2018:
I’m still processing a lot that happened last year, so it’ll probably be a bit more time before I fully grasp what twenty eighteen meant to me on a larger scale. A lot happened, and the highs and lows were even more extreme than 2017 (I’d like to blame climate change/climate disorder in both the metaphorical and literal sense), but having recently transitioned out of the year, I’d say that overall it was more positive than anything else. For instance:
I went to 6 weddings/wedding receptions (in and out of state) and got to witness several people I love vouch their love for one another.
Two lovely and close friends and couples I know got engaged.
I helped kill Moviepass by seeing “Black Panther” 9 times, “The Last Jedi” 8 times, and several others (#noshame #wakanda4evar) – and after Moviepass decided to rickroll on its promises, I discovered Sinemia and AMC Stubs A-list, all in which solidified my constant presence in movie theaters (before running numbers, it looks like I attended movie theaters approximately 40-60 times throughout the year).
I started taking film classes at USC using my staff benefits, and very quickly discovered that it takes more discipline for me to stop working on film (aka sleep) than it is to get started. I also met some great people and professors who have supported and inspired me to continue.
I had the privilege of attending the first “Women in Animation” symposium.
Tazaki turned two years old!
I got to visit Croatia and Australia, accumulating memories and travel points along the way.
That being said, I would also say that 2018 was an interesting year of thematic foils in cinema – that is, films that addressed the same topic, and had vastly different approaches and effects. This notion stemmed from a close friend (cc: 友利さん)who noted that two movies, “BlackKkKlansman” and “Sorry to Bother You,” both had black protagonists who navigated their worlds with a ‘white’ voice.
I would extend the idea of thematic foils to the following as well:
Spider-Man: Into the Spider-verse // Black Panther
Vice // Fahrenheit 11-9
If Beale Street Could Talk // Green Book
Won’t You Be My Neighbor // Mary Poppins Returns
Shoplifters // Burning
Destroyer // You Were Never Really Here
Museo // Can You Ever Forgive Me?
I also found several movies that engaged with non-chronological and non-linear storytelling. In some instances, the effect was obvious (e.g. Spider-Man: Into the Spider-verse) while it was less explicit in others (e.g. If Beale Street Could Talk).
Major regrets that I did not see in theaters include the following:
Widows
Blindspotting
Hale County This Morning, This Evening
Once I develop better writing discipline, I’ll get into more details about these cinematic foils and ideas. For now, here are my top cinematic minutiae of 2018 – a list films that have a particular memory and emotion associated with them.