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Jonathan R. Lack’s Top 10 Films Of 2013

This is the Top 10 list I have been waiting my entire critical career to write. I have been reviewing movies since 2004, and compiling Top 10 lists since 2006, and while the latter task has become increasingly stressful with each passing year – maybe because I see a greater number of movies each year, and maybe because the industry has been on a general upward trend in recent times – I have never had the pleasure or challenge of compiling such a dense collection of cinematic brilliance for my year-end countdown. It is always tough at first, whittling the list of contenders down to the actual ten titles, but if I am being honest, I also find that most Top 10 lists I make are made up of a few films I might call legitimate masterworks, a bunch of great movies I love intensely, and, at the bottom, a sentimental pick or two that most clearly reflects my own obsessions and interests. And that’s perfectly fine, because a Top 10 list constructed like that still represents a whole lot of very meaningful cinema.

[h2]7. Stories We Tell[/h2]

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One of the absolute richest films of the year, Sarah Polley’s Stories We Tell is so many wonderful and fascinating things, all at the same time. It is a deconstruction of documentary form, an examination of human memory and perception, a study into the construction of stories and the act of storytelling, and a beautiful, emotionally complex tale of family and familial relationships. It is on that simplest and most direct level that the film hit me the hardest, as the intensely personal narrative Polley weaves about her own family’s past ultimately reveals itself to have wildly insightful and extremely universal things to say about all families, particularly in the way we view our parents.

The film forced me, near the end, to come to a bit of a revelation about my own mother, and some of the ways I have maybe been unfair to her in the time since my father’s passing, and I think any time a film can give us moments of clarity like that – especially a documentary that comes from such a deeply personal place to begin with – the work is obviously something very, very special. No matter how one ultimately views or interprets the film, all of it is executed with unbelievably inspired flairs of creativity, and realized with nothing but the deepest pathos. Polley has crafted a documentary masterpiece for the ages, one that transcends not only the limits of the documentary form, but even, perhaps, of filmmaking itself.

Stories We Tell is now available on DVD. 

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