From time to time, we like take a break from technology news to query our readers to find out details about our community. Previously, we asked you to show us your desktop. This time, we ask “What’s your favorite movie?” Is it sci-fi or comedy? Action or maybe drama? Share your favorites so we can check them out! I’ll start: while I’m tempted to say The Red Violin, I’m not sure there’s a better screenplay than The Usual Suspects.
I have to say that my favourite movie of all time is Sin City. Pulp Fiction must deserve a mention as a very close second.
you was faster than me ^^
Sin City is one of my favourite videos, too. Fight Club is very good, too. But Sin City has that great Soundtrack and the sound in the movie is that perfect.
Sin City was awesome the first time. The second time I felt ill watching it…never again.
Bladerunner.
Others near the top of my list would be: King Kong (the original), The Good The Bad and The Ugly, McCabe and Mrs. Miller, Taxi Driver, Rashomon, Unforgiven, and Pulp Fiction.
-Bob
i think ill second that one
This will get many comments.
Anyway, almost all Kubrick movies are awesome, Gus Van Sent is awesome (Gerry), Ang Lee is great (Brokeback Mountain). Best movies are about nothing, where you just sit and watch life unfolding before your eyes with no moral at all.
Great point Buck! Perhaps that’s why I also like Dead Poets Society and Stand By Me. While those have a moral they reflect some of what you’re getting at because they deal with youth and angst over growing up.
I would have to say Dazed and Confused (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0106677). It’s something about it that makes me want to watch it over and over again!
Edited 2007-04-28 16:58
I love Syriana…cunningly plotted tale of consequences.
I have to say, being an old timer, I prefer the old classics. My all time favorite is “How Green Was My Valley”, followed closely by “Casablanca”
Casablanca is pure movie magic, for me it is easily my favourite film.
I’m afraid that, for me, Casablanca can join The Usual Suspects (irony) on my list of highly praised movies that leave me cold. Add Heat to that list too.
There’s a funny review of Casablanca on Mr. Cranky:
http://www.mrcranky.com/movies/casablanca.html
Of course, the site’s rate scale ranges from “Almost Tolerable” to “Proof that Jesus died in vain,” so hating everything is kind of his shtick.
Anything made by my two favourite directors: Stanley Kubrick and Tim Burton.
If you haven’t already, you should check out some of Terry Gilliam’s older stuff (Brazil, Time Bandits, etc).
Yeah, Time Bandits is good, though my little brother loves it more than I do. But it is a good one
Heh. When I was a kid, I absolutely adored Short Circuit… I really wanted Johnny 5 to be alive.
Just about anything sci-fi or animé is good. However, for all-around favorite, it’s very hard to beat The Princess Bride.
Was very very funny, though I’m not sure that the writers meant it as such.
I love that movie too. It’s one of my favorite comedies. It was a comedy… right?
[ followed closely by “Casablanca” ]
I really like most Bogart films, but was disappointed in Casablanca, especially considering the long-standing adoration and hype surrounding this film. Perhaps you could enlighten me regarding the film’s appeal, since it’s on your list?
“The Maltese Falcon,” “To Have and Have Not,” and a few others were better-made Bogart films. IMO of course.
-Bob
Of course, if I really took the time to think about all of the movies I have seen, I might alter my list slightly. That being said, “Casablanca” is a movie that can be watched over and over again. There are so many good scenes and great dialogue. Some movies when you watch a second or third time, you find yourself waiting for the good parts and tuning out the other parts. I am a big Bogart fan also, and have about 10 of his movies in my DVD collection and the Maltese Falcon is one of them ( also enjoyed the book ). I love Film Noir movies and old classic musicals such as “Singing in the Rain”. My most recent DVD purchase was “A Tale Of Two Cities” – great movie and great book ( my favorite author is Charles Dickens ).
I guess I have a soft spot for Leo.
Usual Suspects was predictable. I knew who Keyser Söze was after about the first 15 minutes. As soon as it became apparent that the ‘twist’ was Keyser’s identity, it wasn’t too hard to surmise Spacey’s character was the one.
I wouldn’t have posted this but you commented on it in the article and I had so many people come to me after seeing that movie expousing it’s virtues I went to the movie with high expectations only to be kinda let down.
Gordon
(That’s right, ‘e’, not ‘o’)
funniest dirty movie ever made.
“””
funniest dirty movie ever made.
“””
‘W’! ‘A’! ‘N’! ‘G’!
Emperor Wang’s the one for me!
Without him the planet Porno…
Would be oh so forlorno!
(Not sure what tune that was to.)
Indiana Jones and the Fourth Crusade
Kubrick is one of the greatest directors of all time. But since each of his films is so different, it’s hard to pick a single film that best represents or highlights his directing. The same thing is true about Robert Altman.
I think “The Killing” is my favorite Kubrick film, an early example of non-linear storytelling and creative directing.
Tim Burton is great too. I didn’t care for Scissorhands, but his animated films are incredible.
-Bob
I’ve got three that are always tied for first. The Original Dawn of the Dead, Evil Dead 2, and Suspiria.
The Beyond is a close second.
Edited 2007-04-28 17:22 UTC
The Professional
Leon! Yes. I second this.
charles bronson, jan michael vincent. boom ! you’re dead !!
The forbidden Planet (1956) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0049223/
(sometimes it’s fun to watch old sci-fi movies)
Oldboy.
Also ran:
-A Clockwork Orange
-Back to the Future
-Blade Runner (director’s cut)
-Evil Dead
-Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
-Ghost in the Shell
-Koroshiya 1 (Ichi the Killer)
-Mi¶ ( http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0082755/ )
-Mononoke Princess
-Raiders of the Lost Ark
-The Big Lebowski
Edited 2007-04-28 17:45 UTC
Sin City – just amazing.
Garden State – written and directored by that guy from scrubs
Lord of war – because they actually brought real guns from real arms deallers instead of using props.
The Shawshank Redemption (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0111161/)
Cool Hand Luke is another good film in the same vein. They make good films to watch together; I’ve always found it interesting that The Shawshank Redemption is the darker film, but has a happy ending – while Cool Hand Luke is much lighter, but has an unhappy ending.
Oh joy of joys! I thought I’d be the only person to mention Cool Hand Luke…which is my favourite film.
This is one of the few stories where I liked the movie better than the book. Especially the ending. In the book, Red is on the bus hoping to see his friend, but in the movie, he sees him on the beach and it brings a sense of positive closure I really liked.
I just love the atmosphere in this movie.
No MTV flashing of frames, this movie is from the time you can actualy see what’s going on 🙂
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0084787/
Plus-freakin-plus.
I enjoy turning my brain off and watching a decent action flick as much as the next person, but most of them in the last few years are next-to-unwatchable thanks to jump-cut and shakey-cam combination. It always gives me the impression that the filmmakers or actors were incapable of doing convincing fight scenes, so they just resort to a cheap trick to make the scenes seem intense without actually showing anything.
Oh noooo. I saw that movie as a child – still gives me the creep very much. Never slept worse than that night.
The Silence Of The Lambs
V For Vendetta
Se7en
The Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind
Snatch
The remade Ocean’s 11 and 12.
I know there is plenty more serious stuff out there, but when i seen this movie when i was a child, i was totally enchanted.
“Hello? Hello? Anybody home, huh, Think, McFly! Think!”
I’m totally with you on that. It really set the stage for the ‘epic trilogy’ that we’re now seeing so much of (X-Men, Spiderman, LotR).
I think epic trilogies are more likely inspired by Star Wars. ’80s had a lot of such long movie series.
Right on, there were some great adventure-comedy films in the 80s. Someone has mentioned Indiana Jones already.
And we can’t forget Ghostbusters! Some of the best lines ever:
“Listen! Do you smell that?”
“When someone asks if you’re a god, you say ‘YES’!”
Yeah, maybe I’m in the minority on this one, but I have to say Iron Monkey!
Fritz Lang’s 1927 original restored and released in 1984 by Giorgio Moroder.
Nothing like working vector calculus problems to the PI soundtrack!
Swingers and The Bourne Identity get nods too.
I would have to choose between Lawrence of Arabia, Doctor Zhivago, (2 dramas) Kenneth Branaughs’ Much Ado about Nothing (light Shakespeare comedy) and above all his also Shakespeare.”Henry V” with the immortal words: We few, we happy few…, another historical drama.
Monty Python’s the Life of Brian is probably my all time favorite…you gotta love the ending! Always look on the bright side of life…LOL.
Holy Grail, and Super Troopers are pretty close on that list too.
I…. am a knight who says Nee
It is not Nee, it is Ni!
Oh no I said it! And I said it again. No stop it! It it it!
EDIT: Your mother was a hamster and your father smelt of elderberry!
Edited 2007-04-28 20:41
you left out the best part of that…. let me indulge myself…
“don’t want to talk to you no more, you empty headed animal food trough wiper. I fart in your general direction. our mother was a hamster and your father smelt of elderberry!”
lol priceless
Haha yes yes
I fart in your general direction
I don’t understand the insult but it’s really funny
Amen reverend!
Except for no Super Troopers and obviously Holy Grail before Life of Brian
Well since this is OSNews, Im sure someone’s favourite movie is Hackers…..anyone??….no??
I don’t think I really have a favourite movie but Ritchie movies get a nod from me for being some of my favourites.
The problem is that most so-called hacker movies gets all/most of the tech wrong.
Anti-Trust – information theory says the claimed super hack is impossible.
Strange-Days – Ok I loved this one but logic about how people would and did react does not match the real-world I live in. Mob do not think that fast.
Avalon – left me cold.
Existenz – left me cold too.
The Thirteen Floor – seemed like a weak, feel-good ending to me.
TakeDown – Left me disliking Kevin Mitnick as a person.
The Matrix – got so many things wrong I don’t even want to try and list them.
SwordFish – Starring Johnie T. Do I need to say more?
Real Genius – Was a great movie where the details went over the head of most viewers.
The Net – Where hacker is being hunted to keep a secret but never considers to the final five minutes that posting the secret on the internet will remove the reason they are hunting her. Plus what women send her time dressing up to look like S.B. did and has no-one who remembers what she looks like?
Hackers – these kids could not hack themselves out of a paper bag. There were a few good ideas but their approach again was all wrong. Worse the evil master plan would not have worked in real-life, at-least no for all the ships, and if one ship reports in what have the finger points right back at the bad guys.
WarGames – you don’t crack codes that way.
Disclosure – loved the interface.
TRON – Fun but no real tech.
Johnny Mnemonic – was out of date before it even hit the theatres.
Sneakers – also upset me by having the tech so wrong.
Enemy of the State – Did the tech wrong, but I can see the desire for such control existing in the real world already.
Pirates of Silicon Valley – was interesting to watch.
Just a few comments.
Hackers was a good movie if you liked comedy thanks to cereal killer. I think thats why I like it a lot, it was just pure comedy for me. Not my favorite movie but very fun to watch.
I know some people don’t care for it. But I was 16 when it came out, and I had been waiting for it with tremendous anticipation for years.
It really clicked with me. And to this day, I don’t think that another movie has been nearer or dearer to my heart.
Over 28 years, I’ve seen it so many times that I don’t even need to watch it anymore. I can pretty much replay any scene in my head.
Edited 2007-04-28 18:00
My absolute favourite film is Paddy Chayefsky’s Network – it should be required viewing for anyone who enjoys dark comedy. I find it especially impressive because of how thoroughly it avoids the cliches/lazy tricks that have become standard in Hollywood films – despite being a Hollywood film with a big-name cast, etc. One of the greatest and most underrated films ever made – sadly, I’ve read that George Clooney of all people is working on a remake (bleh). Of course, Darren Aaronofsky’s idiotic attempt at remaking Lone Wolf and Cub as a western (!) fell through, so maybe they’re still hope.
Comedy:
Forest Gump!
Drama:
The Shawshank Redemption
The Terminal
Gangster:
The Godfather 2
The Godfather
Road to Perdition
War:
Full Metal Jacket
Saving Private Ryan
Western:
Dances with Wolves
Sport:
Bull Durham
The Legend of Bagger Vance
Thriller:
No Way Out
The Good Shepherd
True Story:
The Basketball Diaries
Romance:
Legends of the Fall
If I had to pick only one: Of course, Forest Gump!
Do you see a trend? Yes, I love Tom Hanks, and I think Matt Damon is great for a young dude.
You simply can’t top that 🙂
So hard to choose from such a long list.
Apocalypse Now
The Godfather
Goodfellas
Donnie Brasco
Lawrence of Arabia
The Big Lebowski
Chinatown
Lord of the Rings
Manhattan
Also love Kurosawa’s movies though they are definitely classic and many of the movies from Spain and Latin America. Although they’re not movies, the best of Das Boot and the Sopranos is as good as anything on the big screen, imho. Like sci-fi books, sci-fi movies usually bore me rigid and I can’t think of any at the moment.
My all time favourites are Ghibli series: “Kiki`s Delivery Service”, “Spirited Away”, “Howl`s Moving Castle”, “Whisper of the Heart”, “Porco Rosso” and many others… I see one or two of them every month. Again and again…
Agreed. Studio Ghibli’s movies are magical. I’m surprised you didn’t mention My Neighbour Totoro, it’s one of my favourites and relatively known movie.
Yes, i agree. Sorry for leaving My Neighbour Totoro out… I meant *any* by Ghibli… I mentioned some of the movies to help people remember/recognize. Totoro is great! I will watch Totoro tonight. I have a *big* poster from the cinema, with Totoro…. Love it.
Ghibli…. Subtitled and with original language/sound. Can it get better?
🙂
I’m surprised none of you guys mentioned ‘Grave of the Fireflies’. Admittedly it’s quite possibly the most depressing movie I’ve ever seen in my life, but I’ve seen very few war movies that were so powerful in how they affected you while watching it. ++ to pretty much anything Ghibli in any case
Grave of the Fireflies… Man, it was so long ago that I almost forgot about this movie. Never thought of it as something that I would call a favorite – and I am not a huge fan of Ghibli movies – but I can’t quite remember any other animation nor movie that made me cry like I did back then when I watched this so yes, it really touches you. I have to second that this is the most depressing movie that I ever saw in my entire life and I find it really hard to watch again.
For those who like dramas and haven’t seen it, I highly recommend it: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0095327/
I’d agree, anything Ghibli is great and always beautiful. Grave wouldn’t be my absolute favourite but it’s pretty close 🙂 I wouldn’t say it’s depressing, rather incredibly touching. For instance the scene where Seita washes his face under a tap he stumbled across you get such a feeling of happiness from such a simple thing. I’d probably say Princess Mononoke is my favourite but Nausicaa, Spirited Away and Howl’s Moving castle are the ones i have watched the most.
cheers
Robocop would have to be my choice. Great mix of drama, comedy, action. This movie has many underlying messages about humanity/society that many people miss.
I’ll buy that for a dollar!
For Me, Lord Of The Rings Trilogy and Braveheart.
I love movies a lot, really a Lot, i watch are less one movie a week, sometimes i watched more than 7 or 8 film in a weekend..And have a Collection of more than 300 film (just the ones that i watched and Like it a Lot of).
“Best Vietnam Flick” – the Wikipedia entry is nice, I did not know till today that those forest sequences were shot in the Northwest, fooled me !
Edited 2007-04-28 18:31
Deer Hunter has my all-time most shocking and thought-provoking scene. He asked for three bullets, played the odds and then shot his way out of what seemed like an absolute no-win situation.
>> Deer Hunter has my all-time most shocking and thought-provoking scene. He asked for three bullets, played the odds and then shot his way out of what seemed like an absolute no-win situation. <<
“Sigh”. If the North Vietnamese Army dudes had typically been so dumb, as to actually do stuff like that, then the outcome of the war might have been different !
“Reality Shows” are just about the only thing I watch anymore. Any PBS war documentary, for example Ken Burns “The Civil War”, is so vastly different from such fantasy-scriptwriting as the scene you mention.
It has been a while since I saw “Deer Hunter”, and most of the script-writing was superior to “that scene”, but this being a software-forum it’s appropriate for you to mention worst-case-behavior :-).
o Minority Report (!)
o The Ring
o Ocean’s Eleven
and they are silent films
La Passion de Jeanne d’Arc
Metropolis
Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari.
I’ve seen a few more, but I really liked these.
I cannot believe not one person here has mentioned one of the best films of all times….
THE GOONIES
brilliant for all ages
It’s quite popular around the Pacific Northwest, it having been set in Astoria, OR.
Natural Born Killers
The Net
Ground Hogs Day
UHF (weird Al)
Hoosiers
2001 Space Odyssey
Star Wars Episode IV
Lord of the Rings: Return of the King
Matrix (not II and III)
PI
Stand and Deliver
KPAX
Forest Gump
The Passion of the Christ
The Explorers
The Natural
Fields of Dreams
The list goes on…
Finally! I can’t believe I got this far down all these comments before someone mentioned Star Wars Episode IV. I think it’s the only movie I paid to see 4 times (in the theater back in ’77).
It’s really just an old western but it’s done better than any other old western.
Taxi Driver
The Godfather
Dog Day Afternoon
A Clockwork Orange
Annie Hall
From other eras:
Pulp Fiction
2001: A Space Odyssey
L.A. Confidential
The original Gone in 60 Seconds (not the retarded remake with Nicholas Cage) has to be the greatest movie of all time, hands down.
And, yes, it’s cheesy, but Antitrust comes next, followed by:
The Princess Bride
Apollo 13
Star Trek: First Contact
Others may be on the list, but can’t remember them
probably:
“se7en” and “The boondock saints”
1) Monty Python and the Quest of the Holy Grail
1) Buster Keaton – The General
3) Monty Python and the Quest of the Holy Grail
3) Buster Keaton – The General
5) The Beatles – A Hard Day’s Night
6) Monty Python – Life of Brian
7) Pride and Prejudice (yes, the one with Keira Knightley)
8) StarWreck VI – In the Pirkinning
9) Monty Python – And Now for Something Completely Different
It is hard to pick just one, so here is a list:
Young Frankenstein
Finding Forrester
Under Suspicion
Forbidden Planet
Pitch Black
Rashomon
Midnight (The original Europen version and not
the remake set in Alaska)
I could name a lot more but these would top the list.
Without a doubt, Heat. The shootout in downtown LA is one of the best action sequences I’ve ever seen. Period. Se7en comes a very close second.
They really don’t make movies like they used to…my top 10 list is entirely pre-2003.
1)”Salò or the 120 Days Of Sodom” – P.P.Pasolini
2)”Godfather pt.II” – F.F.Coppola
3)”2001: A Space Odyssey” – S.Kubrick
4)”And now for something completely different” – Monty Python
5)”Zelig” – W.Allen
6)”Rashomon” – A.Kurosawa
7)”Ed Wood” – T.Burton
8)”Gattaca” – A.Niccol
9)”Scarface” – B.De Palma
10)”The Good, The Bad and The Ugly” – S.Leone
And I thought I would be the only one to suggest “Rashomon”. 🙂
As wikipedia confirms, the basic plot of Gattaca was “loser wants to be an Astronaut”.
I highly recommend Robert Forward’s “Rocheworld” for hard-SF on interstellar travel – Boredom, Boredom, Boredom, and yes Panic.
Especially the ex-convict truck-pilot who melted the MacArthur-Maze and the drunkard who commanded the Exxon-Valdez are examples of what happens when Losers get to be Pilots.
Economically, both incidents involve “Unpriced Externalities” as they say, who paid for the wrecks “we all did”.
Underdogs can be underdogs for LOTS of varied reasons. But given that the dude in Gattaca actually DID have less-than-pilot-grade vision, for heaven’s sake, what we need to examine is, why is it our knee-jerk that we should be rooting for such an underdog ? These mentioned lessons indicate we should be paying various pilots more, so that selection-pressure will save the world from the HUGE downside risk, in those rare Moments of Panic.
By the way Googling (( Freefall 767 )) finds a nice book on what happened when a Real Pilot, a MUSCULAR pilot who flew GLIDERS for a hobby happened to be driving when due to English/Metric confusion his 767 ran out of fuel over Canada. Usually strength is irrelevant, but with only the ram-air-turbine to supply hydraulics, it took everything he had to supply the happy ending, in this case. With a politically-corrent Gattaca-grade-pilot, the situation WOULD have been hopeless.
“Loser wants to be an Astronaut” does not translate directly into “Loser wants to be a pilot”. Last I checked, not every current astronaut is a pilot. Sure pilots make up the majority, but look at all the mission specialists.
1. the professional (aka leon)
2. usual suspects
3. jaws
4. blade runner
5. sixth sense
6. close encounters of the third kind
7. lord of the rings trilogy
8. secret admirer (ahh the 80’s)
9. empire strikes back
10.the hot spot
A day in the country by Renoir
Solaris, the black and white version
La Regle du Jeu also by Renoir
Two or three things I know about her – Godard. A scene where they are drinking coffee that is absolutely extraordinary, nothing else like it.
Bergman, Smiles of a summer night. And also Through a Glass Darkly, and Wild Strawberries,
It was a different generation….
Once Upon a Time in the West. Greatest Western ever made.
Amen.
I am surprised that no one has mentioned Sneakers!
“Anybody wanna black out New England?” Classic……..
And to all the “Hackers” fans, watch Sneakers, this is what Network Security & Black Hat living is REALLY like…..
In no particular order:
– Memento
– Fight Club
– Akira
– The 5th Element
– Back to the Future I & II
– Any of the Indiana Jones movies
– T2
– Hot Shots! (yeah, silly but so what?)
– Plan 9 From Outer Space (unintended comedy, never laughed so hard )
– Macross Plus (movie version) (weak story, great visuals: the “Top Gun” of anime)
– *Anything* by Pixar
Even though I can’t bear to watch it again.
I like sci-fi, though there are very few good films in the genre (some exceptions like 12 Monkeys), original comedies (Kiss Kiss Bang Bang was good) and drama that makes you feel like you were picked up and thrown against a wall (see above, also Gegen Die Wand). I can take romance if it is non-sappy and isn’t brainless (check out Die Fetten Jahre Sind Vorbei).
Honerable mentions: Memento, My Summer of Love, The Machinist and too much others to mention.
My top 3:
1. Casablanca
2. Singin’ in the Rain
3. Star Wars (original first one)
I love LA film noirs too like Double Indemnity and Sunset Boulevard; and anything by Hitchcock.
Certainly the best thing to come from Denmark since Legos
Intruiging story, told excellently, great acting too. Also, the dark and grainy visuals that stem from following the Dogma ’95 principles really add to the atmosphere of this movie.
But I’ve seen a few other excellent movies mentioned here, especially The Professional/Leon, Tim Burton movies, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and PI. I must say Memento also deserves an honourable mention, just like The 5th Element (yeah I just have a bit of a soft spot for Milla Jovovich in that movie )
You just can’t quite top Office Space. Although there are some great runners up:
Clerks
Serenity
Anti-trust
Finally someone else who likes Kevin Smith
Gladiator
The Sting
The Pianist
Schindlers List
Road to perdition
Sophie’s choice
History of the world (Mell Brooks)
Tin man ( 1987 Richard Dreyfuss, Danny DeVito )
Woody Allen in general
Laurel and Hardy
Edited 2007-04-28 19:27
Haneke’s excellent study in violence as consumable entertainment. Even more depressing than Pasolini’s Salo.
No question. Favorite movie of all time. Afterall, I saw it 20+ times in the theater… night after night after night. And I have the ticket stubs to prove it.
I know every scene, every name, every line, when and where and how. Wanna prove it? Try me… quote a line spoken in the movie. I’ll tell you who said it and in what scene. Name a moment from any scene and I’ll tell you everything about it and who was in it.
I’m 38 now. I watched it that many times when it FIRST came out. It’s the ONLY Disney movie (animated or otherwise) as well as the ONLY movie, period, I have EVER been compelled to see over and over again.
I attribute it to (what I jokingly refer to) a “Nala fetish”.
“The Lion King II: Simba’s Pride” is a fairly decent sequel. If it had a tad more polish and taken some of the overt silliness out of it (Kovu’s brother is an absolute LOON and Timon and Pumbaa act a little too much like their Saturday Morning Cartoon selves for my taste), it could have been released in the theater. The songs are awesome (“We Are One”, “Upende”, and “Love Will Find A Way” totally rule!) and the “in your face” (i.e. not subtle) love between Kiara and Kovu is nice. But the hyena’s and Timon/Pumbaa (combined), in The Lion King, were never as silly as Kovu’s brother, alone!
The Devil’s Advocate (haven’t seen it mentioned yet) is my favorite followed by Hackers, Antitrust, The Fifth Element and Starship Troopers, Office Space and Snakes on a Plane.
On SoaP, the only reason I think I liked it was because I saw it in the theater on opening night and it was quite spectacular, everyone throwing rubber snakes around and wearing SoaP shirts, fantastic.
Edited 2007-04-28 19:39
I’m with ya on that one. Devil’s Advocate was a great movie. My all time favorite movie (insert any Pacino flick here).
As a DVD collector (yes, all legally bought) I’d be hard-pressed to name a favorite. As others have said, anything by Kubrick is way up there. Then there’s Scorcese (Raging Bull, Taxi Driver, Last Temptation of Christ), Woody Allen (Annie Hall, Radio Days)…
On a more trashy note, anything by John Carpenter. “Ringu” is also way up there as one of the few movie that actually scared me.
More obscure mentions would go to “Withnail and I” and Tom Stoppard’s “Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead”.
Saw “Children of Men” and “Flags of our Fathers” yesterday…two excellent films, highly recommended.
Great flick. It may not have had the slick production values of The Passion, but it’s more than made up for by the strength of the acting and the direction.
I guess given my nickname it should be clear that I like the movie brazil from terry gilliam very much.
Some other of my favorite movies, in no particular order:
2001: A space odyssey
Trainspotting
Dead Man
Gattaca
Eraserhead (David Lynch)
Lost Highway
Apocalypse Now
Bladerunner
Dogville (Lars von Trier)
Idioten (Lars von Trier)
Clerks
Slackers
Whoah, Eraserhead. That is one disgusting movie. That’s great I guess
Bladerunner, Gattaca, 2001: Zzzzzzzzzzzz
La Dentellière (The Lacemaker) – Claude Goretta, 1977
Seven Samurai (1954)
Das Boot (non-english, subtitles please)
Stalker by Andrei Tarkovski…a desaturated masterpiece
Stalker simply has no movie to be compared in western cinema
http://imdb.com/title/tt0079944/
Best Hollywood movie evah… L.A. Confidential, it is a shame that Holywood haveen’t been able to produce more than 2-3 movies of this quality every 10 years
http://imdb.com/title/tt0119488/
Seems a preference for Hollywood is the majority here, but I’ve got to pipe in with some overlooked non-American films:
* Trois couleurs: Blanc (Three Colors: White) – funny and endearing. Along the same lines, I’d also have to nominate ‘Trois couleurs: Bleu’, but for different reasons (see below).
* Das Boot – War in a cold, small space.
* Nikita – Brilliant! And if someone nominates ‘Point of No Return’, may God strike you down .
* Dobermann – An action movie which hits the gas and doesn’t let up (Tchéky Karyo is also a brilliant actor, see ‘Nikita’ above).
* The English Patient – I can’t even bear to watch it now — it’s that moving.
* Satin Rouge – A Tunisian movie where a woman comes into her own.
* M – The film which laid the groundwork for film noir.
* Anything with Juliette Binoche in it.
I could go on-and-on, but I’ll leave it here.
Along the same lines:
– Aguirre, Der Zorn Gottes (Werner Herzog’s first film)
– La Planète sauvage
– Gandahar
– Das Experiment
Brasil (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0088846/) or
Dune (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0087182/)
I would have to say “Curse of the Yellow Flower” which is second only to “House of Flying Daggers” IMO.
Van Wilder….
Who can forget the scene when the preppy guy drinks his shake and writes his SAT and runs out to shit in the trashcan. Got to love that scene, definitely got to love that movie.. w00t w00t
Brazil – 1984 1/2, great antiuthopy from Terry Gilliam. Fascinating world of future, that is quite similar to our times.
Amen! I really love the retro-futuristic atmosphere in Brazil (the “computers” with the transparent screens and manual typewriter keyboards, the cars, etc).
The story behind the film is also quite amusing. Universal refused to release the film unless Gilliam cut more off the running time, or re-cut it with a happy ending. Gilliam took out a full page ad in a LA newspaper and ran a personal letter to the president of universal, along the lines of “Dear Mr. so-and-so, why won’t you release my film Brazil?” Then someone discovered that there was no rule stating that film had to have been released to be eligible for Academy Awards, so a group of film critics got it nominated based on private screenings. And Universal was essentially forced to release it, to avoid the embarrassment of refusing to release a film that ended up winning multiple Oscars.
I just love his movies, his style. Anyone seen Grindhouse? I had so much fun watching it, and I’m sure they had a lot of fun making it too
Only one mention of Serenity? I cry for your souls.
Amelie is definitely up at the top…
Just about anything with Audrey Hepburn (Breakfast at Tiffany’s especially)
The LOTR Trilogy
Most of the Trek movies
I found L.I.E. (Independant) strongly moving and disturbing (great movie…Bryan Cox is a great actor)
I’m far better at the “favorite show” or “favorite music” questions!
The absolute MUST watch movie is “The Passion of The Christ”. But only for the express reason of seeing what Jesus went through for us on the cross.
It is not a movie you go to see for “entertainment”. It’s a movie to go see the utterly realistic depiction of the suffering Jesus went through for us. And, going to see it more than once for any other reason, seems needless. We saw it once in the theater and bought it on DVD as soon as it came out, but we’ve never taken it out of it’s shrinkwrap. Why? Because we can’t justify watching it for any other reason than to see the most realistic portrayal of Jesus’ suffering for us that I think has EVER been done.
Maybe it would be good to watch on Easter (in church), though… since the theme of Easter in our church is all about the death and resurrection of Jesus.
Dunno…
Just out of curiosity, how do you know it was realistic?
“Just out of curiosity, how do you know it was realistic?”
Try to imagine being beaten with a whip of cords with bits of metal and splintered bone in the tips, across your bare back. By individuals who actually were laughing at your suffering as they brough the whip down time and time again, as hard as they could. You want to say that you wouldn’t be in just as much suffering as what we see “Jesus” was in the movie? I can’t imagine a more accurate depiction of physical suffering as what I saw. And I believe the real Jesus suffered no less than that, if not even more.
Don’t try and get me started. I got in trouble once for that (even though I was purely joking around, being silly). You want to discuss this further, Email me directly.
I would recommend The Last Temptation of Christ ( http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0095497/ ), it’s a really good movie.
I’ll also recommend another title that people haven’t mentioned: Trainspotting ( http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0117951/ )
Edited 2007-04-28 21:32
“The Last Temptation of Christ” is a blasphemous movie, to truly born-again Christians. It depicts a Jesus who sinned (or at least desired to; I never saw the movie, so I’m only going from what little I remember hearing or reading about it). Not the sinless, spotless Son of God as we know Him. Another movie that goes along this same line of thinking, is “The DaVinci Code” and “The Lost Tomb of Christ” (or whatever that ridiculous cable movie by James Cameron was called).
“Good movies” are not always ACCURATE movies, if you’re trying to depict historical accounts of people. And accurate movies are not always considered “good movies”, by many people.
Which reflects more poorly on born-again Christians than it does on Scorsese’s film (or Kazantzakis’ novel before it). You really should at least deign to see the film before passing judgment on it – despite its “blasphemous” nature, it presents Jesus and his message in a much more sympathetic/positive light than Mel Gibson’s propaganda piece/gore-and-cheese-fest.
“You really should at least deign to see the film before passing judgment on it – despite its “blasphemous” nature, it presents Jesus and his message in a much more sympathetic/positive light than Mel Gibson’s propaganda piece/gore-and-cheese-fest.”
No. I worship a Jesus who is the sinless Son of God. Who died for our sins on the cross of Calvary and rose again on the 3rd day. I will NEVER watch a movie that portrays Jesus as a flawed or ordinary “human”. That totally negates everything the bible says about Him.
Just because you and others want a Jesus who seems more “tangible” and “understandable” (i.e. “he was just a good man who taught good principles we should follow after”), doesn’t make Him that way.
What Jesus went through WAS gory. It WAS extremely bloody! What he went through WAS a horribly cruel way to die. But He did it for US! All of us. Every last one of us. All we need to do is accept His sacrifice. But far too many just can’t… or won’t.
If you want a movie about a Jesus who lived an ordinary life… who was just as flawed as you and me… there are plenty of them. I choose to watch movies that glorify Him… not bring Him down to our level. He already “came down to our level” (“…and the Word became flesh…”) 2,007 years ago, so we could rise up to His!
Email me, if you wish to continue this discussion…
Even assuming the historicity of the events (which is a big leap in and of itself), it was exaggerated to an almost cartoonish degree in The Passion.
There’s a difference between an accurate portrayal of violence and gratuitously reveling it (slow-motion blood splatters, etc).
Uh huh. And now, when you make point, you can point to The Passion and say “See what I mean!”
“There’s a difference between an accurate portrayal of violence and gratuitously reveling it (slow-motion blood splatters, etc).”
Ok… you have a point. I didn’t recall that. But I’ll believe you. Yes, agreed. Slow-motion is definitely over-excessive when depicting the suffering of our Savior. I’m sure it was meant to further convey His suffering, but it really wasn’t necessary.
But realize, it wasn’t violence for violence sake. It was portraying violence against our Savior. While the extra “effects” were, I admit, gratuitous, it’s purpose (I believe) was meant to further cement the suffering He went though in our fairly jaded minds.
As an atheist and ex-catholic (if you can call that an indoctrinated child) I’ve never really got what’s so special about Jesus dying on the cross. It was quite common punishment back in the day and lots of people died that way, nobody seems to be amazed by that.
Passion of the Christ is like making a movie about daily life of a concetration camp prisoner or person tortured by spanish inquistion (at least there could be a comedy scene about non-expectance of spanish inquisition).
Yay, religion flamebait ;/
“As an atheist and ex-catholic (if you can call that an indoctrinated child) I’ve never really got what’s so special about Jesus dying on the cross. It was quite common punishment back in the day and lots of people died that way, nobody seems to be amazed by that.”
It doesn’t surprise me one iota that you went from being a catholic to an atheist, because you must be born-again in order for you to have an actual relationship with God and be His.
While I would absolutely love to get really “into” this issue, right here and now, it would be vastly off-topic. If you want to discuss this matter in more detail, contact me via Email.
“Passion of the Christ is like making a movie about daily life of a concetration camp prisoner or person tortured by spanish inquistion.”
Jesus didn’t go through that, but ONCE in His life. It was not “daily life” for Him, so your comparison is utterly invalid. Not that it surprises me. You simply don’t understand Jesus, because you were never born-again.
“Yay, religion flamebait ;/”
Yeah, tempting as it is, I have attempted to keep it as low-key as possible. If you want to discuss (or debate) this issue further, you know how to reach me.
Edited 2007-04-28 23:51
Personally I’m an Asatru (google it if you don’t know, i don’t time to explain). I watched that movie and was utterly disgusted by it. It was designed for maximum shock value to scare the weak minded sheeple back in line and went to horrid lengths to do so.
Asatro cool
Watch Berzerker cool vikingmovie
“Personally I’m an Asatru (google it if you don’t know, i don’t time to explain).”
Ah, Norse mythology! Fascinating culture and beliefs, and one goddess is/was the source of the day we call Easter! I knew Easter was a weirdly amalgamized day, sourced from pagantry, but I had no idea that the hare and the egg were symbols of her. Now I know where the idea of the bunny and eggs came from!
“I watched that movie and was utterly disgusted by it. It was designed for maximum shock value to scare the weak minded sheeple back in line and went to horrid lengths to do so.”
It’s not meant to be a “fun” movie. It’s MEANT to shock us, with the reality of what Jesus went through, so that we may appreciate His sacrifice for us that much more!
As far as us “weak-minded sheeple” are concerned, I’ll take that as a complement! Why? Because Jesus is The True Shepherd and His sheep know His voice!
My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me:
(John 10:27)
One source of the word “Shepherd” is “sheep herder”. (“Look it up in Google…”, as you so nicely put it ). So, yes… we born-again Christians *ARE* “sheeple” (sheep-people)! Thank you very much! 🙂
At least the God we serve actually EXISTS! Unlike the Norse mythological gods… who never sacrificed *anything* for their worshippers. God *gave*… but gods *demand*…
‘Nuff said. I’ve gone off topic far too much already (thanks to you). If you wish to continue this, please feel free to Email me directly.
Yet you’re praising a film made by a Catholic, specifically to present an interpretation based on Catholic tradition, and largely based on the writings of a Catholic nun?
“Yet you’re praising a film made by a Catholic, specifically to present an interpretation based on Catholic tradition, and largely based on the writings of a Catholic nun?”
“The Passion of The Christ” is not about who directed the movie, who wrote the script, or who had what visions (or writings) that inspired the movie…
It’s about the suffering of Jesus. What He went through for us! You’re seeing everything except what the movie was truly about. Should that surprise me? I suppose not…
The movie simply makes “more real”, what Jesus actually went through, in the most graphic, detailed way possible. Because what He went through WAS graphic and it was VERY detailed! Every prophecy concerning His sacrifice was fulfilled the day He was crucified. What are the odds of that?
It’s hard, for even us Christians, to really understand what Jesus experienced, because the bible doesn’t go into minute details about it. The movie simply “fills in all the details”, so that we can truly SEE what He experienced.
Sure, there is “Catholic interpretation” in it… how couldn’t there be? Every step of it’s creation was influenced by Catholicism. But if you dismiss the movie based purely on all the extraneous “chaff”, you miss the entire point of the movie itself.
Just because a lot of people may think that the movie was “too graphic” or “too catholic” or “Jesus (in the movie) shed more blood than the human body contains”, doesn’t make the truth of what the movie was REALLY about any less meaningful… except to those who watched the movie for the wrong reasons.
‘Nuff said. Back on track, please…
Eh, you’ve missed the point of my post. I was pointing out the contradiction in praising a film as being “accurate” and “true,” and then suggesting that the people responsible for the film/the theology behind the film are incapable of having an “actual relationship with God and be His.”
“Eh, you’ve missed the point of my post. I was pointing out the contradiction in praising a film as being “accurate” and “true,” and then suggesting that the people responsible for the film/the theology behind the film are incapable of having an “actual relationship with God and be His.”
No, I haven’t. What you don’t realize is, God can take a sinner and win people to Christ. He can take something bad and turn it to His glory. God can do things like that. It doesn’t matter who made the movie (or why), if I walk away from it, with a greater appreciation of what Jesus did for me, then the movie has accomplished the goal for which it was meant.
I doubt Mel Gibson made this movie just to ick people out with it’s violence. I believe he intended for the people who watched this movie, to come away with a realization of exactly what Jesus went through at Calvary.
It doesn’t matter what “nonsense” (demon baby, et al) was mixed in and between the scenes. It’s all about Jesus, plain and simple. If all you see is the “gratuitous effects” or the “catholic influence” or the “excessive blood and gore”, you’re not paying attention to the message.
Eh? No you haven’t what? By suggesting that only those who are born-again can have an “actual relationship with God and be His,” is that not an implicit suggestion that such a relationship is lacking/not possible with other flavours of Christianity?
So artistic license is okay when it comes to ridiculously exaggerated gore, but not when it comes to interpretation of the canonical “facts”?
“Eh? No you haven’t what? By suggesting that only those who are born-again can have an “actual relationship with God and be His,” is that not an implicit suggestion that such a relationship is lacking/not possible with other flavours of Christianity?”
Look, Jesus said “Ye must be born-again.” That’s the bottom line. I didn’t say it. My pastor didn’t say it. The Pope didn’t say it. Jesus said it. You wanna argue why we believe what we believe? Take it up with Him.
If you accept Christ then, at that point, your relationship with God is as good as you make it. But if you are not, as Jesus said we must be, then no such relationship can exist. If you can find, in the bible, where Jesus gave another option, let me know. I personally only adhere to the JKV. Not the NKJV or any other version.
Hasn’t this gotten off-topic enough already? All I wanted to do was comment on a good movie for Christians to see and you’re turning it into an ongoing religious argument…
I’d much rather continue this in the acceptable forum of Email, not here. I’d prefer to NOT get in trouble for “thread hijacking”, which is where this seems to be going…
Just Email me at “[handle]@xoc.ten”. (flip the individual words (after ‘@’) around, for the real address and replace [handle] with my name found here) Thank you.
Agreed. Not an entertainment movie for sure. Does though show what HE went through for mankind. It’s a movie I watched just once. That was enough. I have seen even Atheists cry while watching it though.
I recall that it’s been criticized for being decidedly unrealistic – E.g., on screen, Jesus loses more blood than the human body contains. And IIRC, the source for many of the specific details was not biblical, but taken from writings describing the visions of 18th century Austrian nun.
“I recall that it’s been criticized for being decidedly unrealistic – E.g., on screen, Jesus loses more blood than the human body contains.”
I was not aware of this, while watching it, but that’s probably because I wasn’t paying to the amount of blood loss onscreen, but the portrayal of suffering “Jesus” went through, onscreen.
It’s called “The PASSION (suffering) of the Christ”, not “The Blood Loss of the Christ” *sigh* If you’re watching the movie for the right reason, the point is lost.
“And IIRC, the source for many of the specific details was not biblical, but taken from writings describing the visions of 18th century Austrian nun.”
I saw a few myself, that seemed out of place… like the demon child being nursed by the “Satan mother”. That was really weird. No movie is perfect. And “artistic license” is going to be used, whether we like it or not.
But the “suffering”, to me, was entirely realistic. And that’s why I went. To see a representation of His suffering for us.
If you’re not one of His… you can’t understand.
No need to be disingenuously melodramatic, it was an *example* to address your specific claim that the film was a realistic depiction. It’s certainly not the only example either – all of the violence in The Passion is relentlessly exaggerated and over the top, it’s up there with Dead Alive Riki Oh as one of the most gratuitously gory films I’ve ever seen.
Riiiight. That’s a convenient way to dismiss criticism without the hassle of actually addressing it.
“No need to be disingenuously melodramatic, it was an *example* to address your specific claim that the film was a realistic depiction. It’s certainly not the only example either – all of the violence in The Passion is relentlessly exaggerated and over the top, it’s up there with Dead Alive Riki Oh as one of the most gratuitously gory films I’ve ever seen.”
Well, I guess the only way we’ll ever truly know if the movie was accurate or not, is to actually have someone go through all that Jesus did… and then be nailed to a cross afterwards.
Um, you wanna volunteer?
I’ll pass, thank you.
The movie accomplished the goal I believe it was created to reach. And I appreciate the movie on no other level than that.
Eh? I don’t have to be a doctor to say with certainty that someone doesn’t get most their skin flayed off and lose that much blood without dying as a fairly quick result.
“Eh? I don’t have to be a doctor to say with certainty that someone doesn’t get most their skin flayed off and lose that much blood without dying as a fairly quick result.”
You’re assuming Jesus was an average human. Do normal people turn water into wine, raise the dead, cleanse lepers, restore withered limbs to whole, walk on water, feed tens of thousands of people with 3 loaves and 2 fishes, walk through a crowd of people who wanted to stone him without being touched, heal the son of someone when that dying individual wasn’t even there, dry up a womans issue of blood just by having the hem of his garment touched, heal a cut off ear…
Shall I go on?
You think something like being beaten, flayed, and having a crown of thorns jammed into his skull is going to stop Jesus… the Spotless Lamb of God… the final sacrifice… from making it all the way to Calvary? Pah! He’s God the Son, man! You don’t stop God from accomplishing His purpose… and no amount of torture and beating and whipping and crucifying was going to defeat Him, til He said “It is finished!”
THAT’S a God I can respect! Amen!
You think something like being beaten, flayed, and having a crown of thorns jammed into his skull is going to stop Jesus… the Spotless Lamb of God… the final sacrifice… from making it all the way to Calvary? Pah! He’s God the Son, man! You don’t stop God from accomplishing His purpose… and no amount of torture and beating and whipping and crucifying was going to defeat Him, til He said “It is finished!”
THAT’S a God I can respect! Amen!
This is SO off-topic, but I just have to stick my nose here quickly..First of all, I get the feeling you glorify jesus because you think of him as a superhero with fantastic superpowers, and if he didn’t have such, you’d lose all your respect for him. And secondly, as far as I remember from what I’ve read, jesus wasn’t a god, and didn’t mean for himself to be glorified and iconified but rather make people believe in “God”. Remember the story of the golden statue? Well, you seem to have fallen in the same trap..
Oh, just as a little bit of info to you: if you had truly been studying these things, you’d know not everything in bible is to be taken literally, and jesus wasn’t born 2007 years ago..He was born actually a few years earlier.
“This is SO off-topic, but I just have to stick my nose here quickly..First of all, I get the feeling you glorify jesus because you think of him as a superhero with fantastic superpowers, and if he didn’t have such, you’d lose all your respect for him. And secondly, as far as I remember from what I’ve read, jesus wasn’t a god, and didn’t mean for himself to be glorified and iconified but rather make people believe in “God”. Remember the story of the golden statue? Well, you seem to have fallen in the same trap..”
I agree. This whole issue HAS gotten horribly off topic. All I wanted to do was comment about a good movie for Christians to see and Mr. BeDoper decided to turn it into a religious argument, *KNOWING* I’d defend my faith!
I only hope my replies serve God in some way.
Hey, you think I think Jesus is some kind of super hero? Well, if someone saved YOU from eternal damnation… wouldn’t you think pretty highly of them, yourself? 🙂
No, Jesus isn’t “a god” (well, except to the Jehovah’s Witnesses). He is God the Son! He said “for the Father and I are one” and “If you’ve seen Me, you’ve seen the Father.” and “Before Abraham was, I AM.”. How much more evidence of absolute Deity do you need?
Man, this has just GOTTA stop! Email me already!!!
“Oh, just as a little bit of info to you: if you had truly been studying these things, you’d know not everything in bible is to be taken literally,”
Oh, I’m sorry… then what parts should I pick and choose to be literal and NOT literal? If one thing is ‘not to be taken literally’, maybe ALL of it shouldn’t be taken literally! Maybe it’s all just one giant lie and we’re all living in some massive conspiracy dillusion that has affected mankind ever since the Garden of Eden. Oh, but wait… that’s not to be taken literally, either, is it?
*sigh* Just email me… PLEASE?!?
“and jesus wasn’t born 2007 years ago..He was born actually a few years earlier.”
I don’t recall saying He was born 2007 years ago… He died on the cross of Calvary 2007 years ago. He was born approximately 33 years earlier.
Email… me! THANK YOU!
“If you’re not one of His… you can’t understand.
Riiiight. That’s a convenient way to dismiss criticism without the hassle of actually addressing it.”
The bible clearly says, the wisdom of God is foolishness to man. The Word of God contains the Wisdom of God. Hence, you can’t comprehend it… until you’re one of His.
Tell me, do you know what it’s like to fly on the Shuttle? How can you, until you’re IN the shuttle, first? Until you’re ON God’s path, you can’t understand what God’s path is like or about.
Simple truths are oft the hardest to comprehend, because we want/expect them to be more complex.
Edited 2007-04-29 20:20
So in other words, it’s not possible to have religious conviction until you have religious conviction?
“The bible clearly says, the wisdom of God is foolishness to man. The Word of God contains the Wisdom of God. Hence, you can’t comprehend it… until you’re one of His.
So in other words, it’s not possible to have religious conviction until you have religious conviction?”
‘Religious conviction’ has nothing to do with it. The Holy Spirit helps bring you to the point of acceptance of Jesus’ sacrifice. Then, from that point, you can then embark on comprehending God’s Word.
The Word of God is spiritually decerned. You can’t understand it until your spirit is reborn, hence why Jesus said “ye MUST be born-again” [emphasis mine, for clarification of requirement] . We Christians didn’t just pull the name “born-again” out of thin air… Jesus said it. That’s why we call ourselves that.
… and – coming in second – all movies by David Lynch
Another woman (Woody Allen)
Being there (with Peter Sellers)
Kiki’s delivery service (Myjazaki)
Tonari no totoro (Myjazaki)
Howl’s moving castle (Myjazaki)
Sleuth (with Michael Caine)
The descent
300
Frank Capra – It’s a Wonderful Life.
No blood, no gore, no special effects – just a beautifully told story about people and how relevant they are to those around them.
Mine is “Amores perros”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amores_perros
Serenity has to be one of my favorites…
It was beautifully done for a Sci-Fi and just awesome.
But the Nativity, was the best ever and reflected not only events that really happened, but events that will effect all of our futures.
My favorite movie of all time would have to be “It’s All Gone Pete Tong”. It’s simply an amazing movie. If you’ve never seen this movie go check it out.
A few others close behind it:
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
Strangers on a Train
Citizen Kane
Last Night (directed by Don McKeller)
The Sweet Hereafter
Stranger Than Fiction
Nah..
The Big Lebowski of course.
What else could I choose?
Truman Show, Old Boy (Korean), Amelie (French), The Pianist, are all timeless too.
I totally hate Kill Bill (well, most Tarantino stuff, actually), but this was not about worst film ever, right?
Were you listening to the dude’s story?
Donny you’re out of your element!
The Chinaman is not the issue here!
By the way, Dude, Chinaman is not the preferred nomenclature.
Asian American, please.
🙂
The most important movie ever made for two reasons:
1) It shows you what government is about.
2) It shows you that fear is the main enemy of the human race.
>> fear is the main enemy of the human race <<
Sorry I have not actually seen that film.
However (( War “who’s right” “who’s left” ))is a worthy Google Query, within the context of Dawkins “The Selfish Gene”. Dawkins-wise, at the most-rationally-courageous, our parents made us babies before going off to war.
Which brings up (( “the Who” Tommy )) “It’s a boy Mrs. Walker it’s a boy”… I have not seen the DVD but ever since the ancient college days some tunes will occasionally go on endless-loop in my head, “listening to you…”
I think « Crash » is my favorite movie.
I like « Requiem for a dream » and « C.R.A.Z.Y. ».
I would have to say my favorite movie for lasting replay value is “Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead”
Others that make the short list:
– Anything my studio Ghibli with “Kiki’s Delivery Service” holding a special place.
– “Before Sunrise” and “Before Sunset”
– “The Crow”
– And having stayed up through the night to watch the entire Firefly series in order, “Serenity”
I like the Kevin Smith films so its Chasing Amy for me followed by a very close Clerks 2. After that its the Star Wars trilogy and honorable mention to Pirates of the Carribean: Curse of the black pearl
I would have to say that Clerks is much better than Clerks 2.
Office Space
Wargames – I think I have this on beta still!
Tron
The Hunt for Red october
Young Frankenstein
Jurassic Park
Borat
Most James Bond’s
Most Star Trek’s, TNG cast
Purple Rain was good too
-m
Bladerunner, Memento & Russian Ark.
In no particular order:
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
Requiem For a Dream
Sin City
Pulp Fiction
Dazed and Confused
Scarface
Natural Born Killers
Monty Python and the Holy Grail
The Princess Bride
Reservoir Dogs
A Clockwork Orange
Full Metal Jacket
Taxi Driver
A Bronx Tale
Tombstone
Goodfellas
Edited 2007-04-28 22:00
Not my favorite, but it’s hasn’t been mentioned yet, a must see if you like Kiefer Sutherland and who doesn’t? 😉
Dark City http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0118929/
Edited 2007-04-28 22:05
my favorite movies are
T2 (way ahead of it’s time, remember the GUN getting stuck as he warped through the bars ?)
The Mission (fantasic story/scenery and EXCELLENT music score)
The Big Blue
The Untouchables
and Aliens 2
cheers
anyweb
Gotta go with Napoleon Dynamite, my all time favorite. I thought 300 was great, too.
Assassins. *cough*.
The Cell
anything from Ghibli (Totoro was the first anime that I ever saw)
Akira
Super Troopers
Y Tu Mama Tambien
Ong Bak, The Thai Warrior (the very end made me go “DAAAAAAMN!!!”)
Digimon Movie 2: Bokura no War Game (I’m sorry, but Season 3 was the best)
Face (Korean horror mystery)
Snatch
And no, I’m not ashamed over the more juvenile selections.