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<text id=94TT1818>
<title>
Dec. 26, 1994: The Best Cinema of 1994
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Dec. 26, 1994 Man of the Year:Pope John Paul II
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE BEST & WORST OF 1994, Page 132
The Best Cinema of 1994
</hdr>
<body>
<p>1. Pulp Fiction
</p>
<p> Now here's a movie. Three stories that begin as cliches but
soon go wild and wily. A gallery of tough guys who minor in
philosophy. Career-defining turns by John Travolta, Samuel L.
Jackson and Uma Thurman. Peppery dialogue that brings macho
swank into the '90s. Quentin Tarantino's adrenaline rush of
a melodrama is a brash dare to timid Hollywood filmmakers. Let's
see, he says, if you can be this smart about going this far.
</p>
<p>2. Red Rock West
</p>
<p> Film noir is more than a lighting style. It's a seedy, cynical
world view: people are motivated by greed, stupidity and sexual
avarice. Director John Dahl gets it all right in his mean, hilarious
tale of a drifter (Nicolas Cage) mistaken for a contract killer.
The title town is off all the moral maps, and so-- deliriously,
invigoratingly-- is this lowbrow, low-budget assault.
</p>
<p>3. Heavenly Creatures
</p>
gggggg<p> Pauline and Juliet, two love-struck teenagers in 1950s New Zealand,
created a voluptuous fantasy world and moved into it. Director
Peter Jackson moves in with them; his fevered camera style communicates
the rapture and peril of adolescent hysteria. This hurtling,
upsetting film, based on a true murder case, has a thrillingly
nervy performance by Melanie Lynskey as the darker, needier
Pauline.
</p>
<p>4. The Shawshank Redemption
</p>
<p> Jailbirds and moviegoers both do time-- and depending on the
picture, two hours can seem like a life sentence. Time is the
preoccupation of Frank Darabont's deeply satisfying prison drama
about a man wrongly convicted of murder who plots revenge and
escape. Tim Robbins and Morgan Freeman are tough, smart, patient.
So is the film.
</p>
<p>5. Hoop Dreams
</p>
<p> At 14, William Gates and Arthur Agee are sports heroes and working
stiffs-- magicians on the high school basketball court who
stagger under the burden of producing wins (and glory and revenue)
for their team. Documentarians Steve James, Fred Marx and Peter
Gilbert have produced an epic of love, betrayal, heartbreak,
true grit.
</p>
<p>6. Bullets over Broadway
</p>
<p> Woody Allen rounds up the usual show-biz subjects-- egomaniacal
star (Dianne Wiest in a great, bold comic performance), earnest
young playwright, desperate producer-- and an underworld hit
man (Chazz Palminteri) who has what none of them has: theatrical
genius. He teaches them all a thing or two about art and life
in Allen's happiest, most assured comedy in many years.
</p>
<p>7. The Lion King
</p>
<p> Primal Disney on the African plains: a lion cub survives banishment
and his father's death. This cartoon feature (directed by Roger
Allers and Rob Minkoff) has the glories of narrative savvy,
voicemanship, lively songs and scenic splendor-- familiar Disney
virtues but still fresh and fine.
</p>
<p>8. Little Women
</p>
<p> The March sisters navigate the passage from girlhood to womanhood
with grace, spirit and infinite appeal in Gillian Armstrong's
passionate realization of the 19th century children's classic.
Winona Ryder leads an entrancing cast in a family film that
interrupts our pious pratings about "family values" to say something
truthful and unsentimental on the subject.
</p>
<p>9. White
</p>
<p> A Polish nebbish gets even with the nasty Frenchwoman of his
dreams. In this dark comedy (second episode in the wonderful
Blue-White-Red trilogy), director Krzysztof Kieslowski cannily
observes the flourishing of capitalism and the festering of
emotion in his wayward homeland.
</p>
<p>10. Clerks.
</p>
<p> In a Jersey mini-mall, the convenience-store guy and his pal
from the video store talk dirty but think long and wistfully
about the life that is passing them by. Their customers and
girlfriends are just as lost, goofy and irrelevant. The budget
for Kevin Smith's movie was $27,575, but he's the Chekhov of
slacker life-- and maybe of America's secret life.
</p>
<p>...And The Worst
</p>
<p> Female Trouble
</p>
<p> Remember when popular movies had women in them? In 1994's top
films, the ladies were lucky if the guys let them even drive
a bus. The typical female role was a captive or a pinup, wounded
faun (Forrest Gump) or ditsy wife (True Lies). For its Best
Actress prize, the New York Film Critics had to go to a TV movie
(The Last Seduction's Linda Fiorentino). Affirmative action
is demode these days, but Hollywood needs some spur to bring
women into full partnership with the Toms and Arnolds and Simbas.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>