Ray Ivey’s 2002 Movie Awards – Welcome to Just Adventure + – Articles

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Ray
Ivey’s
2002 Movie Awards!

2002 will certainly not
go down in my diary as a banner movie year. There were a few
bright spots, but very little to get really passionate
about. Except for the remake of Swept Away, and “burning hatred” and “outraged
bafflement” aren’t the kind of passions I’m talking about.

I hate having to explain this, but YEAH, an asterisk denotes the
winner in a category.

THE BEST FILMS OF 2002

1. Spirited Away. This spectacular film from Japanese anime genius
Hayao Miyazaki was the most transporting, transcendental moviegoing
experience of 2002. It tells the story of a little girl whose family
stumbles into what appears to be abandoned amusement park, but which
is actually a gateway into a fantastic world populated by spirits.
The movie is gorgeous, thrilling, moving, scary, and funny.

2. Chicago. I would have never believed that a movie this good would
have ever been made of the much-beloved 1975 Kander and Ebb / Bob
Fosse musical. The real stars of the movie are Rob Marshall, the
director, and Bill Condon, who wrote the adaptation (without the
aid of a phantom twin brother, even!).

3. The Pianist. I’m not sure quite how he did it, but Roman Polanski
made a movie about the Holocaust in Poland that stands on its own
despite the towering shadow of Schindler’s List. Adrien Brody is
spectacular as a young musician whose family is torn apart after
the establishment of the Warsaw ghetto. His true story of is remarkable
not for its depiction of heroism, but of the almost surreal accident
that survival can be.

4. The Quiet American. This beautiful movie practically makes you
smell Saigon. Michael Caine is stunning as a world-weary reporter
trying to make sense of the new American presence in Indochina.

5. The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers. The magnificent trilogy
continues.

6. About Schmidt. What a revelation: A major star (not an over-the-hill
star) doing a film that’s actually about aging. Nicholson is simply
magnificent in this wry, spare, and moving journey of a retired insurance
man’s first steps into old age.

7. Secretary. You’ve got to love a peppy, heart-warming movie about
sexual liberation and sado-masochism. James Spader and Maggie Gyllenhaal
are brilliant as an employer and employee who learn to work through
their personal baggage with a walk on the wild side. Fun for the
whole family!

8. Signs. I consistently admire M. Night Shymalan’s films for their
clarity of purpose. Though the previews prompted many moviegoers
to expect an alien-invasion blockbuster, Signs was anything but that.
Instead, it was a quiet, intense, narrowly-focused drama with the
terrifying premise: What would you do if it looked like the aliens
were invading your family’s farm, TONIGHT? Even though I don’t like
Mel Gibson, he and the rest of the cast are quite effective in creating
hair-raising tension.

9. Confessions of a Dangerous Mind. A surprisingly funny, smart,
entertaining and even moving picture about Chuck Barris and his double
life. Who cares if it’s true or not?

10. Rabbit-Proof Fence. This stunning movie tells the disturbing
story of Australia’s policy of kidnapping half-breed children in
the outback. A simple story of great emotional power.

Honorable Mention: The Hours, Minority Report, Moonlight Mile, Roger
Dodger, Tully, Monsoon Wedding, Frida, Kissing Jessica Stein, One
Hour Photo, Barbership, , Drumline, Antwone Fisher, Possession, Igby
Goes Down, The Ring, The Man From Elysian Fields, Catch Me If You
Can, Autofocus

BEST MOVIE NOT IN THE CORRECT MOVIE LANGUAGE

Y Tu Mama Tambien

*Talk to Her

The Crime of Father Amaro

DOCUMENTARY

The Kid Stays in the Picture

*Bowling for Columbine

Standing In the Shadows of Motown

ACTOR

*Adrien Brody, The Pianist

Sam Rockwell, Confessions of a Dangerous Mind

Greg Kinnear, Autofocus

Michael Caine, The Quiet American

Daniel Day-Lewis in Gangs of New York

Honorable Mention: James Spaker in Secretary, Kieran Culkin in Igby
Goes Down, Jake Gyllenhaal in Moonlight Mile, Robin Williams in One
Hour Photo, Andy Garcia in The Man From Elysian Fields, Campbell
Scott in Roger Dodger, Derek Luke in Antwone Fisher

ACTRESS

*Julianne Moore, Far From Heaven

Jennifer Aniston, The Good Girl

Maggie Gyllenhaal, Secretary

Salma Hayek, Frida

Nicole Kidman, The Hours

Honorable Mention: Michelle Pfeiffer in White Oleander

SUPPORTING ACTRESS

*Robin Wright Penn, White Oleander

Toni Colette, The Hours

Susan Sarandon, Moonlight Mile

Kathy Bates, About Schmidt

Meryl Streep, The Hours

Honorable Mention: Samantha Morton in Minority Report, Amanda Peet
in Igby Goes Down, Novella Nelson in Antwone Fisher, Christina Applegate
in The Sweetest Thing.

MOST OVERRATED SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Queen Latifah who was perfectly
good, but certainly not great, in Chicago.

SUPPORTING ACTOR

Eddie Izzard, The Cat’s Meow

Dustin Hoffman, Moonlight Mile

Willem Dafoe, Autofocus

*Chris Cooper, Adaptation

Mick Jagger, The Man From Elysian Fields

Honorable Mention: Bob Burrus in Tully, Naseeruddin Shah in Monsoon
Wedding, Cedric the Entertainer in Barbershop

DIRECTOR

Peter Jackson, The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers

*Rob Marshall, Chicago

Pedro Almodovar, Talk to Her

Hayao Miyazaki, Spirited Away

Roman Polanski, The Pianist

ART DIRECTION/PRODUCTION DESIGN

The Pianist

*Far From Heaven

The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers

Catch Me If You Can

Frida

CINEMATOGRAPHY

*Chicago

The Pianist

Frida

The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers

Catch Me If You Can

SCORE

*John Williams, Catch Me If You Can (Who knew this Important Movie
Composer still had surprises up his sleeve? His jazzy Mancini-esque
riffs really helped the movie.

Cliff Martinez, Solaris

Howard Shore, The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers

Jeff Dana, The Kid Stays in the Picture

OKAY, IT WAS CLEVER, BUT IT WAS SO DAMN SMUG IT JUST PISSED ME OFF

Adaptation

MOST DISAPPOINTING MOVIES OF 2002

Blood Work. Why would Clint Eastwood want to make a two-hour episode
of Mannix?

Naqoyqatsi. Koyaanisqatsi was fantastic, its sequel Powaqqatsi had
an incredible Philip Glass score, but the third installment in Godfrey
Reggio’s visually existentialist trilogy is just a big fat bore.

MOST OVERRATED MOVIE OF 2002

The deadly Gangs of New York. Now that Martin Scorcese’s got it
out of his system, I hope he next decides to make a a movie that’s
actually entertaining.

SMART CAREER MOVES

Amanda Peet, doing interesting work in small roles, like Igby Goes
Down.

Adam Sandler, for making a non-Adam Sandler movie (Punch-Drunk Love).
Sure, the movie was all but unwatchable, but he was good in it, and
it’s going to help him reposition himself in Hollywood. Thank God,
because if you’re like me, you’re tired of worried about Adam Sandler’s
well-being.

OKAY, TIME TO TAKE A LITTLE VACATION

John C. Reilly and Philip Seymour Hoffman. I don’t care how good
both of you are, let’s give someone else a turn for god’s sake.

IS IT TOO EARLY TO GIVE HER A LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD?

The divine, indispensible, ultra-fabulous Reese Witherspoon.

TIME TO TAKE OFF THE SHIRT, KILLER. KEEPING IT ON IS NEVER GOING
TO MAKE YOU CARY GRANT

Mark Wahlberg

SCARIEST MOVIE IN A LONG TIME

The Ring

COOLEST MASS DEATH SCENE

Ghost Ship

SMARTEST DIALOG

Moonlight Mile

Roger Dodger

GOODBYE, MR. HOLLAND’S DEAD POET’S SOCIETY OPUS AWARD

The Emperor’s Club. How many times are they going to make this movie?

WAS HOPING IT WOULD BE AS GOOD AS FIRST CONTACT, BUT IT WAS ONLY
AS GOOD AS INSURRECTION:

Star Trek: Nemesis

OH, WAS THAT RELEASED THIS YEAR? YAWN.

Star Wars Episode 2: The Clone Wars

MOST MISUNDERSTOOD AND UNDERAPPRECIATED

Death to Smoochy. Okay, maybe it wasn’t a home run. But it was dark
and funny and nothing LIKE the disaster everyone declared it to be.

Possession. I was sorry
and surprised that everyone ignored Neil LaBute’s lovely version
of A.S. Byatt’s hugely successful novel about
parallel love stories set in the English literary world. Sure, most
antiquarian scholars don’t look like Gwynneth Paltrow and Aaron Eckhart,
but hey, it’s the movies. The movie was sort of “The French
Lieutenant’s Woman Lite,” and what’s wrong with that?

Who is Cletis Tout? A fun little trifle starring Christian Slater.

25th Hour. Poor Spike Lee can’t get any respect. This was a terrific,
heartfelt, beautifully acted movie.

The Cat’s Meow. Why didn’t people enjoy this charming, speculative
trifle about one of Hollywood’s most notorious scandals as much as
I did?

BRAVO TO NEIL LABUTE FOR FINALLY ALLOWING HIS PERRENIAL STAR AARON
ECKHART TO LOOK HIS RIDICULOUSLY ATTRACTIVE BEST

Possession

BEST CREDITS SEQUENCES

The retro graphics of Autofocus were terrific.

The shadow-box effect of the Nicholas Nickelby opening were sweet.

*But the combination of the zippy retro animations and John Williams’
Mancini-esque, playful jazzy score at the beginning of Catch Me If
You Can reminded us of how fun credits could actually be.

This actually provides a nice seque into:

MOST PRETENTIOUS NEW MOVIE TREND

I can live with the “Title only, all other credits at the end” thing.
But several movies this year took this idea one pretentious step
too far: They eliminated even mentioning the TITLE of the film until
the end! This is just precious and stupid behavior, folks, and the
producers of Punch-Drunk Love, The Man From Elysian Fields, Solaris,
Gangs of New York, and several other films, need to get over themselves
in a hurry.

VERY FUNNY MOMENTS

All the women in the ladies room grope Christina Applegate’s fake
boobs in The Sweetest Thing

Margaret Cho’s opening joke in Notorious C.H.O. (cannot be repeated
here!!).

Cedric the Entertainer’s now notorious rant about African American
sacred cows in Barbershop

GREAT LINES

“I’m just taking a wild guess that the phrase that’s going
through your head right now is ‘Community Property.'” Reese
Witherspoon gets her estranged husband’s attention by selling all
of his belongings in Sweet Home Alabama

“Is this now?” Pre-cog
Samantha Morton wrestles with the idea of real time in Minority
Report.

“My mother was the most beautiful woman I’d ever seen. I know
everyone says that about their mothers, but in my case it was true.” Alison
Lohman describes her mother, played by Michelle Pfeiffer, in White
Oleander.

BEST RAIN

Road to Perdition

MOST ADMIRABLE STUDIO ACTIONS

The suits at Miramax for actually hiring the right guy to make Chicago:
an actual Broadway musical choreographer/director. Imagine!

The suits at MGM for standing firm behind Barbarshop despite the
RIDICULOUS attacks it received by Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton.

BOY WAS THIS YEAR SHORT ON LAUGHS

BEST COMA RAPE MOVIE IN A REALLY LONG TIME

Talk to Her

BEST HEARTWARMING S&M
COMEDY EVER

Secretary

MOST AMAZING MOMENT IN A MOVIE IN 2002

Michael Moore actually shames K-Mart into removing ammunitions from
their store shelves.

CAN WE PLEASE SEE SOME MORE OF

Thandie Newton, James Spader, Jeff Goldblum, Diane Keaton, Ethan
Embry, Sam Rockwell, Jennifer Coolidge, Franka Potente, Jesse Bradford,
Gabriel Union, Derek Luke, Nick Chinlund.

WHAT THE HELL WAS WITH THAT?

What the hell was that cave in Gangs of New York?

MOST UNNECCESSARY REMAKE

Red Dragon

BEST TRADITIONAL DISNEY ANIMATED MOVIE IN A LONG TIME

Lilo and Stitch

STUPID, PREDICTABLE, I LOVED EVERY MINUTE OF IT

Panic Room

SMARTEST “GAY” MOVIE
IN A VERY LONG TIME

Kissing Jessica Stein

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