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May 12, 2008

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Indies in the New Millennium

Four Years Down, 20 Great Films to Watch

The 1990s may be the decade in which American independent moviemakers—and the distribution companies that released their films—broke through the glass ceiling of college-town obscurity and became players in the eyes of movie buffs and major studios alike. But the first half-decade of the new century has also been notable for its surprising number of top-notch independent films.

Following the shakeups of the past decade, the world of independent film has been split between indies that function as the low-budget arms of the studios, like Miramax, Fox Searchlight and Warner Independent, and those companies that go it alone, like Newmarket and New Yorker Films. For the purpose of this article, we’ll assume that both of these groups can legitimately be referred to as “indies.” After all, while the status of a company like Fox Searchlight as truly independent is dubious, the indie sensibility of a moviemaker like Richard Linklater (whose Waking Life the company distributed) is indisputable.

As Peter Biskind documented in his gossipy yet illuminating book Down and Dirty Pictures, much of the financial basis of the independent moviemaking movement may have vanished in a series of agreements between groundbreaking production companies like Miramax and the studios. But the ideal of a great film made for relatively little money, which harnesses together a writer, director, actors and crew toward the realization of a collective, unique vision, remains as strong as ever. The 20 films selected we’ve selected below as the “best American indies of the 21st century thus far” all share this dedication of vision. Together they form a portrait of the state of American independent moviemaking today, and even of the United States, in all its multiplicity of identities and subcultures.

You Can Count on Me (2000)
Director: Kenneth Lonergan
Paramount Home Video, $14.99
Possessed with a remarkable sense of place, acclaimed playwright Lonergan’s debut film was marked by masterful performances from Laura Linney and Mark Ruffalo, and a deep understanding of the way family bonds simultaneously connect and suffocate. Along with many of the other films on this list (George Washington, In the Bedroom, Los Angeles Plays Itself), it serves as definitive proof that, like charity, artistry begins at home.

Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai (2000)
Director: Jim Jarmusch
Republic Studios, $9.98
Probably Jarmusch’s most underrated film, Ghost Dog is a distinctively offbeat take on the hitman subgenre. Forest Whitaker stars as a Mafia contract killer with a greater interest in reading Rashomon and observing the unusual life blooming everywhere around him than in murder. Not quite as towering as the director’s masterpiece, Dead Man, but an impressive achievement nonetheless.

Thomas Haden Church and Paul Giamatti hit the road in Alexander Payne’s Sideways (2004).

George Washington (2000)
Director: David Gordon Green
The Criterion Collection, $39.95
Another regionalist, whose fascination with the textures of Southern life matches Lonergan’s and Todd Field’s interest in New England, Green crafted a film more concerned with the sensation of simply being than with plot.

In the Bedroom (2001)
Director: Todd Field
Buena Vista Home Video, $29.99
This astoundingly assured tale of grief and murder is soaked in the minutiae of life in small-town New England: Red Sox games on the radio, late-summer sun, the daily toil of the fisherman’s life. Anchored by the brilliant Tom Wilkinson, In the Bedroom finds meaning in nuances like the imprint of a head on a rumpled pillow or the name on a passing truck. Field’s film is noteworthy as a movie with the patience to observe.

Waking Life (2001)
Director: Richard Linklater
Twentieth Century Fox Home Video, $9.98
Linklater has cobbled together one of the most impressive resumes of any American moviemaker working today, and one of the reasons why is his refusal to tie himself down to a specific genre or style. To say that Waking Life is an animated film is to summon up mental pictures of Mickey and Donald or, at best, Pixar’s family-friendly flicks. Here, he blows the doors off traditional animation to craft a highly personal, unabashedly literate commentary on the nature of consciousness. The film’s musings on dreams, ambition, cinematic theory and the like are amplified and extended by the jittery energy of the animated imagery.

Donnie Darko (2001)
Director: Richard Kelly
Twentieth Century Fox Home Video, $14.98
Without a doubt, the best indie-gonzo-science-fiction film about time travel ever made. Extra points for the giant bunny rabbit that makes occasional appearances, and for the astute use of ’80s musical gems like the Church’s “Under the Milky Way.”

The Royal Tenenbaums (2001)
Director: Wes Anderson
The Criterion Collection, $19.99
A more than worthy follow-up to the classic Rushmore, this film about a family of eccentric former child prodigies retains the quirky comic values of the earlier film without losing its melancholy romanticism. Anderson is the boy-whiz of American moviemaking, and shows no signs of letting up in his quest to be the greatest director of our era.

Ghost World (2001)
Director: Terry Zwigoff
MGM Home Video, $14.95
Based on the graphic novel by Daniel Clowes, Ghost World was a welcome dose of the reality of adolescence amongst the She’s All Thats. Zwigoff’s subtly heartbreaking film was an elaborate ode to geek culture that served as a worthy bookend to his brilliant 1994 documentary, Crumb.

Mulholland Drive (2001)
Director: David Lynch
Universal Studios, $14.98
An erruption of dream logic into the normally staid narratives of the American multiplex, Lynch’s film was, quite simply, the most original, mind-bending film of the year—and quite possibly the decade. Much like Waking Life, Mulholland Drive was a celebration of the irrational, the unusual and the uncanny, a cocktail of neo-noir sex and violence, or in the director’s own words, “a love story in the city of dreams.”

Jason Schwartzman and Jude Law search for the truth in David O. Russell’s I Heart Huckabees (2004)

Our Song (2001)
Director: Jim McKay
MGM Home Video, $14.95
A summer in the life of three Bronx teenagers, centered around the marching band they all play in. Like an urban minority version of Ghost World, Our Song limned the frustrations and desires of adolescence, painting an indelible portrait of girlhood in Giuliani-era New York.

Spellbound (2003)
Director: Jeffrey Blitz
Columbia Tri-Star, $19.95
Much like Hoop Dreams, with which it shares the honor of being the most novelistic documentary of its era, Blitz’s film about The National Spelling Bee pulled off the trick of being a film about a type of person (brilliant 13-year olds) as well as the specific children being followed. It is nearly impossible to sit through this film and not learn something about the nature of American childhood, immigrant dreams, parental ambitions for their children or any one of the myriad subjects this film effortlessly sweeps under its arm.

American Splendor (2003)
Directors: Shari Springer Berman & Robert Pulcini
HBO Video, $27.90
An artful amalgam of fact and fiction, live-action and animation, this study of nebbish comic master Harvey Pekar’s life brilliantly deconstructs the traditional biopic format, crafting a partially fictionalized Pekar who is somehow truer to the real Harvey than a more scrupulous film would have allowed. American Splendor also contains footnotes in the form of the real Pekar, whose occasional appearances serve as running commentary.

Elephant (2003)
Director: Gus Van Sant
New Line Cinema, $26.99
Van Sant in pointillist mode, going undercover at an average American high school and returning with a carefully etched portrait of adolescence in all its beauty and cruelty. Harris Savides’ crystal-clear photography and Van Sant’s eye for the offbeat loveliness of his actors adds up to one of the most ravishing—and ultimately disturbing—films of the past five years.

The Fog of War (2003)
Director: Errol Morris
Columbia Tri-Star, $26.96
Just a man alone in a room left to ponder the vagaries of history and the consequences of his actions. Morris’ feature-length interrogation of former defense secretary Robert McNamara is less a criminal prosecution than an illustrated tome on the disasters of war.

An Injury to One (2003)
Director: Travis Wilkerson
Currently Out of Print
Wilkerson’s angry political documentary is part history lesson, part polemic. It is also the best example of politically committed, personal moviemaking since the heyday of Chris Marker. In Wilkerson’s study of murdered union activist Frank Little lurks an entire century of struggles for the betterment of the American working classes and its flip side, the astounding rightward shift of blue-collar America.

Everyday People (2004)
Director: Jim McKay
Warner Home Video, $26.98
A day in the life of the workers at an iconic Brooklyn restaurant, McKay’s film is simply understated moviemaking about nothing much—just the hopes, anxieties and daily tribulations of a cross-section of New York City residents. As day passes into night in the film, its premise cracks wide open, revealing an infinite compassion for its lovingly crafted characters.

Los Angeles Plays Itself (2004)
Director: Thom Andersen
Currently Out of Print
Andersen’s little-seen documentary is a nearly three-hour tour through the cinematic history of Los Angeles. In contrast to the cynical illustrations of LA life found in such Angeleno masterpieces as Chinatown and LA Confidential, Los Angeles Plays Itself demands a greater respect for genuine history and reality as it is lived. The film is a crusade for greater political engagement, argued with as much wit, verve and intelligence as any film of the past few years. In the words of critic Mark Peranson, “the film is, finally, about the betrayal of the cinema in general with regard to our real lives.”

Sideways (2004)
Director: Alexander Payne
In Theaters at Press Time
Paul Giamatti is note-perfect in one of the funniest, most tender films ever made about male friendship. This unfiltered peek through the microscope at middle-aged, schlubby failure is, like The Royal Tenenbaums, a bittersweet bar of chocolate that will have you laughing with a tear in your eye.

Before Sunset (2004)
Director: Richard Linklater
Warner Home Video, $27.95
That passenger pigeon of the cinema, the artistically successful sequel, Linklater’s latest masterpiece revisits Celine and Jesse, the star-crossed lovers who spent a memorable day together in Vienna in 1995. Upping the ante here, the entirety of the film takes place in real time. Before Sunset celebrates the art of good conversation, renders the heartache of love as deeply as any film in recent memory and is a pocket symphony to the sheer loveliness of Paris. Is it safe to call it a masterpiece yet?

I Heart Huckabees (2004)
Director: David O. Russell
In Theaters at Press Time
Bashed by many critics as a reach, Russell’s film managed to encapsulate, in its messy, disheveled fashion, something of the essence of American life as we know it, circa now. Studying environmentalism, corporate shilling, consumerism, post-9/11 stress and French nihilism with the same jaundiced, winking eye, I Heart Huckabees has the brains to critique contemporary politics and society, and the heart to hope for better. “Shall I bring my own chains?,” one character asks another of a tree-hugging protest. “We always do.” MM


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MovieMaker Magazine

Magazine cover: Winter 2005This story was published in the Winter 2005 MovieMaker Magazine. The headline was:

Best American Indies of the New Century / Four Years Down, 20 Great Films to Watch

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Since 1987 Kodak has been the official partner of the Cannes Film Festival, sponsoring the Camera d’Or prize that is awarded yearly to the best feature film by a first-time director. The tradition continues in 2008 when, for the fifth consecutive year, the festival will also hand out the Kodak Discovery Prize for Best Short Film.

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