I rang in the new year with an unexpected trip to St. Barts that ended up with friends.
I made a resolution in 2025 to watch more films. It’s an art form I have many friends in and when we have hung out I realized how shallow my understanding of the canon of film was. I have a lot of catch-up to do, and it also required a lifestyle change as I’m usually at a laptop so to make the space to enjoy a film for a few hours was a departuture from my normal routines.
I watched 72 movies last year! This definitely came at the cost of books finished, if I look at my stats. But I’ve begun to really appreciate the contours of what I love about a movie now.
This is a long lead to recommend the movie Jay Kelly, which streams on Netflix with George Clooney and Adam Sandler. After seeing many great and terrible movies, old and new, I really appreciated what they did with this film, and it was one of the rare ones I watched entirely or in sections several times, gaining new appreciation for what they pulled off.
It starts with a “One-er,” which is a continuous shot with no cuts that moves between a number of different scenes in a really slick way. (Excellent episode of The Studio about this!) It’s a film way of showing off, as it must be incredibly hard to have hundreds of people all pulling off something flawlessly for a long period of time, not unlike a Broadway show.
Jay Kelly is George Clooney playing himself, which as he says is the hardest thing to do. There are meta-levels of reality and fiction and so many allusions and callbacks the entire thing is a work of art. You learn to appreciate what actors do, and how film is made, while watching a film being done in such a nice way.
So that is my recommendation from the year. In older movies I really enjoyed Kate & Leopold, which also includes an amazing Sting song that is impossible to find on streaming.
Maybe this year you could
Maybe this year it would be good to view artwork made without any computer assistance.