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2 - Thunderball
3 - The good the bad the ugly
4 - The Italian Job
5 - Willy wonka and the chocolate factory
Rocky
Jaws
Superman: The Movie
Raiders Of The Lost Ark
Total Recall
Star Wars
Terminator 2
Planet Of The Apes
Goldfinger
The whiny Connor kid gets damn irritating mighty fast and spoils any enjoyment whenever on screen, and worst of all, Schwarzenegger gets tweaked to become a 'good' Terminator.. What a pile of chicken litter
Robert Patrick is in fact the most entertaining character of the entire movie and without him, any watch just wouldn't be possible. Some may view T2 as some grand viewing experience, but the sum total is it's in fact another example of a film release that's all style and no substance
(Can't limit it to 5 now, sadly)
1. Munich
2. The Man From Nowhere
3. I Saw The Devil
4. The Chaser
5. The Yellow Sea
6. Hwayi: A Monster Boy
7. Blood Diamond
8. Lord of War
9. Layer Cake
10. The Mission (1999 Hong Kong film)
11. Breaking News (2004 Hong Kong film)
12. Collateral
13. Terminator 2
14. Indiana Jones and The Last Crusade
15. Die Hard: With a Vengeance
16. Yojimbo
17. Heat
18. Taken
19. Zodiac
20. The Good, The Bad, The Ugly
1. The Departed
2. Fight Club
3. The Matrix
4. Inception
5. The Dark Knight
The French Connection
Army Of Darkness
Duck Soup
Star Wars, Episode IV: A New Hope
Plus my three favorite pieces of crap: Death Wish III (silly? Yes, shamefully parafascist? Hell yes, exciting and badass? FUCK YEAH, entertaining and funny? [HAS AN ORGASM]), Giorgio Moroder's Metropolis (I love the original, and I have an special BFI edition, but the Moroder version will stay my fav for geeky reasons) and 3 Dev Adam (a Turkish delight).
And yeah, the Moroder version is my fave as well!
YEAH BABY!
1. Casino Royale
2. On Her Majesty's Secret Service
3. The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King
4. The Godfather
5. The Godfather Part 2
6. Vertigo
7. Rear Window
8. Good Will Hunting
9. Saving Private Ryan
That's one heck of a Top 6; love it. I still can't give an order (or limit to five), but here are some of mine:
-The Dark Knight
-The Godfather
-The Godfather Part II
-The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King
-The Lion King
-Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
-Big Fish
-Casino Royale
-Labyrinth
Also have to give mentions to the rest of the Dark Knight and Lord of the Rings trilogies. There are a TON more honorable mentions to give; sometime I should just sit down and figure out my Top 50-100 films I've seen. Making an exact order is pretty much impossible though for me.
01. "NETWORK" (1976):
Wonderful, no...brilliant film that's still very topical. The film almost predicted the rise of 'unethical' journalism and right-wing 'news' channels like Fox News. And Faye Dunaway was simply magnetic in this film.
02. "AMERICAN BEAUTY" (1999):
After 9/11 our (western) world changed. We are now faced with Donald Trump's xenophobia, the demise of the European Union and the immigrant crisis. But this film shows how....unconcerned, happy-go-lucky society was in the 1990's. And so was all the little drama in the suburbs.
03. "CRASH" (2004):
My hot favourite for the 'Best Picture' Oscar back in 2006, and Paul Haggis' ("Casino Royale") directorial debut. This movie perfectly sums up the aspect of xenophobia and fear. Fear for the unknown, fear that is being facilitated to us by populists. And it's all set in real-life environments, your neighbourhood, or mine.
04. "NASHVILLE" (1975):
I think it's one of Robert Altman's best films, but sadly most people have forgotten it. The film has around 10 leading characters, whose lives are followed in the musical scene of Nashville, Tennessee. The individual storyline's are interwoven through a presidential primary of...yet another populist.
05. "LITTLE CHILDREN" (2006):
A movie about kids...from the kids of parents to the actual 'children' of this film; the parents. Another suburbian tale, that is centered around a pedophile. And it's that pedophile who actually tries hard to grow up.
Honorary mentions:
06. "ON GOLDEN POND" (1981):
07. "MAGNOLIA" (1999):
08. "KRAMER VS. KRAMER" (1979):
09. "BOYHOOD" (2014):
10. "THE LAST PICTURE SHOW" (1971):
11. "ABOUT SCHMIDT" (2002):
12. "BIUTIFUL" (2010):
13. "FARGO" (1996):
14. "BABEL" (2006):
directed by INGMAR BERGMAN
2. Suspiria (IT 1977),
directed by DARIO ARGENTO
3. Licence to Kill (UK 1989),
directed by JOHN GLEN
4. The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (NZ 2001),
directed by PETER JACKSON
5. Der Himmel über Berlin (DE 1987),
directed by WIM WENDERS
6. Le Samouraï (FR 1969),
directed by JEAN-PIERRE MELVILLE
7. 8 1/2 (IT 1963),
directed by FEDERICO FELLINI
8. The Third Man (UK 1949),
directed by CAROL REED
9. Kagemusha (JP 1980),
directed by AKIRA KUROSAWA
10. Vertigo (US 1958),
directed by ALFRED HITCHCOCK
And it's ackowledged that if not for Moroder and his team, who discovered some new footage and made the film available to the general public, maybe Metropolis wouldn't be one of the most studied films nowadays. It's a gigantic MTV video, but man, as Moroder's song said, "from heeeeeere to eteeeeeeeenityyyyyyy".
1. Die Hard – the ultimate action movie, never bettered.
2. The Time Machine (1960) – Brilliant time travel movie.
3. Robocop (1987) – Still relevant today
4. Back to the Future – Fantastic adventure.
5. Harry Brown – Caine is magnificent in this role.
Uhm.....interesting list ;-). But...what about @GoldenGun 's and my list ;-)? Curious if you have seen those films. By the way, I have seen all the films in your list, and I think "Harry Brown" is my favourite.
The Magnificent Seven
Shane
Star Trek 2
Waldo Pepper
(this will change one second after clicking "post comment")
common themes - bravery, sacrifice, friendship, adventure, justice, ageing, fatherhood
PS
Heat at 6 (same themes, a pattern emerging)
Yeah, its a different list is mine but I like what I like ;) and these movies are my current favourites. Always subject to change of course.
As for yours, I'll be honest, some I've never heard of but some greats in there. :D
I've seen in your previous posts that we have a lot in common, when it comes to which movies we like :)
Haven't seen Labyrinth, but other then that i either love or like the rest of your picks.
Couldn't agree more.
2-CR
3-Lincoln
4-City Lights (by Charlie Chaplin)
5-Lord of the Ring (Fellowship)
Honorable mention:
King Kong (Peter Jackson)
8 men out
Modern Times (by Charlie Chaplin)
The Living Daylights
Avengers (first movie, not the Ultron garbage)
What makes Bond so different, and why I like it so much, are the stylish protagonist, the classy music and the inventive titles to name but a few. I'd prefer foreign art house, period pieces or cult horror over any Lethal Weapon for instance.
Silence of the Lambs
Goodfellas
The Naked Gun
Airplane
The Lion King
Perhaps not the most inspired of choices but they have been some of my most watched films while growing up.
I always found the Lion King to be one of the weaker Disney films, though.
2. sex, lies, and videotape
3. GoodFellas
4. Full Metal Jacket
5. L.A. Confidential
Your first two are abysmal. The next two are great, so not sure what to think.
1. Godfather I (1972)
2.House Sitter (1992)
3. Nothing in Common (1986)
4. Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969)
5. Predator (1987)