4 EYES ON THE SCREEN: Top 4 Films of 2019 [Review]

Let’s start with the positives: 2019 has been a fantastic year for cinema.

I’ve not reviewed as many films as I’ve seen this year due to work commitments, but I’m hoping the short reviews below will make up for it!

There were quite a few to choose from and I’ve really had to narrow it down to my top four. From the Russo’s epic Avenger’s finale Endgame to Ciro Guerra and Cristina Gallego’s hypnotic Birds of Passage to Scorsese’s sombre, brooding The Irishman, it’s been difficult to reduce it all- but here they are (in no particular order):

IF BEALE STREET COULD TALK: Jenkins Heightens The Tenderness and Turns Down the Tragedy of Baldwin’s Novel.

Director: Barry Jenkins / Screenplay: Barry Jenkins – based on the 1974 novel of the same name by James Baldwin.  

Jenkins’ follow-up project after his award-winning Moonlight continues the director’s intensely intimate style. He locates the essence of Baldwin’s story (even though Jenkins often softens the author’s grittier, sharper novel): the beauty and fragility of Tish (Kiki Layne) and Fonny’s (Stephan James) dream to be together and raise their family against the racism of 1950’s America. Jenkin’s sublime camera-work is conjoined with a deeply resonant score from Nicholas Britell. Featuring wonderful supporting performances from Regina King and Brian Tyree Henry, If Beale Street Could Talk resounds with pain, tenderness, joy, despair and love.

My Verdict |★★★★☆


BOOKSMART: Wilde’s Debut of Sisterhood and Senior Year Sentiments is A Wild Night Out.

Director: Olivia Wilde / Screenplay: Emily Halpern, Sarah Haskins, Susanna Fogel, Katie Silberman

Wilde’s feature directorial debut it an absolute hoot. Kaitlyn Dever and Beanie Feldstein raise the roof with their brilliantly misguided antics as two studious American high-school seniors determined to have the night of their lives before graduation. Booksmart tries to subvert established conventions of this high-school coming-of-age comedy, offering some introspection, but gets top grades for its wit, hijinks and warmth.

My Verdict |★★★★☆


FOR SAMA: A Harrowing Depiction of Survival and Hope in War-Torn Syria.

Director: Waad Al-Khateab

Without doubt, one of the most harrowing documentaries I’ve watched in recent years. Al-Khateab’s unflinching documentation of her life in besieged Aleppo during the Syrian Civil War pulls you through the inevitable decline of life and hope during conflict. An incredibly powerful piece of cinema that continues to haunt me, For Sama deserves to be seen widely.

My Verdict |★★★★★


SORRY WE MISSED YOU: Packages of Precarity, Pain, and Pride.

Director: Ken Loach / Screenplay: Paul Laverty

My review here. Loach remains as unremitting as ever in his exploration of austerity Britain, this time skewering the ‘gig economy’. This is a difficult watch but has some deeply moving performances from Kris Hitchen, Debbie Honeywood, Rhys Stone and Katie Proctor. As with I, Daniel Blake, you walk away from Sorry We Missed You filled with inspiration from the dignity of the lives portrayed and anger at the system which has attempted to reduce them. There should be more British cinema like this- especially now.

My Verdict |★★★★★



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2 responses to “4 EYES ON THE SCREEN: Top 4 Films of 2019 [Review]”

  1. ospreyshire Avatar

    Thanks for the recap of the best of 2019. I haven’t seen any of these films, but I might check some of them out.

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  2. 4 EYES ON THE SCREEN: My Top Films of 2023 [Review] – 4 Eyes on the Screen + Even More Eyes Avatar

    […] as the film moves towards its tragic culmination. Reminiscent of Barry Jenkins’ Moonlight and If Beale Street Could Talk in its intimate cinematography and social themes, Virgo allows the emotional details and resonances […]

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