Welcome to yet another edition of Top Ten Things, here at Enuffa.com. Things, ten of them, at the top.
Today I'm talkin' about directorial debuts. I forget how this popped into my brain, but one day I just started thinkin' about which first-time directors ended up defying the odds and making lasting pieces of cinematic art. With most talented directors their first films show at least some promise, even if they either haven't found their voice or simply didn't have adequate funding to realize their vision. Then you get situations with a James Cameron directing tripe like
Piranha II: The Spawning, just a gifted aspiring filmmaker looking to get his feet wet.
But sometimes a newbie auteur gets it just right on his or her first try and delivers a great film right out of the gate, taking an established narrative form and giving it a new spin, or inventing a new genre altogether. Below are ten such examples (but first some honorable mentions). Note: This list only includes debut feature-length films, not shorts.
Honorable Mentions
American Beauty (Sam Mendes, 1999)
The 40-Year-Old Virgin (Judd Apatow, 2005)
Anchorman (Adam McKay, 2004)
Hedwig and the Angry Inch (John Cameron Mitchell, 2001)
Blood Simple (The Coen Brothers, 1984)
Hunger (Steve McQueen, 2008)
Hereditary (Ari Aster, 2018)
10. Clerks (Kevin Smith, 1994)
The movie that launched Kevin Smith's View Askew-niverse,
Clerks is a quintessential indie slacker comedy, about two best friends stuck in a go-nowhere convenience store job trying to figure out what they want to do when they grow up (amid discussions about
Star Wars, Gatorade and relationship troubles). Shot in grainy 16mm black & white, the entire film takes place over the course of one day, chronicling our hero Dante's misadventures, from closing the store to play hockey on the roof, discovering a dead customer in the bathroom, and ruining his relationship with his current girlfriend to rekindle one with his ex. The film showcases Smith's gift for writing quirky, articulate, often vulgar dialogue and inventing memorable characters, the most lasting of which are View Askew anti-heroes Jay & Silent Bob, two drug dealing miscreants who spend all day loitering in front of the store. Smith's inexperience as a first-time director shows in
Clerks, but the script and atmosphere are so strong they make up for the film's lack of polish. I still consider
Clerks to be his best movie.
9. Monster (Patty Jenkins, 2003)
The future director of the smash-hit
Wonder Woman movie began her career behind the camera with this haunting bio of serial killer Aileen Wuornos, a Florida prostitute-turned-murderer who was executed by lethal injection in 2002. Without excusing Wuornos's seven murders,
Monster presents her as a severely damaged woman who was dealt a terrible hand from childhood and felt she had no other recourse but to rob and kill. Boasting a scorchingly exquisite lead performance from Charlize Theron (for which she won a well-deserved Oscar),
Monster focuses on the person behind the heinous acts, showing us how and why she arrived at them. This film is pretty note-perfect and it's quite shocking that Jenkins didn't direct another feature film until
Wonder Woman.
8. Reservoir Dogs (Quentin Tarantino, 1992)
Quentin Tarantino's directorial debut based on his third screenplay (His first two,
True Romance and
Natural Born Killers, would later be directed by Tony Scott and Oliver Stone, respectively),
Reservoir Dogs took the heist film and turned it upside down, presenting the events in question almost as a parlor drama. Instead of a long buildup to the heist followed by an action centerpiece,
Dogs briefly introduces the characters and then spends the majority of the film on the aftermath of a job gone horribly wrong, without ever showing the heist itself. Structurally I had never seen anything like this before, and it illustrated Tarantino's ability to play with time and sequencing while indirectly revealing information about the characters; we see the heist's aftermath sprinkled with flashbacks focused on key players, so the plot information is doled out sporadically (One of the robbers is suspected of being an undercover cop, and we don't get the reveal until an hour in). With uniquely musical dialogue, grisly, stylized violence, and strong performances by veteran actors like Harvey Keitel (whose enthusiasm for the project essentially got the film made), Tim Roth and Michael Madsen,
Reservoir Dogs announced Quentin Tarantino as a maverick new filmmaker.