Your 10 worst/best films of the 2010s
The 2010s were perhaps the weakest decade since 1950 for me (although I guess it is also because I stopped watching many movies in 2013), even the superhero movies were weaker than the ones of the previous decade, despite the massive number of those. The decade was very good for animation though and had the first actual Hollywood adaptation of manga (adaptation in the sense of actually translating the plot of the manga into the movie instead of just using the names of the characters and replicating some visual elements as that horrid Ghost in the Shell movie).
1. In this Corner of the World (2016) 10/10
2. Little Witch Academia (2013) 10/10 (short film)
3. Tale of Princess Kaguya (2014) 10/10
4. Mad Max: Fury Road (2015) 9.5/10
5. A Silent Voice (2016) 9.5/10
6. Interstellar (2014) 9.5/10
7. The Wolf of Wall Street (2013) 9.5/10
8. Wind Rises (2013) 9/10
9. Lore (2012) 9/10
10. Alita: Battle Angel (2019) 9/10
Only three 10/10 movies but looking back at all those movies 10 it still looks like it was a nice decade. Also, Interstellar is Nolan's best movie IMO and one of the last examples of great science fiction. There are also 3 movies from the greats: Takahata, Miyazaki, and Scorcese's, the first one died and the last two are perhaps the two greatest living directors.
Also, representing the increase in gender diversity I have two movies directed by women in there: A Silent Voice (2016) and Lore (2012).
1. In this Corner of the World (2016) 10/10
2. Little Witch Academia (2013) 10/10 (short film)
3. Tale of Princess Kaguya (2014) 10/10
4. Mad Max: Fury Road (2015) 9.5/10
5. A Silent Voice (2016) 9.5/10
6. Interstellar (2014) 9.5/10
7. The Wolf of Wall Street (2013) 9.5/10
8. Wind Rises (2013) 9/10
9. Lore (2012) 9/10
10. Alita: Battle Angel (2019) 9/10
Only three 10/10 movies but looking back at all those movies 10 it still looks like it was a nice decade. Also, Interstellar is Nolan's best movie IMO and one of the last examples of great science fiction. There are also 3 movies from the greats: Takahata, Miyazaki, and Scorcese's, the first one died and the last two are perhaps the two greatest living directors.
Also, representing the increase in gender diversity I have two movies directed by women in there: A Silent Voice (2016) and Lore (2012).
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Us and American Hustle on a worst list I don't like that
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Japanese way more introvert as compare to western society like America. But in context of their acting's culture, their approach in acting that was theatrically convey their emotion: being more excessive or over the top by movement, gestures, and expression; but at the time this aesthetic also applied to, for extent, the like silent film and classical hollywood. The different i guess, in Japan the stage acting influences --of the traditional play like kabuki, noh or even classic Western play, like Shakespeare-- pave their way to the contemporary and across media(manga, anime, even tv shows).
As matter of generalization, I believe the term Shakespearean actors still the best to describe most performers in japan today.
As matter of generalization, I believe the term Shakespearean actors still the best to describe most performers in japan today.
I guess that a person that is not acquainted with Japanese culture might perceive it as more explicit because it lacks some of the elements of discretion that are typical of Western culture. In the same way, the Japanese see western culture as extremely lacking in terms of discretion.
The biggest cultural differences regarding Japan and the West in terms of culture are:
1) Western culture is very unsexualized in the sense that sexuality is rigidly constrained to certain domains where it is regarded as appropriate, in Japan they lack this constraint (hence why they were the first to have tentacle hentai).
2) Western culture values realism in representation, especially when it is trying to depict something serious western art tends to become more realistic. For example, nobody would ever think about doing a movie like Schindler's List animated while in Japan they had made an animated remake of Sansho the Bailiff already in the 1960s: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0054631/, while there is a lot of western cartoons it almost never is serious, instead it tends to be just simplistic and aimed at small children or be crude comedy, and in the few times it tries to be serious it tries to be more realistic.
While only in Japan they managed to make something like EVA, which is completely unrealistic in multiple dimensions but takes itself more seriously than almost any western fiction. That explains why the Japanese did not have a problem with the very unrealistic depiction of characters in Ozu's films.
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I do not see a higher degree of explicitness in the depiction of emotion in Japanese fiction if compared to Western fiction. In fact, it is even standard for Japanese characters to hide their emotions (see Ozu's films for an obvious example).
The other one is based on the craving need of mental escape for this kind of discretion culture. Shounen is the finest popular example where the premise circling on characters that will not shy away to speak their dream or what is on their mind, and even against the conformity. That one of the big reasons why a personality like Oda Nobunaga so big and important in their culture, so did project (on the extent) in anti-conformist idiot like Goku, Luffy, Hanzawa Naoki, and ofc
I guess that a person that is not acquainted with Japanese culture might perceive it as more explicit because it lacks some of the elements of discretion that are typical of Western culture. In the same way, the Japanese see western culture as extremely lacking in terms of discretion.
Last edited by resopamenic; 02-17-20 at 02:27 AM.
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