My Top 10 Films of 2023 of 2023

My Top 10 Films of 2023 of 2023

No more schlock.

That’s the promise I made myself. I had a lot of growing up to do this year, and one way I had to get that done was going to the movies less. So I made the decision that franchise schlock was not worth going to the theaters. Guardians of the Galaxy 3? It’ll come to Disney+. Fast X? Nah, that one’s getting pirated. Barbie?

Okay, well, I had to see Barbie.

But that was my strategy. Fewer movies overall, more focus on movies I’m actually interested in. I’m not obligated to see anything. That sounds basic, but after 7 years of doing these lists, I’d started to lose sight of why I enjoy it.

And then I got over it. By the end of the year it wound up being smarter to reactivate my Regal Unlimited pass.
Overall, I feel this has been a promising year for the state of movies after a few scares. Distributors have finally realized that releasing direct to streaming is as effective as burning money. Superhero movies are finally beginning to look like a passing fad. One of the biggest box office sensations was a historical biopic mostly consisting of government workers holding meetings. As long as no more of the big producers buy up any of the others we should be good to- oh no.

My Top 30 Music Videos of 2023

My Top 30 Music Videos of 2023

Kenneth Anger passed away in May this year. The director is probably most well-known for the 1963 experimental short Scorpio Rising, a film about neo-Nazi bikers set entirely to a soundtrack of contemporary pop music. I discovered it in a film class over 50 years later, and I can tell you it’s still a hit among the film students of today.

Scorpio Rising can be seen as a predecessor to the modern concept of the music video. The songs are the focus of the soundtrack, uninterrupted by dialogue, and interact with the visuals to tell a more complex story than the audio or visuals could alone. A classmate of mine who took the same class that screened Scorpio Rising made an observation I found insightful: If we call Scorpio Rising both an experimental film and a proto-music video, that means music videos are in fact the current general-audience version of experimental film. Experimental film is more popular now than ever.

I think there’s been a clear elevation of music videos as an artform recently that speaks to that. I don’t recall seeing directors so prominently credited on music videos 15 years ago. The most recent winners of the Oscar for Best Directing were previously best known as music video directors, and while the music video to feature film career trajectory is nothing new, their work is definitely discussed differently than, say, David Fincher’s.

This year, I decided to put the theory into practice and dive deep into the world of music videos. My goal, in addition to discovering more music, was to explore the artform on its own terms. All the caveats I mentioned in my albums list last week apply. I am most likely an easily impressed neophyte, but I have to start somewhere.

My Favorite Albums of 2023

This list is mostly a side effect of next week’s. I’m usually pretty bad at keeping up with new music releases, and when I do I’m (1) not at all adventurous and (2) more interested in singles than albums. Maybe I’m part of the problem.

I think the way I engage with music is closer to how normal people engage with film. I know what I like. I stay in my lane. Most of my analysis comes down to “I liked it” or “I didn’t like it.”

In other words, I am out of my depth! With my film lists, I like to think that I can speak to that subject with some amount of weight. I would never tell anyone they’re wrong for disagreeing with me that, for example, Tár is the best film of last year, but I could put together a decent argument that it is. I have no such delusion of authority here. Part of my brain is screaming that I shouldn’t bother. But it’s my blog! I can share some stuff I liked!

My Top 10 Films of 2022 of 2022

The word of the year is “maximalism.”

As we begin to refer to the pandemic in the past tense and crowds return to theaters (a rebuke of 2021’s conventional wisdom that the industry is a relic, as much as the distributors seem intent on ignoring that), the shows on display appear determined to remind audiences why the theatrical experience is necessary. Big screens deserve big movies. And this year’s movies went big. Among the multitude of “love letters to the cinema” we were subjected to this year, the prevailing sense seems to be that if the theaters have to die, they’ll go out with a bang. Even the sequel to the Agatha Christie knockoff turned up the spectacle.

Some years I’m excited to sit down and make this list because I have no idea what will wind up at the top. That was not the case this year. The hardest part was figuring out which movie squeaks in at #10. But the more I’ve sat with this list over the last week, the better I feel about it. This is a quality batch, and I hope you make time for one or two that might be new to you.

My Top Games of 2022 of 2022

This started as a top X video games post, like I used to do when I played video games regularly. I like to do these write-ups regardless of how much I have to say about new releases. It’s tradition at this point, sure, but mainly I find it valuable to organize my thoughts about video games and my evolving relationship to them. Video games used to be my life. This year, according to my Backloggd, the number of games I played eligible for this list barely broke double digits.

In other words, I didn’t put away enough this year to justify ranking them. I’ve been finding it harder and harder to squeeze as much artistic fulfillment from video games as I now get from films. Kirby and the Forgotten Land is a decently enjoyable time waster, but I can’t shake the feeling timewaster is all it is. I’m never going to think about it again.

But I do still think about Outer Wilds regularly. And Sayonara Wild Hearts, and the Persona series, and Death Stranding in its own weird way. It’s not that there’s no artistic gratification in games, it’s that I am failing to find them. (Maybe I should get into the interactive fiction scene. They seem like they’re having a good time.)

So when there is a game, even one game, that completely reinvigorates my interest in interactive storytelling, that alone justifies publishing thist list. Here are the games that have been on my mind the most this year. For all six I explain why they’re worth your time. For five, in case you’re as busy as me, I give you an excuse to skip them.