Jim Hubbard of American Film Renaissance, who runs the AFR film festival, has released his organization's poll of conservative film critics and industry insiders:
BEST         FILMS of 2005
       
        1. Cinderella Man 138
        2. The Chronicles of Narnia 106
        3. Walk the Line 75
        4. Crash 70
        5. Downfall 67
        6. Pride and Prejudice 58
        (Tie) Batman Begins 58
        8. Capote 48
        (Tie) The World's Fastest Indian 48
        10. King Kong 44
       
        BEST DOCUMENTARIES
       
        1. March of the Penguins 71
        2. Grizzly Man 49
        3. Mad Hot Ballroom 27
        4. Enron: Smartest Guys in the Room 21
        5. Murderball 14
A good list, but         it's hard to avoid the conclusion that, from any political perspective,         2005 was a fallow year for films.
       
        I haven't seen "World's Fastest Indian," with Sir Anthony         Hopkins as a motorcycle speed record setter, but the trailer with Sir         Anthony's helmeted head skidding across the Bonneville Salt Flats to the         accompaniment of The Clash's version of "Police on My Back"         looks great. It's certainly an appropriate role for Sir Anthony, who,         due to his superb diction, has been stuck for decades playing highbrows         even though in real life his main cultural interest is 1960s American         muscle cars.
       
        Here's the Top Ten list I submitted at ARF's request:
1.         "2046"         -- Probably my favorite movie of the year, with sexy, glamorous         performances from Tony Leung and Zhang Ziyi, gorgeous cinematography by         Christopher Doyle ("Hero"), and a terrific soundtrack         assembled by director Wong Kar-Wai.
       
        2. "The         March of the Penguins" 
         
         3. "Head-On"         -- Deracinated Turkish immigrants in Germany re-enact "Sid and         Nancy." So, that's assimilation?
        
        4. "Kiss Kiss Bang Bang" -- Brilliant screenplay and         performances in my favorite genre
       
        5. "Millions"         -- Snazzy little family movie about a very religious little boy who         finds a duffel bag full of cash.
       
        6. "Junebug"         -- A semi-comedy ensemble effort in which a Chicago yuppie takes his         cosmopolitan bride to visit his downscale family in North Carolina.         Insightful and surprisingly sympathetic to all sides.
       
        7. "Yes"         -- Yes, "Yes" is in rhyming iambic pentameter couplets.
       
        8. "Crash"         -- Too contrived to be a great movie, but a contrivance of a high order.         And if Matt Dillon doesn't win the Best Supporting Actor Oscar ...
       
        9. "The Squid and the Whale" -- It's past time for Jeff         Daniels, as egomaniacal novelist Jonathan Baumbach, to get his first         Oscar nomination.
       
        10.  "Walk         on Water" -- Israeli comedy-drama about a Mossad agent who has         to pretend to be a tour guide for a New Agey German tourist so he can         locate and murder the tourist's 100 year old Nazi grandfather.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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