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  1. #1
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    What films can people watch time and time again without getting bored or losing interest? (At least over 6 times a year)



    My list would start with Bullitt, (I must watch this Steve Mqueen classic at least 6 times a year if not more) The Day of the Jackal, Double Indemnity, Zulu, Mr Hulot's Holiday, Long Good Friday, The French Connection

  2. #2
    Senior Member Country: UK Moor Larkin's Avatar
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    The original "Assault on Precinct 13"




  3. #3
    Senior Member Country: United States
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    This reminds me of the "300 Favorite Films List" - that thread seemed to beg for dissertations even I couldn't write! (And among my penpals, they KNOW that's saying something!)



    MALTESE FALCON. I hardly ever drop in my copy, but when it's on TV and I see any part of it, I'll leave it there. Not every Bogart film gets this. CASABLANCA is a film I watch often but not every time - I think it begs for a greater emotional commitment and apparently I am unwilling to do that always.



    Just about any Veronica Lake film.



    OPERATION PETTICOAT for some reason. It has an abundance of dumb, uninteresting scenes, but Cary Grant's exasperations make all the slow parts worthwhile. "We sunk a TRUCK!" or his giving away all of Lt Holden's fine things to the Filipino farmer... The breakfast-in-bed scene where Tony Curtis asks, "If we - gulp - can't surface...uh..." and Cary Grant's hand dips down, and then he explodes and is barking orders.



    the Doris Day-Rock Hudson pictures, especially the scenes where Tony Randall has a lot of dialog.



    AMERICANIZATION OF EMILY, and a lot of James Garner B&W films. I don't know why he's a favorite - I would never list him as a favorite actor, but I like a lot of his films.



    VICTOR VICTORIA, too... odd - hmmm - Julie Andrews. James Garner. Hmmm - is there a trend?



    WHAT'S UP DOC.



    The Ealing comedies. Jack Hawkins war pictures. mAN WHO NEVER WAS, along with your DAY OF THE JACKAL (I don't know why those two films resonate together so well).

  4. #4
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    phyco, Marnie, Shadow of a doubt, Up the Junction, spring and port wine i love these films and could watch them over and over again and never get fed up of them.

  5. #5
    Senior Member Country: Great Britain
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    I tend to watch Hitchcock films and musicals over and over again without ever getting bored. The 39 Steps, Suspicion, Strangers on a Train and Marnie are personal favourites. As for musicals, Oliver, The King and I and My Fair Lady never lose their appeal despite numerous viewings. I've also enjoyed Dark Victory and Brief Encounter more times than I care to remember.



    I tend to find films which are part of a series easy to watch over and over again. The James Bond, Carry On and Hammer films are so approachable you can just let them flow over you.



    As for actors, Michael Caine's finest films never seem to wane despite numerous showings.



    Regards

    Phil Turner

  6. #6
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    All the b/w films they show in the afternoon on Channel 4 which I don't get to see because I live in Wales and have poxy S4C inflicted on me.



    Just to show how slack S4C are, they were showing Went the Day Well? at 3 o'clock in the morning so not having seen the film before I videoed it.

    The following evening I switched and the film started, again not having seen the film I was not unconcerned that the opening scenes were without sound

    The whole bloody film was without sound because the slackers had pressed the button and gone home without bothering to check and this is one example of many mishaps on S4C, sometimes they just do their own thing like not showing listed films at all!

    Films I watch over and over again

    Went the Day Well

    The Dam Busters

    Zulu

    Where Eagles Dare

    Sink the Bismark

    The Colditz Story

    National Velvet (light relief)

    One of Our Aircraft is Missing

    Battle of the River Plate

    A Matter of Life and Death

    First of the Few

    Most of the Ealings

    Carry on up the Khyber

    Green for Danger

    Hue and Cry

    Rebecca

    Maltese Falcon

    Casablanca

    Dead of Night

  7. #7
    Senior Member Country: Great Britain
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    The Wicker Man

    Ask A Policeman - and most prime Will Hays

    The Devil Rides Out

    The Ealings

    The 39 Steps - any version

    Bulldog Jack

    Went The Day Well

    The Italian Job

    Night Of The Demon

    Death Line

    The Quatermass trilogy

    to name a few

    Also everytime The Great Escape is on has turned into an event with a group of us happily drinking, whistling and quoting our way through a blissful 3 hours. Refuse to buy it or even tape it, just take it how and when it comes.

  8. #8
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    name='Sgt Dudfoot']The Wicker Man

    Ask A Policeman - and most prime Will Hays

    The Devil Rides Out

    The Ealings

    The 39 Steps - any version

    Bulldog Jack

    Went The Day Well

    The Italian Job

    Night Of The Demon

    Death Line

    The Quatermass trilogy

    to name a few

    Also everytime The Great Escape is on has turned into an event with a group of us happily drinking, whistling and quoting our way through a blissful 3 hours. Refuse to buy it or even tape it, just take it how and when it comes.


    What taste,i've got all of these absolue corkers but the ones i HAVE to watch are



    ISLAND OF TERROR-don't ask why because i couldn't put into words(now you see why i use a pseudonym as knobbykins is NOT my real name!)



    (Or is it?)



    DANCE OF THE VAMPIRES-because it's brilliant!



    THE LION IN WINTER-simply the best film ever made EVER!The only film whose impact on me doesn't waver a bit.

  9. #9
    Senior Member Country: UK Moor Larkin's Avatar
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    Definitely Zulu as well of course. (I find Italian Job a victim of its own cliches nowadays).



    There are some favourite films I wouldn't want to watch repeatedly because I sense over-familiarity would spoil them.



    I generally don't watch the same Picture over and over again so I'm trying to think of the ones that I think would stand that sort of treatment.............. I wonder if the central characters have to be especially magnetic, the story profound but not too 'clever-clever' and positively no big twist at or near the end.



    I'm thinking...... and wondering.....



    Mona Lisa.

    Things to do in Denver when you're dead.

    The Shootist.

    Get Carter.

    Night of the Hunter.

    Cape Fear (1962)




  10. #10
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    Missed a few

    Oh Mr Porter

    39 Steps Robert Donat only

    The Full Monty (a rare modern one)

  11. #11
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    I'm thinking...... and wondering.....





    Things to do in Denver when you're dead.





    [/QUOTE]



    You're the only other person i know of who likes DENVER, most love to slag it off!

    But CHRISTOPHER WALKEN is brilliant,as usual,and manages to steal it.

  12. #12
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    name='Crimson']Missed a few...a rare modern one
    One of the reasons I hate threads like this is because I end up seeing how few "modern" movies make my Favorites lists, including a "Watch Over & Over" list. If I have a 100 titles that I'll watch over and over, I can't even name one of those made in this century. Pitiful.



    Even worse - it looks like I've got plenty of company, from the rest of your lists.

  13. #13
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    name='ChristineCB']One of the reasons I hate threads like this is because I end up seeing how few "modern" movies make my Favorites lists, including a "Watch Over & Over" list. If I have a 100 titles that I'll watch over and over, I can't even name one of those made in this century. Pitiful.



    Even worse - it looks like I've got plenty of company, from the rest of your lists.


    You've jogged my memory,well done!

    Forgot to put on my list DAWN OF THE DEAD remake.

    I can almost hear the gasps up and down the country,but bear with me.I love the original and was ready to rip into this one with a vengeance but couldn't because being a lover of post apocalyptic films,books and EVEN TV,i just kept thinking just suppose.....and now i can't do without my regular fix of it!



    So apart from this i'm in complete agreement,until someone else jogs my terrible,er,um.....

  14. #14
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    Brazil (1985)

    Oh Mr Porter (1937)

    Passport to Pimlico (1948)

    A Matter of Life and Death (1946)

    Goodbye Lenin (2003)

    Quatermass and the Pit (1967)

    Black Narcissus (1947)

    Night of the Demon (1957)

    Ballad of Cable Hogue (1970)

    The Captive Heart (1946)

    Bone (1972)

    Steptoe and Son Ride Again (1973)

    They Live (1988)

    Hell Drivers (1957)

    Lifeboat (1944)

    The Strawberry Statement (1970)

    High Hopes (1988)

    Carry On At Your Convenience (1971)

    Whistle Down the Wind (1961)

    Dawn of the Dead (1985)

    Went the Day Well? (1942)

  15. #15
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    Walkabout

    The Snow Goose

    The Railway Children

    AMOLAD

    A Canterbury Tale

    Went the Day Well?

    BLIMP

  16. #16
    Senior Member Country: UK bobsterkent's Avatar
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    I can watch the following at any time:



    any Ealing comedy

    Prime of Miss Jean Brodie

    Brief Encounter

    The Italian Job

  17. #17
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    A couple I missed, The Third Man watched it more times than I can remember, and Fargo

  18. #18
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    The Battle of Britain

    The Dambusters

    The Ladykillers (Ealing version)

    The Happiest Days Of Your Life

    Dead of Night

    Jaws

    Ronin

    Con Air

    The Godfather Trilogy

    Lawrence of Arabia

    The Fugitive (Harrison Ford)

    Deadly Pursuit

    Schindler's List

    Dances With Wolves

    The Searchers

    ET

    Gladiator

    The Bond films

    Das Boot

    In The Line of Fire

    Unforgiven

    Dirty Harry

    Zulu

    The Italian Job (Michael Caine)

    Two Way Stretch

    The Wrong Arm of The Law

    The Lethal Weapon films

    Die Hard films.....

    The Third man

    Fail Safe (Henry Fonda)

    The Longest Day

    Tora Tora Tora

    Saving Private Ryan

    Indiana Jones trilogy

    Carry on films of the sixties

    Day of The Jackal

    Bridge On The River Kwai

    The Shawshank Redemption

    Green For Danger

    The Green Mile

    My Cousin Vinny (mainly for the acting talents of Fred Gwynne and Marisa Tomei )

    They were in no particular order and I am sure I will think of some more.

    Ta Ta

    Marky B

  19. #19
    Senior Member Country: England
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    In no particular order (apart from the first)



    Zulu

    The Italian Job

    The Dam Busters

    The Battle of Britain

    The Ladykillers

    Kind Hearts and Coronets

    A Canterbury Tale

    Quatermass and the Pit

    The Searchers

    The Alamo (John Wayne)

    The Third Man

    Tora Tora Tora

    A Bridge Too Far

    Far From the Madding Crowd

    Life of Brian



    Not too many new films there, are there!

  20. #20
    mattok
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    Classic film and one I've seen quite a few times. Full of great actors and classic coments.

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