Which comedians would you choose for the best comedy team ever in history? — universeness
I figured his films deserve mention given that they have had a dominating influence on American comedy the past 20 years — Joshs
As for Dudley Moore, I really liked the original "Bedazzled" with Peter Cook as the devil. Didn't like Arthur or 10. What else was he in? — T Clark
:up:American History X — Pinprick
Hey, how did you know where I keep my first edition, signed copies of priceless Vera Mont books!!!
Seven Samurai
Persona
8 1/2
There Will Be Blood — Mikie
5. A Clockwork Orange — god must be atheist
Annie Hall — T Clark
2. Pulp fiction
3. The Godfather (all the parts)
4. Tokyo Monogatari
5. A clockwork orange
6. Ikiru
7. Yojimbo
8. Ran
9. Akira — javi2541997
The Godfather I & II
Blade Runner
Barfly
Unforgiven — 180 Proof
Pulp Fiction
Andrei Rublev
Taxi Driver — Jamal
Amadeus
Groundhog Day
Donnie Darko — Luke
The Gods Must be Crazy
Tootsie — Vera Mont
Night of the Hunter
Citizen Kane
Midnight Cowboy
Bonnie and Clyde
Almost Famous — Joshs
Richard II, with Lawrence Olivier
Lawrence of Arabia
High Noon
The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie — Paine
Aguirre, the Wrath of God
Princess Mononoke
Spirited Away — tim wood
Platoon — universeness
Oops. Yes I did see that — I know it as Tokyo Story. The Japanese didn’t ring a bell. Ozu is incredible and it’s a great movie.
I love almost everything I’ve seen out of Japan, which admittedly isn’t a lot. Ozu and Kurosawa are at the very top. Miyazaki is up there too. — Mikie
I have seen all Ozu's films, and they are fantastic. — javi2541997
Love Good Morning. His silent film,I Was Born, But... which is loose remake, is also excellent. — Maw
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (The evil of authority generally, but perfectly personified by Nurse Ratchett).
The Shining (The face of insanity)
American Beauty (Suburban existentialism) — Hanover
Mike Leigh films:
Mr Turner.
Vera Drake. — unenlightened
Ken Loach films — unenlightened
Trainspotting. — unenlightened
Goodfellas
Chinatown
The Big Lebowski — Bradskii
Seven Samurai (1954) - Kurosawa
Apur Sansar (1959) - Ray
L'Eclisse (1962) - Antonioni
Late Spring (1949) - Ozu
Ran (1985) - Kurosawa
Cleo from 5-7 (1962) - Varda — Maw
Persona is my favorite Bergman — Maw
The Meaning of Life — BC
Midnight Cowboy
Casablanca
The Graduate
Annie Hall
Fanny and Alexander (Bergman)
Godfather
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s nest
Dr Strangelove
Gone With the Wind — BC
Gallipoli — BC
Thin Red Line (a great poetic war film from Terrence Malick) — ssu
Heat (a great Al Pacino and Robert de Niro faceoff, likely best film from Michael Mann) — ssu
In the Mood for Love
Brazil
Walkabout — Tom Storm
A masterpiece — javi2541997
Pulp Fiction
Goodfellas
Dr. Strangelove
Lost in Translation
The Departed
Monty Python and the Holy Grail — Manuel
All About Eve
Blow-Up — Joshs
The Magnificent Seven
The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly - I'm surprised no one has mentioned this. Also:
A Fist Full of Dollars
For a Few Dollars More
Once Upon a Time in the West — T Clark
That’s why I’m a big fan of the anti-Western, and Sergio Leone’s films with Clint Eastwood were among the first of these. Anti-Westerns turn the tables on the standard view of the hero as establishment figure. The rebellious anti-establishment outlaw becomes the new hero. — Joshs
Das Boot (1981): submarine films don't get better as this and perhaps the best naval warfilm. Puts the sound of sonar in a totally different perspective. — ssu
Although I think the most grim warfilm, a film that really makes war as awful as it can be is Elem Klimov's Come and See from 1985, a quite rare film from the Soviet Union. — ssu
Being John Malkovich
Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon — Andrew4Handel
I kind of skipped classic Hollywood westerns (there are two or three that I like) and went straight for Sergio Leone's spaghetti westerns. — SophistiCat
Of Angelopoulos I've seen only Eternity and a Day - loved it. The music is still stuck in my head. — SophistiCat
Check out Kore-eda Hirokazu if you haven't seen him: Nobody Knows, Still Walking, Shoplifters. — SophistiCat
but are especially Hollywood films become worse? — ssu
Or the scary issue is when people read less. You see, with reading you really have to use your imagination: you are confronted only with words in a book, you have to create the image yourself of what is happening. But especially now, when listening to a book isn't difficult (all that mess with cassette tapes etc.) it's far more easy to listen to a book and do something else when you are listening.Note: I am sorry for being a millennial and I assume part of the responsibility of my weak generation. For example: I don't know anyone of my age who watched Yojimbo or had read Yukio Mishima, for example. — javi2541997
Total book reading is declining significantly, although not at the rate of literary reading.
■ The percentage of the U.S. adult population reading any books has declined by -7 percent over the past decade.
And a question for everyone.
Have I just become old and cranky, but are especially Hollywood films become worse? What do you think about current films compared to 20th Century films? Especially the last few years have seem to me as a quite downer when it comes to great films. — ssu
Have I just become old and cranky, but are especially Hollywood films become worse? — ssu
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