One of two in a series.
Many things in 2007 were good. These are some of the most good bits.
Ratatouille
As has been said elsewhere, it’s really nice that once a year, Pixar puts out a movie, and the best case scenario is that it’s a timeless classic and the worst case scenario is that it’s just a really good, fun little movie. Ratatouille is firmly in the middle ground of Pixar releases – better than Cars or A Bug’s Life, but not as fully realized as The Incredibles or Toy Story 2. (Which makes it only about ten times as good as most movies at a bare minimum.) Brad Bird – a likely candidate for the best animation director alive, and yes, I’m counting Hayao Miyazaki when I say that – brings a relatively simple story of a rat-turned-chef to life with a minimum of fuss, a wonderful turn from Peter O’Toole and a sweet, widely applicable moral.
Civilization IV: Beyond The Sword
The deepest computer strategy game there is – period – gets its second extension, and god, what more can they pack in if they decide to create a third expansion pack as rumoured? A ton of clever new mods, new units, the addition of corporations and advanced espionage rules, a crapload of new civilizations (including the Dutch, Sumerians, Byzantines and the Holy Roman Empire – but, sadly, no Canada), and of course the chance to play as Abraham fucking Lincoln. The game just keeps getting deeper and more complex with every expansion, and the best bit is that the learning curve can be as slight or as tough as you want. And it’s so deeply moddable a game – if I were inclined to mod games, this would be it. Civ IV as applied to the Wheel of Time world? As applied to Tolkien? Heck, even Eddings. (Eddings wouldn’t be hard, you’d just take the appropriate equivalent existing civilizations and change the names.)
The Immortal Iron Fist
Unlike, for example, Chris Sims, I have no particular fetish for the curious remnants of 1970s Marvel comics, and I had no expectations of an Iron Fist series. The man wore slippers for god’s sake, little yellow kung-fu booties. He kicked people, which in and of itself is not really that amazing or impressive. (I mean, Karate Kid kicks people, and just look at Countdown.) In short: a third-tier superhero with a small, dwindling fanbase is, generally speaking, not something about which I really look forward to reading. But then Matt Fraction and Ed Brubaker decided they wanted to write a complete kung fu epic, only really tangentially related to the Marvel Universe, and they got superb art from David Aja and a host of others, and thankfully they got rid of the booties. The result is quite simply the best superhero comic available at present: a non-angst-ridden story-driven work, stuffed to the buns with top-quality action, a wealth of backstory applied smartly, and whip-smart dialogue. And again: it’s Iron Fist. Who woulda thunk?
Don’t Mess With The Dragon by Ozomatli
Their best album so far, and when you’re dealing with a band with a discography like Ozomatli’s that is no small thing to say. Some music critics dismissed the album as “admirable, but unfocused.” This is Music Critic for “not all of the songs sound the same so I have trouble writing up the album in one paragraph. Please make all of your songs sound kind of alike.” Ozomatli cannot do this, though, partially because they are a nine-piece band, but mostly because they are simply too damned awesome, with their melange of funk, hip-hop, salsa, rock and jazz fusing together into an improbable, wondrous whole. And as a bonus, this is far and away their most danceable album yet.
“30 Rock”
Quite possibly the funniest television show of the new millennium – all the sharp, venomous wit of Arrested Development combined with the quotability of the best seasons of The Simpsons and a surprising amount of heart to boot, and topped off with performances that any other show would kill simply to have one of. In most shows, Judah Friedlander’s fat nerd writer would be the go-to joke character; in 30 Rock, he’s not even in the top three, not when you have Tina Fey and Alec Baldwin and – I can’t believe I’m typing this – Tracy Morgan, who prior to this was my second-least-favourite SNLer of all time (beaten out only by the truly talentless Horatio Sanz). But especially Alec Baldwin, who finally gets to display the savage comic ability that was only hinted at by his numerous guest appearances on SNL, and who should be on this show for the rest of his natural life if they can manage it.
Air Guitar Nation
Everybody making best-of movie lists this year gives the nerd-doc props to The King Of Kong (and understandably), but by god do not overlook Air Guitar Nation, which like that other doc works the “competition” storyline by having one rock-steady hero (the incomparable C-Diddy) and one egomaniacal ass (the deeply strangleworthy Bjorn Turoque), who are both extremely good at what they do. The fact that what they do is cavort around on stage rocking an imaginary guitar is at first hilarious, but then eventually becomes life-affirming and wonderful (and hilarious), and when the film progresses to the World Championships of Air Guitar, somewhere in rural Finland (no, really), and the crowds cheer for the devoted air guitarists – well, it is entirely possible that a small portion of Heaven is like this. A fairly weird portion. But a portion.
Team Fortress 2
When it comes to the Orange Box, Portal understandably gets all the hype, because it’s clever and original and funny. But Portal only lasts a few hours. The real meat of the Orange Box comes with the involving, easy-to-learn-but-hard-to-master online gameplay of Team Fortress 2, a game with animation and visual design reminiscent of The Incredibles and a sense of humour from, well, pretty much the same place (the Heavy Weapons Guy’s pseudo-Slavic commentary alone is worth the price of admission, but don’t discount the Scout’s Bronx taunts, the high-pitched German screaming of the Medic, or the muffled yells of the Pyro – because the Pyro wears a mask, you see). The gameplay is simple and elegant, and always extremely easy to follow: “snapshots” freeze-framing the guy who killed you not only help you identify who killed you but help newcomes get an idea of how. Plus, they helpfully label the pieces of your dead body when you get gibbed.
“Kings of New York: A Year Among the Geeks, Oddballs, and Geniuses Who Make Up America’s Top High School Chess Team” by Michael Weinreb
Recommended particularly for nerds, and I estimate my readers are, oh, ninety-eight percent or so nerds. (Wave your freak flag high.) Even if you aren’t a chess fiend particularly (and I, personally, am at best an average player – although if we’re talking speed doubles chess, that’s different strokes right there), this book will resonate, because – come on – it’s about nerds surviving high school by doing their own thing. It’s just that in this case, “their own thing” wins them big-ass trophies.
Killer of Sheep
I first saw Killer of Sheep when I was 20, taking an American Cinema course. The prof had a bootleg copy, which is how I got the rare chance to see a movie that, though made in 1977, only got released this year due to conflicts over the music rights. Killer of Sheep is amazing – a lot of people liken it to Italian neorealist cinema like The Bicycle Thief, but I always thought of it as having a more Cassavetes sort of a feel, despite the film’s essential lack of continuous narrative – it’s bleak and honest but doesn’t lack heart, and indeed I would argue it almost has more because of that bleakness. It’s on DVD along with Burnett’s second feature and a number of his shorts, which are likewise brilliant. Rent or buy, either way.
The video for “1234” by Feist
The song alone would qualify for this list, but the video is the sort of thing that births superstars – delightful low-fi wonderment, relying on showmanship and pure filmmaking skill to pull off (trust me when I say that I can tell the focus pulling for the shoot was nightmarishly difficult just by looking at it), and effortlessly communicating sheer joy in a way that isn’t entirely common, to say the least. A thousand thousand high school girls just got their first girl-on-girl musician crush this year because of this video. (Tori Amos would be proud.)
The Spirit
Step 1: Get Darwyn Cooke to write and draw something.
Step 2: Fuck yeah.
Bioshock
A perfectly excellent first-person shooter, notable for both the character improvement system imported from the old (and fantastic) System Shock games, and the gorgeous, completely immersive 1940s Art Deco-ish visual design, brought to life with graphics both gorgeous and surprisingly interactive. (The opening, where your plane crashes in the middle of the ocean, and you get to swim around as you watch it sink – amazing.) Oh, and of course there’s the fact that the main plot boils down to “Atlas Shrugged, except it all goes wrong and people become zombies.” I am honest enough to admit that the game’s hearty “fuck you, Ayn Rand” ethos tickles me greatly.
Yau Man on Survivor: Fiji
Yau Man was easily the coolest player to come along in quite a while on Survivor – a canny late-fifties math teacher with a knack for practical survival and for playing the game to a brilliant inch. Plus, he was funny. Unfortunately, Yau Man made the critical mistake of thinking that somebody named “Dreamz” was intelligent enough to realize when he had precisely zero shot at winning the game outright, or that giving “Dreamz” a car would be incentive enough for the jackass to walk away happy rather than compromise his much-vaunted integrity in the hopes of winning a million dollars he would never actually win. On the bright side, the next season of Survivor, starting in February, is a “hardcore fans versus top Survivors” show, and you have to bet that Yau Man qualifies as a top Survivor – if he wants to go for a second round, that is. Yau Man might not, because he’s just that cool.
Upcoming: The stuff that did suck.
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Thanks for the reminders…
*Adds Feist and The Spirit to Things to Get list*
I think you ranked not one, but two SNL cast members lower than Jimmy Fallon. I cannot understand this.
“Who woulda thunk?” I woulda–I picked up the Essential Iron Fist, as part of my general philosophy that big cheap volumes of black-and-white comics are worth buying on general principles, and I was amazed at how damn good it was. This isn’t 70s nostalgia talking, either; I didn’t read ‘Power Man and Iron Fist’, had no particular interest in the character, and just grabbed it off the shelf more or less at random.
But it rocks. Roy Thomas starts the whole thing off, kicking it old-school (because Roy Thomas has a mad love for the pulps), and then you get Chris Claremont and John Byrne writing and drawing it (because this was back in the days when ‘Uncanny X-Men’ was still a bi-monthly title, and so those two had tons of free time), which is why this is where Sabretooth made his first appearance, back before he became overused, and then you get a letter-perfect X-Men guest appearance, then some Claremont/Byrne Marvel Team-Up issues that rock, and then the first meeting of Power Man and Iron Fist, which is one of the best moments in comic book history. (Luke Cage has been coerced into kidnapping Iron Fist’s girlfriend. He subdues her, feeling horrible for doing so, then behind him, this light flares up in the darkness–the Iron Fist. Danny just says, “Mister Cage? Turn around,” and proceeds to hit him so hard he goes out through the wall, and then through the wall of the building across the street, which collapses on him.)
So, in short, Iron Fist totally rocks and it was just a matter of time before we got another good Iron Fist series.
Nice job with Yau-Man. However, I’m not that hard on Dre. I didn’t think he was stupid…I just thought of him as the flightiest player ever. If Rob Cesternino was able to plan five days in advance, then Dre couldn’t think five minutes into the future. The only bright side of Yau biting it? It paved the way for Earl Cole, a very cool customer himself, to become the first winner to receive all votes. And after putting up with the likes of Lisi, Mookie and Rocky, I’d say us fans were the real winners.
The bad news: from what I’ve heard — and I’m not the sort to dive into spoiler threads — the “favorites” aren’t exactly going to be that good. I heard Rocky might show up, as well as James (aka Rupert 2.0, if you measure how much Probst swings from his jock). You want Yau Man? Apparently, he rejected an offer to come back. Instead, you might have to settle for Cao Boi in the “older Asian guy” role, instead of the less dopey Bruce, who at least made the merge during his season. Oh, and I heard Stephanie would be getting a third shot at the $1 million. Personally, I felt she lost a lot of goodwill during Survivor: Guatemala. I’d make a push for Bobby Jon, since 1. he didn’t get eliminated in a conventional manner either time, and 2. He’s nuts, but it’s a fun kind of nuts. Remember when he and Jamie nearly came to blows? Good times. I wanted Day 39 to end with no tribal council…just Bobby Jon and Jamie in a steel cage, wrestling in grits while “Sweet Home Alabama” played in the background.
I’ve been in need of a worthy Civ4 opponent…
Track me down if you’d like to get an online game going sometime.
Don’t forget.. Flash Gordon came to DVD.
Two things: First, I can tell you right goddamned now what they can still put into Civ 4 — an improved diplomacy model that checks similar government models and weighs them at LEAST as strongly as it does similar religions, a UN that isn’t a fucking afterthought that you can call on your own, specify the motion to be voted on, see where everyone’s voting and then contact individual leaders and try to get them to change their votes, and a unit workshop where your techs discover new weapons or transportation and you get to mix and match them.
In other words, there’s still shit they had working in Alpha Centauri that Civ 4 is failing to do, and that’s unacceptable to me.
Second thing: Yau’s in the next season of Survivor. He’s been on the leaked lists of returning All-Stars and also he’s a semi-regular on the Something Awful forums… or was, until he suddenly dropped out of sight for no apparent reason about two weeks after the last season started.
Andy…well, here’s hoping. The bad news would be that he’d get the same treatment Rob Cesternino got and get voted out at the first opportunity. From what I heard, the cast will be announced on January 3.
Nope, don’t like leslie feist much
[…] Many things in 2007 were good. These, unfortunately, are not some of them. […]
“Brad Bird – a likely candidate for the best animation director alive”
After The Incredibles, I’ve felt that he’s the best American director alive, forget the animation marginalization.
New Survivor cast revealed. I barely remember some of the women. Ticked that Twila and Ian didn’t make it, pissed that Jon Dalton has been brought back…but thrilled about the returns of Cirie, Jonathan, and Yau-Man.