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Lots of End-of-Year List Goodness

Happy New Year!

Happy New Year!

What better way to kick off ‘09 than to look back at some of the things that made ‘08 great?

If Time-magazine’s bewildering set of end-of-year lists wasn’t enough lists for you, here is a run-down of some more countdown lists by the critics:

/Film’s Top 10 list podcast

Joystiq Network’s Video Game of the Year awards

allmusic’s (very extensive) Best Albums and Songs Films

NPR Best Books of 2008 Series

 

As thorough as those lists are, if you’re looking for something easier to scan, Metacritic’s probably the place to go, especially because most of these pages also have a section incoroporating in the top ten lists of most major critics.

Metacritic’s Best Films of 2008

Metacritic’s Best Music of 2008

Metacritic’s Best Games of 2008

 

I personally would make and share my own top ten lists in these categories, but I haven’t really experienced enough of any of these released in 2008 for me to be comfortable making the list.  What were some of your favorite movies, albums, or games of the year?

Still the Best End-of-Year Games List: GameSpy

gamespy

GameSpy started making annual top ten lists in 2002 at the latest.  Just by changing the year in the URL, you can go back to 2003, and they reference game awards back through 2002.  It’s possible there were earlier lists, too.  Here we are in 2008 and they’re still making them.

Their lists are really good, year in and year out.  First, the picks are always solid.  A good balance of mostly highly-reviewed titles everyone talks about with a few forgotten gems.  The clincher, though, is the writing.  It explains well what was good about the games that get picked.  I feel genuinely excited about playing these games after I read the picks.  In recent years, the site has had multiple perspectives on each games for some lists by having remarks from different writers about each game.  It provides points, counterpoints, arguments, and a variety of perspective.  This year Gamespy provided multiple perspectives for each game in the Top 10 Overall Games of the Year list.

Speaking of that list, here are the picks:

1. Fallout 3 (PC/360/PS3)
2. Warhammer Online: Age of Reckoning (PC)
3. Left 4 Dead (PC/360)
4. Gears of War 2 (360)
5. LittleBigPlanet (PS3)
6. Grand Theft Auto IV (PC/360/PS3)
7. Rock Band 2 (360/PS3)
8. World of Warcraft: Wrath of the Lich King (PC)
9. Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots (PS3)
10. Professor Layton and the Curious Village (NDS)

2008 was a year in which more great video games were released than any year before, so it was probably quite difficult to pick and rank the games.  The writing explains why the picks were made and kept me hooked.  Here’s the link again.

My runner up choice for my favorite end-of-year games list in 2008 is one that isn’t even really a traditional list.  It’s GamesRadars’ yearly recap awards thingy.

I like it because of some unpredictable picks and an excellent big-picture analysis.  When I went to go find the link, I accidentally read the whole thing again, so I guess the writing’s pretty compelling too.

Too bad I’m a poor college student so I can only play games I download on my computer.

Roger Ebert’s Top 20 Films of 2008

ebert

For the second time in three years, Roger Ebert has gone against the grain of film critic and not given us a straightforward, ranked top ten list of movies for the year.  His reasoning?  There are too many good ones to pick just ten.  He also has written many times through they years about how he’s not a big fan of ranking movies.  So we have a set of unranked favorites from the year.  Here are his twenty picks, alphabetically:

Ballast
The Band’s Visit
Che
Chop Shop
The Dark Knight
Doubt
The Fall
Frost/Nixon
Frozen Friver
Happy-Go-Lucky
Iron Man
Milk
Rachel Getting Married
The Reader
Revolutionary Road
Shotgun Stories
Slumdog Millionaire
Synecdoche, New York
W.
Wall-E

Interestingly, I’ve noticed at least one movie on this list (Wall-E) that didn’t get four stars, only three and a half.  This is certainly not a complaint, as I love Wall-E and I hope all of its year-end love will help in the Oscars race for years to come; it is wondered whether, with the right push, it could become the second and animated movie and first since the Animated Movie award was introduced to be nominated for the Best Picture Oscar.

That Wall-E was included is especially strange because some of his four-star reviews of the year (In Bruges, Lakeview Terrace) weren’t included as part of the twenty.

If I have a criticism with the list, it is that it’s coming out so early, and before a few of the Oscar hopefuls come out.  Movie studios tend to load the end of December with releases of artful, award-hopeful movies to have them fresh on people’s mind as the big awards are dolled out.  It’s not just a matter of respect, it’s a matter of money: an obscure film will get a lot more ticket sales if it gets nominated.

Unfortunately, I haven’t had much opportunity to get out so far this year, so I haven’t seen too many of 2008’s movies.  This list includes the favorites of the ones I’ve seen (Dark Knight, Wall-E) and some of the ones I most want to see (Frost/Nixon, Iron Man, Slumdog Millionaire).  Of these, I know W. got mostly mixed reviews, and Happy-Go-Lucky’s were only midly positive.  Most of these seem to be well-accepted by most, too.

It’s always fun to see movies ranked, but I respect Ebert’s choice not to.  Perhaps the days of his traditional Top 10 lists are at an end.  Ebert’s untraditional format is sort of refreshing given the ADHD, list-obsessed nature of many sites and news.  And though I love lists (obviously), it’s pretty cool to see something a little bit less hyperactive, more thoughtful.

Or maybe I just love everything Ebert writes and puts together.  It could be that too.

10 Songs I Re-Discovered in 2008

oasis

Let’s face it: I’m a young man in my 20’s.  I’m too young to be an expert on all of rock and roll’s back catalog.  And there is so much good music that has been produced that as soon as I start falling in love with a song or an album or an artist, it’s time to move on to the next one.

With the year coming to an end, people are focusing on the music that came out this calendar.  I’m here to take a look at a few of the songs that took a full hold of my attention, even if they didn’t come out this year.

Here are ten of my most-listened and most-appreciated songs this year, in no particular order.

Read more »

Time Magazine Goes List-Crazy

time

Time Magazine has outdone itself and brought you a whopping FIFTY top ten lists to recap 2008.  Wowza.

Here are topics covered:

Albums

Animal Stories

Awkward Moments

Best Biz Deals

Best Performances

Breakups

Buzzwords

Campaign Gaffes

Campaign Video Moments

Children’s Books

Crime Stories

Editorial Cartoons

Election Photos

Fashion Moments

Fashion Faux Pas

Fiction Books

Financial Collapses

Fleeting Celebrities

Food Trends

Gadgets

Green Ideas

iPhone Apps

Late Night Jokes

Magazine Covers

Medical Breakthroughs

Movies

Museum Exhibits

News Stories

Non-fiction Books

Oddball News Stories

Olympic Moments

Open Mike Moments

Outrageous Earmarks

Photos

Plays and Musicals

Political Lines

Quotes

Religion Stories

Scandals

Scientific Discoveries

Songs

Sports Moments

T-shirt Worthy Slogans

TV Ads

TV Episodes

TV Series

Underreported Stories

Video Games

Viral Videos

Worst Biz Deals

Each one of the ten entries for each of these fifty categories has a little paragraph or two to accompany it.

This is almost bewildering for me.  It’s just about too much to process.  Of course, I devoured the ones important to me (Albums, Movies, TV Series, Video Games, Sports Moments, etc.), but most I only had time to give a cursory glance.  It doesn’t help that you have to click through to a new page for each item of each list.  I wouldn’t mind having a few of these lists scrapped and had a new and improved interface implemented.

 Top 10 Outrageous Earmarks?  Top 10 Breakups?  I dunno if these should be mixed in with the big hitters.  But, hey, if a magazine is going to go all-out on something, at least it’s something easy to read, organized, and logical, like lists!

Overall, though, I would NOT recommend this list set for two reasons: 1) Dark Knight not mentioned as one of the top 10 movies of the year. 2) The Office not mentioned as one of the top 10 TV shows of the year. WTF!?!

Just kidding, these are definitely worth a look.  Pick out the ones that look most interesting you and you’ll probably get a lot out of it.

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