Wednesday, December 31, 2008

2008 - A Year In Review

The year 2008 started as any year does – Dick Clark pitifully stumbling through the Rockin’ New Year’s broadcast, but humbly being supported by Ryan Seacrest. While I spent the next morning rising early and feeding breakfast to my kids, most people my age went to bed already hung-over and wishing they were someone else.

The year was full of fun and exciting events, some good, some bad, most depending on your perspective. Without any further waste of your time, here is the year as I saw it:

January

Professional con-artists Martin O'Malley gleefully announces that tuition at the University of Maryland system will not increase, making higher education more affordable to the hard working people of the state. This was one of his election priorities, along with raising taxes and increasing spending. While tuition does not increase at the University of Maryland system, mandatory lab fees are raised from $150 per semester to $25,000 per semester.

Actor Heath Ledger was found dead in his apartment. The toxicology report indicated that his body contained 6 different drugs and was ruled an "accidental overdose". How taking 6 drugs and dying can be considered accidental is beyond my comprehension. Ledger will best be known as the gay cowboy in Brokeback Mountain and the crazy Joker in The Dark Knight.



February

The New England Patriots and the New York Giants meet in the Super Bowl. The Patriots enter the game with the longest winning streak in NFL history and a perfect season. The Giants of suburban New Jersey promptly embarrass the boys from the suburbs of Boston. At the conclusion of the Super Bowl, Brett Favre retires from football, but before more overpriced bad commercials can air he changes his mind and decides to play until he’s 57.

Mid-February saw the end of the Hollywood writers’ strike, ending nearly 2 months of reprieve for the viewing public. Unfortunately, some of the terms of the deal included more reality television shows and 6 new versions of CSI.

The billionaire Dictator of impoverished Cuba, Fidel Castro, announces he will resign from office effective February 24th. Officially his resignation is due to declining health, but rumors have been circulating for several years that he has been dead. Miraculously his brother Raúl is unanimously elected to be his replacement by the Cuban National Assembly whose members voted under gun point by Fidel's troops.

March

New York Governor Elliot Spitzer resigns after it is revealed that he's been having a relationship with a prostitute. Comedians across the nation have a field day. How obvious do the jokes have to be when your last name is 'Spitzer'? I mean, that's a hard joke to swallow.

Brett Favre continues to make his annual retirement announcements. The Green Bay Packers finally declare that Aaron Rogers is their new quarterback, prompting Favre to unretire. Unfortunately, the Packers are tired of his ritual and do not offer him an invitation to training camp.

Arizona Senator John McCain seals the deal to become the Republican nominee for President. At 106 years old, he’s the oldest nominated candidate in the history of the United States. And by the way, he’s a maverick.

April

Kansas defeats Memphis in overtime in the NCAA basketball tournament. Unfortunately, Big South conference power-house Winthrop University didn't make it past the first round.

A polygamist camp in Texas is raided on a tip that men are marrying more than one woman and having sex with underage girls. Federal authorities safely remove 416 children from the government-funded compound. The brain-washed zombie mothers are interviewed on television and deny that the men are polygamists. The thought of being with multiple ladies briefly excites the majority of the male population of the country. However, their attitudes quickly change when they realize that one nagging wife is difficult enough. Imagine if all 25 of your wives were nagging you while you were trying to watch the football game. It just wouldn't be worth it.

May

Nothing significant happens in the entire month of May. So to fill space, have you seen the new Baltimore Sun lately? Due to cut backs and continuing decline in revenue, management makes some more cuts to the staff and the printed paper. The paper now consists of 2 sections – the front page and the back page. My – how times have changed.

June

With just a couple of weeks until summer, the Detroit Red Wings defeat the Pittsburgh Penguins in the Stanley Cup Championship. The most popular souvenirs are the Red Wings tank top/Bermuda shorts combo and the Pittsburgh Penguin bathing suits. Less important, Detroit wins the series 4-2, but Sydney Crosby scores 2 goals in the series and ESPN declares him the best hockey player of all-time during their annual 15 seconds worth of hockey coverage.

A couple of weeks later, the Boston Celtics defeat the Los Angeles Lakes in the 75th NBA finals featuring these 2 teams. Interestingly, the NBA first had to overcome a logistical nightmare when they realized that the playoffs actually overlap the ‘08-‘09 pre-season schedule by 3 weeks. The problem is initially blamed on George W. Bush’s failed economic policies, but later attributed it to 2008 being a Leap Year.

Hollywood celebrated the birth of Jamie Lynn Spears’ baby. Jamie Lynn Spears, the former star of Nickelodeon show Zoey 101, was 16 when she got pregnant. Additionally, she is the hot-mess sister Britney Spears, the former hot-mess pop-singer turned hot-mess basket-case socialite. Nickelodeon promptly drops the show in favor of new teenage sitcoms starring actresses that they hope can stay sexually responsible for at least a few seasons.

Anti-religion comedian George Carlin died at age 71. The often-cured drug and alcohol addict is best known for his 7 deadly words routine, in addition to many other profanity-laden skits. He once said that we should think about how stupid the average American is, then realize that half of the country is stupider than that person. Surprisingly he did not die from drugs, alcohol, or abusive language. But after arriving at the Pearly Gates, God looked at him and said, "Are you F-in kidding me? You want to come in here?

July

Oil prices hit $147 per barrel, causing gas prices to spike to $4 per gallon in most places across the country except in California, where they are even higher. Environmentalists predict $1000 per barrel oil by year-end, hurried global warming, and the total annihilation of the polar bears. Meanwhile, July goes down as the coldest July in recorded history.

Perennial presidential candidate John Edwards admits that he's been having an affair with Elliot Spitzer. He says that he asked his wife for forgiveness. Then he asked God for forgiveness. No word on whether he asked for forgiveness from the thousands of obstetric doctors that quit their practice in North Carolina after he sued them for millions of dollars for malpractice while he was a trial lawyer.

Maryland House of Delegates member Kumar Barve gets probation before judgment for his drunk-driving arrest after he repeatedly points out to the judge, one of his fellow drinking buddies, that he has taken a tough stance on drunk-driving laws.

August

The summer Olympics are held in Communist China's capital of Beijing. To help with the inhuman health conditions of the city, China bans automobiles for several weeks, limits the amount of time that its citizens are allowed to breathe, and paints the grass green. Furthermore, the military jails tens of thousands of civilians that they suspect will cause problems. China is unable to imprison Michael Phelps and his giraffe-like arms and he swims away with 8 gold medals. Unfortunately, the medals are tainted with led paint and have to be recalled.

Democratic Presidential candidate Obama selects Joe Biden, a U.S. Senator from Delaware, to be his running mate. Obama must have been impressed when Biden said, "I mean, you got the first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy. I mean, that's a storybook, man." (February 9, 2007)

Brett Favre signs with the Jets, then announces his retirement. When he unretires 5 minutes later the Jets get rid of their quarterback, Chad Pennington.

Republican Presidential candidate McCain announces that in addition to being a maverick, he has selected Alaska Governor Tina Fey to be his running mate. Her twin sister Sarah Palin returns to Saturday Night Live to spoof her. Do I have that backwards? I'm not sure. But I am sure that McCain would have done better if had selected Tina Fey as his running mate.

September

Hurricane Ike slams into Galveston, Texas doing millions of dollars worth of improvements. Hundreds of residents whine, cry, and complain that their million dollar beach front homes are ruined and demand a bailout.

Joe Biden, while speaking at a political event, shows some more grace under fire and says to wheelchair-bound Missouri state senator Charles Graham, "Stand up, Chuck, let ‘em see you."

The world's largest insurer, A.I.G. comes to the Federal Reserve, hat in hand, and asks for a bailout for bad investments. When asked how much, A.I.G. responds with $85 Billion. Asked how they came up with that number they say it came out of this hat in their hand. Over the next several months, A.I.G. gets billions more with threats that the financial world will collapse if they don't get it. A.I.G. then throws a huge multi-million dollar party and gives its executives millions of dollars in "retainer" fees. IOU’s are then converted to FU’s.

Still one of the handsomest men in showbiz, 83 year old actor Paul Newman succumbs to lung cancer. Upon arriving in heaven, God quickly pushes Carlin aside and allows Newman fast-track entrance because Cool Hand Luke, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, and The Sting are among God’s favorite movies.

In one dramatic day Lehman Brothers declares bankruptcy and Merrill Lynch is sold to Bank of America. These 2 former mighty organizations blame their collapse on big bets on subprime mortgages that were made to people who didn't qualify for mortgages. To save face, both organizations articulately explain their shock when calculations reveal that most people that make $25K per year cannot afford $4000/month mortgages. Congress immediately starts making pledges to stop this housing crisis and help keep people that aren't qualified to own homes to remain in their homes.

October

The World Series features 2 of the most unlikely of opponents - the Tampa Rays (or whatever they call themselves this year) and the Philadelphia Phillies. The Phillies win it 4 games to 1 giving the city of Brotherly Crime its first championship in 25 years. The Flyers and the 76ers are relieved as they can now go a few more decades with abysmal records before someone notices. In a related story, the Orioles are mathematically eliminated from the 2009 playoffs.

Vice Presidential Candidate and former plagiarist Joe Biden criticizes John McCain by saying, "Look, John's last-minute economic plan does nothing to tackle the number one problem facing the middle class, and it happens to be, as Barack says, a three-letter word; jobs. J-O-B-S." However, Biden is later criticized for not recognizing that McCain is a maverick.

With the economic crisis in full swing, Circuit City, Kay-Bee Toys, Linens ‘n Things, and the Maryland Republican Party file for bankruptcy, all claiming they have no resources to continue operating successfully.

November
Election

After 6 years of election campaigning, it is finally over. Americans decide that they are tired of Republicans and boot most of them out of office. Barrack Obama wins on a pledge of change, a change which he never specifies, but does mention that he's cool and wishes there was a college football playoff, a national policy that most Americans can relate to. The 2012 Presidential campaign can now officially get underway.

On the other side, Americans and world leaders announce that they now look forward to a world without Bush. Playboy responds that there hasn't been any Bush in 15 years.

In Maryland, condescending hard left-wing liberal Governor Martin O'Malley and his fire breathing socialist cronies in the General Assembly decide to allow Maryland voters to decide if slots should be allowed in the state. O'Malley, who had previously been against slots when he was busy attacking former Republican Governor Ehrlich who backed the idea, suddenly favors the plan as a way to generate much needed revenue for the state. However, in a move of pure genius, the Constitutional referendum absolves him and other Democrats of having their name tied to the vote and makes it nearly impossible to remove slots from Maryland. It will take Marylanders decades to figure out how to get out of this one.

General Motors and Ford fly their executives on luxurious private jets to request billions of dollars of bailout money from Congress. They claim they need the money to continue paying their union employees more than $30 per hour and to refuel their luxury jets on the flight back to Detroit. This move receives mass criticism from the press, so on their next journey to Washington to ask for billions of dollars, both hitch rides in '72 Pintos.

December

In another act of brilliance, Obama selects former carpet-bagging Presidential candidate Hillary Clinton to be his Secretary of State. Not only does this remove her from a highly respected and powerful New York Senatorial role where she can openly criticize him, he now also has the power to fire her.

Unconvicted murderer O.J. Simpson is convicted of armed robbery in a Las Vegas hotel. Leaks indicated that the jurors wanted to put him up for the death penalty, but were talked down to 9 years to life in prison. When asked if the harsh sentence was retribution for the failure of the jury to convict him of murder back in the 1990’s, one insightful juror pointed to Karma, but didn’t rule out the bloody glove.

Illinois Governor Rod Blogojevich is arrested by the FBI for conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud and solicitation of bribery when he attempts to sell outgoing U.S. Senator Obama’s seat to the highest bidder. Most experts admit that the FBI does not have enough evidence to convict him, but perhaps they can still hold him indefinitely at Gitmo for having the worst haircut in the United States.

Martin O'Malley receives feedback from the panel members that he appointed to review the death penalty. The members, all of whom he selected for their vocal hatred of the death penalty, shockingly recommend that the death penalty be abolished. Gun-toting thugs in Baltimore City rejoice at this recommendation by murdering over 234 more people this year.

The New York Yankees sign C.C. Sabathia for $161 million, A.J. Burnett for $82.5 million, and Mark Teixeira, who has no cool first initials, to $180 million. Add that to the existing contracts of Alex Rodriguez' $275 million and Derek Jeter's $189 million and the Yankees have a payroll higher than the GDP of France. Rumors spread that A.I.G. and General Motors ask the Yankees for a bailout loan.

In other O'Malley news, he announces furloughs of state employees. This will save the state $34 million dollars. In his humble sad way he claims that this is a tough decision, but fails to cite raising the budget by several billion dollars last year as one of the causes.

Oil sinks to under $40 per barrel, a 71% decrease from the July peak. Polar bears are thrilled.

The NFL regular season ends and Brett Favre announces that he needs surgery, which may mean that he has to retire again. The Jets then decide to promote their backup quarterback to starter, but then realize that he now plays for the Miami Dolphins.

After weeks of taunting Israel with rocket attacks, Hezbollah-controlled areas of Gaza are flattened by Israeli F-16's. The world reacts in horror wondering how Israel could be so callous.

And there you have – all that you need to know about 2008. Let’s hope for a good 2009, but keep expectations realistic. Most likely it will suck.

Goodbye 2008 ....

So it's 2009!

Well okay, it's not really 2009 right now, while I'm typing this. And it won't yet be 2009 when I post it. But, work with me here people, okay?

Anyway, I guess it's time for predictions and revolutions resolutions.

So here are a few predictions for 2009:

1. The hottest selling toy of the year will be the Governor Rod Blegojevich Action Figure. Mostly because of it's cool accessories.

- The doll comes with three different outfits for him to wear. A business suit for work. A jogging suit so he can run out of his house and meet with the media for a few minutes. And a bright orange prison jump suit.

- A bag full of hair care accessories. Combs, brushes, mousse, hair spray and a blow drier to help keep that awesome helmet head haircut looking good.

- A suitcase full of unmarked non-sequential $100 bills.

- And the best part is the kickbacks refunds that everyone gets. The doll is normally $19.99, but if you slip the store clerk a $5 bill, he or she will sell you the doll for only $9.99. So, you end up saving $5, and the clerk get's $5 under the table. It's a win-win situation!

2. A massive cold front will grip the U.S. in the middle of February. People as far south as Jackson, Mississippi and as far west as Las Vegas will be iced in. Al Gore will give a hastily put together speech saying that this is a result of "Global Cooling" and is man-made and can only be stopped by the elimination of electric and hybrid cars.

3. The Political world is rocked when pictures of Nancy Pelosi and Sarah Palin wearing leather dominatrix outfits and whipping Bill Clinton and New Gingrich are published by the National Enquirer.

4. Natalie Portman will see the error of her ways and show up at my door one night with the torn up remains of her restraining order against me in her hands ready to beg me for forgiveness and to take her in. But, he hopes will be dashed when the door opens and she sees Olivia Munn in my kitchen making me Beef Stew while wearing her Princess Leia outfit.
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Then poor Natalie will scream "HOW COULD YOU!" at me. Or maybe at Olivia, it'll be tough to tell. Then she'll throw the torn up remains of my restraining order on the ground and run to her car while sobbing uncontrollably. She will then sit in her car for a while crying and cursing the bitter twist of fate that has befallen her.

Of course, Olivia will run over and clean up all the paper scraps on the floor, including the scraps that fell on the patio outside. She likes to keep the place tidy, ya know.


--


Okay, on to some resolutions ...

After my "How to be a Better Stalker and Stalkee" post, along with the "Room with a View" post that ended up with my neighbor making a cameo while I was video taping the view out my peephole, I don't think it's possible to raise the level of creepiness of this blog. So, I'm not even going to try. But, here are a few things I will make an effort to achieve ...

1. In honor my good friend Vinny Bond, I will no longer make fun of that decrepit, crime-filled, blight on the American South's landscape that gives ghettos a bad name city of Memphis that he calls home. (Hey, it's not 2009 yet!)

I'm doing this just for you Vinny. I hope you appreciate it.

Besides, how could I waste so much time and creative energy making fun of Memphis when a city like Detroit exists?

2. I will post on this blog a minimum of six days a week. Even if I just don't feel like it.

3. I will give up tequila completely.

4. Hell I'll even give up Tila Tequila completely.
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5. I will make a real and honest effort to make sure that for the first time in the history of this blog, the number one search terms for the year will not be "Giada de Laurentiis boobs/cleavage/nude/naked/whatever."
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6. I think I will even try to raise the intellectual level of this blog and try to be taken more seriously by not posting any pics of half-naked babes anymore.



Ohhhhhhhhhh darn! Looks like I had my fingers crossed when I made those resolutions!

Sucks!

Well, I guess I'll just have to come up with some vague resolution about being a better blogger and more decent person or some shit like that. Whatever.

Anyway, hope everyone has a great New Year and I hope that 2009 is the best year EVER!

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Here on new year's day.

2009


i can't believe this is it.
this is 2009.
and i have turned the big 2-0 four hours ago.
i'm twenty years old.

i have always been a person who wants to grow up fast. i've always dressed and behaved way beyond my age. people think that i'm 20something when i was only 12. you get the picture.

but now, i've hit the big 2! i'm happy!! but at the same time, i know that once i'm 2 decades old, time will fly even faster than ever and *blink blink*, 2010 is at my doorstep, and i turn 21.

somewhere inside me wishes that i'll stay forever 21. God, this is my secret wish. hahah i'm sure it's yours too. but there's this particular scripture that enlightened me, and i wish to share it with you.

"Gray hair is a crown of splendor; it is attained by a righteous life." - Proverbs 16 : 31.

growing older by the day, month and year is not necessarily such a bad thing afterall, is it? :)
it is a crown of splendor, man..don't prey prey..
not forgetting it is attained by a righteous life too. therefore, i wish to start my year being righteous. it's hard but i'll surely try my best. isn't life just so exciting and new everyday? :)

made my new year resolutions and am planning to stick close by with it.
a lot of times we fail to follow or fulfill our new year resolutions is because we simply chuck them aside after a while.

why not try and make a specific and achievable new year resolution this year, and make sure you stick close by with it? it works for many, and there's no way it doesn't work for you :)

besides, if you fail to plan, you plan to fail. so, plan ahead to stay ahead! it's just this simple :)

will be going for prayer meeting in new church building at 10am later (it's 4.18pm now), and afterwhich, will be doing HTV with my favourite HTV co-host, Bro. Bock ;) maybe after that we'll go paktoh together or something..and have dinner with family. that's basically how my Jan the first is gonna be i think. exciting-exciting! :))

you guys out there, update your blogs and lemme know what's happening in your brand new 2009! paint a beautiful year ahead on this blank piece of canvas ♥

happy 2009 my dears..

love, careen

New Year Lingerie Evening Wear


Out with the old and in with the new. Tonight marks the beginning of a historic new year. Celebrate where you've been and where you're going. In the meanwhile, be sure to enjoy the moment that you're in right now. It's a momentous time to be alive!

Why not dress up tonight in something that makes you feel utterly sexy, sassy and Celebrates Your Inner Eve?

I've compiled some of my favorite lingerie pieces that can go from a night on the town, ringing in the New Year, to the boudoir. I love the versatility of the pieces (see images) on this page. Simply pair them with a skirt or pants with a lacy camisole or black bra (for the risque look) and you have a New Year's Eve outfit that is both elegant and sexy.

The La Perla Lace Passion Collection (image left) "plays on the contrast between stiff Leavers lace and the elasticised satin. The lace, strictly black, joins the brilliance of satin, giving life to super impositions and colour contrasts with a great impact." For more information on La Perla and the lacy image, click on Lace Passion Collection.

The beautiful black kimono top and mini dress (images below) are found at Faire Frou Frou and Kiki de Montparnasse.
The Lavande SWK, by local Los Angeles designer, features the Ava Geisha Top (image above left). This item is "the latest must-have collection in luxury lounge wear! Make a dramatic entrance with the Ava Geisha Top, one of the most versatile pieces in the Lavande group." The Ava Geisha Top is on sale for $79.20 at Faire Frou Frou.

The V Minidress by Kiki de Montparnasse (image above right) is where "(s)implicity meets sensuality." Highly versatile as a dress for the boudoir, it can also be worn out. Simply wear it with a slip underneath and boots or as a top with a bra or camisole beneath (paired with a skirt, pants, or jeans). The V Minidress is $395 and can be purchased at Kiki de Montparnasse.

Lingerie is about having fun and embracing the essence of you. Here's to a wonderful New Year! As always, Celebrate Your Inner Eves, my dear Lingeristas!

Daniel Craig with his girlfriend Satsuki Mitchell in beach








Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Road trip to Malacca!

warning: this blog post will be flooded with many pictures. and some captions.

road trip to malacca!!

the backseat people.






the sky was beautiful..so was the weather :)



yeap, it was pastor's car. they were on the way to Spore for staff retreat! what a pleasant surprise! pastor flew btw.

mama marie giving the usual stare. ahahaha


and there we were after a series of wandering-around-malacca-town. jonker street!! thanks baby :)


just to remember where we parked. boon's car on the right :)


we saw this couple who had very nice backs. we aspire to have backs like them, so we captured their pic and look at it every night before we sleep :)


first stop. clothes- we can never resist them, can we? ;)


boon apparently looking bored. hahaha


lion head.


old folk's karaoke competition. super cute man..


war of the wings

chicken wing delicious :Dpriceless pic of Gladys.some super nice potato ball.the reunion of our band- The Way. maybe this could be one of our album pictures. maybe we should really record our songs one day- 'Curtains' and 'Caught without a bra' :)and this would be our manager. or marie and jo and gladys would say- mascot instead. but to me, he's still the manager :) muax!marie and jo apparently enjoying it a lot.hahahahafter the Taiwanese Spicy Sausages. poor thing..big foot behind. hahathis is the ultimate revelation: the nerdy careen is already dead. this is the nerdy spirit coming back to visit-visit. now there's no more nerdy but camho careen- below.

there you go :)

will post up more pictures and more stories once i have the time! crazier and i mean crazierrr pictures are yet to be posted up. ahahahah..
gotta go clean my room, my closet, nap and get ready for a long night of new year countdown and ushering of the terrific and blessed 2009!!

happy 2009 dear readers!! me ♥ you all!

love, careen

It's All Write, Baby

Time weighs heavily, sometimes
pressing down, at once a comforter warming
sometimes cloying. Fevered. Difficult to breathe.

Night is eternal, still, I see the end of it.
Over there.

Don't press it.

Words are unbidden. Don’t think right. No. Wright.

Cute. Semantics.

Still they tumble, those … They tumble out, jumbling together, defying, daring me to make sense of them. Run the shredder backwards, please.

With wonder and loss I gather them. The image of a hen gathering hatchlings comes to mind.

That’s funny. That’s funny. That’s funny. That is so funny. I know nothing of animal husbandry.

I remember a cherished thought primal. Rather I have a memory of the memory, and it feels pause worthy. A star exploding in a distant galaxy. I empty, reaching down and back. What does it mean?

Pointless. Even if I captured it. Again. Intact. It wouldn’t be the same. It exists for the first reverie only. Examination is demeaning. Put it away – deep in the closet. Among the many others. At some point – years ago from now, take it out, fuzzy.

Why did I keep this?

Ah, there’s that time thing again. A gift. Numbs the pain.

Tomorrow I’ll be better. You betcha. Not fine, exactly. Too many of these, uh, too many of these. But tomorrow all – this – will be put away. One more meaningless verbal twitch of synapses. In company.

Let it pass. Breathe deep. Watch the jaded repetition that is CNN until sweet oblivion is everything. A drunk reaching that point.

Tomorrow … and tomorrow … and tomorrow. Yes. Yes.

And then? Excuse me if I can’t find the words.

Cinema Spectacular — 2008

This seems to be written in this space every year, but I must write it again: What a great year for movies.

After more than 100 years of filmmaking in America, there are still unheard stories, unfilmed subjects and unknown dramas. This year in film seemed to accentuate the human drama that exists in our world: good and evil (The Dark Knight), kindness (Happy-Go-Lucky), love (Wall•E) and personal triumph (Milk, Slumdog Millionaire). There is so much we can still learn and feel from film, and 2008 proves it. Here is the evidence.
— Michael Clawson
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1. Wall•E
The most human movie of the year stars a robot, which should hardly be surprising from Pixar, a film studio that could bring meaningful life to a jelly donut if a story called for it. Pixar’s talented storytellers and animators — and voice artist Ben Burtt — have done more than inject life into Wall•E, though: they have transplaneted real personality, humanity even, into their little trash-compacting robot. Abandoned on a junk-covered Earth, Wall•E chugs away at his clean-up directive while scooting around to Hello, Dolly! songs. After meeting a vegetation scanner named Eve, Wall•E embarks on an intergalactic rescue mission that changes the course of human history. As much satire as it is an environmental plea, Wall•E is fundamentally, at its core, a brilliant character study, where the robot’s actions, motivations and heart-wrenching love for Eve are on full display. It's so rare to even think this, let alone type it, but here it goes: Wall•E is a perfect movie.
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2. Slumdog Millionaire
So authentic are the Indian locations of Danny Boyle’s cultural and visual extravaganza that the stench and filth seem to waft from the screen in hazy plumes, but the characters and culture are so captivating you’ll want nothing more than to see it firsthand, slums and all. Films tend to romanticize India, but Slumdog shows it as it is: a collision of squalor, crime and decay (India’s past) with engineering marvels and a burgeoning computer industry (India’s future). Stuck in the middle is Jamal (Dev Patel), who’s appearing on the Indian version of Who Wants to Be A Millionaire?, where he gives more correct answers than a poor “slumdog” should. Between show tapings he’s beaten by a local police officer to find out how, or even if, he’s cheating. The movie is Jamal’s life story as he tells it to the police detective: orphaned young, living on the streets, conning tourists at the Taj Mahal, begging for change, crime with his brother and love with a girl from his old neighborhood. Slumdog’s a travelogue, a romance and a great tragedy all at once. It’s also so much more — it’s food for the soul.
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3. The Dark Knight
Yes, Heath Ledger is very good. As is Christian Bale; when is he not? But The Dark Knight is a monumental film because of writer and director Christopher Nolan, who extends his themes — mainly, the duality of man — way beyond those two-dimensional comic pages. He also creates real mythology for his hero and villains: “You either die a hero or you live long enough to see yourself become the villain.” Nolan has not only made a human drama with depth, but he’s created an intense thrill ride, spectacular visual effects, a compelling romance, rich dialogue and characters that matter not just to the plot, but to us. And that shot of the Joker hanging out the car window as it weaves through Gotham is perfect in its composition and its lunacy. Every piece of The Dark Knight works and works skillfully.
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4. Milk
Milk is a brave movie because it presents Harvey Milk, America’s first openly gay elected official, with all his character flaws. It doesn’t deify him, but shows him to us just as he was: devilishly funny, romantic, charmingly blunt with a distinctive speaking style and occasionally very single-minded. It helps, of course, that Sean Penn plays him the way only Sean Penn can, with great humanity and honesty. Here's an interesting observation: Picture Penn as Penn talking in his own voice. I can't do it; I just his characters. That is an actor.The Gus Van Sant film follows Milk as he moves to San Francisco’s Castro district, falls in love, starts a business and, after witnessing ratcheting persecution against gays and lesbians in the area, runs for a city office on a gay platform. The movie dangles tension above our heads when Milk meets another city official, Dan White (Josh Brolin), who will eventually go on a shooting spree in city hall. Yes, I’ve revealed the end, but it should be a historical fact, not a spoiler. The movie presents a dilemma that still rages today: is sexual orientation a religious issue or human rights issue? Milk knew the answer. He lived the answer.
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5. Gran Torino
So Dirty Harry retires. Clint Eastwood directs himself in one of the most provocatively racist films ever made. Snarling to no end, he plays a retired Korean War veteran who’s at odds with his Hmong neighbors, who annoy him for simply being Hmong, or anything that’s not white. In between his racial tirades and unrepentant Catholic shame, Clint accepts his neighbors as his friends and saves them from the Asian gang that terrorizes their street. But the movie is more than that. It’s an examination of two generations: the old generation, which is callous to the new world and all its integrations, and the young one, which is quick to forgive. Clint Eastwood is a treasure to the pictures, this one in particular, but he might be upstaged at times by his younger actors, who smile through his snarls and accept him for the curmudgeon he is.
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6. The Reader & Revolutionary Road
Kate Winslet excels at everything she touches. A Colgate commercial with her in it would make for riveting television. This was her year, too. In The Reader, she plays a teenage boy’s first lover, who is later revealed to be a former guard at a Nazi death camp. The movie, which should not be mistaken for a Holocaust picture, is a careful examination on shame, particularly with the boy, who refuses to speak up at a pivotal junture. In Revolutionary Road — in which Winslet is directed by her husband Sam Mendes and reunited with Titanic star Leonardo DiCaprio — she is a loving ’50s-era housewife who’s not ready for life in the suburbs and dreams of a trip to Paris that never comes. Here she plays the role society wants her to play — homemaker — only to abandon it when her husband perpetuates a myth that never happens. Winslet doesn’t just memorize her lines for her films; she becomes the characters. And she also plays them with affection, as if she really liked who they were, or at least understands their motivations. She’s one of the most gifted actresses working now and these are two prime examples of her craft.
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7. The Wrestler
Mickey Rourke guts himself, his real self, right up there on the screen in The Wrestler. Yes, Randy “The Ram” Robinson is a fictional character, but you can’t look at The Ram and not see Rourke. Randy is a has-been wrestler — fake television wrestling, not real Olympic wrestling. His life oozes from all sides, fading away into oblivion. His muscles ache so he takes steroids. Wrestling gigs in VFW halls don’t pay well so he becomes a supermarket butcher. His love life is gone so he socializes at the topless bar. You can’t look at Randy and not feel pity, or just great sadness. But director Darren Aronofsky doesn’t frame him that way; he gives Randy and Rourke room to move, to show their gentle spirits resonating behind the tough exteriors. And Marisa Tomei, in one of the performances of the year, plays a stripper who needs a second chance as much as Randy.
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8. The Visitor
A man returns to an apartment he has not lived in for several months. There is a couple sleeping in his bed, using his things; they’ve been duped into paying rent to a man who doesn’t own the place. Who’s the visitor here: the intruding couple or the man who owns the apartment? The movie is a meditation on that and other questions about visitors, sometimes called immigrants or aliens, or maybe even illegal aliens. The star is Richard Jenkins, who performs his role so carefully that it’s almost a whisper. His character befriends the couple and then, curiously and inexplicably, learns to play the drum as a form of expression. Eventually there is an arrest and a threat of deportation, and a mother appears to give a son guidance. Again, the issue comes up: Who is the visitor? The answer is either everyone or no one, but not both.
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9. Happy-Go-Lucky
Sally Hawkins’ character in Happy-Go-Lucky, a lovable sprite named Poppy, could have been a blissful caricature. Instead it’s so real it’s heartbreaking. Mike Leigh’s movie is all about Poppy. There are other characters, but everyone and everything revolves around her. There’s no plot really, just adventures with Poppy, who lunches with friends, visits a sister, talks to a homeless man and takes driving lessons. Poppy is infectiously happy, so much that it makes others uncomfortable. Her sister views her smiles as sarcastic insults on her suburban lifestyle. The driving instructor mistakes her kindness for attraction. Everyone seems to take issue with her optimism. It’s a parable on the world we live in, where we feed off negativity. More than anything, though, it’s a character study on Poppy. And Hawkins aces it.
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10. Hellboy 2: The Golden Army
Director Guillermo del Toro is the visionary this age of filmmaking not only desires, but requires. He has taken an absurd story about a kitten-loving demon and made it into a rich fantasy of equal parts dream and nightmare. This is not the first time he’s toyed with our imaginations (remember Pan’s Labyrinth?) and it’s unlikely to be his last now that he heads into The Hobbit. Hellboy, played by Ron Pearlman, is a gentle giant with a mean left hook. He’s poetically glib about everything, except Liz (Selma Blair), who he adores to no end. The story is fun, and it’s told using humor and wit, but really the showpiece here is del Toro’s dark creature creations and elaborate fantasy settings.
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Honorable Mention: Forgetting Sarah Marshall
Here is my guilty pleasure. It’s a Judd Apatow comedy with a third-rate star (Jason Segel) and a pointless series of romantic comedy setups. But it has heart, and it’s not afraid to break it to serve its theme. When the male and the female can finally vent to each other why their relationship never worked they come to this realization: they both failed, which is an observation that is entirely too honest for a movie this dumb to be sharing. Like Lil' Wayne sampling Chopin. Somehow, though, amid Segel's wiggling penis and Kristen Bell's winking bikinis, the movie finds a relationship's decaying soul and mercy kills it in one crushing swipe. You will hear echoes from your own failed relationships in this movie, and listening to these characters’ struggles can be cathartic. And that Dracula song from the puppet musical is the best song to emerge from a movie all year long.