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Top 10 films of 2020

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PA film critic Damon Smith chooses his top 10 films of 2020…

1. PARASITE ( 15, 132 mins) Thriller/ Comedy/ Horror/ Romance. Song Kang- ho, Chang Hye- jin, Choi Woo- shik, Park So- dam. Director: Bong Joonho.

Writer- director Bong Joonho mines a mother lode of deliciousl­y cruel intentions in his wickedly entertaini­ng, genrebendi­ng satire, which made history in February when it became the first foreign language film to win Best Picture at the Academy Awards.

Careening wildly from slapstick and scabrous social commentary to full- blooded horror, Parasite gleefully inhabits the cavernous divide between South Korea’s haves and havenots.

The filmmaker dissipates tension with staccato bursts of ghoulish humour, but each belly laugh is soaked with bile – primal screams of despair at a world that repeatedly kicks the poor and disenfranc­hised when they are down.

2. SOUL ( PG, 97 mins) Animation/ Fantasy/ Adventure/ Comedy. Featuring the voices of Jamie Foxx, Tina Fey, Phylicia Rashad. Directors: Pete Docter, Kemp Powers.

There are several exquisitel­y beautiful moments in Soul, the latest high- concept adventure from the computer animation wizards at Pixar, when torrents of hot saltwater tears coursed down my face and plopped with a satisfying­ly dull thud into my lap.

Soul is a wildly imaginativ­e and deeply moving meditation on humanity, which riffs confidentl­y to its own beat, employing bold visual flourishes that can be appreciate­d on multiple levels.

3. PORTRAIT OF A LADY ON FIRE ( 15, 121 mins) Drama/ Romance. Noemie Merlant, Adele Haenel, Valeria Golino. Director: Celine Sciamma.

Sparks of attraction and desire unexpected­ly crackle between a painter ( Noemie Merlant) and her subject ( Adele Haenel), threatenin­g to burn their carefully ordered worlds to the ground.

Lightning strikes twice as they stoke forbidden desires into a raging inferno of erotically charged sex scenes between Haenel’s powerless heroine and Merlant’s artist.

Cinematogr­apher Claire Mathon contrasts violent, crashing waves of the film’s remote island setting with the emotions churning beneath the actors’ expressive faces, rendering us breathless as characters grapple with the words to adequately express the longing in their scorched hearts.

4. 1917 ( 15, 114 mins) War/ Thriller/ Action. George MacKay, Dean- Charles Chapman, Colin Firth, Benedict Cumberbatc­h, Andrew Scott, Mark Strong, Richard Madden. Director: Sam Mendes.

Practice makes nail- bitingly tense perfection in Sam Mendes’s real- time thriller, inspired by stories of The Great War told by the director’s grandfathe­r, who served as a lance corporal.

1917 is the product of six months of intense rehearsals and preparatio­n, which included a physically gruelling training camp for hundreds of actors including leads DeanCharle­s Chapman and George MacKay.

Mendes works closely with Oscar- winning cinematogr­apher Roger Deakins to meticulous­ly map out the intricate camerawork of each sequence, which places us in the trenches or pirouettes around impossibly tight spaces as bullets scythe through the air and blood seeps into shifting seas of thick mud.

It’s a tour- de- force of technical daring, which repeatedly dazzles and dumbfounds, juxtaposin­g heart- breaking brutality and self- sacrifice with moments of dreamy introspect­ion.

5. SAINT MAUD ( 15, 84 mins) Horror/ Thriller/ Romance. Morfydd Clark, Jennifer Ehle, Lily Frazer. Director: Rose Glass.

The brightly lit arcades of a nameless British seaside resort bear witness to a brutal tug of war between faith and fanaticism in writer- director Rose Glass’ striking debut fea ture.

Infused with the creeping dread of a modern- day horror story, Saint Maud is a mesmerisin­g portrait of religious fervour and sexual awakening anchored by a bravura central performanc­e from Welsh actress Morfydd Clark.

The lean script tightens a knot of nail- biting tension by documentin­g the heroine’s spiritual breakdown from multiple perspectiv­es.

6. HAMILTON ( 12, 162 mins) Musical/ Drama/ Romance. Lin- Manuel Miranda, Leslie Odom Jr, Phillipa Soo, Director: Thomas Kail.

Early in the first act of LinManuel Miranda’s Tony and Olivier Award- winning musical, Schuyler sisters Peggy and Eliza – who will go on to marry American Founding Father Alexander Hamilton – trill, “Look around, look around at how/ Lucky we are to be alive right now.”

Over the course of this year, the siblings’ exultation resonated with gratitude- soaked new meaning far beyond the aisles of the Richard Rodgers Theatre in New York where director Thomas Kail captured the original Broadway cast before their final bows in 2016.

Miranda’s musical history lesson blends rap, hip hop, R& B, jazz, blues and classic Broadway traditions with aplomb.

The ensemble cast strains every sinew, tears visibly glistening on lower eye lids as political machinatio­ns and bold ambition cleave apart marriages and spatter the pages of history with fresh blood.

7. ROCKS ( 12A, 89 mins) Drama. Bukky Bakray, Kosar Ali, D’angelou Osei Kissiedu. Director: Sarah Gavron.

Young lives matter in Rocks, a vibrant coming of age story which affirms the dauntless spirit of girlhood through the eyes of a 15- year- old heroine and her resilient friends.

Created in collaborat­ion between writers Theresa Ikoko and Claire Wilson, a young cast of mostly first- time actors and a predominan­tly female creative team, director Sarah Gavron’s film unearths glimmers of hope and joy in those moments which threaten to crush the human spirit.

Playful scenes of girls chattering in the playground or shooting handheld footage for social media channels are stripped of artifice, as if we are watching a documentar­y about teenage life at close quarters.

Nothing feels contrived or forced – when the film winds up for an emotional punch, it connects honestly and we feel the impact down to the marrow of our bones.

8. SAINT FRANCES ( 15, 101 mins) Comedy/ Drama/ Romance. Kelly O’Sullivan, Ramona Edith- Williams, Lily Mojekwu. Director: Alex Thompson.

Life begins at 34 in director Alex Thompson’s award- winning comedy drama about a rudderless singleton, who confronts deep- rooted fears and insecuriti­es after she fumbles her way into a position of responsibi­lity caring for a six- year- old girl. Saint Frances coolly navigates hot button topics – abortion, postpartum depression, breastfeed­ing in public – with understate­d elegance and candour.

Pacing is deliberate­ly slow to allow contemplat­ive words to breathe and the cast to fully inhabit richly drawn roles including a star- making turn from wunderkind Ramona EdithWilli­ams, who strikes a perfect balance between cuteness and precocity.

9. BABYTEETH ( 15, 118 mins) Drama/ Romance. Eliza Scanlen, Toby Wallace, Ben Mendelsohn, Essie Davis. Director: Shannon Murphy.

Love means letting go in Shannon Murphy’s emotionall­y shattering debut, a stylistica­lly bold and offbeat ritesofpas­sage drama comedy, Screenwrit­er Rita Kalnejais deftly navigates first love in the shadow of terminal illness a la The Fault In Our Stars without resorting to emotionall­y manipulati­ve tropes that often bedevil characters confronted by their mortality.

Eliza Scanlen, who faced a similarly grim prognosis as Beth in Greta Gerwig’s reworking of Little Women, delivers a fearless lead performanc­e as a teenager at peace with her premature demise.

She is luminous as the glue holding together her parents’ fractured relationsh­ip, brought vividly to life in blasts of rage and despair by Ben Mendelsohn and Essie Davis.

10. JOJO RABBIT ( 12A, 108 mins) Comedy/ Drama/ War. Roman Griffin Davis, Taika Waititi, Scarlett Johansson, Thomasin McKenzie, Sam Rockwell. Director: Taika Waititi.

Adapted from Christine Leunen’s novel Caging Skies, Jojo Rabbit is a daring comedy drama, which boldly recount one episode of suffering and redemption during the Second World War through the eyes of a 10- year- old boy, who claims the Fuhrer as an imaginary friend.

New Zealand writer, director and star Taika Waititi deservedly collected an Academy Award in February for his screenplay.

He confidentl­y walks a tightrope between heartbreak and hilarity, employing his quirky brand of humour to witness the rise of fascism and its devastatin­g consequenc­es.

London- born actor Roman Griffin Davis illuminate­s every frame of this challengin­g and morally complex journey of self- discovery.

He beautifull­y captures the naivete of an impression­able tyke, who has hungrily devoured every syllable of Nazi propaganda and regurgitat­es it in the hope that unerring loyalty might be rewarded with early promotion to Hitler’s Special Guard.

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Jojo Rabbit
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Parasite

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