| My choices for the best of the year... |
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| BY ANTHONY KUSICH |
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| See the best of other years: 2001 * 2002 * 2003 * 2004 * 2005 |
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| BEST PICTURE |
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'GRIZZLY MAN' |
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| Activist Timothy Treadwell, who spent summer after summer interacting with bears in the Alaskan wild, stars in a self-made portrait of his own poignant search for a place to live free of social restriction. In another year of declining Hollywood quality, Werner Herzog's brilliant documentary treatise on man's role in nature struck an emotional chord that's impossible to shake. |
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'CRASH' |
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'BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN' |
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'A HISTORY OF VIOLENCE' |
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| David Cronenberg wowed film festivals around the world with this treatise on human nature. Is the world an inherently violent place? Are we inherently violent creatures? Do we have the capacity to change? |
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'MATCH POINT' |
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| BEST DIRECTOR |
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ang lee, 'BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN' |
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| Rebounding after the "Hulk" debacle, Lee returns to the greatness he achieved with "The Ice Storm" and "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon." A poignant western romance set amid the backdrop of tragedy and damned with repression, he coaxes exceptional performances from his actors and coalesces vibrant storytelling, cinematography, and music into a terrific, near-revolutionary whole. |
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werner herzog, 'GRIZZLY MAN' |
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david cronenberg, 'A HISTORY OF VIOLENCE' |
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woody allen, 'MATCH POINT' |
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| His last classic? "Deconstructing Harry." "Match Point," however, takes Woody to levels never before reached -- and he succeeds brilliantly. I hope this return to form lasts for the rest of the filmmaker's days. |
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steven spielberg, 'MUNICH' |
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| BEST ACTOR |
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david strathairn, 'good NIGHT + good LUCK' |
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heath ledger, 'BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN' |
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philip seymour hoffman, 'CAPOTE' |
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terrence howard, 'HUSTLE & FLOW' |
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| In one of several breakout performances Howard gave this year, the actor stars as DJay, a pimp by trade who dreams of becoming a successful rapper. His tenable frustration and anger make for a full-bodied portrait of a man seeking valuation and redemption. |
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eric bana, 'MUNICH' |
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| RUNNERS-UP: Jeff Daniels, The Squid & the Whale; Viggo Mortensen, A History of Violence; Ralph Fiennes, The Constant Gardener |
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| BEST ACTRESS |
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reese witherspoon, 'WALK THE LINE' |
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| I'd call this performance the surprise of the year. While Reese has definitely flexed her acting muscles in the past -- "Election" and "Pleasantville" come immediately to mind -- she is completely revelatory in one of 2005's most versatile turns. She sings, she dances, she holds her own against a powerhouse Joaquin Phoenix. In short, a performance not to be forgotten. |
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claire danes, 'SHOPGIRL' |
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patricia clarkson, 'THE DYING GAUL' |
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radha mitchell, 'MELINDA & MELINDA' |
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| Half drama and half comedy, Mitchell's turn is all excellent. In Woody Allen's other '05 pic (which is where I say the comeback began), she flips between two romantic tales without ever leaving her enchanted viewers in the dust. |
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joan allen, 'THE UPSIDE OF ANGER' |
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| RUNNERS-UP: Charlize Theron, North Country; Felicity Huffman, Transamerica; Naomi Watts, King Kong |
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| BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR |
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terrence howard, 'CRASH' |
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| In many ways, it was the year of Terrence Howard. In addition to minor roles in popcorn fare like "Get Rich or Die Tryin'," he gave two outstanding performances in buzzed-about indies: The aforementioned "Hustle & Flow," and this hypnotic racial drama. As a TV director who's repeatedly taken advantage of by the LAPD, he steals the show with equal parts fire, vulnerability, and rage. |
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william hurt, 'A HISTORY OF VIOLENCE' |
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alexander siddig, 'SYRIANA' |
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jake gyllenhaal, 'BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN' |
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| His performance doesn't have the same level of nuance as Heath Ledger's, but it's a different role. As the person in their relationship most comfortable with his homosexuality, his inability to live openly is all the more frustrating. |
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mickey rourke, 'SIN CITY' |
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| RUNNERS-UP: Will Ferrell, Melinda & Melinda; Luke Wilson, The Family Stone; Craig T. Nelson, The Family Stone |
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| BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS |
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maggie gyllenhaal, 'HAPPY ENDINGS' |
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maria bello, 'A HISTORY OF VIOLENCE' |
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laura linney, 'THE SQUID & THE WHALE' |
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scarlett johansson, 'MATCH POINT' |
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| Johansson & Allen, a "Match" made in heaven? As the only Anglo character in a predominantly British cast, Scarlett nabs best-in-show honors as a high-strung jilted lover. Her re-interpretation of Anjelica Huston's character in "Crimes & Misdemeanors" is A+. |
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catherine keener, 'CAPOTE' |
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| RUNNERS-UP: Diane Keaton, The Family Stone; Taraji P. Henson, Hustle & Flow; Sharon Stone, Broken Flowers |
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| BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY |
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woody allen, 'MATCH POINT' |
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| The similarities between "Match Point" and "Crimes and Misdemeanors" are many, but the posh London setting gives the Woodman's latest a fresh, invigorating twist. He explores the dichotomies between rich and poor, luck and fate, guilt and innocence, and surprise and expectation with long-absent wit and observance. It truly is great to see Mr. Allen back in top form. |
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paul haggis & bobby moresco, 'CRASH' |
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don roos, 'HAPPY ENDINGS' |
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noah baumbach, 'THE SQUID & THE WHALE' |
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| Brisk, on-the-fly, witty, poignant, and revealing. That basically sums up Baumbach's small tale of surviving his parents' divorce. Extra props for bringing back Anna Paquin to the big screen (and the "Blue Velvet" shout-out). |
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jim jarmusch, 'BROKEN FLOWERS' |
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| BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY |
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stephen gaghan, 'SYRIANA' |
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| There's so much going in "Syriana" it took me two viewings to sort it out. But rarely does such a smart and able (and timely) political thriller come along, so I didn't mind the second ride. Weaving disparate stories of CIA malfeasance, terrorism, D.C. corruption, and Middle-East power struggles, Gaghan's masterwork -- and labor of love -- paid off structurally and, more importantly, emotionally. |
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l. mcmurtry & d. ossana, 'BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN' |
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josh olson, 'A HISTORY OF VIOLENCE' |
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tony kushner & eric roth, 'MUNICH' |
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| In the film's meatiest scene, Israeli assassin Avner (Eric Bana) -- pretending not to be a Jew -- and a Palestinian discuss Why They Fight. The complexities of pride, vengeance, and justice are brilliantly laid out, and we again know why peace is so far away. |
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dan futterman, 'CAPOTE' |
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| There's a matter-of-factness about David Strathairn's performance that's as refreshing as it is stern. As TV journalist Edward R. Murrow, leading the fight against red-baiting Sen. Joseph McCarthy, the actor embodies calm, diplomatic might in a very familiar battle against media manipulation. It's a dream showcase for an actor who supremely fits the role. |
| After writing the screenplay for last year's Best Picture-winning "Million Dollar Baby," Haggis scored again with this thought-provoking exploration of race issues in L.A. Twisted but revealing, it deserves to be seen and discussed for a long time. |
| After a mostly disappointing decade, Woody Allen returned with one the sharpest thrillers in years -- and the film most unlike the rest in his canon. It explores the role of fate and luck in determining our places in life, and does an exhilarating job of mounting suspense. |
| The repressed love between gay ranch hands in 1963 Wyoming is every bit as universal as the straight romances of a million other movies. That it's written, scored, photographed, and acted this superbly makes it that much more monumental. |


| The German master took the tapes of Timothy Treadwell, reconnected with his old friends and acquaintances, and fashioned them into the year's best film. His indelible stamp is all over this terrific work of non-fiction that shamefully went ignored by Oscar. |
| The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is fairly (and tautly) explored in Steven Spielberg's second success of the year, following "War of the Worlds." In "Munich," he gets right to the heart of the neverending cycle of terrorism and violence that still consumes us today. |
| One of the less-heralded auteurs of recent years, Cronenberg showed that he's still in top form with this spare, jolting thriller about revenge. He also culls edgy, excellent performances from his entire mesmeric cast. |
| Ledger gives a career-transforming performance in Ang Lee's drama as Ennis Del Mar, a man so unfamiliar with the feelings stirred up by his fellow ranch hand that he ends up denying himself true love for the duration of his frustrating, empty life. |
| Bana went from a bad performance in a bad film ("The Hulk") to a good performance in a bad film ("Troy") to a good performance in a good film ("Munich"). But it's more than good -- it's a startling evocation of the perils of revenge...and paranoia. |
| I've always hated the phrase "imitation is the sincerest form of flattery," so I refuse to call Hoffman's work "perfect mimicry" or "impersonation." He really does become Truman Capote, nailing the voice, mannerisms, and heartbreak of the doomed writer. |
| Since leaving "My So-Called Life" in 1995, Danes hadn't really impressed me as a film actress. But now she stuns in film after film (including genre work like "T3" and this year's own "Family Stone") with her brittle beauty and determined will. |
| Joan Allen channelled her always-endearing repression (see: "Pleasantville," "Nixon," et al) into this story of a frazzled mom coming to terms with the end of a marriage and the dawn of middle age. A winning turn by one of our most underrated actresses. |
| The film is an overcooked mish-mash, but that's no fault of Clarkson's: As the wife of a posh studio exec who suspects her husband's having an affair with a man, the actress gets a chance to bare her teeth in a performance full of cynicism and volatility. |
| Although he doesn't make his appearance until the pic's final third, you don't dare take your eyes off the screen when he's there. With a spot-on cameo in "Syriana" as well this year, Hurt is doing just fine playing second banana in provocative indies. |
| Gruff voice, noirish down-on-his-luck character, wicked "comeback." Out of the many odd characters in this comic book pastiche, Rourke fares the best simply because he invests a lived-in quality that suits the role -- and film -- extremely well. |
| George Clooney gained the weight, but Siddig turned in the most full-bodied performance. As the "good prince" whose plans for reformation are thwarted by an oil-hungry CIA, Siddig gets deep in the heart of our current quagmire in the Middle East. |
| It was also the year of the Gyllenhaal. Jake put in two worthy efforts ("Jarhead," "Brokeback Mountain"), but Maggie is deserving of identical acclaim. In "Happy Endings," her bawdy Jude, a free spirit who bounces from band to bar to bedroom with equal aplomb, is a vibrant creation that nearly leaps off the screen. She's simply mesmerizing in 2005's top female performance. |
| Maria Bello runs away with the movie as a wife determined to hold her family together at all costs. She's equal parts anger, guile, strength, and passion. As great as the film is on its own terms, it would collapse without Bello's evocative presence. |
| Small role, effective presence. After her breakthrough turn in "Being John Malkovich," Keener stumbled a bit in a few strange projects. This classy actress found her footing again in "Capote," and also did ace work in "The Interpreter" and "40-Year-Old Virgin." |
| My, how quickly Linney has risen to the ranks of Actresses Who Rarely Give a Bad Performance (see: Patricia Clarkson, Catherine Keener). Her acerbic bite balances this odd retro-memoir, and serves as an eminently entertaining foil to a terrific Jeff Daniels. |
| Haggis and Moresco attempt a high-wire juggling act and, miraculously, pull it off. With intertwining characters, stories, and motivations, their powerful words are the foundation for one of 2005's strongest dramas. |
| Jarmusch unravels his offbeat tale of self-discovery in chapters, with Bill Murray (as the ironically named Don Johnston) going on a fact-finding mission with four women from another era in his life. Their tales are all bizarrely humorous in that Jarmuschian way. |
| "Happy Endings" received way lass acclaim than 1998's "The Opposite of Sex," but Roos' wit and offbeat charm are nonetheless still present. If anything, his characters have matured and developed deeper souls. |
| Annie Proulx's short story arrives vibrantly on the big screen thanks to this spare, emotional script. The feelings of loss and regret between Jack and Ennis are always palpable, their frustration always clear. |
| Movies about writers aren't always an invigorating experience, but "Capote" surely is. Futterman really gets inside Truman Capote's head and lays bare his reasons for befriending a savage killer: The recognition that would ultimately destroy him. |
| The twists and turns of this revenge tale always keep you guessing, and that's quite an accomplishment in this trailer-spoils-all era. Every situation and circumstance feels anxious and authentic, another rare feat for a thriller these days. |