Top 10 Best Classic Hollywood Movies of All Time

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  • Опубликовано: 18 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 945

  • @MsMojo
    @MsMojo  Год назад +17

    What's YOUR all-time favorite classic? Let us know below, and be sure to also check out our video of the Top 10 Classic Hollywood Movies with Disturbing Backstories: ruclips.net/video/8RzBaZmT-Fg/видео.html

    • @chrismulwee4911
      @chrismulwee4911 Год назад +5

      It's not my favorite, but why the heck is the original King Kong (1933) not on here. . That movie broke new ground in special effects

    • @denniscunningham2041
      @denniscunningham2041 Год назад +3

      Great selections but there were so many great ones. I saw no mention of "The Adventures of Robin Hood with Errol Flynn. Best action adventure film of all time.

    • @kruiff
      @kruiff Год назад +4

      What about Holiday Inn, White Christmas, Sabrina, Breakfast at Tiffany's, High Society, Barefoot in the Park, The Apartment, etc........

    • @chrismulwee4911
      @chrismulwee4911 Год назад +2

      @@kruiff 'd definitely go with Holiday Inn overWhite Christmas. Never have seen Barefoot IN The Park, and have only seen bits and pieces of The Apartment

    • @jasnapanic3621
      @jasnapanic3621 Год назад

      PSYCHO❤

  • @lauratieri5025
    @lauratieri5025 Год назад +185

    I remember taking a film class in College... and all the young(er) kids laughing at the effects in Casablanca. But by the time the movie ended, you could've heard a pin drop... they were so invested in the story. It was quite something to witness!

    • @ROBYNMARKOW
      @ROBYNMARKOW Год назад +9

      What "effects"? The movie is perfectly character -driven( & that's what makes it a classic👌)

    • @lauratieri5025
      @lauratieri5025 Год назад +3

      @@ROBYNMARKOW It absolutely was, but one of the opening / early shots is of the airfield... it's been forever since I've seen it but I believe it was a plane landing that looked like a toy plane.

    • @ROBYNMARKOW
      @ROBYNMARKOW Год назад +3

      @@lauratieri5025 (😅) I'll have to re-watch that scene . I don't get why they couldn't use a real airplane but I guess they were all being used for the war effort.

    • @XY_Dude
      @XY_Dude Год назад +2

      ​@@ROBYNMARKOWGood question - $$$ and the biggest reason sound stages are used: controlled environment and subject. My daughter is a movie director

    • @nbenefiel
      @nbenefiel Год назад

      I lived in Dublin for most of the 70’s. Casablanca was going to be n TV. I borrowed a TV and had a party.

  • @trinaq
    @trinaq Год назад +273

    I adore "Roman Holiday", as well as most of the Audrey Hepburn films of that era. You'd never have guessed that it was her first major role, she absolutely shines, and deservedly won "Best Actress."

    • @jaclynsanture6643
      @jaclynsanture6643 Год назад +15

      Roman Holiday and Breakfast at Tiffany' are two of my favorite movies

    • @WCove99
      @WCove99 Год назад +5

      Definitely. My favorite movie.

    • @Omar-wq9dz
      @Omar-wq9dz Год назад +11

      Roman Holiday is terrific. I also like Sabrina, Breakfast At Tiffany's, and Charade

    • @WCove99
      @WCove99 Год назад +1

      @Omar 94 Holly Go Lightly was pretty dumb for my liking. But great acting and her outfits were wonderful! I also like "Funny Face". "The Children's Hour" was disturbing, though I like the ones you mentioned.

    • @jaclynsanture6643
      @jaclynsanture6643 Год назад

      @@Omar-wq9dz Me too

  • @mr.decencykeepinitreal6348
    @mr.decencykeepinitreal6348 Год назад +223

    ‘Gone With The Wind’ is still one of the greatest Hollywood movies of all time.
    “Frankly, my dear, I don’t gove a damn.”
    That line never gets old…

    • @jordandutra9029
      @jordandutra9029 Год назад +11

      I definitely agree. Plus it’s my favorite movie, nothing will change.

    • @JPSE57
      @JPSE57 Год назад +5

      I could never understand why anyone gave a damn about GWTW. The only good part was the burning of Atlanta! 🔥

    • @ellenchavez2043
      @ellenchavez2043 Год назад +6

      My favorite quote: "You is a mule in horse harness." - Mammy to Scarlett.

    • @youtuber5305
      @youtuber5305 Год назад +1

      @@ellenchavez2043 Quotes from GONE... are included in the 2023 article "My Dinner with Sydney...".

    • @chrismulwee4911
      @chrismulwee4911 Год назад

      If it were made today, he would most likely say" Franky, my dear...UP YOURS!!"

  • @thomasbradley4505
    @thomasbradley4505 Год назад +105

    So glad Rebecca made the list. It’s usually overlooked even when talking about Hitchcock’s films

    • @MrRedacto
      @MrRedacto Год назад +4

      I've been wanting to watch it for some time...but as far as I can tell it's not available to stream or to rent on any platform! I couldn't tell you why.

    • @robertmarginean164
      @robertmarginean164 Год назад +6

      Totally agree. It has always been my favorite Hitchcock film and everyone I tell that to raises their eyebrow

    • @百済義純
      @百済義純 Год назад +2

      確かに最近はヒッチコックと言えば「めまい」や「サイコ」ばかりで「レベッカ」が忘れている。あの怖い女中頭が同性愛者で再注目されているが。

    • @Kate-ip8ul
      @Kate-ip8ul Год назад +1

      Yes Rebecca is available free for streaming. I watch it about once a year.

    • @marianneskanland310
      @marianneskanland310 Год назад

      @@Kate-ip8ul The 1979 version with Jeremy Brett, Joanna David and Anna Massey is better, I think. Better acting, e.g in the scene when Maxim tells his wife that he killed Rebecca. For some reason it's freely available, divided into episodes, on youtube!

  • @madman00774
    @madman00774 Год назад +135

    Fun Fact: During the filming of Casablanca, the actors thought that it was going to flop... Oh boy how ahead of its time this movie was!

    • @westzed23
      @westzed23 Год назад +11

      During filming they were still writing the movie. No one knew how it was going to end.

    • @rstein926
      @rstein926 Год назад +1

      Like George Lucas thought about Star Wars

    • @christinedunning8463
      @christinedunning8463 Год назад +6

      @@westzed23 and EVERYONE was writing it! It had more screenwriters adding stuff than most movies. And yet -- it's easily one of the best screenplays of all time.

    • @ROBYNMARKOW
      @ROBYNMARKOW Год назад +4

      Another fun fact: the airport scenes were filmed at Van Nuys Airport( located in L.A.'s San Fernando Valley) which is just a few minutes drive from where I live👍

    • @mikeballard8404
      @mikeballard8404 Год назад

      Casablanca caught a break, WW2 played right into it, plus Rick was like our great nation, he picked the right side to take, the underdog.

  • @justapeacefulmanwhosbornin7291
    @justapeacefulmanwhosbornin7291 Год назад +46

    Thank you for showing us all 10 classic Hollywood movies, especially ‘Casablanca.’ Good work, MsMojo.

  • @douglaslaturner9685
    @douglaslaturner9685 Год назад +36

    Don't forget the movie that got me hooked on classic movies. THE BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES....Great writing actors direction and it captured the mood of many returning vets from WW2...

    • @beechnut8779
      @beechnut8779 Год назад +1

      Plus one of the great musical scores of any movie!

  • @lyndiwilson7671
    @lyndiwilson7671 Год назад +169

    And don't forget "To Kill a Mockingbird " Gregory Peck as Atticus Finch totally brilliant

    • @margowestover1026
      @margowestover1026 Год назад +6

      "To Kill a Mockingbird" is an excellent film!! One of my personal favorites!!

    • @jamessumita5193
      @jamessumita5193 Год назад +6

      Yes I think it at least deserved a honorable mention ….

    • @anthonycaruso8443
      @anthonycaruso8443 Год назад

      Liberal response.The white guy defending the helpless black guy,because black people are to dumb to defend themselves.Gun control created by Dems so blacks could not defend themselves

    • @nahumkantene5983
      @nahumkantene5983 Год назад +3

      Yes

    • @terr777
      @terr777 Год назад +4

      You saved me the trouble. I would replace Rebecca with it.

  • @beechnut8779
    @beechnut8779 Год назад +18

    Never ever get tired of watching Casablanca. It is the perfect movie, and definitely deserves to be #1 on any list.

  • @DavidRay_40
    @DavidRay_40 Год назад +84

    While I'm glad It's a Wonderful Life at least got an honorable mention, it really should be on the main list. It's my favorite movie of all time, after all.

    • @jordandutra9029
      @jordandutra9029 Год назад +6

      I agree. Plus it’s a wonderful life is on my list of my favorite movies.

    • @hayleym1483
      @hayleym1483 Год назад +6

      Same with Sunset Boulevard - both in my top 10.

    • @rbrown5518
      @rbrown5518 2 месяца назад +1

      If a movie ALWAYS get you in the gut every time... that's saying something!

  • @skyeslaton3435
    @skyeslaton3435 Год назад +47

    These are the movies every film lover needs to experience instead of just watching films from the 2000s, 2010s and 2020s

    • @christinedunning8463
      @christinedunning8463 Год назад +6

      But these are all pretty well known. What's the NEXT ten? I'd really like to see that list.

    • @skyeslaton3435
      @skyeslaton3435 Год назад

      @@christinedunning8463 most people don't wanna watch them because they're black and white or too long

    • @Radentstwo
      @Radentstwo Год назад +2

      Modernists don't know what they missing out on and mostly view films from the 80s going forward.

  • @alexhidalgo7110
    @alexhidalgo7110 Год назад +66

    The wizard of oz absolutely iconic

  • @rubygracemoseley8144
    @rubygracemoseley8144 Год назад +22

    Classic movies are so unique and beautiful compared to modern movies. The soundtracks were always dramatic but so on point for the stories. The costumes were beautiful and fantastic. The dialogues were witty, clever, good and emotional. The love stories were passionate and romantic (whether or not they were an actually good relationship). The singing and dancing was off the charts impressive, all of the actors were so talented. They all had this beautiful, wistful, other worldly feel to them.

    • @jessrosefawkes2721
      @jessrosefawkes2721 Год назад +5

      I totally agree Ruby. They don’t make films like the classics anymore! I would of loved to have been born in the old Hollywood era!!

    • @jessrosefawkes2721
      @jessrosefawkes2721 Год назад +2

      And regarding your comment Ruby, I couldn’t of said it better myself ☺️

    • @Dallin456
      @Dallin456 Год назад +2

      My mom introduced my sister and me to classic movies. We found a theater that played classic movies, and to economize we would sneak in food. My mom seemed to know everyone and everything about classic films. She was my idol. Thanks mom, these movies now live on as I have introduced them to my children and grandchildren!

    • @rubygracemoseley8144
      @rubygracemoseley8144 Год назад +2

      @@Dallin456 Aw that’s so sweet. That’s what my dad did with classic music with my sister and I. He played CD’s left from his grandfather. I grew up hearing music from the 30’s, 40’s and 50’s. I absolutely love music, movies and clothes from those eras as well.

  • @chelseacanales8763
    @chelseacanales8763 Год назад +30

    West Side Story is my mother’s favourite musical and The Wizard of Oz was my late grandmother’s favourite. Something about classical musical just makes you want to escape the world. ❤❤❤❤❤❤

    • @westzed23
      @westzed23 Год назад

      What is your favourite musical?

    • @patriziopaladino2821
      @patriziopaladino2821 4 месяца назад

      @@westzed23 Oklahoma! + 7 Married_7Brothers...

  • @trinaq
    @trinaq Год назад +26

    "West Side Story" got me hooked on musicals, I saw it when I was ten or eleven, and I was instantly enthralled by the singing, dancing, performances... Everything! ♥️

    • @davidz3879
      @davidz3879 Год назад +3

      Why are light-hearted song & dance routines in a film about violent street gangs?

    • @jordandutra9029
      @jordandutra9029 Год назад +1

      I watched it before the remake. The original West Side Story is not my cup of tea, it’s not terrible. It’s well done, the songs, the choreography, the dance, the characters, but it’s not for me.

    • @Irisheddy
      @Irisheddy Год назад +1

      One of the biggest Ironies of the original West Side Story was the role of Maria went to an actress Natalie Wood who wasn't Puerto Rican , but the actress. The Great Rita Moreno, who was the memorable character Anita and won the Oscar for the role was Puerto Ricans

    • @jtaylor3981
      @jtaylor3981 Год назад

      I just saw the original for the first time when the remake was made. I like it. I just can't watch it in one sitting.

    • @nurselibby96
      @nurselibby96 8 месяцев назад

      West Side Story got me hooked in 1963, at age 10 too!

  • @rubygracemoseley8144
    @rubygracemoseley8144 Год назад +41

    It’s A Wonderful Life is my absolute favorite Christmas movie! And honestly probably just one of my favorite movies. It’s so beautiful, the acting is insanely good, there are so many fun happy scenes as well as emotional meaningful ones. And the overall message of the story is so good and relevant even today.

    • @jessrosefawkes2721
      @jessrosefawkes2721 Год назад +3

      I’ve never seen it’s a wonderful life. I must be living under a rock or sumat lol cos everyone says it’s an amazing film and it always gets voted 1 of the best Xmas films of all time. I’m guna make sure I watch it this Xmas, if not before. My grandma said she always cries wen she watches it, happy and sad tears. And she’s not a woman that cry’s at any film, so it must be good lol.

    • @rubygracemoseley8144
      @rubygracemoseley8144 Год назад +1

      @Jesse Rose Fawkes I saw it for the first time about three or four years ago when I was around 14. I loved it!! It’s my favorite Christmas movie but I’ve only seen it three times. My dad who is in his 50s saw it for the first time about four years ago so you aren’t alone

    • @11cabadger
      @11cabadger Год назад

      I used to love "It's a Wonderful Life". Then my best friend's son pointed out several plot points that totally wrecked it for me. The thing is, unlike a lot of haters who apply current mores & sensibilities to movies and literature, this kid sincerely wondered how I hadn't noticed the inconsistencies. All I can say is, guess I got caught up in all the "Capra corn".

    • @moviewryter1985
      @moviewryter1985 Год назад +2

      Couldn't have said it better myself. It's a Wonderful Life is fantastic. My #1 favorite movie ever. I would add it touches on practically every element of the human condition: love, sacrifice, family, creed, corruption, selfishness, selflessness. etc..

    • @challisetaylor7988
      @challisetaylor7988 3 месяца назад

      @@11cabadgerplease tell me! I watch it every single Christmas since I was born and I would love to know if I’ve missed something over the years

  • @mr.decencykeepinitreal6348
    @mr.decencykeepinitreal6348 Год назад +37

    Many years ago, I saw ‘The Wizard of Oz’ on DVD, it was literally impressive.

    • @georgenaughten3038
      @georgenaughten3038 Год назад +3

      I saw Wizard of Oz on the big screen. It played many years ago at the Stanford Theater in Palo Alto. It was great

  • @DanGamingFan2406
    @DanGamingFan2406 Год назад +54

    _West Side Story_ is still one of my most favorite movies of all time. Great music, amazing songs and dancing, and characters you can't help but root for. And it's definitely the best version of _Romeo and Juliet.

    • @jaclynsanture6643
      @jaclynsanture6643 Год назад +3

      I love West Side Story

    • @davidz3879
      @davidz3879 Год назад +3

      The light-hearted song & dance routines are out of place in such a serious film.

    • @ROBYNMARKOW
      @ROBYNMARKOW Год назад

      ​@@davidz3879 I think that they effectively show sad irony since the story takes such a dark turn.For example, I like in the new one how Maria sings "I Feel Pretty" & then finds out that the guy who she was singing so joyfully about has killed her brother in s gang fight.Of course,movies are subjective so you're definitely entitled to your own opinion 👍

    • @12classics39
      @12classics39 Год назад +2

      @@davidz3879 the film times its songs to match the tone of the film, or in other words, each song reflects the ever-shifting mood of the story. The love songs like "Maria" and "Tonight" happen when the couple are blindly in love and unable to think of anything else. Songs like "America" and "I Feel Pretty" are there because characters are still in high spirit. The point is that nobody really takes the feud seriously - thinking of it as a game - until Riff and Bernardo die in the rumble, and Chino comes after Tony, and the tone changes completely and the stakes skyrocket. Then, "Somewhere" emerges from the couple's desperation to escape, "Cool" expresses the gang's tension and trauma and anxiety after what's happened, etc. After the rumble, the story does not stop going downhill, and the songs reflect that; all the lighthearted joie de vive of the earlier songs just drains and vanishes once blood is actually shed and the seriousness fully sets in.

    • @Art-is-craft
      @Art-is-craft 11 месяцев назад

      West side story is not one of the great movie though and simply cannot hold a candle to something like The Searchers or Ben-Hur.

  • @baby_grogu
    @baby_grogu Год назад +54

    Vertigo should have at least gotten an honorable mention!

    • @westzed23
      @westzed23 Год назад +10

      I would have picked Psycho. Hard choice.

    • @baby_grogu
      @baby_grogu Год назад +1

      @@westzed23 Yeah, definitely that one too

    • @julesgamingnstuff
      @julesgamingnstuff Год назад +3

      And Rear Window

    • @Radentstwo
      @Radentstwo Год назад +2

      It for surely should be in the list.

    • @leonoranicolaysen2784
      @leonoranicolaysen2784 6 месяцев назад +1

      Vertigo is perhaps the one movie I can watch forever. Gorgeous cinematography.

  • @thebestlayahead7331
    @thebestlayahead7331 Год назад +25

    Roman Holiday and Casablanca are two of my personal top films. Ironically, both portray male leads facing moral, ethical challenges and choosing to do the 'right thing' yet losing the girl.

  • @ajhebb
    @ajhebb Год назад +33

    As soon as I saw Roman Holiday in the thumbnail, I clicked the link. I’m happy that it’s getting more attention because it’s one of my favorites.
    I’m surprised It’s a Wonderful Life didn’t make it pass Honorable Mention. It’s not only one of the best movies, but one of the best Christmas ones.

    • @LognaKoch-jp6by
      @LognaKoch-jp6by Год назад

      Hello 👋🏻

    • @rbrown5518
      @rbrown5518 2 месяца назад +1

      This movie for me defines...Classic!

    • @ajhebb
      @ajhebb 2 месяца назад

      @@rbrown5518 so true!

  • @ismailyaman3779
    @ismailyaman3779 Год назад +64

    0:25 Wizard of Oz
    01:31 West Side Story
    02:38 Roman Holiday
    03:42 Rebecca
    04:53 Double Indemnity
    06:04 Gone with the Wind
    07:14 It Happened One Night
    08:23 Singin' in the Rain
    09:29 Citizen Kane
    12:15 Casablanca

    • @vanash4
      @vanash4 Год назад +2

      Replace Double Indemnity with All About Eve.

    • @michellelekas211
      @michellelekas211 Год назад

      No. Replace Roman Holiday with All About Eve!

    • @Joe-bd4xc
      @Joe-bd4xc Год назад

      I agree with Michelle. Replace Roman Holiday with ALL ABOUT EVE. The former is a chick flick, the latter has the GREATEST SCREENPLAY EVER !!!!!!!!

    • @michellelekas211
      @michellelekas211 Год назад

      Yay!@@Joe-bd4xc

    • @fondcello
      @fondcello Год назад +2

      They miss Ben Hur

  • @Gkontax
    @Gkontax Год назад +28

    All About Eve also comes to mind whenever you mention classic Hollywood films.

    • @rbrown5518
      @rbrown5518 2 месяца назад

      Yes... the movie is a bumpy ride!

  • @indy-fs6de
    @indy-fs6de Год назад +30

    A list like this is impossible, but these are great choices and would make a terrific starter pack for someone wanting to get into older films.
    Other recs I'd make for starting out that are approachable for newcomers:
    - All About Eve - 1950 - Bette Davis - Davis' greatest role - drama about the politics and hierarchy of the NYC theater scene. Crackling dialogue and screenplay.
    - Rear Window - 1954 - Jimmy Stewart/Grace Kelly - Hitchcock's most "fun" movie as well as one of his most suspenseful and masterful. About a wheelchair-bound newspaper photographer who suspects a neighbor has been murdered. Grace Kelly is a technicolor goddess.
    - Ninotchka - 1939 - Greta Garbo/Melvin Douglas - Romantic comedy by Ernst Lubitsch. Dramatic legend Garbo's only comedy where she plays a stern Russian envoy whose icy exterior gets melted by the romance of pre-WW2 Paris and by the charms of Douglas.
    - The Apartment - 1960 - Jack Lemmon/Shirley MacLaine - Romantic dramedy - Lemmon plays an office worker who unwittingly falls in love with his jerk boss's mistress played by MacLaine. Wonderful New Year's movie.
    - My Man Godfrey - 1936 - William Powell/Carole Lombard - screwball comedy - It Happened One Night may have jumpstarted the screwball comedy genre, but My Man Godfrey perfects it with screwball queen Carole Lombard as a rich heiress who falls for the no-nonsense butler played by Powell.
    - The Thin Man - 1934 - William Powell/Myrna Loy - mystery/comedy - Your new best friends will be Nick and Nora Charles, a wealthy married couple who enjoy cocktails, flirtatious banter, and solving murders.
    - Stagecoach - 1939 - western - John Wyane/Claire Trevor - Director John Ford's The Searchers is probably a lot of our fathers' and (and grandfathers') favorite western, but hasn't aged too well. Ford's earlier film Stagecoach is much more palatable (and probably the best of the western genre, imo). It follows an unlikely group of men and women who have to share a stagecoach as it traverses through treacherous western landscapes. An entire class system in a carriage.
    - Sabrina - 1954 - Audrey Hepburn/Humphrey Bogart/William Holden - Romantic comedy - this movie is almost pure champagne froth with some darker undertones. Hepburn plays the naive daughter of the chauffer to an old money Long Island family. After spending 3 years at cooking school in Paris, her maturity and sophistication turn the worlds of rich brothers played by Bogart and Holden upside down. This film also marks the first collaboration between Hepburn amd Givenchy who would design Hepburn's iconic wardrobe in 6 additional films.
    - Adam's Rib - 1949 - Katharine Hepburn/Soencer Tracy - Romantic comedy - Hepburn and Tracy are among the most iconic film duos (on-and-off screen), starring in 9 films together. Adam's Rib is arguably their funniest outing together where they play a husband and wife lawyer team who are pitted against each other in an attempted murder case.
    - Modern Times - 1936 - silent comedy/romance/satire - Charlie Chaplin/Paulette Goddard - Chaplin plays an assembly worker who struggles to survive in a world that is becoming more and more industrialized. Even though sound had been around for several years, Chaplin still chose to make most of his movies silent to help preserve his physical comedy as well as his conceit that one didn't need so much dialogue when actors had their facial expressions and body language to convey messages.
    - Gentlemen Prefer Blondes - 1953 - Marilyn Monroe/Jane Russell - musical comedy - often overlooked by film buffs in favor of the more highly-praised Some Like It Hot, I prefer Gentlemen because Monroe is given more to do with her character and gets to be both extremely funny and dignified. She and Russell play two showgirls who are searching for their ideal men. You probably have seen the scene where Monroe sings Diamonds Are a Girl's Best Friend (or the million homages to it found in modern media).
    - The Best Years of Our Lives - 1946 - Myrna Loy/Fredric March - drama - The movie is about 3 servicemen returning to their families/communities from World War 2 and the difficulties they each face reacclimating to a changed world (PTSD, physical disabilities, feelings of alienation from loved ones, finding employment, etc.) The film is strikingly honest in its portrayal of the aftermath of war and in no way glamorizes it, which is extraordinary considering that the war had ended only a year before Best Years was released. It beat It's A Wonderful Life for Best Picture which sounds sacrilege until you actually watch it.
    - Gilda - 1946 - Rita Hayworth/Glenn Ford - film noir - Hayworth's nickname was "The Love Goddess," a moniker was was cemented by her role here. She plays Gilda, the wife of a wealthy man who operates an illegal casino in Buenos Aires. Her husband hires a man (played by Ford) to be his casino manager. Unbeknownst to her husband, the man he hired has a history with Gilda. Double innuendos ensue. Hayworth, who was always resentful of her bombshell persona, would glumly say afterward, "men go to bed with Gilda, but wake up with me."
    - The Treasure of the Sierra Madre - 1948 - western - Humphrey Bogart/Tim Holt/Walter Huston - 2 downtrodden men (Bogart and Holt) join up with a grizzled old prospector (Huston) to search for gold in 1925 Mexico, a quest which drives Bogart to murderous madness. The film was a major influence on directors like Steven Spielberg, and you will feel like you're watching an Indiana Jones movie at times. Bogart's unhinged portrayal is completely ruthless and frightening.
    - The Lady Eve - 1941 - Barbara Stanwyck/Henry Fonda - screwball comedy - Stanwyck plays a con artist who works with her con artist father on a cruise to exploit wealthy naive man played by Fonda. However, Stanwyck ends up falling for the sincere Fonda. If you watch this back-to-back with Double Indemnity, you'll realize that Stanwyck was the Amy Adams of Old Hollywood - probably the most versatile actress working with a bunch of Oscar nominations without a single win.
    - His Girl Friday - 1940 - Cary Grant/Rosalind Russell - screwball comedy - Grant plays a newspaper editor who is about to lose his star reporter and ex-wife (played by Russell) who is getting remarried to another man. Grant contrives to delay her nuptials by suggesting they work together in covering a high-profile murder case. The rapid back-and-forth quips in this are the stuff of legend. If you love Clue (1985), this is the film that all the Clue actors were forced to watch in order to get the rapid cadence of their line delivery right.
    - Duck Soup - 1933 - The Marx Brothers - black comedy - The zany team of brothers (Groucho, Harpo, Chico, and Zeppo) play characters that all feature in the politics and war between fictional countries Freedonia and Sylvania. The jokes are just so rapid fire and stacked on top of one another, you'll need at least 4 rewatches to catch even half of them. The density of jokes is even more extraordinary when you realize the runtime is only 68 minutes.
    - Top Hat - 1935 - Fred Astaire/Ginger Rogers - musical comedy - You must introduce yourself to the greatest screen dancing duo of all time, Rogers and Astaire who made 10 films together. Many film lists will posit that Swing Time is the best Rogers/Astaire flick, but Swing Time holds the distinction of containing black face. It has great music and numbers that you can watch on RUclips if you'd like, or you can just watch Top Hat which is believe is just as charming and ambitious as Swing Time, only without the black face which is always a plus.
    - To Kill a Mockingbird - 1962 - Gregory Peck - legal drama - I know. This one may sound like homework, and you may have fallen asleep in you high school English class when your teacher put this on. But just try to shake all that academic context, and just take in this film for the masterpiece that it is. Based on the Harper Lee book of the same name, Peck plays a lawyer in 1930s Alabama and is defending a black man who has been accused of assaulting a local white woman. His children, Jem and Scout, are often shielded from the cruel realities of their time, but as the story progresses, their awareness of the racist, violent, and nonsensical world around them starts to permeate through the veil of childhood. Peck delivers one of the great screen performances.
    - The Night of the Hunter - 1955 - Robert Mitchum/Lillian Gish - thriller/horror - if you like dark Coen Brothers movies, you'll love this. Mitchum plays a serial killer posing as a preacher who insinuates himself into the lives of an unsuspecting widow and her two young children. Mitchum is in search of money stashed on the widow's property by his former cell mate who was the deceased husband of the widow. Often cited as one of the greatest films of all time, it was a commercial and critical flop upon its release. It was tragically director Charles Laughton's only film as he took the film's failure to heart. Mitchum as the psychopathic preacher was way ahead of its time and has influenced many movie villains that came after.
    - Charade - 1963 - Audrey Hepburn/Cary Grant - romantic comedy/mystery thriller - Cary Grant + Audrey Hepburn + Paris + a murder mystery where suspects are dropping like flies. Often called the "greatest Hitchcock film that Hitchcock never made," the Stanley Donen (of Singin' in the Rain fame)-directed Charade is notable for its inspired Grant/Hepburn pairing, intriguing mystery, and its melding of so many genres together. Hepburn plays a newly-minted widow pursued by a trio of threatening men who may or may not have murdered her husband. They are in pursuit of $250k that her husband stole from them and which they think is now in the possession of Hepburn. She meets a handsome stranger played by Grant who is both helpful to her as well as mysterious.

    • @indy-fs6de
      @indy-fs6de Год назад +3

      - Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? - 1966 - Elizabeth Taylor/Richard Burton - Drama , The film follows an aging married couple, George and Martha, played by Burton and Taylor respectively. Burton is George, a professor of history, and Taylor is Martha, his wife who is the daughter of the college's president. Martha and George have a very contentious relationship and make very little attempt to hide this from a pair of young newlyweds who they have over for cocktails. Secrets and resentments are dredged up and laid bare over the course of the evening and over very many cocktails. All involved give a tour de force performance, but Taylor's Martha is a performance for the ages and the recipient of a much-deserved Oscar for Taylor.

    • @christinedunning8463
      @christinedunning8463 Год назад +3

      Nice list! I would add Marty (1955) -- A lonely butcher and a lonely school teacher meet unexpectedly at a NYC dance hall. Although they both feel like social outcasts, they find themselves attracted to each other -- until Marty's family and friends intervene. Wonderful performances, especially by Ernest Borgnine in a romantic role, and he won the Oscar for it. Also won Best Picture, and a well deserved best screenplay for Paddy Chayefsky.

    • @christinedunning8463
      @christinedunning8463 Год назад

      @@indy-fs6de the only reason I wouldn't put it on this list is that it's not from the Golden Age -- although it's in black and white, it's well past that period. I'm not sure if it's got a name, but movies from about 1960 to 1977 (when Star Wars changed movies) deserves it's own category -- and this film definitely belongs on that list.

    • @Dallin456
      @Dallin456 Год назад

      I love these additions!

    • @SilentPresence
      @SilentPresence Год назад +2

      Surprised no one mentioned Guess Who is Coming to Dinner

  • @Random_butokay
    @Random_butokay Год назад +17

    My Fair Lady and The Miracle Worker from 1960-something are 2 movies my grandfather forced me to watch but ended up loving very much and I’m born in the early 2000s so I had no clue about them. But the wizard of oz is a movie I will never forget when I first watched it with my cousins when I was a child 🫠

  • @pdgf
    @pdgf Год назад +30

    1. All About Eve
    2. Casablanca
    3. From Here To Eternity
    4. West Side Story
    5. Singing in the Rain
    6. Citizen Kane
    7. Sunset Boulevard
    8. The Bridge on the River Kwai
    9. The Wizard of Oz
    10. Gone With The Wind
    11. Lawrence of Arabia 😊

    • @allysonkho2017
      @allysonkho2017 Год назад +7

      Sunset always should be in the top 10. I agree.

    • @Елена_В-к6п
      @Елена_В-к6п Год назад

      Первый раз вижу в списке " Касабланка" , а ведь фильм сильный. Casablanka is Best and strong film.

    • @Catseye189
      @Catseye189 Год назад +1

      Thank you!

    • @mikedbigame3398
      @mikedbigame3398 Год назад +3

      Never understood the love for "All about Eve"

    • @anthonycaruso8443
      @anthonycaruso8443 Год назад

      The Free State of Jones

  • @vanpelt2321
    @vanpelt2321 Год назад +3

    Ms. Mojo, this is a spot-on primer for Hollywood classics that will help viewers expand into other classics from these. When director John Ford was dying from cancer in 1973 he watched "The Wizard of Oz" on tv from his bed one night and at the end, with tears in his eyes, the old lion growled "Now THAT'S one helluva film!" Pretty good endorsement, I'd say, from the great poet of cinema.

  • @angelaholmes8888
    @angelaholmes8888 Год назад +22

    Double identity is an amazing film Barbra stanwyck is brilliant

  • @werthmelissa
    @werthmelissa Год назад +18

    Great choices! A few that I'll add to this list: The African Queen, My Fair Lady, Breakfast At Tiffany's, The Sound Of Music, His Girl Friday (another one of the early romantic comedy movies) and The Ten Commandments (a huge must watch and some of the best visual effects ever).

    • @JoanSmith-t7k
      @JoanSmith-t7k 10 месяцев назад +1

      The first time I saw Ten Commandments was at a drive-in theater, BEST place to see it with its speaker turned all the way up, it sounds like the Red Sea is trying to flood your
      car! 😮

    • @janbarrett4544
      @janbarrett4544 8 месяцев назад

      Definitely "Afican Queen".

  • @kathyt8374
    @kathyt8374 Год назад +7

    I’ve been introducing my granddaughter to the joys of classic movies. We watched Gaslight, Casablanca, The African Queen and All About Eve last weekend. She’s already seen GWTW, Some Like it Hot and the Godfather. She loves them all!!!

    • @allysonkho2017
      @allysonkho2017 Год назад +2

      She's got great taste and a great grandmother

    • @elliepoyer6344
      @elliepoyer6344 Год назад +1

      I LOVED African Queen!
      If she’s ever in the mood for a musical - Seven Brides for Seven Brothers is one of my favorites. Little sneak peak: one of the girls is actually- Julie Newmar. One of my favorite cat women. THE Catwoman if you ask me 😉

  • @megamoviez
    @megamoviez Год назад +31

    Ok this is great and all but how the HELL did they forget 12 Angry Men or Seven Samurai?! Two of the most influential classics.

    • @marilynsobel7414
      @marilynsobel7414 Год назад +1

      The Seven Samurai is my favorite movie of all time!

    • @mikedbigame3398
      @mikedbigame3398 Год назад +6

      12 Angry Men is better than every film on this list

    • @t-mar9275
      @t-mar9275 Год назад +1

      The Seven Samurai is a great movie but it doesn't qualify for the list, as it's not a product of Hollywood. If MsMojo ever decided to produce a video for the top 10 non-Hollywood movies from the Golden Age of Cinema, it will probably make the list. However, I wouldn't hold my breath, as such a video would probaly have limited appeal for channel subscribers.

    • @marilynsobel7414
      @marilynsobel7414 Год назад

      @@t-mar9275 That's what I get for not paying attention to the title!

    • @margowestover1026
      @margowestover1026 Год назад +4

      "12 Angry Men" is also one of my personal favorites!!!❤

  • @janinelemonides3705
    @janinelemonides3705 Год назад +33

    The 1939 movie The Women! A fabulous film with Norma Shear, Rosalind Russel, Joan Crawford, Joan Fontaine, Paulette Goddard & Mary Borland!

    • @СвітланаГуцул-х5л
      @СвітланаГуцул-х5л 4 месяца назад

      О , який неймовірний акторський склад ! Я не бачила цього фільму , але обов'язково перегляну . Дякую за згадку .

  • @margaritalopez6957
    @margaritalopez6957 Год назад +24

    I agree with the selections. “All about Eve” should be considered at least for an honorable mention. Love Bette Davis.

  • @topeogunmakinwa9347
    @topeogunmakinwa9347 Год назад +22

    The Wizard of Oz(1939) is one the BIGGEST INSPIRATIONS to Brynhildr in the Darkness(2014) for the "I'm Melting" death scene for the melting deaths of the Witches throughout the entire series. Both The Wizard of Oz(1939) and Brynhildr in the Darkness(2014) are my ALL-TIME favorites. Both of them as of right now are CLASSICS.

  • @dk50b
    @dk50b Год назад +18

    "It Happened One Night" gave birth to a character who's influence dwarfes that of the film. While developing Bugs Bunny, director Friz Freling drew on the nonchalant, playful tricksters played by Gable (Peter Warne) and Roscoe Karns (Oscar Shapeley). The scene where Peter fast talks while munching a carrot became a hallmark, and source of the false belief rabbits like carrots. Even his name is based on Bugs Dooley, a fictitious thug Peter uses to scare off Oscar.

  • @heidibee501
    @heidibee501 Год назад +8

    For me the definitive romance of all time was "An Affair to Remember," with Cary Grant and Deborah Kerr. "Sleepless in Seattle," was based on this movie. It was clever and unabashedly sentimental...a thing of beauty. Another movie that impacts our speech even today was "Gaslight" with Ingrid Bergman and Joseph Cotten. My fave is "Portrait of Jennie," a movie that transcends time and place.

    • @brandinshaeffer8970
      @brandinshaeffer8970 9 месяцев назад

      An affair to remember makes me cry buckets every single time

  • @kenschultz4033
    @kenschultz4033 Год назад +30

    There could have been many more on this list like All about Eve, Psycho, Lawrence of Arabia, To Kill a Mockingbird to name a few

    • @LarryKnipfing
      @LarryKnipfing Год назад +4

      Twelve Angry Men, Rear Window

    • @lray1948
      @lray1948 Год назад

      @@LarryKnipfing and The Best Years of Our Lives, The Godfather, Ben-Hur

    • @rbrown5518
      @rbrown5518 2 месяца назад

      "Jane Eyre (1944)"
      is never mentioned in anyone's top 10! One of Liz Taylor's first films with Fontaine, Welles ... and Peggy Garner's role was for me brilliant!
      And Margaret O'Brien and the French "love child"

  • @dinocub1
    @dinocub1 Год назад +16

    Surprised 5 time Oscar winner (including best picture) The Apartment with Jack Lemon and Shirley MacLaine didn't make the list. Such a great movie.

    • @SarahRenz59
      @SarahRenz59 Год назад +1

      @dinocub1 I was hoping to see The Apartment on the list, too, though I can't disagree with any of the choices. So many great films over the years; it's impossible to narrow it down to just 10.

  • @kiciaharleyofalabama6105
    @kiciaharleyofalabama6105 Год назад +7

    Gone with the Wind is my all time favorite movie and book, have to watch it at least twice a year and read it at least once a year

    • @Kate-ip8ul
      @Kate-ip8ul Год назад

      My mom was 12 when GWTW came out. She was forced to take her 6-year-old sister with her to the movie in a very small town. Right before the intermission when Scarlett proclaims “I’ll never gov hungry again” her little sister mortified her by saying very loudly, “Dottie, does she got an onion?”

  • @נדבהורביץ-ג5ר
    @נדבהורביץ-ג5ר Год назад +7

    "The Wizard of Oz" is one of my favorite Hollywood classics

  • @roxy5588
    @roxy5588 Год назад +17

    This list needs a top 50. Singin' in the Rain will always be the GREATEST Musical of ALL TIME! I am glad you guys ranked that film high on this list. Casablanca is a brilliant movie full stop.

    • @LognaKoch-jp6by
      @LognaKoch-jp6by Год назад

      Hello 👋🏻

    • @Dallin456
      @Dallin456 Год назад

      A top 50 would be a good idea. I’m sure though, that regardless of list length, some favorites would be excluded. I mean, could you make a list without having to drop some favorites?

  • @Louisejames23
    @Louisejames23 Год назад +44

    Anything with Audrey Hepburn or Grace Kelly is essential. Brilliant actresses with that touch of class. ❤👍🥂

    • @Dallin456
      @Dallin456 Год назад

      Another somewhat forgotten actress with that touch of class was Loretta Young!

    • @michellelekas211
      @michellelekas211 Год назад

      Ida Lupino, Barbara Stanwtck, Susan Hayward, Gloria Grahame, Vivian Leigh (!….watch Waterloo Bridge), and I would argue for Ava Gardner (Really: Showboat!).
      Audrey and Grace were gorgeous style icons. Love them, but acting chops were not there (Forget about their dopey Oscars for dressing down/ honestly watch The Country Girl or A Nun’s Story…yuck) .

  • @allisontucker9874
    @allisontucker9874 Год назад +25

    Gone With The Wind is a masterpiece, it’s such an iconic film and has the greatest one liner in film history, “Frankly My Dear, I don’t give a damn”

    • @jordandutra9029
      @jordandutra9029 Год назад +2

      I definitely agree. Plus it’s my favorite movie.

  • @ronleight9341
    @ronleight9341 Год назад +12

    I don't know which one would have to be removed, but 'The Third Man' should be on this list!

    • @Stilicho19801
      @Stilicho19801 Год назад +1

      I agree but for the fact it was not a Hollywood movie.

    • @WeeWyllie
      @WeeWyllie 5 месяцев назад

      In my opinion "The Third Man" leaves all the rest in the dust!😮

    • @rbrown5518
      @rbrown5518 2 месяца назад

      what would you like to take off the list first?

    • @ronleight9341
      @ronleight9341 2 месяца назад

      @@rbrown5518 For me, it would probably be West Side Story.

  • @billfisher9238
    @billfisher9238 Год назад +28

    BEN HUR. all time record holder of 11 Oscars (until tied by LOTR and TITANIC). a world phenomenon when released on giant screens around the world. still holds up beautifully. also, throw in THE BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES, VERTIGO and THE SEARCHERS.

    • @Amy-ps6hf
      @Amy-ps6hf Год назад

      The Best Years of Our Lives and The Heiress (with Olivia Dehaviland and Montgomery Clift) are my favorites.

    • @alfredogomez5241
      @alfredogomez5241 Год назад +2

      Ben Hur is probably the best movie ever made.

  • @loismugo7825
    @loismugo7825 Год назад +8

    I really wish My Fair Lady was mentioned here. One my all-time favourites...

  • @JoanSmith-t7k
    @JoanSmith-t7k 10 месяцев назад +4

    I will always LOVE Captains Courageous (1937), it has at times a POWERFUL effect on me.

  • @liahmacncheese7495
    @liahmacncheese7495 Год назад +7

    I saw Roman Holiday, and I clicked❤❤❤

  • @mikedbigame3398
    @mikedbigame3398 Год назад +18

    Alternative list:
    1. 12 Angry Men
    2. To Kill a Mockingbird
    3. The Adventures of Robinhood
    4. The Apartment
    5. Night of the Hunter
    6. High Noon
    7. Casablanca
    8. It's a Wonderful Life
    9. The Beat years of our lives
    10. Marty

    • @patwooster3851
      @patwooster3851 Год назад +3

      Pretty darn good list!

    • @allensacharov5424
      @allensacharov5424 Год назад +1

      totally agree with Marty. Also bring Ernest Borgnine around again for From Here to Eternity

  • @Shadowace724
    @Shadowace724 Год назад +8

    Great List! I would have squeezed The Quiet Man in there somewhere :)

  • @captira
    @captira Год назад +12

    This is the first top 10 list that I've seen putting Casablanca as #1. Exactly where I think it belongs. But I'd have liked to see To Kill A Mockingbird or Grapes of Wrath at least given honorable mention. And while Some Likes It Hot is a great comedy, I much prefer The Producers (the original version). But still a great list.

    • @HeronCoyote1234
      @HeronCoyote1234 Год назад +1

      To Kill a Mockingbird definitely should have been on this list.

    • @christinedunning8463
      @christinedunning8463 Год назад +1

      @@HeronCoyote1234 To Kill a Mockingbird is not from the Golden Age of films (which ends at about 1959). It's from 1962 -- just past -- but movies really started to change in the early 1960s, after the studios started to dissolve.

    • @HeronCoyote1234
      @HeronCoyote1234 Год назад

      @@christinedunning8463 you’re correct. I thought about that after I made my comment.
      If there were another list with great classics of the 60s, TKaM would be right up there with Lawrence of Arabia, imo.

  • @gaborjurina2839
    @gaborjurina2839 Год назад +7

    I love all your selects, especially Singing in the Rain, but I would add North By North West and Rear Window, Audrey, Grace,Cary, Eva Marie Saint and Gene it doesn't get any better :)

    • @Dallin456
      @Dallin456 Год назад +2

      If we are going to have a discussion about these movies, I think we’d best include Charade, called the best Hitchcock movie that Hitchcock didn’t make. Stellar cast, great dialogue, wonderful chemistry between Grant and Hepburn, especially considering their age gap, and funnier than almost any thriller.

    • @gaborjurina2839
      @gaborjurina2839 Год назад

      @@Dallin456 I agree, the opening scene shot in Megève, in the French Alps is iconic, the story telling is superb, Cary Grant is such a gentleman, and was aware of the awkward age difference, the film handled it with such grace. Also Walter Matthau was brilliant. thank you for your comment.

  • @susanobst-dworkis3873
    @susanobst-dworkis3873 Год назад +14

    You forgot "The Women" 1939 version. From Comedy to Drama & back again, it has everything. Star studded, fast paced & glamorous clothes as well as the sets & not one man in it but that's all that is talked about. An amazing script. If you haven't seen it yet search it out, you won't be disappointed.

    • @mikedbigame3398
      @mikedbigame3398 Год назад

      The Women is okay, but not great. More novelty than anything... I'd rank another female-centric 30's film, "Stage Door" significantly above "The Women"

    • @rbrown5518
      @rbrown5518 2 месяца назад

      If FAST pace is good for you... Watch the 1940 "His Girl Friday" Russell and Grant were connected a the hip!
      The dialogue is head wipping

  • @Chaotic_Pixie
    @Chaotic_Pixie Год назад +4

    I'm in my 30s but 'this' encapsulated my childhood. I was OBSESSED with classic movies. AMC had such good movies back then. Iconic musicals, classic romance movies, film noir, cheesy B westerns... I loved it all. And now, finding these iconic movies streaming anywhere feels impossible because they don't get recommended. You have to go searching and that means you have to remember film titles. I miss the days of just putting on AMC or TCM and enjoying 5 great movies a day during summer break. There would be 15 minute gaps or about between each and that's when I'd get all my chores done LoL

    • @chapal1216
      @chapal1216 Год назад +1

      You are describing my childhood, too! We are unconventional 30 something’s and I wouldn’t change that at all

  • @CEVasquez421
    @CEVasquez421 Год назад +4

    Treasure of the Sierra Madre and Ben-Hur are 2 of my favorite Hollywood classics.

  • @demetrialaird937
    @demetrialaird937 Год назад +9

    CASABLANCA has always been my favorite movie. Kudos for being on top. But don't forget African Queen with Bogart and Hepburn in almost a wonderful two-person character study. Two amazing performances.

    • @andrealenze8161
      @andrealenze8161 Год назад

      “Psalm-singin’ skinny old maid!” always cracks me up 😂😂😂 Also “I now pronounce you man and wife. Proceed with the execution.”

    • @werthmelissa
      @werthmelissa Год назад +1

      I love The African Queen! One of my all-time favorite adventure films! I watch it just to see Humphrey Bogart and Katherine Hepburn together.

  • @mikemapu
    @mikemapu Год назад +2

    Thank you so much for this! Always love seeing more Old Hollywood content & this ranking has to be one of y'all's best yet.

  • @2615ParkAvenueAssociates
    @2615ParkAvenueAssociates Год назад +6

    In my book, "Gone With The Wind" and "Casablanca" tie for the number one spot. "GWTW" gets downplayed now because of its racist overtones, and to be sure they are there, but both of these classics are really about love, gumption, and the desire to survive. The love story of Rick and Elsa and Rhett and Scarlett are not to be missed or forgotten. "The Wizard of Oz" should be on the list for Garland's "Over The Rainbow" alone. It tugs at your heartstrings from childhood onward and that is amidst a wonderful story so well acted. Thanks, Mojo!

  • @SouthPaw7896
    @SouthPaw7896 Год назад +4

    My favorite musical easily is Singing in the Rain! So glad it's on this list.

  • @artofmusic303
    @artofmusic303 Год назад +3

    Glad to see you included the great Double Indemnity. I would have also made room for North by Northwest and The Third Man.

  • @daphneloose5880
    @daphneloose5880 Год назад +3

    Wizard of Oz and It's a Wonderful Life are two of my favorite movies
    of all time!!

  • @mihaelasearov659
    @mihaelasearov659 Год назад +3

    Thank you for at least giving a special mention for "The Philadelphia Story"! I absolutely love it! As well as more than half of the ones in the top!

  • @douglaswhite9524
    @douglaswhite9524 Год назад +2

    The Apartment,A Streetcar Named Desire, Gone With The Wind, Chinatown, HUD, Holding the Man, West Side Story, Breakfast at Tiffany’s, To Kill a Mockingbird, The Miracle Worker, Ben-Hur

    • @Radentstwo
      @Radentstwo Год назад

      Chinatown isn't from the "Golden Age".

    • @douglaswhite9524
      @douglaswhite9524 Год назад +1

      I should’ve said that these are my favorite pictures of all time. So sorry!

    • @rbrown5518
      @rbrown5518 2 месяца назад

      a bit poky but Sam Peckinpah's Wild Bunch "69" had some of the best bloody gun action!

  • @12classics39
    @12classics39 Год назад +3

    Thank you for ranking "Casablanca" above "Citizen Kane." The latter is definitely a technical achievement in film history, but it has no sympathetic characters and none of the things that keep an audience without a critically analytical eye engaged; it's driven by a character's narcissism rather than emotionally investing relationships, and in the end, it's just a bleak and depressing story that nobody really wants to rewatch, but they're afraid to admit they don't want to rewatch it because film scholars are always parading it around as "#1 and anyone who thinks otherwise is a fool." But the former is just a better film experience in every way; Bogart and Bergman's electric chemistry, the inspiring character development, the powerful true story of the Resistance's efforts against the Nazis, the brilliant reveal of their past romance after so much hinting, the gripping suspense regarding the hero's ultimate decision, fantastic subtext, endlessly quotable dialogue (who quotes "Kane" dialogue?), and just a lot more emotional investment and rewatchability for everyone, critic or average viewer, overall.

    • @lray1948
      @lray1948 Год назад +1

      "Rosebud!"

    • @Dallin456
      @Dallin456 Год назад

      Every argument you have made is credible, but you are still presenting a niche point of view that turns you into just another version of the film critics. Not everyone who watches Casablanca is going to see the same qualities that you do. This is the challenge everyone faces in trying to identify something that has general appeal. If we were to create a list called “The Everyman’s Top Ten List of Golden Age Movies” I do not believe that Casablanca or Citizen Kane would be very high on the list. They are simply not the movies that the average Coke and popcorn gorging movie-goer, who can be induced to view and rank golden age movies is going to watch once and rate it high. The movies that we, in our self-righteous golden age ivory towers rank at the top must be savored and revisited and allowed to marinate in our souls to reach the top of the list. So God bless us for being willing to walk that uphill path, but God bless Everyman who pays the cost of admission that keeps Hollywood afloat during the Cubic Zirconium Age of Hollywood Movies.

  • @mfva1824
    @mfva1824 Год назад +1

    The fact that most of the movies in this top are my favorites is amazing ❤❤❤❤
    Please more videos of classic movies

  • @laurarubin1145
    @laurarubin1145 Год назад +3

    Great choices. There are a few others that deserve mentions...Holiday Inn (the movie that brought us White Christmas)...White Christmas...Psycho...Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (for the choreography alone). Westside Story is one of my all time favorites, along with Holiday Inn

  • @joaquincalderon4602
    @joaquincalderon4602 Год назад +2

    "The Wizard Of Oz" (1939), "Citizen Kane" (1941), "It's A Wonderful Life" (1946), beautiful films 🎞❤🎞

  • @MARY-jl5dj
    @MARY-jl5dj Год назад +7

    Gone with the Wind and west side story ❤

  • @elliepoyer6344
    @elliepoyer6344 Год назад +2

    My personal picks.
    The big sleep- Noir, salacious & thrilling. An absolute gem!
    Gigi - I understand why it wouldn’t be on the list.
    The music, the playful drama & directing was phenomenal!
    Sabrina- my all time favorite Audrey Hepburn movie.
    Reeks of comedic femininity &
    Humphrey Bogart sends the fireworks home.
    All of these had me dreaming of romance as a kiddo.
    I rewatch them yearly.

  • @nita409
    @nita409 Год назад +8

    Imitation Of Life (either iteration) should have at least gotten honorable mention.

    • @MarilynButler-v7x
      @MarilynButler-v7x 10 месяцев назад +2

      Absolutely breaks my heart just thinking about it

  • @sydneybrown3336
    @sydneybrown3336 Год назад +14

    Singing in The Rain is my favorite movie. That movie is why I got into musicals and saw West Side Story. I watched both so many times as a kid. It's like they are part of my childhood.

    • @dinocub1
      @dinocub1 Год назад +2

      Any movie with Gene Kelly in it is a masterpiece to watch.

    • @daleviker5884
      @daleviker5884 8 месяцев назад

      Singing in the rain was before my time, but I love West Side Story. I did see American In Paris not long ago, with Gene Kelly, and loved it too. Is singin' in the rain better?

  • @WCove99
    @WCove99 Год назад +6

    Roman Holiday is my favorite movie of all time!

  • @t-mar9275
    @t-mar9275 Год назад +3

    My favourite Hollywood film from this era is the 1933 version of King Kong. Although they're not my cup of tea, I'm surprised by the absence of Disney animated movies. There were about 5 or 6 from this era that were #1 at the box office for their respective years and outold almost all the films on MsMojo's list. Many are much more sophisticated than their superfiical appearance and deserve to taken more seriously than just children's fare.

  • @richardrokita4979
    @richardrokita4979 Год назад +3

    The Best Years of Our Lives is on my list for sure!

  • @olaiacampos8538
    @olaiacampos8538 Год назад +2

    My favourite classic Hollywood movie is Giant, definetly. My love for James Dean is beyond words.

  • @chrisz8585
    @chrisz8585 Год назад +7

    The Grapes of Wrath SHOULD have gotten a mention AT LEAST

    • @rbrown5518
      @rbrown5518 2 месяца назад

      We're the people that live. They can't wipe us out; they can't lick us... A timely quote?

  • @romanclay1913
    @romanclay1913 Год назад +1

    1967 we went to the Esquire Theater, Pasadena to see a film I knew nothing about. The film was TWO FOR THE ROAD. Afterwards we only talked about the time jump edits and the performances of Audrey Hepburn and Albert Finney. If you haven't seen it, see it. If you've seen it, see it again. It's more than worth the journey.

  • @MrRodrigues4
    @MrRodrigues4 Год назад +7

    My favorite is "The Heiress" and "Notorious"

    • @christinedunning8463
      @christinedunning8463 Год назад +3

      The Heiress is SO good, and not very well known unless you are an old movie buff (like me).

    • @MrRodrigues4
      @MrRodrigues4 Год назад

      @@christinedunning8463 exactly. isn't so famous, so iconic. but it's a great film

    • @Amy-ps6hf
      @Amy-ps6hf Год назад +1

      @@christinedunning8463 So glad you mentioned The Heiress! It is my favorite movie...I watch it practically once a month!

    • @lray1948
      @lray1948 Год назад

      @@christinedunning8463 And so is "Johnny Belinda" and "The Snakepit" which came out the yr before "The heiress"

  • @maximskabkin9562
    @maximskabkin9562 Год назад +1

    I have lived in the States for four and a half years. And my feeling was made up that, apart from Gone with the wind, the most lovely American movie is Miracle on 34th Street. It is really a great movie!

  • @rubygracemoseley8144
    @rubygracemoseley8144 Год назад +4

    Singin In The Rain is one of my absolute favorite movies of all time! It’s so much fun, it’s got amazing costumes, ridiculously talented dancers and singers (but mainly dancers), iconic moments (the theme song being the most iconic)…I love it so much! My sister showed it to me about sevenish years ago and I absolutely loved it. I still love it to this day! I listen to the soundtrack on a regular basis. In fact I woke myself up with Good Morning this morning 😂

    • @jessrosefawkes2721
      @jessrosefawkes2721 Год назад +1

      I’ve seen singin in the rain, I loved it as a kid, so my mum bought me it on video lol! I had a massive crush on gene Kelly growing up and I used to rewind the part of him dancing in the rain dozens of times lol! It’s an absolute classic!

  • @stevenbarrie7969
    @stevenbarrie7969 Год назад +3

    The only one I would’ve found space for that you didn’t is “Vertigo.” Otherwise, a superb list (including the HMs).

  • @anupacharya8731
    @anupacharya8731 4 месяца назад +1

    Very nicely described ❤ Thank you 😊

  • @jorgesantis3753
    @jorgesantis3753 Год назад +10

    Where is "Vertigo"? It is a masterpiece from beginning to end

  • @marwanhaddadin5918
    @marwanhaddadin5918 4 месяца назад +2

    Lawrence of Arabia, magnificent seven, guns of navarons, gone with the wind Spartacus, gladiator, casablanca

    • @rbrown5518
      @rbrown5518 2 месяца назад

      Can't go wrong with these... but did not care for the O'Toole rape scene😖😖

    • @Radentstwo
      @Radentstwo 2 месяца назад

      Gladiator don't belong

  • @scottadkinshill2493
    @scottadkinshill2493 Год назад +10

    My dad named my sister after Scarlett O'Hara. He LOVES classic movies.

    • @jordandutra9029
      @jordandutra9029 Год назад +2

      Aww that’s nice! 😊

    • @TaraLyz
      @TaraLyz Год назад +3

      I was named Tara from that book/movie! ❤

    • @JT-rx1eo
      @JT-rx1eo 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@TaraLyzFriend of mine in the Marines married a girl from Alabama. I looked at the program and one of the little bridesmaids was named Tara Bell.

  • @marcstanard2425
    @marcstanard2425 Год назад +3

    Gone with the wind must be #1 hands down

  • @marietakilpatrick1027
    @marietakilpatrick1027 Год назад +1

    Camelot (Richard Harris and Vanessa Redgrave)
    and Dr. Zhivago. Both have epic stories, phenomenal acting, memorable music and masterful cinematography!!!

  • @chheinrich8486
    @chheinrich8486 Год назад +3

    These movies are works of Art, and many people want to censor or even ban them just because their not representing modern values😡😤

  • @aucourant9998
    @aucourant9998 Год назад +2

    'Some Like It Hot' is my number one Classic Best. I'd also have 'Pyjama Game' with Doris Day in there somewhere too.

  • @GamerFunOriginallyAarush
    @GamerFunOriginallyAarush Год назад +3

    So classic to watch!

  • @SheilaMink-c2t
    @SheilaMink-c2t Год назад

    Thank you for your wonderful list and for all of the other movies that didn't manage to squeeze into the top 10 but are also a joy to watch.
    I hope you are having a very good day.

  • @drueschesrruesche8442
    @drueschesrruesche8442 Год назад +4

    I never tire of watching Rita Moreno dance.

    • @daleviker5884
      @daleviker5884 8 месяцев назад

      Well to be fair, she's the one doing the hard work. 🙂

  • @ParkerAllen2
    @ParkerAllen2 Год назад +2

    Great choices. If you had room for one more honorable mention I would have included "The Best Years of Our Lives."

  • @BlankCanvas88
    @BlankCanvas88 Год назад +3

    Others would be Gaslight, The Heiress, and Meet Me in St. Louis. But overall, I agree completely with this list.

    • @Amy-ps6hf
      @Amy-ps6hf Год назад +1

      As I said in a earlier post...The Heiress is my favorite movie. So glad it is on your list. Unfortunately, it is difficult to buy/stream. I wish it was more available.

    • @BlankCanvas88
      @BlankCanvas88 Год назад

      @@Amy-ps6hf Yes. I actually watched the 90's version first but liked the 40's version much better. I have it on DVD I think is how I watched it. :) Another movie I recently watched and really liked (though I don't think many would agree with me) was 1947's "Lured" with Lucille Ball and George Sanders. I actually watched it then watched it again with my mom b/c I liked it so much. It's very interesting b/c the subject matter is about a serial killer who lures women in a way similar to catfishing, which makes it feel like it's ahead of its time. My favorite Lucille Ball movie bar none. And she's absolutely beautiful in it.

    • @Amy-ps6hf
      @Amy-ps6hf Год назад +1

      @@BlankCanvas88 Thank you so much for your reply. I didn't know that there was a 90's version of the Heiress. I may try to watch the 90's version. But I love the 1949 version so much that I can't imagine wanting and liking the 90's version sight unseen. The movie with Lucelle Ball sounds very interesting, I will try to find it and will let you know if I liked it. Again, thank you for your information.

  • @imranfaisal9040
    @imranfaisal9040 Год назад +3

    And I also like Audrey Hepburn's Breakfast at Tiffany's

  • @thejenmath
    @thejenmath Год назад +2

    I'll happily watch any Jimmy Stewart or Audrey Hepburn movie.

  • @shawnpriest2119
    @shawnpriest2119 Год назад +3

    I'd say The Apartment should have gotten at least an honorable mention. Billy Wilder's best film and fantastic turns by Jack Lemmon, Fred McMurray, and Shirley McClaine

    • @tinasan3870
      @tinasan3870 Год назад +2

      Totally agree........The Apartment has so many wonderful characters......in addition to the main 3, there's the lady Jack takes to the apartment on xmas eve, the neighbor doctor and his wife, Sylvia, the switch/board operator, Ray Walston, and an incredible performance from Edie Adams........Plus 12 Angry Men !

    • @rbrown5518
      @rbrown5518 2 месяца назад +1

      For me ...Wilder "Magnum Opus" was: STALAG 17 (1953) and SUNSET BLVD. (1950)

  • @johnnygunzfilmbuff7821
    @johnnygunzfilmbuff7821 Год назад +1

    I love all of these movie's classics. they get better for me as I get older.

  • @simonwetterlund
    @simonwetterlund Год назад +2

    Got to say Citizen Kane, every movie after it have tried to imitate it in one way or another, thats how groundbreaking it was.