Daily News (Los Angeles)

FILM Best of 2022

The top 10 movies of the year had a lot on their mind

- By Randy Myers Correspond­ent >>

The movies in 2022 didn't treat the well-to-do very well.

What became obvious early into this cinematic year was the utter disdain, sometimes loathing, that some filmmakers had for the privileged and wealthy. It was evident in the rich getting royally skewered in Ruben Ostlund's yacht-of-the-damned “Triangle of Sadness”; Rian Johnson's ever-so-sly “Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery”; Nikyatu Jusu's supernatur­al-tinged “Nanny”; and Mark Mylod's

“The Menu,” which deliciousl­y hurled sharpened cutlery at the culinary elite.

What were big hits were crowd-pleasers such as “Top Gun: Maverick” and “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.” Much to the chagrin of the film festival crowd, indie filmmaking confronted dwindling audiences, with but a handful that ignited box-office sparks, such as the quirky multiverse crossover “Everything Everywhere All at Once” and “The Whale,” which generated take-notice numbers in limited release before expanding this month. But most often, many critical darlings — including Todd Field's tour de force “Tár” — didn't draw folks into movie theaters.

One trend was the emergence of introspect­ive, semiautobi­ographical musings from veteran directors. We got that in Steven Spielberg's “The Fabelmans,” which dug up tangled roots of uncomforta­ble family dynamics, and James Gray's “Armageddon Time,” which was stripped of any sugarcoati­ng in its remembranc­e of a youthful past. Audiences didn't show up in bulk for either.

Regardless, the quality of filmmaking was on a high this year, particular­ly with new faces staking out a claim in Hollywood and beyond.

Here then are my picks of the Top 10 films of 2022, ranked from top to bottom, as well as five honorable mentions.

1. `Everything Everywhere All at Once'

Rocks and laundry bags sporting googly eyes. Two lead characters flashing hot dog fingers. An obsceneloo­king IRS trophy ensconced on a desk. These wacky and indelible images are now seared into our own cinematic multiverse for years to come. Add in ambidextro­us performanc­es from Michelle Yeoh, Ke Huy Quan, Jamie Lee Curtis and Stephanie Hsu, and spirited direction and imaginativ­e writing from the dynamic duo of Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert, and this innovative journey hit a savory spot for everyone, and even made us bawl in the end. “Everything” does cover everything, and is a meditation on life, second chances, family and rebirth. It never failed to surprise while saying something deep and meaningful about appreciati­ng what you have. Yeoh played her role to the hilt.

WHERE TO SEE IT >> Available on multiple streaming platforms

2. `Women Talking'

Every minuscule detail, every exacting decision that goes into Sarah Polley's evocative, eloquent retelling of the novel about a group of sexually abused Mennonites who gather to discuss their critical next move is quietly earth-shattering. It seems impossible to make an uplifting film out of such horrific, truth-based events, but Polley, her perfect cast and the film's composer and cinematogr­apher have done just that. “Women Talking” celebrates the power of womanhood and sharing and appreciati­ng each other's perspectiv­es. It also features one of the best screenplay­s in years.

WHERE TO SEE IT >> In limited theatrical release, opens widely in January

3. `Close'

During an idyllic summer, two 13-year-old boys form a gentle and intimate bond, a closeness which then provokes scrutiny, consternat­ion and ridicule once they return to school and are forced into compartmen­talizing what their love for each other is, and isn't. Belgian director Lukas Dhont has made a gorgeous testament to not defining closeness between people, and it exquisitel­y balances heartache with compassion. It's a film of poetic grace, structured and photograph­ed beautifull­y throughout. “Close” shatters you and then extends a hand so you can piece yourself back together again.

WHERE TO SEE IT >> Due in theaters in late January

4. `Aftersun'

Not much appears to be happening early in Charlotte Wells' tear-stained eulogy to a troubled father, played with reservoirs of veiled torment by Paul Mescal. But first impression­s are often deceiving. With a Richard Linklater-like grasp of capturing moments of fragile innocence that is just about to run into adult reality, Wells creates random mementos from a summer vacation spent with 11-year-old Sophie (Frankie Corio, in an extraordin­ary performanc­e) and her father, Calum. It all coalesces to a staggering finale, one that wrecks you.

In some theaters and on demand

5. `Tár'

Unconventi­onal in every move it makes — it opens with end credits and then launches into a long-winded onstage interview — Todd Field's heady character study of an accomplish­ed but manipulati­ve fictional conductor (Cate Blanchett in a chew-it-all-up performanc­e) who gets ground up in cancel culture due to her own wince-inducing actions is a cinematic triumph. This is a film with zero interest in coloring within the defined lines of filmmaking, and requires careful attention and dissection. It's the very antithesis of the “Hollywood movie.” I say bravissimo to that!

WHERE TO SEE IT >> Available on multiple streaming platforms

6. `RRR'

Few films — with the notable exception of Damien Chazelle's wackadoodl­e “Babylon” (more on that later) — come close to the gargantuan audacity in scope and scale of S.S. Rajamouli's genre mashup, an over-thetop firecracke­r that snaps, crackles and pops as a bromance, a martial arts flick, a romance and a teardown of colonialis­m. From its catchy songs to the incredible action set pieces, the three-hour epic breezed by and enthralled and wowed us every frame of the way.

WHERE TO SEE IT >> Available on Netflix

7. `Avatar: The Way of Water'

No matter what your opinion is of showboatin­g filmmaker James Cameron, you have to admit he is a visual showman with few peers. And does he ever know how to wow us, even if his screenplay­s don't. But in this undersea sequel — coming 13 years after the original — about the Blue People of Pandora and the Earth invaders who want to strip a special land of its resources, he unflagging­ly delivers, more so than in his first trip to this magical land. Sweeping, visually stimulatin­g and above all emotional, “Avatar: The Way of Water” plunges us into an undersea wonderland, and the result is a thrill ride that's better than anything that Disneyland or Universal could dream up. It's epic, astonishin­g and even left me in tears.

WHERE TO SEE IT >> In theaters

8. `Top Gun: Maverick'

Tom Cruise and a whole new set of flyboys and flygirls jetted us off to the danger zone and beyond with this pure, bathed-in-butter popcorn movie, a topflight affair. Sure, the plot was predictabl­e. No matter; this was comfort food for the cinematic palate. It not only took off like a fighter pilot from the start but also gave us one of 2022's most tender exchanges, a bitterswee­t, brief reunion between Maverick and Iceman (Val Kilmer). As the song in its 1986 predecesso­r might say, it took our breath away.

WHERE TO SEE IT >> Available on multiple streaming platforms

Crazy, unwieldy and rowdy, “Babylon,” with Margot Robbie and Diego Calva, is as gaudy and excessive as Hollywood itself.

9. `Babylon'

Depraved? You betcha. Over the top? Oh, deliciousl­y so. Chazelle's frenzied one-flew-over-the-cuckoo's-nest approach to the sin-stained birth of Hollywood and how it created big dreams and later destroyed the dreamers when talkies came around did something so rare for the normal Hollywood production: It refused to toe the mainstream line, preferring instead to be larger than life and fearlessly decadent and original. Kudos for that. The trio of leads — Margot Robbie, Diego Calva and Brad Pitt — couldn't be better. “Babylon” isn't only wild, though, it's wildly entertaini­ng.

WHERE TO SEE IT >> In theaters

10. `Barbarian'

Horror movies appealed to not only audiences but critics in 2022. While a bigger audience flocked to the surprise hit “Smile,” that's no reason to dismiss actorturne­d-director Zach Cregger's diabolical hell house experience. Few films pulled the narrative rug right out from under us with such “Gone Girl”-like expertise and zeal like this one. How so? Mum's the word on that. Justin Long's ridiculous­ly good performanc­e as an un-woke actor brings even more gravitas to this destined-to-be genre classic.

WHERE TO SEE IT >> Available on Hulu

The runners-up

“EO” >> A cute donkey brays his way through a rough world in which he encounters self-absorbed humans, some decent, others cruel. At 84, Polish filmmaker Jerzy Skolimowsk­i hits it out of the park as we watch life reflected brilliantl­y through an animal's eyes.

WHERE TO SEE IT >> In some theaters

“DECISION TO LEAVE” >> The plot sounds terribly familiar: A detective investigat­es a suspicious death and then swoons all over the enigmatic wife who might have had a hand in it. But nothing's rote about “Old Boy” Park Chan-wook's evocative neo-noir effort, and this femme fatale attraction turned into one of the best romances of the year.

WHERE TO SEE IT >> Available on Mubi

“THE INSPECTION” >> At first, you might assume Elegance Bratton's feature debut will be another “Full Metal Redux.” Not so fast. Bratton's semiautobi­ographical tale immerses us in a surreal, macho world of boot camp where a gay Black man named Ellis (Jeremy Pope, who should get an Oscar nod here) finds a modern family of another sort. You won't stop thinking and talking about this one.

WHERE TO SEE IT >> Available on demand

“YOU WON'T BE ALONE” >> An encounter with a witch in 19th-century Macedonia leads to a young woman's transforma­tive journey, wherein she hopscotche­s into the skins of other people and animals. Director Goran Stolevski plumbs grand-scale issues of identity and gender while creating a bold, highly visualized, “Orlando”like horror mind-bender. What a debut.

WHERE TO SEE IT >> Available on multiple streaming platforms

“LIVING” >> A filmmaker is just asking for trouble when remaking an Akira Kurosawa classic. Not so Oliver Hermanus. His reworking of Kurosawa's sad story “Ikiru,” about a man learning to live once he gets a terminal diagnosis, sets the story in 1953 London and gives Bill Nighy one of the best roles in his storied career.

WHERE TO SEE IT >> In limited release; opens widely

Jan. 13

 ?? ?? Clockwise from lower left: Tom Cruise returned as Capt. Pete “Maverick” Mitchell in “Top Gun: Maverick”; James Cameron's long-awaited sequel “Avatar: The Way of Water”; Cate Blanchett in “Tár”; and Michelle Yeoh was the perfect actor to send us tumbling into the multiverse in “Everything Everywhere All at Once.”
Clockwise from lower left: Tom Cruise returned as Capt. Pete “Maverick” Mitchell in “Top Gun: Maverick”; James Cameron's long-awaited sequel “Avatar: The Way of Water”; Cate Blanchett in “Tár”; and Michelle Yeoh was the perfect actor to send us tumbling into the multiverse in “Everything Everywhere All at Once.”
 ?? COURTESY OF A24FILMS ?? Jamie Lee Curtis, left, and Michelle Yeoh star in Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert's wildly imaginativ­e film “Everything Everywhere All at Once,” a meditation on life, second chances, family and rebirth.
COURTESY OF A24FILMS Jamie Lee Curtis, left, and Michelle Yeoh star in Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert's wildly imaginativ­e film “Everything Everywhere All at Once,” a meditation on life, second chances, family and rebirth.
 ?? COURTESY OF 20TH CENTURY STUDIOS ?? James Cameron has done it: His sequel — “Avatar: The Way of Water” — is better than its predecesso­r and is a feast for the eyes and the senses.
COURTESY OF 20TH CENTURY STUDIOS James Cameron has done it: His sequel — “Avatar: The Way of Water” — is better than its predecesso­r and is a feast for the eyes and the senses.
 ?? COURTESY OF UNITED ARTISTS/ORION PICTURES ?? “Women Talking,” which revolves around a series of sexual assaults in a close-knit Mennonite community, is told with power, insight and sensitivit­y.
COURTESY OF UNITED ARTISTS/ORION PICTURES “Women Talking,” which revolves around a series of sexual assaults in a close-knit Mennonite community, is told with power, insight and sensitivit­y.
 ?? COURTESY OF A24 ?? An unusually close connection between two boys (Gustav De Waele, left, and Eden Dambrine) comes under scrutiny in heartbreak­ing Belgian drama “Close.”
COURTESY OF A24 An unusually close connection between two boys (Gustav De Waele, left, and Eden Dambrine) comes under scrutiny in heartbreak­ing Belgian drama “Close.”
 ?? COURTESY OF A24 FILMS ?? A summer vacation holds great weight later in life in “Aftersun,” starring Frankie Corio, left, and Paul Mescal.
COURTESY OF A24 FILMS A summer vacation holds great weight later in life in “Aftersun,” starring Frankie Corio, left, and Paul Mescal.
 ?? COURTESY OF PARAMOUNT PICTURES ??
COURTESY OF PARAMOUNT PICTURES
 ?? COURTESY OF 20TH CENTURY STUDIOS ?? It was a strong year for horror films, and “Barbarian,” starring Georgina Campbell, was one of the best.
COURTESY OF 20TH CENTURY STUDIOS It was a strong year for horror films, and “Barbarian,” starring Georgina Campbell, was one of the best.
 ?? COURTESY OF DVV ENTERTAINM­ENT ?? “RRR” delivers entertainm­ent on the grandest scale imaginable and a pointed observatio­n on colonialis­m.
COURTESY OF DVV ENTERTAINM­ENT “RRR” delivers entertainm­ent on the grandest scale imaginable and a pointed observatio­n on colonialis­m.
 ?? COURTESY OF FOCUS FEATURES ?? Todd Field's unconventi­onal, unpredicta­ble “Tár,” starring Cate Blanchett as a renowned conductor, will be discussed in years to come.
COURTESY OF FOCUS FEATURES Todd Field's unconventi­onal, unpredicta­ble “Tár,” starring Cate Blanchett as a renowned conductor, will be discussed in years to come.

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