2016 is already slipping through our fingers quickly. This weekend marks the Academy Award Ceremony, as well as the end of leap year February. I just barely got through screening the Big Five categories (Best Picture, Director, Actor, Actress, and Screenplay), finishing last night with The Danish GirlWhew, I think this might be the first year that I have actually pulled it off–all 17 different films if I counted right. 

Image courtesy of ABC and CC 2.0 license.
Image courtesy of ABC and CC 2.0 license.

A few people have asked me why I dedicate so much time each year trying to watch as many films from the Big Five ballot as possible. I started this practice back in my junior year of undergraduate, inspired by my friend Aaron Smith (@OGNetflix), who took this season as an opportunity to bond with friends and family. He’d screen each nominated film with a different group or individual, using the time to have thoughtful conversations about cinema, while simultaneously catching up on his friends’ lives. Since I started copying Aaron, I now can’t wait for the months of December-February because of how many great memories I have made with people while going to see films. Last year, I remember seeing Birdman on a double date; I came out being the only person underwhelmed by the film but it made for a feisty and memorable conversation afterwards in Starbucks. This year, I got to see Brooklyn at a LACMA & Film Independent advance screening with a dear friend. We both laughed and cried a lot through the film, and now the film is attached indelibly in my mind with our friendship, that evening, and the many subsequent conversations we’ve had about how we were touched by that story.

But there is another reason why I painstakingly try to check each film off my list: it’s a matter of discipline in my content consumption. With today’s algorithms on sites like Facebook, Twitter and Netflix, we have become increasingly more accustomed to only seeing the content that we want to see and the content that aligns with our personal interests and ideologies. We actually have to go out-of-the-way to engage with material that challenges us or makes us feel uncomfortable. However, if you commit to follow a list generated by a third-party organization like the Academy Awards, you are more likely to encounter content that falls outside of your normal preferences–content that you may find you actually really enjoy or appreciate. That’s how, a couple of years ago, my husband and I ended up bawling our eyes out in the car after seeing the utterly incredible French film Amour (which, by the way, should have received much greater recognition).

I use this same practice with a variety of content, but with books in particular. I have belonged to several book clubs over the years, both with local friends and on Goodreads, and I’ve been steadily working through the Pulitzer, Nebula, and Hugo Award winners when I can. Both those lists and those communities have introduced me to some of my favorite authors and pieces of literature, such as American Gods by Neil Gaiman and Americanah by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. Plus it takes some of the mental effort out of having to choose your next film or book! Just go with whatever’s next on the list.

So next year, give it a try with the Oscars and tell me what the experience is like for you. Or if you are more into reading, you can check out this year’s Nebula nominees that were announced six days ago. I haven’t read any of them, so I’d love to hear your thoughts on the choices.

Happy listing!

Featured image courtesy of LincolnBluesdistributed by permission of CC 2.0 license.

So, the Oscar nominees came out yesterday morning. It was a pretty underwhelming year and there were quite a few significant snubs. (Check Twitter for #OscarsSoWhite if you haven’t seen any of the relevant tweets yet.) But none of this was really any surprise; it was another classic Academy year.

Nevertheless, there is something strangely compelling about lists, especially for somebody like myself who survives by compiling numerous collections of to-dos, to-watch’s, to-reads, and then complimentary lists of the things I’ve managed to complete. There is nothing like the thrill of checking something off a list. 

According to friends, I also apparently have the tendency of assigning my favorite films/TV shows/books etc. to arbitrary and grandiose list designations such as “my top 50” or “top 125” in conversation. So for a compromise and in reflection on 2015, I’m going to try be a little more intentional and spend the next few days presenting my actual Top Five favorite media selections from the past year. I’m going to do a different media category every few days, starting today with television. 

So without further ado, here’s Judging 2015: The Lists, Vol. 1, “The TV Edition”

  1. Mad Men, Season 7, Part 2
    Mad Men is already my favorite TV drama, and Season 7’s finale proved a fitting and memorable end to the show, placing this solidly at the top of my list. I will miss Don Draper a little, but mostly, I was sad to say goodbye to Joan and Peggy, two of the most fascinating female characters on tv.
    Screenshot from the finale.
    Screenshot featuring Peggy Olson (Elisabeth Moss) from the finale.
  2. Mr Robot, Season 1
    I hate to participate in all the hype, but Mr. Robot legitimately was a great show. I was a bit unsure at first, but once the show got into the swing of things it developed into such a unique story about a troubled hacker, told in an exquisite fashion. Once I have more time on my hands, I plan to go back and unpack some of the layers woven into this show–such as its regular nods to Kubrick. Unlike Mad Men, however, I felt like the female characters were quite lacking. Let’s hope that season 2 makes up for that.
    mr robot
    Screenshot featuring Elliot Alderson (Rami Malek) and Mr. Robot (Christian Slater).
  3. Jessica Jones, Season 1
    This was another hyped show that I reluctantly started watching after I turned in my last paper this fall. I am not a big Marvel fan, so I wasn’t expecting much. But Jessica Jones is not your typical superhero; in fact, she actually abandoned a failed superhero career to instead pursue life as a private eye. This is film noir meets the digital age with a liberal splash of David Tennant at his finest. By the time you cross the halfway mark, you will find yourself hard pressed to pull away.
    Screenshot
    Screenshot featuring Jessica Jones (Krysten Ritter) and Trish Walker (Rachael Taylor).
  4. Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, Season 1
    Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt is the third show on my list to surprise me. I started watching this Netflix Original after overhearing segments while my husband watched the show. Kimmy Schmidt has lived captive underground for the last decade; after she is rescued, she decides to start her new life as an independent adult in New York City. Of course much has changed while she was underground, so Kimmy experiences everything with the naïveté and innocence of a child. The result is a refreshingly frank yet hilarious and delightful perspective on the state of the world today.
    Screenshot
    Screenshot featuring Kimmy Schmidt (Ellie Kemper).
  5. Black-ish, Season 2
    My last pick is also a comedy that is both frank and hilarious. Black-ish follows the ABC Modern Family sitcom model with a twist. It’s a story about an African-American family living in a wealthy, white neighborhood, while trying to navigate what it means to be black within this new context. It can be cute and funny but more often than not, Black-ish tackles complicated and sensitive topics with comfortable ease. For instance, the first episode of the second season centered on an insightful discussion of the historic and contemporary usage of the n***** word. 
    Screenshot
    Screenshot featuring the Johnson Family (L-R: Marsai Martin, Tracee Ellis Ross, Anthony Anderson, Yara Shahidi, Marcus Scribner, and Miles Brown)

Special Mention: Blindspot, Season 1
While I don’t think Blindspot operates on the same level of brilliance as my top five picks, this show is still an incredibly fun and compelling ride. A woman is discovered by the FBI in Times Square–unconscious, naked, and zipped up in a bag. In addition, they quickly learn that not only does she remember nothing, but she has also been recently inked with hundreds of complex tattoos that cover her entire body. How did she end up there? Well that’s the underlying question of the show, and each tattoo holds a separate mystery that brings the FBI closer to solving her identity and her origin. Blindspot is an intricate blend of mimicry–you’ll find elements of True Detective, Memento, and CSI throughout the show–but in this case, the mimicry actually works. I think the reason is because the characters and the performances are so believable. There are also a number of fantastic female characters written into this show, which I am always a sucker for.

Screenshot
Screenshot featuring Jane Doe (Jaimie Alexander) and Patterson (Ashley Johnson)

Next Up: “The Book Edition”

In 2001, Spotlight, the small investigative branch of the Boston Globe took on a new case exploring several incidents of reported child molestations by Catholic priests in the Boston area. The Globe had already reported on these types of stories for decades, but they’d never amounted to much more than scattered incidents–until the four reporters of Spotlight discover that the story is a whole lot bigger than anybody realized. And it was right under their noses all this time. 

The film, however, isn’t really about their discoveries, and that is what separates Spotlight from other “mystery” or “scandal uncovering” dramas. This is a film about the Spotlight team and its significance to the larger journalistic/media community and indirectly us–the audience.

Without giving too much away, there is a pivotal moment during the film when the 9/11 terrorist attacks occur. By this point, the team is halfway through their investigation and in full momentum, but 9/11 grinds the entire operation (indeed, the entire U.S.) to a halt. The world came to a watershed moment that day and, afterwards, time would find itself marked either pre-9/11 or post-9/11. The post-9/11 world consists of many things, and one of those things is the existential crisis that journalism faced. This crisis was already emerging before the attacks occurred, brought on by the advent of the digital and influenced by the new easily distracted MTV generation. Glimpses of the shift in journalism can be seen in the film through the Globe’s new editor-in-chief Marty Baron, who recognizes that he needs to make some serious changes to the newspaper, changes which include staff cuts. Spotlight, with its slow meticulous methods, is one of the first departments to fall under his critical gaze. His response, however, is to give them an assignment–the Catholic priest scandal–to see what they might accomplish with it.

This brings us back to 9/11, during which every reporter had dropped what they were doing to focus on the tragedy gripping the nation. The media coverage during 9/11 arguably kicked off the “breaking news” era in journalism. Since then, we repeatedly see news organizations position their reporting as a string of dramatic breaking news events, driven by a momentum for better metrics. But for Spotlight, they had an uncomfortable story that could alienate and upset their largely Catholic readership. Theirs was news that shocks, but not necessarily news that sells. Throughout the film, however, each member of Spotlight at some point reiterates that their goal and motivation for what they do is to serve the public, no matter the cost. Their work stands in direct contrast to the changing climate of journalism, highlighting several aspects of journalism that can be hard to find today:

  • Good local reporting that supports a particular community, and reporters who, while pursuing objectivity, see themselves as part of that community and integral to its well-being.
  • Journalism that seeks to preserve and uphold human rights and the safety of communities, especially in the areas in which law enforcement, legal firms, and church leadership cannot or will not fulfill their own similar responsibilities to the community.
  • Long-form journalism, in which reporters take their time in gathering and telling a full story, in context, and not just one part of that story in order to meet a deadline.
  • Journalism that seeks to tell people’s stories respectfully, providing a place for those who need a voice to be heard but not exploited.

One of the things that I really appreciated about this film was director Tom McCarthy’s depictions of the team that accomplished this incredible journalistic work. While we don’t learn much about their personal lives–this story isn’t about them as individuals–we do see snatches of each individual’s private life, enough to learn that these are four, very unassuming individuals from regular walks-of-life, but with the incredible ability to develop rapport and trust with their sources. We see this same rapport as they interact with their families. For instance Matt Carroll (Brian d’Arcy James) worries about his kids’ safety, fretting about a neighborhood potential danger, while Sacha Pfeiffer (Rachel McAdams) drinks tea and attends mass with her grandmother, a woman committed to the Catholic church that Sacha is investigating. Though they all work late hours that sometimes extend into the weekends, these are also individuals who understand that their responsibility to the community begins at home with their families.

Promotional Image for the Spotlight Film. KERRY HAYES / DISTRIBUTOR: OPEN ROAD FILMS

In terms of a critique, perhaps the film could have been a bit shorter, but I am not sure what I would have cut out, and indeed, shortening it undermines the argument for long-form storytelling. I would also liked to have seen a bit more from Liev Schriber’s character, Marty Baron. It was delightful to see him in a less action-driven role like this, but the way his role is positioned leaves one expecting some great reveal regarding Marty Baron–or at least greater insight into Baron’s interest in this particular story. Instead Baron remains an elusive figure in the shadows. There are no complaints about any of the performances, however. I am usually indifferent to Rachel McAdams, but she was incredible as Sacha Pfeiffer. Michael Keaton, while no Birdman this time around, gave a strong performance, and Mark Ruffalo just keeps out doing himself every year. HIs performance was perhaps my favorite of them all.

So far this year has been largely unexceptional in regards to movie releases, but Oscar season is now upon us, and Spotlight is a clear indication of this. It is my favorite film of the year, thus far, but I am excited to see what else is in store. Star Wars, of course, I will be seeing tonight, and thankfully has had rave reviews so far. Then Monday, I’ll be seeing Paolo Sorrentino’s new film Youth, starring Michael Caine and Rachel Weisz. So for the next few weeks, expect to see a solid string of film reviews. I’ll try to keep churning them out as I see more Oscar contenders. Please let me know if there’s a particular film you want me to see and review.

This week’s featured image is courtesy of Thomas Hawk with permission from the CC 2.0 license.

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