2021年2月13日 星期六

Movies of the Late 90s, Ranked in the Order I Enjoyed Them


Movies, movies, so many movies.  Honestly, I'm kind of glad to be done with the late 90s.  I'll always have a certain nostalgia for 80s and early 90s movies, but the late 90s films are more hit or miss for me.  I had a lot of great times during those five years, but my memories of them are less connected to the movies of the period.  I was also much older, and probably viewing those films with a more critical eye.

The movies at the top of this list are movies I continue to like.  The movies at the bottom are some of the worst movies ever.  The movies in the middle?  Let's just say that the late 90s was an uncertain time, and that the middle of the road movies - in part catering to the emerging direct-to-video market - were truly average in every respect.

The Matrix (99)
Citizen Ruth (96)
American Beauty (99)
Armageddon (98)
Ghost in the Shell (95)
True Crime (99)
Primary Colors (98)
Kundun (97)
The Edge (97)
Starship Troopers (97)
All About My Mother (99)
A Civil Action (98)
Breaking the Waves (96)
Happy Together (97)
Basquiat (96)
Bastard Out of Carolina (96)
Braveheart (95)
La Haine (95)
Bottle Rocket (96)
Independence Day (96)
Witness Protection (99)
Wild Things (98)
Princess Mononoke (97)
Unagi (The Eel) (97)
Savior (98)
A Taste of Cherry (97)
The Boxer (97)
Happy Gilmore (96)
Pi (98)
Virus (99)
Outbreak (95)
BASEketball (98)
Cube (97)
Memories (95)
Gummo (97)
Kansas City (96)
Whisper of the Heart (95)
Top Dog (95)
Die Hard with a Vengeance (95)
Striptease (96)
Little Dieter Needs to Fly (97)
Perfect Blue (97)
Girl, Interrupted (99)
I Know What You Did Last Summer (97)
Mortal Kombat: Annihilation (97)
2 Days in the Valley (96)
Species (95)
The End of the Affair (99)
Selena (97)
Secrets and Lies (96)
Gotti (96)
Primal Fear (96)
Shadow Conspiracy (97)
The Truman Show (98)
The Pentagon Wars (98)
The Evening Star (96)
Aftershock: Earthquake in New York (99)
Fallen (98)
A Little Princess (95)
Choke (95)
Tales from the Hood (95)
Generation E (97)
Matilda (96)
No Child of Mine (97)
Rushmore (98)
Mortal Kombat (95)
The Wrong Guy (97)
Bulworth (98)
Gorgeous (99)
Anaconda (97)
Twister (96)
Catwalk (95)
Last Man Standing (96)
A Time to Kill (96)
The CIA: America's Secret Warriors (97)
Lake Placid (99)
The Craft (96)
Fallen Angels (95)
Godzilla (98)
The Funeral (96)
Jawbreaker (99)
The Cure (95)
Set It Off (96)
Assassins (95)
Rogue Trader (99)
The Odyssey (97)
Billy Madison (95)
Drive (97)
30 Years to Life (98)
Major Payne (95)
The Shadow Men (97)
Speed 2: Cruise Control (97)
Blue Streak (99)
A Bug's Life (98)
Dead Man (95)
Deep Impact (98)
Rollercoaster (99)
Deep Blue Sea (99)
Friday (95)
The Thirteenth Floor (99)
Primal Force (99)
Jumanji (95)
Hackers (95)
The Boondock Saints (99)
Anastasia (97)
Fly Away Home (96)
Idle Hands (99)
Now and Then (95)
10 Things I Hate About You (99)
Half Baked (98)
Space Jam (96)
The Faculty (98)
Legion (98)
Candyman: Farewell to the Flesh (95)
Tales from the Crypt: Demon Knight (95)
The Scarlet Letter (95)
Family of Cops (95)
Flubber (97)
I Still Know What You Did Last Summer (98)
The Patriot (98)
Mighty Joe Young (98)
The Iron Giant (99)
Caught (96)
The Mangler (95)
Black Wednesday (97)
Big Daddy (99)
The Avengers (98)
Volcano (97)
The First Wives Club (96)
Lost in Space (98)
Small Soldiers (98)
Sleepers (96)
The Siege (98)
Silver Wolf (99)
Total Eclipse (95)
Meet Joe Black (98)
Land and Freedom (95)
Lost Souls (98)
Aeon Flux: The Complete Series (95)
Home Alone 3 (97)
Komodo (99)
Survivor (99)
The Butcher Boy (97)
La Belle Verte (96)
Rajaji (99)
Futuresport (98)
Killer Deal (99)
Don't Look Behind You (99)
Mad City (97)
Undercover Angel (99)
Evita (96)
Cleopatra (99)
Before and After (96)
Jingle All the Way (96)
Animal Farm (99)
The Mirror Has Two Faces (96)
Tank Girl (95)

Related Entries:

Some Other Movies From 1999 (2)


For further background on the year in film, please refer to the
Some Other Movies From 1999 entry.

The following things happened in 1999:
  • The euro currency was established.
  • Bill Clinton was acquitted after impeachment proceedings.
  • Shakespeare in Love won the Oscar for Best Picture.
  • Nunavut became Canada's third territory.
  • Bill Gates became the richest man in the world.
  • The Columbine shootings took place in Colorado.
  • Napster appeared.
  • Falun Gong was banned in China.
  • The 9-21 Earthquake struck Taiwan.
  • Boris Yeltsin resigned as Prime Minister of Russia, leaving Vladimir Putin as acting president.*
Underlined entries were viewed on Netflix.

Linked entries can be viewed in their entirety on YouTube.

Disclaimer: I was scraping the bottom of the YouTube barrel with this one.  The "Excellent" category aside, "Good" in this context is relative.  Is a movie like Aftershock: Earthquake in New York REALLY good?  No, definitely not.


Excellent 

1. American Beauty 

Yes, we all hate Kevin Spacey now, but once upon a time he was one of the best actors in the business.  American Beauty is excellent regardless of his tarnished reputation, and it's still one of the most heartfelt movies ever made.

What's it about?  I suppose you could boil it down to the dangers of conformity, and of being so invested in the rat race that you overlook the simple joys of life.  Besides Spacey, the supporting cast is also great.  Especially Annette Bening, as Spacey's controlling wife.

Fun Fact: This was director Sam Mendes' very first movie.  He'd go on to direct Road to Perdition, Skyfall and Spectre.

2. The Matrix

One thing American Beauty and The Matrix have in common: they both end with the perfect song.  American Beauty ends with an Elliot Smith tune, and The Matrix ends with Rage Against the Machine.  Those two songs both capture the moods of their respective movies perfectly.

Every so often I feel the need to revisit the first Matrix.  In my opinion it's a perfectly executed science fiction movie, and those revisiting it in 2021 will find it hasn't aged a day.  It's also a perfect synthesis of trends in science fiction up until that point - the existential depth of anime like Ghost in the Shell, Hong Kong-style gunplay and martial arts, trends in virtual reality and gaming, and a host of actors and actresses who would become much bigger names as the 2000s wore on.  In essence it does just what a movie like Jaws did before it: it encapsulates what came before, and also offers us a glimpse of what's to come.

Of course I realize that Jupiter Ascending was terrible, but I'm still a bit sad that it's not the Wachowskis directing the Dune adaptation.  Plot elements from Dune Messiah were almost certainly incorporated into The Matrix Revolutions, and a more direct adaptation of Dune by the Wachowskis would have been a great ride.  Nothing against Denis Villeneuve - he's one of the great directors working today - but yeah, the Wachowskis doing Dune would have been epic.

And can we talk about how Laurence Fishburne almost carries this entire film?  Or how awesome Hugo Weaving is?  I could watch those guys do their thing all day.

Fun Fact 1: The Wachowskis originally wanted Will Smith for Neo and Val Kilmer (!) for Morpheus.  Will Smith turned down the movie in favor of Wild, Wild West.

Fun Fact 2: That rooftop set in the beginning was constructed for Dark City, which had just finished filming.  Both Dark City and The Matrix came out the same year, and share many themes in common.

Fun Fact 3: The fourth installment in The Matrix franchise will be released at the end of this year.  Keanu Reeves and Carrie-Anne Moss will be the only cast members retained from the first movie.


Tom Sizemore, Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio and Forrest Whitaker star in this movie about a family entering the witness protection program.  It's miles better than Don't Look Behind You (below), and offers a lot of insight into problems encountered by families in that situation.


Some Good Ones


Shades of 9-11.  There's even a part where Erika Eleniak tells Tom Skerritt that "the Twin Towers are still standing."  Not for long though...

It's slow to get going, but as disaster movies go it's much better than the recently seen Volcano and Deep Impact.  Tom Skerritt stars as the obligatory disaster relief guy, with Jennifer Garner and Charles S. Dutton in supporting roles.  A big budget spectacle?  Not exactly, but you don't always need a big budget to make disasters convincing.

Fun Fact 1: This entire movie was filmed in Vancouver, Canada.  All the shots of New York are either stock footage or models.

Fun Fact 2: Speaking of Erika Eleniak, her first movie was 1982's E.T.: the Extra-Terrestrial.


Ron Perlman leads a group of would-be victims around an island infested with killer baboons.  It reminded me of 1996's The Island of Dr. Moreau, though of course it lacks the big ideas present in that earlier movie.  The baboons look fake at times, but given the budget I think those responsible did a good job.


No, not the 70s disaster movie.  This one's about a group of adolescents sneaking into an abandoned amusement park.  It's very angsty, and also very representative of the time period.  Anyone else remember all those introspective, guitar-driven songs of the late 90s?


Some Bad Ones

1. Big Daddy

Brought to you by McDonald's and Hooters!  It's occasionally funny but overall rather mean-spirited.  Adam Sandler stars as a man burdened with an abandoned child.


What, you ask, were Michael Biehn and Roy Scheider doing in 1999?  Ok, maybe you weren't asking, but the answer lies in this kid-friendly movie about a young boy befriending a wolf.  I guess if you were into snow boarding you might like it.


Yasmine Bleeth, remember her?  And... James Earl Jones?  Casey Kasem?  It's a bewildering mix of actors and actresses.

In Undercover Angel an aspiring writer is asked to watch a friend's daughter for several days.  The daughter in question displays the level of precociousness which inspired the creation of Zyklon B.  And why the fuck is that guy using a typewriter?  In 1999 even struggling artists had word processors!

Weird Fact 1: Jim Varney was scheduled to appear in this, but Yasmine Bleeth's agent refused to allow Varney to appear in the same movie as his client.  Why?  I have no idea!

Weird Fact 2: Bleeth was addicted to cocaine during the filming of this movie.


It's impossible to sympathize with this family.  And if I've learned anything from the internet, it's that YOU DON'T FUCK WITH THE CARTEL.  And if you do, you better vanish right quick.  

Yet instead of vanishing right quick, this family spends a lot of time whining about the witness relocation program.  "Oh, why can't I call my boyfriend!  So unfair!"  By the time this move's over you actually feel a bit sorry for the cartel, who at least had their shit together.  

Seeing Patrick Duffy and Pam Dawber subjected to a slow death at the hands of cartel enforcers would have been much better than the way this movie actually ends.


Crewmen in the arctic drill too deep and discover an ancient extraterrestrial threat.  Half of this low budget made-for-TV movie is so dark it's hard to see what's going on, and the other half utilizes some of the worst special effects I've ever seen.  Really, even compared to some of the lower budget 80s movies this one looks bad.  A lot of it reminded me of John Carpenter's The Thing, though of course it's not nearly that good.


I suppose after the success of Anaconda a movie like Komodo was inevitable.  It was either that or Iguana, which for all I know was also a thing.

The only thing I liked about this movie was the ridiculous "happy" ending.  All those deaths?  Not a big deal, now that we've all learned to be more resourceful and the boy has overcome his childhood trauma.  Aren't a few horrific deaths justifiable when a therapist is trying to "reach" a young boy?

I once stayed at a resort in Malaysia which kept an adult Komodo dragon as a pet.  Once you've seen one of those things eat a live chicken you learn to keep your distance.


It's the future - or sometime after 2009 anyway - and the rich are harvesting the organs of the poor.  Has this happened?  Is it happening?  I suppose it depends on who you ask.


Pretty much unwatchable.  The actress playing Cleopatra is beautiful, but she can't act worth a damn.  Even Timothy Dalton, who probably has some background in Shakespeare, is terrible in this one.  Lines which should have force come off sounding like something from a car commercial.

There are a few things that TV movies - at least until the advent of Netflix and other streaming services - did better than movies.  Chief among these things is telling a longer, more complex story with a greater depth of characterization.  Grand, meticulously staged battle scenes?  Leave that to Hollywood.


Like Cleopatra another Hallmark movie.  The acting in Animal Farm is much better, but the animatronic animals look incredibly fake.  Even worse is the cgi applied to actual animals.

Like many others, I was compelled to read Orwell's novel in high school.  As much as I will always love 1984, I found Animal Farm to be both heavy-handed and extremely obvious.  The TV movie adds more human drama to the story (i.e. the humans are better fleshed out and more obviously evil), but the story does not benefit from this addition.

Related Entries:


*Putin has been in and out of office several times.  No, he hasn't been overseeing Russia since 1999.

2021年2月3日 星期三

Some Other Movies From 1998 (2)


For further background on the year in film please refer to the Some Other Movies From 1998 entry.

The following things happened in 1998:
  • Bill Clinton's relationship with Monica Lewinsky was discovered.
  • Titanic won the Oscar for Best Picture.
  • The final episode of Seinfeld aired.
  • India and Pakistan threatened one another with rounds of nuclear testing.
  • Microsoft released Windows 98.
  • Google was founded in California.
  • The Tencent company was founded in China.
  • Akira Kurosawa died.
Linked entries can be viewed in their entirety on YouTube.  Aside from The Patriot, which was direct-to-video, and Fallen, which was released in theaters, all of the YouTube entries below were TV movies.

Underlined entries were viewed on Netflix.


Classic 

1. Armageddon

Lens flare!  Pan 180 degrees!  Zoom out!  Zoom in!  Extreme close-up!  Cut!  Cut!  Cut!

Still my favorite Michael Bay movie.  You can even see the director early on in the film.  It's big, it's loud, it's dumb and it's unapologetically American.  Watch a double feature consisting of this and Independence Day.  You'll be glad you did.

Fun Fact 1: The narrator in the beginning?  Charlton Heston.

Fun Fact 2: Ben Affleck once asked Michael Bay why "training oil drillers to be astronauts was easier than training astronauts to be oil drillers."  He was told "to shut the fuck up."


Some Good Ones

1. A Bug's Life

Disney/Pixar production.  I just bought a 4K TV, and you can really see the improvements in cgi that took place in the late 90s. Not especially memorable in terms of story, but man those graphics just pop out on a newer TV.

2. Deep Impact 

Heavy on the drama, light on both the science and the sense of suspense.  Tea Leoni, Morgan Freeman and Elijah Wood star in this movie about a killer comet, and the results are decidedly mixed. This disaster film really needed more disasters, and less conversations inside closed sets.

Deep Impact is often compared to Armageddon (above), which came out the same year. I like Armageddon much better.  Sure, Armageddon is a bloated movie, soaked in implausibility from beginning to end, but it gets people going, damnit! It reminds you that AMERICA (in the form of Bruce Willis) is what it takes to stop any and all celestial threats!

Fun Fact: Deep Impact started out as a film adaptation of both the 1951 movie When World's Collide and the 1993 Arthur C. Clarke novel Hammer of the Gods.

3. The Truman Show 

Whenever people discuss "Jim Carrey as a serious actor" they pull out Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, but Peter Weir's The Truman Show also fits the bill.  In this movie Jim Carrey slowly discovers that his life is viewed by millions worldwide.  It's a good movie, even if it could have dug deeper into the subject matter.


Kelsey Grammar and Cary Elwes star in this look at the weapons development process inside the Pentagon.  No pyrotechnics in The Pentagon Wars, just a good script performed by good actors.

Fact Check: In reality the Bradley wasn't the disastrous failure this movie makes it out to be, and the argument between the general and his subordinate wasn't so clear cut.  A modified version of the Bradly is still in use today.

5. Fallen

Denzel Washington stars as a detective facing a supernatural adversary.  It'll remind you a lot of the far superior Seven, and the bad guy falls into a certain trap rather easily, but it's still an entertaining movie.


Robert "Airplane!" Hays stars as a man wrongly "geriatrified" (aged 30 years) after his stepfather is murdered.  It's far from awesome, but very watchable.  Remember when "VR" was the newest, coolest thing?

Fun Fact: This movie was filmed in Luxembourg.


Ehhhh.....

1. Godzilla 

Roland Emmerich's take on Japan's most famous export.  He did this after Independence Day and before The Patriot.  As popcorn movies go it's certainly loud enough, and packed with the kind of destruction you'd expect, but none of the characters are especially likable and the movie (not unlike The Siege below) grows increasingly silly toward the end.

And what's up with the rain in this movie? Why is it almost always raining, and why do so few characters dress for the weather?  I guess the director felt that conversations in the rain were more dramatic, but after a while you begin to wonder at the apparent raincoat /  umbrella shortage in New York.

Is this movie as good as the more recent interpretation of Godzilla? In my opinion not even close.  If you're bored and want to see monsters stomp around it's ok, but there was a lot of room for improvement left in this movie.

Fun Fact 1: The news anchor in the beginning is played by Harry Shearer, the bass player from Spinal Tap AND the voice of several characters in The Simpsons.  His character's secretary is played by Nancy Cartwright, the voice of Bart Simpson.  Hank Azaria, who plays the cameraman, also voiced several characters on The Simpsons.

Fun Fact 2: On the way to becoming a reality this movie went through many iterations. Jan de Bont, the first director attached, would have given us a Godzilla created by Atlanteans, fighting an extraterrestrial threat named The Gryphon.


Some Bad Ones

1. Meet Joe Black

Anthony Hopkins plays a wealthy communications magnate who has a brush with death. And then... who cares?  The characters in this movie have the most ridiculous conversations, and it's impossible to care about any of them.

2. Small Soldiers

Director Joe Dante attempts to fuse Gremlins and Toy Story.  The results are predictably bad.

Fun Fact 1: The voice cast includes almost all the actors from the 1967 film The Dirty Dozen AND all three members of Spinal Tap.

Fun Fact 2: Stan Winston designed several puppets for this film.  They were later discarded for cgi.

UNfun Fact: This was Phil Hartman's last movie.

3. The Siege

Denzel Washington, Tony Shalhoub, Annette Bening and Bruce Willis star in this thriller about Muslim terrorist cells in New York.  It starts out GREAT, but Bening's and Willis's characters are never developed. The ending also goes from inexplicable to infuriating very quickly.


The parents in this movie are weird.  They KNOW the house is haunted, but for whatever reason they think the ghosts will cure their daughter's autism.  After that point I fell asleep.  What I saw when I woke up was not encouraging.

Fun Fact: You might remember star John Savage from The Deer Hunter.  He played "Steven" in that movie.


No, not that Patriot!  The other one!  The Steven Seagal movie!  In The Patriot he plays (or attempts to play) an immunologist battling a virus in rural Montana.  Sounds like a setup for "So Bad It's Good" status, right?  Sadly most of this movie is just boring.  Sure, there are some unintentionally amusing bits, but for the most part it's a chore.


Like The Patriot above, casting Dean Cain and Wesley Snipes in this low(er) budget Rollerball knockoff sounds like the recipe for some glorious badness.  Unfortunately it's also talky and boring.


So Bad It's Good

1. Legion

"I fear that we are all pawns in a diabolical game of death!"

Corey Feldman and Rick Springfield. You know what time it is.  Act, you fuckers, ACT!!  And can we talk about the budget for this movie?  Or the lack thereof?  I think they filmed it in an old hospital, with a script copied from Aliens... except they forgot the aliens. Or they didn't have enough money for those.  Whatever.

Related Entries: