Monday 2 January 2012

Film 2011. Worst. Year. Ever.


It has been widely-agreed that 2011 was a lacklustre year for film.
Many highly-anticipated films did not live up to their hype (127 HoursTinker Tailor Soldier Spy) and others were just plain awful (Cowboys & AliensSucker Punch). It was a year of pointless sequels (Hangover 2Transformers 3Pirates 4), unnecessary remakes (ConanThe Girl with the Dragon Tattoo) and filling-the-void superhero films (The Green LanternThe Green HornetCaptain America). The output of 3-D fodder reached an all-time high and children’s cinema reached an all-time low, often at the same time (The SmurfsYogi the BearChipwrecked). Oscar season was underwhelming with only The King’s Speech and Black Swan entering into five-star territory. Even Pixar misfired withCars 2.
Nevertheless, it has been a great year to write about cinema. I have continued to write for Intuition Online, I attended my first film festival (Empire Magazine’s Big Screen) and I created my very own film website: The Big Fairbanski. The content is coming in 2012.
Also, coming in 2012, is probably the best year of cinema since 1999: The Dark Knight Rises,Superman: Man of SteelThe Amazing SpidermanThe AvengersBraveSkyfallJohn CarterPrometheusThe Muppets and a little independent movie called The Hobbit.
As such, maybe 2011 was a necessary sacrifice to keep audiences occupied whilst the studios worked on the big dogs.
In which case, bring on 2012.

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