The 10 Greatest Films of All Time

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  • Опубликовано: 2 дек 2024

Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @bhami
    @bhami Год назад +83

    All the comments here are interesting, but nobody bothered to list Moviewise's titles for quick reference!:
    00:00 The Ten Greatest Films of All Time
    00:57 1 The Rules of the Game (Jean Renoir, 1939)
    02:51 2 Sunset Blvd. (Billy Wilder, 1950)
    05:17 3 The Bridge on the River Kwai (David Lean, 1957)
    07:29 4 The Big Country (William Wyler, 1958)
    09:31 5 Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (Mike Nichols, 1966)
    13:20 6 Once Upon a Time in the West (Sergio Leone, 1968)
    15:51 7 A Fish Called Wanda (Charles Crichton, 1988) (script by John Cleese)
    18:48 8 The Cook, the Thief, His Wife & Her Lover (Peter Greenaway, 1989)
    21:08 9 JFK (Oliver Stone, 1991)
    23:08 10 Hamlet (Kenneth Branagh, 1996)
    25:19 Ten Honorable Mentions:
    The Maltese Falcon (John Huston, 1941)
    Les Enfants du Paradis (Marcel Carné, 1945)
    All About Eve (Joseph L. Mankeiwicz, 1950)
    The Quiet Man (John Ford, 1952)
    Madame de... (Max Ophüls, 1953)
    La Dolce Vita (Federico Fellini, 1960)
    Dr. Strangelove (Stanley Kubrick, 1964)
    Chinatown (Roman Polanski, 1974)
    Unforgiven (Clint Eastwood, 1992)
    The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)

  • @edwardgabriel5281
    @edwardgabriel5281 10 месяцев назад +116

    I'm 95 and remember Charlie Chaplin in a silent film. Throughout my life I loved and enjoyed the cinema. In these later years, I have been able to view great productions I missed earlier in life. As a common average person, I am grateful to be the recipient of the talent of the great ones. That said, I do wish the great ones I admired so much (they are all dead, now) can stand tall before our Intelligent Creator. My experience, in my lifetime, tells me that too many will not. Time passes so quickly.

    • @lnl3237
      @lnl3237 8 месяцев назад +15

      You don't sound like a common average person at all. What are your favorite films? You were born the same year as the incomparable Audrey Hepburn. Eva Marie Saint will be 100 on July 4th!

    • @edwardgabriel5281
      @edwardgabriel5281 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@lnl3237 I was born in 1928, a bookkeeper turned farmer at age 50. I have to give email credit because it gave me a chance to see what comes out of my mouth, reconsider it, and make the changes that werre usually necessary. It has only been in this later part of my life that I have had the time to sit back and appreciate the talent like that of Audrey Hepburn and Eva Marie Saint. Acting is an art and many have attained perfection in that field and many other art forms. The beauty of life is that although we may have no talent at all, it doesn't stop us from enjoying the fruits of others. My life has been "the movies". Favorites - "Gone with the Wind" and "The Ten Commandments". My favorite musical group is the Tabernacle Choir at Temple Square.

    • @JesusMagicPanties
      @JesusMagicPanties 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@lnl3237 You sound as "subtle" as if saying: " Oh my gosh , you're so jurassic quirk! Could you sing and dance for me right now?"

    • @lubormrazek5545
      @lubormrazek5545 3 месяца назад +1

      holy moly, you, sir, can write

    • @haterforidiots4760
      @haterforidiots4760 3 месяца назад

      Where are you Sir now?

  • @LolaLaRue-sq6jm
    @LolaLaRue-sq6jm 11 месяцев назад +98

    Humphrey Bogart is probably the actor who appeared in the most classic films of any other.
    This list is STAGGERING:
    The Maltese Falcon. High Sierra. Sahara. Sabrina. The Caine Mutiny. The African Queen. In a Lonely Place. Key Largo. Dark Victory. The Treasure of the Sierra Madre.
    AND CASABLANCA!

    • @snatchhog
      @snatchhog 11 месяцев назад +11

      The Big Sleep. To Have and Have Not.
      The Barefoot Contessa. Beat the Devil...

    • @ferulebezel
      @ferulebezel 11 месяцев назад +2

      Ward Bond was in way more.

    • @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633
      @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633 10 месяцев назад +5

      Yeah, but he always played the same character. It never varied. He was so lucky.

    • @xav9258
      @xav9258 10 месяцев назад +3

      Brando and Jimmy Stewart both have three each in AFI's top 30 films. Incidentally, the absolutely amazing Casablanca is in my fave-ever top ten movies, but so is The Godfather😊

    • @johnnyb4187
      @johnnyb4187 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@snatchhog I've seen 'the big sleep' far more than 'casablanca'. 'Beat the Devil', kind of underrated but it's a favorite such a talented cast.

  • @delosreyesgino
    @delosreyesgino Год назад +42

    Akira Kurosawa didn't even sniff the Top 10? As good as A Fish Called Wanda is, is it really better than Rashomon, Ran, High and Low and Seven Samurai?

  • @DrShreck65
    @DrShreck65 Год назад +42

    10: Singin' In The Rain (1952)
    9: Fellini's 8 and a Half (1963)
    8: Sunrise (1927)
    7: Persona (1966)
    6: The Searchers (1956)
    5: His Girl Friday (1940)
    4: The Godfather Part II (1974)
    3: La Grande Illusion (1937)
    2: Hold Back The Dawn (1941)
    1: Rear Window (1953)
    Or, alternatively:
    10: Bicycle Thieves (1948)
    9: Tokyo Story (1953)
    8: The General (1926)
    7: Double Indemnity (1945)
    6: In The Mood For Love (2000)
    5: Love Me Tonight (1932)
    4: Only Angels Have Wings (1939)
    3: Psycho (1960)
    2: It's A Wonderful Life (1946)
    1: L' Atalante (1933)

    • @Moviewise
      @Moviewise  Год назад +2

      Hold Back the Dawn! Now there’s an underrated Billy Wilder script with a great Charles Boyer character

    • @DrShreck65
      @DrShreck65 Год назад +3

      @@Moviewise Indeed! Thank you and congratulations on creating such a highly individual 10 best list that eschews convention and celebrates NARRATIVE cinema

    • @Mortizul
      @Mortizul Год назад

      Jeanne Deilman 23 Commerce Quay 1080 Brussels?

    • @paulvoorhies8821
      @paulvoorhies8821 Год назад +2

      Love Rear Window. I’ve always thought that Double Indemnity was highly overrated.

    • @paulvoorhies8821
      @paulvoorhies8821 Год назад +1

      Virginia Wolf is a brilliant film.

  • @robinspiers2025
    @robinspiers2025 Год назад +141

    Because yesterday was WWII Memorial Day in the Netherlands, a local theater had a showing of Bridge on the River Kwai. If it weren’t for your video I probably would have ignored it, but I’m so glad that I decided to go with a friend. It was an absolute blast, brilliant film.

    • @Moviewise
      @Moviewise  Год назад +16

      I'm very glad to hear! I myself have never watched the film in a theater, it must have been a blast!

    • @libradragon
      @libradragon Год назад +8

      It is one of my favorite movies. It was also a surprising gem, far better than I thought beforehand.

    • @geoffhoutman1557
      @geoffhoutman1557 Год назад +1

      Do they ever play SOLDIER OF ORANGE at those things?

    • @poetcomic1
      @poetcomic1 Год назад +2

      I just watched a double feature of Soldier of Orange and The Black Book.

    • @brerrabbit9585
      @brerrabbit9585 11 месяцев назад +3

      The ONLY way to watch 'Bridge on the River Kwai'. I was fortunate enough to see it on a big screen at an old school 'movie palace' a few years ago. Needless to say, I also have the video and the DVD..@@Moviewise

  • @Shah-of-the-Shinebox
    @Shah-of-the-Shinebox Год назад +74

    Pretty solid list dude. Here's mine:
    1. The Godfather
    2. The Godfather Part II
    3. Lawrence of Arabia
    4. There Will Be Blood
    5. Ran
    6. City Lights
    7. La Dolce Vita
    8. Sunrise
    9. GoodFellas
    10. The Wild Bunch

    • @bobblowhard8823
      @bobblowhard8823 Год назад +3

      With the exception of "Lawrence of Arabia" and "La Dolce Vita", the other movies on your list are absolutely horrible.

    • @Shah-of-the-Shinebox
      @Shah-of-the-Shinebox Год назад +7

      @@bobblowhard8823 that's your opinion. To each their own.

    • @daroblackheart383
      @daroblackheart383 Год назад +22

      @@bobblowhard8823 The Godfather, Ran, Sunrise, Goodfellas and The Wild Bunch are horrible movies? Lame joke.

    • @blackmore4
      @blackmore4 Год назад +3

      @@bobblowhard8823 Haha, that's a bit extreme. I don't like some of them either but "horrible"?!

    • @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633
      @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633 10 месяцев назад +1

      Excellent choice, Ran (Kurosawa). Almost every one of Kurosawa's films is a masterpiece, but Ran might be the best.

  • @DavyDredd14
    @DavyDredd14 Год назад +11

    My 10 Greatest Films of All Time :
    A Streetcar Named Desire (1951) The Good, The Bad & The Ugly (1966)
    The Searchers (1956) Rocky (1976)
    Psycho (1960) The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
    8½ (1963) Blade Runner (1982)
    Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf (1966) GoodFellas (1990)

  • @MikeydeLaraCovers
    @MikeydeLaraCovers Год назад +12

    The MOST interesting best movie list I’ve seen in forever. So great. And funny. And clearly articulated. So good!

  • @JohnJohnson-du7vc
    @JohnJohnson-du7vc Год назад +19

    I detect a touch of the melodramaphile. Pleasantly surprised to see The Big Country. Thanks for the list, good to know where you're coming from!

    • @feedingravens
      @feedingravens 10 месяцев назад +3

      I loved the character of Gregory Peck in "The Big Country". He did not let himself be challenged like a small boy. When he saw a challenge, he proved it to himself.

      Like with the horse they wanted to get him on. Then in the night, he rode the horse, got thrown off again and again, until his determination prevailed over the will of the horse.

      It requires character and confidence to NOT let yourself be manipulated, stand to how you are.

  • @bloggystyle
    @bloggystyle Год назад +28

    One of the best courses I ever took in college was genres and modes of comedy. We began with the Greeks-Lysistrata, examined the comic archetype of the weak character who through wit and flexibility bests the stronger rigid adversary. We went on to Ben Jonson, Shakespeare (focus on Falstaff), Moliere. The beauty of the course was how beautifully “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Wolf”, a play I would not have thought to be a comedy, is in fact a classic one.

    • @Moviewise
      @Moviewise  Год назад +5

      Sounds fascinating! Do you remember if there was a reference book?

    • @joemarshall4226
      @joemarshall4226 9 месяцев назад +4

      In college, I played Sganarelle (the lead character) in Moliere's The Doctor In spite of Himself. It's a hilarious play about the phoniness of doctors. I was seen and asked to audition for a local non-union film that was being produced. It was called Skeleton Key, and I got the lead! It took more than a year to film (funding ran out half way through), but it was shown on local prime time tv (buffalo, NY), and the lead girl and I were on the cover of tv guide locally. I had my chance to go Holly wood, but passed it up, and wound up teaching middle school and being a father of four boys, one of whom is a professional performer. Seven years after we started making the film, kids came into school, swearing that they had seen me on tv the night before. turns out the film was being shown on the Lifetime Network. I still sing with a band, and do comedy songs of my own making as a folk act...once you have ti in your blood, you have to keep going.

  • @cheerios-9464
    @cheerios-9464 Год назад +28

    Mine Are
    1. Twin Peaks: FWWM
    2. Mulholland Dr.
    3. 2001: A Space Odyssey
    4. Moneyball
    5. i'm thinking of ending things
    6. Suspiria
    7. All That Jazz
    8. Barry Lyndon
    9. Dr. Strangelove
    10. Vertigo

    • @Moviewise
      @Moviewise  Год назад +6

      Someone enjoys a Puzzle! Plus... Suspiria ❤️❤️

    • @hvitekristesdod
      @hvitekristesdod Год назад +1

      Very nice

    • @kulanchandrasekaran4462
      @kulanchandrasekaran4462 9 месяцев назад

      Ah … thanks for mentioning Mulholland Drive … a movie so surreal it almost seems real.
      The rest of your choices are great too.
      I think you should make a video.

    • @earlybird3668
      @earlybird3668 5 месяцев назад

      Nice list. I'm Thinking of Ending Things maybe one of the most depressing movies of all time.

    • @cheerios-9464
      @cheerios-9464 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@earlybird3668 this was my list a year ago lol. crazy how much it’s changed. thank you for the comment so i could see!

  • @rpg7287
    @rpg7287 Год назад +57

    For what it’s worth, here’s my top ten, in chronological order:
    1. Citizen Kane
    2. Casablanca
    3. The Third Man
    4. The Searchers
    5. Psycho
    6. Lawrence of Arabia
    7. 2001: A Space Odyssey
    8. Apocalypse Now
    9. The Shawshank Redemption
    10. No Country for Old Men

    • @AbrasiousProductions
      @AbrasiousProductions Год назад +1

      embarrassing to admit but I've only seen 2 out of these 10 selections

    • @cheerios-9464
      @cheerios-9464 Год назад +6

      @@AbrasiousProductions nothing wrong with that. it takes alotta time

    • @AbrasiousProductions
      @AbrasiousProductions Год назад

      plus I have to save them for reviews

    • @rpg7287
      @rpg7287 Год назад +2

      @@AbrasiousProductions well, you have a lot to look forward to. 👍🏻

    • @Moviewise
      @Moviewise  Год назад

      👌👌

  • @melanie62954
    @melanie62954 Год назад +17

    I'm new to this channel, so here's my list fwiw:
    1. Battleship Potemkin (1925)
    2. Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans (1927)
    3. La Passion de Jeanne d'Arc (1928)
    4. M (1931)
    5. Casablanca (1942)
    6. Children of Paradise (1945)
    7. The Third Man (1949)
    8. All About Eve (1950)
    9. High Noon (1952)
    10. Tokyo Story (1953)
    Aw, heck. I made it through fewer than 30 years. I guess this list is going to 20.
    11. Rear Window (1954)
    12. Seven Samurai (1954)
    13. The 400 Blows (1959)
    14. The Apartment (1960)
    15. Lawrence of Arabia (1962)
    16. The Leopard (1963)
    17. Persona (1966)
    18. The Godfather (1972)
    19. Aguirre: The Wrath of God (1972)
    20. The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie (1972)
    Guess I have to stop here and not include Scorsese, Tarkovsky, Kubrick, Wenders, Eastwood, Spielberg, Wong Kar-wai, Malick, Lynch, Kiarostami, Farhadi, etc. Boo.

    • @boboloko
      @boboloko Год назад +1

      Aguirre Wrath of God is my number 1

    • @israelthacker8568
      @israelthacker8568 Год назад +3

      Great list! Love seeing The Third Man on there. Fantastic film.

    • @mesolithicman164
      @mesolithicman164 Год назад +1

      I like this list. Can I recommend Pickpocket and A Man Escaped?

    • @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633
      @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633 10 месяцев назад +1

      Great list.

    • @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633
      @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633 8 месяцев назад +1

      You have great taste. I watched M last night. I was floored. What a great film! Peter Lorre was superb as the child killer.

  • @jlovebirch
    @jlovebirch Год назад +21

    I'd add Casablanca, Citizen Kane, Beauty and the Beast (1946), Orpheus (1949), Wizard of Oz, Singing in the Rain, et al.

    • @karllieck9064
      @karllieck9064 Год назад +2

      The Last Emperor and Amedeus.

    • @gtf5392
      @gtf5392 11 месяцев назад +1

      I remember watching La Belle et Le Bete in French class and it absolutely blew me away. It’s in my top 15.

    • @dareese6778
      @dareese6778 11 месяцев назад

      The 2versions i've seen of "Beauty ..." were fantastic.

    • @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633
      @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633 10 месяцев назад

      I'd add Black Orpheus. Wizard of Oz terrified me as a child. I still consider it the scariest movie I've ever seen.

    • @zb7293
      @zb7293 10 месяцев назад

      Gone with wind

  • @jslasher1
    @jslasher1 11 месяцев назад +40

    It all comes down to personal preferences, a matter of choice. Some great films here, particularly "Lawrence of Arabia", "Citizen Kane", "Vertigo".

    • @oppothumbs1
      @oppothumbs1 5 месяцев назад +4

      Many of his films are epics for the pretentious. I like few but 1 or 2 of his films make my top 50. Most would be in my 50- 200 list though I hated Lawrence of Arabia. My list is for those who like suspense. Almost Famous The Talented Mr. Ripley The Silence of the Lambs Rear Window L.A. Confidential 12 Angry Men The Bourne movies The Last Picture Show. Training Day North by Northwest Rounders Goodfellas 12 Angry Men 12 Monkeys The Naked Gun The Dead Zone Day of the Jackal ( 1973) Zodiac Shane The Graduate
      No Way Out (Cosner) Five Easy Pieces Dr. Strangelove Prisoners Drive Marathon Man

  • @Seth_M-T
    @Seth_M-T Год назад +20

    Here are mine, in order of release date:
    Rear Window (1954)
    2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)
    The Godfather (1972)
    Dog Day Afternoon (1975)
    Raging Bull (1980)
    Fargo (1996)
    The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001)
    Mulholland Drive (2001)
    There Will Be Blood (2007)
    Parasite (2019)

    • @chriskarley384
      @chriskarley384 11 месяцев назад

      Great movies!! Parasite was so entertaining from start to finish!! I tell everyone to see this film!!!

    • @Steve-gx9ot
      @Steve-gx9ot 11 месяцев назад +2

      The only one of your list is 2001

    • @sg-vp2qg
      @sg-vp2qg 11 месяцев назад +2

      Fargo, yes

    • @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633
      @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633 10 месяцев назад

      Oh yes! The Lord of the Rings. I forgot about it.

  • @brianmacgabhann5630
    @brianmacgabhann5630 Год назад +29

    I love The Big Country for it's subtlety. My absolute favourite scene is when Charlton Heston reluctantly follows the Major into Blanco Canyon. The Major never looks behind him as Heston rides up; he's going on whether alone or not. But Heston glances behind when the rest of the crew come galloping up, and then glances at the Major; who is still looking rigidly ahead, now with a wry smile. You can see Heston thinking: "There'll be no fucking living with him now"!

    • @Moviewise
      @Moviewise  Год назад +12

      That scene is perfect! I’m gonna make a video about The Big Country next month and I’ll talk about that scene and how it speaks so much about both characters.

    • @Rhubba
      @Rhubba Год назад +9

      Every moment Burl Ives is on screen is mesmerising. A villain? Perhaps...a man finally realising he's paying the price for being a bad influence on his sons but who has more honesty and integrity than the supposed pillar of the community. My goodness, everyone brings their A game to this movie. Chuck Connor's best bit of acting and the duel is my absolute favourite part...closely followed by the Major riding alone and Steve and the other cow hands riding up to join him.

    • @ams4374
      @ams4374 11 месяцев назад +5

      A chronically under appreciated epic. Outstanding cast, acting, writing, filming and score.

    • @LolaLaRue-sq6jm
      @LolaLaRue-sq6jm 11 месяцев назад +6

      I've always thought this was an underrated masterpiece.

    • @susanellis8067
      @susanellis8067 9 месяцев назад +2

      Burl Ives was amazing, when he gate crashed the party

  • @FDR_progressive_liberal
    @FDR_progressive_liberal 11 месяцев назад +8

    I would include "The Passion of Joan of Arc" in here. I've never seen another movie filmed entirely in closeup. I was immersed and mesmerized.

  • @RaysDad
    @RaysDad Год назад +14

    Here's my list with release dates:
    Metropolis (1927)
    King Kong (1933)
    The Wizard of Oz (1939)
    Moby Dick (1956)
    Wild Strawberries (1957)
    Les Parapluies de Cherbourg (1964)
    The Battle of Algiers (1966)
    Solaris (1972)
    Andrei Rublev (1973)
    The Deer Hunter (1978)
    Paris, Texas (1984)

    • @TheThaggs
      @TheThaggs 11 месяцев назад +2

      Harry Dean Stanton and a soundtrack by Ry Cooder, what's not to love.

    • @RaysDad
      @RaysDad 11 месяцев назад

      @@TheThaggs Even the toughest guys in the audience left the theater crying!

    • @katehamilton7240
      @katehamilton7240 8 месяцев назад +1

      The Deer Hunter, yes! And the Wizard of Oz

    • @philipfritz-f8x
      @philipfritz-f8x 28 дней назад

      My only argument with Moby Dick is John Hustin should have directed himself as Ahab. Am I right?

    • @RaysDad
      @RaysDad 28 дней назад

      @@philipfritz-f8x John Houston was a great actor/director (The Treasure of Sierra Madre almost made my Top 10). But it would be hard to beat Gregory Peck as Ahab. He overacted so well!

  • @ead630
    @ead630 Год назад +21

    For me:
    - The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938)
    - Gone With the Wind (1939)
    - The Thief of Bagdad (1940)
    - Citizen Kane (1941)
    - Seven Samurai (1954)
    - The Ten Commandments (1956)
    - Barry Lyndon (1975)
    - Goodfellas (1990)
    - Hoop Dreams (1994)
    - Spider-Man 2 (2004)

    • @gtf5392
      @gtf5392 11 месяцев назад +2

      Hoop Dreams is in my top 15.

    • @kulanchandrasekaran4462
      @kulanchandrasekaran4462 9 месяцев назад +2

      Thanks … I was going through comment after comment to see if anybody mentioned Barry Lyndon.
      So many layers of human emotions, ambitions and betrayals, it needs to be watched over and over again for its true depths to be fathomed.

    • @tobiasmeinecke6144
      @tobiasmeinecke6144 6 месяцев назад +1

      I'm with you on '4,5 and 7. Whenever there is a chance to see Barry Lyndon on the big screen I go and watch it.

    • @movieshistory768
      @movieshistory768 6 месяцев назад

      IF there is Goodfellas in your list and not The godfather then you have no brain my friend.

    • @movieshistory768
      @movieshistory768 6 месяцев назад +1

      Someone who put spider man movie in a top 10 has zero knowledge on Cinema

  • @johnnzboy
    @johnnzboy Год назад +25

    I've watched "The Cook, The Thief, His Wife And Her Lover numerous times but never noticed in those gorgeous tableaux that all four of them are in the shot. Thank you for increasing my appreciation of that film even more. A superlative list and a peerless paean to cinematic excellence.

    • @johnnzboy
      @johnnzboy Год назад

      OMG and the most exquisitely perfect line from the Blackadder time-travel special at the end, sublime.

    • @TheRealFamespear
      @TheRealFamespear 11 месяцев назад

      Wow! I could only sit through it once and that was brutal. Terrible film! 😳

    • @tamsinthai
      @tamsinthai 4 месяца назад

      As we were leaving the theater, an acquaintance remarked 'you look just like her' Helen Mirren. Having said that, I've also been compared to Glenn Close in Fatal Attraction and Elizabeth Montgomery in Bewitched haha.

  • @drankin_barry6005
    @drankin_barry6005 Год назад +4

    Great selections. There’s a few on here I plan on viewing again. Thank you kindly for your insight!

  • @timjansen7694
    @timjansen7694 11 месяцев назад +2

    It looks to me like a case of overthinking the video's title. I would argue that the #1 film of all time is not obvious because when it emotionally moved each of us for the first time, (and I do mean _each of us_ ) we were children. That film would be _The Wizard of Oz_ . Once you get by that film, it gets tricky. _E.T._ ? _West Side Story_ ? _Titanic_ ?

  • @51Dss
    @51Dss 11 месяцев назад +10

    You put the best, greatest, most perfect movie of all time in the honorable mentions - Dr Strangelove...or how I learned to stop worrying and love the bomb.. This move had everything. Satirical humor, great acting, great directing, great writing, great character development, great special effects, great script and dialog, bawdy humor, gallows humor, great filmography, amazing use of Black and White, Great score, great costumes...I dunno; maybe I love this movie because I'm a baby boomer who grew up during the height of the cold war and I remember events like JFK, MLK, RFK, Bay of Pigs, Cuban Missile Crisis, Sputnik, Frances Gary Powers, Race riots, Kent State, Oswald, Jack Ruby, Marilyn Monroe, Backyard bomb shelters, Vietnam, Napalm, Mai Lai, Tet...one fearful and worrisome event after another all while living under a constant fear of global nuclear annihilation. The storyline of Dr Strangelove was more than merely a plausible what if. Maybe thats why I always considered it to be the greatest film of all time..

    • @steveperry1344
      @steveperry1344 10 месяцев назад

      a lot of good reasons but you left out slim pickens.

  • @dandevore8703
    @dandevore8703 Год назад +19

    Love, love, love this! Thank you for including The Big Country... the most overlooked great western!

  • @dukecraig2402
    @dukecraig2402 Год назад +54

    Seriously, JFK instead of Lawrence Of Arabia?

    • @jmdi2703
      @jmdi2703 4 месяца назад +3

      Yes. JFK better then racist, historical liar film Lawrence of Arabia.
      I'm not saying is bad film. Yeah very good cinematoghrapy but JFK have very good cinematography too.

    • @spanishpeaches2930
      @spanishpeaches2930 4 месяца назад +15

      ​@@jmdi2703....Ahh...the old racist trope of the latter day revisionist. Lawrence absolutely pi55es on JFK in ever way. The fact that it is Spielberg's favourite film says a lot about its quality.

    • @jmdi2703
      @jmdi2703 4 месяца назад +2

      @@spanishpeaches2930 JFK is Tarantino's favorite film says a lot of its quality. :)

    • @paulecrosby2006
      @paulecrosby2006 4 месяца назад

      Really ?

    • @GregJohnson-bm8mz
      @GregJohnson-bm8mz 4 месяца назад

      WHAT ABOUT MAMCHIRIAN CANIDANT FOR THE A BETTER POLITICAL THRILLER THAN JFK. BY THR WAY, I WAS AN EXTRA IN JFK.

  • @brerrabbit9585
    @brerrabbit9585 11 месяцев назад +6

    How can 'North by Northwest' and/or 'Psycho' NOT be on this list??

  • @51Dss
    @51Dss Год назад +4

    Dr Strangelove is the best movie ever made - It has the very best of everything: Writing, Directing, Casting, Acting, Script writing, Costume design, Set design, Cinematography, Film media (Black and White), Every role was perfectly cast and every actor played his/her part to perfection. Peter Sellers, Slim Pickens, George C Scott, Sterling Hayden, Keenyn Wynn...
    Although I beileve Dr Strangelove stands the test of time it is possible that in order to truly appreciate this film the viewer would have had do have lived during the cold war.
    I do not know what awards this movie was granted but it could have been nominated and won as best comedy, best drama, best writing, directing...

    • @peterturner6497
      @peterturner6497 11 месяцев назад

      Weirdest movie ever made . Actually off the fucking planet crazy. Stanley Kubrick at his deplorable worst. Only David Lynch could produce more despicable drivel. Unwatchable.

    • @dennismoore1116
      @dennismoore1116 10 месяцев назад

      What poor taste you have. It is Kubrick's masterpiece if you ask me and he has made several excellent movies. Or maybe you didn't get it because you did need to live during the cold war era. @@peterturner6497

    • @katehamilton7240
      @katehamilton7240 8 месяцев назад

      then you also loathe eraserhead? @@peterturner6497

  • @essaywhu
    @essaywhu Год назад +6

    Not really organized enough to come up with a real list. So here’s 10 films I have been thinking about a lot lately in no particular order:
    The Young Girls of Rochefort
    Swept Away
    Marnie
    Casablanca
    Diabolique
    Modern Times
    Breaker Morant
    Blue Velvet
    Diamonds Are Forever
    Fanny and Alexander
    Swept Away was the last time I was blown away by a film. I don’t think I’ll ever stop thinking about it. The film and Lina Wertmuller deserve to be more well-known.

    • @sclogse1
      @sclogse1 Год назад +2

      How about her other film, Seven Beauties?

    • @JohnDough-yr2zt
      @JohnDough-yr2zt 10 месяцев назад +1

      Breaker Morant is a perfect film.

    • @gumbycat5226
      @gumbycat5226 3 месяца назад +1

      To me the script is everything and Diamonds are Forever has one of the wittiest scripts I have ever had the pleasure of knowing. Me and my friends, we watch it regularly and Regularly pre-empt all the corny lines, all the smutty jokes etc. It is a sheer delight. Of course it's important to be word-perfect.
      I have 3 movie posters - all huge. A) Les Demoiselles de Rochefort (better condition than the one in the Musée Cinématique in Paris), B) Casino Royale (you know which one - mine's a pristine French one C) "The Baby" - if you need to know, you don't know.
      When I bought my Baby in Paris, I asked, Do you have a poster of "The Baby" and he pulled it out. What's the date of the poster? The shop owner answered, 1971. I knew I was in safe hands.

    • @aniveed8005
      @aniveed8005 Месяц назад +1

      Blue Velvet is the absolutely scariest film I have ever watched. Terrifying. Dennis Hopper was totally demented.

  • @andrewpereira9271
    @andrewpereira9271 Год назад +21

    Thanks for including "Who's Afraid of VW" . . . that movie just doesn't seem to get the credit it's due. Glengarry Glen Ross is another one in which the playwright's dialogue absolutely sparkles, especially coming from such great actors in both movies.

  • @mckeldin1961
    @mckeldin1961 Год назад +4

    Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans
    The Rules of the Game
    His Girl Friday
    The Magnificent Ambersons
    Late Spring
    A Star Is Born (1954, George Cukor)
    Vertigo
    Yojimbo
    Au hasard Balthazar
    Nashville

  • @askarsfan2011
    @askarsfan2011 Год назад +23

    I just watched Sunset Blvd on your recommendation. Hollywood just doesn't make movies like that anymore. Of course, people don't think, talk, or live like that anymore. Today a movie like this would have been slammed with accusations of exploiting mental illness for entertainment. And the accusers wouldn't get the movie at all. They would only care about checking off an offense box.

    • @galinazatuchny3833
      @galinazatuchny3833 11 месяцев назад +2

      My favorite film and citizen Kane

    • @maddiekits
      @maddiekits 5 месяцев назад +2

      Meh Sunset Blvd is just a bit overated by being on the list of baby's first classic movies. There's some movies of the era that approach mental illness better as well tbf.
      But in all seriousness I don't think your characterization is accurate at all. Sunset blvd is relatively palatable compared to some of the garbage media people actually get offended by regularly

  • @numbersix8919
    @numbersix8919 Месяц назад +2

    Wow, man, you included _The Big Country_ ! Good on ya mate!

  • @str.77
    @str.77 11 месяцев назад +3

    "this is what the artform can achieve when you're totally unrestrained by ethics" would be more fitting for JFK

  • @andydufresnefromshawshank5866
    @andydufresnefromshawshank5866 Год назад +6

    From 10th greatest to greatest
    10. The Shawshank Redemption
    9. Blade Runner
    8. Terminator 2 & Aliens
    7. The Thing
    6. The Godfather Part 2
    5. Mulholland Drive
    4. Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark
    3. Lord of the Rings The Return of the King
    2. Schindler’s List
    1. Star Wars A New Hope

    • @KRhetor
      @KRhetor Год назад +1

      Try watching something made before you were born.

    • @andydufresnefromshawshank5866
      @andydufresnefromshawshank5866 Год назад +1

      @@KRhetor 8/10 of these are before I was born

    • @andydufresnefromshawshank5866
      @andydufresnefromshawshank5866 Год назад

      @@DanLyndon hello bot

    • @relicofgold
      @relicofgold Год назад +1

      I think only LOTR is not an American film. There's a whole world that creates cinema, not just the USA.

    • @andydufresnefromshawshank5866
      @andydufresnefromshawshank5866 Год назад +3

      @@relicofgold oh god you’re one of those losers. “Um actually there are other movies out there, so so… your list is wrong 🤓”These are my favorites, I know that theirs others out there, deal that it’s my opinion

  • @James7977-ge3oi
    @James7977-ge3oi Год назад +15

    Godfather I; Godfather II; The Quiet Man; Good Fellas; The Searchers; Apollo 13; Casablanca; A Few Good Men; Shawshank Redemption; The Best Years of Our Lives;

    • @ahmedalsaaidi3714
      @ahmedalsaaidi3714 Год назад +7

      Maybe lawrence of arabia should be there somewhere.

    • @fluorosco
      @fluorosco Год назад +3

      Thats a Great list.

    • @justme-ti1rh
      @justme-ti1rh 11 месяцев назад +1

      Your list is terrible. Unless you need to fall asleep.

    • @AnuAnoop07
      @AnuAnoop07 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@justme-ti1rh All right show me your top tier movie list

    • @moirapettifr7127
      @moirapettifr7127 10 месяцев назад

      Anything by Alfred Hitchcock. He knew how to create the perfect movie.

  • @RobertDeMartin
    @RobertDeMartin 2 месяца назад +1

    I offer this: 'Splendor In The Grass' featuring Natalie Wood and a new leading actor, Shirley McClaine's brother, Warren Beatty. The supporting cast was sensational led by Pat Hingle.
    A story of a love between two young people who were unsure of how to deal with all the pro's and con's of a close relationship and without the approval of their parents. Many ebbs and flows and the movie can relate even to today's young people. A classic movie particularly for all young people to watch, messages which vary and touch everyone's senses to such a degree of uncertainty it leaves plenty of room for a viewer to come away with mixed emotions but with an understanding that lingering in a pool of doubt is not the way to face life.
    And, may I add, Natalie Wood was marvelous and this was her finest performance.

  • @DorimantHeathen
    @DorimantHeathen Год назад +31

    I'm surprised you included only as memorable mention what I thought was a favourite of yours, an rightfully so: "All about Eve", perfect screenplay perfectly delivered by perfect cast.

    • @2vintage68
      @2vintage68 10 месяцев назад

      Truly one of the greatest films ever made.

    • @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633
      @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633 10 месяцев назад

      @@2vintage68 Why?

    • @wobkgs
      @wobkgs 10 месяцев назад

      The only film in Oscar history to receive four female acting nominations @@elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633

  • @craigblack7076
    @craigblack7076 Год назад +2

    Chronologically
    1: Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942)
    2: The Thing (From Another World) (1951)
    3: Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956)
    4: The Music Man (1962)
    5: Knife in the Water (1962)
    6: It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963)
    7: King Kong vs Godzilla (1963)
    8: Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    9: Ed Wood (1994)
    10: Captain America: The First Avenger (2011)

    • @johnnyola8391
      @johnnyola8391 8 месяцев назад

      I love #2, 6, and the VERY underrated Ed Wood

  • @MrGadfly772
    @MrGadfly772 Год назад +7

    A very good list. I'm so glad you included The Big Country it's an unsung classic too often forgotten.

  • @stratocruising
    @stratocruising 10 месяцев назад

    The omission of "Apocalypse Now" and "2001, a Space Odyssey" is puzzling. Since you admit comedies are also movies, I would have included "Airplane". Low-brow? Absolutely.

  • @soapeydudd.93
    @soapeydudd.93 Год назад +12

    My Top Ten is always changing but right now (in chronological order):
    Vertigo (1958)
    The Graduate (1967)
    Rosemary’s Baby (1968)
    Alien (1979)
    Dazed and Confused (1993)
    Scream (1996)
    The Social Network (2010)
    The Wolf of Wall Street (2013)
    Parasite (2019)
    Once Upon A Time In Hollywood (2019)

    • @theimp5901
      @theimp5901 Год назад +5

      You're very young. Parasite? Dazed and Confused ? Scream ? Oh My.

    • @soapeydudd.93
      @soapeydudd.93 Год назад

      @@theimp5901 I’m 21 haha

    • @theimp5901
      @theimp5901 Год назад +1

      @@soapeydudd.93 Well, I can see you have great taste by having , Vertigo, Graduate and Rosmary's Baby , which still scares me . Good job . Hollywood was a terrific movie, very accurate to the time, except for the ending , that I wish was true cause I was here for it. John Lennon was killed in front of the Dakota ( Rosemary's Baby setting ) and I had a friend who lived there in the 60's-70's.There's some history for you my friend. I guess I should watch some new movies :) !!! HAHAHAHA !

    • @Alexander-tj2dn
      @Alexander-tj2dn Год назад +2

      Never seen a non american film?

    • @PastorBateman7
      @PastorBateman7 Год назад

      @@theimp5901 If you don't mind me asking, what are some of your favorite movies that released recently??

  • @simonmcmanus1397
    @simonmcmanus1397 28 дней назад +2

    a brilliant top ten movie selection and from ( you must be German? ) and you have a brilliant sense of humour! As an Englishman I congratulate you whole heartedly.

  • @GregJamesMusic
    @GregJamesMusic Год назад +6

    My favorites, in chronological order:
    1. Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939)
    2. Casablanca (1942)
    3. The Apartment (1960)
    4. A Man for All Seasons (1966)
    5. Henry V (1989)
    6. Goodfellas (1990)
    7. Beauty and the Beast (1991)
    8. The Shawshank Redemption (1994)
    9. Chicago (2002)
    10. Nightcrawler (2014)

  • @CultureDTCTV
    @CultureDTCTV Год назад +3

    Mine would be:
    Ikiru (1952)
    Memories of Murder (2003)
    Persona (1966)
    Yi Yi (2000)
    Fallen Angels (1995)
    2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)
    Taxi Driver (1976)
    Princess Mononoke (1997)
    Everything Everywhere All At Once (2022)
    Stalker (1979)

  • @PhotoTrekr
    @PhotoTrekr Год назад +16

    I've always said that Who's Afraid of Virginia Wolfe is the greatest horror film I've ever seen. I saw it when I was still a child. I couldn't believe people could be that cruel to each other.

    • @USGrant-rr2by
      @USGrant-rr2by Год назад

      Welcome to addiction!

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 Год назад

      What Ever Happened To Baby Jane?
      Far more horrifying.

    • @annebrown7379
      @annebrown7379 Год назад

      I just watche with my 33 yr old daughter and she laughed all the way through it. She loved it and thought it was a hoot

    • @milesflanagan4899
      @milesflanagan4899 11 месяцев назад +1

      I've always seen it as one of the greatest love stories ever.

    • @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633
      @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633 10 месяцев назад

      That's why I don't like it.

  • @bobblowhard8823
    @bobblowhard8823 Год назад +6

    Some of these, I agree with you: "The Bridge on the river Kwai"; "Once Upon The Time In The West"; and "JFK". Some others, not so much. But some not mentioned should absolutely be on this list. "The Graduate"; "The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly"; "Kelly's Heroes"; and "Vertigo" should be here.

    • @Steve-gx9ot
      @Steve-gx9ot 11 месяцев назад

      JFK by stone was so manufa cured. Out of sequence bs

    • @snatchhog
      @snatchhog 11 месяцев назад +2

      Kelly's heroes is a great movie😊

    • @bobblowhard8823
      @bobblowhard8823 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@snatchhog The All-Star cast alone, is worth the price of admission.

    • @scotmandel6699
      @scotmandel6699 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@snatchhogEntertaining but def not top 10 or even top 100. You really need to watch more movies instead of the same ones over and over.

    • @snatchhog
      @snatchhog 10 месяцев назад

      @@scotmandel6699
      Thanks. Appreciate your opinion for what it's worth 👌

  • @shiven513
    @shiven513 Год назад +3

    1. Satantango
    2. Pierrot Le Fou
    3. World of Apu
    4. Fanny and Alexander
    5. Andrei Rublev
    6. Yi Yi
    7. La Dolce Vita
    8. Black Friday (2004)
    9. As I Was Moving Along Occasionally I Saw Brief Glimpses of Beauty
    10. Uncle Boomnee Who Can Recall Past Lives
    Rules of the Game and Solaris would probably preceed after.

    • @totostamopo
      @totostamopo Год назад

      There are some newbies there for me! Exciting!

    • @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633
      @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633 10 месяцев назад +1

      Wow! Unusual. Satantango, Andrei Rublev, World of Apu. Great choices. More adventurous than the usual Hollywood films.

  • @ly776
    @ly776 4 месяца назад +2

    Wonderful presentation of your list. Of course, there is no answer to the ten best movies of all time. But you gave an excellent entertaining of your favorites. All the films you mention are exceptional. Bravo!

  • @allancoote1221
    @allancoote1221 Год назад +6

    Great list, particularly loved the inclusion of Who's Afraid.. and The Cook the Thief.. I'm going to watch The Big Country this weekend and I'll have to check out fish called wanda.
    Here's my 20
    Stalker by Andrei Tarkovsky (1979)
    Life of Oharu by Kenji Mizoguchi (1952)
    Floating Weeds by Yasujiro Ozu (1959)
    The Travelling Players by Theo Angelopolous (1975)
    City of Sadness by Hou Hsiou-Hsen (1989)
    A Brighter Summer Day by Edward Yang (1991)
    War and Peace by Sergei Bondarchuk (1966-67)
    Gate of Hell by Kohei Sugiyama (1953)
    Ninotchka by Ernst Lubitsch (1939)
    The Man who would be King by John Huston (1975)
    Prospero's Books by Peter Greenaway (1991)
    Lawrence of Arabia by David Lean (1962)
    Gone to Earth by Powell and Pressburger (1950)
    Ordet by Carl Theodore Dreyer (1955)
    Lion in Winter by James Goldman (1968)
    Cleopatra by Joseph L Mankiewicz (1963)
    Marriage Italian Style by Vittorio de Sica (1964)
    Werkmiester Harmonies by Bela Tarr (2000)
    Once upon a Time in the West by Sergio Leone (1969)
    Paris, Texas by Wim Wenders (1984)

    • @Moviewise
      @Moviewise  Год назад +3

      Damn that’s a beautiful list!

    • @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633
      @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633 10 месяцев назад

      Wow! Very interesting list, esp. the Werkmeister Harmonies. What a choice! I watched it late one night and at first thought the most boring film ever made, then it grabbed me. Very unusual. Strange you don't include any Kurosawa. Rashumon for example. He has so many masterpieces. He's one of the greatest of directors. I would also include Satyajit Ray.

  • @PastorBateman7
    @PastorBateman7 Год назад +6

    Quite impressive how you managed to do that.
    I mean even if I'm given the luxury of making a top 25 list, I would still struggle immensely since there are dozens of movies I wouldn't be able to exclude.
    Here are some of my favourites:
    The Red Shoes, The Ten Commandments,
    A Streetcar Named Desire, Wild Strawberries, Ben-Hur, Kwaidan, The Conversation, Chinatown, Nashville, The Exorcist, Raging Bull, Amadeus, Goodfellas, Mullholland Drive etc.

    • @kitrik23
      @kitrik23 11 месяцев назад +3

      Amadeus😁

    • @PastorBateman7
      @PastorBateman7 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@kitrik23 Yep

    • @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633
      @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633 10 месяцев назад +1

      Agree with Streetcar Named Desire, yes Wild Strawberries and other Ingmar Bergman films, Chinatown.

    • @PastorBateman7
      @PastorBateman7 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633 Yeah I'd also include films from Kurosawa, Tarkovsky and Satyajit Ray. Some of the greatest directors ever.

  • @liltick102
    @liltick102 Год назад +4

    Excellent and non-cliche list.

  • @IntheClutch75
    @IntheClutch75 6 месяцев назад +2

    I love this list. Not bcuz I agree with, heck, most of your choices, but bcuz I don't. Nor do I see most of them on most top ten movie lists. But like, The Cook, the Theif, His Wife and Her Lover should definitely be considered of that caliber. Brilliant movie.

  • @a.duncan6791
    @a.duncan6791 Год назад +2

    Lists are created using various criteria. For me, does the story resonate, does the film last in my memory, and will I want to see it again (and again, and again, and again). So here goes...Casablanca, Elvira Madigan, The Hairdresser's Husband, Il Postino, Bridge Over River Kwai, Once Around, Babette's Feast, Cinema Paradiso, Bullitt, and Bliss (1985). Of course there are honorable mentions, but the previous 10 always come first to mind.

  • @KeyserSoze1234
    @KeyserSoze1234 Год назад +7

    I guess my list would be more or less like this:
    1. 2001: A Space Odyssey
    2. The Godfather
    3. The Godfather: Part II
    4. Citizen Kane
    5. Casablanca
    6. Andrei Rublev
    7. War and Peace (1966)
    8. Ran
    9. The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
    10. Taxi Driver

    • @Moviewise
      @Moviewise  Год назад +2

      I see you also appreciate a quality epic

  • @chelmsfordroad50
    @chelmsfordroad50 Год назад +2

    It's a good thing this guy (who I suspect may be Arnold Schwarzenegger) isn't into superlatives: in this video we have the greatest performances, greatest dialogue, best shot in the history of cinema, best score in the history of cinema, best beginning, best ending, greatest narration ever etc etc etc.

  • @davidmullineaux6157
    @davidmullineaux6157 11 месяцев назад +5

    A Fish Called Wanda? Stop using drugs.

    • @LolaLaRue-sq6jm
      @LolaLaRue-sq6jm 11 месяцев назад +2

      Yeah, I LOVED that movie but COME ON! One of the top 10 of all time???? Puh-leez!

  • @themillenial28
    @themillenial28 10 месяцев назад

    If only there was a MoviewiseAI, I'd have bombarded it with so many questions. You've completely changed my view as a cinema lover. Thank you so much. Please keep making such videos. Humankind needs it.

  • @wingflanagan
    @wingflanagan Год назад +14

    Glad _Unforgiven_ made it in there somewhere. "Deserve's got nothin' to do with it" may be my favorite line in all of cinema. And it's a film FULL of great lines.

    • @Dennis_Reynolds
      @Dennis_Reynolds 4 месяца назад +1

      “He should have armed himself…if he’s gonna decorate his bar with my friend.”

  • @stephenpenrice1230
    @stephenpenrice1230 10 месяцев назад +2

    Fun fact about The Bridge on the River Kwai: Foreman and Wilson were blacklisted at the time so the screenplay was credited to the novel’s author, Pierre Boulle, who did not speak English. (Ok, maybe it’s not that fun.)

  • @RetakeRemakeAlanSmithee
    @RetakeRemakeAlanSmithee Год назад +5

    I agree with many of these entries on other lists, I would like to add: "The Passion of Joan of Arc" (1927) and "October: Ten Days That Shook The World" (1928)

    • @jeffpatterson1722
      @jeffpatterson1722 Год назад +3

      I was wondering when I would see Passion of Joan of Arc in the comments. :) The backstory of the film itself parallels in many ways Joan's own life as well!

  • @brianterence3211
    @brianterence3211 10 месяцев назад +2

    It's not a movie I'll grant you, but Brideshead Revisited is my favourite onscreen..
    English writers and actors can really excel.
    Casablanca is my American favourite. Scent of a Woman is right up there too.

  • @PhantomFilmAustralia
    @PhantomFilmAustralia Год назад +5

    There's a film made in the last fifteen years which had everything-a great plot, snappy dialogue, character development, gorgeous cinematography, phenomenal acting, and absolutely no fat, making it a perfect film..._"In Bruges".

    • @sg-vp2qg
      @sg-vp2qg 11 месяцев назад

      Yes! One of my favorites.

    • @StretchFletcher
      @StretchFletcher 11 месяцев назад

      100% One of my all-time favorites

  • @kuroshthegreat8073
    @kuroshthegreat8073 Год назад +1

    In no particular order :
    1. 2001 a Space odyssey
    2. Jason and the Argonauts
    3. The Terminator
    4. Sunset Boulevard
    5. Metropolis
    6. All Quiet on the western front (original)
    7. Chinatown
    8. 12 Angry Men
    9. Blue Velvet
    10. Schindler's List

  • @Calcprof
    @Calcprof Год назад +16

    I think that Dr. Strangelove would be the Kubrick I would pick, if not Paths of Glory. There's no Kurosawa here -- but there are so many choices. Maybe Rashomon or Ikiru, or even Seven Samurai for its influence on all subsequent battle scenes. And what about Satyajit Ray, Mizoguchi and Ozu?

    • @czarnick2
      @czarnick2 Год назад +6

      Paths of Glory is brilliant, and that ending scene alway gets me. What an incredible moment

    • @massi6528
      @massi6528 Год назад +1

      Hell yeah!

    • @BarrettSlimmer
      @BarrettSlimmer 11 месяцев назад +3

      2001 A Space Odessey filmed in a process that Astronauts claim is what space is like and a movie that influence all films since on a subject that is difficult to project and a sound track that is perfect.

    • @2vintage68
      @2vintage68 10 месяцев назад +1

      SANJURO s a magnificent film, but then every one of his films are too.

    • @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633
      @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633 10 месяцев назад

      Spot on!

  • @aravis72
    @aravis72 6 месяцев назад +1

    What a great and completely original list. I am so glad to see Branagh’s Hamlet on here. It is both reviled and loved, but I for one find it to be the Citizen Kane of Hamlet’s.

  • @feedingravens
    @feedingravens 10 месяцев назад +7

    I loved the character of Gregory Peck in "The Big Country". He did not let himself be challenged like a small boy. When he saw a challenge, he proved it to himself.
    Like with the horse they wanted to get him on. Then in the night, he rode the horse, got thrown off again and again, until his determination prevailed over the will of the horse.
    It requires character and confidence to NOT let yourself be manipulated, stand to how you are.

    • @stephendavidbailey2743
      @stephendavidbailey2743 9 месяцев назад

      Eisenhower’s favorite film. He watched it four times. There was a tribute Japanese film called Tampopo.

  • @mrca2004
    @mrca2004 Год назад +2

    If you watch Charleton Heston's portrayal of what acting should look like, Hollywood will look like a bunch of high school thespians. And Branaugh, simply amazing example of acting in the complete Hamlet.

  • @tsbm9
    @tsbm9 Год назад +4

    my list : the best years of our lives. wild strawberries. after the rain. brief encounter. zulu. ulzana's raid. the ox bow incident. dr. zhivago. les quatre cents coups. baisés volés. hara kiri.
    my darling clementine. grapes of wrath. the virgin spring. the seventh seal. shane.the apartment.

  • @alk7028
    @alk7028 8 месяцев назад

    Thanks for the great list. My top ten movies of all times is:
    1.A Man with a Movie Camera (1929)
    2.Sunrise (1927)
    3.Mirror (1975)
    4.Mulholland Drive (2001)
    5.Fanny and Alexander (1982)
    6.The General (1926)
    7.Cache (Hidden) (2005)
    8.Throne of Blood (1957)
    9.Last year at Marienbad (1961)
    10.Werkmeister Harmonies (2000)

  • @bijibadness
    @bijibadness Год назад +3

    it was a very canny decision to include for a thumbnail a picture that very few people will recognize in your video showing The 10 Greatest Films of All Time.
    because that just gets people all interested in "Whoa, what's that movie? I haven't seen it. I must watch the list!"
    I'm just saying -- good idea. it worked.

  • @TheAutistWhisperer
    @TheAutistWhisperer 3 месяца назад

    1. Blade Runner
    2. Seven Samurai
    3. Once Upon a Time in the West
    4. Oldboy
    5. The Night of the Hunter
    6. Jason and the Argonauts
    7. Dark City
    8. Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb
    9. One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
    10. Jin-Roh: The Wolf Brigade

  • @tommunyon2874
    @tommunyon2874 Год назад +10

    I remember being in bed while my parents watched the Academy Awards. I found it hard to sleep because the notes of Colonel Bogey's march seemed to play over-and-over, as "The Bridge on the River Kwai" took award after award.

  • @lindenstromberg6859
    @lindenstromberg6859 Год назад +1

    1943 - Casablanca
    1946 - Notorious
    1954 - Rear Window
    1958 - Vertigo
    1962 - Lawrence of Arabia
    1968 - 2001 A Space Odyssey
    1990 - Goodfellas
    1991 - Silence of the Lambs
    2001 - American Psycho
    2017 - Blade Runner 2049
    Hard to nail down, I like a lot of films, but these are the ones on my list that will probably land best with fancy people. You guys probably hate James Cameron, Kevin Smith, Brian De Palma, and Paul Verhoeven.

    • @clintprovance8047
      @clintprovance8047 11 месяцев назад +1

      1 The adventures of Robin Hood 1938 2His girl Friday 1940 The Maltese falcon 1941 The wizard of Oz 1939 Laura 1944 High Noon 1952 Bride of Frankenstein 1935 doctor strangelove 1964 planet of the apes 1968 Blazing Saddles 1973 best actor Gary Cooper 1952 High Noon best actress Vivien Leigh A Streetcar Named Desire1951. best picture Dr Strangelove 1964 best supporting Walter Brennan 1940.The Westerner Best Supporting actress The a Grapes of Wraith Ma Joed

    • @lindenstromberg6859
      @lindenstromberg6859 10 месяцев назад

      @@clintprovance8047 Good list! I tend to like some of the other Mel Brookes films that are less well regarded than Blazing Saddles: High Anxiety and History of the World Pt. 1. His Girl Friday is the Howard Hawks film that many don't think as much about (I think Scarface and The Big Sleep are the ones I hear most about) but His Girl Friday is very rewatchable, probably my favourite Hawks film. And for some strange reason I've never seen Dr. Strangelove, despite loving everything I've ever seen from Kubrick.

  • @gumbycat5226
    @gumbycat5226 Год назад +10

    Your list is quite interesting. I can't believe that you showed a glimpse of Amadeus and didn't rate it. I would also have rated The Good The Bad And The Ugly much higher than Once Upon A Time In America. To me the perfect adapted screenplay is the 1954 version of The Importance Of Being Ernest, and I would definitely have included a musical (Cabaret, perhaps) and a cartoon.

    • @denroy3
      @denroy3 Год назад

      No on Cabaret

    • @counterflow5719
      @counterflow5719 Год назад +2

      Yes on Cabaret

    • @98pointseven
      @98pointseven Год назад +6

      is ANYTHING in the history of movie musicals more endearing than the wide-eyed innocent yet fiercely tragic Liza Minelli doing the Kander & Ebb songs and the Bob Fosse dances as "Ze toast of Mayfair, zat inter-nazi-onal zen-zay-zhun Fraulein Sally Bowles" in Cabaret? It's gotta be one of the top five movie musicals ever. At the very least.

    • @dayceem
      @dayceem 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@98pointseven Liza and Fosses' tour de force. Speaking of Fosse, All That Jazz gobsmacks me just about as hard, changing from heartfelt one-on-ones to heartstopping sweeping musicals in a -- heartbeat.

    • @98pointseven
      @98pointseven 11 месяцев назад +1

      I love that movie. And i never get tired of playing a clip of the scene when the legendary dancer Ann Reinking and the little girl (Erzsebet Foldi) do a top-hat and stockings dance number with Peter Allen's "Everyting Old is New Again" as their music.@@dayceem

  • @emitindustries8304
    @emitindustries8304 11 месяцев назад +2

    Absolutely a great list and video. Thank you!

  • @bjones8470
    @bjones8470 Год назад +24

    A little while ago I did a deep dive into movies that are called “classics” On The Waterfront, Public Enemy, Streetcar Named Desire, Citizen Kane and another 6-8 films including as well as about 4 Hitchcock movies. Another one of them was Who’s Afraid Of Virginia Woolfe and it was my favorite of them all followed closely by Streetcar. Just great performances all around. A Fish Called Wanda and The January Man made me a fan of Kevin Kline for life.

    • @oppothumbs1
      @oppothumbs1 Год назад +6

      I like all of these though January Man was a little weak.
      Favorite Suspense movies:
      The Talented Mr. Ripley
      The Silence of the Lambs
      Rear Window
      L.A. Confidential
      Training Day
      North by Northwest
      12 Angry Men
      12 Monkeys
      Goodfellas
      The Fugitive
      Day of the Jackal ( 1973)
      Zodiac
      No Way Out
      Identity
      Blue Velvet
      Die Hard
      No Fellini, De Sica, and pomposities.

    • @robertfaulkner1824
      @robertfaulkner1824 Год назад +4

      A fish called Wanda is my favorite comedy of all time

    • @laustcawz2089
      @laustcawz2089 Год назад +3

      Have you seen Kline in "Soapdish"?

    • @oppothumbs1
      @oppothumbs1 Год назад

      @@robertfaulkner1824 Funny and good.

    • @oppothumbs1
      @oppothumbs1 Год назад +3

      @@laustcawz2089 Probably good. Though 74% TOMATOMETER
      63% Audience. read Soapdish is funnier than most industry lampoons and in-jokes

  • @LuisGarcia-cr3pr
    @LuisGarcia-cr3pr Год назад +1

    Mine in no particular order: Trilogy of Godfather, Once Upon a time in America, Noveccento, Sunset Blvrd, Chinatown, Exorcist, Barry Lyndon and Akira Kurosawa RAN.

  • @jslasher1
    @jslasher1 11 месяцев назад +3

    Despite William Wyler being practically deaf, which resulted in most music in his films being difficult for him to listen to, several of the finest scores were composed for his films. I include "The Big Country" [Jerome Moross], "The Heiress" [Aaron Copland] & "The Best Years of Our Lives" [Hugo Friedhofer's universally acclaimed Oscar-winning score].

    • @pp312
      @pp312 11 месяцев назад +2

      And of course Ben-Hur. (Miklos Rozsa)

    • @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633
      @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@pp312Yes!! Best film score of all.

  • @timpani25
    @timpani25 Год назад +2

    so many 'great movie lists' eschew comedies. thank you so much!!!

  • @doggiesarus
    @doggiesarus 11 месяцев назад +4

    Great list. A little less known. I love that you put Who's Afraid of Virginia Wolf" in there. That film really made me understand my feuding parents a bit more. An Branaugh's Hamlet, and The Bridge ofer River Kwai. So many! I would have added a few though, but you know lists!!!

    • @tamsinthai
      @tamsinthai 4 месяца назад

      I live near the Bridge Over The River Kwai now. Parents took me to see it as a child. NOT why I relocated.

  • @jeanpaulfelix4095
    @jeanpaulfelix4095 8 месяцев назад

    I want to thank you for this list. You inspire me to do my own top 10 as your list isnt even close.

  • @megatrollificus
    @megatrollificus Год назад +3

    Well done. A fine list, well-reasoned, well-presented, and, of course, completely wrong lol.
    Many thanks.

  • @mockmonkey1
    @mockmonkey1 9 месяцев назад +1

    Finally, someone other than myself who sees how funny "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" is. It's my favorite movie and I used to have it on cassette tape to listen to at work, it's music to my ears. I wish Richard Burton had won the Oscar that year. I always cry at the end. There are three on your greatest ten that I haven't seen yet.

  • @ChubbyChecker182
    @ChubbyChecker182 Год назад +4

    Good call on JFK, kind of forgotten these days but that is one very well done movie, powerful polemic stuff.
    I would not have it in my Top 10, but I do appreciate it is very deserving of recognition...I would have it in my Top 50 for sure.
    Another movie I think that is kind of Forgotten from the same time is Spoke Lee's Macolm X, the best Biopic I have seen.

    • @Moviewise
      @Moviewise  Год назад +4

      Roger Ebert placed both JFK and Malcolm X in his top 10 of the 90s. It seems people talked more about these films a decade or so ago.

  • @craigarmstrong5291
    @craigarmstrong5291 10 месяцев назад +1

    Ben Her Charlton Heston
    The day the earth stood still 50s
    Terminator 2
    Crash David Cronenberg
    The Quite Man
    The Italian Job michael cane
    Duel Steven Spielberg
    J F K
    The Irishman
    Openhimer
    Just a few thoughts 😅

  • @Video81501
    @Video81501 Год назад +3

    Unlike most lists of this kind, I actually agreed with some of your picks. 😂

  • @canonrivette
    @canonrivette 11 месяцев назад +2

    Hello: Enjoyed your video and your choices - and the analysis of why you chose the films you did. I don't agree with your every choice, or the films that should have but didn't make your list. But again, your commentary was very interesting. Cheers!

  • @N_Loco_Parenthesis
    @N_Loco_Parenthesis Год назад +7

    Branagh's Hamlet arrived in cinemas at exactly the moment we were studying the play in college. It was invaluable, unforgettable.

  • @kathleenclark5877
    @kathleenclark5877 Год назад +2

    I love films, full stop. I am incapable of picking just ten. I would have to categorize by such things as actors, directors, genres or time the film was produced. I always say, “My top-twenty favourite films”. So hard to limit!

  • @drusilladelp5162
    @drusilladelp5162 Год назад +5

    And don’t forget Some Like It Hot

  • @JustinHerfel
    @JustinHerfel Год назад +2

    Keep making videos. Your content is really great!

  • @fragile59
    @fragile59 Год назад +5

    My personal Top (in chronological order):
    Dance of the Vampires (1967)
    Solaris (1972)
    Apocalypse Now (1979)
    Once Upon a Time in America (1983)
    Amadeus (1984)
    Brazil (1985)
    Der Himmel über Berlin (1987)
    The English Patient (1996)
    The Ninth Gate (1999)
    Test (2014)

    • @Moviewise
      @Moviewise  Год назад +4

      A fan of unusual Polanski, nice! And Wings of Desire really should be in more lists

    • @badinfluence3814
      @badinfluence3814 Год назад

      The Ninth Gate is terrific.

    • @Pancrasio-it9qd
      @Pancrasio-it9qd Год назад

      Brazil is great

  • @thekeywitness
    @thekeywitness Год назад +1

    A fine list to remind me to watch some of the classics from time to time.

  • @johnbrill7909
    @johnbrill7909 Год назад +26

    I remember watching the Quiet Man back in the 90's. To my mind the fight at the end ranks as one of the best fight scenes in all of movie history. The entire movie builds to it, it ranges all over the country side, and the entire village gathers to watch. "Here's a good stick to beat the missus with!" Such a great line!

    • @theimp5901
      @theimp5901 Год назад +4

      I'll pay ya ! I'll pay ya ! --- NEVER ! Love Victor McLaughlin . Best funny part is Wayne and McLaughlin as 250 pound jockeys among all these other tiny guys.

    • @LolaLaRue-sq6jm
      @LolaLaRue-sq6jm 11 месяцев назад +2

      I HATED that sexist piece of garbage when I was a little girl and I HATE it even more now.
      Any man that likes that film should be regarded with suspicion by any woman.
      This is the kind of man we should AVOID at all costs.

    • @LolaLaRue-sq6jm
      @LolaLaRue-sq6jm 11 месяцев назад +2

      The worst part of that awful mess wasn't the terrible behavior of the men. It was the way the woman degraded herself & capitulated to them. Maureen O'Hara never seemed to get tired of selling out other women to support the patriarchy and not just in this movie. I can barely stand the sight of her.

    • @johnbrill7909
      @johnbrill7909 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@LolaLaRue-sq6jm "I can barely stand the sight of her."
      Maybe that is because she is a traditional woman and you are a modern woman. Modern woman just do not understand the strength and character of traditional women. Modern women just hate it when women are feminine.
      "selling out other women to support the patriarchy"
      Without "patriarchy" there is no civilization. Functionally "patriarchy" recognizing that men and women have their respective strengths and spheres of influence, and that society works best when men and women stick to what they each do best respectively. I don't know why you are against equality.

    • @theimp5901
      @theimp5901 11 месяцев назад +2

      @LolaLaRue-sq6jm Yeah, l think you should get to Shakespeare and have him revise his plays so they identify with your agenda. Oh wait, he's dead. So apparently, you don't have a life either, so maybe you CAN get in touch 🤔

  • @alejandroceppi3707
    @alejandroceppi3707 Год назад +2

    Lawrence of Arabia would be my personal choice for best film ever.
    I did not like Branagh's version/interpretation of Hamlet though I love the play (I read it several times).

  • @bluepeteblue
    @bluepeteblue Год назад +3

    Bridge on the River Kwai question: There's one thing that's always bugged me about it (SPOILER). The young guy (forgot his name) whose job it was to blow up the bridge, why didn't he press the detonator instead of go after Saito and NIcholson with the the knife? And why do the others shout at him to kill those guys? They should've been shouting at him to blow up the bridge. It's always bugged me and kept me from feeling like it's "perfect." I love that movie. I recently rewatched it and there I was again thinking "don't go after those guys, just blow up the damn bridge!"

    • @Moviewise
      @Moviewise  Год назад +13

      What happened was the day before they arrived, the commandos got a radio message telling them to wait for a Japanese train to go through the bridge so they would destroy both the bridge and the train.
      Joyce, the young man, had to handle the plunger alone (Warden had been hurt and couldn’t take part).
      As Nicholson and Saito followed the wire to the plunger, Warden and Shears were hoping Joyce would forget the train and blow up the bridge immediately. Joyce was inexperienced though and believed he had to follow orders to the letter, so he still wanted to wait for the train.
      When Nicholson and Saito decided to cut the wire, Joyce killed Saito, completing his story arc (his whole conflict was whether he could kill an enemy in close range, which he finally proved he could).
      Nicholson then held Joyce down and called for Japanese soldiers. That’s when Warden and Shears shouted for Joyce to kill Nicholson.
      I imagine Joyce didn’t even consider that he was “allowed” to kill a fellow Allied soldier or blow up the bridge without the train.
      He ultimately died because he obeyed orders too thoroughly (waiting for the train) and because he didn’t see Nicholson as enemy that should be killed, which makes his story arc move backwards in the end. Another case of irony I’d say.

    • @BarrettSlimmer
      @BarrettSlimmer 11 месяцев назад

      My pet pevee is it's story is a fictionalized account of a true World War two campaign.

  • @carrdoug99
    @carrdoug99 6 месяцев назад +1

    This is an AMAZING list. Well done.👍👍

  • @summerlakephotog8239
    @summerlakephotog8239 11 месяцев назад +3

    I saw Who's Afraid of Virginia Wolf when it came out in a theater on Sunset Boulevard (other movie on list). It was late at night and the theater was almost deserted. It made quite an impression.