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Jonathan R. Lack’s Top 10 Films Of 2013

This is the Top 10 list I have been waiting my entire critical career to write. I have been reviewing movies since 2004, and compiling Top 10 lists since 2006, and while the latter task has become increasingly stressful with each passing year – maybe because I see a greater number of movies each year, and maybe because the industry has been on a general upward trend in recent times – I have never had the pleasure or challenge of compiling such a dense collection of cinematic brilliance for my year-end countdown. It is always tough at first, whittling the list of contenders down to the actual ten titles, but if I am being honest, I also find that most Top 10 lists I make are made up of a few films I might call legitimate masterworks, a bunch of great movies I love intensely, and, at the bottom, a sentimental pick or two that most clearly reflects my own obsessions and interests. And that’s perfectly fine, because a Top 10 list constructed like that still represents a whole lot of very meaningful cinema.

[h2]9. The Act of Killing[/h2]

act-of-killing-documentary

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Few filmmakers have ever looked evil in the eye as unflinchingly as director Joshua Oppenheimer does in The Act of Killing, and through one of the most unsettling and ingenious structures ever conceived of in documentary form, Oppenheimer forces the eye of evil to look back upon itself, to horrifying and transfixing results. Focusing on the now old men who were once lead executors in the Indonesian anti-communist killings of 1965-66 – which resulted in the deaths of over half a million people – The Act of Killing begins as a study into the banality of evil, watching mass murderers go about their day in a country where they live not only with impunity, but as celebrities free to boast about what they have done.

But when Oppenheimer gives these men the opportunity to recreate the killings, from their own perspective, as a series of film scenes, each based in a different genre ranging from detective noir to musical, The Act of Killing evolves into something far more strange, potent, and revealing. The killers say they took inspiration from Hollywood movies – here is the proof, but here also is a blistering look at how art, even art made by murderers, reveals the innermost depths of the human soul, laying every perception and fallacy one carries bare whether one intends to do so or not.

For the film’s main subject, Anwar Congo, the increasingly surreal and disturbing dramatizations become a psychological deconstruction of his own mind and soul, and by the time the film ends, it is possible he is a different, more thoroughly haunted man than the one we met at the film’s beginning. It is possible no film this year was more challenging and provocative, and there is no doubt that in The Act of Killing, Oppenheimer has created a new historic benchmark for documentary film, one that will be celebrated and dissected for decades to come.

The Act of Killing is not currently playing in theatres, but will arrive on DVD and Blu-Ray January 7th.

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