The Associated Press' film writers picks for best movies of 2021:
LINDSEY BAHR:
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1. âThe Lost Daughterâ: Thereâs an element of danger, real and theoretical, permeating every moment of Maggie Gyllenhaalâs electric adaptation of the Elena Ferrante novel. Despite the idyllic Greek seaside setting and the intoxicating premise of a solo vacation, the unease hovers oppressively as we follow the brilliant, passionate, selfish, cruel and inscrutable Leda Caruso (Olivia Colman) through some unorthodox choices, past and present. Not only is she one of the richest characters that has ever graced our screens, itâs the kind of film that will bury itself in your subconscious.
2. âLicorice Pizzaâ: Itâs a rare film that makes you nostalgic for a time and place you never knew, but Paul Thomas Andersonâs breezy, sunny âLicorice Pizzaâ does just that for the San Fernando Valley of Gary Valentine (Cooper Hoffman) and Alana Kaneâs ( Alana Haim ) youths. Awash in Southern California calm and optimism, this is a playful and joyous ode to the big personalities, embellished stories, endless possibilities and endearing Hollywood-adjacency of a place that barely exists anymore.
3. âDuneâ: A bigger-than-IMAX vision that is as smart as it is spectacular, Denis Villeneuveâs âDuneâ is far and away the best blockbuster of the past few years. There was so much baggage and failure and missed opportunities swirling around âDuneâ that itâs kind of miraculous that they were able to make something this clear-eyed, thrilling and visually unique. The best part is itâs not even finished yet.
4. â The Souvenir Part II â: Art house films donât typically get sequels with numerals on them for many reasons, most of them boring and money related, so itâs a bit of a miracle that âThe Souvenir Part IIâ even exists. But perhaps more extraordinary is what a great film it is as director Joanna Hogg and her star/stand-in Honor Swinton Byrne unpack Julieâs tragic first love and her evolution as an artist.
5. âDrive My Carâ: There is a tranquility to the Japanese drama âDrive My Car,â which filmmaker Ryusuke Hamaguchi adapted from a Haruki Murakami short story about a widowed actor who develops a connection with his chauffeur, while putting together a multilingual production of Uncle Vanya. Donât be scared off by the three-hour runtime, which lately has seemed to be the exclusive province of bloated epics: Here, it is sublime.
6. âBarb and Star go to Vista Del Marâ: Writing about the absurd joys of âBarb and Star Go to Vista Del Marâ is almost a disservice to something that just needs to be experienced, preferably in pastel culottes with curlers in your hair and a blended tropical drink in hand. It was a big swing that could have been a disaster. Instead, we got a new comedy classic. Letâs just hope it doesnât take Annie Mumolo and Kristen Wiig another 10 years to dream up their next adventure.
7. âLucaâ: This is the only film on the list that Iâve seen more than 10 times already. Itâs not exactly by choice, thereâs a 2-year-old in the equation, but itâs not a chore either. In fact, itâs a joy to be transported into the Cinque Terra-inspired town of Portorosso to watch a few adolescent sea monsters dream of Vespas and a better future. It also has a tremendous score and a lively soundtrack of mid-century Italian bops.
8. âThe Power of the Dogâ: A story about loneliness in the barren Montana frontier of 1925, Jane Campionâs stunning and sure-footed film is as rich and layered as a novel, playing out as a mystery, a Western, and a meditation on masculinity, femininity, class, love and hate. Benedict Cumberbatchâs, brilliant, unbathed, casually cruel rancher Phil Burbank is a villain for the ages.
9. âThe Hand of Godâ: Paolo Sorrentinoâs autobiographical film âThe Hand of Godâ may deal with tragedy and fate and âcoming-of-ageâ but it is hardly a maudlin or overly sentimental affair. This is a shimmering, ecstatic love letter to family that uses all of the colors in the box.
10. âEl Planetaâ: Director Amalia Ulman acts alongside her real mother in âEl Planeta,â a ferociously pointed satire about two women with severely limited funds attempting to live out a glamorous farce in post-crisis Spain by scamming and shoplifting their way through high-end establishments and wearing their best while doing so.
Also of note: âThe Rescue,â âBergman Island,â âFlee,â âThe World to Come,â âThe Green Knight,â âSummer of Soulâ
JAKE COYLE:
1. âThe Worst Person in the Worldâ: Joachim Trierâs richly compassionate character study wasnât my first movie back in theaters this year, but it was the first film that filled me with all the joy, delight and surprise of going to the movies. Trierâs film, which debuted at the Cannes Film Festival and properly opens in February, stars Renate Reinsve as an uncertain Oslo 30-something finding her way. I havenât yet worked out whether it was the movieâs warm, exuberant humanity or the experience of seeing it on the big screen in a theater with other people that moved me to tears. But whatâs the difference?
2. âThe Beatles: Get Backâ: Itâs been an extraordinary year in music documentary thanks to revelations like Questloveâs âSummer of Soulâ and Todd Haynesâ âThe Velvet Underground.â But Peter Jacksonâs eight-hour Beatles hang-out is an overwhelming cultural artifact not just because of how it reframes so much about what we know about Paul, John, George and Ringo, but for how it captures artistic creation and collaboration in real time. As much as âGet Backâ is about the bandâs dissolution, itâs how in sync they can be with one another thatâs often astonishing and sweet.
3. âLicorice Pizzaâ: Paul Thomas Andersonâs shaggy-dog story of self-discovery in â70s San Fernando Valley feels to me like a loose, easy-breathing culmination for Anderson, a virtuoso filmmaker here at his most tender and organic. âLicorice Pizza,â crammed with the comic chronicles of adolescence and young adulthood, is the most lived-in movie of the year.
4. âThe Souvenir Part IIâ: Even better than part one, Joanna Hoggâs sequel to her deeply autobiographical drama is simply one of the most sublime portraits of an artist as a young filmmaker there is. If Anderson resurrects â70s California in âLicorice Pizza,â Hoggâs film is just as detailed in its â80s London. Filmmaking is rarely so acutely personal â and yet generously expansive -- as this.
5. âThe Truffle Huntersâ: Michael Dweck and Gregory Kershawâs exquisitely charming documentary is about old Italian men who scavenge truffles with faithful canine companions. Their tradition, though, is imperiled by the greed of those who would thwart or even kill the dogs so they can better compete for the high-priced delicacy. With lush, pointillist imagery (and dog cams!), the filmmakers unearth an enchanting, vanishing world. (For a truffle-hunting double feature, pair with "Pig," starring a fabulous Nicholas Cage.)
6. âDrive My Carâ: Dogs are a clue to happiness, too, in Ryusuke Hamaguchiâs emotional epic, a staggering work of quiet, profound intimacy. There is much under the hood of âDrive My Carââ art, grief, friendship, Chekhov. A lot of movies are described as âa ride,â but Hamaguchiâs melancholy masterwork, where the opening credits arrive 40 minutes in, earns that label in its own uniquely winding way.
7. âThe Mitchells vs the Machinesâ: A classic family road trip movie, with a robot apocalypse thrown in, along with a pug easily mistaken for a loaf of bread. An antic delight.
8. âPetite Mamanâ: CĂŠline Sciammaâs âPortrait of a Lady on Fireâ was my favorite film of 2019, but I was still unprepared for what a gentle gem her follow-up, âPetite Maman,â would be. In just 72 minutes, Sciamma composes a spare but enormously rich fairy tale about an 8-year-old girl who, in a time of grief, meets another girl mysteriously similar to her in the woods. Thereâs a magic here that Maurice Sendak would have adored.
9. âThe Humansâ: A family gathers in a rundown Chinatown apartment for Thanksgiving as darkness falls in Stephen Karamâs chilling adaptation of his own Tony-winning play. Like the apartment, they all have their own painted-over failings and faults, and the conversation throbs with existentialist reverberations. In a flawless cast, Richard Jenkins and Jayne Houdyshell are particular standouts.
10. âThe Hand of God": Autobiographical doesnât feel like a natural mode for Paolo Sorrentino, but thatâs part of what makes his most personal film so full of wonders. Sorrentinoâs film, about a childhood in Naples that stretches from the divine to the profane, from bliss to tragedy, is best when heâs gazing not at himself as a young man but outward, at his seaside city and the family around him.
Also: âRed Rocket,â âThe Power of the Dog,â âThe Lost Daughter,â âA Hero,â âCODA,â âTitane,â âFlee,â âDune,â âAnnette,â âRiders of Justiceâ
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Follow the AP film critics on Twitter at http://twitter.com/ldbahr and http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP