Best of 2011!Okay, to return to that topic, here are my faves for 2011:
BEST SILENT ON TV: LailaI know this was also a DVD release, but I watched this Norwegian outdoors drama on TCM and was quite enchanted. "Naive charm" seems the word for it, it's visually exciting yet sweet and endearing. More about it
here.
BEST TALKIE ON TV: The Story of Temple DrakeWell, I haven't actually watched it yet. But I'm excited to have this scandalous precode version of Faulkner's Sanctuary recorded and I'm sure it's going to be worth the very, very long wait (first read about it in the late 70s or early 80s, I'm sure). Better get on it before the TiVo wipes it, I guess...
BEST SILENT ON BLU-RAY: The Buster Keaton shorts from KinoThere are multiple candidates— and that in itself is cause for rejoicing— and I would nearly name The Phantom Carriage instead, a film I'm not even that fond of, but which looks
so good on blu-ray; People on Sunday would be another, surely. But let's face it, for sheer transcendent entertainment value, and the quality of the best prints in the set, this one is just delight from beginning to end, the greatest and most intellectual of comedians in his most adventurous and ingenious work... and his youth.
BEST TALKIE ON BLU-RAY: The Killing/Killer's KissHappy to have The Killing, a very good film, in such quality, but the real revelation, from spot-checking it, is Stanley Kubrick's borderline-amateur film Killer's Kiss, an exercise in style over budget in which every shot looks like his Look magazine photos. This is a case where I think stunning visual quality in blu-ray has made an entirely new film out of something which on other levels, is merely a good early try from someone of promise.
BEST SILENT ON DVD: Landmarks of Early Soviet Film/The Cigarette Girl of MosselpromSlowly the picture of Soviet film broadens beyond Eisenstein and dialectical montage. These two releases— the first from Flicker Alley and containing films like The Extraordinary Adventures of Mr. West in the Land of the Bolsheviks and The House on Trubnaya Street, the second from Kino— join titles such as Bed and Sofa, Outskirts, Miss Mend and others in doing that good work. Now we just wait for that Eclipse Fedor Ozep set...
BEST TALKIES ON DVD: Laurel & Hardy Essential CollectionThe perfect Laurel & Hardy set, perhaps not quite, not that I think they ever needed perfection the way Keaton (with his visual grace) or Lloyd (with his prosperously middle-class production values) do, but a relief and joy to have in good shape after so long, absolutely. If you disagree, allow me to play my kids' laughter over the phone for you as they watch them.
BEST LIVE PERFORMANCE OF A SILENT: Lord Jim, CinesationMany candidates this year, including Mont Alto playing for Sunrise in Chicago and the Music Box's presentation of Clash of the Wolves with Dennis Scott on organ and Susan Orlean in attendance, but what made this one stand out was 1) it was a film unknown to me which completely impressed as a serious and grownup adaptation of the Conrad novel, and 2) usually Phil Carli gets to play these pounding exotic-location melodramas, but Ben Model got this one and delivered every bit as fine a performance (and likewise on The Cop, for which he played proto-noir silent piano).