15 Movies That Transformed Cinema In 1999

Damn, 1999! Good freakin' job.

This year marks the 15th anniversary of one of the most important years in film. The year 1999 truly changed how movies are made and perceived. Twist endings, low-budget pseudo documentaries, classic book adaptations, darker-than-dark comedies, and that loathsome Jar Jar Binks character: 1999 had it all. Not since the summer of 1989 (Batman, Lethal Weapon 2, Ghostbusters 2, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade) has a year been more fruitful and transformative at the box office. Why, exactly, there was suddenly a surge in creativity in Tinseltown during this particular year remains a mystery. Maybe the hysteria of the coming Y2K "apocalypse," which, as we now know, never materialised, panicked Hollywood executives, and they took risks green-lighting more daring and out-there scripts (just think of Being John Malkovich). Whatever the reason, their anxieties were the movie-loving world's gain. It's hard to believe, but all of these gems were released in the same year, so c'mon: let's party like it's 1999...

15. The Matrix

It all started with "The One." The commercials teased, "What is The Matrix?" and, for once, we actually cared and wanted to know (if its box office performance was any indication). Try to forget the nonsensical sequels and the last 5 seconds of this one ("Neo can fly!"), this movie truly showed us things we just never saw before. It even coined the industry term "bullet time," though it was regrettably copied in almost every single action movie since. Still, philosophy and kung-fu have never blended so seamlessly before - or since. In The Matrix, Keanu Reeves' Neo (or "The One") discovers that day-to-day reality is nothing more than a gigantic computer program that has blinded us from the reality that we're actually slaves providing energy to an alien race of machines. The movie sparked our fascination with digital worlds and noted our increased reliance - and interdependence - on computers years before Second Life or Facebook. Somewhat paradoxically, The Matrix enhanced both the amount of digital trickery and practical effects when it came to stunts. While multiple digital cameras captured action in "bullet time," more wires were added to stunt work, though they were naturally erased in post. Wire-work stunts would probably reach its zenith with the following year's Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, directed by Ang Lee. So what is The Matrix? Keanu Reeves in a science-fiction blockbuster that contemplates the transcendence of reality and the tangible nature of existence. "Whoa," indeed.
Contributor

Michael Perone has written for The Baltimore Sun, Baltimore City Paper, The Island Ear (now titled Long Island Press), and The Long Island Voice, a short-lived spinoff of The Village Voice. He currently works as an Editor in Manhattan. And he still thinks Michael Keaton was the best Batman.