Movie geeks like your humble authors here at the Screengrab are no different than geeks of any other sort. That is to say, we are compulsive listmakers, inveterate rankers and categorizers, and the sort of people who will happily mouth off our opinions about things that happened years before we were born. And we're proud to say that over at the Onion A.V. Club, the reviewing staff (friends of this program, as they say in the biz) have found a delightful way of upholding the tradition by combining all three of those geeky tendencies: in their enjoyable new "My Favorite Movie Year" feature, each of their film reviewers picks one year in the past they think of as an exceptional one for film and ranks the top five movies that debuted in that year. The exercise kicked off a week ago when Noel Murray discussed the best films of 1974, and this week, the redoubtable Keith Phipps takes a look at 1967, singling out Bonnie and Clyde, Play Time, Point Blank, The Graduate and Two for the Road as reasons that year was particularly praiseworthy. (Sure, Keith. How quickly we forget Hillbillies in a Haunted House.) Next week should also be worth looking in on as the always-amusing Nathan Rabin picks the best of 1994.
|