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The Quest of 1993: The Single Finest Film of Our Generation?


This is a stone cold test of endurance. This is the crap-in-your-pants marathon of movie blogging. We are not even halfway through the necessary, yes, but mind-bogglingly painstaking process of selecting and subsequently exalting the official Single Finest Film of Our Generation and I already feel like I'm looking for my second wind. Luckily I'm not lumbering toward some nebulous point in the future that may or may not exist in which my leadership finally becomes meaningful because you, the people, the movie lovers of the blogosphere, are the reason I come back every two weeks after each much deserved respite to analyze a new year from our childhood/adolescent memories. Thus far we have pushed through the honorable finalists Home Alone, Point Break, and The Mighty Ducks and now we look to the year where I (and many of you) finally broke double digits. Ten years old we became and even deeper we did submerge ourselves into the majesty of the cinema. 1992 was a surprising hotbed of fury between an Emilio Estevez hockey movie and a Charles Grodin dog movie, so it will be interesting to see the intensity found in a voting period featuring Spielbergian dinosaurs, Jamaican bobsledders, an evil Culkin, peroxide-crazy Wesley Snipes, and a postmodern-fail Governator. Vote for your favorite (tip: think both in terms of "how much awesome is in my noggin thanks to this film?" and "how much do I wish I could be watching, laughing, and loving this movie right now?") in the comments!

Jurassic Park: The big kahuna. The whole enchilada. The top banana. When it comes to 90s cinema, hardly anything comes close to a film in which scientists bring dinosaurs (the ultimate childhood fascination as far as I'm concerned) back into existence, only to have them turn on their re-creators and run amok on an island. The best part? That could have been a terrible premise, but luckily Mr. Steven Spielberg combined the only three things he's good at (pulling heartstrings, creating there's-a-monster! tension, and communicating childlike wonder) to make JP infinitely memorable. Did The Lost World and the third one that I don't even remember ruin everything? Kinda. Is it almost unfair to include a movie that so closely straddles the line between entertainingly awesome (ah Goldblum) and genuinely awesome (my heart still almost ruptures during the kitchen scene)? Probably. But while JP might just be the only film covered throughout this quest to be both preposterous and genius, it's all about watching through a child's eyes, whether it be in the past or in the present. Even when I'm a grandpa I'll be wishing Dr. Hammond was mine.


Cool Runnings: Then again, if you wanted to be different, you could vote for what just might be the ultimate underdogs of the 90s, the Jamaican bobsled team! I have to say, even though a small corner of my heart is happy that The Mighty Ducks prevailed in 1992's vote, I personally think Cool Runnings is the most heartwarming sports movie of my childhood, and possibly, of my entire life. Man this is hard. John Candy had already won my affection in Uncle Buck and as "the polka king" in Home Alone (who was allegedly based on the "polka king of New England" that my own mother almost married in the early 90s, by the way), so when he came rolling through as the down and out Irv Blitzer, he not only creeped me out less than Gordon Bombay, but I always felt Candy had a earnestly jovial and carefree spirit that endlessly impressed me. Plus, Doug E. Doug's short-lived sitcom Where I Live was a favorite of mine that year when it premiered on (and sadly soon disappeared from) on TGIF, so I was stoked to see the two together on the screen. The one down note for CR is that I haven't seen it for years so I really have no clue if it holds up (though I'd love to give it a try). Also, a false rumor started around school after CR came out by a friend who shall remain nameless claiming that my mother stood up and cheered at the end of the film, yelling "Go Jamaica!". I don't know if that's a good or bad memory though.

Demolition Man: There's few movies I remember seeing as a kid and thinking they were totally strange, seeing as how I was a pretty forgiving critic back then as far as accepting the reality of an alternate verisimilitude, but this is definitely one of them. Even ten-year-old Chris couldn't understand why in this futuristic action film starring Sylvester Stallone and Wesley Snipes as cryogenically frozen criminals who are thawed (one on accident, one on purpose) and released to fight each other, Taco Bell remained society's only restaurant. Or why people only had virtual mind-sex, or why there was a shell in the bathroom instead of toilet paper that was never explained how it was used!!! Okay okay, as an adult, I understand these are all semi-failed tongue-in-cheek isn't-the-future-wacky jokes, but as a kid thinking he was seeing a wicked fight scene-fueled sci-fi shoot-em-up, I ended up severely confused throughout the majority of it all. Luckily, that just made it that much more entertaining and memorable for me, and revisiting it as an adult is quite the hoot, and one of a handful of flicks on this quest that I've actually sought out and done that for, proving its unpredicted stamina as a solid gem of WTF from the 90s.


Last Action Hero: Let me tell you the one and only thing I remember from my first viewing of Last Action Hero. It's not a scene from the movie that is almost nothing but a collection of random scenes as Austin O'Brien of My Girl 2 fame literally enters a world of explosions and guns as he becomes a part of a fictional action hero's life. It's not even an image or something in my peripheral from the theater excursion with my mother, who is by all accounts, no fan of action films. It was a feeling related to that last notion, though. I had, until that point, only watched action flicks with my brother. Maybe it was because it was PG-13 or maybe it was because the marketing for the film made it seem like more of a kids' fantasy than a straight-up kaboom-fest, but as I ended up seeing the film-within-a-film, a very specific feeling jolted up inside me that I'll never forget. I felt like I was escaping and was realizing that action of escaping as I was doing it. A stupid Schwarzenegger movie that tried so hard to be clever and often confused me as a child and proves almost to be unwatchable as an adult (so I guess you can see I'm not voting for this one) is indeed still responsible for a pretty eye-opening moment in my film-dweebification process. To be fair, I should give credit to the 1992 film Stay Tuned, which came before it, for setting up the bump-set-psychological spike.

The Good Son: First came the cookie cutter family comedy, then came the action film, and finally we have the horror movie. My brother had tried to get my teeth cut in the genre earlier, but I proved to be far too much of a wuss, closing my eyes and asking him to turn off a number of video rentals, including Dr. Giggles and The Lawnmower Man. But of course, somewhere between Pet Sematary 2 and Candyman, I finally experienced my own curiosity in the obscene, the gory, and the downright despicable with the help of two child actors crossing over from that very first genre that pulled me into a love of film in the first place. It was almost too perfect an idea to not garner fascination of all ten-year-old boys who were starting to finally get cocky and think a movie had to show gruesome deaths in it in order to be good, but this time the violence was committed by children. And not little dolls with red hair or who lived in a corn field, but by actors they recognized formally as the sweet harmless stars of My Girl and Radio Flyer. Yes, with the truly evil"Mac" Culkin as a disturbed orphan and Elijah Wood as the doe-eyed innocent facing off against each other was endlessly thrilling and jarring as a newly minted 6th grader. Finally the genre made sense to me, and from there on out I set out to discover more of the weirdly dark to experience that blithe rush of terror over and over again.

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  1. Blogger christine | 7:48 AM |  

    On time for this one:

    Even though this post made me crave watching The Good Son again, Jurassic Park is the only logical contender here.

    Jurassic Park is my vote!

  2. Blogger Brigitte | 8:39 AM |  

    how many of you were allowed to watch The Good Son when it came out?? I certainly was not.

    I vote for Jurassic Parks.

  3. Blogger Unspar! | 8:55 AM |  

    I think I was even afraid to ask if I was allowed to see The Good Son. That's how creepy it looked.

    Jurassic Park. Duh.

  4. Blogger Unknown | 8:56 AM |  

    Chris, I haven't even looked at the other contestants, and I know I'm voting for Jurassic Park. This is one of my favorite films of all time, probably mostly for nostalgic reasons, but also because it was AMAZING!!!

  5. Blogger P. Arty | 9:14 AM |  

    I vote for Jurassic Park too. Duh.

    There's a reason it's the go-to-starting movie for Popcorn the Video Game.

  6. Blogger Unknown | 9:22 AM |  

    Now after reading the post, some additional comments. Somehow I have not seen Cool Runnings even though I've always intended to. Nor have I seen Demo Man, and I don't want to (unless at a Terminator/Troll 2 style party). One of my favorite films on this list, aside from JP, is The Good Son. Somehow I feel they could remake this movie and recast Elijah Wood in the same role. I've always thought of this as a Suspense movie rather than Horror, but perhaps a reviewing is in order?

  7. Blogger Unknown | 9:33 AM |  

    It's too bad Cool Runnings didn't come out in 1992 because I have a feeling that would have won by a landslide that year. Agreed - most heartwarming sports movie ever. But, JP is the obvi winner here. If it were a showdown between Home Alone and Jurassic Park...it'd be close.

    Last Action Hero was so boring that even 10-year-old Qualler quit watching it on VHS midway through. Demolition Man I sadly hadn't seen until Blogulator Conference 1.0 last summer. And The Good Son I haven't seen the whole thing of yet (though the menacing Macauley on the cover of the video was pretty scary) (and I was also not allowed to watch it, Brigitte!)

  8. Blogger Sean | 11:27 AM |  

    Pretty sure they were cousins and Elijah was the orphan. Hence Macauly's plea "I love you mom" and she drops him and saves her nephew.

  9. Blogger chris | 11:54 AM |  

    My bad, Sean, this is why I need to watch this movie again!!! Sounds like we've already got our October Movie/Food Party lined up...

    Yeah, I figured JP would win in a shutout.

    But if anyone wants to try to turn this around, please feel free!

  10. Blogger DoktorPeace | 1:35 PM |  

    Jurassic Park.

    Also, I'm still mad you forgot the original TMNT. In my mind, that may be the only competition for JP thus far.

  11. Blogger Sean | 4:33 PM |  

    Jurassic Park, btw.

    Also, is this competition only movies that are geared towards children? I bet 1993 had some sweet period movies.

  12. Blogger Nicole Arratia-Walters | 4:26 AM |  

    These are some of my other favorite movies from 1993 (which I looked up just to see if anything competes with Jurassic Park):
    Dave
    Much Ado About Nothing
    Sleepless in Seattle
    Rookie of the Year
    The Joy Luck Club
    Schindler's List

    and, obviously the one I loved most that actual year: For Love or Money:)

  13. Blogger chris | 8:31 AM |  

    This is a competition between movies from 1993 that I (we) had a distinct childhood/adolescent relationship with. So no, I did not feel particularly close to Howards End.

    Rookie of the Year almost made the list of nominees, Nicole. But then I remembered how the girls all had crushes on him and the jealous hatred for Thomas Ian Nicholas returned and boiled in my blood once again.

    Thanks for the write-in votes though! I'm considering having a wild card round before we look back at all the winners from each year...

    But I think it's safe to say that JP now joins the ranks of Home Alone, Point Break, and The Mighty Ducks.

  14. Blogger Unspar! | 9:10 AM |  

    Home Alone, Point Break, Mighty Ducks, and Jurassic Park. That is the weirdest collection of "best" movies of each year that I've ever seen. Can you imagine if even one--let alone all--of these won Best Picture?

  15. Blogger Unknown | 9:38 AM |  

    I totally vote for Cool Runnings- not only because I wasn't allowed to see any of the other movies- but because it is a fantastic movie. If you haven't watched it lately, watch it again. It is still phenominal. In fact, I beleive I might host a Cool Runnings night.

  16. Blogger Jerksica | 3:26 PM |  

    First of all, Chris's insecurity (or at least the insecurities of the 10 yo version of him) do not justify the exclusion of Rookie of the Year from this list. I watched that movie so many times that I broke the tape (broke the tape!!!!). And, yes, Henry was hottt. BUT, so was Brad Renfro and I wasn't warping celluloid over "The Client" or anything. ROTY had hijinks (the faking out and heckling of batters), friendship, and heart (he lost his "gift" but learn important life lessons). Who cares that it isn't probably medically accurate that you can become a super pitcher from a bad broken arm? He's a motherfing Cub, dammit! So, I vote ROTY.

    However, if you insist on making me vote for a film that meets your discretionary "cut", I vote for Cool Runnings. Those guys can luge like no one's business.

  17. Blogger Unknown | 3:35 PM |  

    With all due respect, Jess, ROTY is garbage. Everyone knows a little boy can't be a major league pitcher by breaking his arm. It doesn't make sense! Plus, I'm with Chris -- the ladies just were too into Thomas Ian Nichols for me to respect him. Now, Little Big League - that's a sports film.

  18. Blogger DoktorPeace | 3:39 PM |  

    Qualler likes a film about the Twins? I have to sit down...

  19. Blogger Papa Thor | 4:46 PM |  

    I always felt sorry for Last Action Hero. It came out I think within a week of Jurrassic Park and I saw it much later and thought "this is a funny movie, with some good action, and Arnold self-awarily mocking himself, this guy is smarter than the stereotype, I bet he could go into politics and be Mayor of San Jose, no, I bet he could be governor of the whole state!" but it came out in the summer of Jurrassic Park and just couldn't compete. If it had come out the year before it would have been a box office hit.
    JP is just too well made, it shows not Spielberg the genius but Spielberg the Master Craftsman. Forget the impossibility of the main premise, forget the myriad incongruities of the various plot devices:
    - a single consultant programmed the entire system?
    - a tropical storm forces evacuation of the island except for the barest skeleton crew and the owners grandkids?
    - let's have some paleontologists and oh, perhaps a mathematician to review the setup?
    - as the (single master?) computer reboots with cool cubes rotating around (cool in the days of dos) the little girl exclaims "this is a unix system! I know this!"
    That last one was what caused the crowd of fellow IBM employees that attended the afternoon team building viewing (yes, I am a member of the computer graphics brotherhood) to laugh the loudest, the easily recognizable arch enemy computer manufacturer that was featured in the scene escalated our collective jealousy, but the whole thing was so well made, I can envision little Stevey S. plotting each scene, methodically calculating which emotion to tweak, scaring us just enough, killing just the right people: the lawyer, the generic cigarette smoking manager, the overmatched big game hunter, the traitorous software engineer, endangering the innocents but letting us know that no real harm would happen to them, wryly mocking the whole concept of a mega-enterprise, the wondrous experience was truly the highlight of that boiling hot summer, appealing to old and young, high tech and action fans and even girls liked it, it was the turning point for computer technology to entertain and not just organize, it tickled us with some ideas that we didn't have to think about too deeply, providing the existential thrill-ride we all craved.
    That hot summer of layoffs or no raises, of transition between the ruthless practicality of the Republicans and the progressive open-mindedness of the Democrats, before the sleaze hit the fan, before the fall of Communism was discovered to precipitate even worse governments, America and the world could come together and be scared and enraptured by a truly awesome film experience.
    And no, Brigitte, you cannot see "The Good Son."

  20. Blogger Unknown | 10:47 PM |  

    Clap. Clap. Clap.

    Is this the comment of the year award winner? I believe so.

  21. Blogger Unspar! | 10:53 AM |  

    Wow, that is the best comment ever. I want to print that out and post it in my cubicle.

    And Qualler, did you realize the irony of saying ROTY doesn't make sense and voting for JP? If you did, hilarious. And even if you didn't, hilarious.

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