PeterRS Posted April 22 Posted April 22 A more lighthearted thread. Can you list the five movies that you consider your favourites? And with just one sentence for each to explain why? I know most such lists are for a minimum of 10 or 20, but it seems more fun just to make the limit five. But you can also add what I term a "sleeper" - a movie that most may not have seen but which has a special meaning for you. My list: Psycho I saw this as a teenager and it was the first movie during which I jumped out of my seat at least three times and almost screamed. Lawrence of Arabia David Lean’s masterpiece epic in my view, better than Dr Zhivago and far better than Passage to India and Ryan’s Daughter. The Go-Between I loved this movie with its various intertwining themes of innocent and not so innocent love, the haves and the have nots, the searing heat of an unusual English summer and the hopes for a brilliant new century soon to be dashed and affect many of the participants. Victor Victoria Have loved this movie ever since I first saw it on a Garuda flight from Bali to Hong Kong, the unaccustomed versatility of Julie Andrews partnering a perfectly magical performance by Robert Preston and the whole gloriously funny souffle masterminded by Andrew's husband, Blake Edwards. Schindler’s List In my view Spielberg’s masterpiece which I saw in a packed small cinema in Tokyo along with 100 or so young Japanese, every one of whom was in tears at the end. My Sleeper: The Egoist I choose this brilliant 2022 Japanese gay movie I saw in Bangkok’s Sam Yan cinema complex last year. Friends had told me about it but I was not prepared for the excellence of its performances, its raw intimate scenes, its heartbreaking pain and the emotions it stirred. The full movie with English subtitles is available on the internet. This is a very brief trailer - tm_nyc, BjornAgain and TMax 3 Quote
BjornAgain Posted yesterday at 08:00 AM Posted yesterday at 08:00 AM In a shortlist: 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979) The Father (2020) Blade Runner (1982) Once Upon A Time In The West (1968) For pure entertainment, comedy and popcorn appeal, then: Pirates of The Caribbean: The Curse of The Black Pearl (2003). Movies primarily are for entertainment, enjoyment, relaxation, dramatic events ( horror), education and social interaction, by that I mean discussion. Leaving the Movie Theatre with friends our immediate action is to discuss, good, bad, crap, interesting, not as good as his/her's last one, best movie ever etc. Really great movies make you think. 1) 2001: A Space Odyssey. Adapted from Arthur C. Clarkes's short story The Sentinel (1948), Kubrick's vision was to trace the story back to the dawn of man, the leap from primitive ape to weaponised ape and the exponential growth in intelligence, kick started by external interplanetary forces. An idea adopted by Ridley Scott with the Alien prequels and franchise. The middle part is the journey (think Greek Odysseys') to meet the intelligent entity, with some of the most amazing cinematic effects to this day, bearing in mind it was made 1968, so before we landed on the moon. The movie was shot in 70mm, so the quality and clarity of the in-picture action on a wide screen made the experience breathtaking. The third part is where the magic really happens. Certainly as a 16 year old when I first watch it on TV, I hadn't a clue what was going in, with each subsequent viewing the picture's meaning becomes clearer. Underlying the visuals is the music, both Johann and Richard Strauss, György Ligeti, Aram Khachaturyan and the suggestion at the time from the music consultant on the movie, namely Patrick Moore, the use of Richard Strauss's Also Sprach Zarathustra forever associated with space flight. Despite Oscar nominations for Director, Sceen Writing and Art direction, it only recieved one for Special Effects. Kubrick joked at the time the movie should have got the award for costume, however this went to The Planet of The Apes, as most of the academy was under the impression the apes were real! 2) Star Trek: The Motion Picture. The story is simple, but in my opinion the most likely incident to connect us to other lifeforms. Voyager 1 was launched 2 years before the movie was made, and is currently 15.4 billion miles from earth and still exploring further and further out into space. No OTT laser shoot-outs, for the younger generations to get excited about, yes there's plenty of dialogue, but intellectually one of the most thought provoking Sci-Fi films. 3) The Father. A tour-de-force in acting by Anthony Hopkins and Olivia Coleman. Directected by Florian Zeller and adapted from his stage play of the same name. This film makes you think all through the movie. In a nut shell it's about old age. 4) Blade Runner. A perfect symmetry between visuals and Vangellis's music. The images have shaped countess Sci-Fi movies, TV series and printed media since it's release. It's the bible for making Sci-Fi. 5) Once Upon A Time In The West. Breathtaking, slow, memorable, great acting, and Enio Morricone's immersive score. Sergio Leone's direction, camera work and setup is what you see throughout Quentin Tarantino's work, his greatest inspiration. Much as I love QT's work, best to watch and learn from the master. Sergio is quoted as saying "I make silent films", hence the reason why the camera lingers on it's subject so you take in all the details, facial inflections, breathing etc. He forces you to study the scene. Hence in the initial shooting of the boy at the beginning of the film, you don't see the shooters face, he's dressed in black, so must be the villain. As the camera follows him over about 3 minutes it slow turns round to focus on the deep blue eyes of Henry Fonda, who despite his age of 63 at the time of making the movie, had never played the bad man. Found out recently, both Morricone and Leone went to the same junior school, and it wasn't till after they first collaborated together that either of them knew. Propose the same question in a years time, and the selection will be slightly different. Rewatching old movies I watched in my youth I'm finding completely different films and experiences. Great way to wile away retirement. Quote
Olddaddy Posted yesterday at 10:55 AM Posted yesterday at 10:55 AM My favourite was that one with Matt Damon where he played a new Detective and his Uncle was a Irish🇮🇪 gangster , I think it was set in Boston what was the name of that movie please ? I think the Uncle was Jack ... someone? And another movie I love was NO PLACE for old men , I think that's the title Quote
Members tm_nyc Posted yesterday at 11:41 AM Members Posted yesterday at 11:41 AM 43 minutes ago, Olddaddy said: My favourite was that one with Matt Damon where he played a new Detective and his Uncle was a Irish🇮🇪 gangster , The Departed w/Jack Nicholson, Leonardo DiCaprio & Mark Wahlberg. Directed by Martin Scorsese. Olddaddy 1 Quote
PeterRS Posted yesterday at 01:50 PM Author Posted yesterday at 01:50 PM 2 hours ago, tm_nyc said: The Departed w/Jack Nicholson, Leonardo DiCaprio & Mark Wahlberg. Directed by Martin Scorsese. This was basically an English language remake of the Hong Kong movie "Internal Affairs". It won a ton of awards at the Hong Kong Film Festival, just as "The Departed" won top awards at the Oscars. Olddaddy and tm_nyc 2 Quote
PeterRS Posted yesterday at 03:06 PM Author Posted yesterday at 03:06 PM Great to see comments. but please remember I asked for just one sentence to explain the reason for your preferring a particular movie. It concentrates the mind on why you really like it! Quote
unixmad Posted yesterday at 03:21 PM Posted yesterday at 03:21 PM The Godfather- No explaination needed lol The Shawshank Redemption- Timeless reminder that hope is the most powerful thing a man can hold onto. Planes, Trains and Automobiles- It’s hilarious but also gets you with it's honesty about loneliness, frustration, and unexpected friendship PeterRS and floridarob 2 Quote
floridarob Posted yesterday at 04:11 PM Posted yesterday at 04:11 PM 49 minutes ago, unixmad said: Planes, Trains and Automobiles- It’s hilarious but also gets you with it's honesty about loneliness, frustration, and unexpected friendship Ever watch this? Quote
unixmad Posted yesterday at 04:52 PM Posted yesterday at 04:52 PM 40 minutes ago, floridarob said: Ever watch this? No this is my first time seeing this.. thank you for posting it! floridarob 1 Quote
PeterRS Posted 15 hours ago Author Posted 15 hours ago 17 hours ago, BjornAgain said: 3) The Father. A tour-de-force in acting by Anthony Hopkins and Olivia Coleman. Directected by Florian Zeller and adapted from his stage play of the same name. This film makes you think all through the movie. In a nut shell it's about old age. Wonderful film with as @BjornAgain points out amazing acting from Hopkins and Coleman. Hopkins was the oldest to win the Best Actor Oscar in the year everyone thought it would go to the late Chadwick Boseman. But also more than a little frightening. It reminded me of the Judi Dench movie "Iris" where she pays the novelist Iris Murdoch as she first realises she has dementia and follows her through that horrible journey. Jim Broadbent, so good in so many movies, plays her husband determined not to leave her in an institution, the role which won him a Best Supporting Actor Oscar. Masterfully directed by Richard Eyre. tm_nyc and BjornAgain 2 Quote
Members tm_nyc Posted 14 hours ago Members Posted 14 hours ago 12 hours ago, PeterRS said: This was basically an English language remake of the Hong Kong movie "Internal Affairs". I believe that the title of the HK movie is Infernal Affairs. I liked the Scorsese version but I think that the original was better than the remake. PeterRS 1 Quote
Members Thomas_88 Posted 2 hours ago Members Posted 2 hours ago 23 hours ago, unixmad said: ...Planes, Trains and Automobiles- It’s hilarious but also gets you with it's honesty about loneliness, frustration, and unexpected friendship One of my favourite scenes it the conversation with the car rental lady. Quote
reader Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago Lawrence of Arabia Casablanca The Bridge Over the River Kwai Patton Almost anything featuring Anthony Hopkins Quote