WacoWas AnAccident
Ex-Bluelighter
1. The Godfather
Personal preference. The Godfather is what happens when every important aspect of movie making comes together. It has some of the greatest actors of all time (James Caan, Marlon Brando, Al Pacino, Robert Duvall) animating some of the greatest CHARACTERS of all time (Don Corleone, Sonny, Michael). Puzo's script drives the story, and he should get most of the credit for this extraordinary film. Because when Copolla took the creative reigns he ended up popping out the turd that is known as The Godfather 3. Technically the film is nothing to marvel at; it's actually fairly conventional with regards to editing, camera placement, etc. The story and the acting are just that good.
2. Citizen Kane
This is the American Film Institute's top film of all time. And no, I'm not a bandwagon jumper. The story is good, the acting is on point, and the technical part is fantastic. I mean technically, it is just a master piece of filmmaking.
3. A Streetcar Named Desire
Brando as Stanley Kowalski. Absolutely amazing. One of the best performances in history. I would kill my own mother to be able to go back to 1947 and catch the original stage performance at the Barrymore. Read the play if you ever get a chance. Tennessee Williams was a talented, talented man.
4. Schindler's List
Had to put Spielberg on here and this was his best film. We all know why Spielberg is great, there's no need to make a laundry list.
5. Adaptation
This actually doesn't belong here, but it is very, very clever and I love metatheatrical stuff that disassembles typical notions of structure. Also I couldn't decide on anything else.
6. Dr. Strangelove
Alright my previous statement was a lie because I decided on this. I couldn't exclude Kubrick. Most people on this site probably prefer A Clockwork Orange because, well, you guys are all quite depraved. But the biting satire in this film is great. Witty and funny and sharp(and particularly relevant at the time it was released; contextualizing films and art and other media is very important to fully understand it). Kubrick is... well Kubrick. And Peter Sellers is... well Peter Seller! He was a genius.
Personal preference. The Godfather is what happens when every important aspect of movie making comes together. It has some of the greatest actors of all time (James Caan, Marlon Brando, Al Pacino, Robert Duvall) animating some of the greatest CHARACTERS of all time (Don Corleone, Sonny, Michael). Puzo's script drives the story, and he should get most of the credit for this extraordinary film. Because when Copolla took the creative reigns he ended up popping out the turd that is known as The Godfather 3. Technically the film is nothing to marvel at; it's actually fairly conventional with regards to editing, camera placement, etc. The story and the acting are just that good.
2. Citizen Kane
This is the American Film Institute's top film of all time. And no, I'm not a bandwagon jumper. The story is good, the acting is on point, and the technical part is fantastic. I mean technically, it is just a master piece of filmmaking.
3. A Streetcar Named Desire
Brando as Stanley Kowalski. Absolutely amazing. One of the best performances in history. I would kill my own mother to be able to go back to 1947 and catch the original stage performance at the Barrymore. Read the play if you ever get a chance. Tennessee Williams was a talented, talented man.
4. Schindler's List
Had to put Spielberg on here and this was his best film. We all know why Spielberg is great, there's no need to make a laundry list.
5. Adaptation
This actually doesn't belong here, but it is very, very clever and I love metatheatrical stuff that disassembles typical notions of structure. Also I couldn't decide on anything else.
6. Dr. Strangelove
Alright my previous statement was a lie because I decided on this. I couldn't exclude Kubrick. Most people on this site probably prefer A Clockwork Orange because, well, you guys are all quite depraved. But the biting satire in this film is great. Witty and funny and sharp(and particularly relevant at the time it was released; contextualizing films and art and other media is very important to fully understand it). Kubrick is... well Kubrick. And Peter Sellers is... well Peter Seller! He was a genius.