• Hanover
    12.8k
    A lot of great movies listed here. Instead of repeating any, I thought I'd add these that weren't mentioned yet, with my one sentence review:

    One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (The evil of authority generally, but perfectly personified by Nurse Ratchett).
    Being There (We walk blindly among miracles)
    The Shining (The face of insanity)
    A Beautiful Mind (Awareness of confusion)
    American Beauty (Suburban existentialism)
    The Matrix (Not overrated and stupid Cartesianism, but but it made the point well)
    The Secretary (a sideways love story of true devotion)
    Blue Velvet (fuckupedness on steroids)
    Bananas (a potpourri of 1960s quirky ridiculousness)
    Airplane (cartoonish characters who evoke no sense of humanity in an absurd reality)
  • T Clark
    13.7k
    Aaaargh! I keep being reminded of ones I should have put on my list. Here's some books that were the basis of movies that are good:

    • Little Big Man - Berger. Should have been on my movie list
    • Last Picture Show, Lonesome Dove - McMurtry is a great writer
    • Elmore Leonard - All his books are great. Some of his movies stink. My favorite adaptation is the TV show Justified.
    • Princess Bride - Goldman. Even more ironic and funnier than the movie.
    • Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy and Smiley's People - Le Carre
    • In Cold Blood - Capote
    • Billy Bathgate - Doctorow
    • Manhunter - Harris. This is the original Hannibal Lecter movie made in the 80s with Brian Cox as Lecter. The book is Red Dragon. The movie Red Dragon was a remake.
    • The Martian - Weir.
    • The Name of the Rose - Eco
    • Smilla's Sense of Snow - Hoeg
    • Starship Troopers - Heinlein - Good dumb movie. Good dumb book.
    • Stardust - Gaiman
  • T Clark
    13.7k
    Good to hear from you Tim.
  • Mikie
    6.6k
    The Little Thief of Baghdad (1940)tim wood

    Never even heard of this one. :up:
  • Vera Mont
    4.2k
    Airplane (cartoonish characters who evoke no sense of humanity in an absurd reality)Hanover

    Yes!! Stardust, too.
    Also:
    Nightmare Before Christmas
    The Dark Crystal
    Caveman
    Bicentennial Man
    Orlando
  • Mikie
    6.6k
    American BeautyHanover

    Conrad Hall’s cinematography alone puts it up there. Another one I forgot.

    Aaaargh! I keep being reminded of ones I should have put on my list.T Clark

    Me too…should have done the top 25. Just too many good ones.
  • Vera Mont
    4.2k
    Forrest Gump.
    Closeaup
    Firestarter
    ET
    Brief Encounter
    Jesus Christ Superstar


    Yes, 25 is closer.
  • Shawn
    13.2k
    There will be blood.
    2001...
    Blade Runner
    Paths of Glory
    The Shining

    Anything with Jack Nicholson.
  • Vera Mont
    4.2k
    Oh, oh oh !
    As Good as It Gets
    Coccoon
    ... and never thought I'd say this...
    Men in Black
  • Mikie
    6.6k


    I’m glad at least a few people are including fun ones like Star Wars and Men in Black. I love those. I still love Disney movies too, frankly. Some of Don Bluths were great.

    I’m surprised no one threw in Who Framed Roger Rabbit. That movie was my world as a child.
  • unenlightened
    9.2k
    Some Jolly good British films to do you all good!

    Mike Leigh films:
    Mr Turner.
    Happy-go-Lucky.
    Vera Drake.

    Ken Loach films:
    Cathy Come Home.
    I, Daniel Blake.
    Kes.

    Other films wot I like:
    The Bedsitting-room.
    Educating Rita.
    Shirley Valentine.
    Passport to Pimlico
    Kind Hearts and Coronets
    The Railway Children.
    Trainspotting.

    Edit: Dennis Potter films ( well more series really):
    The Singing Detective.
    Cold Lazarus.
    Pennies from Heaven.
  • Paine
    2.4k

    Righto!
    I have seen half of that list. I better get to work on the rest.
  • Vera Mont
    4.2k
    Shirley Valentine.unenlightened
    One of my all-time favourites. Love Pauline Collins. Did you see the series Upstairs Downstairs? The girl was incandescent. Plus, it was cool to see Joanna Lumley, one of the British documentary presenters I like, in an acting role.
    Kind Hearts and Coronets
    What fun!
    The Railway Children.
    Excellent!

    A Walk in the Clouds
    The Aviator
    State Fair
  • Bradskii
    72
    In no particular order:

    The French Connection: Hackman at his superb best
    Lawrence Of Arabia: Epic
    In Bruge: Brilliant casting and script
    Snatch: A breath of fresh air
    Godfather I and II: A masterpiece
    Casablanca: Classic scene after scene
    The Deer Hunter: I'd watch it every day.
    No Country For Old Men: The Cohens' best (and so true to the book)
    Pulp Fiction: Not a wasted minute.
    Unforgiven: Thanks, Clint...

    Honourable mentions:

    Fargo
    The Deer Hunter
    Airplane
    Goodfellas
    Saving Private Ryan
    Se7en
    Spinal Tap
    Brokeback Mountain
    Chinatown
    The Big Lebowski
  • Mikie
    6.6k
    Forrest Gump.Vera Mont

    Another great one. Even despite the cringey parts.

    UnforgivenBradskii

    That’s been mentioned a few times. I like that movie, but I’ve never understood exactly why so many people think it’s so great. I feel I’m missing something.
  • Mikie
    6.6k
    The grapes of Wrathuniverseness

    Here’s another unpopular opinion of mine. I’ll have to watch it again, but I remember hating this one. I think it’s because I had just read the book.
  • Mikie
    6.6k
    Good luck finding some of these on streaming services. Jesus…
  • Vera Mont
    4.2k
    Good luck finding some of these on streaming services. Jesus…Mikie

    I tried a couple. You Tube wants to charge me rent for Doctor Strangelove and Being There. So does Amazon Prime.

    Even despite the cringey parts.Mikie
    ?? I didn't cringe once. Now I'm curious.
  • Mikie
    6.6k
    ? I didn't cringe once. Now I'm curious.Vera Mont

    Some of it is just too silly I guess.
  • Maw
    2.7k
    No order (and subject to change)

    Seven Samurai (1954) - Kurosawa
    Harakiri (1962) - Kobayashi
    Alice in the Cities (1974) - Wenders
    The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928) - Dreyer
    Satantango (1994) - Tarr
    Apur Sansar (1959) - Ray
    The Weeping Meadow (2004) - Angelopoulos
    L'Eclisse (1962) - Antonioni
    Late Spring (1949) - Ozu
    Dersu Uzala - (1985) - Kurosawa

    Some of the above could rotate with (but not limited to) the below:

    Ran (1985) - Kurosawa
    Spirit of the Beehive (1973) - Erice
    Cleo from 5-7 (1962) - Varda
    Landscape in the Mist (1988) - Angelopoulos
    The Tree of Wooden Clogs (1978) - Olmi
  • Vera Mont
    4.2k
    Some of it is just too silly I guess.Mikie

    Oh, now I'm really curious. Wondering whether it's a generational gap in communication.
    The coincidences might have seemed silly, but I thought they were necessary to bring all the historical and cultural references into a coherent story.
  • Maw
    2.7k
    Another film I recommend of him is Good Morning (お早よう, Ohayō).javi2541997

    Love Good Morning. His silent film,I Was Born, But... which is loose remake, is also excellent.

    Anything by Bergman is good, and Seventh Seal is certainly up there — but for me, Persona may be his greatest.Mikie

    (I'll check out Persona which I've never seen.)180 Proof

    Persona is my favorite Bergman :up:
  • T Clark
    13.7k
    Educating Rita.unenlightened

    Yes. Made me realize I'd left out Michael Caine:
    The Man Who Would be King
    Educating Rita
    Billion Dollar Brain
    Hannah and Her Sisters
    Noises Off

    GoodfellasBradskii
    Should have been on my list.

    ChinatownBradskii
    Great movie. The only movie with Jack Nicholson I really like.

    No Country For Old MenBradskii
    Hated the book so much I wouldn't watch the movie.

    Ex Machina180 Proof
    Disturbing movies - Really like them. Really never want to watch them again.
    Ex Machina
    On the Beach
    Manhunter - Pre-Anthony Hopkins Hannibal Lecter
    Let the Right One In - Swedish version. Wikipedia calls it a "romantic horror movie." Well...no... calling it romantic is like saying Psycho is a movie about plumbing. Also - they're like 12 years old.
    Miracle Mile - Really believable and scary movie with Anthony Edwards. Now this is a romantic horror movie. Also had Tasha Yar from Star Trek the Next Generation.
    Crimes and Misdemeanors

    A Thousand ClownsJoshs
    I forgot about his. A really good movie. Not like anything else I've ever seen with Jason Robards.

    How about some musicals
    The Bandwagon
    Cabaret
    The Wizard of Oz
    An American in Paris
    Singing in the Rain
  • BC
    13.5k
    There are "great films" and there are Films we like the most. They may not be the same.

    Low Brow Comedy Favorites

    The Meaning of Life
    High Anxiety
    Twelve Chairs (Brooks)
    The Producers
    Pink Flamingos
    Priscilla Queen of the Desert

    Midbrow Comedy Favorites

    What about Bob
    Bob Carol, Ted, and Alice
    Play It Again Same
    Throw Mama Off the Train
    Annie Hall
    Love and Death (Allen)
    Wizard of Oz

    highbrow film

    Midnight Cowboy
    Casablanca
    The Graduate
    Annie Hall
    Fanny and Alexander (Bergman)
    Godfather
    The Last Detail
    One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s nest
    The Last Winter (Film Board of Canada)
    The Boys in the Band
    The Seventh Seal
    Koyaanisqatsi
    Dr Strangelove
    On the Beach
    Z (With its dark view of Greek politics and its downbeat ending, the film captures the director's outrage about the junta that then ruled Greece
    Brokeback Mountain
    Notorious
    Dim Sum: A Piece of Heart (Wayne Wang)
    Gone With the Wind

    Australian

    Breaker Morant
    A Town Like Alice
    Gallipoli
    `
    And a few dozen others.

    Forgot "Cabaret"
  • ssu
    8.5k
    As there are good lists, I would add perhaps

    - One movie from Charlie Chaplin: Perhaps City Lights or Goldrush, The Kid, the Great Dictator...
    Charlie+Chaplin+City+Lights+You+A-BitterSweet-Life+Cinematic+Poetry+10.png?format=1000w

    - Thin Red Line (a great poetic war film from Terrence Malick)
    The-Thin-Red-Line-Featured.jpeg

    - Heat (a great Al Pacino and Robert de Niro faceoff, likely best film from Michael Mann)
    images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRP_bAAxADbEASZBKuh6k78ttat0XYsuyMLrg&usqp=CAU
  • Bradskii
    72
    No Country For Old Men
    — Bradskii
    Hated the book so much I wouldn't watch the movie.
    T Clark

    I read the book last week. It was like reading the script. Hardly anything was changed and even some of the dialogue was verbatim. The film played out in my mind as I read it. Now reading anotherof Cormac's books - Blood Meridian.

    And damn, I Jjust remembered The Thin Red Line. Has to be top ten.
  • ssu
    8.5k
    And damn, I Jjust remembered The Thin Red Line. Has to be top ten.Bradskii
    :up:

    A great reminder that film is art.
  • universeness
    6.3k

    Films like 'the grapes of wrath' are films I return to, to remind me of what's important in life.
    How about:
    Inherit the wind
    Mississippi Burning
    Hoffa
    Malcolm X
  • Tom Storm
    9k
    Chinatown
    — Bradskii
    Great movie. The only movie with Jack Nicholson I really like.
    T Clark

    Agree. I generally find his performances mannered and appalling. Post 1980 this was probably Kubrick's fault.

    Films like 'the grapes of wrath' are films I return to, to remind me of what's important in life.universeness

    I don't enjoy 'noble' message films. And recent era cinema with overstated movie scores, swimming in clichés are really off putting. I prefer to see something visually inventive, with a focus on milieu and plots generally don't interest me much. Character does and sometimes dialogue. Clever production design can take your breath away and make something highly watchable.

    10 chosen at random


    In the Mood for Love
    Sunset Boulevard
    Psycho
    Sweet Smell of Success
    F for Fake
    The Trial
    The Third Man
    Brazil
    Walkabout
    Leon
  • javi2541997
    5.7k
    In the Mood for LoveTom Storm

    A masterpiece :up: :sparkle:

    In-the-mood-for-love.jpg
bold
italic
underline
strike
code
quote
ulist
image
url
mention
reveal
youtube
tweet
Add a Comment

Welcome to The Philosophy Forum!

Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.