The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 3B - Thursday, January 7, 2010 BEST FILMS '09 From Page 1B "Up" "(500) Days of Summer" Pixar laps up another victory. Boasting one of the strongest expos- itory sequences since, um, last year's "WALL-E," "Up" is a giddy, luminous tale of love and perseverance. 78-year-old Carl Fredrick- sen lives out the fantasy we all had in our youth: to sail into a billow- ing ocean of balloons, seeking adventure, and to never come back. Yet the strongest aspect of "Up" is the economy of dialogue. Those words left unsaid are powerfully dictated by a glance, a smile or a sigh. "Up" is easily one of the most heartbreaking and heartwarming films of the year. -JENNIFER XU "(500) Days of Summer" is a mishmash of modern classics, drenched in the vintage. This tale of boy-meets-girl-loses-girl (that quite insis- tently proclaims itself to be "not a love story") evokes the old-school charm of "Annie Hall," the hipster quirkiness of "Punch Drunk Love" and the modern-age nonlinearity of "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind." But despite its derivations, director Marc Webb manages to fashion a film that's refreshingly, lyrically different from its predeces- sors. It's about falling hopelessly in love and falling hopefully out of love. And that animated bluebird scene couldn't be better. -JENNIFER XU "Up in the Air" George Clooney's character Ryan Bingham is paid to fire people. He has spent most of his life alone, in and out of hotels and airports. His life seems to be a lonely and depressing one, but director Jason Reit- man, of "Thank You for Smoking" and "Juno" fame, brings warmth and wit to an otherwise desolate picture. It's a funny movie, but it also gives reason to look twice at everyday occurrences - especially the people standing in line at a security check. -EMILYBOUDREAU COURTESY OF PARAMOUNT "Paranormal Activity" "An Education" "A Serious Man" Jenny is a 16-year-old girl who devotes all of her time to getting into Oxford. When she meets David, a man twice her age, Jenny starts to see the world around her differently. There's a whole world out there that has to be experienced, not just studied. Actors Peter Sarsgaard and Carey Mulligan both show great talent in roles that aren't easy to pull off, and they both deliver simply stunning per- formances. Not only are the actors convincing, the film creates an arresting portrait of London in the 1960s where people are always conscious of class and change. -EMILY BOUDR EAU "The Hangover" "The Hangover" is one of film's first successful fusions of intelli- gent humor and outright inebriation. This movie somehow managed to show us that Mike Tyson's tiger, Vegas weddings and a whole slew of dental jokes could co-exist with the ideals of close friend- ship and marital fidelity. But more important than the film itself was its role in introducing America to Zach Galfianakis, a comedian whose merit as an actor, while made apparent in "The Hangover," is yet to be fully realized. -TIMOTHY RABB It was rumored that Stephen Spielberg had to wait until daytime to finish watching his copy of "Paranormal Activity." Whether that story is true or not, "Paranormal" is without question one of the scariest movies of the modern era. If it wasn't the midnight-only screenings or the long, winding lines outside of select theaters that helped viewers appreciate the film, it must have been a realization that hit them as they shook under the covers upon returning home: Their bed - their haven of refuge for all these years - may just be the last place they want to be. -HANS YADAV Editors' choice: "The Hurt Locker" "The Hurt Locker" is a painful character study of badass Staff Ser- geant William James, a bomb diffuser who has fallen in love with the rush of his craft. For James, who has dismantled more than 800 bombs in Iraq and Afghanistan and keeps a box of his favorite triggers under his bed, nothing else in life matters. Fellow soldiers and family members cycle throughout the movie, but you,like James, don't care. Because, like James, all you really want isto experience the heart-pounding adrena- line rush of standing over a bomb. -JACOB SMILOVITZ "Why do bad things happen to good people?" That is the philosophi- cal question lying at the heart of the Coen brothers' "A Serious Man." The directors take us back to the 1960s Minneapolis suburb of their youth to tell the tale of a mild-mannered physics professor put through a series of moral dilemmas - drawing obvious parallels to the plight of Job in the process. Amid their trademark ambiguity, schadenfreude and eccentric characters, the Coens raise stirring questions about morality and the role of faith in society. This is the dynamic duo of directing at their finest. Be sure to bring your Yiddish phrasebook. -KAVI SHEKHAR PANDEY Games that pwned '09 Epic "uTue videos of 2009 "Borderlands" 2K Games This may very well be the most innovative role-playing game of the year. Set in the desert wasteland of Pandora, this treasure-hunting epic has. a fast-paced style that fluidly combines the gameplay fundamentals of other live-action RPGs ("Knights of the Old Republic," "Jade Empire," etc.) with cel-shaded graphics that set it apart. The plot development is lacking and the cinematic sequences that are usually used to fill in story details are virtually nonexistent, but it's pure, cartoony fun, and some- times that's all we should want from a game. -TIMOTHYRABB "The Sims 3" Electronic Arts With the countless expansion packs already sold for the first two "Sims" games, some thought the franchise was out of new tricks. They thought wrong. "The Sims 3" realizes the vision many gainers had when the orig- inal game came out back in 2000: The whole neighborhood is an active entity. Your Sims are no longer confined to their homes and lawns by load- ing screens; they can walk through the neighborhood and even bump into other Sims on the street. The personality system and the improvement of "wishes" also makes "The Sims 3" the franchise's best offering to date. -JAMIE BLOCK "Inbflat" Inbflat.net is a collection of 20 YouTube videos that can be combined in any order to create a calming and interesting musi- cal sound. The videos include instruments and devices rang- ing from guitars and trumpets to Game Boys and voice record- ings. This is a truly one-of-a- kind experiment, as each video was submitted independently with these instructions: play in B flat, with simple rhythms, breaks of silence and similar speeds and volumes to the other videos. The result is a brilliant, cacophonous sound. -BRAD SANDERS "Blend Your Own Adventure" For those who seek the adven- ture of blending random foods together and drinking the result- ing concoction, but fear the digestive consequences, this YouTube compilation is your lib- erator. Minor YouTube celebrity Corey Vidal arrays an assortment of different tastes and consisten- cies on his kitchen counter. Then you, the viewer, get to choose which two he blends together and drinks simply by clicking your mouse. Not.only does Vidal break into innovative new You- Tube territory here, but he does so with a smile on his face and a potato-jalapeno smoothie burn- ing in his belly. -JAMIE BLOCK "Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2" Activision War games that accurately simulate vehicles, weaponry and the chaos of battle have become an industry standard. Don't you long for a game that eagerly explores the aberrant terrorism that has become the forefront of public debate? "Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2" pushes the envelope by bringing the war a bit closer to home - actually, a lot closer to home in the D.C. metropolitan area. And it doesn't hurt the already superb game's reputation to mention that the multiplayer game- play completely kicks ass. -TIMOTHY RABB "David After Dentist" What's funnier than the antics of a seven-year-old and the mus- ings of your friends when they're stoned? The antics and mus- ings of a stoned seven-year-old. "David After Dentist" details the journey of our youthful hero David - high as a kite - after a tooth removal at the dentist. David is philosophical and exis- tential, asking "Is this real life?" and "Why is this happening to me!?" while wondering, "Is this going to be forever?" It's ador- able, it's hilarious and it makes going to the dentist sound like fun for once. -CAROLYN KLARECKI Terrific tunes of the yesteryear Animal Collective "My Girls" Hipster boys and girls across America rejoiced when Animal Collective debuted "My Girls," accomplishing for the indie scene what Asher Roth's "I Love College" did for frat boys. The psychedelic track served as a call to arms, uniting an entire subculture and quickly becoming one of the most frequently hummed songs of 2009. The irrepressible tribal rhythm is so catchy even the most jaded listeners will find themselves breaking out embar- rassingly awkward dance moves. Who knows - maybe all we really do need is four walls. And adobe slats ... whatever those are. -JASMINE ZHU Mew "Introducing Palace Players" This is a weird one, but it's also one of the year's best musical curveballs. The minute-long intro is so rhythmi- cally off-kilter and jarring that the song seems fated to self-destruct. But after those agonizing 60 seconds comes the "ahhhh" moment, when the chaos resolves - with unexpected logic - into a glorious, fist-pumping anthem. While Mew's unabashed prog tenden- cies made its 2009 effort No More Sto- ries... a bit theatrical, "Palace Players" more than redeems the band's many indulgences. -JEFF SANFORD Passion Pit "Sleepyhead" "Sleepyhead" is pretty much every- thing. It's fun. It's sexy. It's nonsensi- cal. With a dense glimmer of eclectic percussion and a complex yet steady beat, "Sleepyhead" revs up the listen- er's mojo for a quick jaunt across cam- pus, a shining moment on the dance floor or an inspired start to the day. A floating, lilting and melodic luster fuses the beat with indiscriminate vocals and takes the harsh edge off the constant pounding. Once you pop, you can't stop. -,LEAH BURGIN Neko Case "People Got A Lotta Nerve" You don't need the cover of Neko Case's latest album Middle Cyclone to be convinced she's a force of nature. "People Got A Lotta Nerve" is perhaps her most concise and engaging pop song to date, thanks in no small part to a pair of chiming guitars, endearing lyrical imagery and some carefully placed snare rolls. With her commanding voice and nearly untouchable range, Case eschews classical vocal style for a flat tone based on-raw power and old country grit. And when she sings about being a "man-man- man-eater," you better believe it. -MIKE KUNTZ Jay-Z (Ft. Alicia Keys) "Empire State of Mind" Amid the lackluster effort of Jay-Z's The Blueprint3, one cut stands above the rest. Featuring the gutsy backing vocals of Alicia Keys, "Empire State of Mind" is the feel-good radio anthem of 2009. An ode to the rapper's home city, Jay-Z gives shout-outs to everything from the streets of Bedford-Stuyvesant to decked- out designer cars. However, the true star here is Alicia Keys, whose boomingvoice gives life to a track that would otherwise be overpowered by Jay-Z's notorious ego. Together, the two create a boda- cious song that appeals even to listeners far removed from the Big Apple. -SASHA RESENDE