A.V. Club Blog
The Best
The Departed: Okay, I’m with The A.V. Club and the rest of the world on this one—it’s bloody and great. Grade: A.
Pan’s Labyrinth: Again, with my peeps here. The trailer made me laugh—not in a good way—but the movie, which pairs a gory fairytale with the Spanish Civil War, is stunning. Grade: A.
49 Up: Roger Ebert’s review of Garfield: A Tail Of Two Kitties (written as Garfield—that is not a joke) makes everything he likes suspect, but he’s right that Michael Apted’s documentary series is inimitably great. Grade: A.
Strangers With Candy: Nathan noted the “absence of a strong narrative drive.” I was too busy giggling to notice. Grade: A-.
Borat: Like the Oscars, The A.V. Clubbies dis comedies. Was any film more purely enjoyable or even groundbreaking than Borat? Grade: A.
Babel: Here’s where I fall far from the consensus. Overrated? Babel is a tense, terrific filmgoing experience. B-minus, Scott? No, it’s not as good as Amores Perros, the first teaming of this writer and director, but almost nothing is. Grade: A.
Little Miss Sunshine: Another one that those immersed in film seem to group-hate on. Sure, it’s convenient, but maybe it’s not shooting for The Squid And The Whale. Grade: B+.
Stranger Than Fiction: Charlie Kaufman lite, to be sure, but also a way to trick people who’d normally hate Charlie Kaufman into seeing a charming movie full of mostly great performances. Grade: B+.
The Next Best
The Devil And Daniel Johnston: Not sure if this documentary about the mentally challenged Austin singer-songwriter is Top-10 material, but it’s certainly fascinating and worth seeing. Grade: B.
The Last King Of Scotland: Yeah, it’s a great performance and a compelling movie, though there’s probably a better movie in here somewhere, one that focuses a little more strictly on history. Grade: B.
Half Nelson: Gripping and worth seeing, but no Top-10 classic. Grade: B.
Inside Man: The year’s only solid band robbery movie (that I saw). Grade: B+.
Brick: The whole noir language thing is simultaneously distracting and fascinating. They should offer a modern-language alternate audio track on the DVD so people can decide if the film itself is actually any good. I suspect it is. Grade: B.
Bubble: Proof that when Steven Soderbergh follows his muse, amazing things can happen. Grade: B.
Shut Up And Sing: Who gives a fuck about the Dixie Chicks? Oh, I guess I do. Grade: B+.
Take These Or Leave These
A Prairie Home Companion: You’re rooting for it. You really are. Grade: C+.
For Your Consideration: It’s tough to dismiss any Christopher Guest movie after just one viewing, but this one doesn’t seem to demand the extra looks. Grade: C+.
The Good German: Proof that when Steven Soderbergh follows his muse, halfway decent things can happen. Grade: B-.
Superman Returns: And stays 40 minutes too long. Grade: C+.
The Illusionist: If you know exactly what’s going to happen 45 minutes in, the next hour gets a little dull. Grade: C+.
Surprisingly Unbad
Mission Impossible III: Quite possibly the best of the three, which I know isn’t saying much… Grade: B.
Tenacious D In The Pick Of Destiny: Five years too late and not uproarious enough to make up for that fact, but still good for some giggles. Grade: B-.
Clerks II: Shockingly, almost unbelievably, not bad. Maybe that’s just low expectations talking. Grade: B-.
Watch QVC Instead
Nacho Libre: I love stupid movies, and I didn’t laugh once. Grade: F.
Miami Vice: Crushingly disappointing. The last thing Michael Mann’s movie version of his classic TV show should be is boring. And yet… Grade: D.
Talladega Nights: Did this one catch me on a bad day, or was it just stupid? Grade: C-.
Special Letter Grades Are Needed For These Vexers
The Fountain: Totally beautiful or total nonsense? Beautiful nonsense? Remember that crappy Robin Williams movie where he ends up in a painting or something? It’s better than that. Grade: ABCDEF.
Tideland: Terry Gilliam is still a mad genius, but he could use some trimming and some tonal cues, so the six people that saw this movie could enjoy it without squirming the whole time. Grade: T—tensely twisted.
Idiocracy: Funny? Sort of? Ridiculously on the nose? Too smart or too dumb for its own good? Grade: H—for huh?
Edmond: William H. Macy wanders around in David Mamet’s weird world, and it’s tough to tell if he’s comfortable. A different writer and star and this would’ve been a weird B-movie. Maybe it still is. Greatest line of dialogue this year, though: “Get on my body.” Grade: L—for loopy.
United 93: It’s tough to reconcile the excellent filmmaking with the story itself, which makes United 93 difficult to enjoy (obviously). It’d be interesting to see a fictional event shot the same way. Grade: T—tough to watch.
I’m Excited To See: Children Of Men, Casino Royale, The Prestige, The Science Of Sleep, Old Joy, Jonestown: The Life And Death Of People’s Temple
I Will Not See, Unless On A Plane Or Sick In Bed With No Remote:: The Pursuit Of Happyness (too goopy), Dreamgirls (too dreamy), Lady In The Water (too M. Nighty), The Holiday (do I need a reason?)

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