Top Ten Films of 2008

It’s the time of year for creating top-ten lists, an enterprise that by its very nature is somewhat limiting and unfair. Can you imagine ranking the Top Ten Parables of Jesus?

Nevertheless, we do it every year – if nothing else, such lists can start good conversations about the sort of art that was created in the past 12 months. And so here are my 10 favorite movies out of the more than 100 I reviewed in 2008. I’d love to hear your own.

1. The Promotion

One of the hard lessons of 2008 was the folly of putting too much faith in the systems of man: the stock market, the housing market, the job market. Really, almost any market built on worldly – rather than Godly – ideals.

“The Promotion,” a largely unseen black comedy about two grocery-store managers (Seann William Scott and John C. Reilly) feverishly competing for a promotion to a job they don’t even really want, cleverly captured the year’s sense of economic desperation. As these guys comically flail about, you wonder if it’s possible to run the rat race and keep your God-given dignity intact.

2. Slumdog Millionaire

As I posted here before, “Slumdog Millionaire” has a startlingly Christ-like approach to poverty and the impoverished. Director Danny Boyle follows an Indian orphan from the slums of Mumbai to a winning seat on a televised game show, and not for a moment does he pity or condescend to the movie’s downtrodden characters. Instead, “Slumdog Millionaire” meets them on a level playing field, depicting them as vibrant and valuable members of the human community. Sound familiar?

3. Trouble the Water

When Hurricane Katrina pulverized New Orleans in 2005, residents of the city’s neglected Lower Ninth Ward asked themselves: Where were our neighbors? Where was the government? Where was God?

“Trouble the Water” is a first-person account of that anguish. Most of the documentary’s footage comes from the home-video camera of Kimberly Roberts, an aspiring rapper who stuck it out for most of the storm. Her pyrotechnic, spoken-word performance at one point is nothing less than an irate prayer.

4. The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

I might post on this further another day, but for now I’ll just say this sad, beautiful film about aging and death – in which Brad Pitt plays a man who is born old and gets younger every day – notably lacks any consideration of an afterlife. Perhaps that’s why I found it more mournful than romantic.

5. The Dark Knight

Forget comic-book movies – you’d be hard pressed to find many movies of any kind that are more morally complex than this masterful, visually audacious Batman installment. When it comes to good and evil, Christian Bale’s conflicted Batman, Heath Ledger’s anarchic Joker and Aaron Eckhart’s idealistic Harvey Dent are flips sides of the same trick coin.

6. WALL-E

Sure, Keanu Reeves warned us of the dangers of defiling God’s creation in “The Day the Earth Stood Still,” but I much prefer the environmentalism of this Pixar gem. It’s no less apocalyptic – the endearing title robot is charged with tidying up an Earth that humans have turned into a garbage dump – yet in their pessimism the Pixar animators still manage to work movie magic.

7. Ballast

Forgiveness, compassion, redemption. Such Biblical qualities are beautifully rendered in this tiny independent effort about the relationship between a suicidal single man and his latchkey nephew. The movie – an assured debut from writer-director Lance Hammer – reminds us that we’ve all hurt others; we’ve all been hurt; and that you never know where you might find precious healing.

8. Cloverfield

Don’t look for similar thematic depth in this thrilling “Godzilla” reworking – about a group of partygoers who videotape a giant monster stomping through Manhattan – yet with its eye-of-the-camera conceit, the movie offers an intriguing consideration of how technology has become intensely personal, even poignant.

9. Be Kind Rewind

In far too many Christian circles, artistic creativity is one of the least appreciated of God’s gifts. Perhaps that’s why I was so taken with this loopy comedy, which exists to celebrate creative expression.

After accidentally erasing all the tapes in a video store, an employee and his friend (Mos Def and Jack Black) recreate and film their own versions of Hollywood blockbusters using found costumes and cardboard props. After seeing their “Driving Miss Daisy” – with Black in the Jessica Tandy part – I can only imagine what these two would do if dropped into a church drama group.

10. Tropic Thunder

I’m not sure there is a redemptive angle to this Tinseltown satire - and there is certainly no way to defend the movie’s shockingly filthy (and often very very funny) dialogue. But for any veteran movie-watcher who has tired of self-centered celebrities, it is a joy to watch director-star Ben Stiller Hollywood hubris.

Login to comment

Comments (8)

Usually I am utterly impressed with Think Christian posts, and I'm really looking forward to seeing Slumdog Millionaire thanks to your previous post on it, but this list looks quite lacking and random... Tropic Thunder, for example, should be avoided by believers if only for the way it depicts people with developmental disabilities, if not for the pure suckiness of the film. I ended up turning it off - more because I was bored than offended. Some of the others, such as the Promotion and Be Kind Rewind are simply mediocre. The Dark Knight is an excellent choice, as (from what I understand) is Slumdog Millionaire and Wall-E is a good family film. Overall, pretty hit-and-miss but interesting to read your perspective.
Thanks for responding Keith. Randomness, actually, is pretty much what I go for in a top ten list, which tries to distill the 200 or so movies I've reviewed the previous year into a representation of those that moved me - be they comedies, kids’ flicks or spiritually significant dramas.

I'm glad you brought up “Tropic Thunder,” for the parts that refer to people with developmental disabilities – and bear with me here - were some of the bravest, funniest moments, to my mind. (For background, Ben Stiller plays an action-movie star who once tried to win an Oscar by playing a severely mentally disabled farm hand. Robert Downey Jr., as another actor, tells Stiller's character he didn't win because he went "full retard").

The target of the joke, actually, is the way Hollywood often portrays people with developmental disabilities in a cloying, insulting way - as potential awards bait - rather than full human beings. This is tricky territory, to be sure, but I appreciated Stiller's expose of that sort of Hollywood hypocrisy.
How about "The Visitor"? Not merely because it features a moving performance by self professing follower of Jesus, Danai Gurira, but because it wrestles with the gospel themes of sacrifice, hospitality, justice, and in some ways an incarnational compassion.
As for "The Visitor," Scott, I did admire the film, but more for the thematic reasons you mention than the fact that a Christian was involved in making it (of which I was unaware).

It's a slippery slope when we praise films simply because a Christian acted in it (or wrote, or directed, or designed the costumes for it). I prefer to think of movies as their own unique entities, which means one made by a nonbeliever may indeed be incredibly artful (and sometimes spiritually enlightening), just as one made by a believer (unfortunately) may be downright dreadful.
I must admit I am not a regular Think Christian reader but surprised to find Tropic Thunder listed in a top ten list on a Christian site. I have not seen the film but the pluggedin review would make me avoid it. I honestly would love any films poking fun at Hollywood's ill-rooted compassion - I have actually been an avid South Park fan - but am trying in the new year to avoid this type of mind debasing entertainment. Thanks for the blog.
Glad I could surprise you Eric. And if you can take "South Park," you'll have no trouble with "Tropic Thunder." Speaking of which, both "South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut" and "Team America: World Police" (from the South Parkers) have made previous top-ten lists of mine.
I didn't watch a whole lot of movies this year but IMHO, I thought Bella was very good and also refreshing. Though if being entertaining was one of your critiques, then perhaps that's one of the reasons it didn't make it to your list. Any thoughts?

I used to work at a church. I wentthrough a period of mild depression as a result of the ministry. The leadership recognized it and used it as part of their ammunition to ultimately fire me. I had hoped for some support or understanding, or at least some dialogue.

See the latest in:

Promotion

promo 1 promo 2
promo 3 promo 4

Donate Now