Monday, August 4, 2025

Magic, Melancholy, and Wonder Boys: January/February 2000, contd

Continuing the beginning of the year 2000 and, already, we have our first Oscar winner of the year!


Wonder Boys was originally intended for end-of-year awards consideration in 1999. Getting it all together proved a challenge, though, and the release date was pushed back to February 2000, a surprising decision considering how firmly the November-December period had become Awards Season by that time. Critically acclaimed but met by audiences with a shrug, it came and went at the end of February. Such was the support within the film and critical communities, it was re-released in November, better suited for awards consideration. Indeed, it went on to be nominated for four Golden Globes (winning Best Original Song) and was among the National Board of Review's Top Ten Films of 2000, while star Michael Douglas was named Best Actor by the Los Angeles Film Critics Association. 

But that would be a December 00/January 01 story. We're still in January and February 2000, and Wonder Boys was one release of many - all seen this year for my first time:

Sunday, August 3, 2025

The Beginning of a New Age: January/February 2000

The year 2000 began with a genuine sense of history. Once the ball dropped and Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve continued without blackouts, internet outages, or planes falling from the sky (that wouldn't be for another 20 months), we celebrated as citizens of a New Millennium, laying the groundwork not just for the next century but the next ten centuries!

We started with eyewear

When the media spoke of the Y2K bug, a glitch that would convince the world's computer systems that the year had turned to Zero, it was in apocalyptic terms. Yet, in a sense, it did feel like Year Zero, in that there was a sense of renewal, of possibility. We were living in the future, Two Thousand! Even I, a fifth grader, ten years old, felt it. I seem to recall the slightest hitch in my breath when some joker turned the lights off just as the countdown hit "three....two...ONE...HAPPY NEW YEAR", but soon I was swept up in the emotion, in watching the people around me -  mom, Dad, siblings, grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins - celebrate how we, they, had made it. There were people in the room who seemed to have seen it all: WWII, the moon landing, the Concorde, the internet at your fingertips, now marveling that they were part of this new era. My God, what would we do with this blank slate, this call to shape the world?

We would keep living, it turns out. The real opportunity to shape the 21st Century would not come until November (it was an election year!). Until then, we returned to work, to school, back to reading The Ballad of Lucy Whipple, to doing homework while watching Pepper Ann in the afternoon, to evenings with Dilbert and Malcolm in the Middle

And people went right back to the movies. Indeed, some went the very first day of this New Millennium....

Friday, August 1, 2025

The Year 2000: An Introduction

The Turn of the Century is a phrase that, growing up, I knew referred to that blurry period between the Gilded Age and WWI. Working with people born after 2001 humbles one into realizing, somewhere between the reminiscences of Y2K paranoia and Daria, that for many, and soon many more, the Turn of the Century occurred just 25 years ago. And I was part of it!

With the gravity of that realization, I decided my look at the year 2000 would be different from other retrospectives. I lived through it! I watched many of the hits either in theaters that year or on VHS (ha!) the year after! And what I didn't see, I certainly knew about thanks to daily conversation, TV spots, newspaper reviews, and subsequent pop culture references. So, instead of the usual 65-80 films, I watched 122, doing my best to watch in the order of their release (the only exception: January releases, which I sprinkled throughout because...well, I'm not sure why I did that, but that's how it worked out). I had my friends on Instagram vote on what I should prioritize. And I decided to spend two months talking about it.

Sunday, I'll discuss the films released in January and February 2000 that I was already acquainted with; Monday, I'll discuss the films released in January and February 2000 that I saw for the first time. And it will continue in that pattern until September, when I take a look at that year's Oscar race category by category (well...ten categories, at any rate), culminating in my personal picks for the best of the year.

By the way, these are the 122 films:

28 Days
102 Dalmatians
Almost Famous
American Psycho
The Art of War
Autumn in New York
Bamboozled
Battlefield Earth
Beau travail
The Beach
Bedazzled
Before Night Falls
Best in Show
Big Momma's House
Billy Elliot
Boiler Room
Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2
The Boondock Saints
Bounce
Bring It On
The Broken Hearts Club: A Romantic Comedy
But I’m a Cheerleader
Cast Away
Cecil B. Demented
The Cell
Center Stage
Charlie's Angels
Chicken Run
Chocolat
Chuck & Buck
Chunhyang
The Contender
Coyote Ugly
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
Croupier
Dancer in the Dark
Disney's The Kid
Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas
Dr. T and the Women
Dracula 2000
Drowning Mona
Dude, Where's My Car?
Duets
The Emperor's New Groove
Erin Brockovich
Eye of the Beholder
Fantasia 2000
The Fantasticks
Final Destination
Finding Forrester
Get Carter
Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai
Girlfight
Gladiator
Gone in 60 Seconds
Hamlet
Hanging Up
High Fidelity
Hollow Man
The House of Mirth
The In Crowd
Isn’t She Great
Judy Berlin
Keeping the Faith
The Last September
The Legend of Bagger Vance
Love & Basketball
Love’s Labour’s Lost
Malèna
Me, Myself & Irene
Meet the Parents
Men of Honor
Miss Congeniality
Mission: Impossible II
Mission to Mars
Next Friday
The Ninth Gate
Nurse Betty
The Nutty Professor II: The Klumps
O Brother, Where Art Thou?
Paragraph 175
The Patriot
Pay It Forward
The Perfect Storm
Pitch Black
Pollock
Psycho Beach Party
Quills
Ratcatcher
Red Planet
Remember the Titans
The Replacements
Requiem for a Dream
Return To Me
The Road to El Dorado
Road Trip
Romeo Must Die
Rules of Engagement
Scary Movie
Scream 3
Shadow of the Vampire
Shaft
Shanghai Noon
Shower
Small Time Crooks
Snatch
Space Cowboys
State and Main
Sunshine
Thirteen Days
Traffic
U-571
Unbreakable
Urban Legends: Final Cut
Vatel
The Virgin Suicides
What Lies Beneath
What Women Want
Wonder Boys
X-Men
Yi Yi
You Can Count on Me


You May Also Enjoy:
Like us on Facebook