Editorial

Jacob Mouradian’s Top 10 Films of 2021

Udo Kier Swan Song 02

Jacob Mouradian’s Top 10 Films of 2021

This time last year I was lamenting on the tumultuousness of 2020, and how despite all the closures, public health crises, and political upheavals, cinema kept on kicking and entertaining us through all the chaos and uncertainty. Ironically and/or disappointingly, the same still holds true for 2021.

Reopening procedures throughout the United States have seen mixed or downright negative outcomes due to bureaucratic mismanagement and capitalistic hubris. New variants of COVID-19 continue to sweep through our populace, shutting down entertainment venues and other aspects of public life that we were happy to finally see come revving back to life. The planet’s getting hotter with no foreseeable saving grace (hell, the ocean caught on fire this year!). Socioeconomic discontent feels like it’s rising to all-time highs.

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Cinema and other forms of art and entertainment are not solutions for these issues in and of themselves, but they can act as parts of a greater whole. They can be steppingstones in our own cultural and political educations, leading us down paths of enlightenment and engagement we might not have otherwise traversed. Other times these media are simply salves for the hardships of daily life, offering up the smallest bit of respite amidst an increasingly distressing world. Like all art forms, cinema expands our perceptions of the world, of our possibilities, and even our dreams. That expressivity is the sort of stability I crave in this uncharted world ahead of us, and it’s what keeps bringing me – and millions of others – back again and again and again.

2021 showed us that cinema, despite all fearmongering and doomerist trolling to the contrary, is here to stay. And just like us, it’s rapidly adapting to suit our new reality.

It was quite a challenge to narrow this list down to just 10 titles – especially when, thanks to FilmBook, I had the opportunity to attend the SXSW, Tribeca, Fantasia, and Locarno film festivals (all within the span of five months) and caught more new releases from around the world than I ever had in any prior year! But after looking back, these are the ones that stuck with me the most, that affected me on some profound level, or were just too goddamned fun to ignore.

Also, to repeat my 2020 mantra: as with all sorts of media categorization, lists like these should be seen less as a definitive declaration of taste and more so as a timestamp of interests as they exist here and now. Because canon is ridiculous, lists are subject to future change.

Jacob Mouradian’s Top 10 Films of 2021

Uzeir Delic Jabir Delic Usama Delic Ibro Delic Brotherhood 01

  1. Brotherhood

Director Francesco Montagner sneakily diverts attention away from the film’s documentary confines, letting its strikingly narrative setup hit you with an incredulous wallop. His creative choices are evident by his trusting and unobtrusive camera, letting the three brothers Jabir, Usama, and Uzeir reveal their lives to the filmmaker in their own time and on their own terms. If anything, Montagner’s film hints at an illogical narrative impulse that permeates all of humanity and speaks to the commonly recurring ways we crave connection and understanding to each other – be we a city-dwelling film crew or rural farmers. Of course, the gorgeously-shot Bosnian countryside certainly aides in the film’s beauty, too.

You can read my full review of the film here.

Aswang

  1. Aswang

Filmed in the wake of Rodrigo Duterte’s election in the Philippines in 2016 and his ensuing war on drugs, Alyx Ayn Arumpac’s documentary is a disparaging dive into the dark side of a country victimized by their own government. Using the titular cryptid as a jumping-off point, Arumpac examines how irrational concepts and ideologies spring about to make sense of a nonsensical reality. That juxtaposition makes us question whether said beliefs are the actual danger, or if it’s the puppeteers manufacturing them instead. Heartbreaking, terrifying, and infuriating in equal measure.

You can read my full review of the film here.

Jasna Duricic Quo Vadis, Aida? 01

  1. Quo vadis, Aida?

Bosnia and Herzegovina’s submission for the Best International Feature Oscar got beaten out Denmark’s Another Round back in April, but that in no way discounts Jasmila Žbanic’s harrowing account of a U.N. translator in the hours leading up to the Srebrenica massacre during the Bosnian War. Jasna Duricic plays the titular Aida, a Bosnian woman, who’s being pulled in multiple directions to save her family and her fellow Srebrenican townspeople from the encroaching Serbian troops. Duricic’s performance is a balancing act of poise and anxiety as she fights against the clock in a continuously backstepping form of compromise, perfectly matching the film’s righteous sense of anger and frustration over bureaucratic malfeasance and forgotten history.

Lily Newark A Brixton Tale 01

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  1. A Brixton Tale

Gentrification isn’t just when trendy white hipsters move into underserved Black neighborhoods and start filling them with craft breweries and artisanal cafes. It’s also the exploitation of the marginalized people’s lives for personal artistic gain, and that can be just as psychologically destructive. A cross between Michael Haneke’s Benny’s Video and Antonio Campos’ Afterschool but with a more humanistic approach, directors Bertrand Desrochers and Darragh Carey showcase the poisonous nature of social detachment and how dangerous the art that stems from that mindset can be. There’s even a critique of the weaponization of both the camera as a tool and white femininity as a social construct, and a suggestion that a mix between the two is downright deadly. A striking feature debut that carries on the British tradition of kitchen sink realism into a grittier, grimier realm.

Daniel Kaluuya Judas And The Black Messiah 04

  1. Judas and the Black Messiah

We can argue until we’re blue in the face over the optics of a mega-corporation within the Belly of the Beast producing a biopic about one of the most radical Black communists the United States has ever known, and we can get into semantics over the sincerity and/or accuracy with which this messaging actually plays when it’s filtered through numerous different producers and comes attached with a $26M price tag (and trust me: as an avid listener of too many leftist podcasts to count, these arguments are and have been happening). But even on a surface level it’s still an amazing feat to see something so enlightening, sympathetic, and radically oriented get a wide release within our modern neoliberal hellscape. On top of that, Shaka King’s direction is energetically tempered and the performances he gets from Daniel Kaluuya, LaKeith Stanfield, Dominique Fishback, and Jesse Plemons are all phenomenal.

You can read my full review of the film here.

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Jacob Mouradian

A Midwest transplant in the Big Apple, Jacob can never stop talking about movies (it’s a curse, really). Although a video editor and sound mixer by trade, he’s always watching and writing about movies in his spare time. However, when not obsessing over Ken Russell films or delving into some niche corner of avant-garde cinema, he loves going on bike rides, drawing in his sketchbook, exploring all that New York City has to offer, and enjoying a nice cup of coffee.
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