Home Featured Content

10 Great Movies From 2013 That You Probably Missed In Theatres

More than 600 movies received a theatrical release in 2013, which means that if you went to see a new movie every day this year, you still could not cover the whole cinematic spectrum. 2013 was, in this critic’s opinion, one of the best years for film in recent memory. Of the 80 or so films I saw this year, I enjoyed about two thirds of them. The titles that I can recommend heartily range from big-budget extravaganzas (among them, Gravity and Star Trek Into Darkness), as well as modest films that did not last long in theatres. If the diversity of the picks from early awards and critics prizes attest to anything, it is that the variety of quality films was vast this year.

[h2]9) Stories We Tell[/h2]

Stories-We-Tell-Sarah-Polley

Recommended Videos

A terrific, post-modern look at storytelling and the fallibility of truth, Sarah Polley’s documentary catapults her into the ranks of great young filmmakers. Stories We Tell is a documentary, a mystery, a family exposé and a deeply moving look at tangled human relationships – all centered around Polley’s family life. She sits down with her own family – her father, actor Michael Polley, as well as her brother and sisters – to tell the collective story of her mother, Diane, who died when Sarah was 11.

The threads that emerge from these re-tellings show different elements of her father, a private man with a lot of creative ambitions left unfulfilled, and her mother, a vivacious beauty who loved being the centre of attention. However, the plot thickens when Polley’s siblings whisper about how Sarah may not have been Michael’s biological daughter, but a result of a fling Diane had. Polley tries to fill in the gaps of her life, but family and friends greet her with doubt and discrepancies. She moves from probing her own family to making sense of an unexamined part of her own life.

What makes the documentary so fascinating is how, even within the structure of a non-fiction film, the possibility of doubt lingers on every story twist. Like Errol Morris’s 1988 documentary The Thin Blue Line, she weaves together a story through different, sometimes irreconcilable versions of events. Looking at the tenuous strands that separate fact and fiction, Polley’s interrogation of her family turns into a look at the subjectivity of storytelling, as well as documentary filmmaking. (Even some of the archive footage featured in Stories We Tell turns illegitimate when it starts featuring actors in the role of the family.) It is both a riveting look at family secrets and an insightful analysis of truth in art and storytelling.