Written by Matt Patches
Solid relationships are built on compromise. Meaning, when your boyfriend or girlfriend tells you they want to go see Something Borrowed or Thor this weekend and your gut reaction is āIād rather have an eagle bite out my liver every day for an eternity than see that movie,ā well, you have to suck it up. Not just because youāre trying to keep the two of you together, but because the movie may actually turn out to be your cup of tea. Open minds, people.
Iāve been the āmovie buffā in many a relationship, but this weekendās line-up reminded me of the many discoveries Iāve made thanks to the differing opinions and interests of past significant others. For every sappy mother/daughter road trip drama (Anywhere But Here), fairy tale relationship come true (The Prince and Me), or by-the-books rom-com with a song for a title (Sweet Home Alabama), my girlfriends took me to a movie that ā gasp ā continues to resonate in my memory, challenge the way I watch films and remind me that I should get over myself once in awhile.
Pretty impressive. I hope one of them felt that way when I sat them down to watch Jet Liās The One.
As a reminder to myself and to all that we donāt ever really know what weāre going to enjoy the heck out of, here are eight movies I would probably never have seen on my own volition. And then I turn the table on you: what movie did someone twist your arm to see that actually turned out to be solid? I gratefully ask you to share your stories in the comments!
My Neighbor Totoro
The Pre-Judgment: My Neighbor Totoro was a movie my high school girlfriendās dad recorded off TV on to a Hi-8 tape and required us to watch off a video camera. Starring what appeared to be one of those creepy, grinning stuffed animals thatās always peering at you from the other side of a room, I imagined successfully sitting through Totoro would earn me some sort of boyfriend medal of honor.
The Judgment: Hayao Miyazakiās simplistic, charming animated film was my gateway drug to the world of Studio Ghibli, and even more importantly, the world of animation. My Neighbor Totoro was fantastical art ā even in crappy, lo-fi quality. There was a potential to this form of filmmaking I hadnāt seen before, a magic that could only be captured through the colorful, whimsical eye of an animator. My girlfriend loved it because the Totoro song is the most adorable thing ever created by man, but I was just happy to have alternatives to Disney flicks and Dragon Ball Z.
Down with Love
The Pre-Judgment: A throwback to the crack-up sex comedies of the 1960s, chock full of retro styles and wink-wink gags delivered by one of the more irksome actresses of modern day: RenĆ©e Zellweger. It was like my girlfriend asking me to read back issues of Vogue while getting our nails did. Guess I didnāt see the hilarious appeal of beehive hair-dos.
The Judgment: As far as rom-coms go, Down with Love doesnāt just step outside the box, it breaks it down, tapes it back together and fancies it up with a stylistic gift wrap that is practically unheard of in Hollywood. How did this movie get made? Mystifying, but watching Zellweger, Ewan McGregor and director Peyton Reed embody the whirlwind of an old fashioned romance (not mock it) makes for a truly lovely time. Which is why the movie made $0.
The Lion in Winter
The Pre-Judgment: The Lion in Winter stars the legendary Peter OāToole and Katharine Hepburn and won several Oscars when it was released in 1968 ā but there are few things less appealing on a Friday night than a heavy drama set in medieval France. Medical studies have proved that cinematic play adaptations concerning European history are the second most effective sleep drug under Ambien.
The Judgment: What a fool I am, especially as a person who can enjoy a riveting piece of theater, to brush off The Lion in Winter. Every line in this frickinā movie is delivered with unrivaled ferocity, like Shakespeare interpreted by David Mamet. We talk about the fine, but definitive line between theater and film, but a movie like The Lion in Winter convinces you that thereās room for a hybrid. We can have unrealistic, poetical dialogue in movies. Take a Hepburn classic: āI could peel you like a pear and God himself would call it justice! ā
Me and You and Everyone We Know
The Pre-Judgment: QuirkFest 2005, courtesy of performance artist/writer/mind-controller over the literary-inclined, Miranda July. Julyās Me and You and Everyone We Know appeared to be another Wes Anderson-inspired, surface-level indie combined with the unstoppable power of adorable children who say intellectual things. I was very worried for the girlfriend that enjoyed this movie.
The Judgment: Julyās latest film The Future solidifies this for me, but even in Me and You and Everyone We Know you begin to realize that sheās something of a 21st century, female Woody Allen. The movie isnāt quirky for quirkās sake, Julyās just the real deal. I could see why a person who authentically enjoys art and the creative process would be enthralled by Julyās work ā itās a completely unfiltered vision, an extension of herself, much like Allenās films. Not necessarily appealing all the time, but genuine.
Amelie
The Pre-Judgment: Ah, the days when Iād head to Blockbuster and watch my girlfriend pick whatever movie had compelling box art. As a young person, I never had a fear of foreign films the way some of my compatriots did (er, still do, I would imagine), but letās be honest: I had some other priorities while watching movies. Subtitles required my undivided attention and I had serious concerns that this random, schmaltzy French flick would be tooā¦distracting.
The Judgment: Always cross reference the names on the box with your memory bank. Obviously I was too caught up in my own obnoxious behavior to connect director Jean-Pierre Jeunet to films I had seen and loved, like Delicatessen and The City of Lost Children (note: films my girlfriend at the time loathed). Amelie was something even more special than his earlier work, the perfect gel of his style and romanticism. As Amelie and Nino zipped through the streets on their bicycle and the credits rolled, I recalled saying, āwhy arenāt American films more like that?ā To which my girlfriend replied, āDid you like it?ā
Save the Last Dance
The Pre-Judgment: Julia Stiles is the queen of movies that girlfriends demand to see in theaters, much to their boyfriendsā dismay. She starred in so many āhow can X guy win over Julia Stiles this time?ā movies, that I had a strong resistance to seeing The Bourne Identity in theaters. Sad. Save the Last Dance fit that model, mixed withā¦dancing. Ew, gross.
The Judgment: Few movies take teenagers as seriously as Save the Last Dance. Yes, the whole interracial dance thing is a little trite, but the movieās about the power of ambition and friendship, letting down oneās guard to find comfort in others. Thatās important stuff for the core demographic ofSave the Last Dance and it doesnāt hurt that the hip hop music and dancing is equally as powerful as Stiles and Sean Patrick Thomas (what happened to that guy?). Whatever Step Up franchise, the real deal is Save the Last Dance.
John Q
The Pre-Judgment: I vividly recall trying to decide between staying in one night and playing Rummikub or going to see Denzel Washington in John Q. I lost that argument. I donāt even know if my girlfriend at the time wanted to see John Q, as it looked like one of the most sentimental turds in all of movie history. She just really didnāt want to play Rummikub with me.
The Judgment: Well, I wasnāt wrong. I havenāt returned to John Q since that fateful day, but I think about it constantly. It may have been the first movie I flat out hated ā HATED! ā which makes it that much more important. Everything in John Q stunk to high heaven, and even with āworseā movies in existence, watching the film was a moment of clarity, in which I could perfectly describe why the film was a piece of poop. Everything is flawed and itās the perfect film to analyze why this happens to a project that is, obviously, someoneās labor of love (in this case, Nick Cassavetes).
Before Sunset
The Pre-Judgment: Watching two people fall in love on screen can be a great experience for couples. Watching people talk about how they were never able to make it work and have lots of regrets and wish they could be together even though itās impossibleā¦probably not as great an experience. Those are the kind of seeds you donāt want to plant two months into your new relationship.
The Judgment: Off the tip of my tongue, Iād say Before Sunset is the most romantic movie Iāve ever seen. Yes, itās also the sequel to Before Sunrise, the āone night flingā movie that could also take the title, but watching two former lovers, further down the road of their lives, talking about how things have changed and mistakes theyāve madeā¦that brings you little closer to the things you do have. Okay, girlfriend, you won that round. Iāll pay you back by taking you to Blade: Trinity!
How many movies have you been forced into that changed your life?