the "other side of the tracks" who is welcomed to the popular group in high school, but is repulsed by attitudes when she gets there and leaves with her dignity.

8. Crash Davis (Kevin Costner) - Bull Durham - The "player to be named later" becomes the conscience of the Durham Bulls, grooms the bonus baby and falls in love with the local girl.

7. James Bond (Roger Moore, Sean Connery, Daniel Craig) - Bond series - OO7 always got the job done and got the girl, no matter who was in the role. My personal preference was Moore, probably because his movies (1973-85) were out when I was growing up.

6. Lt. Aldo Raine (Brad Pitt) - Inglourious Basterds - Aldo the Apache from the Smoky Mountains is the charismatic leader of the Jewish-American guerrilla force which aims to accumulate Natzi scalps.

5. Norman Dale (Gene Hackman) - Hoosiers - A successful but aging basketball coach with a checkered past, including a suspension for punching his player, gets one more chance in tiny Hickory, Indiana.

NOTE: The top four could go in any order. Too close to call.

4. John Blutarsky (John Belushi) - Animal House - Bluto's grade-point average was 0.0, but he loved beer, partying, breaking guitars, climbing ladders at sororities and it led to him to the U.S. Senate.

3. John McClane (Bruce Willis) - Diehard - He was awfully hard to kill. A New York cop that did his best work away from the Big Apple, beating master criminals by any means possible and with some personality.

2. Penny Lane (Kate Hudson) - Almost Famous - The leader of the Bandaids - whose real name is Lady Goodman - goes through a roller coaster of emotions with love and friendship on the road to Morocco. She's no good at goodbyes.

1. John Winger (Bill Murray) - Stripes - Loses his job as a cab driver, his car and his girl within a hour, but the acorn becomes the oak with a little Arrrrrrmy training, sir. Cried his eyes out when Old Yeller died, and that's the facts Jack.


Top Bit Movie Characters of All Time

8. Rachel (Chloe Grace Moretz) - 500 Days of Summer - Uses the word bizzaro well.
7. Lacey Underalls (Cindy Morgan) - Caddyshack - Likes ties
6. Pepper Brooks (Jason Bateman) - Dodgeball - Bold strategy
5. Harry Doyle (Bob Uecker) - Major League - A bit outside
4. Dewey Oxburger (John Candy) - Stripes - Lean, mean fightin' machine
3. Walter Stratford (Larry Miller) - 10 Things I Hate About You - Down with the 411
2. Chazz (Will Ferrell) - Wedding Crashers - Meatloaf!!
1. The Wolf (Harvey Keitel) - Pulp Fiction - Solves problems













Thursday, March 5, 2020

Once Upon a Time in 2019



    By Mark Pukalo

     Whether you watched on the big screen, on your computer or in the comfort of your living room, 2019 provided many compelling and entertaining films.

     They took you around the world, tackled big issues, made you laugh, caused you to sing along and made you cry. This amateur critic went to the movies almost every week last year and consumed enough popcorn to fill a dump truck. I ended up viewing a new personal-record 210 films - at the time - in all and still didn't see everything I wanted.
   
     It was a great year at the theater without a real major theme, although some of the best movies were more than two and half hours long. Much like in 2018, it was difficult to pick the best film of the year because any of the top 12 probably could have been placed on top.

    In the end, I could not pick something off the board like in 2018. The best film of 2019 had incredible acting and dialogue. It had plenty of humor. It told the story of a period in time in LaLa Land. You can call it a character study or just a series of entertaining scenes, but by the end it becomes a full movie with Quentin Tarantino steering the ship.

    "Once Upon a Time in Hollywood" was the most entertaining and the best film of 2019. Brad Pitt most certainly deserved his best supporting actor Oscar, Andie McDowell's daughter Margaret Qualley dominated the screen in her scenes, Leo was great as usual, Margot Robbie couldn't have been more likable as the real life Sharon Tate, the hippies were darn creepy and Cliff's pit bull Brandy might have been the biggest star of all.

     There were so many great moments this year, from the simple like Emma Nelson and Cate Blanchett singing Cyndi Lauper's "Time after Time" in the car during "Where'd You Go Bernadette?," to the cute as JoJo Betzler reads a fake letter to his new friend inside the wall during "JoJo Rabbit," to the fascinating as the new pontiff is picked in "The Two Popes," to the shocking conclusion of "Parasite," to the emotion of Mister Rodgers visiting a dying man in "A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood," to the humorous when Enzo the dog sarcastically comments on the cats frolicking on TV in "The Art of Racing in the Rain," to "Alita; Battle Angel" kicking ass, to Maya Erskine's quick wit in "Plus One" and to Elton John (Taron Egerton) beginning his first show at the Troubadour with Crocodile Rock in "Rocketman." Those are just a few. I could go on and on.

    I don't have the ability to see every movie. There are several limited-release films, very well reviewed, that did not even get out on Red Box. .

   I really don't want to be a professional critic.  I prefer not to think of structure and whether the plot works 100 percent. Some movies might be technically sound, but just don't work for me (The Favourite). I want to be entertained, whether that is making me think, laugh and maybe even cry. Or all of the above. The old Jim Valvano test.

   More than 70 films passed that exam in 2019. Here's my list of the Best of the final year in the decade:

     25. Apollo 11 - Because I was just 6 at the time, I barely remember watching the first moon landing on television, so it was very interesting to be able to watch the story unfold again in this well-constructed documentary.

    24. The Rise of Skywalker - While it might sit sixth or seventh best among the films in the Star Wars trilogy, it was still an entertaining final journey. It's weaknesses were far outweighed by its strengths, led by Daisy Ridley's presence.

     23. Joker - The much-deserved Academy Award performance from Joaquin Phoenix drives the film that is about as dark as it gets, but in a good way. I don't believe that director Todd Phillips made the Joker a sympathetic figure like many critics do. I did not take it that way. Phoenix just makes you want to know what will happen to the mad man next.

     22. Rocketman - This movie about the life of Sir Elton John was more of a musical than I expected, but it is quite entertaining. Egerton was terrific - and snubbed unfairly for an Oscar nomination - as the amazing performer and Jamie Bell is strong as Bernie Taupin, the songwriter behind the star.

    21. Official Secrets - Keira Knightley stars as Katharine Gun, the famous English whistleblower who uncovered an illegal United States spying operation in the lead up to the invasion of Iraq. Knightley's powerful, conflicted but righteous, performance was outstanding.


    20. Wild Rose - A troubled young woman (Jessie Buckley) from Glasgow, Scotland has dreams of being a country singer in Nashville. Her journey is both heartbreaking and exhilarating.

    19. Just Mercy - Michael B. Jordan gives a very strong performance as a Harvard law graduate who moves to Alabama to help provide representation for people on death row in the 1980s. He turns his attention to Walter "Johnny D" McMillian (Jamie Foxx), who was unjustly incarcerated for murder.

     18. Plus One - A very likable romantic comedy about a pair of friends who decide to accompany each other to a long list of weddings on their calendar while putting their own disappointing love lives on hold.. Alice (Maya Erskine) is one of my favorite 2019 characters.

    17. Knives Out - An enjoyable mystery with Daniel Craig and the beautiful Ana de Armas leading an outstanding ensemble cast. Took me a while before I decided to see this at the theater, but it was smart and fun from start to finish.

    16. The Farewell - Awkwafina fully deserved her Golden Globe for playing Billi, a Chinese-American who joins her family for a gathering in China to visit her grandmother, who is dying of cancer but has not been told of her disease. The family deals with the traditional decision of keeping the illness from lovable Nai Nai.

    15. 1917 - Director Sam Mendes hits it out of the park with this compelling war film that builds slowly to an amazing final 30 minutes or so. It's a story of perseverance, duty, honor, family and friendship along with the horrors of war. Yes, I have it a little lower than many critics, but that doesn't take away anything from the epic film.

    14. Linda Ronstadt: The Sound of my Voice - A documentary about the woman behind one of the greatest voices in music history. There was a lot I learned in this film, especially about the end of her singing career, that I did not know and the rest just brought back fond memories of Linda - every man's crush in my generation.

    13. Little Women - The seventh film adaptation of the 1868 novel by Louisa May Alcott is done with expertise by director Greta Gerwig (Lady Bird), and includes some brilliant acting led by Saoirse (say it right, Sirsha) Ronan and Florence Pugh. Bouncing between past and present early in the film got slightly confusing, but it was long forgotten by the end.

    12. Booksmart - Olivia Wilde provides a very likable comedy in her directorial debut about two bookworms who decide to begin partying in their last days of high school. Beanie Feldstein (Molly) was great, but I especially enjoyed Kaitlyn Dever's vulnerable Amy and not just because she had an Elizabeth Warren bumper sticker on her car.

    11. A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood - A unique and well-executed take on the greatness of Mister Rodgers, inspired by an article about him titled "Can You Say. ... Hero?" written by Tom Junod that was published in Esquire magazine in the late 1990s. Tom Hanks does Fred proud and the main closing scene is one of the most emotional of the year.


     10. Bombshell - The biographical film centers on the development of a sexual harassment case against Fox News CEO Roger Ailes, and does it with credibility - without extra political sentiment. Margot Robbie, Charlize Theron and Nicole Kidman all take on their characters with grace and class.

     9. Yesterday - I saw one critic actually name this as the worst film of the year and that the main characters had no chemistry. That is incredibly ridiculous. While it had a few moments that people can criticize, when you like the subject matter, the characters and the ending it doesn't matter to me. Loved it from start to finish, and it may have had the line of the year: "Bloody Ed Sheeran."

     8. Parasite - Wasn't sure what to expect when I saw this South Korean, subtitled film, but it sure packed a punch and had you glued to the screen throughout. It wasn't my pick for the Academy Award, but director Bong Joon-ho did a masterful job with this story of family, class warfare and wealth disparity in the world.

     7. Marriage Story - Director and writer Noah Baumbach uses an amazing cast to tell a story of the perils of the early end to a marriage and the heartbreaking process of divorce with a young child. Laura Dern deserved her supporting actress Oscar for playing Nora Fanshaw, Scarlett Johansson's lawyer, while Adam Driver and Scarlett also shine.

      6. The Two Popes - For some, this might be a boring movie, but I was riveted by the dialogue as Pope Francis and Pope Benedict fictitiously (but believably) meet to speak on two sides of the Catholic faith. The imagery and pacing is strong and Jonathan Pryce is so good as Francis, you do not know he is acting. Some say it favored Francis a bit and it did, but it also brought life to Benedict.

     5. Blinded by the Light - The true story of a young Pakistani teenager living in a small town in England, who is introduced to Bruce Springsteen music and it changes his prospective on life. It is directed by Gurinder Chadha (Bend it Like Beckham) and includes a wonderful speech at the end by lead character Javed (Viveik Kalra) along with a trip to Asbury Park.

     4. The Irishman - Director Martin Scorsese brings Charles Brandt's book "I Heard You Paint Houses" to the screen in a pulsating 3 1/2 hour film that centers on Frank Sheeran, a truck driver who becomes a hit man for the mob. Al Pacino (Jimmy Hoffa) and Joe Pesci (Russell Bufalino) are pitch perfect in their roles and Anna Paquin (Sheeran's daughter) has one of the best small roles of the year.

    3. Avengers: Endgame - Yeah, it's Marvel and it's about cartoonish superheroes, but this three-hour action film had more heart than most of the similar movies put together. It begins with our heroes splintered and beaten, and ends with an uprising to remember. The last scene is both heartbreaking and heartwarming.

     2. JoJo Rabbit - A cheeky comedy-drama which both loudly and in subtle ways shows the lunacy of hate and fascism. Taika Waititi writes, directs and stars in the film while amazing 12-year-old Roman Griffin Davis plays the Hitler Youth "JoJo" Betzler, who must deal with finding out his mother (Scarlett Johansson) is a member of the resistance and is hiding a young Jewish woman (Thomasin McKenzie) in the wall at the end of World War II. One of the best endings of the year.

     1. Once Upon a Time in Hollywood - A movie about movies. That doesn't sound that great, but Tarantino uses all his talent to create compelling characters who weave a story about a period of time in the Hotel California. Leonardo DiCaprio is actor Rick Dalton on the downside of his career, Pitt is his driver and former stunt man and Robbie is the girl next door - sort of. Then, there's the hippies from the beginnings of Charles Manson's cult, Jackie Chan's fight with Pitt and Al Pacino lauding Dalton's performance in "The 14 Fists of McCluskey." Once again, it's Tarantino changing history as the Manson crazies are sidetracked on the way to murder Robbie's Tate. It's off the wall. Crazy. It's just fun. That's entertainment.

     Joe Lunardi's first six out:

     The Art of Racing in the Rain - Many critics didn't like it, but how could you not love Enzo? And the story was just fine to me.
     Atlantics - A romantic drama with a supernatural element that slowly draws you in with a backdrop of Dakar, Senegal. Lead character Mame Bineta Sane (Ada) provides an amazing performance in her first major film.
     Dark Waters - Mark Ruffalo plays Robert Bilott, the man who took down DuPont for their irresponsible business practices with chemicals.
     Harriet - Cynthia Erivo is brilliant as Harriet Tubman, who helped free as many as 70 slaves through the Underground Railroad.
     Uncut Gems - Adam Sandler is a force of nature as a Jewish jeweler with a gambling addiction.
     Waves - The unique and heartbreaking story of a African-American family in the suburbs of an east coast Florida city that takes an emotional journey through important issues to tragedy to dealing with loss. 
          
    On-Line Gems

    Between Two Ferns: The Movie - Laughed more than any movie this year.
    Knock Down the House - Get to know AOC a little better. Interesting documentary about grass roots campaigns.
    El Camino - Breaking Bad sequel does not disappoint.

    High Honorable Mention (42): 
    AD Astra - Solid, but expected more of the plot
    A Dog's Journey - Cute story
    Alita: Battle Angel - Cartoonish Alita is one of the best characters of the year
    Amazing Grace - Some great music from the Queen of Soul
    American Woman - Sienna Miller was fantastic, Should have been nominated
    Angel Has Fallen - Lots of action and intrigue, though formulaic
    Brian Banks - Heartwarming story, but a bit too tame
    Brittany Runs a Marathon - A woman takes the long journey toward finding her true self
    Captain Marvel - Brie Larson shines as a super hero
    Dolemite is my Name - Eddie Murphy is back, but just not enough humor for top 25
    Downton Abbey - Better than expected. Characters are rich
    Dumbo - I enjoyed the big Elephant story. Better than critics say
    Falling Inn Love - Netflix rom-com is likable
    Fighting with My Family - Wrestling fun
    Ford v. Ferrari - Strong acting from Damon and Bale, just a bit over-rated
    Good Boys - Some funny kid stuff
    The Great Hack - Fascinating, scary documentary
    Jumanji: The Next Level - Liked it a lot more than I expected
    High Life - Erotic, outside the box, science fiction film with convicted criminals used as Guinea Pigs to explore a black hole in space.
    Hotel Mumbai - Intense film that is well done
    Hustlers - Jen and Constance were terrific as strippers
    The Last Black Man in San Francisco - Very unique, abstract and interesting story by the end
    Last Christmas - Emilia Clarke can be adorable when not riding a dragon
    Late Night - Emma Thompson plays an iconic TV show host
    The Lion King - Thought they did a nice job bringing back this story
    Long Shot - Kinda dumb in parts, but plenty of humor
    Jexi - I laughed a lot, sorry
    John Wick 3 - Parabellum - Some overdone action, although the script is not bad
    Miracle in Cell No. 7 - Heartwarming and heartbreaking story about a father with a mental disability trying to reunite with his child
    Playing With Fire - Sweet firefighter story, along with some laughs
    The Public - Civil disobedience at a public library with Emilio Estevez
    Queen & Slim - Disappointing, but still enough intrigue to place it here
    The Report - Intense drama about the uncovering of the CIA's 9/11 detention program
    Richard Jewell - Strong film about the jump to conclusion in the Atlanta Olympic bombing.
    Rolling Thunder Revue - Martin Scorsese's brilliant documentary goes behind the scenes during Bob Dylan's tour with several great artists.
    Spiderman: Far from Home - Peter Parker meets Zendaya
    Toy Story 4 - Another fun film in the series
    The Two Killings of Sam Cooke - Documentary about of the greatest singers of all time
    Under the Silver Lake - Weirdest movie of the year. Not quite sure how to take it, but it is compelling
    Us - Chilling horror film from Jordan Peele
    Western Stars - Bruce Springsteen's documentary that followed his new album by the same name is well done and sounds very good.
    Where'd you go Bernadette? - Cate Blanchett rocks
    Who Killed Garrett Phillips? - Displays the worst kind of cops
    Zombieland: Double Tap - Lots of fun in this sequel

    Middle Honorable mention (53) (Had good elements, but also some weaknesses): 
   The Addams Family 
   After
   Aladdin
   Always Be My Maybe - Sweet netflix film
   American Factory - Won Documentary Academy Award
   An Acceptable Loss - Government conspiracy
   Anna  - Don't mess with Sasha Luss
   Miss Bala
   Bennett's War - Disabled war hero returns to the motocross circuit
   The Best of Enemies - Racism in the deep south
   Black Christmas - Bad kids in scream outfits terrorize a sorority
   Black and Blue - Very bad cops, Naomie Harris is very good
   Breakthrough - A bit too religious
   Clemency
   David Bowie: Finding Fame - Interesting documentary about the superstar.
   Dora & the Lost City of Gold - Young Isabela Merced is gorgeous and talented
   Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile - Zac Efron as Ted Bundy?
   Fast Color - Mystical story
   Fast and Furious: Hobbs & Shaw - Lots of action. Not bad
   Five Feet Apart - Haley Lu Richardson is quite appealing in an otherwise formulaic story
   Frozen II - Anna is awesome in the sequel
   Gloria Bell - Julianne Moore as a dating divorcee
   Good Sam - A good Hallmark-type movie
   Happy Death Day 2
   Her Smell - Elisabeth Moss as a druggy rock star
   A Hidden Life - Beautifully shot and acted, but a bit boring
   Homecoming - Beyonce!
   How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World
   The Last Summer - Decent Netflix film
   Light of my Life - Apocalyptic story with Casey Affleck trying to protect his daughter
   Judy - Renee Zellweger was good, but she should not have won the oscar
   Justine
   Midway - War movie
   Motherless Brooklyn - Ed Norton in a well acted, but dull city drama
   The Mustang - A convict finds some purpose breaking wild horses
   Otherhood
   Overcomer
   Pain and Glory - Well acted, but not real compelling to me
   The Peanut Butter Falcon - Story is missing something
   Poms - Seniors do some cheerleading
   Portrait of a Lady on Fire - Artsy movie with beautiful Noemie Merlet in the lead
   Ready of Not - Better than expected horror film, with some laughs
   The Red Sea Diving Resort
   Rim of the World
   Screwball - Expose of the cheating A-Rod
   The Secret Life of Pets 2
   Someone Great - Gina Rodriguez and Brittney Snow.
   Stuber - Don't beat me up for rating it this low Dave Bautista. It is not unlikable, though
   The Sun is also a Star - Chance love story could be the best of this section
   Trial By Fire - Laura Dern defends man on death-row
   6 Underground - Ryan Reynolds is a wacky action movie
   The Upside - Bryan Cranston and Kevin Hart bring some humor
   See you Yesterday - OK, but poor ending in my opinion

    Some Redeeming Value (51) (Or just not bad enough to make the worst of the year list):
   The Aftermath
   American Son
   An Easy Girl
   Annabelle Comes Home
   Backdraft2
   Beyond the Law
   Can you keep a secret?
   Cats - Francesca Hayward was likable as the lead cat Victoria, allowing it to reach this level.
   Charlie's Angels
   The Coldest Game
   Coma - Russian Sci-Fi
   The Current War - Dull
   The Dead Don't Die - Surprisingly bad with a great cast
   The Dirt - The Motley Crue story
   Doctor Sleep
   Freaks
   Fyre: The Story of the Greatest Party That Never Happened - Interesting, but makes you mad
   Gemini Man
   Godzilla: King of the Monsters
   The Goldfinch - Incredibly disappointing
   The Good Liar
   Greta - I like Chloe Grace Moretz. That saved it
   The Highwaymen
   The Hummingbird Project
   The Hustle - A few isolated laughs from Rebel Wilson
   I am Mother
   Inside Man Most Wanted
   I See You - bad netflix horror/mystery
   Isn't it Romantic? - No.
   The Kid Who Would be King
   The Kitchen
   The Laundromat
   Little
   Men in Black International
   MidSommer - The kids were so dumb. Just get outta there!
   Murder Mystery
   Paddleton
   The Perfection - Very creepy
   Pokemon Detective Pikachu
   Rambo: Last Blood
   Replicas
   Run the Race - Tebow cameo!
   Shaft - Was expecting worse
   Shazam!
   The Souvenir
   Strange But True - Pregnant Margaret Qualley in a chilling film
   Tolkien
   Triple Frontier
   Unicorn Store
   What Men Want
   Wine Country
   X Men: Dark Phoenix
   21 Bridges - RIP Chadwick. He couldn't save a bad plot here, though

   Most Over-rated: MidSommer, The Beach Bum, Ford v. Ferrari, High-Flying Bird

    Can't recommend at all (26): The Art of Self Defense, The Beach Bum, Bottom of the 9th, Captive State, Cold Pursuit, Corporate Animals, Countdown, Crawl, The Curse of La Llorona, Drunk Parents, Fractured, Glass, Hellboy, High-Flying Bird, In the Shadow of the Moon, The Intruder, Io, It Chapter Two, The Lighthouse, Lucy in the Sky, The Platform, Point Blank, Ma, Serenity, Terminator: Dark Fate, 3022

   Worst of the year: Cold Pursuit

   Could not find or haven't gotten to: Transit, Ash is Purest White, 3 Faces, Long Day's Journey into Night, Diane, David Crosby: Remember My Name, Honeyland, Honey Boy

    Did not care to see: Abominable, Adopt a Highway, A Dog's Way Home, The Angry Birds Movie 2, Arctic Dogs, Brightburn, Division 19, Don't Let Go, The Driver, Driven, Ecco, Escape Plan, Escape Room, The Fanatic, Housfull 4, Jacob's Ladder, The Lego Movie 2, Maleficent: Mistress of Evil, Mayday, Missing Link, Ophelia, Peel, Pet Semetary, The Prodigy, The Professor and the Madman, Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark, UglyDolls, Unplanned, Where's my Roy Cohn?, Wonder Park, 47 Meters Down: Uncaged, 10 Minutes Gone.


PREVIOUS PICKS FOR BEST OF THE YEAR

2018:  The Hate U Give

2017 - The Big Sick

2016 - Lion

2015 - Spotlight

2014 - Birdman

2013 - Nebraska

2012  - Silver Linings Playbook

2011  - The Descendants

2010 - The Social Network

2009 - Inglourious Basterds

2008 - Frost/Nixon-The Wrestler (tie)

2007 - Once

Best of All Time - Almost Famous



















 




Saturday, February 8, 2020

The Worst Movies of 2019


  By Mark Pukalo


   OK, I finally saw Cats.

   Surprisingly, it was only added to the dishonorable mention list. Francesca Hayward being likable as Victoria, the lead cat, saved it from sneaking into the top 15.

   This list is never complete, but there were certainly enough bad films in 2019 to fill out 15 spots. ... plus. The Fanatic, Brightburn, Pet Semetary and several others might have made the grade if I chose to waste $1.95 on them at Red Box or came across them on HBO.

   Some big stars played key roles in films near the top of my list of stinkers, including Demi Moore, Liam Neeson, Matthew McConaughey (twice) Jesse Eisenberg, Sofia Vergara and Dennis Quaid. Shame on them for not walking out on awful scripts and foregoing the paycheck.

   Yes, I'm not big on horror films. They have to be smart and at least somewhat compelling like "Get Out." Very few are good enough to interest me these days.

   Thankfully, the only one I spent money on at the theatre came in at No. 12. At least the popcorn was good. But, here you go. Not the worst year for really bad movies, but stay away from these rents.


   Dis-Honorable Mention: Godzilla: King of the Monsters, Cats, Crawl, Murder Mystery (Adam and Jennifer can do better), Point Blank. High Flying Bird (Saw this on some best lists. I was totally bored by it), Fractured, In the Shadow of the Moon, Io, Ma, The Platform, 3022, Lucy in the Sky, I See You


   15. Terminator: Dark Fate - Some terrible dialogue and acting. Mindless violence and no real heart to the film.

   14. Countdown - Pretty Elizabeth Lail saves it from being in the top 10. Just a silly horror movie with an ending that really didn't make much sense.

   13. It Chapter Two - Worse than the first chapter. It was 2 hours, 50 minutes of nonsense and stupidity.

   12. Captive State - Futuristic science fiction tale with John Goodman and Vera Farmiga that is hard follow, and honestly you really don't care to. Didn't really get the ending either.

   11. Glass - A real nasty superhero and some mindless script writing. Expected to dislike it and, Bingo.


   10. Hellboy - Thought the big superhero might be some fun, but the film was just filled with violence and gore.You lose track of what's really going on.

   9. The Curse of La Llorona - A dreadfully bad horror film. I kept thinking that Tulsi Gabbard was playing the lead character, too.

   8. The Beach Bum - Think they were going for a modern day "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas" in a way, but it was just McConaughey being flat-out annoying for a couple hours. Snoop Dogg saved it from the top 5.

   7. The Intruder - The psychological thriller owns one of the worst scripts of the year and you wonder why this dopey couple could have bought that house in the first place. Quaid is more creepy than he is in those recent commercials.

   6. Serenity - A mystery that you don't care about five minutes into the film, and McConaughey along with Anne Hathaway make it worse.

   5. The Lighthouse - Rented this recently and fast-forwarded through most of it. Dark, uninteresting and ugly. You actually say at one point, "poor seagull."

   4. Bottom of the Ninth - Probably would be No. 1 if anybody had heard about this one. Talented baseball player gets out of jail after a long stint and tries to make the big time again. Bad storytelling and worse acting. Come on Sofia.

   3. The Art of Self-Defense - Eisenberg sleepwalks through this boring film as a young man who tries to learn karate to defend himself after being attacked. They call it a black comedy and I guess that means you hate all the characters.

   2. Corporate Animals - A supposed comedy that isn't the least bit funny. A group of co-workers get trapped in a cave on a retreat with their boss (Moore) and nothing interesting really happens.

   1. Cold Pursuit - Neeson tries hard to soldier through a movie that is poorly written and has some of the worst acting I've seen in a while - especially from the main villain. This becomes the worst film of the year because more was expected from it after the trailer. Let's hope Liam doesn't see this.

 

PREVIOUS WORST MOVIES OF THE YEAR

2018:  Mile 22

2017 - Mother!

2016 - 13 Hours and Hail Caesar!

2015 - Chappie

2014 - The Monuments Men

2013 - The Place Between the Pines

2012 - Cloud Atlas

2011 - Tree of Life




Friday, October 25, 2019

The Best Movies of the Decade: 2010-19


   By Mark Pukalo


   It all went so fast. But what a ride it has been through the 2010s at the theater.

   For more than a decade, I have enjoyed handicapping the best movies of the year and blogging about it. Many times during that period, the films just fell into place. I knew when I walked out of the theater most days where each would rate at the end of the year. Sometimes movies do grow on you with multiple viewings. But the first watch is often the best indicator.

  With 2019 coming to a close, I saw an interesting list of the top 20 movies of the decade on twitter and - of course - had to do it myself. But I found out how hard it was when I wrote out a list of the top few from every year. They did not fall in place easily.

   It was a decade filled with so many thrilling, thoughtful and different movies, although I can't list 20 perfect films. I ranked them with the following criteria:

   1/ How much it moved me.
   2/ How it stood the test of time.
   3/ How significant it was.
   4/ How good the cast was and how the movie flowed.
   5/ How much I wanted to watch it over and over.
   6/ How it rated on the Jim Valvano test (cry, laugh, think)

   Before I get to the best, in my amateur movie critic's opinion, the worst movie of the decade was Jennifer Lawrence's Mother! Just dreadful. The three most-over-rated movies of the past 10 years to me were The Favourite, The Tree of Life and Phantom Thread. Just didn't get them, I guess. All three are popping up on critic's best lists for the decade. I thought about adding Mad Max: Fury Road. But I actually liked the movie. I just didn't think it was good enough to be nominated for awards.

   Here's an updated list of my favorite films of the decade after seeing an abundance of strong efforts at the end of 2019 and watching those on my list again.

   Honorable Mention: 50/50, Argo, Begin Again, Boyhood, Guardians of the Galaxy, The Hunger Games, The Infiltrator, I, Tonya, The Irishman, OJ: Made in America, The Spectacular Now, The Town, Truth, The Way, Way Back, Wind River, Zero Dark Thirty.


    20. The Tillman Story (2010) - Terrific documentary about the life and controversial death of the great Pat Tillman.

   19. Black Panther (2018) - Never thought this would make a list like this before walking into the theater,  but the epic film was terrific in so many ways.

   18. The Hate U Give (2018) - Thought the story of racial tension and injustice was told with grace and depth. It moved me.

   17. The Avengers: End Game (2019) - Yeah, it's a super-hero movie, but I was riveted from start to finish with the story, the emotions and the bits of humor.

   16.. Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (2019) - Not sure how this movie will hold up over time, but it is an incredibly written (Quentin Tarantino) and acted (Leo and Brad) film.

   15. Short Term 12 (2013) - A terrific cast that includes Brie Larson, Rami Malek, Kaitlyn Dever (she hasn't seemed to age since then) and John Gallagher Jr. weave a story about a residential treatment center for young people.

    14. BlackKlansman (2018) - Had it ranked eighth for the year, but after watching it 100 times on HBO I think I under-rated it quite a bit.

    13. The Descendants (2011) - George Clooney stars in the emotional Alexander Payne film that explores death, infidelity and family politics all with Hawaii as the backdrop.

    12. Birdman (2014) - Michael Keaton should have won the Oscar for his career-best performance of a troubled theater actor in a film that is shot in a very unique manner, and it works.

    11. Moneyball (2011) - Brad Pitt did a great job playing Billy Beane, the GM of the Oakland Athletics, as he tries to keep the team competitive with a small payroll. Very well written script.


    10. Silver Linings Playbook (2012) - Jennifer Lawrence and Bradley Cooper make for a fun couple in the comedy-drama about people dealing with mental illness.

     9. Sing Street (2016) - Yeah, sorry, another coming-of-age film. Boy tries to impress mysterious and gorgeous older girl (Lucy Boynton) by putting together a band and finds out he's pretty good at it.

      8. JoJo Rabbit (2019) - A cheeky comedy-drama which both loudly and in subtle ways shows the lunacy of hate and fascism.

     7. The Big Short (2015) - An incredible cast brings Michael Lewis' book about the country's financial crisis in 2007-2008 to life with plenty of humor and intelligence.

     6. The Social Network (2010) - Jesse Eisenberg hasn't been in many good movies since, but he was great as the enigmatic Mark Zuckerberg in Aaron Sorkin's film about the birth of Facebook.

     5.. Lion (2016) - Amazing and emotional film about a lost little boy in India who tries to complete his journey back home after 25 years. Buckets of tears.

      4. The Big Sick (2017) - Just absolutely loved this romantic comedy based on the true story of how Kumail Nanjiani met his wife. The performances are spot on.

      3. Nebraska (2013) - Still upset Bruce Dern did not win Best Actor over Matthew McConaughey for his performance in this dramatic comedy about family and an old man's final journey in life.

     2. Ex Machina (2015) - Science fiction thriller about a mad, brilliant, rich recluse (Oscar Isaac) who is working on perfecting a beautiful life-like robot (Alicia Vikander). One of the most shocking endings to a movie ever.

     1. Spotlight (2015) - Settled on this at No. 1 because I thought the cast made the true story of the Boston Globe's uncovering of a scandal in the Catholic church so incredibly authentic. I was in news rooms for more than two decades and every actor, every scene was right on point. This is why journalism is so important. People forget that.









Thursday, October 3, 2019

Can the Lightning Finally Reach the Promised Land?


By Mark Pukalo


Here we go, again.

The Tampa Bay Lightning approach the 2019-20 season with the pieces in place to make another run at a Stanley Cup. Four or maybe even five times in the past decade the Bolts seemed poised to add a second Cup to their history, but they could not finish the job.

None of those seasons ended with more disappointment and questions than last spring, when the Lightning tied the NHL all-time record with 62 regular-season victories and failed to add another while being swept in the first round of the playoffs by the Columbus Blue Jackets.

There were many reasons for that disaster, but the one positive coming out of it is the 2019-2020 version of the Bolts will have a little more anger in their game.
   
“We could sit and pout in the corner, but it’s not going to change anything that happened last year,” Tampa Bay captain Steven Stamkos told reporters when training camp opened. “I’m hoping guys come in with that extra motivation and a little chip on their shoulder, because I know I will.”

The Lightning have more than enough talent to play deep into June. The question is, how to do it? Who plays with who, can they add some size without losing their flow, can they be tighter defensively without giving up much offense?

Much of that falls on coach Jon Cooper, who should be under the most scrutiny of his career in Tampa Bay this season. You can say that if Ben Bishop doesn’t come flying out of net in Game 5 of the 2015 Cup finals or if Yanni Gourde gets his stick on a puck inches from the line in Game 7 of the 2018 Eastern Conference finals, Cooper could have two Cups. You could even say if Victor Hedman and Anton Stralman don’t get hurt and the Bolts don’t get overconfident after a 3-0 lead in Game 1, they beat Columbus last year before gaining momentum. Who knows?

But, with all that talent, Cooper hasn’t been able to make the proper adjustments when it really counted to get the team over the finish line first. The fear is he doesn’t have what it takes. The hope is that he has learned a lot from all these experiences, failures, and can put them to use. The thing is though, he may not be Tony Bennett.

Tampa Bay has struggled on offense at key times in the last two postseasons, despite owning the NHL’s best attack, but the biggest improvement must be made on defense.

The Bolts gave up the 11th-most shots per game in the league last season and finished tied for seventh in goals-against per game. That difference happens when you have the best goaltender in the world between the pipes. Andrei Vasilevskiy was outstanding in every way last season and the Lightning don’t have to worry about their goaltending - with capable veteran Curtis McElhinney as the backup - but they would like to limit the rubber the duo sees overall.

Ryan McDonagh, who was a remarkable plus-38 in the regular season in 2018-19, has formed a great partnership with physical Eric Cernak in the top four on the blue line. The dilemma is, who do you play with Norris Trophy candidate Victor Hedman with Stralman and Dan Girardi gone? Mikhail Sergachev looked like he could get a shot there, but it appears newcomer Kevin Shattenkirk will start the season beside the big Swede.

Shattenkirk could be one of the keys to the season, coming in on a one-year deal to re-establish his reputation after struggling with the New York Rangers before they bought him out. In my opinion, he is a much better defender than people think and if that proves true this season, the Bolts’ blue line will be improved. I’d still like to see Dominik Masin get a look at some point this season as a potential lefty replacement for Braydon Coburn in the future. Let’s hope GM Julien Brisebois doesn’t give up on him too soon.

With Brayden Point arriving late to camp and being held out a few games while finishing his recovery from double hip surgery, the forward lines have been jumbled early on. Cooper seems to have decided to move Stamkos to the wing, at least for now, and play either Gourde or Tyler Johnson in the middle when Point returns. I disagree. But it is bold and there’s nothing wrong with experimenting with a team that will be in the playoffs, unless it is barraged with injuries.

Patrick Maroon adds beef on the fourth line and in front on the power play for the Bolts while rookie Carter Verhaeghe joins the team after a strong season with AHL Syracuse in 2018-19 followed by an excellent training camp. Gemel Smith also adds some size on the fourth line for the Lightning with Cedric Paquette (arm) out for a while.

There will be enough scoring with Stamkos, reigning Hart Trophy winner Nikita Kucherov and Point, but they need to match last season’s secondary production. Gourde and Johnson can score goals while Mathieu Joseph and Anthony Cirelli have the ability to contribute even more after outstanding rookie seasons. If the Bolts can get a rebound season from Ondrej Palat and another 17-20 goals from Alex Killorn, they will be fine up front, no matter how they are configured until the playoffs. I would love to see Palat score 20-25 goals to quiet his detractors.

Good health, reduction of shots against, continued secondary scoring depth and bit more sandpaper will be plenty to win the Atlantic Division.

Then, the hard part begins.

This team is impossible to predict. Have the failures of the past five years damaged their psyche. Or will those disappointments fuel the players at just the right time.

It’s time to enjoy the next six months of hockey. Then, Lightning fans can start worrying again.