home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1995
/
TIME Almanac 1995.iso
/
time
/
010493
/
01049929.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-03-27
|
5KB
|
131 lines
<text id=93TT2605>
<title>
Jan. 04, 1993: The Best of 1992:Movies
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
Jan. 04, 1993 Man of the Year:Bill Clinton
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
MOVIES, Page 54
THE BEST OF 1992
</hdr>
<body>
<p>1. Aladdin
</p>
<p> Animation is pure moviemaking: not just the photographing
of actors but the creation, frame by frame, of a whole new
world. Disney's 31st cartoon feature, directed by Ron Clements
and John Musker, paints that world in gorgeous colors,
populates it with a menagerie of witty characters (including a
truly magic carpet) and sets it spinning at Mach speed to half
a dozen lively tunes. Robin Williams may forever seem diminished
in live-action films after his turn as the ingenious Genie. In
the new Golden Age of animation, Aladdin gives reason to
celebrate the cinema. This is a magic-lamp movie: rub it and
wonders emerge.
</p>
<p>2. Unforgiven
</p>
<p> Clint Eastwood's dark (and at times darkly humorous)
western broods--laconically, ironically, tragically--on the
morality of violence and the ambiguity of human motives. In this
pungent commentary onan aging genre, Eastwood's iconic authority
as an actor is matched by the clarifying force with which he
directs David Webb Peoples' complex script.
</p>
<p>3. Howards End
</p>
<p> Handsome, of course, and of course handsomely acted
(pre-eminently by Emma Thompson, Helena Bonham Carter and
Vanessa Redgrave). But in this perfectly pitched adaptation of
E.M. Forster's richest novel, the stately virtues of other
Merchant Ivory movies are transcended in a collision of classes,
temperaments and genteel obsessions. What cruelties people
inflict on each other! And with such style!
</p>
<p>4. Gas Food Lodging
</p>
<p> Addressing the topic of growing up poor and female in
trailer-park America, director Allison Anders smartly skips the
piety. She has an unbuttoned, unsentimental gift for observing
teen dreams and realities, working-mom desperation and
exhaustion. She even spares a wry, forgiving thought for male
shiftlessness in this high-spirited low-budgeter.
</p>
<p>5. Toto le Heros
</p>
<p> An old man, reviewing his unfulfilled life, finds that
memories of a magical childhood wilt in the heat of his passion
for revenge. The brisk, risky style of Belgian filmmaker Jaco
Van Dormael's beautiful drama educates the viewer to attend
carefully to each of life's privileged moments, because they
will be replayed endlessly in the screening room of old age.
Memory is tyranny.
</p>
<p>6. Indochine
</p>
<p> A true epic finds irony and illumination in the mix of
megahistory and personal history. In Regis Wargnier's confident,
delicate evocation of 1930s French colonial life, the politics
of love offers both devastation and redemption to a woman
(Catherine Deneuve, never so radiant) and her adopted daughter,
while the politics of revolution propose the same for their
society. High romance, touched with tragedy.
</p>
<p>7. Raise the Red Lantern
</p>
<p> In 1920s China, a lovely teenager (Gong Li) is sold to a
rich man as the fourth of his mistresses. To be his bedmate of
the evening, each woman must flaunt her femininity in a display
that combines beauty pageant and office politics. The great
director Zhang Yimou locates ripe melodrama and ravishing
textural harmony in this bitter, seductive parable.
</p>
<p>8. A Brief History of Time
</p>
<p> Errol Morris' documentary traces the evolution of
physicist Stephen Hawking's theories and the devolution of his
body after decades of assault from amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis. Morris suggests a bond between the man's history and
the history of the universe he has imagined. In its way, the
movie is as elegant and subtle as its subject's thought.
</p>
<p>9. Batman Returns
</p>
<p> The controversy over this sequel's suitability for kids
was almost as amusing as Daniel Waters' fecund script. But not
quite. This gorgeous meditation on mixed and masked identities--Are we human or something frightfully other?--turns a
comic-book story into ghouly, ghostly comic art. A zillion
dollars allowed director Tim Burton to unleash the beasts of his
imagination. They're all beauties.
</p>
<p>10. The Last of the Mohicans
</p>
<p> Director Michael Mann's adaptation of a Great American
Chestnut has the sweep, scope, innocence and bustle of
old-fashioned Hollywood historical dramas--the kind they don't
make anymore. But there is also a reanimating conviction in its
reverence for unspoiled landscapes and its idealization of the
unspoiled men and women who pioneered them.
</p>
<p>...AND THE WORST
</p>
<p>Tell-All Trailers
</p>
<p> Those "previews of coming attractions" used to tease
audiences with a few discreet scenes. But the new model of
trailers reveals practically the whole plot--and robs the
moviegoer of that cherished quality, pristine ignorance. It's
like having a loudmouth near you blab, "Smith done it," before
the mystery has even begun. Upside: in two minutes you learn all
you need to know about a movie you'll never have to see.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>