The Dissenter’s Top Films Of 2017

Editor's Note
It’s that time again to engage in the annual ritual of listing off top films from the past year. These are films that made an impression and/or pushed boundaries. Some may carry social importance. Others are purely entertaining.
I have compiled an annual list since I started publishing “The Dissenter” column in 2011. As with previous lists, the films are not ranked in any order.
If I introduce a few readers to one great movie they never heard of or remind them of a film they did not get to see from this year, then this list was worth putting together.
—Kevin Gosztola
Blade Runner 2049
One of the more powerful images is of a dead tree held up by wires because most natural life has been lost to capitalism. Cinematographer Roger Deakins brilliantly captures this environment. The sound design and score are multi-layered and marvelously amp up the intensity of key action sequences. And director Denis Villeneuve crafts a slow-burning dystopian film that is every bit as intense and provocative as the first film. |
Florida Project
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Get Out
Peele made the protagonist black and crafted a scenario that would be terrifying for black audiences, in particular. There are elements that audiences of all colors have come to expect from classic horror movies. But its punch comes from learning the white family of the film isn’t to be feared because they are possessed by supernatural or paranormal beings. They are your typical middle or upper class garden variety racist, who any black person should tread carefully around. |
I, Daniel Blake
Director Ken Loach seamlessly captures the coldness of government bureaucracy, as Daniel fights for what he rightfully deserves. In our age of austerity, Blake’s struggle is a lyrical tale for working people trapped in the margins of Western society trying to survive. |
Mudbound
Poverty is vividly depicted. All the characters are poor. The racism and subjugation of black people is a way for white people to better manage their survival. Nevertheless, that does not justify the violence and callousness that those living in Mississippi allow to be perpetrated against black bodies. |
Shadow World
The film plumbs the dark depths of the arms trade indicting world superpowers for choosing militarism over investing in the well-being of people. As journalist Vijay Prashad puts it, Western countries make policy on the “assumption of greed.” He eloquently argues superpowers made war more inevitable by crushing efforts in the Global South (e.g. Latin America) to imagine an alternative way of organizing institutions. The potential of successfully contesting the global arms trade is extraordinarily bleak, and yet, with all the destruction it causes, the film expertly shows challenging the trade should be a moral imperative for the global population. |
Shape Of WaterDirector Guillermo Del Toro crafted a gorgeous love story with splendid production design. Set during Cold War, Elisa (Sally Hawkins) and Zelda (Octavia Spencer) are janitors at a research facility that has captured the Creature. Both the Americans and Russians care little about the life of the Creature. They only want to squeeze what they can out of the Creature so their power can be maximized, even if that means the Creature dies. But Hawkins, who gives a very heart-rending and heartwarming performance as a mute, falls in love with the Creature. She attempts to protect and save the Creature from the brutality of the research facility, and the blend of fantasy and humanity of it all is utterly captivating. |
Star Wars: The Last Jedi
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Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
What separates this film from other standard murder mysteries is McDonagh’s commitment to raising the stakes constantly to see what happens between the characters which populate the town. In the end, the simpletons of Ebbing, Missouri, are far more absurd and interesting than catching a murderer. |
Whose Streets?
All the hopes and frustrations of a movement are crystallized, and the scale of unfinished business is clear. Seeds of justice were planted, but the St. Louis area is still a place, where car dealerships will proudly hang “Blue Lives Matter” flags alongside their American flags. |
Films I Wish I Had Seen Before the Year Ended:Coco • Human Flow • Okja • The Post |