Top 50s

Top 50 of 1940s

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The unofficial Criterion forum has been conducting a “Lists Project” for a couple of years now. Members submit a list of 50 films from a particular decade every few months and the results are tallied into the top 100 vote getters. At the end of January, a new list for films from the 1940s will be compiled and I’ve been studiously watching and re-watching as many titles from that decade as possible. I thought I would share my contribution, which probably reaches into old Hollywood, especially film noir, more than many of the other members’ lists since that’s what interests me most from the decade. There are still a few notable films I’ve not yet seen due to unavailability, such as several classics of Italian Neorealism, but I feel pleased enough with my final list. I’ve included some brief thoughts on each title, a few of which I’ve also previously discussed.

1.) Citizen Kane (Welles, 1941) - Too easy? Perhaps, but Welles’ achievement is undeniable and his masterpiece makes almost every other film of the decade look like a relic of the past while Kane remains as fresh and vibrant as ever. It’s Welles’ own performance, especially in the film’s first half, that pushes Kane past its technological innovations and into a remarkably modern and vital piece of cinema. The perfect American film.

2.) Notorious (Hitchcock, 1946) - Hitchcock’s first true masterpiece. Cary Grant, inching further away from his persona without abandoning it, and Ingrid Bergman have incredible chemistry as possibly the best romantic couple in a Hitchcock film. Grant, in particular, is very effective as the emotionally conflicted Devlin. “Dry your eyes baby, it’s out of character.”

3.) Double Indemnity (Wilder, 1944) - The true quintessential film noir and a breakthrough for Wilder that established his unmatched versatility and set up scores of pale imitations. Somehow withstands the test of time despite numerous rip-offs and parodies; also managed to inspire a very good pseudo-spin off 35 years later with Body Heat.

4.) The Palm Beach Story (Sturges, 1942) - My favorite of Sturges’ great screwball comedies; Claudette Colbert and Joel McCrea are perfect embodiments of the Sturges style and this is the funniest of his many classics. Just thinking about the Ale and Quail Club puts me in stitches.

5.) It’s a Wonderful Life (Capra, 1946) - My favorite film of any of these, but I controlled myself on placing it higher since even I realize it’s probably not the best picture of the decade. Unfairly maligned by film snobs for its sentimentality (which is an unearned criticism since it’s much darker than its reputation), it affects me like no other film I’ve seen. One of the definitive post-war Hollywood classics and an incredible come back vehicle for Jimmy Stewart, who hadn’t made a movie for five years while on active duty for the U.S. Army Air Corps.

6.) Monsieur Verdoux (Chaplin, 1947) - I can’t possibly imagine how audiences felt after seeing their beloved Charlie Chaplin, the little tramp who had last been seen wickedly mocking Hitler, as a cold-blooded bluebeard, murdering innocent old women for their wealth. An incredibly daring and quite successful attempt at pitch black comedy from Chaplin that obliterates the sentimental tag with which he’s often labeled.

7.) Casablanca (Curtiz, 1942) - A film most everyone loves, which hinders it among arty, contrarian circles, but well deserved of its bedrock status as a classic. Still incredibly enjoyable to watch with a little bit of everything that we enjoy in movies (laughs, action, romance, intrigue, etc.).

8.) Beauty and the Beast (Cocteau, 1946) - A magical fairy tale that remains an enchanting film experience. If I can fall under its spell then any movie lover can most definitely succumb to its charming story and visual feast.

9.) The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (Huston, 1948) - Bogart appears quite a bit on my list and rightfully so, as he had an incredible string of successes in the decade, but his performance as Fred C. Dobbs is the pinnacle of his career in my mind. Huston’s portrait of greed is unmatched in American cinema and Bogart’s refusal to be pigeonholed in the good guy role was nearly unheard of for a major Hollywood star. His risk in playing the crazed and mostly unsympathetic character pays off, even if Academy voters inexplicably denied him even a nomination.

10.) His Girl Friday (Hawks, 1940) - My favorite Cary Grant comedy and the fast-paced, rapid-fire dialogue is used to perfection by Hawks. Look for the unforgettable tongue-in-cheek lines apparently ad-libbed by Grant referencing Ralph Bellamy (whose character is described as looking like the actor) and Archie Leach (Grant’s real name).

11.) The Third Man (Reed, 1949) - Every time I watch it I think it’s slightly overpraised…until that glimmer of light shines on Orson Welles and immediately the film is elevated to another level. Up to that point, the pacing seems a tad off, but the appearance of Welles sets up one of the most memorable characters to ever appear on film with so little actual screen time. His performance here makes me mourn not only the lost opportunities for Welles as a filmmaker, but also the relatively few roles that allowed him to display his remarkable and charismatic talent as an actor.

12.) Late Spring (Ozu, 1949) - I’m certainly not an Ozu expert, but I can still recognize the subtle mastery he displays here. His characters seem more like multi-dimensional, living and breathing human beings than the fictional subjects we often see in movies. I also don’t feel qualified to provide any kind of confident analysis into why the film succeeds, but I trust my own reaction enough to know it’s something special.

13.) The Lady Eve (Sturges, 1941) - Barbara Stanwyck at her sexiest, making Henry Fonda no match for her cunning charm. This is where Sturges really began to hit his stride with still no one matching his short burst of creativity since.

14.) The Maltese Falcon (Huston, 1941) - Faithful adaptation of Hammett’s novel makes me wonder why more filmmakers don’t just film the source material as written when adapting. Bogart somehow makes Sam Spade vicious, likeable and legendary as generations of viewers have sought to emulate the private detective to no avail.

15.) Day of Wrath (Dreyer, 1943) - An exceptionally powerful film, set in the 17th-century and concerning religious executions of “admitted” witches, as well as a forbidden love, that perhaps peaks too soon, but still leaves a lasting impression.

16.) Laura (Preminger, 1944) - Otto Preminger made the best of his opportunity replacing the fired Rouben Mamoulian, directing the story of a woman so beautiful that her portrait inspires the detective investigating her death to fall in love. Gene Tierney should star in every movie.

17.) The Big Sleep (Hawks, 1946) - Too often judged as having an incomprehensible plot, it more accurately weaves its way from one crevice to the next while keeping the viewer interested enough to pay close attention and keeping the story fresh on repeat viewings since few people can really remember every little detail on subsequent viewings. Bogart’s not my favorite Marlowe, but he’s always interesting here as he became the standard bearer for others to be judged by.

18.) The Shop Around the Corner (Lubitsch, 1940) - Sure it’s set in Romania with a couple of American actors in the lead who don’t even try to stray from their regular accents, but it’s a fine story (good enough to be filmed again twice) and the chemistry between Margaret Sullavan and Jimmy Stewart is invitingly real due in no small part to the latter truly being smitten with his co-star in real life for many years. In some ways, my favorite Lubitsch movie and it speaks to the crusty-hearted romantic in all of us.

19.) The Great Dictator (Chaplin, 1940) - Incredibly prescient portrait of Hitler’s maniacal rule with laughs. Chaplin tugs at the heartstrings while making a bold statement about the murderous tyranny lurking in the Nazi leader.

20.) The Fallen Idol (Reed, 1948) - Possibly the finest portrait of the descent from childlike innocence into the realization that adults can be inherently self-serving, director Carol Reed’s precursor to The Third Man is impressive in its own right as an engrossing reflection of the lengths to which children will go to protect those they most admire.

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21.) Scarlet Street (Lang, 1945) - Arguably Lang’s best American film and working from the same source material as Renoir’s La Chienne, the director gives us a sap hero played by Edward G. Robinson. Trying to shake his tough guy image, Robinson is remarkable as a born loser ready to give up his life for the cunning Joan Bennett.

22.) Red River (Hawks, 1948) - Boldly placing a young Montgomery Clift as the hero and John Wayne as the out of touch ranch owner mutinied on a cattle drive, Hawks’ western is a superlative example of a versatile director expanding on an established genre to great effect.

23.) A Matter of Life and Death (Powell & Pressburger, 1946) - After watching most of the Archers’ output from this decade, I think this has emerged as my favorite. The innovative camera work and mixture of color and black and white are just part of what makes this romantic and witty film such a delight.

24.) Sullivan’s Travels (Sturges, 1941) - In maybe the greatest one-two punch for one year in cinema history, Preston Sturges followed up The Lady Eve with this end of the year triumph about a comedic director in search of a project that would go beyond mere laughs (and maybe with a little sex thrown in for good measure). Joel McCrea’s greatest role is perhaps Sturges’ greatest achievement, though not my personal favorite.

25.) The Magnificent Ambersons (Welles, 1942) - The story of a well-to-do family unable to change with the times and, like an animal who’s become too fat and lazy, slaughtered (figuratively) when they fail to adapt. Despite moments of brilliance, it still feels like a gutted epic and probably holds the distinction as the biggest what-if in cinematic history.

26.) Stray Dog (Kurosawa, 1949) - The Japanese master’s reflection on post-war Japan in the form of a story about a young police detective who loses his firearm and is forced to roam the seedy areas of Tokyo in search of his missing weapon. Toshiro Mifune, as the inexperienced officer, adeptly portrays the confusion and frustration resulting from the realization that his character could have easily descended into the thuggish lowlife he’s pursuing.

27.) The Set-Up (Wise, 1949) - Seventy minutes of sweat and grit with Robert Ryan at his best as an aging fighter unwilling to take a dive.

28.) The Killers (Siodmak, 1946) - From a script written by the uncredited John Huston adapting Ernest Hemingway’s short story, this high-level film noir gave Burt Lancaster his fortuitous film debut and moviegoers much more to chew on than typical cops-and-robbers stories. The fact that we’re never told exactly what the Swede did to put him on the titular characters’ hit list is part of what makes the film so great.

29.) A Canterbury Tale (Powell & Pressburger, 1944) - Functioning as both a retelling of and a tribute to Chaucer’s stories, the Archers’ film is a thrilling celebration of life and spirit. Sheila Sim’s arrival to the changed, recently bombed Canterbury is incredibly moving.

30.) The Leopard Man (Tourneur, 1943) - Chosen over the director’s more celebrated Cat People, this is the film that I find spookier and creepier and the pinnacle of RKO’s Val Lewton-produced atmospheric classics.

31.) Hangmen Also Die (Lang, 1943) - Lang’s mostly unheralded masterwork starring Brian Donlevy as a Czech doctor who assassinates a Nazi leader. Incredibly engrossing despite its lengthy running time, the film openly defies the German director’s homeland at the height of World War II and provides a virtual blueprint for translating German expressionism into American cinemas.

32.) Brief Encounter (Lean, 1945) - Achingly romantic classic that almost makes an adulterous fling seem perfectly acceptable. It also provided the seed that Billy Wilder used in writing The Apartment.

33.) The Philadelphia Story (Cukor, 1940) - With Grant, Hepburn and Stewart, how could it not be a delight. The movie that gave the latter his only Oscar, it’s too often considered a make-up award for Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, but the scenes where he’s had too much to drink are some of the finest work in his pre-war career.

34.) Les Dames du Bois de Boulogne (Bresson, 1945) - You can see early shades of the style Bresson would later adopt in his second film, but it holds up well on its own merits. More than a simple melodrama, the story, with dialogue by Jean Cocteau, of a woman spurned by her beau to seek a cruel revenge is bolstered by a chilling performance from Maria Casares and a stunning finale.

35.) Thieves’ Highway (Dassin, 1949) - Rescued from obscurity by the Criterion Collection’s fine DVD and full of great performances, especially Valentina Cortese, Jules Dassin’s noir centers around overnight truckers hauling fruits and vegetables to market with war vet Richard Conte out for revenge against boss Lee J. Cobb. Its biggest flaw is a studio-imposed ending that Dassin was still upset about 55 years later.

36.) Letter from an Unknown Woman (Ophüls, 1948) - Stunning tragic love story with a flashback narrative and great direction from Ophüls. Joan Fontaine’s journey through obsession, love, betrayal and tragedy is unforgettable.

37.) Ride the Pink Horse (Montgomery, 1947) - Director-star Robert Montgomery’s underseen noir perfectly embodies the post-war pessimism of the genre with its grimy Mexican setting and mysterious anti-hero, who finds comfort and friendship in unlikely sources.

38.) Sergeant York (Hawks, 1941) - Sentimental propaganda, but done at the highest level. Hawks’ handling of the rural small town atmosphere and Cooper’s natural performance support the film’s status as an enduring classic.

39.) Suspicion (Hitchcock, 1941) - Joan Fontaine won her Oscar here, but it’s Cary Grant’s charming ambiguity, forcing the audience to wonder if the movie star could possibly be a cold-blooded murderer, that makes the film. That and the eerie, glowing milk he brings her near the end.

40.) The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp (Powell & Pressburger, 1943) - Epic and controversial telling of the life of a British career military man based on a bitingly satirical comic strip. Particularly memorable is the majestic overhead shot of the duel between Roger Livesey and Anton Walbrook, seen through a skylight as snow falls.

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41.) High Sierra (Walsh, 1941) - Bogart’s break-out role as Roy Earle, a just-pardoned bank robber who missed the concept of rehabilitation. The character walks a tightrope between savage, impatient thug and kind-hearted soul searching for love. The filmed on location finale is a pinnacle in genre filmmaking of the era.

42.) Heaven Can Wait (Lubitsch, 1943) - Welcome sentimentality in the form of a man forced to face both the good and the bad of his past before settling into the afterlife.

43.) Le Corbeau (Clouzot, 1943) - Made during the occupation of France, the film served as Clouzot’s own poison pen letter to Nazi informants. It was banned by nearly everyone imaginable at the time, but is now seen as an important work by a major filmmaker.

44.) Rope (Hitchcock, 1948) - The master’s experiment in continuous long takes marked his first collaboration with James Stewart, who replaced Hitch’s original choice of Cary Grant. The Leopold-Loeb murder case has provided fertile ground for dramatic interpretations, none more successful than this film.

45.) The Miracle of Morgan’s Creek (Sturges, 1944) - Maybe the director’s most daring achievement where he somehow managed to get a picture released where a young Betty Hutton gets knocked up by an about to be deployed soldier after a one-night stand without remembering who the guy was. Very funny performance from Eddie Bracken as her fractured fairy tale white knight.

46.) Force of Evil (Polonsky, 1948) - Later blacklisted, director Abraham Polonsky made his debut with this corrosively devastating story of a crooked lawyer seeking to protect his somewhat estranged brother from a numbers running scam. The second half is especially dark and the remarkable scene when gangsters come to collect the accountant Bauer at a cafe is spellbinding.

47.) Nightmare Alley (Goulding, 1947) - In my opinion, Tyrone Power’s finest film and performance as a carnie with ambition. Its bleak ending is still strikingly unexpected.

48.) Remember the Night (Leisen, 1940) - Neglected Christmas classic written by Preston Sturges and starring Stanwyck and MacMurray four years before their most famous teaming. More of a love story than a comedy, but a highly enjoyable piece of Hollywood fluff nonetheless.

49.) Leave Her to Heaven (Stahl, 1945) - Flawed, but compelling film that stands out today for mixing Technicolor melodrama with icy noir undertones and Gene Tierney’s career-best performance.

50.) This Gun for Hire (Tuttle, 1942) - Early Alan Ladd-Veronica Lake vehicle, based on a Graham Greene novel, that provided an obvious influence on Jean-Pierre Melville’s Le Samouraï. Ladd’s character is a solitary hitman who’s forced to go on the run from the police and is somewhat reluctantly aided by Lake, who plays the fiancee of one of the detectives searching for the professional killer.

Last five I reluctantly had to leave off - Spellbound (Hitchcock, 1945), Out of the Past (Tourneur, 1947), White Heat (Walsh, 1949), Unfaithfully Yours (Sturges, 1948), The Lady from Shanghai (Welles, 1947)

Top 50 of 1950s

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It’s that time again, as the Criterion forum’s Lists Project focuses on the decade of the 1950s. As described in my list for the previous decade (here), a master list of 100 films is calculated from participating members’ individual 50 film lists. I probably take this whole thing way too seriously as I try to meticulously fill in the gaps of what I’ve seen and re-watch things where it’s been a couple of years since my last viewing. I’m not reluctant to include the films frequently honored in these type of lists, as long as I think something deserves to be there, but reputation alone isn’t going to be enough. Looking back at my list, it becomes a little too obvious the kind of film I like and a few directors (Wilder, Ray, Mann, Hitchcock) are particularly well-represented. This decade, while not as consistent as the forties in my mind, had more really good and great films than the previous one. As I said the last time around though, I’m content with the final flims included and their rankings. I’ve commented briefly on each choice and included links to pieces I’ve previously written where available.

1.) Rear Window (Hitchcock, 1954) - For me, the most fascinating film ever made. A helpless, wheelchair-bound photographer can’t help spying on his neighbors after weeks of being confined to his New York City apartment. It’s a cracking suspense film, up there with Hitchcock’s (and thus anyone else’s) best, but the really interesting parts are Jimmy Stewart’s portrayal of L.B. Jefferies, his relationship with Grace Kelly’s character, and, of course, the voyeuristic element. Writers tend to psychoanalyze Stewart’s Vertigo character ad nauseam, but Jefferies here becomes equally unraveled. Even though his suspicions ultimately prove accurate in Rear Window, his methods are still unhealthy, intrusive and creepy at best, disturbing at worst. Also, notice how little Stewart pays attention to Kelly and how their relationship suddenly becomes warmer when he tells her he thinks one of the neighbors he’s been spying on has killed his wife. Finally, the multiple levels of watching (Stewart on his neighbors, the viewer on Stewart, and, in a sense, Hitchcock on everyone) really showcase a master director at the very top of his game. I think my favorite scene is when Stewart is looking through his lens at Raymond Burr while Kelly is being escorted from Burr’s apartment by the police and suddenly Burr turns to look at Stewart, the camera, and the audience. It always makes me feel quite uncomfortable, like I’ve been caught watching something I shouldn’t have been.

2.) Sunset Blvd. (Wilder, 1950) - Somehow Gloria Swanson is Norma Desmond. It’s difficult to think of another actor so associated with just one role. Even though she was Oscar-nominated twice before (in 1929 and 1930), Swanson has become Norma in most of our hearts. Wilder’s scathing look at the devouring nature of Hollywood is still unsurpassed in its depiction of the insanity of the movie industry. It’s no accident that, fifty-one years later, David Lynch used another famous Hollywood road for the title of his look at the destructive side of Hollywood with Mulholland Dr.

3.) In a Lonely Place (Ray, 1950) - I wrote a lot about this one already so I don’t want to drone on, but I can’t think of another film in any language or decade that inspires the level of heartache found in Ray’s masterpiece.

4.) Vertigo (Hitchcock, 1958) - I like Rear Window better, but Vertigo (which ranked first in the last Lists Project go-around) may be the better film. Regardless, it’s difficult to argue with either’s place in cinematic history. Combined with the Capra and Mann films, shouldn’t these two make Jimmy Stewart the consensus top Hollywood movie star of all time? Really, who else could have pulled off so many variations and downright shake-ups of an image while maintaining their strong popularity. Vertigo, like Citizen Kane, can be watched literally dozens if not hundreds of times without becoming tiresome. It’s that layered and endlessly fascinating while somehow still being fun and entertaining.

5.) The 400 Blows (Truffaut, 1959) - Aside from Citizen Kane, this could be the greatest debut film in the history of cinema. Antoine Doinel is a remarkable character - a tad precocious, a little bratty, but ultimately a kid looking for escape. Like Welles, Truffaut probably never made anything else as perfect as his first feature. Certainly the other Doinel feature films didn’t approach the first’s brilliance and left many people disappointed. I like them all to varying degrees but The 400 Blows is in a class by itself.

6.) Ace in the Hole (Wilder, 1951) - Wilder’s long-neglected masterpiece of unbridled cynicism is as unrelenting as anything from the decade. Its power continues to increase as the pull of the media strengthens and the masses continue to give society a bad name.

7.) A Face in the Crowd (Kazan, 1957) - A perfect companion piece to Ace in the Hole, Kazan’s film outdoes Network by twenty years and still plays like a punch to the gut of all those talking head followers. Andy Griffith is remarkable and his television show persona might look just a little creepier after watching this.

8.) Diary of a Country Priest (Bresson, 1951) - A fascinating, moving look into faith, religion and the human struggle of balancing both with our own individual needs. Like Ordet, it doesn’t try to provide answers so much as encourage introspection. For Bresson, it was a leap forward from Les Dames du Bois de Boulogne stylistically and the first of his films to use his trademark “models,” or non-professional actors.

9.) Singin’ in the Rain (Donen & Kelly, 1952) - The musical for people who hate musicals. The glorious Technicolor, the transition from silents to talkies and Jean Hagen are all icing on Gene Kelly’s cake. There just aren’t very many scenes in film as magical as Kelly’s performance of the title song.

10.) Seven Samurai (Kurosawa, 1954) - It’s amazing to see the enduring popularity of Kurosawa’s film when you take into consideration everything it seemingly has going against it. Shot in academy ratio black-and-white, the film is nearly 3 1/2 hours in length and, of course, in Japanese. Yet, generations now have been introduced to Kurosawa, Toshiro Mifune, Japanese filmmaking and even international cinema through this film. It makes for a wonderful entry point and remains a resoundingly entertaining epic.

11.) Some Like It Hot (Wilder, 1959) - Hilarious, daring, and fun, Wilder’s first collaboration with Jack Lemmon proved to be a winning effort. I’m still amazed how the scene between Tony Curtis (doing his best Cary Grant) and Marilyn on the yacht made it past the censors.

12.) Nights of Cabiria (Fellini, 1957) - I’m not sure how I find Giulietta Masina here so poignant and heartbreaking, but kind of annoying in La Strada. Her Cabiria is truly one of the most memorable, devastating characters in Italian film.

13.) North by Northwest (Hitchcock, 1959) - Endlessly watchable, Hitchcock’s frequent theme of mistaken identity was never played for as much pure entertainment as it was here. Cary Grant’s likeable screen persona goes a long way. When people opine that they don’t make ‘em like they used to, this is the kind of movie they’re talking about.

14.) Paths of Glory (Kubrick, 1957) - Impressive for its restraint, the film that really made a young Stanley Kubrick’s career has aged incredibly well. Sadly, it will remain timeless as long as powerful, insulated men send young, vulnerable soldiers to their deaths.

15.) The Big Heat (Lang, 1953) - Lang’s violent and sexy look at vengeance remains a potent noir.

16.) Johnny Guitar (Ray, 1954) - What kind of western has a supposedly tough outlaw named “The Dancing Kid?” Maybe one that’s not a western at all. Whatever Nicholas Ray’s genre-exploding film is, it’s bizarrely incredible. Joan Crawford essentially playing a stereotypically male character and Sterling Hayden as a former outlaw now reduced to a guitar instead of a gun. Throw in Mercedes McCambridge (also in a masculine role) and the ubiquitous Ernest Borgnine and you’ve got a truly odd Western mash-up. These characters’ relationships are remarkably complex and fly in the face of the genre’s expectations. Ray’s use of color is but one of the many unexpected aspects found in the film. Make sure to pay attention to the colors of Crawford’s dresses as the film progresses.

17.) Mon Oncle (Tati, 1958) - I like to laugh, it’s just that my sense of humor doesn’t necessarily mesh with the general public. Thankfully, Jacques Tati shared the Chaplin slapstick combined with topical questioning of technology that I find appealing. Does that make it a mixture of lowbrow and highbrow or is it even worth trying to characterize? Either way, it’s satire with physical comedy and without the pretentiousness.

18.) Kiss Me Deadly (Aldrich, 1955) - One of the finest noirs of the decade, Aldrich and Ralph Meeker give us the uncaring, callous Mike Hammer and a mysterious glowing briefcase. A great effort from one of the more underrated American filmmakers.

19.) The Searchers (Ford, 1956) - I’m always going to have a few problems with it, but Ford’s film has justly risen to the top echelon of the American western. Endlessly debateable, the racial undercurrent is stronger here than in any other American film I can think of, impressively doing so without hitting the audience over the head with clear-cut answers. We’ll never know exactly what John Wayne was thinking while playing Ethan Edwards, but we’ll keep on watching as we try to get closer to both the character and the myth of his portrayer.

20.) Winchester ‘73 (Mann, 1950) - First Mann-Stewart teaming and arguably the best. A great collection of actors, mingling together while the determined Stewart stays on the trail of a mysterious man from his past. This film, along with the other four director-star teamings, makes so many other Westerns before and after it look corny and fake.

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21.) Bob le Flambeur (Melville, 1955) - Sort of in the same vein as Rififi and Touchez pas au grisbi, two other French noir classics about older men on the fringes of the law struggling to go straight, but Melville’s film is my favorite by a considerable margin. It’s the soul we see in Bob that makes him the most compelling and that wide stroke of final irony, as perfect an ending as one could possibly imagine.

22.) Ordet (Dreyer, 1955) - Challenging and difficult, Dreyer’s penultimate film raises a lot of questions and answers almost none. Even though religion and faith permeate the entire story, the viewer never gets the feeling we’re being told who or what is right or correct. The final act, whether as a result of faith, miracle or supernatural, opens the door for a remarkable amount of discussion and interpretation.

23.) On Dangerous Ground (Ray, 1952) - Fine early effort from Ray, with the towers of noir Robert Ryan and Ida Lupino each performing near their peak. Bernard Herrmann’s jarring score is a highlight.

24.) 12 Angry Men (Lumet, 1957) - The greatest American legal film, a riveting exploration into the prejudices and weaknesses of a jury. An engrossing, perfectly paced debut from Lumet. Along with The Grapes of Wrath, this is Fonda’s defining screen role.

25.) Touch of Evil (Welles, 1958) - A last chance for Welles that proved disastrous commercially, but now fits comfortably as one of his best two or three. I don’t know what it is about Mexican settings that lend themselves so well to film noir, the style/genre frequently cited as ending with this film, but it’s captured here perfectly.

26.) Sweet Smell of Success (Mackendrick, 1957) - New York City never looked more beautiful in black-and-white. I’m not sure there’s been many lines in film better than “you’re a cookie full of arsenic.” I’m also not sure Burt Lancaster ever gave a better performance or that Tony Curtis was ever used as well in a dramatic role.

27.) The Wages of Fear (Clouzot, 1953) - Tension-filled excursion into the sweaty recesses of men’s souls and the inane lengths greed will take them. I probably shouldn’t enjoy Clouzot’s misanthropy so much, but I can’t help it.

28.) Tokyo Story (Ozu, 1953) - Beautifully sad and touching meditation on aging, generational change, and human nature. I seem to enjoy some Ozu films much more than others, but this and Late Spring are both nearly perfect examples of the director’s career.

29.) The Night of the Hunter (Laughton, 1955) - A fairy tale like none other, Laughton’s try at film directing remains the greatest one-off ever made. L-O-V-E…we know, but we still can’t turn our eyes when Mitchum is on the screen.

30.) Rashomon (Kurosawa, 1950) - Important and extraordinarily influential, Kurosawa’s take on truth and first-person reliability was his international breakthrough. It’s been unfairly diluted by countless imitations and maybe suffers a tad from repetition, but remains inarguably required viewing.

31.) I Vitelloni (Fellini, 1953) - Not a lot of movies from this decade focus on a group of young adult screw-ups, but that’s exactly what we get in Fellini’s film. The autobiographical portrayal of young male struggle, through adulthood and all its trappings, rings true. If anyone doubts Fellini’s ability to make strong, affecting films without falling back on hallucinatory dreams (and an odd fixation on the circus), this and Nights of Cabiria should be mandatory viewing.

32.) Limelight (Chaplin, 1952) - I doubt this film would work with any other actor besides Chaplin. The nostalgia of an aged showman may seem sappy to some, but I find it tender, warm, and wonderful. Plus Calvero’s flea circus routine never fails to make me laugh.

33.) Night and the City (Dassin, 1950) - Widmark had a knack for making low-life losers completely watchable, brilliantly illustrated by his two appearances on my list here. Incredibly, Dassin made the film while exiled in London as his career in Hollywood crumbled at the feet of HUAC. The director’s reputation has benefited immeasurably by the release of five of his films in the Criterion Collection and this may be his best of them all.

34.) Pickpocket (Bresson, 1959) - Multi-layered brilliance from Bresson, who gives us a short, but substantial, look into the soul of a petty thief and his tedious criminal artistry. Quite amazing to look at this with Pickup on South Street as a companion, seeing as it inspired Bresson to make this film, since the two couldn’t be more different in style and approach.

35.) Rio Bravo (Hawks, 1959) - The director claimed this as his reaction to High Noon, but you don’t need to have a strong opinion of that film to enjoy this one. I don’t think John Wayne was ever this likeable (or vulnerable, for that matter) in anything else and Dean Martin gives an actor’s performance instead of a singer’s. If you like male comraderie, this is the film for you. On a side note, fifties westerns liked to incorporate now-dated songs, but this is one of the few where the music (from Martin and Ricky Nelson) adds to the picture.

36.) Diabolique (Clouzot, 1955) - Great, essential French suspense from the reliable H.G. Clouzot. For those who are intimidated or put off by black-and-white and/or subtitles, this is the perfect, expectations-shattering antidote.

37.) Alice in Wonderland (Geronimi, 1951) - Vibrant colors and memorable characters make Walt Disney’s take on the Lewis Carroll story pop. This is animation with a remarkable detour from the safe princess and animal tales the studio had been producing.

38.) Stalag 17 (Wilder, 1953) - Not so much forgotten as sized up and dismissed, this Wilder film remains perhaps his most sheerly entertaining. It’s probably more popular among those who could care less who directed it than Wilder’s other films and basically ignored by the arthouse crowd. Still, the director found the perfect rebound from the commercial disappointment of Ace in the Hole and managed to still successfully combine war and comedy without venturing into jingoistic propaganda. Next year: a revival of the play on Broadway to be directed by Spike Lee.

39.) All About Eve (Mankiewicz, 1950) - This is an absolutely brilliant master work by Mankiewicz, who directed and also wrote the screenplay. Even though I find no real fault in Judy Holliday’s Born Yesterday performance, I still see the Academy’s snub of both Bette Davis and Gloria Swanson as at least equal to its worst missteps ever. The film works beautifully even if you have no interest in Broadway. Eve’s unscrupulous climb is merely a fact of life, with or without the show business setting.

40.) Sansho the Bailiff (Mizoguchi, 1954) - After a single viewing of this, Ugetsu and Street of Shame, Sansho is the only one that got under my skin. Mizoguchi’s classical style can be off-putting for someone preferring their Japanese cinema more along the lines of Imamura and Teshigahara, but this film is one that cannot be ignored. The story of a brother and sister tricked into slavery was apparently not the full intention of Mizoguchi, who instead wanted to focus on the titular slave owner, but the emotional wallop we get here plays much better with these two protagonists.

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41.) Pickup on South Street (Fuller, 1953) - “Are you waving the flag at me?” You know how people say this director or that director is cinema? Well Sam Fuller is cinema. The man stripped away everything not essential in film to repeatedly give audiences the bare vitality of what excites and exhilarates us. This may be the best example of that, just as it could be Richard Widmark’s best 80 minutes on the screen. In my alternate universe, Thelma Ritter has the Oscar and Donna Reed is content to play mother to the perfect suburban family.

42.) The Lusty Men (Ray, 1952) - Robert Mitchum, in a beautifully layered interior performance, is a rodeo star on the decline, injured and looking for a home to latch onto. Arthur Kennedy and Susan Hayward are the married couple hoping to save enough money for their own home when Kennedy meets Mitchum and persuades him to train him for the rodeo life. Another wonderfully unique look at life (and America) by Nicholas Ray.

43.) The Criminal Life of Archibaldo de la Cruz (Buñuel, 1955) - A man and his music box. More subtle than Bunuel’s overtly surrealist films, the tale of a wealthy man with the compulsion, but not the opportunity, to kill women is a sick delight. It’s a real treat for those with a dark sense of humor. In a macabre twist, this was the last film for the actress who played Lavinia, Miroslava Stern, who committed suicide in March 1955.

44.) Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? (Tashlin, 1957) - In a weak decade for comedy, Tashlin’s live-action cartoon is a decidedly bright spot. He was the only director who seemed to know how to use Jayne Mansfield and his advertising farce is a fun, romping satire.

45.) Fires on the Plain (Ichikawa, 1959) - Watching this brutal Japanese anti-war film, it’s easy to forget it was made in this decade at all. Unafraid to completely deglamorize the grueling nature of combat, including unsubtle hints at cannibalism, the film instead portrays both the mundane and the nasty aspects too often glossed over in other war movies.

46.) The Far Country (Mann, 1954) - Possibly the least heralded of the five Mann-Stewart westerns, but it blew me away on a recent viewing. It’s easy to lump the five together, forgetting how accomplished each is and how impressive Stewart’s performances are from film to film. I actually think this may be his best acting of the Mann films, completely shedding the folksy redemption that ekes through in the others. His character retains loyalty to Walter Brennan, but merely uses everyone else in the film. Maybe the darkest of the Mann-Stewart protagonists and thus the most interesting in many respects.

47.) All That Heaven Allows (Sirk, 1955) - Melodrama with a lot to say about closed-mindedness and prejudices. Sirk’s film is visually breathtaking and frustratingly relevant still today.

48.) The Naked Spur (Mann, 1953) - This has the best cast of the Mann-Stewart fabulous five, narrowly focusing on five characters, with Robert Ryan probably the best “villain.” Stewart once again is unhinged brilliance, but I’m a little disappointed in the finale. Burying Vandergroat is like burying $5,000. Sure I understand the statement being made, and that Stewart must wash his hands of this quest for vengeance in the name of a fresh beginning, but I don’t entirely buy it.

49.) The Man from Laramie (Mann, 1955) - The answer to the question, “what’s the best Mann-Stewart western?” is the one you’re watching at any given time. I ranked this at 49, but it could have just as easily been twenty spots higher. This was the last of the five and arguably the most vicious. Try not to wince when Jimmy Stewart has his hand shot at close range.

50.) The Cranes Are Flying (Kalatozov, 1957) - Fantastic Soviet Union film about a young woman whose boyfriend is sent to war and her struggle with the after effects involved. Some of the most outstanding black-and-white cinematography I’ve seen. The emotional pull repeatedly exercised is remarkable.

Last five I reluctantly had to leave off - Roman Holiday (Wyler, 1953), Touchez pas au grisbi (Becker, 1954), The Asphalt Jungle (Huston, 1950), Ashes and Diamonds (Wajda, 1958), Anatomy of a Murder (Preminger, 1959)

Top 50 of 1960s

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As the weather cools and the leaves fall, the Lists Project’s oversized, bespectacled head emerges once again. After working my way through the 1940s and 1950s, the decade of radical changes is now up. The 1960s marked a stinging decline in the quality of Hollywood films, but the international output blossomed beyond expectation, enjoying perhaps its strongest decade in cinema history. Unlike the previous two lists I contributed, I’m not terribly satisfied with the number of films I’ve seen in this period. There are many that remain unreleased and even some things available that I didn’t have time to view. I still had a really tough time whittling a full decade down to only fifty films. (I don’t know what happened in 1965, but nothing released that year made my top 50.) Any previous writing I’ve done about these films has been linked to, and I’ve tried to be as brief as possible in providing comments and justifications for each selection (though the intended couple of sentences often ballooned to a full paragraph or more).

1.) The Apartment (Wilder, 1960) - A very personal choice, not because of a kinship to the subject matter, but due to it being my favorite film by my favorite director. Billy Wilder’s beautiful and bittersweet triumph was always going to be number one and I’d imagine it always will be. I’m going to refrain from any more praise because hopefully I’ll be able to put together a more in-depth piece someday, but I adore The Apartment almost as much as C.C. Baxter adores Miss Kubelik. (Here’s that more detailed review I hinted at.)

2.) The Graduate (Nichols, 1967) - An amazing time capsule that somehow has aged very little. Simon and Garfunkel’s music feels a tad ’60s, but I think it still evokes the timeless confusion of love. The film is the youngest forty-year-old you’re likely to find. And it’s actually very funny, too. Benjamin Braddock’s familiar awkwardness is flawlessly captured by Dustin Hoffman and the idea of “arrested development” of the young American male was given its perfect representation in Mike Nichols’ film. They’ve been trying to loosely re-make The Graduate ever since the original, but nothing has really come close.

3.) Le Samouraï (Melville, 1967) - Melville’s most perfect character in all his films is Jef Costello. Played by Alain Delon, Costello is an emotionless assassin who lives a spartan existence. Trenchcoat and fedora perfectly in place, he follows a samurai’s code and maintains a lonely solitude comforted only by a pet bird. Like the bird, Jef is in a cage, but his is of his own creation and he must follow the rules that go along with his chosen profession if he wants to stay alive after an uncharacteristic misstep. This is the quintessential Melville film, arguably his best and definitely the one that most successfully exhibits the sparse, no-nonsense approach taken by the classic Melville protagonist. Its inspirations are numerous, notably This Gun for Hire and Murder by Contract, as are the films it inspired, namely The Killer and Ghost Dog.

4.) Persona (Bergman, 1966) - I’ve seen eight Bergman films from this decade and this one packs the biggest punch by far. It’s really the only unequivocal masterpiece of his I’ve found so far, but that’s good enough really. Telling a ridiculously involving story of two women, one an actress gone mute and the other a nurse, the Swedish master explores themes almost never approached by other filmmakers. The two women share a home and, eventually, much more. The implication that these two women somehow merge is both extraordinary and unnerving.

5.) Lawrence of Arabia (Lean, 1962) - Few movies make instant legends of previously little known actors, especially on the scale of Lawrence of Arabia and Peter O’Toole. Premiere magazine named his performance the greatest in movie history not too long ago and, notwithstanding personal preferences, it’s almost difficult to argue otherwise. I don’t usually go for “epics,” but I really can’t comprehend how someone can sit down to watch Lean’s film (assuming the screen they’re viewing is of reasonable size) and not be awestruck. The reason I don’t usually like epics is because they often seem to eschew normal film conventions for bombastic spectacle. That isn’t Lawrence of Arabia at all. It could have been split into two parts, released a couple of years apart, and both would be equally as good as the whole. And has the film ever been more timely than it is now?

6.) The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly (Leone, 1966) - I always hear people rave about how great Sergio Leone is and the quality of this film, yet I don’t consider myself one of those zealots. Still, put this DVD in and I can’t take my eyes off the screen. Three hours (in the newest cut) of incredible entertainment and near-perfect execution. When Clint Eastwood, Eli Wallach, and Lee Van Cleef spend what seems like an eternity staring each other down as the camera creeps further in, I can’t help but wonder if any other filmmaker could have gotten away with such a dynamic bit of bravado. Somehow, it works, as does most everything in the picture.

7.) The Manchurian Candidate (Frankenheimer, 1962) - Of all the re-watches, I think this got the biggest boost. It’s really an incredibly gripping political thriller, as well as technically brilliant. Frankenheimer’s film also holds up remarkably well. It’s a good decade ahead of its time, considering the paranoia conspiracy thriller subgenre that bloomed in the 70’s. Probably the most suspenseful film made in Hollywood this decade, and one of the scariest.

8.) The Face of Another (Teshigahara, 1966) - This is the film that started me on the journey of writing about what I was watching and it was also my introduction to the Masters of Cinema line. I still find it fascinating and haunting, painful even. Masks and identity, what makes us who we are, and how can we change ourselves are all topics approached, but never explained by Teshighara and writer Kôbô Abe. Certainly a face is only so important and the physical nature of appearance, again, defines our actions only to a limited extent. I didn’t get a chance to watch this again in compiling my list, and I struggled with exactly where to place the film, but it’s as philosophically powerful as anything I’ve seen from the ’60s.

9.) Army of Shadows (Melville, 1969) - I saw this last year for the first time at New York’s Film Forum and was entertained, but, as with nearly all of Melville’s films, felt somewhat deprived. More characterization, more action, more explanation. It’s not there, and it needn’t be either. Jean-Pierre Melville had an incredible foresight, intentional or not, to make films that demand multiple viewings in order to better understand his characters and their motivations. His heir apparent Michael Mann is currently doing the exact same thing in Hollywood. Army of Shadows develops additional power and resonates on each additional viewing in a way few films do.

10.) Psycho (Hitchcock, 1960) - The best pulling the rug out from underneath the audience in movie history, courtesy of Janet Leigh’s untimely and still-chilling demise. I’m not sure how to best think of Hitchcock’s film, as it’s basically two completely separate halves of a whole, but maybe there’s no need to, as the director fills the brisk running time with wrong turns, red herrings, and a $40,000 MacGuffin. Copied and ripped-off past the point of excess, Bernard Herrmann’s scoring of that scene has rightfully become perhaps the most famous combination of music and editing in film. The psychological wrap-up feels out of place, but it’s somewhat redeemed by setting up Anthony Perkins’ final scene.

11.) 2001: A Space Odyssey (Kubrick, 1968) - As visually stunning as any film I can recall, and it’s easy enough to understand the legions of admirers Kubrick earned with his sci-fi masterpiece. I think maybe some of its flaws are forgiven due to how impressive the images are, but I can’t argue too much. Who would have thought a glowing red and yellow dot could look so sinister.

12.) 8 ½ (Fellini, 1963) - Phantasmagoric is the first word that comes to mind when thinking of Fellini’s incredible film about a director (played by Marcello Mastroianni, but really Fellini himself) who loses his inspiration and can’t come up with an idea for his next film, despite the pressures of sets already built and casting already taking place. The black and white cinematography by Gianni Di Venanzo is probably the best I know of - truly mind-blowing. The other thing that really gets under your skin is how true to life and unapologetic Fellini is. He had a long affair with Sandra Milo, who’s in the film as the mistress of Mastroianni’s director character. Nudity, language, and violence are easy devices to stir up discomfort, but the seemingly cruel truths in 8½ open up wounds with such unapologetic skill that it’s startling.

13.) Antoine and Colette (Truffaut, 1962) - I may have oversold Truffaut’s omnibus episode in the Antoine Doinel saga as possibly the best of the series, but it’s still nearly perfect. Who knows why the director took his character in another direction when he continued making films about him, but I’m glad to have this little slice. It’s a much more faithful follow-up to The 400 Blows than the films that would follow featuring the character. The tone is very similar to Truffaut’s debut and Antoine isn’t hardly the bumbling pseudo-intellectual he’d become. As an aside, I much prefer the more romanticized view of France that Truffaut gave the world than the cold fish politics of Godard.

14.) One, Two, Three (Wilder, 1961) - I can’t think of another film from the 1960s even close to being as funny as the unlikely match of James Cagney and Billy Wilder. This was Wilder’s third masterpiece in as many years (following Some Like It Hot and The Apartment), though this one is the least heralded. It’s set in Berlin, with Cagney a Coca-Cola executive stationed there and in charge of looking after his boss’s daughter. Everything here is sped up and zooms by at a pace more fitting of the screwball comedies of the 30’s and 40’s. You didn’t like that joke? Well here’s another one.

15.) My Life to Live (Vivre sa vie) (Godard, 1962) - Far and away my favorite of Godard’s films. Here, the French director dropped his usual frigid tendencies and made a devastating film about a young woman whose struggles lead to prostitution. There are a few artifacts left over from Breathless concerning gangsters, that probably don’t fit here, but it’s a masterpiece otherwise. As an emotional viewer, I often have trouble relating to Godard, but this film hints at what he could have done had he avoided narrative-unfriendly political babble.

16.) Point Blank (Boorman, 1967) - “You’re a very bad man Walker!” I can’t help but hear Carroll O’Connor spit those words. This should be Lee Marvin’s signature role, a mysterious man on a mission in a film filled with existential angst and fascinating questions that remain unanswered. I love the fact that Boorman’s movie can be viewed with equal enthusiasm both if you take it at face value by following the determined Walker’s quest for his money and if you dig deeper to see Marvin’s character as a dead man dreaming of an out-of-body revenge experience.

17.) High and Low (Kurosawa, 1963) - Somewhere in my brain I can remember loving Kurosawa’s knee-deep plunge into kidnapping, class, and frustration in post-war Japan, but more detailed reasons fail me. Once Criterion takes their overpriced aberration off the market in favor of an improved release I’ll be able to revisit it and, most likely, be reminded of why I held the film in such high regard.

18.) The Hustler (Rossen, 1961) - A film that transcends its setting. Greek tragedy and sports collide for something that adds to more than the sum of its parts. Paul Newman had a career legendary enough to make picking his best (or someone’s personal favorite) role a difficult task, but it’s really tough to argue with Fast Eddie Felson. The great way Newman could combine charm with being a heel (see also: Hud) is on full display here. The actor was surprisingly unafraid to play nontraditional hero types before it became popular. I’m inclined to think this is his best film period, helped considerably by the accomplishments of Robert Rossen and cinematographer Eugene Shuftan.

19.) The Pornographers (Imamura, 1966) - Shohei Imamura has been seriously disrespected in the English-speaking DVD world thus far. Even his few films released digitally have been given little supplemental material, including Criterion’s extras-free release of this film. Though some contextualizing would do a world of good, I’m content just to have the film officially available on DVD. It’s a great film, really. Not one usually mentioned or recommended (possibly because of the dearth of extras), but a key entry in the Japanese new wave nonetheless. Plotwise, it’s about a man who makes his living producing adult material as a service for pre-internet Japanese pervert clients. Certainly the film goes beyond that though, and the pornography angle is barely explored and never exploited. Imamura’s voyeuristic camera is perfectly situated to implicate the audience and gives us just enough information to keep things interesting.

20.) Harakiri (Kobayashi, 1962) - On the strength of the relatively few Kobayashi films available on DVD, I think this lesser-known Japanese director is very much underappreciated. This film stars the ever-dependable Tatsuya Nakadai as a samurai who wants to commit the title ritual of painful self-induced death by sword. The multi-layered structure of the film reveals his reasoning and what has lead him to pursue such a seemingly undesirable fate. Really a remarkable and engrossing film, as good as most any samurai film Kurosawa ever made.

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21.) Belle de Jour (Buñuel, 1967) - Still shocking look at an upper middle-class woman’s decision to stray from her marriage into a voluntary life of prostitution. The sexual psychology of the married woman is on display for everyone to squirm in their seats and remind themselves it’s only a movie. Catherine Deneuve is at her icy best, managing to look beautiful beyond words while displaying looks of disappointment, confusion, and satisfaction throughout the film. In some ways, I think this is Buñuel’s most perfect film because he refrains from his sometimes preachy episodes and focuses completely on Deneuve’s Séverine, a totally enigmatic and fascinating character whose actions defy expectation.

22.) La Dolce Vita (Fellini, 1960) - The great separation point in Fellini’s career, the one that perfectly bridges what would come before and after. It’s a little messy and probably too long, but that’s fitting, I think. From the opening statue of Jesus dangling from a helicopter and through Anita Ekberg’s famous Trevi Fountain bath, this is a true icon of film and a real signal of international cinema’s prominence in the decade. Fellini also became the first person in Oscar history to receive a Best Director nomination for a film not in the English language, a feat he repeated two years later with 8½.

23.) A Man Vanishes (Imamura, 1967) - Shohei Imamura’s fascinating look at the documentary genre, initially told in a straightforward narrative about a Japanese businessman who suddenly disappeared and the phenomenon surrounding similar vanishings. When the director reveals his own man behind the curtain to the audience and, seemingly, the subjects, it’s a moment to rival most anything in cinema history. Once the line between fiction and nonfiction is blurred, it’s nearly impossible to completely sharpen it again.

24.) The Naked Kiss (Fuller, 1964) - Pulpy bordering on ridiculous, but nevertheless brilliant in its own way. The opening scene alone, with a prostitute’s wig being removed and exposing her bald head as she slaps and scratches her pimp, all while the camera is putting the audience in a first-person catbird seat, is both intensely accomplished and daringly insane. Sam Fuller’s films are cinematic adrenaline injected right into the viewer’s vein. This is one of his best and most audacious, about the hooker who moves to suburbia to start a new life, but can’t escape her past.

25.) Au hasard Balthazar (Bresson, 1966) - Robert Bresson’s moving and characteristically downbeat look at the parallel suffering and sacrifice of a young woman and a donkey. The subtext and possible interpretations, for me, are more interesting than the film itself. A discussion as to what Bresson intended, in regards to Christian symbolism and such, is almost without limit and, in reality, without answer. I find little comfort in Balthazar’s plight, regardless of what he represents.

26.) Seconds (Frankenheimer, 1966) - One of the great, underseen American films of the decade. Like The Face of Another, its Japanese cousin released in the same year, Seconds is unafraid to explore questions of identity and the impact of the physical appearance on our psychological makeup. It’s a fearless, highly provocative film and a career highlight for Rock Hudson.

27.) Woman in the Dunes (Teshigahara, 1964) - By far Teshighara’s most famous film, even yielding an Oscar nomination for the director (the first for a Japanese film). Incidentally, have you ever looked at what the Academy nominated in the Director and Screenplay categories in the 1960s? I want that membership back. Back on point, this is a fairly uncompromising film about a teacher who becomes trapped in a dune with a female accomplice who’s just happy to have some company. Nearly limited possibilities for interpretation, with the line “[a]re you shoveling to survive, or surviving to shovel?” cutting just about as deep as one can imagine.

28.) Charade (Donen, 1963) - I think the “best Hitchcock film not directed by Hitchcock” label this movie often gets is probably apt. It’s one of my favorite films where you can start watching it at any point and immediately become engrossed enough to want to continue until the end. Also, a great reminder of older Hollywood films - big stars, light entertainment, mystery, romance. Just an incredibly charming movie, and Cary Grant’s last great role. Plus I’m always a sucker for European locations.

29.) L’avventura (Antonioni, 1960) - Either fittingly or ironically, depending on one’s viewpoint, I feel a little alienated by Antonioni’s films. This, his breakthrough and the first of a trilogy exploring themes of isolation and alienation, feels dauntingly highbrow and requires an enormous amount of work on the viewer’s part. No wonder the film was booed when it premiered at the Cannes Film Festival. Still, there’s something there, a method to the madness or a bottom to the hollow well. I’ve only sniffed it, but I trust I have more to explore.

30.) Yojimbo (Kurosawa, 1961) - Maybe Toshiro Mifune’s definitive screen performance. It’s a mannered and superficial contribution to a fairly simple film, but wow if it doesn’t make all the difference. Combined with Masaru Satô’s perfect score (one of the most stirring and perfect I can think of), Mifune absolutely makes the film. Its story of a wayward ronin who helps a town fight warring gangs is fairly standard and not terribly exciting, but the two elements of music and lead performance are truly special. If I had to pick any one Kurosawa-Mifune collaboration to watch at any given moment, I think I’d pick Yojimbo. Regardless of the mood, it’s great fun and obviously has a lot in common with the Leone-Eastwood pictures.

31.) In the Heat of the Night (Jewison, 1967) - I guess this film isn’t terribly respected, along with its frequently dismissed director. Why though? Its treatment of race remains revolutionary, as well as engrossing. It’s not Steiger’s best performance by a long shot, but he’s still highly impressive. Sidney Poitier, in a year for the ages, solidified his legacy with the slap heard ’round the world, one that still resonates. Oh and it’s also a pretty darn good mystery procedural. I hope I never become so cynical as to not be able to enjoy this film.

32.) Billy Liar (Schlesinger, 1963) - I discovered this film not too long ago and was quite moved by everything in it, especially Tom Courtenay’s performance as Billy. As someone who (still) hasn’t developed much of a relationship with British film, this one hit hard and left a huge imprint in the process. It may sound borderline crazy, but I think this is the best non-Archers, non-Reed film I’ve ever encountered from the UK. I wrack my brain for another character similar to Billy, but I just can’t think of one.

33.) The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (Ford, 1962) - A great late-career peak by Ford, teaming James Stewart and John Wayne as men of honor who share a secret that allows one to take opportunistic advantage of the actions of the other. Meanwhile, Lee Marvin has fun as the title character. The whole “print the legend” analysis has been done, but it’s maybe as good as any single idea in Ford’s film career. An entire period of American life lionized and for what exactly? False lies and newspaper sales? Truthfully, I’m not sure I enjoy any of Ford’s films more and I find the “message” here to be his most persuasive.

34.) Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (Kubrick, 1964) - Like 2001, I only saw this for the first time last week. Not surprisingly, I loved Sterling Hayden as General Ripper. I hate to call Kubrick soulless, but he really sort of is and that’s always my biggest problem with his films. No evil is ever overcome and Kubrick’s world is never one you’d want to live in. Being a Peter Sellers fan, I was a little disappointed with all three of his roles here. He’s kind of underused somehow, only really coming to life as the British “exchange” Captain Mandrake. Still, the film has made its imprint on history and I only wish I hadn’t seen some of the better gags earlier. I enjoyed it (especially George C. Scott’s performance), but a slight disappointment nonetheless.

35.) Jules and Jim (Truffaut, 1962) - I have to admit that I mostly put this film here on the basis of the famous race. Sure it’s a great film otherwise, an atypical Truffaut picture and highly enjoyable without a doubt. It’s the more stylized parts that really put it over the top for me, though. Even if I don’t really fall for style over substance as a rule, when a director as accomplished as Truffaut decides to show what he’s made of, I take notice. A couple of years later, Godard ran his characters through an art museum. Coincidence? Maybe. Regardless, Jules and Jim feels a little dated now, sprinkled with views I don’t agree with and characters I find difficulty reconciling.

36.) The Fire Within (Le Feu follet) (Malle, 1963) - One of the things I love about Louis Malle’s films is that they often portray sick, damaged individuals with an enormously warm eye. Malle was not so much a devil’s advocate as a director interested in showing that there are two sides to every coin and situation. This is one of his very best, a dark downer of a movie about a man whose alcoholic days of youth have left him suicidal and deeply unhappy. Maurice Ronet’s eyes perfectly capture the lightly-buried sadness of the character.

37.) Mamma Roma (Pasolini, 1962) - Another early entry in my index here, and a powerful, heartbreaking film. Both director Pier Paolo Pasolini and his star Anna Magnani were displeased with the final result, but I think time has proven them wrong. It plays like Pasolini’s own spin on neorealism and Magnani is a force as the title character, a woman trying (and mostly failing) to move on from prostitution and be a mother to her teenage son. Magnani is on a completely different stage than the other actors, yet I think it works. Whether you find her performance cloying or sympathetic will probably determine how much you like the film.

38.) Pitfall (Teshigahara, 1962) - I wrote before that Teshigahara’s debut was “an unparalleled combination of the political, procedural, supernatural, and existential.” That’s still pretty much the best description I can come up with. Once you turn your mind off from worrying about the outward “murder mystery” story and give full attention to the images and sounds of the movie, it’s an intoxicating experience. If I had to pick only one box set Criterion has released (for whatever reason), their package of the three Teshigahara-Abe films on my list would win hands down.

39.) Bullitt (Yates, 1968) - Boo anyone who tries to say this movie is just a car chase. It’s Steve McQueen’s best role, best performance, and maybe even best film. His San Francisco detective Frank Bullitt is the perfect McQueen stoic hero. The film has a whole lot to say about corruption (police and political) and the futility of good cops fighting against a crooked system. The car chase is pretty great too. Regardless, I can’t understand the frequent complaints that this film isn’t really that good or that it’s too dated, etc. McQueen’s character faces a devastating ethical dilemma and must deal with the revelation that his entire career is at odds with corrupt and powerful men. The actor was so good at holding back when other performers liked to go too far, into a ridiculous land of over-emoting.

40.) The Silence (Bergman, 1962) - An earlier cousin to Persona, Bergman here explores some of the same themes he would in the later film while also looking at other favorite ideas like impending, anonymous war and various questions of life. This was the last of his trilogy and perhaps the most mysterious and least straightforward. Two sisters visit an unidentified country and inhabit a hotel room. One is ill, coughing up blood, and the other is a sensual and difficult mother of a young boy, who’s also along for the trip. Few answers are given, and I find myself enjoying films like this quite a bit, where the viewer is told very little and is met by strange occurrences left and right. Sometimes these kind of movies can be hollow, all style and no substance, but Bergman really was a genius in this territory and could seemingly crank out films bursting with human truth at will.

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41.) The Professionals (Brooks, 1966) - I’ll acknowledge a bias here. I saw this film for the first time in a gorgeous print during a Lee Marvin retrospective a few months ago. How we’re introduced to certain movies surely affects our opinions, but reflection has caused me to believe this is a great one all the same. It mines some of the same “death of the Old West” territory that The Wild Bunch would three years later, except without the excessive bloodshed and slow motion. You can’t really ask for a better duo than Lee Marvin and Burt Lancaster, or a more a beautiful vision than Claudia Cardinale. It’s funny, has great action, and a cast as good as anyone can reasonably expect. A truly essential Western in a decade where the quality of the genre took a hit.

42.) The Wild Bunch (Peckinpah, 1969) - I feel like I should apologize for placing this film so far down my list, but I’ll just say that I appreciate it and that I’m in awe of William Holden’s performance. Otherwise, I think it’s fallen into a little awkward transition period (one it blasted the way for, to be sure) for the genre and now looks rather dated. A great film certainly, but one that has had its relevance chipped away at over time (no tomato throwing please).

43.) Divorce Italian Style (Germi, 1964) - In the two films directed by Pietro Germi that I’ve seen (Seduced and Abandoned being the other), I’ve noticed how distinctly Italian his work seems. Maybe that’s my ignorance and a play on stereotypes (though I’d like to think not), but other celebrated Italian filmmakers made more universally-themed movies while Germi was aggressively needling the tradition and policies of his native country. This film has my favorite Marcello Mastroianni performance, an infectious bit of comic acting, and may be even funnier in retrospect than while you’re watching it. Mastroianni’s character is married to a hag of a woman and he instead wants to be with the much younger and prettier Stefania Sandrelli, even though they’re cousins. The solution, since Italians could not divorce, is “accidental” death for the wife, and brilliant skewering of Italian law by Germi.

44.) Le Trou (Becker, 1960) - Writing these descriptions can be a little frustrating, like realizing I have Jacques Becker’s final film placed so low and not seeing any way to move it up higher. Anyone who’s enjoyed this intensely suspenseful and engrossing look at the methodical planning and execution of a prison escape will understand my dilemma. From the supreme focus on process to the meticulous use of sound, this is a highly accomplished work that’s both great entertainment and near-perfect artistic achievement. I was maybe halfway through the movie before I realized that I was hoping a bunch of violent criminals broke out of prison.

45.) Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (Hill, 1969) - For sheer audience-pleasing fun, it’s difficult to rival Paul Newman and Robert Redford as the titular notorious outlaws (but, apparently, reasonably good guys). As a fan of both actors, I love this movie. It’s not a perfect (or accurate, for that matter) western, but there’s little reason to judge every film by the same standards. Sometimes great entertainment is good enough. I think The Sting is even better, but this film is certainly enjoyable in its own right and another reminder of what star power and a screenwriter who knows what he’s doing can accomplish.

46.) My Night at Maud’s (Rohmer 1969) - I understand some people don’t like overly talky films, where the characters do little more than converse with one another and the action and plot are minimal. That’s an undeserved prejudice though, and Rohmer’s third of his Moral Tales is a superb example of how dialogue-heavy films can be quite interesting and far from boring. Jean-Louis Trintignant (star of The Conformist) plays a man who stares down his morals (stupidly, one might say) and spends a chatty, but platonic night with the title character. Trintignant’s character comes across poorly in my overly judgmental eyes, but I enjoy the film just the same.

47.) A Hard Day’s Night (Lester, 1964) - Really, just supreme fun and probably the best rock and roll movie ever made. A big part of why I enjoy this film so much is probably because it looks at The Beatles right as they became a phenomenon. They seem like they’re having the time of their lives, and they probably were. So many other pop bands got their own features in the ’60s, but most are just pale imitations of this model. Subtle satire, a direct link to music videos, and such a clean old man.

48.) Faces (Cassavetes, 1968) - I can’t say I particularly like this film, but that speaks more to the characters than to the quality. I think the Cassavetes films from the 1970s are better, but they’re not hardly as raw or grotesque as Faces. The fact that it looks so disgustingly grimy probably doesn’t help me enjoy the film, but it certainly puts you in an appropriate mood. It’s an incredibly important film, but not something I want to dip my toes in with any frequency.

49.) Il Posto (Olmi, 1961) - This is a very, very sweet film about a young man beginning his corporate career in the city and the awkward romance he finds. Almost impossible to actively dislike, Olmi’s film was semi-autobiographical and rings especially true as a result. The Italian director does a nice job of avoiding too much sentimentality and setting a near-perfect tone throughout. I hesitate to use words like “sleeper,” but that’s probably what this movie is. People who watch it tend to rave and recommend this and Olmi’s other Criterion release I Fidanzati over and over.

50.) Advise & Consent (Preminger, 1962) - Otto Preminger might have exploded in a cloud of pleasure and contempt had he made it to see the American political process this decade. Pleasure because of the almost limitless possibilities he’d have artistically and contempt due to the sinking truth of the matter. Forty-five years ago, this was the director’s response, an Altman-like bag of multiple storylines and characters that all feels pessimistic and too true. It’s not a perfect film, but Preminger’s provocative effort is still as good as anything that’s been made about its subject.

No I’m Not Crazy (Five gold-plated films with heavy reputations that I’ve seen, but chose not to include): Breathless (Godard, 1960), L’eclisse (Antonioni, 1962), Contempt (Godard, 1963), Playtime (Tati, 1967), Once Upon a Time in the West (Leone, 1968)

Last five I reluctantly had to leave off: Midnight Cowboy (Schlesinger, 1969), Petulia (Lester, 1968), Band of Outsiders (Godard, 1964), Eyes Without a Face (Franju, 1960), Ivan’s Childhood (Tarkovsky, 1962)

Top 50 of 1970s

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In all its glory, here are my choices for the top 50 elite films of the 1970s. This is the fourth such list I’ve made now, and it just doesn’t get any easier. As with the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s, the list has been submitted for the Criterion forum’s Lists Project. I made an intentional effort to abide by my own subjective whims this time, placing little or no emphasis on canon. My tastes are my tastes, but the goal was to balance between favorites and acknowledged quality while trusting that what I like deserves to be here. The strength of American films, combined with the R1 unavailability of several well-regarded foreign films of the decade, has resulted in a list heavily favoring the English language. Not a problem in my book because I love what was going on in Hollywood during this time. In all, there are only 9 foreign language films among these 50, with another 8 in the list of 25 also-rans I posted previously. I do hope a few people find the list and my justifications/appreciations interesting to look through, read, or browse for recommendations. I know I enjoy the whole process. Any writing I’ve done on a particular film is linked to below.

1.) The Godfather Part II (Coppola, 1974) - I’ve resisted the idea for years that Coppola’s sequel is superior to the first film, but I don’t think I can really deny it any longer after spending a full night with the two parts. This is a richer, more focused effort that completely understands what it wants to project and does so brilliantly. The acting has an understated balance often missing from the earlier film and the tragedy cuts far deeper. Michael’s reveal to Fredo that he knows and Michael’s slap of Kay both send chills down my spine. I don’t particularly see this entry as being about family so much as it is about America. I’m prone to reading the American experience into numerous films, but this must be one of the most glaring. From young Vito’s entry at Ellis Island to Michael’s returning the favor of betrayal as he sits in ominous solitude, Coppola’s film completely embodies a certain side of the possibilities offered by the country.

2.) The Godfather (Coppola, 1972) - Long having been one of my very favorite movies, the adaptation of Mario Puzo’s best-selling (but inferior) novel probably has as lofty a reputation as any piece of 20th century art. Impossible to encapsulate in such a short space, The Godfather’s memorably quotable screenplay (perhaps second only to Casablanca) begins with the immortal words “I believe in America,” but it’s the nonverbal power of the baptism scene that makes good on the film’s opening line. It remains one of cinema’s dazzlingly brilliant sequences. There’s a point where there’s possibly still room to turn back and then there’s running full speed ahead. The ambiguity and moral conflict is so murky that half a dozen viewings and I still don’t know if I’m rooting for the Corleone family.

3.) The Long Goodbye (Altman, 1973) - Here’s what Robert Altman’s films can do to a person. You see something and enjoy it well enough, then watch it again a year later and recognize it was much stronger than you first realized. Another year passes, and you’re ready to consider it one of the finest films of the decade. Nearly all of Altman’s films improve on repeated viewings, but I’ve gotten it into my head that this is his best. It’s full of sly truths, an epic central performance from Elliott Gould, and has a pleasingly bizarre supporting cast lead by a toasted Sterling Hayden. It really is amazing to sit back and see what Altman does to the detective genre.

4.) Being There (Ashby, 1979) - A film that never peaks, always steadily rising until it literally walks on water. I find it incredibly sad that both Peter Sellers and Hal Ashby were unable to make anything of substance afterwards despite both still being relatively young. Sellers, of course, died in 1980 and Ashby followed just a few years later, but couldn’t continue making the kinds of films he so brilliantly crafted in the ’70s. Sellers seems like he’s actually gone crazy while the cameras happen to be rolling. His Chance is a reactionless blank canvas where everyone projects their own thoughts and inclinations. It’s rare for me to proclaim that I really love a film, in the sense that I feel both an emotional connection and would argue that it’s justified. I love Being There. I loved it the first time I saw it and I loved it the most recent time I saw it.

5.) Avanti! (Wilder, 1972) - A final masterpiece from one of cinema’s finest directors. Billy Wilder hit a creative roadblock after One, Two, Three that lasted the rest of the decade. His films were commercially successful, for the most part, but a little out of touch with a changing Hollywood. Too mean, too quaint, nothing that really stretched his talents. Then he had a very difficult time with the release of a heavily-edited version of The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes and stayed in Europe to once again re-team with Jack Lemmon. The result was a still-neglected gem that effectively modernized Lemmon’s growing crustiness with the hidden heart Wilder liked to slip into his ’60s films. I think I hold the movie up a bit higher than most anyone whose opinion I’ve read, but there does seem to be a quiet contingent privy to the film’s considerable charms.

6.) The Passenger (Antonioni, 1975) - None of Antonioni’s other films have struck me like this one. I don’t know if it’s because of Nicholson or exactly what the cause is, but this movie mesmerizes me. I see the alienation in his character more than the comparatively empty protagonists of other Antonioni films. The plot here helps a great deal, which is reminiscent of Hitchcock but told in an entirely different style. And just an extraordinary ending that might cause you to shake your head, rewind the disc, or both.

7.) Nashville (Altman, 1975) - It’s a bit on the surreal side for someone who grew up in middle Tennessee to watch Altman’s 24-character tapestry. Though my understanding is that the city wasn’t fond of how the film turned out, the critical consensus usually places it as the director’s finest. No serious arguments here, even if it’s not my absolute favorite. I don’t think Altman ever made a film so deeply and powerfully emotional. Gwen Welles breaks my heart, especially with the stripping scene coming just after Keith Carradine’s performance of “I’m Easy.” What had been this sprawling, unassuming epic suddenly converges into a dark place that becomes increasingly confusing and upsetting. Watching the final series of events, you’re filled with dread - knowing what’s about to happen, wanting it not to, and being unable to stop it.

8.) Chinatown (Polanski, 1974) - I don’t feel as much emotional connection to Chinatown as I do the films above it here, but it’s certainly on the same level artistically as anything past the Godfather films, in my estimation. What I like a great deal about the movie is how Nicholson makes Jake Gittes, a character that could have easily become bland (see The Two Jakes for evidence of that), an audience surrogate who’s neither too smart nor too stupid despite the notoriously curvy plot. He’s almost entirely grey and, thus, the perfect protagonist. The obvious thing to love about Chinatown is Robert Towne’s script, tweaked and improved by Roman Polanski. It’s truly a Hollywood miracle that works with a big concept (pre-war Los Angeles) while also achieving the more intimate character details that keep the viewer interested.

9.) Mean Streets (Scorsese, 1973) - There’s a rawness at work here that isn’t present in Taxi Driver or Raging Bull. This is less polished and feels more free. Despite my strong admiration for Scorsese, some of his signatures have gotten a little stale over time. Not so in Mean Streets, where the ferocious immediacy remains alive and well. The Catholic imagery is fresher here and, for all its rough edges, the film never recedes into the methodical violence of one upping the director’s legacy, which was obviously almost nonexistent at the time. I don’t think this was Scorsese’s peak for sure, but I do prefer it to Taxi Driver, and I think it remains his most personal film.

10.) Husbands (Cassavetes, 1970) - Am I allowed to declare this as Cassavetes’ best film? I hope so. It’s just a shame that it’s so difficult to track down (illegally downloading it onto your computer doesn’t count; if you’ve only seen a film in a poor quality version on a small screen in the wrong aspect ratio then you haven’t really seen it at all). Months after seeing Husbands, I still think about it constantly - wondering about the characters, about myself.

11.) Dog Day Afternoon (Lumet, 1975) - I tend to think this is Pacino’s best work on screen. Watching the actor he’s become today (and the past two to three decades), his performance here seems totally foreign, like it was an entirely different person. Yet, in Lumet’s sweaty slice of how not to rob a bank, Pacino brilliantly reveals a flustered humanity that’s thrilling to watch. You can just see in his eyes that things are gradually slipping out of his control. It’s impossible not to consider the life and career of John Cazale while watching, too. He turns “Wyoming” into something hilarious and heartbreaking.

12.) Le cercle rouge (Melville, 1970) - Because Jean-Pierre Melville was to make only one more film, Un Flic, and it was arguably inferior to his past efforts, this is a more appropriate culmination of the director’s career. A bare plot, bare acting, minimalist to a fault. There’s also a lengthy heist sequence conspicuously reminiscent of Rififi. I lean towards the opinion that the story here is a little weak, but it’s executed with such stoic professionalism that it hardly matters. The brilliance of Melville’s film is in the details, the pared-down, detached expressions of grey fate. It’s cops and robbers transformed into the tragedy of life.

13.) The Man Who Fell to Earth (Roeg, 1976) - To really appreciate Roeg’s film, I had to read Walter Tevis’ novel, included with the Criterion Collection’s essential release. In most every way, that’s not a good sign. Yet, I found myself so mystified, frustrated even, while initially watching the movie that it seemed like a good idea to explore the source material. After reading it and being entirely caught up in the story, I realized that Roeg had indeed captured the book while instilling the film with his own peculiar vision. David Bowie is really the only choice for the lead role and both Rip Torn and Candy Clark are vital elements of this difficult, if rewarding, puzzle. Ultimately, reading the book confirmed a deep connection I felt with the film and its protagonist. It also established a curiosity with Tevis, an alcoholic writer from Kentucky who also wrote the basis for The Hustler.

14.) Paper Moon (Bogdanovich, 1973) - Even more than in the near-perfection of The Last Picture Show, Bogdanovich and his vital collaborator/wife Polly Platt hit upon something timeless here. A period piece in black and white that could have been made this year or several decades ago. Tatum O’Neal’s Oscar win may be what Paper Moon is now known for, but it should be regarded more highly. Just the fact that Ryan O’Neal is tolerable is a significant accomplishment. Some movies I just absolutely cannot comprehend how someone who enjoys film would not embrace completely and this qualifies.

15.) The Conversation (Coppola, 1974) - Staggering paranoia from Coppola and Walter Murch, but unthinkable without Gene Hackman. This isn’t a film where I particularly value the intricate plot so much as I do the central performance. Harry Caul is one of the great characters to emerge from Hollywood’s renaissance and his saxophone-playing wiretapper contributes a great deal of pathos-laden tragedy to what makes this decade so noteworthy for American cinema. The Conversation is a film that never deteriorates, always improving on multiple viewings, and seems conspicuously detached from Coppola’s other work. Along with Nicholson, Hackman is one of the definitive actors of this decade.

16.) The Marriage of Maria Braun (Fassbinder, 1979) - “The Mata Hari of the economic miracle.” Fassbinder’s first entry in his BRD trilogy is perhaps his best film and contains a wild throwback of a performance from Hanna Schygulla. The whole movie is like a classic Hollywood tale modernized with wondrous colors and copious sexuality. It’s also a fairly obvious allegory on the divided Germany, including an ending awash in metaphor and mystery. Schygulla is exceptional and Maria Braun is one of film’s all-time best characters.

17.) Harold and Maude (Ashby, 1971) - Half an hour in, when Bud Cort slowly cuts his eyes from the horrified blind date his mother has set up for him to gently glance at the camera and give a slight grin, I fell in love with Harold and Maude. It’s not a perfect film. The flaws are obvious, but they hardly matter. With Cort, Ruth Gordon, and what I’m prepared to call the finest set of songs in the history of film, courtesy of Cat Stevens, it’s not difficult to forgive a little unevenness along the way. Some movies I’d argue their merits against detractors, but others, like this one, I’m content appreciating regardless of what higher-minded people think. Funny, warm, and entirely idiosyncratic - this is how you do life-affirming.

18.) Manhattan (Allen, 1979) - No opening titles, just a blinking sign with the film’s name displayed vertically. This is a love letter from a man to a city, photographed with immaculate beauty by Gordon Willis. Of all Allen’s films, I think this is the one most open to repeated viewings. The story is simple, but complex the way any human relationship is and it’s ultimately secondary to the blacks and whites and greys. Literally like watching a collection of moving photographs. The Allen-Hemingway relationship makes me cringe a little, but I like where it ends up.

19.) California Split (Altman, 1974) - The Altman waters run deep this decade. This is the fourth one of these lists I’ve done and it’s the first time I’ve let a single director occupy six slots. He’s special, though. No director better represented the new Hollywood that emerged from the late ’60s until the early ’80s. I find this to be a particularly “Altmanesque” film in that the protagonists are likable screw-ups thrust into a defining situation. Elliott Gould picked up where he left off with The Long Goodbye and continues his streak as the definitive Altman hero. It’s a shame they never worked together again aside from his cameos in Nashville and The Player. Certainly Gould’s career suffered as a result, and you could argue Altman’s did as well despite making several more essential films.

20.) That Obscure Object of Desire (Buñuel, 1977) - Fernando Rey, two actresses playing the same woman, and an enigmatic sack. This was Buñuel’s last film, but it remains one of my favorites from the director. The idea of the Rey character abstaining with these two beautiful women is quintessential Buñuel. And maybe it’s just me but I never believe anything Buñuel said about his films. He claimed the dual actresses were completely random, but I just can’t agree. Like Welles, he’s someone whose interviews I take with roughly a pound of salt. Regardless, this is a fine film whether one or two actresses portray the character.

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21.) A Woman Under the Influence (Cassavetes, 1974) - If they had shiny gold statues for strongest performance of the decade by gender, I’d vote for Gena Rowlands here. I find something worth admiring in all Cassavetes films, but it’s fairly obvious how good this one is. Peter Falk’s turn should be applauded, as well, and he’s stronger here than in Husbands. The “influence” of the title isn’t addiction, but mental illness and Cassavetes perfectly conveys the discomfort in dealing with disorders of the mind. Few, if any, filmmakers so astutely capture pain and transfer it to the viewer as Cassavetes.

22.) The French Connection (Friedkin, 1971) - It’s the car chase. It’s the “pick your feet in Poughkeepsie” line. It’s Hackman, really. His Popeye Doyle, a racist, almost intolerable despite being strangely charismatic NYC cop, is one of the decade’s truly great screen creations. I’ll admit to being a Hackman apologist (though who isn’t?), but this is tops right here. I defy anyone to watch Friedkin’s film and not emerge entertained. I’m also a crime genre enthusiast, but, again, putting on my best objectivity eyes I don’t understand any possible dissent. Additionally, Roy Scheider and Fernando Rey are essentially perfect and that ending is unbeatable. I hesitate to add that the sequel has thus far eluded me because sometimes I just need a certain amount of Popeye Doyle and I know where to look when the call comes.

23.) The Conformist (Bertolucci, 1970) - Gorgeous to look at, with a dazzling color palette and amazing cinematography from Vittorio Storaro, and also quite captivating. I’m not sure what’s not to like here, actually. Jean-Louis Trintignant’s performance and character are compelling, as are the deep political overtones. Stefania Sandrelli is, well, Stefania Sandrelli, one of the great beauties in film. Bertolucci and Storaro turn a film noir premise on its head by adding depth and awe-inspiring colors. It’s a nigh-on perfect film and repeat viewings are essential.

24.) Vengeance Is Mine (Imamura, 1979) - Anyone paying attention here has realized that Shohei Imamura is one my favorite directors. I’m in constant frustration that his films are largely unavailable, for the most part sitting unreleased by Criterion, and I enjoy his work more than the traditional Japanese masters like Kurosawa and Ozu. When Imamura made a potentially career-ending flop with the epic Profound Desire of the Gods, he whittled away for several years making documentaries before returning to fiction with this film. It’s a serial killer docudrama that shows no obligation towards portraying the heinous main character as anything except objectively cold. It’s not that Imamura shows any real sympathy here, just that he doesn’t favor any emotion at all. The director was always the consummate cultural anthropologist.

25.) McCabe & Mrs. Miller (Altman, 1971) - Typically unsentimental, Robert Altman blazed through the western with deliberate abandon. Warren Beatty’s McCabe enters as a legend and exits as a bit of a humbled dimwit. Who knew prostitution could be such a fertile topic for exploring the birth of the Pacific Northwest? This is a uniformly excellent film, amazingly released just after Brewster McCloud. Leonard Cohen’s songs are beautiful insertions and Vilmos Zsigmond’s cinematography is simultaneously striking and dirty. I’m slightly less enthusiastic about the picture than those who proclaim it to be Altman’s one or two best, but the director’s decade of the ’70s was so fertile and diverse that it’s like spinning a wheel to determine what ranks where.

26.) All the President’s Men (Pakula, 1976) - I’m going to tread into the kind of hyperbole I normally loathe, but so be it. No film has ever managed to make events where the viewer already knows almost exactly how the outcome will turn out so exciting and consistently engaging. Credit goes to Alan J. Pakula, one of the decade’s essential directors, and his stars Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman, who give performances that at once seem thankless but, with closer scrutiny, reveal themselves as perfectly balanced. This is a movie I could watch anytime, anywhere and be perfectly happy.

27.) The Last Picture Show (Bogdanovich, 1971) - Largely plotless, but endlessly watchable. The familiarity of the large ensemble helps, but the performances here hold everything in place. Bogdanovich, as he did with some frequency, was working in a different era, exploring a period that was gone even in the ’70s. Few movies can lay claim to presenting that small town albatross that hangs over young people with such clarity and truth. Plus, any movie that won Ben Johnson an Oscar is okay in my book.

28.) Killer of Sheep (Burnett, 1977) - What strikes you when watching Charles Burnett’s student film made at UCLA, a perpetual rarity only made widely available last year, is how different it is from other movies of the decade or before. It’s amateurish, to be sure, but seeing Burnett adopt neorealist methods for the story of working class blacks in Watts, told with an unmistakably humanistic approach, is a high point in truly independent filmmaking. It’s not even a matter of race so much as economic levels. These are people largely unknown to audiences, a little less so now than thirty years ago, despite their lives more closely resembling society at large than the constant parade of cops, lawyers, and other white collar fantasies usually visible on screen.

29.) Amarcord (Fellini, 1973) - Fly-on-the-wall storytelling from a director long since unconcerned with traditional filmic devices. Both nostalgic and foreboding, Fellini’s movie manages to retain a naughty sweetness in the face of public-approved fascism. The image of Gradisca in her red dress sashaying through the deep white remnants of unseasonal snow is gorgeous. There’s a little magic in here.

30.) Annie Hall (Allen, 1977) - It’s very difficult for a comedy to withstand the enormous reputation of Allen’s well-loved film, but this one mostly does. Woody’s Alvy Singer is, like most of his characters, a bit of a clueless bastard, but just his ability to even land Diane Keaton’s Annie plays like nerd manna from heaven. A certain kind of person loves Allen because he’s not movie star material, but he frolics around in that refined space like he belongs. I like Woody because he’s funny and his observations are often hilarious, few more so than the Marshall McLuhan bit famously portrayed here. I’ve been to theaters like that and it’s painfully true (and funny).

31.) The Getaway (Peckinpah, 1972) - A little dialogue goes a long way when it’s being spoken by Steve McQueen. Sam Peckinpah’s directing-for-hire gig has a lot of life in it, punched up by Walter Hill’s script and a noir-like plot. Good guys, bad guys, who cares. If McQueen is the star, he’s automatically the one we’re rooting for and his performance here ranks among the actor’s best. I like Junior Bonner, but I like this better.

32.) Star Wars (Lucas, 1977) - I don’t know if it’s gotten to the point that I have to defend Star Wars after George Lucas screwed up his own meal ticket, but I’m prepared all the same. If we never knew of Yoda or Ewoks or Jar-Jar Binks or prequels, Star Wars would still be a great film. It would still be a dynamite action movie cloaked in science fiction but really closer in spirit to the western genre. With Alec Guinness adding a healthy dose of credibility and a director who’d previously made a pair of very good movies, this is a movie that doesn’t need a postscript on its original title or an excuse for inclusion amongst the other films on this list.

33.) The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes (Wilder, 1970) - Even in its truncated form, Billy Wilder’s uncharacteristic detour remains a sad and entertaining look at the fictional detective. The episodic format works and the performances by Robert Stephens as Holmes and Colin Blakely as Watson are nearly without improvement. It’s easy to claim this seems like it was directed by someone other than Wilder, but, if you look closer, his fingerprints are all over it. The loveless male protagonist who values his career over his personal life. The woman he finds in the process and has difficulty connecting with. The little and subtle touches of humor, often wistful and at the expense of the main character. Though it’s far from my favorite of his films, in many ways, it’s Wilder’s most interesting insight into his own personality because it is so removed from much of his work.

34.) Network (Lumet, 1976) - A bedrock of madness sculpted by Paddy Chayefsky and Sidney Lumet, with five Oscar-nominated performances (three winners). None of these people are easily liked or related to, but the script, direction, and actors elevate what could have been a huge mess into a film that’s become iconic, if slightly dulled after 30+ years. The Howard Beale storyline has become quaint, with the smaller subplot where terrorists are given their own television show now seeming to be more compelling. Beale is still a far cry from the blowhards of today’s cable news because he was working on a far more dangerous, provocative plane than the current gasbags, even if the bombast is entirely recognizable.

35.) F for Fake (Welles, 1974) - Best appreciated by those who hold Welles in especially high regard? I can only say that as an unabashed Welles admirer, his blurring of fiction and documentary was a revelation when Criterion released their two-disc set a few years ago. Not only is the film supremely entertaining (a quality usually present in his films that Welles is never given enough credit for), but it’s also thought-provoking and a continuation of the director’s legend building.

36.) Lacombe, Lucien (Malle, 1974) - Pauline Kael’s comments about the “banality of evil” are forever etched in my brain and they’re immediately what I associate with Malle’s film. Movies, before and, especially, since, have been harping on the incredibly mundane nature of evil, but I think this is near the top in terms of portrayals of the absurdly random nature of being bad. I like that Malle never tries to explain or justify or condemn Lucien. The audience can form their own opinions. Malle is just the one chronicling it all. This is where he’s not given enough credit in my opinion, in his repeated refusal to judge those deemed poison by society. His films often allow darkness to flourish without apology.

37.) Cría cuervos (Saura, 1976) - Ana Torrent and her sad little eyes. This is a captivating story about three young girls, with Torrent at the forefront, whose parents have both died. Geraldine Chaplin plays both the girls’ mother and Torrent’s character as an adult. Descriptions are a tad irrelevant because I think Saura was aiming to capture a mood more than a story, something he does brilliantly. I don’t know if it was the balancing of tone or the repeated use of a pop song, but I was reminded of Wes Anderson’s films, only in Spanish and a bit more somber. I doubt anyone else would make that connection. Maybe some really bizarre Anderson-Almodóvar hybrid.

38.) Apocalypse Now (Coppola, 1979) - I haven’t seen this in a little while so the placing is a little suspect. Despite not finding a chance to re-watch the film, I knew it had to be here somewhere as it’s the darkest of all significant Vietnam films and plays more like the disintegration of the soul than the typical war movie cliches.

39.) 3 Women (Altman, 1977) - Eerie and evocative continuation of what Altman did with Images a few years earlier. The director claimed that he was inspired to make this from a dream he’d had and it plays out in that manner, very dreamlike. The title is a little misleading as the film centers more on a pair of women, with the third playing a smaller, but vital role. By the end, though, the viewer questions everything about what’s just been seen and it becomes difficult to entirely grasp it all. Confusion might be the popular way to characterize the reaction, but it’s really more of a hypnotic experience where you’re slowly drawn into something foreign and unexpected.

40.) The Sting (Hill, 1973) - Find a more purely entertaining and satisfying movie this decade, one you can completely lose yourself in without feeling guilty, and I’ll switch places with it in this slot. I couldn’t and I’ve loved The Sting as long as I’ve enjoyed watching movies. Movie star charisma goes a long way and Newman and Redford combined make your television glow just a bit brighter. The period costumes, the score, the smart double cross of a plot - this is just a fun movie that holds up really well.

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41.) Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia (Peckinpah, 1974) - Warren Oates plays Sam Peckinpah. The actor imitated his friend and frequent collaborator with this performance and it adds a poignant layer to a film that already has a good deal of emotion you wouldn’t normally expect to find in an otherwise surreal and violent movie about a guy driving around with a severed head. These are two of Oates’ finest hours. He’s bizarre, darkly comic, and tragic. In retrospect, I might have ranked this a few spots too low.

42.) Blazing Saddles (Brooks, 1974) - Not only is this still an extremely funny film, but it’s one that remains shockingly iconoclastic. The humor walks, trots, and gallops depending on what level best fits the situation, often trying all three in a trial and error type of action. Then after assaulting the viewer with repeated jokes that aim at desensitizing our prejudicial red alerts, Brooks takes a sharp turn into some kind of multi-layered looking glass. It would be remarkable enough that the humor holds up over thirty years later (most of the decade’s comedies don’t even come close), but Blazing Saddles is special because it’s deceptively ambitious, akin to what Chaplin or Keaton might have done had either been in the prime of his career during this time.

43.) Solaris (Tarkovsky, 1972) - The slow pace typical of Tarkovsky’s films works exceedingly better here than in the other efforts I’ve seen from the celebrated director. Based on Stanislaw Lem’s novel, the film has a pronounced narrative that takes its time without overwhelming the viewer. Filled with profound and thoughtful scenes and images, none more so than the sequence in the library, it’s a thoroughly powerful experience. I found it to be somewhat transcendent in the sense that I could appreciate the film despite having little interest in science fiction or Tarkovsky and having earlier enjoyed Steven Soderbergh’s version a great deal.

44.) The Candidate (Ritchie, 1972) - Politics, for better or worse (mostly worse), slithers through my veins. I don’t think there’s yet been a more dead-on or better film about campaigning and the election process than this. It’s also a great star vehicle for Robert Redford, the kind requiring a strong performance without much stretching. Most of all, though, it’s a deeply, depressingly cynical look at a process that should have nothing to do with who leads and makes policy. The last audible thing Redford’s Bill McKay says is one my favorite closing lines in all of film. “What do we do now?”

45.) Brewster McCloud (Altman, 1970) - In some ways, this is like Altman’s Citizen Kane. After the roaring and unexpected success of M*A*S*H, he was able to do whatever he wanted and wow is there a stranger non-genre studio film this decade. The idea of Bud Cort living in the Astrodome, building wings so he can fly while a series of strange murders occur is a little out there. Throw in, among other things, Rene Auberjonois repeatedly interrupting the film as a bird/man narrator/teacher and Michael Murphy as a Detective Frank Shaft who looks strangely like Steve McQueen’s Frank Bullitt and it becomes obvious that no one at the studio was minding the store whatsoever. Thank goodness for that! It’s not just that the film is weird that makes it good. There’s really an odd, but compelling story about Cort’s Brewster and, like he would as Ashby’s Harold, the actor makes the viewer sympathize with his social awkwardness.

46.) Sleeper (Allen, 1973) - Woody does sci-fi. In terms of pure laughs, this may be Allen’s funniest. It was his first teaming with Diane Keaton, who never looked more beautiful. I find the film to be somewhat atypical of the director while retaining much of the charm that makes his work so appealing. In short, it’s a little less whiny and more universal, more classical. That’s not a knock against his later films, which I mostly enjoy, but Sleeper is the Allen film to watch if you’re not interested in his neuroses.

47.) The Parallax View (Pakula, 1974) - Deeply paranoid and engrossing, this is more in line with John Frankenheimer’s The Manchurian Candidate than Pakula’s other conspiracy-laced efforts of the ’70s. Me against the world-type cinematography from Gordon Willis, possibly the key eye of Hollywood’s rebirth this decade, and an otherworldly creepy indoctrination montage that remains almost unbelievable in both execution and inclusion in its entirety. Warren Beatty is the weakest link, but even he turns in an appropriately clueless performance.

48.) Five Easy Pieces (Rafelson, 1970) - Deservedly considered the film where Jack Nicholson broke free from his Corman days and became a movie star in the process. Like a lot of the lower-budget ’70s pictures, this one has some warts, but Nicholson’s character is the kind rarely seen in American film period - not just before but also since. We spend an hour and a half with him, but we hardly get to know the man. This guy who’s been running his entire adult life from anything that reminds him of home is the same when we leave him as he was when we were introduced. Few “popular” films (and this one somehow landed four major Oscar nominations) feel so little like movies.

49.) The Landlord (Ashby, 1970) - Beau Bridges is a bored and rich 29-year-old who lives with his conservative parents and decides to buy a Brooklyn tenement building. His black tenants don’t initially warm to their new landlord, but Bridges’ Elgar Enders has his sheltered life altered forever. Maybe because it’s not available on DVD, Hal Ashby’s directorial debut has little reputation despite being a terrific movie that deftly shifts in tone, including a surprisingly uneasy climax. At its heart it’s a comedy, and always an Ashby one. There are some mild undertones of The Graduate, with a deeper humanity being substituted for the self-importance of Nichols’ film, but this is largely an original, still unique peak into class and race divides.

50.) Two-Lane Blacktop (Hellman, 1971) - By the time Warren Oates utters “[t]hose satisfactions are permanent,” it’s obvious there’s something special about Monte Hellman’s movie. Not only does the film meander beautifully, seemingly about nothing and everything all at once, it features a performance from Oates that makes you crumble. People who really like movies tend to really like him as an actor, with his GTO being a perfect example of why he’s held in such high regard. You’re not sure who this character is or where he keeps getting all those sweaters, but, the more you see of him, the more you start to like him, rooting for him to “get healthy.”

Top 50 of 1980s

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My lists of Top 50 films from each decade seem to be quite popular and I’m happy to continue with them. They are compiled for the purpose of submission at the Criterion forum (.org), in the Lists Project. I then put together an attempt to justify my selections via a few sentences, as well as adding links whenever I’ve written about a particular film. This decade, the 1980s, is a particularly difficult one for multiple reasons. Foremost, I don’t like it. The ’80s in general just don’t interest me. I don’t really like the movies, the music, the television, anything. There are, of course, exceptions and all 50 of these films listed below are ones I do enjoy on some level. The additional snag is that I’ve probably seen less movies of merit from the ’80s than any other decade since the ’30s, or maybe even the ’20s. I tried to fill in a lot of the more obvious gaps (I’d never seen Blade Runner before this project, for example), but some things still eluded me.

Another problem is the multiple versions for so many of the important films of the decade. There’s a director’s cut for this and an extended cut for that. Who can see all of these different iterations? Mostly, I found a version that seemed definitive and used it. Thus, The Big Red One is really the Reconstruction from 2004 and Fanny & Alexander is the longer television version. I don’t even know which Manhunter my vote is for, though. The simple idea of so many versions and so many extended cuts makes for additional anxiety. I cheated with Fanny & Alexander since it has a television and a theatrical cut, but I didn’t feel right about including mammoth productions like Berlin Alexanderplatz or Kieslowski’s The Decalogue. How do you begin to weigh a program that lasts hours upon hours against a simple 90 minute picture? My decision was to stick to theatrical features.

The list itself is one of my more eccentric offerings. There are things you won’t see and will wonder where they are, and there will probably be others that you’ll fail to understand how they either made the list at all or received such high placement. I can only say that this is what felt right at the time and I’m sure it’ll change or improve eventually. Enjoy, and thanks for reading.

1.) Blue Velvet (Lynch, 1986) - A film full of disorienting playfulness hidden behind suburban America. Lynch is so good at turning the sense of what makes us feel safe completely on its side and resulting in something terrible and horrific. I’m not a fanatic of Lynch’s films, but absolutely no one in American cinema has been able to so successfully peel back the scab of suburbia. I think this is still his best film and I’d be extremely disturbed to encounter either Dennis Hopper or Dean Stockwell in the darkness of night. Virtually every film (plus Twin Peaks) that Lynch has made since owes some debt to Blue Velvet.

2.) After Hours (Scorsese, 1985) - Better than Raging Bull?? I don’t know. I do know that I’d rather sit down with After Hours. I absolutely love movies that veer off into unpredictable and odd directions with the protagonist in tow. This is, in my opinion, the best of that sort of film. Griffin Dunne plays a guy who has the night of his life in New York City, all while simply trying to get back home. You get a sense of the frustration and the strange exhilaration he experiences in the process. Scorsese is one of my favorite directors, and I’ve seen virtually all of his films, but this may actually be my favorite. When I met him a couple of years ago, this was the DVD I asked to have signed.

3.) Wings of Desire (Wenders, 1987) - The idea of the “life-affirming” film too often gets relegated to a ghetto full of junk. This is different. This is nearly perfect in its insistence on gathering everything we know about the human experience and reminding us how privileged we are. We’re privy to the idea that our emotional treasure chest is greater than most anything the world has to offer. I’ve not seen all of Wenders’ work by any means, but it’s nonetheless surprising to find him having made this particular film. It is far from being overly sentimental or treacly. It is, however, entirely life-affirming.

4.) Raging Bull (Scorsese, 1980) - Brilliant indeed, but what turns me off slightly from Scorsese’s mammoth achievement is the sheer brutality of the whole thing. There is no redemption. There is no sense of any warmth being exuded at all. I don’t feel that even Scorsese likes Jake La Motta. De Niro probably does, but not screenwriter Paul Schrader or Scorsese. Otherwise, this is a high point in the film biography for its unflinching desire to reveal the unsympathetic reality of celebrity. There’s no one in the film I feel any emotion for, but like a car crash, I’m still completely enthralled.

5.) Videodrome (Cronenberg, 1983) - I was a latecomer to the Cronenberg parade. It took actually hearing him speak and then trying to understand his point of view before being sold, but I think I’m there now. I watched Videodrome one night and couldn’t believe my eyes. Where Cronenberg excels is by inventing these situations seemingly indebted to the science fiction genre while still maintaining a more intellectual stance that allows for separate consideration apart from stomach cavities. This is, for me, his peak thus far and just about as compelling as cinema gets. If you can get past the muck and ooze of the make-up, there’s an important cautionary tale about technology and obsession. And, of course, some people enjoy the muck and ooze.

6.) Do the Right Thing (Lee, 1989) - Incendiary statement against racism, certainly. Powerful announcement of a new voice in American cinema. Spike Lee is another of my favorite contemporary directors. This is simultaneously loud and aggressive, truly the work of a master filmmaker with strong opinions. He’s since managed to alienate a great deal of the moviegoing public, making his name almost a liability on a picture, but very few directors from Lee’s generation have branded themselves to such a degree on the public at large. Do the Right Thing is special because it was clearly made for a select few who might understand the intentions of a simmering racial divide in the midst of what is supposed to be one of the most diverse areas in the country. The film was slightly misunderstood, but has never abandoned its reputation of being, foremost, an important work of its time.

7.) The Verdict (Lumet, 1982) - Unfortunately, this didn’t even rank in the final tally, but it’s very nearly Paul Newman’s best performance, rivaled by The Hustler and, possibly, Hud. I particularly like Sidney Lumet’s films because they seem free from so much of the superfluous nonsense actors often try to inject. Lumet got great performances from his actors time and again. The work here from Newman and the script from a young buck named David Mamet are extraordinarily balanced and distressing. The film does well in highlighting one man’s attempt at redemption and the constant force he seems to be struggling against. It’s not a movie about alcoholism or, really, the judicial process, but the idea of a last chance where failure really means the end.

8.) Something Wild (Demme, 1986) - Proof that the studio system didn’t take a break the entire decade. Jonathan Demme’s outrageous and entertaining tribute to both film noir and screwball comedy is a marvel of the unexpected. You think one thing and the film does another. It’s two very separate halves that form an impressive whole. Melanie Griffith has never been better and Ray Liotta has rarely been as psychotic, though the competition is a bit fierce there. Yet, it’s Jeff Daniels who holds it all together as the suburban geek whose home life is shot to hell. Griffith’s Lulu is using Daniels no more than he’s benefiting from her.

9.) The Purple Rose of Cairo (Allen, 1985) - Jeff Daniels once again, this time in an effective dual role as both a 1930s film character who emerges from the screen and the worried actor who portrays him. Mia Farrow seems to basically be imitating Woody Allen with her mannerisms, but it’s somehow okay this time. If you love film in general, especially watching old movies in the cinema, this should resonate. There’s a perfection via Allen’s reluctance to go overboard that he rarely achieves in his films. The only complaint is Danny Aiello’s character, who may be necessary but still comes across as a stereotype.

10.) Veronika Voss (Fassbinder, 1982) - Such beautiful black and white cinematography that the rest almost seems beside the point. Inspired by the tragic life of Sybille Schmitz, Fassbinder finds an affecting plot to complement the aesthetics and ends up with a film that’s both engrossing and deeply unsettling. The character of Veronika Voss may have been modeled after German actress Schmitz, but here she also resembles Norma Desmond from Sunset Blvd. and I think that elevates the film into something beyond simply the fictional biography.
11.) Fanny & Alexander (Bergman, 1982) - A richness of character and setting permeates the film, especially in the extended television version. The title is almost misleading because it becomes less about the children than about the families and their various struggles, which Bergman combines for an utterly real and still fantastic open door. That’s what the film really feels like, an open door, because every scene manages to build on something else while often still establishing additional ideas and furthering the narrative in regards to this family. It’s that rare lengthy work that’s layered well enough so as to never seem trying or forced.

12.) Paris, Texas (Wenders, 1984) - Vintage, or perhaps definitive, Harry Dean Stanton seemingly possessed by the spirit of a wandering oddity injected with devastating depth by the actor. I’ve never seen Stanton better used and I’ve only rarely witnessed a film so obsessed with finding the fictional truth behind an emotional disintegration. Dean Stockwell makes an impression also, if nothing else then as a meaningful contrast to his Blue Velvet performance. Wenders seems to enjoy making films concerned with being on the road, but the real surprise is how this movie seems ingrained in the American myth on a level far above almost anything else of the decade.

13.) Crimes and Misdemeanors (Allen, 1989) - You can feel the echoes of previous films from Woody Allen here, and he definitely continued to use some of these same elements later on, but this is another of the near-perfect dissections of upper middle class neuroses from Allen. Martin Landau is on the nose and Alan Alda is nearly his equal. It’s in these less obvious films that Allen is able to best explore his influences, I think. The more overt homage films often tend to imitate to the point of distraction. This film, though, avoids employing a too dark tone and still manages to leave a deeply acrid taste.

14.) Stranger Than Paradise (Jarmusch, 1984) - It took a second viewing to even like, much less appreciate, Jarmusch’s impressive film. What I found after giving it another chance was something extremely controlled and still vibrant. He uses long takes followed by extended shots of black between scenes, creating a slide show effect with moving pictures. This style can be difficult to warm to initially and the layabout characters may not help. After giving in, though, I realized that the three mainstays in the film have their own individual charms. The two New Yorkers are textbook slackers doomed to beautiful loserdom while the Hungarian immigrant embodies how outsiders view the American experience.

15.) Blade Runner (Scott, 1982) - As neither a Ridley Scott admirer nor a science fiction person, I was very much engaged, deeply so, with Blade Runner. Harrison Ford has rarely been better despite not having to give himself over too emphatically to the character. I put the film this high because I felt it had something to say about where the line between being human and being “human” is drawn, and also because I enjoy the complicated machinations of these sorts of plots where answers are either a premium or an impossibility.

16.) The Empire Strikes Back (Kershner, 1980) - Superior to Star Wars and easily the best entry in the series, though I enjoy aspects of each of the films. This was before Yoda became a near-parody and prior to Darth Vader losing some of his menace. Also, importantly, pre-Ewok and prior to the introduction of Jar-Jar Binks. The building mythology of the Star Wars world is filled with excitement here and given a great story that doesn’t lag or feel repetitive or come across as ridiculously complicated. The performances are possibly the best in the series, also. And none of that Episode V stuff here. You don’t change a title twenty years after the fact and expect people to universally play along.

17.) Prince of the City (Lumet, 1981) - Gritty and determined to give off a feeling of authenticity. Treat Williams is impeccable as a cop who turns and cooperates with prosecutors after some pained soul searching. Lumet’s assured but tense direction here is among the best of his impressive career. It’s a long film that plays out like a fascinating novel, likely owing to its source material. Time hasn’t dulled the storytelling or the power of the narrative one bit.

18.) House of Games (Mamet, 1987) - Dialogue with a snap and a pacing sleek enough to gloss over the flaws. David Mamet transported the thrillers of the ’40s into the ’80s and inserted a twisty narrative to go with some brilliant lighting. The con is always on you.

19.) Eight Men Out (Sayles, 1988) - If you love baseball, there’s a good chance you’ll cherish John Sayles’ film about the 1919 “Black Sox” scandal. The detail feels right, the reverence is there, and the entire thing is fully believable. It’s also a fine film by cinematic standards, brilliantly building on ideas of conflict and character.

20.) Matador (Almodóvar, 1986) - A rough gem in the director’s career, and one I seem to admire more than most. Almodóvar here is less daring than he would be in a later film like Kika, but still fully committed to an irreverent point of view, even painting his deviant protagonists with a somewhat loving brush. The movie works well as both a metaphorical mess and a compelling thriller, with the playful tribute to King Vidor’s Duel in the Sun cinching it.

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21.) My Neighbor Totoro (Miyazaki, 1988) - Few filmmakers display such a keen appreciation of hope amid longing as Japanese animator Hayao Miyazaki. That he’s repeatedly done this with feature-length cartoons is especially impressive. There’s another of Miyazaki’s films that I prefer, but Totoro is such a delicate little picture of childhood fantasy that it absolutely ranks with the best of this decade. And the Totoro Bus is an absolutely ingenious creation.

22.) Black Rain (Imamura, 1989) - Though it’s a Japanese film made by a unique and steadfast Japanese director, Black Rain sometimes feels like its primary audience should be those outside of Japan. Imamura takes a cold, hard gaze at the effects of the atomic explosion on Hiroshima. The director never flinches in portraying both the horrors and the more mundane activities of daily life in the bomb’s aftermath. My guess, though, is that those outside of Japan will be the ones most affected, ashamed and confused.

23.) Au revoir les enfants (Malle, 1987) - Louis Malle’s partially autobiographical depiction of life at a French boys school during the German occupation rises far above what viewers have come to expect from such material. In a film like this where the circumstances sound almost familiar, it’s impressive that Malle doesn’t manipulate his audience or provide any answers at all. The weight of what plays out on screen speaks for itself, allowing the director to display his skills at deftly handling the harshest of scenarios with understated delicacy.

24.) Ran (Kurosawa, 1985) - The castle burning as Tatsuya Nakadai calmly emerges. Kurosawa’s King Lear-inspired explosion of color and familial tension attains its epic feeling honestly. Nakadai masterfully conveys madness and paranoia while everything around him crumbles. An aspect of Kurosawa’s longer films that always impresses me is how well he was able to maintain a sense of pacing even without resorting to big action sequences every few minutes. With Ran, the Japanese director keeps that palpable tension throughout just by implying constant chaos inside the family.

25.) She’s Gotta Have It (Lee, 1986) - Ernest Dickerson’s black and white cinematography (with one scene in glorious color) is simply stunning here. Beyond that, the film is a significant debut for Spike Lee, though the often discussed central idea that a woman is substituted for a man in terms of approach to sex doesn’t particularly interest me on its face. I also don’t entirely agree that’s what we really have here since the three male suitors are all separate facets of the male perspective. The main character, Nola Darling played by Tracy Camilla Johns, is interesting enough on her own as a female without trying to inject gender-specific traits. Johns has a real presence in this film so it’s unfortunate that she’s not had any movie roles for almost twenty years now.

26.) Rain Man (Levinson, 1988) - I don’t consider myself a huge Barry Levinson fan and his presence twice on this list, in films no one else voted for, is more coincidence than anything else. That being said, both movies on the list are almost perfect reflections of American populist moviemaking. Levinson pushes the right buttons at the right time without giving way to sentimentality or soggy zeitgeist concerns. I’d take Levinson this decade over someone like Oliver Stone, who won two Oscars for directing within a four-year span. Rain Man, for all its popularity, is still, I’d argue, a highly entertaining and almost profound exploration of dependency and young male maturation. It’s really Tom Cruise’s film, and he’s never been better.

27.) Brazil (Gilliam, 1985) - I’m a one-time visitor to Brazil and reality has almost improbably managed to intervene so that the film no longer holds sway as complete fantasy. I also love Orwell’s 1984, which probably made this movie possible. Nonetheless, Gilliam’s imagination seems in full swing here and Tom Stoppard’s English influence, with the toils of lowly bureaucrats, is well played.

28.) Down by Law (Jarmusch, 1986) - More black and white photography, one unofficial attribute of the ’80s that I love. Jarmusch’s follow-up to Stranger Than Paradise shares some of the earlier film’s passion for non-conformity while leaving behind a bit of the amateurish quality. It may not be possible to dislike Tom Waits and, every time I see this, Roberto Benigni is forgiven a little more for later winning that Oscar he didn’t deserve.

29.) Bad Timing (Roeg, 1980) - Art Garfunkel has no business starring in a movie like this, but the combination of Theresa Russell’s searing performance and Roeg’s rapidly flickering creative light allow Garfunkel’s stiffness to almost work in the film’s favor. The singer has zero charisma, yet he’s also meandering through the film with a sense of detachment absolutely perfect for the role. In many ways, Garfunkel adds to the puzzling nature of the movie by appearing so blank and devoid of presence. Where Roeg’s film reveals some sort of genius is in keeping the viewer so confused and mystified as to suddenly understand the obsessive nature of the characters.

30.) Manhunter (Mann, 1986) - Speaking of obsession, the depths shown by William Petersen’s Will Graham are more impressive than Petersen’s performance, which struggles with the especially intense spots, but the character’s determination is almost eerie in terms of motivation. Part of what makes the film so compelling is wondering why Graham would even bother with this case, putting both himself and his family in jeopardy for no good reason except for the fact that his burden of profiling makes him do it. Sometimes it seems like Graham gets the same release from finding killers as the killers do committing their crimes. Few films feel as creepy as this one. One of the things the equally impressive The Silence of the Lambs has in common with Michael Mann’s film is that both are capable of emitting completely unnerving terror without any real gore.

31.) Sherman’s March (McElwee, 1986) - A documentary about General William Tecumseh Sherman’s Civil War march through the South, burning much of what was in his path, was the intended subject but not really the final one, despite the title. What results is more of a painfully funny look at the documentarian’s pathetic love life. Watching the film left me thinking how sad McElwee’s unnatural pursuit of a companion was, but it certainly made an impression - for days after viewing actually. It’s my own nature that caused me to judge McElwee’s experiences that way, though the idea of presenting it all for anyone in the world to view in perpetuity seems either delusional or even more sad than the film itself.

32.) Stardust Memories (Allen, 1980) - Obviously a self-referential effort akin to Fellini’s from Woody Allen, but still filled with attributes distinctly owing to Allen’s other films. The cinematography (black and white, again) from Gordon Willis almost rivals his work on Manhattan, which this film immediately followed. I’ll admit that, as with several of Allen’s films, Stardust Memories doesn’t entirely work from first frame to last, but I was intrigued by the ideas Allen was already playing around with so early in his career.

33.) Sans soleil (Marker, 1983) - An experience more than a film, really. Chris Marker’s mixing of documentary, travelogue and first person correspondences, with some Vertigo ruminations thrown in for good measure, is a marvel of concise, calculated filmmaking that may seem deceptively easy. The reality is more that the film can be as complicated as the viewer will let it. Though a French version also exists, the English language narration is simultaneously profound and hypnotic, allowing for audio to truly combine with visual versus simply watching and reading subtitles.

34.) Raiders of the Lost Ark (Spielberg, 1983) - I like E.T. also for what it is, but I felt like it was one or the other here. Even though Spielberg is not a particular favorite of mine, I think he got it right with this film. It’s fun, it moves and you can watch it every few years without it feeling repetitive. There’s a definite childlike element to be enjoyed while viewing also. The sequels don’t really the hold same appeal for me.

35.) Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters (Schrader, 1985) - Yukio Mishima’s final day slowly unfolds as four of his stories are acted out in between the author’s preparation and siege of a military office building. Schrader’s storytelling is extremely cold and matter of fact, denying the audience any opportunity to empathize with or understand Mishima’s actions. The result simmers with unlikely suspense and mystery, but it’s also the way Schrader chooses to define Mishima equally by his work and his enigmatic death. It’s not a film with answers, which may turn some away, yet I think the viewer does exit with a real sense of how complicated Mishima must’ve been.

36.) The Killer (Woo, 1989) - There’s a lot of Jean-Pierre Melville in here, specifically Le samouraï. It’s done so compellingly and with enough conviction that you tend to think of the film as an homage more than a copycat. Also helping matters, Chow Yun-Fat is one of the few actors worthy of following in Alain Delon’s footsteps. And it’s perhaps important to keep in mind that The Killer is prime John Woo, when his affection for doves and men holding guns in both hands didn’t yet feel cliched.

37.) Blood Simple (Coen, 1984) - Most of the Coens’ best films can be traced directly back to their debut feature, which is imperfect but shows flashes of violent brilliance. If film noir had still been alive in the 1980s this is probably what it would’ve looked like.

38.) Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown (Almodóvar, 1988) - That whiff of commercial appeasement overcame Almodóvar here, but I think he still made a lively and often hilarious movie. It put him on the international map if nothing else. Armed with a gazpacho sequence that’s one of the funniest things from this decade, the film steamrolls through screwball chaos while never entirely losing the melodramatic center.

39.) Body Heat (Kasdan, 1981) - It’s a Double Indemnity rip-off, but done so well that Kasdan’s directorial debut merits some praise on its own. William Hurt is more impressive here than in some of his more actorly roles and Kathleen Turner certainly gives an eyebrow-raising performance. And Mickey Rourke! Those Brando comparisons started with Body Heat. Kasdan nails the spirit of classic film noir perhaps better than any other film has since those pictures ended.

40.) The Big Red One (Fuller, 1980) - A war movie in starts and stops, nightmares and dreams that begin uncontrollably. Sam Fuller was there, entrenched for the story and lucky to have made it out. From reading his autobiography, I assume much of this film is the Fullerized truth. He deserves heavy credit for showing the side of combat very rarely explored on film at that point, one which is just as concerned with mentally staying alive as physically doing so. Praise also to giving Lee Marvin a final great role.

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41.) Dead Ringers (Cronenberg, 1988) - You could say Jeremy Irons won a belated Oscar for this film more than his work on Reversal of Fortune. Certainly few features utilizing the idea of a single actor playing twins have ever emerged with a central performance of Irons’ caliber. His two gynecologists are halves of the same creepy whole and David Cronenberg is probably the only director who could’ve done full justice to such an odd, somewhat disturbing story.

42.) The Vanishing (Sluizer, 1988) - More terrifying than any number of slasher films because the events here seem entirely plausible and just as frightening. Few movies better plant that seed of forcing the viewer to think about what he or she would do in a particular situation. Yikes. Watch out for rest stops. After seeing this, you’ll want to keep your loved ones in sight at all times for days if not weeks.

43.) The Natural (Levinson, 1984) - Baseball as a higher calling, the mythology of a game, and the nagging idea of fate. In Bernard Malamud’s novel, these things mean different results than in Levinson’s film, but both work on their own. The movie deals more in fantasy and it’s perfectly okay with its particular form of mythmaking. You have to separate the main idea of failure contained in Malamud’s book from the more audience-friendly direction the film takes. Roy Hobbs may have finally learned his lesson.

44.) Chameleon Street (Harris, 1989) - When you wonder where interesting and creative American independent film has gone, think about Wendell B. Harris, Jr., who still hasn’t made a real follow-up to his debut feature after twenty years now. His Chameleon Street, about a Detroit man who impersonated bigger and brighter professionals, usually without the training, shares only a thumbnail plot sketch with Spielberg’s Catch Me If You Can. Harris’ film is both brilliant and frustrating. At the very least it needs to be seen by a much wider audience. There’s genius in there even if it is somewhat muddled.

45.) Ballad of Narayama (Imamura, 1983) - Shohei Imamura’s gift for denying sentimentality works well in the film’s favor. He alludes to the elderly drop-off point of Mt. Narayama throughout the film, but when we get there it’s emotional chaos. Imamura made films about rapists, pimps, prostitutes, serial killers, murderers and any number of seemingly horrible people, but this may be his most unsettling and, thus, most difficult to watch. At least four or five images from the movie are embedded inside my head not out of choice but from involuntary discomfort. It makes you want to be especially nice to the elderly.

46.) Time Bandits (Gilliam, 1981) - It’s a spoiler, but any movie that ends with a child’s parents literally getting blown up gets an automatic recommendation for sheer gutsiness. The ending isn’t the only thing worth enjoying either, as Gilliam’s entire film is a fantasy torn apart at the seams with demented aspects not typically found in children’s storybooks. David Warner’s Evil Genius is such a ridiculously entertaining and fun character.

47.) Field of Dreams (Robinson, 1988) - “It reminds us of all that once was good and it could be again.” Costner is a pretty decent everyman, but James Earl Jones sells that monologue and the film as a whole with his performance. I have three baseball films on this list and I’m adamant about the value of each. Eight Men Out is for the purists. The Natural is for those who cherish the mythology of the game. Field of Dreams is for the dreamers who believe in the game as something more, something almost profound in its simplicity and resistance to time and the outside world.

48.) This Is Spinal Tap (Reiner, 1984) - Though it was funnier before most of the best bits entered the pop culture lexicon, there’s still some gold left to mine on new viewings of this most classic of fake documentaries. It can also be a sad reminder that Rob Reiner once at least had pretty good taste in the scripts he directed. This was Reiner’s first feature directing job and he followed it up with John Cusack in The Sure Thing, then Stand By Me, The Princess Bride, When Harry Met Sally…, Misery and A Few Good Men. He then stumbled with North, but regained the spirit on The American President before falling into a canyon he still hasn’t left.

49.) Police (Pialat, 1985) - A film that sort of answers the question of how a French director who had no interest in a police procedural would make that kind of movie. You can look at Maurice Pialat’s career and see how little he must’ve cared for adhering to the somewhat strict guidelines of the policier. So instead we get a difficult character study of a difficult character that does an adequate job of passing itself off as crime-related drama.

50.) A Fish Called Wanda (Crichton, 1988) - The Ealing spirit was revived a bit in this very funny, sometimes cruel ode to bumbling criminals. Comedic performances completely absent any pathos almost never win Oscars, but Kevin Kline found whatever the necessary combination was and rode it like a rented mule. His character’s treatment of Michael Palin’s K-K-K-Ken is so repulsively wrong that you almost feel bad about laughing uncontrollably.

Top 50 of 1990s

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This list, representing a personal top 50 films from the decade of the 1990s (submitted to criterionforum.org) and carrying on from similar lists I’ve done starting with the 1940s, turned out to be far more challenging than originally expected. While making it, I learned how difficult it can be to separate contemporary perceptions from the evolution of opinion. That is, being around and privy to not only watching movies this decade but also seeing them in the light of then-current reactions has made it even more of a struggle to figure out what still fits my current frame of mind. There are films and filmmakers I held up quite high at the time that I’ve had to reevaluate in the course of the past few weeks. The result is still heavily weighted to American movies and critical favorites, but that’s probably just my taste, I’m afraid. While I haven’t deliberately altered the list for diversity purposes, there was an emphasis on expanding beyond the obvious. I’ll say, too, that the next one, for the current decade of the 2000s, should be a little more interesting because I’ll be working from more of a current sensibility whereas here I was backtracking to deal with what I liked as a younger person who still had pretty good taste but nonetheless enjoyed a comparatively narrowed perspective on things.

1.) Unforgiven (Eastwood,1992) - The singular meditation of violence as an inevitable path to be taken despite our own recognition of what bloodshed leads to. I loved the film when I was younger and I love and admire it now. There’s simply no better exploration of our apparent need to exact vengeance both as an excuse to gain justice and a quelling of the internal anger we struggle to control. It’s Eastwood’s masterpiece and my favorite western.

2.) Rushmore (Anderson, 1998) - Some people seem to identify with or like Max Fischer, and I don’t but that doesn’t stop me from absolutely cherishing Wes Anderson’s ode to coming of age. Plainly, I like Rushmore so much because it’s remarkably funny - the opening rundown of Max’s various clubs and activities set to “Making Time” may be my favorite sequence of the decade - while still maintaining the tragic sadness of knowing we’re set for equal parts tragedy and comedy. My love for Anderson’s films knows no bounds (with The Royal Tenenbaums firmly among the all-time favorites), and it’s never because I relate to the characters. I don’t. Instead, the magic rests with how Anderson conveys disappointment masked with ebullient ambition. He’s brilliant at presenting situations where the internal pain conflicts with bright, warm images and poignant pop songs. Rushmore, for me, exists equally for Cat Stevens to croon “The Wind” and for a darkly humorous interlude by The Who.

3.) Eyes Wide Shut (Kubrick, 1999) - Movies are designed to be seen in a darkened room without interruption. The home viewing experience has allowed for great deviations to this formula, but when a film like Eyes Wide Shut comes along we’re reminded of how important mood and atmosphere can be. Stanley Kubrick’s final effort is so heavily dependent on darkness, with much of the picture taking place at night, and unease that I’m skeptical whether those viewing a broadcast on cable or something similar can really take in the full impact. I’ve never forgotten my first viewing - small screen on its initial run complete with elderly walkouts - and while I’ve seen it multiple times since, including another cinema showing in Germany, the hypnotic hold it had on me during that initial screening was like nothing else. Slowly taking in one Kubrick film after another in the years since has proven to be nothing but a disappointment in comparison.

4.) Red (Kieslowski, 1994) - The conversations Irene Jacob has with Jean-Louis Trintignant’s retired judge are simply some of the most fascinating encounters in this decade of film. I find Kieslowski’s Three Colors trilogy to be ambitious and quite the accomplishment, but it’s only the final part that truly affects me. He was clearly interested in ideas of fate and destiny throughout his career. Where Red stands apart is in its reluctance to completely rely on those concepts above the more traditional cinematic elements. The film uses coincidence without depending on it. There’s an incredibly moving underscore to the character Trintignant plays, allowing Red to be something more than another Kieslowski exercise in fatalistic dualities.

5.) L.A. Confidential (Hanson, 1997) - While I’m not crazy about the Chinatown comparisons that greeted this celebrated adaptation of James Ellroy’s equally brilliant novel, I do think, superficially, it’s the best film of that ilk to come along since the earlier picture. The differences lie with how Curtis Hanson treats his version as a period crime epic, complete with sprawling characters and intricate plotting, while the Polanski-Towne film was more grounded through the singular perspective of J.J. Gittes. L.A. Confidential beat the odds in every way imaginable, proving that pedigree isn’t always essential, and became that woefully rare type of film where you have to absolutely pay attention in order to fully appreciate it. I love movies where the viewer is expected to do a few mental somersaults in the process of putting everything together and I’d say no picture of the decade so skillfully balanced that request with the requisite payoff as this one.

6.) Chungking Express (Wong, 1994) - Not an easy film to attach verbal appreciation to, but still capable of producing the exact sort of feeling one wants to have after the credits roll. Wong Kar-wai uncharacteristically breezed through the production of two story segments, both of which are extraordinary though perhaps the latter is especially poignant, and made what is still his most free and lively picture. You can take into account how vital the theme of time is to the film or you can just enjoy it without asking any questions. The absolute best films tend to invite analysis without requiring it and I think that’s really what Chungking Express does. Nothing here needs to be taken beyond face value while nonetheless sustaining over an hour and a half’s worth of giddy grinning, but it’s hardly a shallow picture.

7.) Goodfellas (Scorsese, 1990) - Possibly too low of a ranking here and maybe we’ve begun taking Scorsese for granted. I shuffled it down a few notches with little guilt because I feel like everyone knows how violently brilliant the film is and how well it will probably age for decades. Certain people bristle at recognizing widely acknowledged masterpieces (with Pulp Fiction suffering the same fate), but as long as you’re not force fed these movies I don’t understand why popularity among a particular segment should reflect poorly on something like Goodfellas. Regardless, it’s the definitive portrayal of that outsider experience and allure of the mob, and Scorsese has rarely, if ever, been in such total control of the material. I’ve read opinions that Casino is really the superior film, but every trap the latter film falls for Goodfellas avoids. The “Layla” sequence may even be Scorsese’s all-time most successful use of popular music.

8.) Pulp Fiction (Tarantino, 1994) - Speak of the devil, and I admittedly struggle with trying to rate a director whose work has lost all inspiration from my point of view. It’s still important to balance what remains an explosive, vibrant film with the near-parody that’s emerged throughout the past several years. Pulp Fiction, while lacking the extreme degree of originality some claimed upon its release, is the perfect mixture of Quentin Tarantino’s internal angel and devil. Portions are thrilling across multiple viewings. The performances are universally on. A degree of cohesion is really sustained throughout the picture. You can still put the film on today and the wide-eyed captivation remains. All of Tarantino’s cinematic tics are effective here instead of overbearing.

9.) Fargo (Coen, 1995) - At least among American filmmakers, this was the decade of the Coens. Each and every one of their five films has substantial merit, with Fargo the critical darling of the time. I really can’t disagree. Watching the film now, there’s little concern as to the procedural aspects of the movie. It doesn’t much matter what genre the Coens are addressing, the particulars really seem to be inconsequential. The characters and, perhaps even more importantly, the situations are what command our attention. In Fargo, the kidnapping and investigation holds little weight against the unraveling of Jerry Lundegaard or the dedication of Marge Gunderson or the bizarrely repulsive acts of the two hitmen.

10.) The Silence of the Lambs (Demme, 1991) - Again, as with Goodfellas, my affection for this film probably doesn’t equal the ranking. Michael Mann’s Manhunter is a fine effort and the subsequent Hannibal directed by Ridley Scott is at least interesting to a point, but something else entirely, something far more brilliant and sinister, is captured by Jonathan Demme here. Lector is given a counterpart in Clarice who is equally interesting, with a contrast that still unnverves. His maniacal genius comes through stronger in this film, by a wide margin, than in the others and the fear is far more pronounced. And even shedding Lector, Demme stages one of the more gripping sequences of the decade when Clarice is in Buffalo Bill’s lair and the viewer is reduced to seeing in night vision. Among the upturned noses, it’s almost a curse to have won the Best Picture award but otherwise that was an amazing accomplishment considering the subject matter.

11.) Show Me Love (Moodysson, 1998) - Also known by the more profane title Fucking Åmål, this is a film which stands alone as being the most painfully true depiction of the teenage crush of anything I’ve ever seen. It happens to concern one girl having feelings for another girl, but that hardly matters. The universality in the situations found here seem undeniable. Every cry is met authentically and the emotional investment couldn’t be more impressive. The material is achingly true while still remaining warm. You might not expect a Swedish film about a teenage misfit girl who harbors a massive crush on a popular female classmate to be so familiar, but it is.

12.) Raise the Red Lantern (Zhang, 1991) - Director Zhang Yimou infuses his first collaboration with Gong Li with rich colors and a troubling plot where the protagonist strains the viewer’s sympathy. She moves, quite deftly, inside the marital dynamic of a Chinese lord but faces resistance from his other wives. The red lantern motif is an unforgettable and striking image, the impact of which changes as the film progresses.

13.) Ed Wood (Burton, 1994) - Burton’s two films just previous to this one (Edward Scissorhands and Batman Returns) are probably more quintessential works, and I’m fond of both, but it’s his black and white tribute to an impassioned, if ineffective, filmmaker that I still consider to be his best. Part of it is the delirious lead performance from Johnny Depp, lovingly coupled with Martin Landau’s Bela Lugosi. Burton finds an almost perfect balance of the reverence for his film’s subjects with the irreverence of what they were doing. You can make a movie with extreme preparation and skill (and money) or you can simply get your hands on some equipment, point and shoot. The results will be different, but the dedication need not be.

14.) Wallace & Gromit: The Wrong Trousers (Park, 1993) - My general rule when making these lists is that even though short films and music videos (as well as extremely long films in the miniseries tradition) are eligible, I’m not comfortable trying to weigh the merits of those against the typical feature. Only a special instance would cause me to make an exception, something I did with the ’60s list for Truffaut’s “Antoine and Colette” and a bending of my own rules that I’m repeating here to include what could be my very favorite animated short. All of the Wallace & Gromit shorts and the feature are downright brilliant, but it’s “The Wrong Trousers,” with the villainous Feathers McGraw, that touches perfection.

15.) The Grifters (Frears, 1990) - Having Donald Westlake adapt a Jim Thompson novel was an inspired melding of two great masters of 20th century crime fiction. Letting Anjelica Huston be blonde and chipping Annette Bening out of a Gloria Grahame mold gave the film a cheap grit often absent from the neonoir films. There’s an understanding ingrained in The Grifters of what came before it and how to respect those pictures without overly honoring them. Updating film noir is a tough thing to do with any success, but this is one of the few examples of retaining the spirit and not just resting on the popular artifacts. Frears can be a chameleonic director with few obvious signatures, leaving the bulk of the credit for Westlake’s screenplay and the female leads.

16.) Boogie Nights (Anderson, 1997) - I’m not sure if I placed this too high or low as I haven’t seen it in several years now and I generally haven’t been happy with Anderson’s other films. Even so, a few things can’t help but rattle around when I think about how a movie focused on the adult film industry is as much about the filmmaking process on the whole and the surrounding complications as, for example, Ed Wood. The tragedy of porn shares the same frailties as the more legitimate side of the business. Part of what disappointed me so much about Brian De Palma’s The Black Dahlia from a few years back was how little he cared about, among other things, Elizabeth Short’s failures at selling herself down the line. Boogie Nights seems to understand this idea far more poignantly, and when Anderson isn’t trying to overly stylize the freak show nature of his film its sadness is almost overhwhelming.

17.) Dead Man (Jarmusch, 1995) - Dubbed an “acid western,” this postmodern take on the genre is probably Jim Jarmusch’s most confident and mature work to date. The film sits very much with others by Jarmusch, intent on philosophical underpinnings and the transformative nature of the journey, but nonetheless feels especially realized in a way some of the director’s movies do not. Certainly having the idea of death linger so prominently in the film (from the title to the increasing bounty placed on Blake’s head and on to the ending) allows it to constantly remind the viewer how difficult mortality is to get a handle on. Jarmusch also returns to a couple of his filmmaking strengths in having dry, black and white cinematography (from Robby Muller) and unexpected, somewhat experimental music (courtesy of Neil  Young) to further draw a line underneath an already meditative picture.

18.) Malcolm X (Lee, 1992) - Spike Lee will probably have to completely go mute before the segments that matter take him as seriously as they should. I’m heartened in believing that some day people will rightfully see him as the American director who most matters among his generation. Combining both style and substance in his best work, including Malcolm X, Lee’s message is frustratingly lost on so many that you want to shout it with particular vigor when the opportunity arises. The biopic is one of my least favorite genres but thanks to Lee and Denzel Washington (deserving of the Oscar awarded to Al Pacino, who actually should’ve won for The Godfather or its sequel, and ultimately rewarded almost a decade later for a lesser performance), this film truly does transcend its genre limitations and rise to an enthralling, emotional work which could hardly be less controversial.

19.) The Big Lebowski (Coen, 1998) - The zealous love for this one and a lukewarm initial viewing turned me against it for a few years. I knew at some point it needed another chance, and it wasn’t that difficult to admit the joy found here, which is somewhat atypical for a Coens film. Mean-spirited, winking humor is entirely my cup of tea, but you don’t want that to infect every film. The antidote is easily Lebowski and Jeff Bridges’ wonderfully good-natured protagonist. Our inadvertent Marlowe, and the Coens aren’t even trying to disguise the Chandler influence, is equal parts irresponsible and lovable. I feel like this is the Coens’ happiest medium so far.

20.) The Insider (Mann, 1999) - Odd that this has been Mann’s most critically successful and honored film despite it being perhaps his least characteristic and commercial. That’s not to say we’re out of Mann’s element and, indeed, the director quickly takes to a story of tobacco and media with the professional recognition you’d expect. The reason I favor The Insider over, say, Heat could be a result of the thematic stretching Mann was forced to do here. His strengths translated into an area where bullets are in mailboxes instead of riddled across the screen. The propulsive tension and pacing are still here, more pronounced even than in his crime epics, but the unexpectedness of the whole thing makes for a grander result where immediacy overtakes deliberation.

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21.) Kansas City (Altman, 1996) - I can imagine that it’s the somewhat divisive performance of Jennifer Jason Leigh that tends to hold back Robert Altman’s best post-1970s film from the acclaim and reputation it should have. But if you’re tuned to Leigh’s wavelength, and no American actress could hold a candle to her this decade, the film’s generous pleasures tend to reveal themselves with little hesitation. There’s also a fine turn from Harry Belafonte as a gangster you wouldn’t want to cross, and a simultaneous mix of serious and kooky that few directors other than Altman have ever mastered. It’s in that little realm of offbeat cinema where Leigh’s magic resides.

22.) Miller’s Crossing (Coen, 1990) - This is just a bit too opaque in my opinion, and I’m not completely confident in how much I like the film, particularly the storytelling in it. The placement probably could have varied at least ten spots in either direction. Certainly we expect the Coens to have a dryness in their films, but the level of stoicism is more unexpected. Still, while not what I’d consider the most enjoyable of their movies, Miller’s Crossing remains a rich, impressive and unspoiled gangster drama, and a creative leap of a third feature for the brothers. The milieu seems just so, and certain scenes, with one being the realization of Tom Reagan’s dream image of his hat, almost take your breath.

23.) The Truman Show (Weir, 1998) - The story of a man whose life has been broadcast to the world, whose entire existence is manufactured into a reality-style theme park without his knowledge, seemed a little more unrealistic when The Truman Show was dubbed the movie of the decade by Esquire magazine just before its release. Things in that regard have taken a turn for the worse and it’s impossible to not view Andrew Niccol’s script and Peter Weir’s film through a different set of eyes than when it first opened. You can either applaud the prescience or consider the film to already be somewhat dated, but I’m inclined to marvel while keeping the central gimmick at arm’s length. Weir has never made a bad movie and works far too infrequently. It’s true that his pictures tend to capture an immediacy of their times, though Truman exists both as a satire of a stampeding form of media and as an impeccably acted, truly moving story of someone deprived of actual reality.

24.) Naked (Leigh, 1993) - The mesmerizing performance of David Thewlis holds together the vignettes and rants involving his drifting Johnny. Thewlis is good enough here to deserve consideration among the greatest of screen turns, yet he was inexplicably overlooked by the Oscar voters for even a nomination. This is not the type of film I expected from Mike Leigh and I also was surprised by just how much it resonated. Naked commands a relatability that’s in no way obviously inherent from its premise. And unlike many films with a staggering lead performance, the movie itself is an unrelenting force that’s built around that central role without entirely depending on it. “That’s the trouble with everybody - you’re all so bored.”

25.) Jackie Brown (Tarantino, 1997) - Time to make peace with Tarantino again. Jackie Brown is his most assured, mature work and it seemed to spell out encouraging things until the director regressed afterward. It doesn’t have the energy of Pulp Fiction, but the trade-off is this beautiful golden overlay of a character study where Pam Grier’s title heroine and Robert Forster’s bail bondsman enjoy such a rare amount of attention, paid honestly and purely, in relation to what we normally get from movies of this type. Elmore Leonard put some of these things in his novel Rum Punch, but it’s a pleasant surprise to see Tarantino actually retain them so well. This film is the only thing keeping me from giving up on the director entirely. I figure if he’s capable of making a movie like this then it’s always possible he’ll overcome adolescence again and return to similarly strong material.

26.) JFK (Stone, 1991) - Oliver Stone always has the least imaginative titles for his films. Unlike his other pictures focusing on presidents, this one, of course, isn’t a biography of John F. Kennedy and that could be why it’s so successful. There’s no need to dissect a life when you can instead peel apart shadow conspiracies with the aid of some dramatic paranoia. Ultimately, it matters little whether there are facts to be gleaned from Stone’s film because he didn’t make a documentary or even a docudrama. It’s glorious fiction to feed the gullible corner of your brain. Maybe I wish that the events in this film were entirely accurate, that we’d have a definitive coda to the most shocking death of the 20th century, but that would marginalize the power of cinema. Stone made a gripping thriller that runs over three hours and I feel like it’s your own fault if you take it as the truth.

27.) The Double Life of Veronique (Kieslowski, 1991) - We don’t explore metaphysical implications of daily life enough in film. Kieslowski must have been almost obsessed with this idea since it was a recurring theme in his fictional features, none more so than here. The Polish director gets away with providing very little concrete plot and instead opts for a more cinematic language of mood, feeling, ambience, and emotion. It can be intimidating to enter this world initially since he expects the viewer to accept one actress (Irene Jacob) in two roles without clearly delineating which is which. A second viewing, especially when aided by the supplementary materials on Criterion’s release, helps, and I think that Kieslowksi’s message about the whims of fate really does solidify the more you immerse yourself into this world. I’m not fond of the green filters used, but it’s a forgivable effect.

28.) Happy Together (Wong, 1997) - Perhaps risky for a heterosexual director whose films had not previously explored homosexual relationships to dive headfirst into that very subject, but Wong Kar-wai essentially translated his penchant for difficult and doomed love onto a story of two men (Tony Leung and the late Leslie Cheung) who experience a rocky and passionate relationship that takes them to Argentina. The film ended up being a powerful look at love and lust without really limiting itself along the lines of any particular gender or sexuality. Heartbreak and difficulty tend to translate across most any barrier and a filmmaker as accomplished as Wong clearly understands the universality of emotion. Add in the extra feeling of loneliness and the struggles of being an outsider, and there’s simply no limiting factor to this film. It possibly ranks as Wong’s most powerful.

29.) Palms (Aristakisian, 1993) - A deeply troubling faux documentary where the narrator, who’s also the director, speaks across harsh black and white footage about how tortured a certain segment of people are. He’s talking to his unborn child and describing a world of undesirables - the crippled, the homeless, and other lesser beings in society - and just when you’re sure he’s a madman, he says something so utterly profound as to render all of his statements worthwhile. This is the most unique film by far on my list, but after reviewing Second Run’s edition of it for DVD Times, I simply couldn’t ignore such a powerful work. There must be an area between documentary and fiction, and Palms has to exist in that purgatorial nether region.

30.) He Got Game (Lee, 1998) - None of Spike Lee’s films charted on the final version of this list, and I can’t figure why that is. I watch his movies and see a virtuoso of technique and storytelling, a talent virtually unparalleled among the filmmakers of his generation. Yes, Spike Lee is the most consistently interesting and accomplished American director of the past 25 years. And no one else seems to see it. He Got Game is a particularly upsetting casualty of the modest studio success. Because Lee does work for the studios, his films enjoy a certain publicity and budget but rarely do they have much of an impact on the greater public. He Got Game is just such a movie that really could have had a bigger audience, and I don’t know of a better film about the game of basketball. By putting an actual athlete (Ray Allen) as the main character and having a genuine movie star (Denzel Washington) brilliantly play against type, you would have thought that some notice might have resulted, but, again, there’s been little recognition for how impressive the film balances a very real and still relevant predicament for kids who aren’t even close to being men yet with the undeterred business side of things. People care so little about He Got Game that the existing DVD isn’t even enhanced for widescreen televisions.

31.) Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me (Lynch, 1992) - David Lynch gets the label of dealing in horror sometimes but it’s only rarely that he actually does make a film where the terror exists beyond the protagonist’s own mind. He generally limits the horror to a psychological manifestation of the internal. Not so here. His prequel to the television series Twin Peaks expands upon some of the episodes Lynch directed, particularly the series finale, and eventually reveals itself to be far more gruesome than anything he’s ever made. We know Laura Palmer’s fate already, and maybe we don’t really want to see, but Lynch is insistent that every scream is necessary. Measuring the film against the television show doesn’t seem particularly helpful as they really are two different entities.

32.) Insomnia (Skjoldbjærg, 1997) - The Hollywood remake by Christopher Nolan was probably both a blessing and a curse since it surely boosted interest in the original while nonetheless proving inferior in dumbing down an incredibly dark character study. None of the changes were beneficial, and anyone who hasn’t seen this version should completely remove Hollywood’s attempt from their mind before settling in with one of the best police dramas of the decade. Stellan Skarsgård, a terrific actor in everything I’ve seen him in, imbues his character with an unsympathetic malevolence that you’d never see from Al Pacino. The result is a richer, far more effective film about a man - and not a case, which is an important distinction - unaware of his limitations. Skarsgård is fearless.

33.) Devil in a Blue Dress (Franklin, 1995) - The spirit of film noir lives on in Carl Franklin’s adaptation of the first of Walter Mosley’s Easy Rawlins novels. A twist is added by Easy’s race and the subservient reaction he gets at most every turn despite having served honorably in World War II and living in his own house. Those aspects aside, this is really a topnotch noir update, with a commanding performance by Don Cheadle in support. The mood is there. Easy remains defiantly in over his head just like the great noir protagonists. Franklin had previously directed the grittier One False Move to impressive effect, but I find Devil to be the better movie due to its superior source material. Like the films it drew inspiration from, this lets the viewer experience the crumbling decay of postwar America, when no one seemed to be paying attention to the criminals minding the store.

34.) All About My Mother (Almodóvar, 1999) - The trouble with Pedro Almodóvar is that almost every movie he makes is brilliant. Trying to determine what ranks where becomes difficult, and I had to leave off Live Flesh, which I enjoy a great deal, while opting for this safe but moving melodrama and the more adventurous Kika further down the list. The film is safe in the sense that it doesn’t necessarily take extreme chances, aside from, you know, having a tranvestite hooker father both the ill-fated young adult son of Cecilia Roth’s character and the unborn child of HIV-postive nun Penelope Cruz. So maybe all of the critics who slag on Almodóvar for not taking risks and abandoning his former emphasis on the wild and woolly in favor of more palatable efforts are really off the mark. There’s no self-sacrifice to Almodóvar. He’s as uncompromising as ever, and I’d hardly call this particular film overly mainstream. If the greater art house public, which remains a distinct minority of filmgoers across the globe, embraces the director more now than in the eighties, it’s hardly a negative.

35.) La Belle Noiseuse (Rivette, 1991) - A subplot goes in another direction, but the main idea that effectively floors me with this film is the sense of the creation of art. The time, the emotion, the investment, the personal sacrifice, and all the various other ingredients are explored so delicately and with a rawness unexpected from a film of such length. The waited-for lulls never occur, and this is the rare film of extraordinary length where the duration plays virtually no role. If anything, a sense of commitment is reinforced by the substantial runtime. Rivette seems to enjoy these extremely commanding lengths. I sometimes find the results to be hit or miss, but his films can only rarely be called tenuous despite how many minutes they often run. Such deliberation actually seems to work in Rivette’s favor. It definitely does with Noiseuse, and the rhythms it accommodates direct the viewer away from any restlessness.

36.) Un coeur en hiver (Sautet, 1992) - An intentional pairing of Emmanuelle Béart movies here. She’s actually better in this film, I think, than in Noiseuse, though it’s Daniel Auteuil (her real-life love interest and future husband) who makes the largest impact, playing a violin craftsman unable to experience love. This could have easily been a far less effective film had Claude Sautet lacked the delicacy necessary to keep Auteuil’s character both relatable and balanced between his ego and his desire for Béart. There is a tendency to limit this as merely a typical French film with hesitant characters doomed to lovelessness, but that’s a real short-changing of the film as a whole. Beyond plot, Sautet creates a balance of intrigue, of sadness, of regret, and numerous other emotions that inform Auteuil, whose performance fills in the rest of the necessary blanks. Maybe Béart falls too swiftly for his character, but I think it’s his attention and skill with perfecting the violins that inspires her feelings. When he can’t - or won’t - reciprocate, the onus strangely falls on both her and him, but also the viewer, who’s helpless while still floored by Auteuil’s detachment.

37.) Good Will Hunting (Van Sant, 1997) - I highly doubt that Oscar nominations and statues were legitimately on the mind of anyone during the making of this film. That it happened was hardly choreographed or intended. Let’s pare it down a bit then and get past the popularity and starmaking nature that met what’s really an all around exemplary film on the nature of genius and class, among other things. The combination of extreme brilliance and emotional insecurity from a life unloved can be a delicate mix where the lead character here cannot be either too sympathetic or too repulsive. I’m not sure Matt Damon has ever been quite so raw throughout any of his leading roles as he is here. He’s an undeniably compelling actor for a movie star, but the performance in this film lacks vanity and any sense of reducing the character to cliche. The various songs from Elliott Smith, too, add a fragile layer that gently emphasizes each mood no matter how melancholy or sad.

38.) Ratcatcher (Ramsay, 1999) - An unfortunate title for a film that’s so evocative of a specific time and place while still playing to the familiar memories of childhood. Lynne Ramsay’s debut feature is a great movie that probably bubbles under the radar but must have been boosted considerably by the Criterion Collection, taking a rare break from more established fare, releasing it on DVD. I’m not sure I would have heard of, much less seen, the film otherwise, though I’m so glad that I did. It’s the work of a filmmaker willing to take risks, someone promising and youthful enough to capture early adolescence without simply reminiscing about it on film.

39.) Irma Vep (Assayas, 1996) - Returning to some of the same things I mentioned in discussing Ed Wood and Boogie Nights, this film examines yet another facet of the filmmaking process but probably concerns itself less with that idea than the total disorientation of its lead actress working on a tumultous set in a foreign country. That doesn’t really scratch the surface of Irma Vep either, as there are a great deal of more obscure and experimental qualities here, culminating in the blissful freak-out ending. While Assayas is clearly the guiding force of the film, he really owes some of its accessibility and charm to Maggie Cheung, who’s such an engaging presence as to be worth watching even when she’s playing a version of herself.

40.) Husbands and Wives (Allen, 1992) - The deepest, boldest of Woody Allen’s domestic dramas, with much of the film downright painful but still never less than fascinating. Allen literally turns the camera on himself and his turbulent personal life. It never fully feels like we’re watching therapy though, and one has to marvel at the universal nature of relationships Allen captures. Bleak, but oddly entertaining in a voyeuristic way.

Taste of CherryHeatFight ClubKikaThe PlayerDr AkagiLimeyRiverBeing John MalkovichCeremonie

41.) Taste of Cherry (Kiarostami, 1997) - A completely involving depiction of a man who’s trying to find a willing stranger to perform a very specific task. Though that description may sound both broad and uninteresting, the film unfolds in such a way as to remind us that the very good and great movies often depend less on what they are about than how they are told (and who is telling them). I’m reluctant to give away any more of the plot to Taste of Cherry, despite it being quite known by this point, because the protagonist’s intentions unfold at a deliberate pace. Still, the film ultimately doesn’t need to be totally unspoiled in order for it to still have a significant impact. Also worth noting is the manner Kiarostami shoots the many driving sequences, which is intimate enough to give the viewer a seemingly vested interest in what happens. I did have a few reservations about why Kiarostami would end his film as he did, and I didn’t really like that decision, but it’s hard to deny that it adds another layer.

42.) Heat (Mann, 1995) - Among Mann’s crime dramas, Heat has never had the impact for me that its reputation would suggest. Some of this is the casting. Pacino and DeNiro both perform effectively, but they take me out of what has become Mann’s style. Both are lacking the stoicism and the pronounced subtlety found in his last few films. If those are some of the reasons why I’m not fully in love with Heat, the rationale behind including it at all is reflected in many of the familiar themes Mann shows interest in here. The professionalism, the dogged intensity in performance of tasks, and the fatalistic insistence on going through with your plan regardless of the consequences are all central parts of these characters. Mann can seem very mechanical in his characterizations, but when you dig deeper there’s a far more interesting sense of commitment which belies emotion without burying it. The Mann principals remain externally devoted and internally conflicted, markedly male traits.

43.) Fight Club (Fincher, 1999) - I really struggled with where to put this film, as well as whether to include Fincher’s Se7en. My feelings about him have somewhat cooled lately, for a number of reasons. I’m very insistent on moving beyond a simple style test, and that makes me question how much substance exists for Fincher’s work. The people who’ve misunderstood Fight Club only to embrace it on some level of shallow admiration also discourage me. I’ve always liked the film, though, from seeing an almost empty screening on its intial release through several subsequent viewings on DVD. It has a power of fleeting revolution and it’s difficult to deny Fincher’s command of the visceral aspects of filmmaking. I’m not turning my nose up at Se7en either, as it too provides a specialized form of entertainment, but it’s Fight Club that remains the more cohesive, affecting work by some margin.

44.) Kika (Almodóvar, 1993) - I’ve really grown to embrace the outrageous part of Almodóvar’s films after seeing that shock value is or was only one of his dimensions. So with Kika, probably the director’s most unapologetic and irreverent movie, the humor of madness becomes both part of the point and, typical of Almodóvar, an offering of odd appeasement. When a rape scene from a feminist-minded director can be shown as comedic - and disturbingly funny at that - I think it’s fair to separate the reality of the film from what’s expected while still recognizing that the implications of the scene remain ripe for consideration. But Kika is hardly defined by that one sequence, and it’s really the entire hysterical insanity, deftly mixed with another of Almodóvar’s macabre plots, that makes the film both fascinating and unforgettable.

45.) The Player (Altman, 1992) - There’s an incestuous quality in seeing Robert Altman gather so many recognizable Hollywood people, often playing themselves, and then use them for a movie in which the tone could hardly be more hostile against the business of making movies. Sure it’s satire done with a heavy dose of cynicism, but much of the inside goings-on (the ridiculously stupid pitches at the beginning that still sound like ideas Hollywood would try if desperate enough) have a real sharpness that Altman refuses to tone down. The director’s next picture, Short Cuts, is now discussed a bit more, but I think my preference is still for The Player.

46.) Dr. Akagi (Imamura, 1998) - Imamura’s Cannes honoree The Eel probably enjoys a slightly higher reputation - and it too should be seen - but I think with Dr. Akagi we see the director’s humor return more fully. The film, about a doctor tirelessly leading the fight against hepatitis in a small village and intent on diagnosing almost any ailment as hepatitis, maintains a serious tone but with a delightfully twisted undercurrent very characteristic of Imamura’s films from the sixties. It’s not hardly as good or as forceful as those pictures, indicative of a clearly mellowed if not entirely softened filmmaker. I still think it carries a lovely weight, of determination in the face of aging and dwindled support, without overselling the case.

47.) The Limey (Soderbergh, 1999) - Style, style, style. Director Steven Soderbergh neatly mashes together a cool collection of songs and unusual editing with a standard revenge plot for a film that ends up standing out particularly for its direction and a frightening central performance from Terence Stamp. There’s not a lot on these bones, but Soderbergh manipulates everything he has to such a degree that the film becomes a joy to watch.

48.) A River Runs Through It (Redford, 1992) - When I first saw this movie I wanted nothing more than to find a stream in Montana and flyfish the rest of my days. That effect, done via Oscar-winning cinematography and the amiable seriousness of the story, is rekindled each time I watch the film and I doubt I’m alone. There’s a simplicity that contrasts well against the inner turmoil of the two brothers, giving the entire thing a welcome quality expected from Redford’s classical style of filmmaking. I couldn’t say whether it’s the setting or the scenery or my own nostalgia, but this is still a movie I’m quite fond of and can watch every so often.

49.) Being John Malkovich (Jonze, 1999) - First, all of Charlie Kaufman’s filmed scripts could benefit from a tad more restraint and some extra refining, I think. He’s undoubtedly the most inventive screenwriter of his generation, but each and every one of the films he’s written so far could stand to be shortened and have a more narrow focus. Being John Malkovich, in particular, gets bogged down in the marital problems of the characters played by John Cusack and Cameron Diaz when there seems to be so much more of interest in the Malkovich portal aspects. Second-guessing makes me feel uncomfortably pompous, but I’m sure both that the premise of the film had the potential to produce an even better movie and that the result as is remains pretty darn impressive.

50.) La cérémonie (Chabrol, 1995) - Claude Chabrol has been making a movie every year or so for decades now, but unlike, for example, Woody Allen, there generally isn’t one or two acknowledged masterpieces that everyone loves more than the rest of a consistently strong output. At times, Chabrol can seem like a victim of his own prolificness. There are some that often stand out more than others, and La cérémonie, a psychological thriller in every sense of the phrase, sits deservingly with the best I’ve seen from the director. The lead performances from an unnerving Isabelle Huppert and the vulnerable Sandrine Bonnaire slowly build a film that always seems to be about something more than just that central relationship of manipulation, until it finally isn’t.

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