David Davidson (Blogger: Toronto Film Review)
Django
Unchained (Quentin Tarantino)
3. Cosmopolis (David
Cronenberg)
Holy
Motors (Leos Carax)
The Master (Paul Thomas Anderson)
4. Far From Afghanistan
(John Gianvito, Travis Wilkerson, Jon Jost, Minda Martin, Soon-Mi Yoo)
Leviathan
(Lucien Castaing-Taylor & Véréna
Paravel)
Tabu (Miguel Gomes)
6. Lawrence Anyways
(Xavier Dolan)
Keep
the Lights On (Ira Sachs)
The Ballad of Genesis and Lady
Jaye (Marie Losier)
8. John Carter
(Andrew Stanton)
Prometheus (Ridley Scott)
9. The Three Stooges
(Farrelly Brothers)
Dark
Horse (Todd Solondz)
This
Is 40 (Judd Apatow)
10. La Guerre est déclarée (Valérie Donzelli)
11. Savages (Oliver
Stone)
12.
The We and I (Michel Gondry)
Girls (Lena Dunhan
)
The Black Balloon
(Safdie brothers)
When You Sleep (Ashley McKenzie)
*****
Arielle Gavin (Tumblr:
Dragonaut. Contributed:
Honesty Competitions (Part 3))
- Cosmopolis (David Cronenberg)
- In
Another Country (Hong Sang-soo)
- Greatest
Hits (Nicolás Pereda)
- Post
Tenebras Lux (Carlos Reygadas)
- Passion (Brian de Palma)
- From
Rome with Love (Woody Allen)
- Leviathan
(Lucien Castaing-Taylor & Véréna
Paravel)
- Magic
Mike (Steven Soderbergh)
- Alps (Giorgos Lanthimos)
- Damsels
in Distress (Whit Stillman)
- Margaret
(Kenneth Lonergan)
*****
Nicholas Little
15 titles in alphabetical order.
- End of Watch (David Ayer)
- The Dark Knight Rises (Christopher Nolan)
- Django Unchained (Quentin Tarantino)
- The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey (Peter Jackson)
- Lincoln (Steven Spielberg)
- Looper (Rian Johnson)
- Magic Mike (Steven Soderbergh)
- The Master (Paul Thomas Anderson)
- Moonrise Kingdom (Wes Anderson)
- The Perks of Being a Wallflower (Stephen Chbosky)
- Prometheus (Ridley Scott)
- Ruby Sparks (Jonathan Dayton & Valerie Faris)
- Skyfall (Sam Mendes)
- Sound Of My Voice (Zal Batmanglij)
- Zero Dark Thirty (Kathryn Bigelow)
*****
Megan Widawski
My Top Ten films of 2012 in no particular order.
- Argo
(Ben Affleck)
- Ruby
Sparks (Jonathan Dayton & Valerie
Faris)
- Pitch
Perfect (Jason Moore)
- The
Perks of Being a Wallflower (Stephen
Chbosky)
- ParaNorman (Chris Butler & Sam Fell)
- Frankenweenie (Tim Burton)
- The
Hobbit (Peter Jackson)
- Dark
Shadows (Tim Burton)
- Magic
Mike (Steven Soderbergh)
- Savages (Oliver Stone)
*****
1. Holy Motors (Leos
Carax)
2. Leviathan (Lucien
Castaing-Taylor & Véréna Paravel)
3. Like Someone in Love
(Abbas Kiarostami)
4. The Master (Paul
Thomas Anderson)
5. Beyond the Hills
(Cristian Mungiu)
6. Cosmopolis (David
Cronenberg)
7. Viola (Matías
Piñeiro)
8. You Ain't Seen Nothin' Yet (Alain Resnais)
9. To the Wonder
(Terrence Malick)
10. Tchoupitoulas
(Bill & Turner Ross)
Honorable mentions: Spring Breakers (Harmony Korine), Life of Pi (Ang Lee), It's Such a Beautiful Day (Don Hertzfeldt).
Best avant-garde of the year
1. August and After
& April (Nathaniel Dorsky)
These two films viewed back-to-back, as they are meant to
be, may well be a candidate for my Favourite Films of All Time list. At the
very least, it's the closest I've come to tears via cinema (still hasn't
happened yet folks).
2. Bloom (Scott
Stark)
3. Orpheus (Outtakes)
(Mary Helena Clark)
4. Reconnaissance
(Johann Lurf)
5. The Extravagant Shadows (David Gatten)
6. the war (James
Benning)
Favourite Performances: Denis Lavant (Holy Motors), Robert Pattinson (Cosmopolis), Seann William Scott (Goon), Frédéric Bourdin (The Imposter), James Gandolfini (Killing Them Softly), Yu Junsang (lifeguard in In Another
Country), Tadashi Okuno (the professor in Like
Someone in Love), Nicole Kidman (The
Paperboy).
*****
Marco G.
[Unranked] Amour
(Michael Haneke)
1. Cosmopolis (David
Cronenberg)
2. The Turin Horse
(Béla Tarr)
3. Passion (Brian De
Palma)
4. Laurence Anyways
(Xavier Dolan)
5. Gebo and the Shadow
(Manoel de Oliveira)
6. Elena (Andrei
Zvyagintsev)
7. Stemple Pass
(James Benning)
8. Post Tenebras Lux
(Carlos Reygadas)
9. differently, Molussia (Nicolas Rey)
10. Leviathan
(Lucien Castaing-Taylor & Véréna Paravel)
11. Attenberg
(Athina Rachel Tsangari)
12. Once Upon a Time in Anatolia (Nuri Bilge Ceylan)
13. The Master (Paul
Thomas Anderson)
*****
Ryan Krahn [
read Ryan’s capsule reviews of all of the
films on his list website, Aufhebung]
1. Leviathan (Lucien
Castaing-Taylor & Véréna Paravel)
2. The Clock (Christian
Marclay)*
3. Amour (Michael
Haneke)
4. The Hunt (Thomas
Vinterberg)
5. Paradise: Love
(Ulrich Siedl)
6. In the Fog
(Sergei Loznitsa)
7. The Last Time I Saw Macao (João Rui Guerra da Mata & João Pedro Rodrigues)
8. Passion (Brian De
Palma)
9. Post Tenebras Lux
(Carlos Reygadas)
10. Spring Breakers
(Harmony Korine)
Honourable Mentions: Tower (Kazik Radwanski), Django Unchained (Quentin Tarantino), Magic Mike (Steven Soderbergh), Berberian Sound
Studio (Peter Strickland), Clip (Maja Miloš).
*all films based on first Canadian (festival or theatrical)
release
*****
David Balzer (Assistant Editor at
Canadian Art magazine. Author:
Contrivances)
Museum Hours (Jem Cohen)
Silver Linings Playbook (David O. Russell)
Holy Motors (Leos Carax)
To Rome With Love (Woody Allen)
Barbara (Christian Petzold)
The Perks of Being a Wallflower (Stephen Chbosky)
Tabu (Miguel Gomes)
Videos for "
National Anthem" and "
Ride" (Anthony Mandler / Lana Del Rey)
Keep the Lights On (Ira Sachs)
Gerhard Richter – Painting (Corrina Belz)
Favourite repertory discovery:
Promised Lands (1974, Susan Sontag) at
Early Monthly Segments.
*****
Chris Kennedy (Programmer:
The Free Screen, Early Monthly Segments. Filmmaker: Towards a
Vanishing Point, Phantoms)
1. autrement, molussie
(Nicolas Rey)
I was able to see this three times in three different
settings, which meant—since the sequence of the nine reels is determined before
each showing—that I saw three different versions. The second, at Media City in
Windsor, was ecstatic (partly due to the stunning projection team that the
festival pulls together). The order was “perfect” and the graininess of the
film-stock came through particularly beautifully then, amplifying Gunter
Anders’ moving parables of underground resistance.
2. Sounding
Glass (Sylvia Schedelbauer)
Sylvia got a handful of awards and a lot of well-deserved
recognition for this piece, a very bracing merging of found-footage and
flicker, with a stunning soundtrack by Thomas Carnacki . This was also a blast
to see in multiple settings, as watching each cinema vibrate from the light
from the screen was almost half the fun.
3. Songs
About Nothing (Jason Lescalleet)
Not a movie, but an album. Lescalleet, who I also managed
to see three times this year (the best seem to come in threes), creates music
out of field recordings, tape loops and assorted dying electronics. The
results, both live and on record, are cinematic mood swings akin to the most
associative free-form poetry of many diary filmmakers-albeit a lot noisier.
4. Movements
of an Impossible Time (Flatform)
A very simple crane shot across a ruined chateau—moving
between small microclimates created by rain, wind, snow and fog machines—served
as a lucid reaffirmation of the emotional power of the artifice of cinema.
5. The Act
of Killing (Joshua Oppenheimer, Christine
Cynn & anonymous)
A chilling documentary about the Indonesia genocide of
the 1960s. The directors rely on the murderer’s own vanity to recreate the
killings. There’s shockingly little remorse, although various murderers react
to guilt in different ways (including a scene which implies that the body may
expulse guilt even if the mind isn’t quite there yet). The final credits are an
extremely moving testimony about the continued reality of this horror—most of
the crew are listed as “anonymous”.
6. Il se
peut que la beauté ait renforcé notre résolution (Masao Adachi & Philippe Grandrieux)
The first time I saw this I was extremely jetlagged, so I
scrambled to get my hands on a screener to reaffirm what I thought I saw. The
night-drenched images worked into my half asleep self-conscious and Adachi’s
rich thoughts on filmmaking and revolution – that you can make the plans but
never predict the results – were a refreshing corrective against orthodox
dogmatism.
7. Game Plan
(Alighiero e Boetti)
An exhibition at the MoMA. Maybe it’s the Italian thing,
but Boetti’s work has resonated with me over the last five years in the same
way that Pasolini’s work did when I was a film student. Arte povera, the poor
man’s conceptualism, seem to match similar threads in Pasolini’s early films.
And then you can try and pair up their later orientalisms … Anyway, great to
see so much of Boetti’s work in one place.
8. Mekong
Hotel (Apichatpong Weerasethakul) & The
Strawberry Tree (Simone Rapisarda
Casanova)
I feel like these two films deserve to share a spot,
partly due to their effortless and humble reflexivity, especially during a year
where other films got so meta on the “meaning-of-movie-making” train (or should
I say “limo”).
9. Friendly
Witness (Warren Sonbert, 1989)
It turned out that the Warren Sonbert retrospective that
our Early Monthly Segments group were able to put on was a really lovely way to
study Sonbert’s dense montages and the cross-referencing of life that his full
oeuvre unfolds into. However, nothing had the full gut-punch of his film
Friendly Witness, which feels like a pure gift in the face of Sonbert’s then
newfound awareness of his diagnosis of AIDS, of which he would succumb to six
years later.
10. The In-Person Screening
This was a good year for filmmakers traveling in to
introduce their work, providing context to their art. The most notable that I
saw may have been Phil Solomon’s screening at the Ann Arbor Film Festival,
which happened immediately after he got off an extremely turbulent foul-weather
commuter flight from Montréal, on which he was sure he would die. The
rejuvenated Solomon gave a generous (despite projection difficulties) and funny
walk through an evening’s retrospective of his film work. Events like that
prove how valuable the in-person is to personal filmmaking, even at the risk of
leaving some skin on the tarmac.
Honorable mentions: Nearly a year later, I’m reminded
about the emotional power of Asghar Farhadi’s A Separation and Philippe Falardeau’s Monsieur Lazhar. They started 2012 well, modeling how a
well-written script, rich yet subtle characters and economic and thoughtful
direction can create a beautiful, moving experience. That’s a simple thing to
ask for in 2013.
*****
Scott Miller Berry (Programmer:
Early Monthly Segments, Images Festival. Tumblr:
cineparlour)
Twelve short films first seen in 2012 that I cannot wait to see again on the big screen! (in chronological order with links!!)
- Qualia Diaries (2009) by Emily Mode, February 12 @ Tate Modern, Barbara Hammer retrospective, London, UK
- Tree Dance (1971) by Gordon Matta-Clark, March 19 @ Early Monthly Segments, Gladstone Hotel, Toronto
- February (2011) by Cho In-Han, May 26 @ Media City, Capitol Cinema, Windsor, Ontario
- Condensation (2012) by Cha Mi-Hye, September @ EXiS Festival, Seoul
- Remains (2011) by Louise Bourque @ Planet in Focus Film Festival, Toronto
- The Tuxedo Theatre (1968) by Warren Sonbert, November 15 @ Early Monthly Segments, Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto
- Un film inédit (1948? / restored 2012) by Gordon Webber, November @ Cinémathèque Québécoise, Montréal
*****
Sean Rogers
My year-end list, despite there being so much I still
need to see [Moonrise Kingdom, Bernie, Liz and Dick, Vamps, The Loneliest
Planet, 4:44 Last Day on Earth].
Many of the best films I saw on Toronto screens in 2012
have not yet opened commercially (and probably, sadly, won't):
A1. Florentina Hubaldo, CTE (Lav Diaz)
A gut-punch of a movie, beautifully shot, elliptically
told. The most hypnotic six hours of my movie-going year.
A2. Two Years at Sea
(Ben Rivers)
A3. The Last Time I Saw Macao (João Rui Guerra da Mata & João Pedro Rodrigues)
A4. autrement, la Molussie (Nicolas Rey)
A5. Three Sisters
(Wang Bing)
As for films that actually received theatrical release in
Toronto: praise be!
1. Bestiaire (Denis
Côté)
2. Holy Motors (Leos
Carax)
3. Tabu (Miguel
Gomes)
4. Once Upon a Time in Anatolia (Nuri Bilge Ceylan)
5. The Master (Paul
Thomas Anderson)
6. Cosmopolis (David
Cronenberg)
7. The Deep Blue Sea
(Terence Davies)
8. Beyond the Black Rainbow (Panos Cosmatos)
9. The Clock
(Christian Marclay)
Or what I saw of it, anyway.
10. Barbara
(Christian Petzold)
A placeholder for so many films I've yet to watch: at the
least, I imagine 56 Up (Michael
Apted) will sneak on to this list when I finally catch up with it.
It's worth keeping in mind, too, all the "2012"
movies that didn't actually open in Toronto, chief among which is The Turin
Horse -- the best film of this or
any other year. Also conspicuous in their absence: Le gamin au
vélo, L'Apollonide, La folie Almayer, Elena, Kill List, The Comedy.
*****
1. The Master (Paul Thomas Anderson)
2. Life of Pi (Ang Lee)
3. Zero Dark Thirty (Kathryn Bigelow)
4. Moonrise Kingdom (Wes Anderson)
5. Holy Motors (Leos Carax)
6. Stories We Tell (Sarah Polley)
7. Skyfall (Sam Mendes)
8. Killer Joe (William Friedkin)
9. Tabu (Miguel Gomes)
10. Lincoln (Steven Spielberg)
11. Oslo, August 31st (Joachim Trier)
12. Django Unchained (Quentin Tarantino)
13. Keep the Lights On (Ira Sachs)
14. Barbara (Christian Petzold)
15. Bernie (Richard Linklater)
16. The Imposter (Bart Layton)
17. Compliance (Craig Zobel)
18. Ruby Sparks (Jonathan Dayton & Valerie Faris)
19. Silver Linings Playbook (David O. Russell)
20. In the Family
(Patrick Wang)
21. Goon (Michael Dowse)
22. ParaNorman
(Chris Butler & Sam Fell)
23. Premium Rush
(David Koepp) & The Raid Redemption (Gareth Evans) & Detention (Joseph Kahn)
24. Magic Mike
(Steven Soderbergh)
25. Chronicle (Josh
Trank)
Honourable Mentions: Amour (Michael Haneke), Argo (Ben Affleck), Fat Kid Rules the World (Matthew Lillard), Miss Bala (Gerardo Naranjo), Looper (Rian Johnson), Bestiaire (Denis Cote), Cosmopolis (David Cronenberg), Les Miserables (Tom Hooper), 21 Jump Street (Phil Lord & Chris Miller).
Best undistributed films: This is Not a Film (Jafar Panahi), The Color Wheel (Alex Ross Perry), The Turin Horse (Bela Tarr), Only the Young (Elizabeth Mims & Jason Tipett), Tchoupitoulas (Bill and Turner Ross), Wuthering Heights (Andrea Arnold), The Kid with a Bike (Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne).
*****
- Casting
Blossoms to the Sky (Nobuhiko Obayashi)
- Django
Unchained (Quentin Tarantino)
- The
Egoists (Ryuichi Hiroki)
- Holy
Motors (Léos Carax)
- In
Another Country (Hong Sang-soo)
- Kotoko (Shinya Tsukamoto)
- Moonrise
Kingdom (Wes Anderson)
- Our
Homeland (Yonghi Yang)
- Skyfall (Sam Mendes)
- Something
in the Air (Olivier Assayas)
*****
Christopher Heron (Film Critic:
The Seventh Art)
I only included films that played in Toronto this year outside of TIFF
and two TIFF films I am skeptical will get a wider release next year.
1. Tabu (Miguel Gomes)
2. The Master (Paul Thomas Anderson)
3. Once Upon a Time in Anatolia (Nuri Bilge Ceylan)
4. Holy Motors (Leos Carax)
5. The Last Time I Saw Macao (João Pedro Rodrigues & João Rui Guerra da Mata)
Assuming this will not have a theatrical release in 2013.
6. Sleeping Sickness (Ulrich Köhler)
7. The Deep Blue Sea (Terence Davies)
8. Barbara (Christian Petzold)
9. Viola (Matías Piñeiro)
Assuming this will not have a theatrical release in 2013.
10. Bestiare (Denis Côté)
*****
Eastern Yoo
1.
The Master (Paul Thomas Anderson)
2.
Cosmopolis (David Cronenberg)
3.
Killer Joe (william friedkin)
4.
Django Unchained (Quentin Tarantino)
5.
Damsels in Distress (Whit Stillman)
6.
Killing Them Softly (Andrew Dominik)
7.
Prometheus (Ridley Scott)
8.
Flight (Robert Zemeckis)
9.
Magic Mike (
Steven Soderbergh)
10.
The Hobbit (Peter Jackson)
*****
Adam Nayman (Film
Critic: Cinema Scope, Reverse Shot, The Grid, The Globe and Mail. Teacher: Coen brothers at the JCC - Spring 2013)
- Alps (Giorgos Lanthimos)
- Barbara (Christian Petzold)
- Bernie (Richard Linklater)
- Bestiaire (Denis Côté)
- The
Capsule (Athina Rachel Tsangari)
- Chronicle (Josh Trank)
- The
Color Wheel (Alex Ross Perry)
- Compliance (Craig Zobel)
- The
Deep Blue Sea (Terence Davies)
- Goodbye
First Love (Mia Hansen-Løve)
- Goon (Michael Dowse)
- Greatest
Hits (Nicolás Pereda)
- Gregory
Crewdson: Brief Encounters (Ben Shapiro)
- Haywire (Steven Soderbergh)
- Holy
Motors (Leos Carax)
- In
the Family (Patrick Wang)
- The
Innkeepers (Ti West)
- It's
the Earth Not the Moon (Gonçalo Tocha)
- Keep
the Lights On (Ira Sachs)
- Killer
Joe (William Friedkin)
- Krivina (Igor Drljaca)
- Leviathan (Lucien Castaing-Taylor & Véréna Paravel)
- Lincoln
(Steven Spielberg)
- The
Master (Paul Thomas Anderson)
- Moonrise
Kingdom (Wes Anderson)
- Once
Upon a Time in Anatolia (Nuri Bilge Ceylan)
- Oslo,
August 31st (Joachim Trier)
- The
Raid: Redemption (Gareth Evans)
- Room
237 (Rodney Ascher)
- Sightseers (Ben Wheatley)
- Sleeping
Sickness (Ulrich Köhler)
- Something
in the Air (Olivier Assayas)
- Spring
Breakers (Harmony Korine),
- Starlet (Sean Baker)
- Tabu (Miguel Gomes)
- Tower (Kazik Radwanski)
- Two
Years at Sea (Ben Rivers)
- Viola (Matías Piñeiro)
- Wanderlust (David Wain)
- Zero
Dark Thirty (Kathryn Bigelow)
Favorite performances: Malin Ackerman (Wanderlust), Carlen Altman (The Color Wheel), Javier Bardem (Skyfall), Jack Black (Bernie), Derek Bogard (Tower), Gina Carano (Haywire), Anders Danielson Lie (Oslo, August 31st), Ann Dowd (Compliance), James Franco (Spring Breakers), Gina Gershon (Killer Joe), Kara Hayward (Moonrise Kingdom), Dree Hemingway (Starlet), Philip Seymour Hoffman (The Master), Anne Hathaway (Les Miserables), Nina Hoss (Barbara), Samuel L. Jackson (Django Unchained), Bedseka Johnson (Starlet), Denis Lavant (Holy Motors), Thure Lindhart (Keep the Lights On), Alice Lowe (Sightseers), Ken Marino (Wanderlust), Matthew McConaughey (Killer Joe, Magic
Mike), Robert Pattinson (Cosmopolis), Sara Paxton (The Innkeepers), Joaquin Phoenix (The Master), James Ransone (Sinister), Emmanuelle Riva (Amour), Yayan Ruhian (The Raid: Redemption), Simon Russell Beale (The Deep Blue Sea), Will Sasso (The Three Stooges), Liev Schreiber (Goon), Laura Soveral (Tabu), James Spader (Lincoln), Channing Tatum (21 Jump Street), Seann William Scott (Goon), Jean-Louis Trintignant (Amour), Maria Villar (Viola), Dreama Walker (Compliance), Rachel Weisz (The Deep Blue Sea)
*****
John Semley (Film
Critic: Cinema Scope, Slant, The Walrus, Now Toronto)
1. Tabu (Miguel Gomes)
2. The Color Wheel (Alex Ross Perry)
3. Kill List (Ben Wheatley)
4. This Is Not a Film (Jafar Panahi)
5. The Master (Paul Thomas Anderson)
6. Bernie (Richard Linklater)
7. Killer Joe (William Friedkin)
8. Skyfall (Sam Mendes)
9. Goon (Michael Dowse)
10. The Comedy (Rick Alversen)
*****
Kiva Reardon (Film Critic:
The Loop, Cinema Scope)
1. Tabu (Miguel Gomes)
2. Compliance (Craig Zobel)
3. Zero Dark Thirty (Kathryn Bigelow)
4. Alps (Giorgos Lanthimos)
5. The Master (Paul Thomas Anderson)
6. Bestiaire (Denis Côté)
7. Bernie (Richard Linklater)
8. Killer Joe (William Friedkin)
9. The Deep Blue Sea (Terence Davies)
10. This Is 40 (Judd Apatow)
Honorable mentions: Pitch Perfect (Jason Moore), Haywire (Steven Soderbergh), Moonrise Kingdom (Wes Anderson), Skyfall (Sam Mendes), The Grey (Joe Carnahan).
*****
I haven't seen Zero Dark Thirty and I haven't seen Starlet.
10. Hope Springs (David Frankel)
Meryl plays a woman again. For adults.
9. That’s My Boy (Sean Anders)
Art.
8. Looper (Rian Johnson)
Blending genres like 1980something.
7. Kill List (Ben Wheatley)
Killed it.
6. Magic Mike (Steven Soderbergh)
Heaven is a place on Multiplexes.
5. Elena (Andrey Zvyagintsev)
I liked it.
4. The Master (Paul Thomas Anderson)
Americana revisited.
3. Wuthering Heights (Andrea Arnold)
Think about it.
2. Holy Motors (Leos Carax)
The limo’s talk.
1. The Turin Horse (Béla Tarr)
Béla’s the horse.
*****
Angelo Muredda
1.
Tabu (Miguel Gomes)
2.
This Is Not a Film (Jafar Panahi and Mojtaba Mirtahmasb)
3.
The Master (Paul Thomas Anderson)
4.
Holy Motors (Leos Carax)
5.
Killer Joe (William Friedkin)
6.
Moonrise Kingdom (Wes Anderson)
7.
The Deep Blue Sea (Terence Davies)
8.
Bestiaire (Denis Côté)
9.
The Loneliest Planet (Julia Loktev)
10.
In the Family (Patrick Wang)
11.
Bernie (Richard Linklater)
12.
Barbara (Christian Petzold)
13.
Alps (Giorgos Lanthimos)
14.
Goodbye First Love (Mia Hansen-Løve)
15.
Zero Dark Thirty (Kathryn Bigelow)
16.
Stories We Tell (Sarah Polley)
17.
Cosmopolis (David Cronenberg)
18.
Goon (Michael Dowse)
19.
Beyond the Black Rainbow (Panos Cosmatos)
20.
Oslo, August 31st (Joachim Trier)
*****
Calum Marsh (Film Critic:
Slant)
1. The Color Wheel
(Alex Ross Perry)
2. Neighbouring Sounds
(Kleber Mendoca Filho)
3. The Day He Arrives (Hong
Song-soo)
4. Tabu (Miguel
Gomes)
5. The Deep Blue Sea
(Terence Davies)
6. Holy Motors (Leos
Carax)
7. The Turin Horse
(Bela Tarr)
8. Oslo, August 31st (Joachim Trier)
9. This Is Not A Film
(Jafar Panahi)
10. Once Upon A Time In Anatolia (Nuri Bilge Ceylan)
11. Kill List (Ben
Wheatley)
12. The Miners' Hymns (Bill
Morrison)
13. Barbara (Christian
Petzold)
14. Goodbye First Love
(Mia Hansen-Love)
15. Elena (Andrey
Zvyagintsev)
16. The Comedy (Rick
Alversen)
17. Sleepless Night
(Frederic Jardin)
18. Attenberg (Athina
Rachel Tsangari)
19. Sinister (Scott
Derrickson)
20. Green (Sophia
Takal)
*****
1. Once Upon a Time in Anatolia (Nuri Bilge Ceylan)
2. Your brother. Remember? (Zachary Oberzan)
3. Bestiaire (Denis
Côté)
4. Tabu (Miguel
Gomes)
5. Damsels in Distress
(Whit Stillman)
6. This Is Not A Film (Jafar Panahi)
7. Neighboring Sounds
(Kleber Mendoca Filho)
8. The Color Wheel
(Alex Ross Perry)
9. The Turin Horse (Bela
Tarr)
10. The Kid with a Bike
(Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne)
11. Holy Motors
(Leos Carax)
12. The Miners' Hymns
(Bill Morrison)
13. The Day He Arrives
(Hong Song-soo)
14. Barbara
(Christian Petzold)
15. Sleepless Night
(Frédéric Jardin)
16. Oslo, August 31st (Joachim Trier)
17. Attenberg
(Athina Rachel Tsangari)
18. Las Acacias (Pablo
Giorgelli)
19. Goodbye First Love
(Mia Hansen-Love)
20.
Vamps (Amy
Heckerling)
*****
Julian Carrington (Film Critic:
Torontoist)
1. The Master (Paul Thomas Anderson)
2. Once Upon a Time in Anatolia (Nuri Bilge Ceylan)
3. Holy Motors (Leos Carax)
4. Moonrise Kingdom (Wes Anderson)
5. Amour (Michael
Haneke)
6. Spring Breakers (Harmony Korine)
7. Django Unchained (Quentin Tarantino)
8. Tabu (Miguel
Gomes)
9. Lincoln (Steven Spielberg)
10. The Queen of Versailles (Lauren Greenfield)
Film/Non-film I'm most disappointed not to have seen in 2012: This Is Not a Film.
*****
1. The Master (Paul
Thomas Anderson)
2. Holy Motors (Leos
Carax)
3. Oslo, August 31st (Joachim Trier)
4. The Kid with a Bike
(Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne).
5. Moonrise Kingdom
(Wes Anderson)
6. This Is Not a Film
(Jafar Panahi)
7. Amour (Michael
Haneke)
8. Killer Joe
(William Friedkin)
9. Bernie (Richard
Linklater)
10. Skyfall (Sam
Mendes)
*****
Thomas Loree
1. The Clock
(Christian Marclay)
2. The Last Time I Saw Macao (João Pedro Rodrigues & João Rui Guerra da Mata)
3. Holy Motors (Leos
Carax)
4. Like Someone in Love
(Abbas Kiarostami)
5. Life of Pi (Ang
Lee)
6. Passion (Brian De
Palma)
7. Student (Darezhan
Omirbaev)
8. Moonrise Kingdom
(Wes Anderson)
9. Night Across the Street (Raúl Ruíz)
10. In Another Country
(Hong Sang-soo)
Honorable mentions: Thy Womb (Brillante Mendoza), Gebbo et l'ombre (Manoel de Oliveira), Penance (Kiyoshi Kurosawa).
Favourite Performances: Denis Lavant (Holy Motors), Noomi Rapace (Passion), Yu Junsang (the lifeguard in In Another
Country), Irfan Khan (the adult Pi in Life
of Pi), Ryo Kase (the psychotic boyfriend
in Like Someone in Love), Tadashi
Okuno (the professor in Like Someone in Love), the four friends of the victim in Penance, Nurlan Baitasov (Student), Jack Black (Bernie), Nora Aunor (the infertile wife in Thy
Womb, Andrew Garfield (The
Amazing Spider-Man), Eddie Redmayne &
Clémence Poésy (Birdsong), Laura
Soveral & Isabel Cardoso (Tabu),
Alba Rohrwacher (Maria in Bella adormentata), Maya Sansa (the suicidal methadone addict in Bella
adormentata), Lee Kang-sheng (The
Walker), the fox (Deux), “Richard Parker” (Life of Pi), Bruce Willis (Moonrise Kingdom).
*****
David Acacia
- Skyfall (Sam Mendes)
- Holy
Motors (Leos Carax)
- The
Kid with a Bike (Jean-Pierre and Luc
Dardenne)
- The
Deep Blue Sea (Terence Davies)
- In
Another Country (Hong Sang-soo)
- Once
Upon a Time in Anatolia (Nuri Bilge
Ceylan)
- Life
of Pi (Ang Lee)
- Katy
Perry: Part of Me (Dan Cutforth &
Jane Lipsitz)
- John
Carter (Andrew Stanton)
- Damsels
in Distress (Whit Stillman)
*****
Andrew Proczek
1. Like Someone in Love
(Abbas Kiarostami)
2. Holy Motors (Leos
Carax)
3. Amour (Michael
Haneke)
4. The Last Time I Saw Macao (João Pedro Rodrigues & João Rui Guerra da Mata)
5. Florentina Hubaldo, CTE (Lav Diaz)
6. Beyond the Hills
(Cristian Mungiu)
7. Margaret (Kenneth
Lonergan)
8. Bestiaire (Denis
Côté)
9. Barbara (Christian
Petzold)
10. Thy Womb
(Brillante Mendoza) & Many a Swan (Blake Williams)
11. Io e Te (Bernardo
Bertolucci)
12. Chrashkurs
(Anika Wangard)
13. The End of Time
(Peter Metler)
14. Tabu (Miguel
Gomes)
15. Moonrise Kingdom
(Wes Anderson)
16. Marina Abramović: The Artist Is Present (Matthew Akers)
*****
Ronald Walther
- Ruby
Sparks (Jonathan Dayton & Valerie
Faris)
- Extra
Man (Shari Springer Berman &
Robert Pulcini)
- Being
Flynn (Paul Weitz)
- Goodbye
First Love (Mia Hansen-Love)
- Beautiful
Boy (Shawn Ku)
- Take
Shelter (Jeff Nichols)
- Martha
Marcy May Marlene (Sean Durkin)
- A
One-Way Trip to Antibes (Richard Hobert)
- Byzantium (Neil Jordan)
- Edwin Boyd (Nathan Morlando)
*****
Scott C.
*****