Alright, everyone! It’s all come down to this. After
spending so much time talking about the worst movies of 2013, it’s finally time
to talk about the best that 2013 had to offer. Despite some embarrassingly bad
titles tossed around this year, I still maintain that it was a fantastic year
for films, with plenty of variety to showcase. It had everything from sci-fi
romance to action thrillers, from family dramas to survival thrillers in space,
and from Hobbits and dragons to snowmen and reindeer. It seemed to have a
little bit of something for everyone, and today, I’m counting it all down in
the top ten best movies I saw all year. Please keep in mind that there are
still high profile films I haven’t gotten around to like Blue is the Warmest
Color, Nebraska, Philomena (or, as it’s now called, PhiloMANIA), and The Wind
Rises.
Before moving on to the official top ten, I’d like to hand
out some honorable mentions to films that would have been very deserving of
placement on here. Steve McQueen’s 12 Years a Slave is a brutal, devastating,
and essential portrait of slavery, lifted by Chiwetel Ejiofor’s stunning lead
performance. Inside Llewyn Davis from the brothers Coen is among the duo’s best
films in years, a tale as timeless and heartbreaking as the folk songs present
in the feature. Woody Allen struck a home run with Blue Jasmine, thanks mainly
due to the performances of Cate Blanchett and Sally Hawkins as two sisters in a
believably bitter situation. Dallas Buyers Club boasted fantastic performances
all around, especially from those of the Oscar worthy Matthew McConaughey and
Jared Leto. Pacific Rim from Guillermo Del Toro is one of the best blockbusters
of the year, and is an all around massive, spectacular, and thoroughly
entertaining popcorn flick.
One project that I’d like to show due appreciation to (even
though it isn’t a movie), is the spectacular survival-horror video game The
Last of Us from the creative minds at Naughty Dog. If this qualified as a
movie, it would have easily taken my position at number 1. Ever since finishing
the game back in June, every image and emotion felt from the experience has
stuck with me. From the gritty tone and atmosphere, the frightening sound
design, the harrowing script, the inseparable duo of unforgettable lead
characters, all the way down to the haunting score, The Last of Us not only
proved how well a game can tell a story, but put any and all of the movies
released this year to shame. It is perfection, one of the greatest games of all
time, and a living testament that video games are high art.
All geeky gamer rambling done, let’s introduce the top ten.