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#1 |
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is just a prescription talkin'
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Halliwell's best movies 1-100
http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/ 1. Tokyo Story Japan, 1953, Yasujiro Ozu An understated, beautifully composed classic of domestic disillusionment from the most classical and contemplative of directors. In his formal concentration on everyday family life, Ozu discovers universal truths about the human condition. Here, an elderly couple face the painful fact that they are a burden to their children and grandchildren. But the most devastating comment comes at the end of the film, from their daughter: “Isn’t life disappointing.” But at least Ozu never disappoints. 2. La Règle du Jeu France, 1939, Jean Renoir It took more than 20 years for Renoir’s film to be recognised as his masterpiece. It was originally banned as demoralising, but remains triumphantly, morally bracing and richly comic. The subject matter of a thousand boulevard comedies — a shooting party at a country mansion, where everyone is preoccupied with love affairs — becomes a devastating portrait of the society of his time; snobbish, racist and mendacious, whose obsessive frivolity leads to death and destruction. 3. Lawrence of Arabia GB, 1962, David Lean The real hero is the director David Lean, in overcoming immense difficulties to create an overwhelming epic. O’Toole, a great actor at his charismatic best, achieves both Lawrence’s bravado and his disenchantment. 4. The Godfather Trilogy US, 1972, 1974, 1990, Francis Ford Coppola It is the first two parts of the trilogy that make it a classic. Nevertheless all three have all the fascination of a snake pit: a warm-hearted family saga except that the members are murderers. 5. The Seven Samurai Japan, 1954, Akira Kurosawa The greatest of all samurai films is a superbly strange medieval adventure. The film later served as the basis for the western The Magnificent Seven but they pale in comparison with this vivid and violent drama. 6. Citizen Kane US, 1941, Orson Welles Although the movie’s technical innovations might now seem run-of-the-mill, Orson Welles identified and exposed a type of megalomaniacal media mogul who is still with us today. Every line is utterly absorbing. 7. Raging Bull US, 1980, Martin Scorsese Robert De Niro’s dazzling performance in the title role encompasses both La Motta as a savage fighter and his later incarnation as an overweight would-be comedian. Scorsese brought to the film what he called a “kamikaze” approach, in which he put everything he knew and felt. 8. Vertigo US, 1958, Alfred Hitchcock Hitchcock used a combination of a forward zoom and a reverse tracking shot to create a feeling of vertigo in this double identity thriller: as unsettling as the phobia it dealt with. Hitchcock’s study of an obssessive and haunted love is the darkest of his films, and the best. 9. Some Like It Hot US, 1959, Billy Wilder A milestone of film comedy that keeps its central situation alive with fresh invention. Marilyn Monroe was worth all the trouble, and Curtis and Lemmon are a brilliantly contrasting pair. “Nobody’s perfect” is the last line, hilarious in its context but, on this occasion, cast, script and director all were. 10. 8½ Italy, 1963, Federico Fellini A coruscating, melancholy, self-reflecting spectacle of a man beginning to be at his wits’ end. Marcello Mastroianni, who used many of Fellini’s characteristic gestures and tone of voice, saw his role as a “symbol of a generation that had nothing more to give”. 11. Doctor Strangelove GB, 1963, Kubrick 12. Singin’ in the Rain US, 1952, Kelly 13. Taxi Driver US, 1976, Scorsese 14. The Searchers US, 1956, Ford 15. The Seventh Seal Sweden, 1957, Bergman 16. Sweet Smell of Success US, 1957, Mackendrick 17. Sunset Boulevard US, 1950, Wilder 18. The Third Man GB, 1949, Reed 19. The Apu Trilogy India, 1955, 1956, 1959, Ray 20. Les Enfants du Paradis France, 1945, Carné 21. The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie France/Spain/Italy, 1972, Buñuel 22. Andrei Rublev USSR, 1966, Tarkovsky 23. The Passion of Joan of Arc France, 1928, Dreyer 24. Viridiana Spain/Mexico, 1961, Buñuel 25. Toy Story US, 1995, Lasseter 26. Rashomon Japan, 1951, Kurosawa 27. Wild Strawberries Sweden, 1957, Bergman 28. To Be or Not to Be US, 1942, Lubitsch 29. Sunrise US, 1927, Murnau 30. The Lord of the Rings Trilogy US/New Zealand, 2001-3, Jackson 31. 2001: A Space Odyssey GB, 1968, Kubrick 32. The Battle of Algiers Algeria/Italy, 1965, Pontecorvo 33. Alexander Nevsky USSR, 1938, Eisenstein 34. Belle de Jour France/Italy, 1967, Buñuel 35. Casablanca US, 1942, Curtiz 36. GoodFellas US, 1990, Scorsese 37. Tristana Spain/Italy/France, 1970, Buñuel 38. The Magnificent Ambersons US, 1942, Welles 39. Breaking the Waves Denmark/Sweden/ France/Netherlands, 1996, Von Trier 40. Sullivan’s Travels US, 1941, Sturges 41. Frankenstein US, 1931, Whale 42. The Battleship Potemkin USSR, 1925, Eisenstein 43. Double Indemnity US, 1944, Wilder 44. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest US, 1975, Forman 45. Weekend France/Italy, 1968, Godard 46. Jules et Jim France, 1962, Truffaut 47. À Bout de Souffle France, 1960, Godard 48. Bonnie and Clyde US, 1967, Arthur Penn 49. Wings of Desire France/West Germany, 1987, Wenders 50. Fitzcarraldo West Germany, 1982, Herzog 51. If . . . GB, 1968, Anderson 52. The Wild Bunch US, 1969, Peckinpah 53. The Red Shoes GB, 1948, Powell, Pressburger 54. Annie Hall US, 1977, Allen 55. Tom Jones GB, 1963, Richardson 56. On the Waterfront US, 1954, Kazan 57. West Side Story US, 1961, Wise 58. Saturday Night and Sunday Morning GB, 1960, Reisz 59. The Grapes of Wrath US, 1940, Ford 60. Great Expectations GB, 1946, Lean 61. The Leopard US/Italy, 1963, Visconti 62. Schindler’s List US, 1993, Spielberg 63. Ashes and Diamonds Poland, 1958, Wajda 64. A Nous la Liberté France, 1931, Clair 65. Antoine Doinel Tetralogy France/Italy, 1959-79, Truffaut 66. Mr Smith Goes to Washington US, 1939, Capra 67. Monsieur Hulot’s Holiday France, 1953, Tati 68. Laurel and Hardy Shorts US, 1928-38, Parrott/Horne/Kennedy/Marshall/French/Blystone 69. Chinatown US, 1974, Polanski 70. Star Wars Trilogy US, 1977/80/83, Lucas/Kershner/Marquand 71. Gosford Park US/GB, 2001, Altman 72. Rear Window US, 1954, Hitchcock 73. Aguirre, Wrath of God West Germany, 1972, Herzog 74. A Short Film About Killing Poland, 1988, Kieslowski 75. M*A*S*H US, 1970, Altman 76. Viskningar och Rop Sweden, 1972, Bergman 77. All the President’s Men US, 1976, Pakula 78. Cabiria Italy/France, 1957, Fellini 79. King Kong US, 1933, Cooper 80. Gone with the Wind US, 1939, Fleming, Cukor, Wood 81. All Quiet on the Western Front US, 1930, Milestone 82. Fanny and Alexander Sweden/France/West Germany, 1982, Bergman 83. North by Northwest US, 1959, Hitchcock 84. The Band Wagon US, 1953, Minnelli 85. Yojimbo Japan, 1961, Kurosawa 86. Brief Encounter GB, 1945, Lean 87. Deliverance US, 1972, Boorman 88. Fargo US, 1996, Coen 89. Cabaret US, 1972, Fosse 90. Once Upon a Time in America US, 1984, Leone 91. Days of Heaven US, 1978, Malick 92. The Adventures of Robin Hood US, 1938, Keighley/Curtiz 93. High Noon US, 1952, Zinnemann 94. His Girl Friday US 1940, Hawks 95. Manhattan US, 1979 Allen 96. Duck Soup US, 1933, McCarey 97. Henry V GB, 1944, Olivier 98. This is Spinal Tap US, 1984, Reiner 99. Bad Day at Black Rock US, 1955, Sturges 100. The Graduate US, 1967, Nichols |
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#2 |
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has no status.
Senior Member
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This is based on a collection of top-tens by various directors and not just John Walker's personal selection. Who'd have thought that 'Tokyo Story' would have come out on top? Usually it is a Kurosawa film with Mifune that is the most popular Japanese film. Some find 'Tokyo Story' slow and boring. I think it's beautiful.
I loved the old Halliwell books for the pig-headed snobbishness. "Everything made after 1936 is complete tripe." seemed to be the underlying message of Leslie Halliwell's arguments. He did like 'Monty Python and the Holy Grail' though. 'Seats In All Parts', his autobiography, is a great account of cinemagoing in days gone by. Who voted 'Toy Story' over 'The Red Shoes'? I ask you! |
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#3 |
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has no status.
Senior Member
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Would Leslie Halliwell been happy with his name headlining this ? Clinton Morgan made a good point on Halliwells tastes ,Halliwell adored Casablanca yet it lies at 35 ,I think critical analysis of films has its important place in movie history yet these 100 best,100 favourite serve no real purpose only as a conversation piece possibly ,but as a definitive statement of the best movies ? no .Adding Halliwells name gives it stature which gives it the look of a defining statement ,that in my view is wrong.
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#4 |
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has no status.
Senior Member
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The books should have been renamed 'Walker's Film Guide'. The last bona fide Leslie edition was the 6th. 'Empire' noticed a change when films like 'Raging Bull' suddenly got a rave review in 'Halliwell's Film Guide'.
After Leslie had died Channel 4 screened a season of his favourite films <span style="font-size:8pt;line-height:100%">(with the announcer saying with no hint of cynicism or irony, "...and if they are his favourites, then they must be the best.")</span> at a ridiculously late time in the evening. I only saw the beginnings of most of the films but they whetted my appetite for black and white thirties cinema. Always in a double bill the films in the tribute season included: The 39 Steps Duck Soup The Bride of Frankenstien Sons of the Desert Seeing glimpses of these scratchy negative and scratchy audio films combined with their lateness was like looking into another world for me. Ahhh! Old school Channel 4. Remember when they used to show Marx Brothers movies at two o'clock in the morning over the Christmas period? |
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#6 |
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is Is still looking for a change in career
Senior Member
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I am just glad my favourite made it to number 3.
Ta Ta Marky B [img]style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/thumbsup.gif[/img]
__________________
I once shot an elephant in my pyjamas - how he got in my pyjamas,I'll never know |
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#7 | |
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has no status.
Senior Member
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Quote:
My favourite didn't make it in the 100 list, but then again, Chariots is more about story and character than cinematography. |
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