Leif-isms…

The world through my eyes.

Movie Review: Up (2009)

As is becoming a fun annual tradition, I ran right out to see the newest effort from Pixar on opening weekend. I actively avoided previews, instead just trusting that Pixar would come up with another film that would almost certainly range from being watchable at worst (think Cars) to fantastic at best (Finding Nemo is only the greatest animated film of all time). This is really quite a phenomenon…it’s easy to imagine going out to see every movie put out by an actor (Ed Norton) or a director (Coens), but a production company? It would sound kind of silly to say, “Oh hey, Miramax has a movie coming out, we have to see that.” Pixar has earned it, though, with such a consistently great track record…and they came through once again with Up. In a pretty big way, I’d say. I place this one in the upper half of the Pixar catalog, and Pete Docter has definitely topped his last directorial effort, Monsters, Inc.

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May 29, 2009 Posted by wsuleifj | Entertainment, Movies | | No Comments Yet

I actually turned on MTV the other day.

I detest MTV. Most of the time, it’s trashy television at its worst and contributes nothing positive to society. There was a day that I liked it, though…and during my first couple of years of college, I was definitely a fan of the animated series Daria. When I was flipping channels the other day, I was scanning the on-screen program guide, and saw Daria: Is It Fall Yet? playing on MTV. I couldn’t help it…for the first time in nearly 10 years, I turned my television to MTV.

I loved Daria. The snark, the acerbic wit, the dark but clever main character…it suited my sense of humor perfectly. I enjoyed tuning into it again this many years later too, but one line really took the cake.

Daria’s friend Jane, unhappy about things at home, heads to art camp for the summer. She turns out to have a negative experience there as well. As Daria meets up with her and they get ready to head back home, Jane bucks up and says, “Anyway, it’s just another two weeks and then we’ll be back at school! Wait…what’s my point?” Daria responds in her usual monotonous voice: “That life sucks no matter what, so don’t be fooled by location changes.

I laughed for a minute straight. A line like that is exactly what I need to hear right before the location change that I’m so excited about.

May 27, 2009 Posted by wsuleifj | Miscellaneous, Personal | | No Comments Yet

Update – one month until quitting day.

This being May 18th, I’ve got exactly one month to go before my last day of work.

I’ve been lacking for content to post about lately. I largely dealt with a lot of moving stuff last month, I got my moving dates set and all of that, and moving logistics don’t make for great writing or reading material anyway. I dread the move itself anyway, so I’d rather not spend more time pondering how “fun” it’s going to be to pack and unpack my stuff.

Still, only 19 more working days to go, and only 32 days total until I depart for Bloomington. I’m sufficiently excited.

May 18, 2009 Posted by wsuleifj | Law School, Personal | | No Comments Yet

For what it’s worth…

I just scrolled back through my Office episode recaps from this season. I didn’t read any of them in full, but I got a sense from each one. It appears that I gave 15 positive reviews and 8 negative reviews. Not terrible. That’s better than most shows would boast if I bothered to follow them closely, 24 is probably the only one that might have a better ratio. I’m a tough critic, after all.

By the way, I’m a casual fan of the show Bones. By “casual fan,” I mean that at no point until I see it pop up on my DVR do I ever actually look FORWARD to the show, but it makes me happy when I see that my DVR has picked up a new one, and I don’t miss many episodes. It’s probably a half notch below Friday Night Lights for me on the “casual fan” scale. The Bones season finale was tonight, and was probably the worst episode I’ve ever seen of that show. Absolutely horrendous. Like…”I don’t know if I’ll bother to tell my DVR to pick it up anymore once I set my new cable up in Indiana” type of horrendous. I’m glad The Office didn’t do any shark-jumping like that. I still didn’t like tonight’s show very much though.

May 14, 2009 Posted by wsuleifj | Entertainment, Television | | No Comments Yet

The Office season finale: “Company Picnic”

***full spoilers, of course***

Weakest season finale since season 1, without a doubt. It wasn’t terrible or anything, it had its entertaining moments, but it hardly felt like a finale. The return of Holly led to absolutely nothing, and now we’re supposed to believe that Pam is pregnant, and that they discovered it when they were checking to see how badly her ankle was injured? Why the heck would they have done a pregnancy test? They left themselves some room for her to not be pregnant, since they never explicitly said it, but I can’t imagine what else would explain what we were shown.

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May 14, 2009 Posted by wsuleifj | Entertainment, Television, The Office | | No Comments Yet

My motivation to run.

I enjoy going for walks. I like the activity, I like the time for reflection, I like listening to music.

I hate running. Hate it. It’s nothing but a miserable means to an end. Is there a feeling of satisfaction afterward, amidst the sweat and generally gross feeling that accompanies it? Yeah, there is…the feeling of having done something productive is always kind of nice. It doesn’t, however, counteract the misery of running…so I stand by my hatred of it.

With that said, when it comes time to put some exercise in (and I do have myself on a decent regimen of doing it 6 days a week), I choose running almost every time. Why? Well, that’s simple…laziness. Obviously on the surface that’s a bit counterintuitive, since walking is the lazier activity; however, I’d rather spend half the time getting my exercise, so I can get back to sitting on my butt, watching TV or surfing the web or whatever. That, and I push myself hard when I run…whereas when I walk, I tend to take a more leisurely pace.

Obviously if you read this blog, you know that I’m not exactly the “oh, I’ll just make lemonade out of those lemons” type…I don’t tell myself any platitudes or look on some hard-to-find bright side in order to enjoy exercising. Exercise is an activity that I do in order to get done with it. So, I run. If you see me out running, don’t admire my work ethic; I promise you, I’m doing it purely out of laziness.

And on the positive note of sitting on my butt and staring at a box…I’m really looking forward to the season finale of The Office tonight.

May 14, 2009 Posted by wsuleifj | Miscellaneous, Personal | | No Comments Yet

The Office: “Cafe Disco”

There was absolutely no point to tonight’s episode. Still, by about the 20 minute mark I found myself really enjoying it. Ed Helms was the show-stealer again…Andy is becoming maybe the funniest character on the show, and it’s because Helms’ comic talents are so diverse. His dance-off with Kelly was fantastic. Dwight had the best line with “You can’t steal what is legally your property.” I enjoyed Angela throughout this episode, first trying to drag Kevin out then having to put up with hanging out at the Disco. And Pam, by the way, has never looked better.

They did basically nothing to set up next week’s season finale (disappointingly only a 30 minute episode this year), and it wasn’t one of the amazing episodes of the season…but it was good. Fun to see the whole cast get a chance to shine.

It’s a little odd that we have no loose plot ends to make us anticipate the finale as strongly as we have in previous years. I would’ve thought that Jim and Pam eloping might’ve been a possibility, but they pretty much erased that tonight by teasing then dismissing it. A Michael/Holly reunion is the only thing from the season that I would logically expect to see. This being the finale though, I fully expect they have a surprise or two in store for us. These writers always provide us with a strong close to their seasons.

May 7, 2009 Posted by wsuleifj | Entertainment, Television, The Office | | No Comments Yet

Kind of a funny story from before I committed to IU.

I’ve always subscribed to the theory that you shouldn’t put anything online that you’re not comfortable with anyone in the world seeing. As such, I always make sure to be careful about what I post on my blogs, my Facebook page, etc. Thankfully, I really don’t have much to hide, so I can be something of an open book on here (there’s a lot of freedom in just being honest as often as possible in life)…but if nothing else, I make an effort to keep my language clean and to not say anything that might give potential future employers (or anyone else) pause. A couple of months ago, I got reminded exactly why I bother to take these measures.

About a week before my trip to Bloomington, when I officially committed to IU, I got an e-mail from a name I didn’t recognize with the subject line “Indiana Law.” Read more »

May 4, 2009 Posted by wsuleifj | Law School | | 3 Comments

My Top 50 Movies: 2009 Edition

The top of this list will look a lot like last year’s edition. Once you get down to the halfway point though, a lot changes…some movies didn’t make last year’s list due to gross oversights on my part, some were movies I viewed for the first time since then. Three movies that hit theaters  last year made the list, and I’ll say this up front…sorry, but The Dark Knight managed to come up a couple of spots short. 13 of the 50 movies are new to the list, for varying reasons.

The most precipitous drops came courtesy of What About Bob and The Sixth Sense; both were in the top 25 on last year’s list, and fell all the way out of the top 50 this year. Sadly, I was hit with discoveries in the past year that both movies have hit their shelf life and are no longer holding up to repeat viewings. Still good movies, but they’re scoring most of their points by being sentimental favorites of their time, rather than currently great movies that hold up today. The same can be said for The Rock, which dropped from #33 to #68 on my extended list. I’ll only bother to comment on the top 50, but will leave the whole top 100 list out there for a reference of other movies I hold in high regard.
The biggest jumps on the list belong to Harvey and The Remains of the Day, both movies I watched again during the last year and found myself loving more than ever. For a third or fourth viewing of a movie to convince you to like it that much better…well, I think it’s safe to say that those movies are going to stick around on my list for a while.
1. The Godfather (1972)
Previously ranked at #1
Most underappreciated performance: Robert Duvall. I know he gets credit for the performance, got an Oscar nomination as well, but it’s primarily Brando and Pacino that get the talk, and Duvall was really the straw that stirred the drink as the sleazy but likable lawyer for the Corleone family. Note that I just took the easy way out and argued for the most underappreciated performance; don’t even put me through the torture of naming the all-around best performance in this one.
2. The Godfather Part II (1974)
Previously ranked at #2
Best scene: so many to choose from, but I have to go with Michael and Fredo in the boathouse. Michael coldly telling his brother that he’s nothing to him now made for an amazing moment. I instantly feel bad for not mentioning like 10 other scenes at this point though, so let’s move on.
3. The Shawshank Redemption (1994)
Previously ranked at #3
Most emotional moment: again, insanely difficult to choose just one, but Brooks’ final scene takes the cake for me. From the amazing perspective you get from “I saw an automobile once when I was a kid,” to the very sympathetic “not for an old crook like me”…Lloyd Bridges really puts his stamp on this movie.
4. Pulp Fiction (1994)
Previously ranked at #6
As a film snob, I rarely want to give that much credit to movies that don’t intellectually stimulate you…but Quentin Tarantino is great enough to break that wall down for me. You sit for two hours, you learn nothing, and you have a great time. I can’t feel that way about a movie with a bunch of stupid car chases, but Tarantino’s flicks are just amazingly entertaining, and Pulp Fiction is his opus. The dark comedic script here is just brilliant, and I’ve never seen better work out of Samuel L. Jackson or John Travolta.
5. Meet Joe Black (1998 )
Previously ranked at #5
I’ve praised this film ad nauseum already, have devoted a past blog entry to undoubtedly my favorite scene in it (when Joe visits old Jamaican woman in the hospital), but let me put in a word for Thomas Newman’s brilliant score for the film. I don’t know if I can place it at the level of his work for The Shawshank Redemption, but it’s in the same ballpark. The emotional high points in this movie, and there are many, wouldn’t pack nearly as much punch without the greatness of Thomas Newman.
6. As Good as It Gets (1997)
Previously ranked at #4
Best non-funny sequence in the movie: “I tell you, buddy…I’d be the luckiest guy alive if that did it for me.” Any weirdo can fall for a pretty woman who brings him food, but for the obsessive compulsive xenophobe that started the movie to be offering shelter to his former gay neighbor in a time of need, that was really the pinnacle of Melvin Udall’s character transformation. The romance in this movie is unbelievable enough that I just can’t get that invested in it; it’s the comic genius and the character arcs of Melvin and Simon that really make this one of my favorite movies of all time.
9/10
7. The Usual Suspects (1995)
Previously ranked at #8
Best supporting character: Todd Hockney. Kevin Spacey carries this show with his narration from the police department, and is certainly the biggest reason that this movie is as great as it is…but amongst a cast full of hugely entertaining supporting characters, I want to tip my cap to Kevin Pollak’s Todd Hockney as the most entertaining of the bunch. “You think you brought enough guys?” As someone who loves apathetic and cynical humor, it should be no surprise that I love that character.
8. A Few Good Men (1992)
Previously ranked at #7
Kind of funny to see Kevin Pollak showing up twice in my top 10. Granted, he’s a supporting character in both, but both performances are very enjoyable. “I strenuously object? Is that how it works?” Beyond Pollak though, it’s worth mentioning that this is easily the best thing Tom Cruise ever did. Rain Man and Jerry Maguire are fine movies, but neither comes close to this film. Best courtroom movie of all time, though not without some competition in that department from…
9. Primal Fear (1996)
Previously ranked at #9
Leonardo DiCaprio walked away from the part of Aaron Stampler, which nearly caused Richard Gere to walk away too, and the movie nearly didn’t get made. Instead, they found some totally unknown kid named Edward Norton to play the part, and the entire film industry became better for years to come because of it. Who the heck knows if Norton would’ve ever caught his break otherwise? Gere, who is likable but limited, is just perfect in this role. He exudes a natural arrogance that portrays Martin Vail perfectly. His reactions in the final scene are probably the best acting moments I’ve seen from him.
10. Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (2002)
Previously ranked at #11
I decided to jump The Two Towers over The Return of the King as my favorite installment of the Lord of the Rings series. Ultimately, picking a favorite between the two is a fairly meaningless exercise right now, since both will most definitely have spots in my top 50 for years to come. Best heart-wrenching moment: “I hate you.” Smeagol to Gollum, with an expression of utter despair, voiced perfectly by Andy Serkis. It’s hard not to have that moment tug on your heartstrings.
11. Rounders (1998 )
Previously ranked at #14
Gretchen Mol has done quite a bit of acting since Rounders, and whenever I run across her I can’t get her portrayal from this movie out of my head…and it’s a very negative association. As Jo, the overbearing girlfriend of Mike McD, she is absolutely insufferable, and almost seems like she’s in there as a cautionary tale to single men everywhere to remain single. Was she intended to be that awful of a character? I’m not so sure, but she’s truly vile in this movie. My guess is that it’s intentional, since the audience was clearly supposed to root for Mike to throw off the shackles and go back to being himself; his conversation with his law mentor played by Martin Landau made that pretty clear.  By the way, Matt Damon does a decent job in this flick, but with a supporting cast that includes Edward Norton, John Malkovich and John Turturro, there’s no way Damon can possibly make a claim to being anything better than the fourth best actor in this movie.
12. Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003)
Previously ranked at #10
I absolutely love the film, but for what it’s worth…it does bother me that Gollum’s demise is treated as anything less than the final act of a tragic life story. Yes, he was a conniving little beast during this movie, but he was also battling demons far greater than he could possibly ever slay. Once we saw the goodness underneath his surface in the Two Towers, it just feels like treating his death like the demise of any other villain is the wrong directorial choice. I admittedly haven’t read the book though, so maybe my gripe would be with Tolkien more than Jackson. Again though, let the high ranking speak for itself, the film is brilliant.
13. Rear Window (1954)
Previously ranked at #18
Films were a lot tamer before 1970…given that fact, I’m still blown away by Hitchcock’s ability to outright scare me as I watch this movie. It still puts me on edge to see Grace Kelly head on into Raymond Burr’s apartment against the wishes of the immobile Jimmy Stewart. You’re put right behind the eyes of Stewart’s L.B. Jeffries, and the effect is just gripping.
14. 12 Angry Men (1957)
Previously ranked at #17
Best character by miles: Juror #4, as played by E.G. Marshall. In a room full of jurors clouded by stupidity, emotion and agenda (and make no mistake, Henry Fonda’s character was HUGELY agenda-driven), Juror #4 was truly just interested in seeking the truth. Of all the holdouts who continue to insist that the defendant is guilty, he’s the one with integrity. I’d like to think I’d approach the same type of case and situation the same way in his seat.
15. American History X (1998 )
Previously ranked at #13
The original cut of this movie was apparently supposed to have Derek Vinyard shaving his head again, which would’ve made the movie much more of a statement about the vicious circle that racism is stuck in, rather than being what it was, a tragic story of redemption fallen short. I’m not sure which one would’ve been the better choice artistically, but I can see the argument for both sides. My favorite scene in this movie has to be the dinner table scene; it’s amazing how convincing Norton is as Vinyard arguing for the complete and total innocence of the LAPD in the Rodney King case.
16. Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001)
Previously ranked at #20
The same great characters and elements of the rest of the series are present here, and as a result this movie is nearly at the same level of greatness. I think the reason I leave it a bit short of the other two is its failure to evoke emotion to the same extent that the next two installments did. I felt a lot more connected to the characters in the other two, and when Boromir and (seemingly) Gandalf meet their ends in this one, I sort of shrug. Also, where the Two Towers leaves off on a creepy “to be continued” note that’s something of a cliffhanger, Fellowship leaves you with a feeling of “okay, our three hours are up, we’ll see you later for part two.” Anyway, that’s how I split hairs here, amongst the Lord of the Rings series. It’s still pure greatness at work.
17. The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966)
Previously ranked at #12
Westerns, while not a genre I dislike, are nothing I usually go out of my way to watch. This is a western you could get me to watch almost anytime, though. Clint Eastwood’s turn as the Man With No Name is hugely entertaining. It’s an endless stream of great quotes, a story you can’t effectively guess out in advance, and an amazing climax amongst the three characters from the movie’s title. I’ll be surprised if I ever see a better western.
18. Legends of the Fall (1994)
Previously ranked at #16
I get chills just thinking of Alfred Ludlow (Aidan Quinn) showing up in the nick of time to gun down the officer who is about to kill his brother. Throughout the movie, Alfred is a character that deserves better…from his father, from his brother, from the woman he loves…but nothing is more satisfying than watching the family reconcile mere seconds before it’s too late.
19. There Will Be Blood (2007)
Previously unranked
Name me a better performance than Daniel Day-Lewis’ turn as Daniel Plainview, and I’ll be inclined to argue with you. I grudgingly concede that Jack Nicholson’s fine work is an eccentric guy playing an eccentric character (not really doing as much “acting“ as some), but seeing Day-Lewis in his extremely soft-spoken manner outside of character, you know very well that he’s (thankfully) not playing anything close to himself in this role.  I have a few performances in my mind that rival this one, but only a few.
20. Gladiator (2000)
Previously ranked at #25
Let’s just say that I much prefer to think of Joaquin Phoenix as he was in this movie, rather than how he was on the David Letterman show. This is one of those great films that immediately compels me to think of the brilliant musical score; Hans Zimmer, who may not be at Thomas Newman’s level but has still put together a great career in composing movie scores, really did his finest work here. And of course I can’t talk about Gladiator without again quoting, “I will have my vengeance, in this life or the next.”  That line might win the award for “most worthy of inspiring a mancrush.”
21. It’s a Wonderful Life (1946)
Previously ranked at #30
Any number of movies can put a lump in my throat by tragically killing off a character, or having a terribly sad event take place…few can inspire emotion out of me that’s borne from a more positive place, but It’s a Wonderful Life certainly accomplishes that point. You put yourself in George Bailey’s shoes, you experience the desperate downward spiral that he experiences, and while you may not have ever had a run of luck THAT bad…you can identify. When Bedford Falls comes running over to save George in his time of need, it reminds you that if you’ve lived your life as a decent and noble person, you really have no idea how much of an impact you’ve really managed to have. It’s a great message from the absolutely definitive Christmas movie.
22. Casablanca (1942)
Previously ranked at #32
Best quote: “Of all the gin joints, in all the towns, in all the world…she walks into mine.” You feel Rick Blaine’s pain; seeing Ilsa Lund just set him back to square one. Just one of the excellent poignant moments from probably the best love story ever produced.
23. Harvey (1950)
Previously ranked at #49
All cynics (like myself) should sit and watch this movie occasionally. I know that we all run into shiny happy people from day to day, but few can melt you the way Jimmy Stewart’s Elwood P. Dowd can. Four pre-1960 movies made it into my top 25…and it’s no surprise to me that three of them star Stewart.
24. The Silence of the Lambs (1991)
Previously ranked at #31
Great subtle moment: when faced with the suggestion that the escaped Hannibal Lecter might come after her, a flustered Clarice Starling brushes off that suggestion by saying, “He would consider that rude.” She’s completely right, and it speaks volumes about the intricate character that Anthony Hopkins plays.
25. Glory (1989)
Previously ranked at #35
Best performance: Denzel Washington. The likes of Matthew Broderick and Morgan Freeman are great in this movie, but it’s Denzel who really jumps off the screen as a superstar in a way I haven’t completely seen him do since. He’s generally good, sometimes he’s really good…but as Private Trip, he’s outstanding. Note: it should come as no surprise that my favorite war film contains minimal action. 
26. The Remains of the Day (1993)
Previously ranked at #47
I raved last year about the efforts of Anthony Hopkins and Emma Thompson, and deservedly so, but I feel like I should give an honorable mention to the other plot of the story, the backdrop of the happenings in Europe that led into World War II. Christopher Reeve’s character giving a toast “to the professionals” is one of the great moments of the movie, a scene that I can watch time and again. 
27. Fargo (1996)
Previously unranked
Not sure how this one wasn’t on last year’s list; after another recent viewing of it (and of the movie sitting at #28), I’ve decided that this is my favorite work from the Coen Brothers. Frances McDormand was a very deserving Oscar winner for this one; as one of the great supporting actresses in Hollywood for a long time, it’s nice to see her get some spotlight. 
28. No Country For Old Men (2007)
Previously ranked at #24
Best scene: “How much have you ever lost in a coin toss?” We had already seen Anton Chigurh kill some people brutally at this point, so we knew what he was capable of…the way he toyed with the old man in the gas station was amazing. Both a really intense scene and a darkly humorous one, that was just the type of classic stuff that I’ve come to expect from the Coens.
29. A Beautiful Mind (2001)
Previously ranked at #22
Line that stuck with me the most: “McCarthy is an idiot. Unfortunately that doesn’t make him wrong.” Parcher, played by Ed Harris, gains instant intellectual credibility with me when he says that…only a sophisticated person can simultaneously dismiss and validate someone that effectively in 10 words. Anyway, that’s not really relevant to the plot. For Russell Crowe to run the gamut from The Insider to Gladiator to this movie in the course of three years, to seamlessly transition himself to three totally different characters and be Oscar-worthy in each (though he only won for one of them) was incredibly impressive. Most actors won’t accomplish in their careers what Crowe did in three years, and I doubt we’ve seen our last brilliant performance from him.
30. Groundhog Day (1993)
Previously ranked at #21
Where I did drop What About Bob way down the list, Groundhog Day doesn’t have a dated feel to it at all. Comedy has a hard time in general holding up over the test of time, a much harder time than drama does, but Groundhog Day easily holds up as one of the best comedies of the 90’s. My list would feel lacking if it didn’t have at least one appearance by Bill Murray.
31. The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008)
Previously unranked
This is where things start to get tricky. I’ve only seen Benjamin Button once;  I really liked it as I watched it, it grew on me more in the days that followed, and I can’t wait to watch it when it comes out on Blu-ray. With that said, it’s really hard to rank a movie on a list like this after only seeing it once; I hope it holds up as well over time as I think it will. Brad Pitt , Cate Blanchett  and Taraji P. Henson are just outstanding in this one, and I’ll vouch for it as David Fincher’s finest directorial work.
32. The Shining (1980)
Previously ranked at #28
This one is a safe bet to stay on the list for the foreseeable future; if it doesn’t feel too dated to be great now, awful late 70’s colors and all, it never really will. While I know that One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Next, Chinatown and some other movies from the previous decade got a lot of credit from the critics, this was the first truly great Nicholson film in my opinion.
33. Braveheart (1995)
Previously ranked at #19
I have a hard time knowing where to rank this one. I feel like I was previously placing it higher than my honest feelings for it due to peer pressure.  With that said, this is a great movie and certainly Mel Gibson’s best work by miles.
8/10
34. Doubt (2008)
Previously unranked
I can’t think of this movie without immediately thinking the words “acting clinic.” Unbelievable jobs by Meryl Streep, Philip Seymour Hoffman and Viola Davis. The confrontations between Streep and Hoffman were amazing to watch. One of the scenes that really sticks with me is the sermon given by the priest regarding gossip. The analogy, and the imagery used by the director, are stellar in this scene.
35. The 25th Hour (2002)
Previously ranked at #29
More Edward Norton, more Philip Seymour Hoffman. I’m not usually a Spike Lee fan, and some of his choices in this one didn’t necessarily work for me either (the convicted drug dealer is a bit too sympathetic of a character for my tastes), but this is a great movie regardless. Aside from the primary character profile, I think this is a very blunt, honest and unique work that bears quite a few repeat viewings.
36. Mother (1996)
Previously ranked at #27
Albert Brooks has a lot of really good movies on his resume, but it’s his chemistry with Debbie Reynolds that really pushes this one into the realm of greatness and makes it his best work. Hilarious and relatable enough for me to watch time and time again.
37. Swingers (1996)
Previously unranked
One of the most endlessly quotable movies to ever exist, period. Vince Vaughn has had himself a great career since this time, but I think he’s always going to be Trent in my eyes. While the greatness of the movie largely rests on Vaughn’s shoulders, it’s the cringe-worthy scene with Jon Favreau calling the girl’s answering machine repeatedly that immediately comes to mind when I think of this movie; awkward humor at its finest. Huge oversight from last year’s list, I can’t believe I forgot to put it on there.
38. Office Space (1999)
Previously ranked at #40
Right on the heels of Swingers in the “most quotable” category is this piece of comic genius from Mike Judge. Ron Livingston is great in the lead, but I want to give some love to Diedrich Bader, who plays the main character’s neighbor Lawrence. Basically every single thing that Lawrence says in the movie is hilarious, and him shouting “don’t worry man, I won’t tell no one neither!” through the wall, causing panic from Mike Bolton, is maybe the funniest exchange of the whole show.
39. North by Northwest (1959)
Previously unranked
Cary Grant is one of the great actors of the golden age of Hollywood, and I’ll happily vouch for this movie as my favorite Grant movie. It reminds me of James Bond, except that it was done first and done better than any Bond I’ve seen. Eva Marie Saint plays the role of hot Hitchcock blonde to perfection here, she honestly jumps off the screen just as well as Grace Kelly does in Rear Window. This is one I watched for the first time (and a couple of times more) after my last top 50 list.
40. To Kill a Mockingbird (1962)
Previously unranked
Gregory Peck’s Atticus Finch is one of the best and richest characters in movie history. A bit idealistic? Sure. I still think we could take a cue from him, though. This movie successfully hits on a lot of solid themes, adapts Harper Lee’s classic book faithfully, and is another one of the all-time classics from the black & white era.
41. Finding Nemo (2003)
Previously unranked
Truly epic. Revolutionized animated features. I can’t say enough good things about this movie. Hilarious at some points, emotional at others…Albert Brooks does a great job as Nemo’s father, and even Ellen Degeneres manages to be funny in this one. Pixar is always at least good, often great, but I won’t hold my breath for them to top this one.
42. Dog Day Afternoon (1975)
Previously unranked
Al Pacino (and John Cazale, who unfortunately didn’t live much longer) served notice in this film that The Godfather was only the beginning. Endlessly referenced and ripped off in future films and television, this was Sidney Lumet’s finest film in nearly 20 years, and is second only to 12 Angry Men in a great career.
43. Reservoir Dogs (1992)
Previously unranked
It was later topped by Pulp Fiction, but Tarantino’s first big work went a long way toward putting him forward as one of the great directors of the last couple of decades and one of the most unique in movie history. All of the actors in the movie do a great job (Harvey Keitel, Michael Madsen, Tim Roth), but I think this might be Steve Buscemi’s best performance amongst a long line of great supporting roles. I really feel like he’s the straw that stirs the drink in this movie.
44. The Notebook (2004)
Previously ranked at #37
One of the things I really appreciate about this movie is the way it avoids the typical movie cliché of turning one of the parties of a love triangle into a terrible villain, in order to in some way justify adultery happening on the side. Rather than oversimplifying things that way, Allie’s fiancé is a sympathetic character. In fact, by movie’s end, every character is pretty sympathetic…some good things happen, some bad things happen, but reality is unfettered by convention. Okay, so you have to suspend belief a bit at the end, but I don’t mind; I still think the movie ends very well.
45. Léon (1994)
Previously unranked
For a movie that would appear on the surface to be little more than a mindless action flick, Léon is a surprisingly good movie, deep and rich in character development and containing a gripping plot. While I will highly recommend this movie, please don’t waste your time with The Professional, the American version that is a lot closer to the “mindless action flick” description due to its insistence on editing out anything that might cause controversy with an American audience that takes sexual repression to silly levels.
46. Gran Torino (2008 )
Previously unranked
Criminally ignored by the Academy, Clint Eastwood’s tale of rugged individualism and redemption is one of the finest of his career. I have to guess that its conservative undertones displeased the Academy, since this flick wasn’t as “progressive” as the inferior Million Dollar Baby. Too bad they couldn’t find it in them to pay tribute to Eastwood in his allegedly final on-screen role; it deserved it on merit alone.
47. The Cable Guy (1996)
Previously ranked at #36
Despite the fact that it didn’t retain such a high spot on the list, this is still a comedy I hold in high regard. I don’t like Jim Carrey as much as a lot of people do, but to me this is his funniest and best, and holds up as a good movie over time (as opposed to, say, Ace Ventura, which it embarrasses me to admit that I ever liked back when I was in middle school). I consider Ben Stiller’s directorial work in this one to be as big of a feather in his cap as some of his best comedic acting jobs.
48. Cinderella Man (2005)
Previously ranked at #41
It really bothers me that this one went so largely unwatched. Between this one and A Beautiful Mind…just tell me that Russell Crowe and Ron Howard are collaborating, and I’ll line up to see it without knowing what the plot or genre is. Not just a great job by those two, though…Paul Giamatti is a show-stealer here. I’ve never liked him more than I did in this one.
49. Psycho (1960)
Previously ranked at #50
Like with Rear Window, it seems incredibly revolutionary that Alfred Hitchcock was able to flat-out scare you 50 years ago in a day and age when he had to do it almost entirely with psychology, and very little of it relied on blood, gore or violence. Psycho is genuine edge-of-your-seat stuff, powered by a killer performance by Anthony Perkins.
50. Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
Previously unranked
I liked this flick back in the day, but I had largely dismissed it as just another “entertaining” action flick from the 80’s. I had wrongly placed it in the same category of worthlessness in my mind with the Back to the Future series. When I rewatched it this past year, I was shown how wrong I was…this movie, as well as The Last Crusade, are both absolutely great time capsules from a decade that was largely short on greatness from the silver screen. Harrison Ford has done a lot of good work…but I think Indiana Jones is his greatest character, and Ford fits the bill nicely.
On the outside looking in…
51. Miller’s Crossing (1990)
52. Glengarry Glen Ross (1992)
53. The Reader (2008 )
54. Iron Man (2008 )
55. The  Dark Knight (2008 )
56. The Sixth Sense (1999)
57. What About Bob? (1991)
58. Goodfellas (1990)
59. The Green Mile (1999)
60. Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989)
61. Zoolander (2001)
62. Toy Story 2 (1999)
63. The Godfather Part III (1990)
64. Fight Club (1999)
65. Snow White & the Seven Dwarfs (1937)
66. The Big Lebowski (1998 )
67. Best in Show (2000)
68. The Rock (1996)
69. Taxi Driver (1976)
70. Juno (2007)
71. The Matrix (1999)
72. Kill Bill, Vol. 1 (2003)
73. Kill Bill, Vol. 2 (2004)
74. Keeping the Faith (2000)
75. Austin Powers (1997) 
76. Arlington Road (1999)
77. Dumb & Dumber (1994)
78. The Family Man (2000)
79. The Untouchables (1987)
80. Amelie (2001)
81. Pan’s Labyrinth (2006)
82. Casino (1995)
83. Notting Hill (1999)
84. Sling Blade (1996)
85. Meet the Parents (2000)
86. Chicago (2002)
87. Analyze This (1999)
88. The Lives of Others (2006)
89. The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (2005)
90. Broadcast News (1987)
91. The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian (2008 )
92. Red Dragon (2002)
93. The Whole Nine Yards (2000)
94. In Good Company (2004)
95. Waiting for Guffman (1996)
96. There’s Something About Mary (1998 )
97. Father of the Bride (1991)
98. The Contender (2000)
99. Forrest Gump (1994)
100. For Love of the Game (1999)

The most precipitous drops came courtesy of What About Bob and The Sixth Sense; both were in the top 25 on last year’s list, and fell all the way out of the top 50 this year. Sadly, I was hit with discoveries in the past year that both movies have hit their shelf life and are no longer holding up to repeat viewings. Still good movies, but they’re scoring most of their points by being sentimental favorites of their time, rather than currently great movies that hold up today. The same can be said for The Rock, which dropped from #33 to #68 on my extended list. I’ll only bother to comment on the top 50, but will leave the whole top 100 list out there for a reference of other movies I hold in high regard.

The biggest jumps on the list belong to Harvey and The Remains of the Day, both movies I watched again during the last year and found myself loving more than ever. For a third or fourth viewing of a movie to convince you to like it that much better…well, I think it’s safe to say that those movies are going to stick around on my list for a while.

1. The Godfather (1972)
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May 3, 2009 Posted by wsuleifj | Entertainment, Movies | | 2 Comments

I sure am lucky I didn’t completely confine my search to the west.

I didn’t bother posting about it, but UNLV and San Diego waitlisted me a couple of weeks ago. Now I received a waitlist offer from Santa Clara also, making a whopping seven waitlist offers that schools have issued me out of 17 decisions (for some odd reason I still haven’t heard back from Wyoming). That brings my record to 6 acceptances, 4 rejections and 7 waitlists. As I anticipated, my odd combo of undergrad GPA and LSAT score being so extremely opposite made for a lot of schools that didn’t know what the heck to think of me. Thankfully I was able to compel Indiana and Wake Forest to offer me acceptances early on; it’s amazing how much brighter the picture became because of just those two decisions.

Obviously when you look at the list of schools I applied to, I was heavily biased in favor of staying out west. Out of 18 applications I sent out, 13 were from western or mountain states, and of the five I applied to out east, two only received my application because they sent me a fee waiver (Illinois, Cincinnati). Indiana, Wake Forest and Notre Dame jumped off the page at me enough to make me want to apply there…despite the fact that I was pretty sure I wouldn’t end up moving that far away. It seems pretty random that I picked the University of Indiana out if I was being so selective out east, by the way…particularly considering that I had never so much as set foot in that state until I was accepted there, and knew nobody out there. I studied up on dozens of states from out east, and that was just one that looked like too good of a fit to ignore.

If I had confined my search to the 13 schools I liked (and thought I could get accepted to) out west, I’d really have had a gloomier outlook. Read more »

May 3, 2009 Posted by wsuleifj | Law School | | No Comments Yet