2010 Calvin Awards: Best Picture

February 12, 2010

It's all fun and games until the house lands on the dog, the boy and the old man.

A distant second place in this year's race for Best Picture is our selection for Best Overlooked Film of the year, The Hurt Locker. The Kathryn Bigelow exploration of the lives of unwanted American soldiers in the Middle East is spectacular. Its evaluation of how specialists uncover and neutralize explosives creates a singularly unique viewer experience. We are forced to watch as the men are treated as unwelcome aggressors as they try to protect the locals from disaster all the while. The half a dozen or so instances when the soldiers flip from combat readiness to in-assignment discipline (or lack thereof) are searing in tone. One moment, these are soldiers at their barracks trying to buy a pirated DVD and the next minute they are manning an unsecured position, attempting to ascertain whether the onlookers are rubbernecking or attempting to spill American blood. This film is an exploration of soldiers' addiction to adrenaline while simultaneously providing a similar rush to the audience.

The rest of our top five this year is comprised of Inglourious Basterds, District 9 and Up in the Air. Quentin Tarantino's film has acquitted itself quite well at The Calvins this year and the reason for that is simple. He chose the perfect broad target in order to counterbalance his ordinarily over-the-top style of cinema to make it more palatable. District 9 is Neill Blomkamp's way of telling all the financiers who dropped out of Halo that they made a huge mistake. His film premise is to take a Borat-ish character and subject him to horrors straight out of A Clockwork Orange. The end result is a hallmark cinematic achievement for anyone but it is all the more noteworthy for a first time director. Up in the Air is Jason Reitman's latest triumph, something of an emotional successor to In Good Company but a better and timelier exploration of similar themes.

The 800-pound box office gorilla of the year, Avatar, is our sixth place selection. Our staff was tormented over what to do with this, the shiniest movie ever made. The problem we faced is that many of us have argued that once you take away the special effects from films like Star Wars and Jurassic Park, there isn't much left in terms of story. While Avatar's special effects are truly special, and historically so, that same argument applies here. We love the sizzle but we note the ordinary nature of the steak itself. If Avatar proves to be equally as absorbing on our home theaters, we'll regret this choice but we are expecting this to be a title that plays much better in theaters than it does long term in our homes. Meanwhile, the opposite is true of Star Trek, the third science fiction film in our top ten (you fell one short, Academy Awards voters!). It doesn't hide behind spectacular visuals but instead places the focus squarely upon the characters, particularly the ones who drove the success of the franchise in the first place, Kirk and Spock. The end result is exactly the sort of tight action piece J.J. Abrams previously demonstrated he could produce in Mission: Impossible III.




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State of Play, Fantastic Mr. Fox, and The Hangover are our final three selections for the year. State of Play, based on the BBC mini-series, offers Russell Crowe's best performance in many years as he finally decides not to sleepwalk through a role. Fantastic Mr. Fox shows that Wes Anderson may be better equipped for the meticulously detailed world of animation than he is for regular features. And The Hangover has Mike Tyson playing air drums before punching out that annoying guy from The Office. What more could we ask from it?

Coraline, Watchmen and Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince were the films that were just a few votes short of nomination. As we have done the past couple of years, rather than list just those few notable titles that missed the cut, we will instead list the top 25 films to receive Best Picture votes in the 2010 Calvins. (David Mumpower/BOP)

Best Actor
Best Actress
Best Album
Best Breakthrough Performance
Best Cast
Best Director
Best DVD
Best Overlooked Film
Best Picture
Best Scene
Best Screenplay
Best Supporting Actor
Best Supporting Actress
Best TV Show
Best Use of Music
Best Videogame
Worst Performance
Worst Picture

Top 25
Position Film Total Points
1 Up 140
2 The Hurt Locker 100
3 Inglourious Basterds 95
4 District 9 86
5 Up in the Air 78
6 Avatar 71
7 Star Trek 61
8 State of Play 39
9 Fantastic Mr. Fox 38
10 The Hangover 37
11 Coraline 35
12 Watchmen 30
13 Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince 26
14 Julie & Julia 24
15 Away We Go 23
16 An Education 22
17 Zombieland 21
18 (500) Days of Summer 19
19 Sherlock Holmes 18
20 In The Loop 17
21 Precious 16
22 I Love You, Man 15
23 Adventureland 14
24 A Serious Man 13
25 Ponyo 12




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