Making a winners and losers list is incredibly tricky, especially in a year where it felt like everyone was either having a massive breakthrough or landing major deals. Picking the losers was easy, but narrowing down the winners to just a select few took some soul searching, but I assure you the rest of the staff will cover what I missed.
Winner: Ryan Coogler
The critically acclaimed director of Creed and Fruitvale station took on his biggest challenge yet, directing Marvel’s Black Panther. With that came responsibility and burdens, after all, what would it signify in Hollywood if a predominately black movie with a 200 million dollar budget bombed at the box office? Thankfully Black Panther not only became one of the highest grossest movies of the year but critically reviewed as well. With Award Season now in the works, Ryan Coogler might land Disney a Best Picture nomination, and more. Coogler has a busy year ahead as he will return to direct the Black Panther sequel.
Loser: The Village Voice
What would you do if your favorite publication or job just ended out of the blue? 2018 answered that question with The Village Voice. Nobody saw The Village Voice shutting down, not even its staffers as the 63-year-old New York alternative news publication announced it was closing shop for good. The news came a year after the publication switched to digital only, and three years after it was bought out by Peter Barbey.
Winner: Brian Tyree Henry
If there is one thing we can agree on is that Brian Tyree Henry is not only talented but one of the hardest working actors of 2018. The Atlanta series star had a breakout year appearing in six feature films this, including Widows, If Beale Street Could Talk, and Spider–Man: Into the Spider–Verse along with several occurring television roles. No matter where you turn you will either see or hear Tyree’s voice before the year is over.
Loser: FilmStruck
Filmstruck may have only been available in select regions, but fans of cinema mourned all over the world when the service announced it was ending in November. Filmstruck had the largest library of not only classic cinema, but films from the prestigious Criterion Collection. Along with its library, the service was known for special features and appearances from directors like Barry Jenkins. Directors, actors, and critics from all over rallied together to help save the streaming service including the likes of Guillermo Del Toro. The Criterion Channel was announced to take its place next spring but is a long wait for many who used the service on a daily basis.
Winner: Lady Gaga
“Tell me something, boy
Aren’t you tired tryin’ to fill that void?
Or do you need more?
Ain’t it hard keepin’ it so hardcore?”
Leave it to Lady Gaga to prove two sets of haters wrong in one year the people who thought she couldn’t sing, and the people who thought she couldn’t act. Lady Gaga does not only look like a crowd favorite for best actress but also a likely candidate to perform at the Oscars. Who would have thought that we would be talking about Lady Gaga to this extent last year? “Shallow” has quickly become the movie song of the year, but honestly, any song Gaga sings in A Star is Born directed by co-star Bradley Cooper is quite exceptional.
Loser: Venice and Cannes programmers
Two of the most prestigious and oldest film festivals in the world were exposed in 2018 for their lack of women directed films across all categories. Cannes only had three women directors out of 21 in their competition category, and Venice as if trying to win a losing competition bested Cannes by only having one woman director out of 21 in their competition category. Both festivals have stated they would do better next year, but it seems Sundance and TIFF are the only ones who have made active changes…
Winner: Brie Larson
Brie Larson is about to become a Marvel star for her role as Captain Marvel, but before the trailers for Captain Marvel dominated the internet, the star was all over the news for something else. During her Crystal Award for Excellence in Film acceptance speech, Larson called for more critics of color and underrepresented people in the industry. “Of the 100 highest-grossing movies in 2017, less than a quarter of the critics were white women, less than ten percent were underrepresented men, and only 2.5 percent were women of color.” Her words were a wake-up call across the industry, and action took place immediately. Sundance and TIFF promised to reserve 20 percent of their press accreditations for critics of color, women, and LGBT community members. Rotten Tomatoes even took notice of this and changed how they verified critics to have a more diverse range of voices.
Loser: The Predator
Another year, and another attempt to try and revive the Predator franchise. What could go wrong with acclaimed director Shane Black at the helm, and a solid cast at his disposal? Well, shocking maybe a dozen people, The Predator is not only one of the worst movies of the year, but also had a major problem on set. Director Shane Black apparently hired a registered sex offender, without disclosing this to the cast, crew, and Fox before shooting began nor during production. Olivia Munn, one of the stars of the movie aired all this information out during the promotion run of The Predator. As you can tell quite a few Fox hire ups were not happy. Don’t even get me started about the silly plot of the movie itself which involves climate change, and autism.
Winner: Ethan Hawke
Best known for his role in the Before Trilogy, Training Day, and Boyhood the iconic actor has had an incredible year. Hawke is not only a favorite for best actor this year but also stars in what could be the best picture of the year First Reformed. There are only a few things stopping Hawke from success this year, and First Reformed director Paul Schrader’s facebook post might be one of them.
Loser: Pacific Rim Franchise
Pacific Rim: Uprising the sequel to the first movie directed by Guillermo Del Toro released earlier this year. Unfortunately, it was reviewed poorly and was such a box office bomb that the third movie was canceled. Blockbusters don’t always strike gold, but Pacific Rim represented an untapped genre of giant robots vs. monsters that was severely lacking in modern cinema.
Winner: Nicolas Cage
Make no mistake Nicolas Cage has starred in some of the worst movies this decade, often his performances in said movies reached cult status for how terrible they were. Cage has starred in or had a supporting role in 8 movies this year, but it was one in particular, that made him not only one of the biggest winners of 2018, but also one of the most memorable performances of his career. Mandy directed by Panos Cosmatos proves that maybe Cage has been miscast all these years, and all he needed was the right movie to channel his inner beast.
Loser: Roseanne
Out of all the biggest losers on this list, Roseanne might be the only one that started as a winner. After all, it is not every day a classic American sitcom gets a revival, receives record-breaking viewings, and is renewed for a second season before its 4th episode. Now if you have no idea what happened, allow me to tell you how one person’s words ruined it for everyone. Star of the show, Roseanne Barr decided to go off on a racially charged Twitter rampage that resulted in not only her being fired, but the whole series being canceled. A spinoff premiered months afterward called The Conners with great reviews, but the damage was already done.
Winner: Horror Revival
Listing a whole genre as a winner might seem strange but it is not every year we get two great horror revivals accompanied by some of the best performances of the year. Horror in 2018 began early with one of the best films of the year Hereditary from breakout director Ari Aster starring Tori Colette who should honestly be praised more for her performance. The year only got better as we got a worthy revival of two iconic horror films Halloween, and Suspiria. Just when you think you couldn’t handle any more horror goodness we get a second wave in the form of Overlord and Netflix surprise hit Cam. The horror genre was never in a dire state, but 2018 puts doubters at ease.
Loser: The Netflix Sci-fi push
This loser will puzzle some but hear me out! Remember when Netflix promised 80 original movies for 2018, well Netflix is hoping you might forget because of the atrocities they unleashed on us earlier this year. Let’s start with Cloverfield: Paradox, Netflix gathered millions of people’s attention when they teased the movie during the Superbowl, and then made it available right after the game was over. It was a great strategy especially considering the success of the last Cloverfield movie, that being said the result was only the beginning of Netflix’s original movie nightmare dilemma. Cloverfield: Paradox was so terrible that most people by this time of the year blocked it out their memory. Just when you thought Netflix had bad luck of the draw, they released another big sci-fi release in Mute. Directed by Duncan Jones, and serving as a spiritual sequel to 2009 Moon. The previous sentence might be the only positive thing one can mention about Mute besides the neon color palette. It is honestly surprising that a worse sci-fi movie than Cloverfield: Paradox not only released in the same year but the following month after.
Winner: Lana Condor
To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before proved quite a few things this year there is still a huge market for romantic comedies, Netflix has original movies worth watching, and of course the winner of this section Lana Condor. Hands down this movie put Lana Condor and her co-star Noah Centineo on the map, to the point it dominated Twitter the month of August. Condor now has numerous endorsements deals and was just recently featured in Teen Vogue 2018 Summit. She is set to star in the new Deadly Class series airing on Syfy this January, and in the sequel To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before.
Loser: Gotti
“Audiences loved Gotti, but critics don’t want you to see it… The question is why??? Trust the people and see it for yourself!”
Gotti is the prime example of how being a sore loser is never a good thing. After being reviewed terribly by Critics, the Gotti press team fired back with a “fake news” spin that would make our current President proud.
Winner: Josh Brolin
Josh Brolin had an incredible year playing the time-traveling Cable in Deadpool 2, and CIA agent in Sicario: Day of the Soldado, but his biggest role is playing the mad titan Thanos in Avengers: Infinity War. Brolin brought much-needed freshness to the Marvel Cinematic Universe as he played a complex villain that received praise across the board.
Loser: Life Itself
Terrible movies come and go over the years, but when you have a cast like this you have to ask yourself what the hell happened? Starring Oscar Isaac, Olivia Wilde, Annette Bening, Antonia Banderas, and Mandy Patinkin Life Itself proves how a great cast can’t save a movie from the director. Life Itself is this year’s biggest tragedy porn as terrible events happen to every character in the movie, and is only explained with the most pretentious and silly of explanations.
Winner: Eighth Grade
Comedian Bo Burnham surprised audience and critics alike when he directed and wrote one of the most accurate portrayals of youth to grace the big screen, what makes it crazier is that this is his first directing role. Breakout star of Eighth Grade Elsie Fisher is being regarded as one of the best performances of the year, and being praised for her authenticity and vulnerability. Both recently won Gotham awards for their breakthroughs, and are nominated for independent awards, along with Eighth Grade for best movie and first screenplay.
Loser: Robin Hood
In what might potentially be not only the worst movie of the year but worst Robin Hood iteration to grace the big screen audience and critics are left with one gaping question ow did this go so wrong? In what might be considered the funniest or craziest idea ever, director Otto Bathurst admitted to the Hollywood Reporter that he never actually watched prior Robin Hood adaptions before making this movie, and it reflected. Not only is Robin Hood the least historical accurate iteration, but the movie has yet to make back it’s 100 million dollar budget.
Winner: Claire Foy
Often regarded for her award-winning role as Queen Elizabeth of the Netflix Series The Crown, Foy proved how versatile she was on the big screen. Starring in Unsane a psychological horror, to playing the wife of Neil Armstrong in Damien Chazelle’s first biopic First Man, and finally the girl with the dragon tattoo and avenger of women in The Girl in the Spider’s Web. To top it off she recently was the host of Saturday Night Live.
Loser: Terry Rossio
Rossio is the perfect example of what happens when keeping it real goes wrong. Known for writing Shrek, Pirates of the Carribean, and Aladdin no one could have expected what happened in November. The famed screenwriter compared the word “Antivax” with the n-word, and what surprised even more people is that he wrote out the whole word on twitter. Rossio recently apologized on Twitter, but his career will be tainted.
Winner: Constance Wu
Known for her role in Fresh Off the Boat, Wu proved she deserved to be on the big screen after her lead role in the 2018 mega-hit Crazy Rich Asians. What makes her a true winner of 2018 is what she is doing off the screen. Wu is one of the biggest activists in Hollywood and fights for American-Asian girls, the Me Too movement, and voting rights.
Loser: The Most Popular Movie Oscar
The Oscars took major heat a few months back for trying to make a “Most Popular Movie Category,” and of course they received unanimously disapproval. By making this category nine months into the year, it proved how worried they were about the potential of Black Panther and other popular movies not being nominated for Best Picture. It was an act of damage control that was unneeded, as the category only served to belittle the achievements of anyone who might have been nominated for this potential category. The “Most Popular Movie Category” is postponed this year, as The Oscars realized it was in poor taste to change the awards so far into the year.
Winner: Ava DuVernay
DuVernay being in this article is not a surprise to most, but her being a winner isn’t just about what she delivered this year. Director of A Wrinkle in Time, which struggled with both critics and at the box office, probably isn’t good enough to make the winners list. What makes DuVernay a winner is what happened months later. In late November the director signed a $100 million dollar multi-year, and multi-genre with Warner Brothers Television setting her up to make more diverse works and making the next few years a potential win for everyone involved.
Loser: MoviePass
Have you ever heard the expression “this is too good to be true” well MoviePass was no exception in 2018. MoviePass is a subscription-based movie-ticket service that for 10 dollars a month allowed moviegoers to see one movie a day. As you can tell just by seeing one movie a month already made this subscription a steal, unfortunately for the company, they were going bankrupt — last quarter alone they lost 137.2 million. To make money, they not only changed the pricing but restricted what subscribers could see, thus resulting in a huge backlash. MoviePass is hoping to bounce back, but other Companies like AMC have hopped on the pass based service and are hoping to profit off the idea created by MoviePass.
Winner: Tessa Thompson
Thompson is the queen of 2018 as the actress not only starred in some of the biggest movies and television of the year but also had offscreen wins as well. Tessa starred in Annihilation, Westworld Season 2, Sorry to Bother You, and box office hit Creed II. In her biggest move of the year, the acclaimed actress came out as bi-sexual and encouraged the message of being proud of who you are to millions. Thompson is set to star in the Men in Black spinoff with her Thor: Ragnorak co-star Chris Hemsworth next year.
Loser: Muppet Movies for Adults
From the studio that was sued by Sesame Street starring Melissa McCarthy, The Happytime Murders shortly after release made everyone wish Sesame Street won the legal battle. The movie proves that being vulgar just for the hell of it never works out, and was McCarthy’s worst-reviewed role to date.
Winner: Michael B.Jordan
If there is a queen of the winners, there has to be a king and even though he is no longer the king of Wakanda Jordan had a huge year. Jordan proved that could be a convincing villain when he starred in Black Panther as Erik Killmonger, but he also proved he had what it takes to be the champion when he reprised his role of Adonis Creed in Creed II. The latter of the two movies had the biggest debut for a live-action Thanksgiving Holiday release. Not only is the actor worthy of being A-list, but might even land a best-supporting-actor nomination for his role in Black Panther.
Loser: Kevin Hart
The final loser on the list is none other than the famed comedian and actor Kevin Hart. Recently Hart was announced as the host for the 91st Oscars Ceremony, in what should have been a time of celebration turned into the biggest disaster. It was revealed that Kevin Hart made homophobic tweets and harsh comments during his comedy tours from years ago by active bloggers and twitter users. Due to the backlash, the Academy gave Kevin Hart a choice that seemed like a no-brainer to any rational person, just apologize. Hart instead of apologizing double down on what he said quote “I chose to pass on the apology,” “The reason why I passed is that I’ve addressed this several times. This is not the first time this has come up. I’ve addressed it. I’ve spoken on it. I’ve said where the rights and wrongs were. I’ve said who I am now versus who I was then. I’ve done it. I’m not going to continue to go back and tap into the days of old when I’ve moved on, and I’m in a completely different place in my life.” Hart recently stepped down as the host, but now many questions how the actor will bounce back from this PR nightmare next year.
The post The Pop Culture Winners and Losers of 2018 appeared first on Film School Rejects.
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