100 The
Devil Wears Prada (David Frankel, 2006)
Meryl Streep begins her own populist career reinvention (soon to be followed
by Mamma Mia!) by playing a tyrannical and thinly disguised version of Vogue
editor Anna Wintour in this satirical yet soft-centered account of life
among the fashionistas.
99 Battle Royale (Kinji Fukasaku, 2000)
The worst school kids in Japan are dumped on an island, fitted with exploding
neckbraces, equipped with weapons and told to fight it out between
themselves. Deliberately lacking in PC credentials but ultimately, it’s a
provocative and challenging film.
98 Crash
(Paul Haggis, 2004)
This surprise Oscar champ of 2004 inspired myriad syrupy “We are all, like,
totally connected” imitators (see The Air I Breathe), and yet the savvy
narrative chicanery and superlative performances (including Sandra Bullock’s
racist housewife) lift this LA-set ensemble far above the crowd.
97 Sympathy
for Lady Vengeance (Park Chan-Wook, 2005)
The third of Park Chan-Wook’s fervid, savage revenge trilogy, Lady Vengeance
ends with a sombre acknowledgement of the futility of revenge. But not
before buckets of blood have been spilt.
96 Morvern
Callar (Lynne Ramsay, 2002)
One of Scotland’s most acclaimed and offbeat filmmakers, Ramsay (Ratcatcher)
here transforms Alan Warner’s cult novel into a thing of woozy, meditative
beauty. Samantha Morton stars, in the title role, as the emotionally
withdrawn checkout girl who profits from her boyfriend’s suicide.
95 Amores Perros (Alejandro Gonz?lez Iñ?rritu, 2000)
This smouldering powder keg of a movie launched a new generation of Mexican
talent. Gael Garcia Bernal stars in the first of three stories which are
linked together by a shattering car crash.
94 An
Inconvenient Truth (Davis Guggenheim, 2006)
A user-friendly slideshow about global warming, combined with a revealing
personal profile of presenter Al Gore, becomes a box office behemoth, an
Oscar winner, and a brand leader for all future eco docs.
93 House
of Flying Daggers (Zhang Yimou, 2004)
Probably the most satisfying of the big budget martial arts crossover movies
of the past decade, it combined ridiculously ambitious action set pieces
with lush, colour-saturated imagery.
92 Dirty
Pretty Things (Stephen Frears, 2002)
A Nigerian doctor (Chiwetel Ejiofor) in London double-jobs as a cab driver and
hotel porter while uncovering an illegal trade in human organs. This quietly
polemical work humanises the immigration debate.
91 Lantana
(Ray Lawrence, 2001)
This intelligent drama is so much more than a murder mystery — it’s an
impeccably acted exploration of human relations at their trickiest.
Meticulously constructed and rewardingly realist in tone.
90 Wedding
Crashers (David Dobkin, 2005)
It could’ve been a frat-boy sex comedy but Wedding Crashers achieves that
miraculous balance of crude and cute, wild and witty. Two charismatic
central turns help, from Owen Wilson and Vince Vaughn, playing the eponymous
cads with sex on the brain but romance on the cards.
89 School
of Rock (Richard Linklater, 2003)
This boisterous love letter to loud guitars and three-chord choruses
represents the last good performance from star Jack Black. It’s an
irrepressible ode to the joy of power-chords played by grown men in PVC
trousers.
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