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- MOVIES, Page 54THE BEST OF 1992
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- 1. Aladdin
-
- Animation is pure moviemaking: not just the photographing
- of actors but the creation, frame by frame, of a whole new
- world. Disney's 31st cartoon feature, directed by Ron Clements
- and John Musker, paints that world in gorgeous colors,
- populates it with a menagerie of witty characters (including a
- truly magic carpet) and sets it spinning at Mach speed to half
- a dozen lively tunes. Robin Williams may forever seem diminished
- in live-action films after his turn as the ingenious Genie. In
- the new Golden Age of animation, Aladdin gives reason to
- celebrate the cinema. This is a magic-lamp movie: rub it and
- wonders emerge.
-
- 2. Unforgiven
-
- Clint Eastwood's dark (and at times darkly humorous)
- western broods -- laconically, ironically, tragically -- on the
- morality of violence and the ambiguity of human motives. In this
- pungent commentary onan aging genre, Eastwood's iconic authority
- as an actor is matched by the clarifying force with which he
- directs David Webb Peoples' complex script.
-
- 3. Howards End
-
- Handsome, of course, and of course handsomely acted
- (pre-eminently by Emma Thompson, Helena Bonham Carter and
- Vanessa Redgrave). But in this perfectly pitched adaptation of
- E.M. Forster's richest novel, the stately virtues of other
- Merchant Ivory movies are transcended in a collision of classes,
- temperaments and genteel obsessions. What cruelties people
- inflict on each other! And with such style!
-
- 4. Gas Food Lodging
-
- Addressing the topic of growing up poor and female in
- trailer-park America, director Allison Anders smartly skips the
- piety. She has an unbuttoned, unsentimental gift for observing
- teen dreams and realities, working-mom desperation and
- exhaustion. She even spares a wry, forgiving thought for male
- shiftlessness in this high-spirited low-budgeter.
-
- 5. Toto le Heros
-
- An old man, reviewing his unfulfilled life, finds that
- memories of a magical childhood wilt in the heat of his passion
- for revenge. The brisk, risky style of Belgian filmmaker Jaco
- Van Dormael's beautiful drama educates the viewer to attend
- carefully to each of life's privileged moments, because they
- will be replayed endlessly in the screening room of old age.
- Memory is tyranny.
-
- 6. Indochine
-
- A true epic finds irony and illumination in the mix of
- megahistory and personal history. In Regis Wargnier's confident,
- delicate evocation of 1930s French colonial life, the politics
- of love offers both devastation and redemption to a woman
- (Catherine Deneuve, never so radiant) and her adopted daughter,
- while the politics of revolution propose the same for their
- society. High romance, touched with tragedy.
-
- 7. Raise the Red Lantern
-
- In 1920s China, a lovely teenager (Gong Li) is sold to a
- rich man as the fourth of his mistresses. To be his bedmate of
- the evening, each woman must flaunt her femininity in a display
- that combines beauty pageant and office politics. The great
- director Zhang Yimou locates ripe melodrama and ravishing
- textural harmony in this bitter, seductive parable.
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- 8. A Brief History of Time
-
- Errol Morris' documentary traces the evolution of
- physicist Stephen Hawking's theories and the devolution of his
- body after decades of assault from amyotrophic lateral
- sclerosis. Morris suggests a bond between the man's history and
- the history of the universe he has imagined. In its way, the
- movie is as elegant and subtle as its subject's thought.
-
- 9. Batman Returns
-
- The controversy over this sequel's suitability for kids
- was almost as amusing as Daniel Waters' fecund script. But not
- quite. This gorgeous meditation on mixed and masked identities
- -- Are we human or something frightfully other? -- turns a
- comic-book story into ghouly, ghostly comic art. A zillion
- dollars allowed director Tim Burton to unleash the beasts of his
- imagination. They're all beauties.
-
- 10. The Last of the Mohicans
-
- Director Michael Mann's adaptation of a Great American
- Chestnut has the sweep, scope, innocence and bustle of
- old-fashioned Hollywood historical dramas -- the kind they don't
- make anymore. But there is also a reanimating conviction in its
- reverence for unspoiled landscapes and its idealization of the
- unspoiled men and women who pioneered them.
-
- ...AND THE WORST
-
- Tell-All Trailers
-
- Those "previews of coming attractions" used to tease
- audiences with a few discreet scenes. But the new model of
- trailers reveals practically the whole plot -- and robs the
- moviegoer of that cherished quality, pristine ignorance. It's
- like having a loudmouth near you blab, "Smith done it," before
- the mystery has even begun. Upside: in two minutes you learn all
- you need to know about a movie you'll never have to see.
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