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50 films I can re-watch anytime

by kowloonzai • Created 12 years ago • Modified 12 years ago
Does it make sense to talk about yet another "personal best" list of films ? Does it make sense if there's 200 films in it ? Who cares. This is a strict list of the 50 films I enjoyed so much I could re-watch them anytime, anywhere. Ranking does not make much sense, I enjoyed all them more than the rest. Maybe I could rank the top 5, then 5 to 10, then 10 to 20, then 30 to 50, but within these 4 groups it could be any order.
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  • Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror (1922)

    1. Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror

    19221h 34mNot Rated
    7.8 (120K)
    Vampire Count Orlok expresses interest in a new residence and real estate agent Hutter's wife.
    DirectorF.W. MurnauStarsMax SchreckAlexander GranachGustav von Wangenheim
    Timeless. Any vampire movie made after this one is just a joke to me. The fairy tale spirit and the extraordinary performance of Max Schreck make the use of cheap tricks and cheap scares absolutely unnecessary. He still does make me shiver. Besides, which other world-class vampire movie was actually made, with exterior shots, in the Carpathian mountains ? Watching this film is just like studying a beautiful master's painting. A true work of art.
  • 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)

    2. 2001: A Space Odyssey

    19682h 29mG84Metascore
    8.3 (760K)
    When a mysterious artifact is uncovered on the Moon, a spacecraft manned by two humans and one supercomputer is sent to Jupiter to find its origins.
    DirectorStanley KubrickStarsKeir DulleaGary LockwoodWilliam Sylvester
    The first time I watched this I was about 12, on an old 25 inch TV. Did not understand the point, fell asleep. Some time later I had the extraordinary privilege of watching it on one of Paris's biggest, widest silver screens with an out-of-this world audio system for the 2001 re-release. I had never seen anything quite like it, and haven't since. I went to the pictures for the date, and for 3 and a half hours the nonetheless exceedingly gorgeous girl simply vanished out of my mind. I felt i was somewhere else myself too, lost in space, or maybe lost in my mind trying to make something of the story.
  • Nikolay Grinko, Aleksandr Kaydanovskiy, and Anatoliy Solonitsyn in Stalker (1979)

    3. Stalker

    19792h 42mNot Rated85Metascore
    8.0 (152K)
    A guide leads two men through an area known as the Zone to find a room that grants wishes.
    DirectorAndrei TarkovskyStarsAlisa FreyndlikhAleksandr KaydanovskiyAnatoliy Solonitsyn
    Some films are so good you forget their genre, they're just great films. Stalker is beyond that - you actually forget this is a film at all. Somehow it all makes sense in the end, you understand nothing yet you just feel the whole experience has a perfect coherence. There is so much you can understand, and it will differ from viewer to viewer , and what he can relate it to, in his own psyche: this film is more than a film, actually, this film is You.
  • Marlon Brando and Martin Sheen in Apocalypse Now (1979)

    4. Apocalypse Now

    19792h 27mR94Metascore
    8.4 (748K)
    A U.S. Army officer serving in Vietnam is tasked with assassinating a renegade Special Forces Colonel who sees himself as a god.
    DirectorFrancis Ford CoppolaStarsMartin SheenMarlon BrandoRobert Duvall
    Ah, the seventies... It's not about Brando, it's not about Hopper, it's not about Sheen who all give the performance of their lives in this film. It's about a shooting that was so hard, so long, so chaotic that it actually shows on every face. You can make anything look like the Vietnam war with a computer, you won't make the actor feel like he's at war, and show it to the camera. They all were at war. And the film is about so many other things than war.
  • A Trip to the Moon (1902)

    5. A Trip to the Moon

    190213mTV-YShort
    8.1 (59K)
    A group of astronomers go on an expedition to the Moon.
    DirectorGeorges MélièsStarsGeorges MélièsVictor AndréBleuette Bernon
    Cinema was basically born with this film. Yes the Lumiere brothers invented the gear a few years before, but they never viewed it as an artistic endeavour. This this is probably the first film to actually use a constructed story. The special effects are amazing. Amazing. Who needs CGI when you are as creative as Mr. Melies. This is also the first film to have been ripped off, litterally by the meter, all around the world in dozens of films. Who needs DSL internet when you can steal a roll.
    The recently released hand-coloured version, with the fantastic soundtrack by Air - remember in the early days of cinema they never actually played the same tune each time a movie was shown - is a tour de force.
  • Maggie Cheung, Leslie Cheung, and Carina Lau in Days of Being Wild (1990)

    6. Days of Being Wild

    19901h 34mNot Rated93Metascore
    7.4 (27K)
    A man tries to find out who his real mother is after the woman who raised him tells him the truth.
    DirectorWong Kar-WaiStarsLeslie CheungMaggie CheungAndy Lau
    Many will consider it odd to view this one as Wong Kar Wai's best, but I still believe it is his masterpiece. First because Leslie Cheung is the greatest actor who ever graced the HK film industry with his performances. Then because of the extraordinary blend between such a poetic atmosphere and the energy of the actors. This film IS nostalgy.
  • Orson Welles, Norman Eshley, and Jeanne Moreau in The Immortal Story (1968)

    7. The Immortal Story

    196858mNot RatedTV Movie
    7.0 (3.7K)
    In Macao, a wealthy merchant named Charles Clay hires two people to recreate a story of a sailor who is paid to impregnate a man's wife.
    DirectorOrson WellesStarsOrson WellesJeanne MoreauRoger Coggio
    Saw this on TV just by chance in a sleepless night and couldn't get my eyes off it. I literally was hypnotized. And i really was lucky as this one is really, really difficult to find. Yes it is a TV movie, but it was shown in theaters too. At this time Welles was finding it hard to make a living, and this is actually his final directing job. Moreau has never been so beautiful and mysterious, Welles has never been so impressive and fragile. This is also the only work in colour by Welles, and boy, does he know how to use colour. Once again this one makes you forget that you are watching a movie, in fact, you are actually watching a painting in the making, until the final touch.
  • Jean-Paul Belmondo and Jean Seberg in Breathless (1960)

    8. Breathless

    19601h 30mNot Rated96Metascore
    7.7 (92K)
    A small-time crook, hunted by the authorities for a car theft and the murder of a police officer, attempts to persuade a hip American journalism student to run away with him to Italy.
    DirectorJean-Luc GodardStarsJean-Paul BelmondoJean SebergRichard Balducci
    When Belmondo was young, handsome, artsy. When Godard was not autistic yet. When Seberg was alive. When nothing else mattered but style.
    Si vous n’aimez pas la mer... Si vous n’aimez pas la montagne... Si vous n’aimez pas la ville : allez vous faire foutre !
    Si vous n'aimez pas ce film, allez vous faire foutre.
  • Maggie Cheung and Tony Leung Chiu-wai in In the Mood for Love (2000)

    9. In the Mood for Love

    20001h 38mPG87Metascore
    8.1 (180K)
    Two neighbors form a strong bond after both suspect extramarital activities of their spouses. However, they agree to keep their bond platonic so as not to commit similar wrongs.
    DirectorWong Kar-WaiStarsMaggie CheungTony Leung Chiu-waiPing-Lam Siu
    No Leslie Cheung here, but Tony Leung reaches his heights. The cinematography is simply gorgeous, and Wai makes you dream of a HK that probably never was. Who cares. At this level, art creates life, not the other way round.
  • Leon Lai in Fallen Angels (1995)

    10. Fallen Angels

    19951h 39mNot Rated71Metascore
    7.5 (57K)
    This Hong Kong-set crime drama follows the lives of a hitman, hoping to get out of the business, and his elusive female partner.
    DirectorWong Kar-WaiStarsLeon LaiMichelle ReisTakeshi Kaneshiro
    Wai's most stylish film ever. The story is accessory. I dare you to not wish to take the first flight to HK after watching this one.
  • Jacky Cheung in Bullet in the Head (1990)

    11. Bullet in the Head

    19902h 16mNot Rated
    7.5 (12K)
    When three close friends escape from Hong Kong to war-time Saigon to start a criminal's life, they all go through a harrowing experience which totally shatters their lives and their friendship forever.
    DirectorJohn WooStarsTony Leung Chiu-waiJacky CheungWaise Lee
    Woo's best, by a hundred miles. Nevermind if the story has already been told in the Deer Hunter, this one is better. The most shocking Vietnam war film I have ever seen. The only film bar one - see below - that still makes me cry at * that * very scene even if I have watched it a dozen times. Get the Director's ending - which was slaughtered in the name of commercialism. Probably the bluntest point about mankind made on film in this ending.
  • Sam Waterston in The Killing Fields (1984)

    12. The Killing Fields

    19842h 21mR76Metascore
    7.8 (62K)
    A journalist is trapped in Cambodia during Pol Pot's bloody Year Zero cleansing campaign.
    DirectorRoland JofféStarsSam WaterstonHaing S. NgorJohn Malkovich
    I know it's just skillfully brought up, I know it's just some easy crafts and slow shots with a cheap song, I know the scene by heart, but I still shed a tear when I see the reunion of Sidney and Dirth Pran. Even when I just think about it.
    Say it : this is a true story, and the main Cambodian actor went through all this himself. Repeat : THIS*IS*A TRUE STORY.
  • Bruce Willis, Mickey Rourke, Benicio Del Toro, Jessica Alba, Rosario Dawson, and Clive Owen in Sin City (2005)

    13. Sin City

    20052h 4mR74Metascore
    8.0 (811K)
    An exploration of the dark and miserable Basin City and three of its residents, all of whom are caught up in violent corruption.
    DirectorsFrank MillerQuentin TarantinoRobert RodriguezStarsMickey RourkeClive OwenBruce Willis
    This is not only about the revolutionary filming technique. This is not only about Frank Miller. This is not only about Roberto Rodriguez. This is not only about the renaissance of Rourke and the reinvention of Willis. This is not only about Jessica Alba's dance - well it could be just that. This is not because it is probably the most highly quotable movie in recent history. This is simply the greatest film noir of modern times.
  • Sylvester Stallone and Talia Shire in Rocky (1976)

    14. Rocky

    19762hPG70Metascore
    8.1 (667K)
    A small-time Philadelphia boxer gets a supremely rare chance to fight the world heavyweight champion in a bout in which he strives to go the distance for his self-respect.
    DirectorJohn G. AvildsenStarsSylvester StalloneTalia ShireBurt Young
    Believe it or not, after this film, the most respected reviewers compared Stallone to Brando or Dean. Most people dream about NYC, LA, Chicago, Miami... But whenever somebody asks me which city I would like to visit first when I travel to the US, I say Philly. I hate boxing, but I love this film. Probably one of the greatest moment of humanity on film.
  • Al Pacino in Scarface (1983)

    15. Scarface

    19832h 50mR65Metascore
    8.3 (977K)
    In the 1980s, a determined criminal-minded Cuban immigrant becomes the biggest drug smuggler in Miami, and is eventually undone by his own drug addiction.
    DirectorBrian De PalmaStarsAl PacinoMichelle PfeifferSteven Bauer
    I think I have never watched any movie which is so single-handedly carried above by the performance of a single actor. You could forget about the violence, the cheesy 80's music and clothing, you can forget the acting of most of the cast, but you can *NEVER* forget Tony Montana. Also, this film is the perfect example of a perfect remake - completely unfaithful to the story, totaly true to the spirit.
  • Max von Sydow in The Exorcist (1973)

    16. The Exorcist

    19732h 2mR83Metascore
    8.1 (482K)
    When a mysterious entity possesses a young girl, her mother seeks the help of two Catholic priests to save her life.
    DirectorWilliam FriedkinStarsEllen BurstynMax von SydowLinda Blair
    This is the kind of horror film that is so good you forget about the horror. Forget about the cheap pea soup, forget about the spider-walk and the grotesque stunts. What really matters is the inner fight of all the protagonists with their own inner demons - no one is pure, everybody is fighting his or her own spiritual, psychological fight. This psychological dimension, the acting, and the rigorous documentation effort is what makes not only a great horror film, but a great film period.
  • Alien (1979)

    17. Alien

    19791h 57mR89Metascore
    8.5 (1M)
    After investigating a mysterious transmission of unknown origin, the crew of a commercial spacecraft encounters a deadly lifeform.
    DirectorRidley ScottStarsSigourney WeaverTom SkerrittJohn Hurt
    Odd as it may seem, this movie is probably the one that I can most closely relate to the 1920's expressionist era of film. The mood development, the design work, the creativity of the special effects, and the tension buildup add up to actually reach poetic levels. Absolutely fantastic work that will look as good and feel as good as new in 50 years time.
  • The Shining (1980)

    18. The Shining

    19802h 26mR68Metascore
    8.4 (1.2M)
    A family heads to an isolated hotel for the winter, where a sinister presence influences the father into violence. At the same time, his psychic son sees horrifying forebodings from both the past and the future.
    DirectorStanley KubrickStarsJack NicholsonShelley DuvallDanny Lloyd
    I talked about Scarface being the perfect example of a perfect remake because it put faithfulness to the spirit over faithfulness to the story, well The Shining is the perfect example of the perfect adaptation of a novel for the silver screen. Because it is not, really not true to Stephen King's story. Kubrick makes room for his own cinematic talents, with breath-taking scenes that don't make any sense but which yo marvel at like Da Vinci paintings. Also he intelligently makes room for the talents of Nicholson, who's absolutely out of his mind in this one.
    Kubrick is not a writer, but hey if King wants to do movies, let he be my guest. He actually tried to remake it... well.... no comment.
  • Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence (2004)

    19. Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence

    20041h 40mPG-1368Metascore
    7.4 (42K)
    In the year 2032, Batô, a cyborg detective for the anti-terrorist unit Public Security Section 9, investigates the case of a female robot--one created solely for sexual pleasure--who slaughtered her owner.
    DirectorsMamoru OshiiNaoko KusumiMizuho NishikuboStarsAkio ÔtsukaAtsuko TanakaTamio Ôki
    Man, what a visual, audio, intellectual and sensorial treat this one was when I watched it at the theatre. I like movies which make me think, but when they can both make me think and feel like this one, they're on the top of my list.
  • Exiled (2006)

    20. Exiled

    20061h 50mR73Metascore
    7.2 (10K)
    A friendship is formed between an ex-gangster, and two groups of hitmen - those who want to protect him and those who were sent to kill him.
    DirectorJohnnie ToStarsNick CheungAnthony Chau-Sang WongFrancis Ng
    Yes, To did Election 1&2, The Mission, Breaking News which got more acclaim than Exiled. But this one is special. There is almost something like a story here. And that little something which you cannot fabricate, which is... a mood. You're in the middle of tiny tiny Macao under the tropics and this is a crime flick, but you actually believe you are in the Mexican desert for a remake of one of Sergio Leone's best westerns. A real tour de force.
  • Robert De Niro, James Woods, William Forsythe, Brian Bloom, Adrian Curran, James Hayden, Rusty Jacobs, and Scott Tiler in Once Upon a Time in America (1984)

    21. Once Upon a Time in America

    19843h 49mR75Metascore
    8.3 (398K)
    A former Prohibition-era Jewish gangster returns to the Lower East Side of Manhattan 35 years later, where he must once again confront the ghosts and regrets of his old life.
    DirectorSergio LeoneStarsRobert De NiroJames WoodsElizabeth McGovern
    Sergio Leone's style adapted to gangster movies. Would someone hang me if I say he achieves even more here than Coppola with the Godfather ? Due respect for the Godfather, but I venture to say so. This is more raw, more real, more streetwise.
  • Naomi Watts in Mulholland Drive (2001)

    22. Mulholland Drive

    20012h 27mR87Metascore
    7.9 (412K)
    After a car wreck on Mulholland Drive renders a woman amnesiac, she and a Hollywood-hopeful search for clues and answers across Los Angeles in a twisting venture beyond dreams and reality.
    DirectorDavid LynchStarsNaomi WattsLaura HarringJustin Theroux
    The only thing I understood for sure about this film is that there is nothing to understand. I feel sorry for those who did not understand this simple principle, for they ruined the unique experience of watching this trying to make something of the story.
  • Patricia Arquette and Bill Pullman in Lost Highway (1997)

    23. Lost Highway

    19972h 14mR53Metascore
    7.6 (165K)
    Anonymous videotapes presage a musician's murder conviction, and a gangster's girlfriend leads a mechanic astray.
    DirectorDavid LynchStarsBill PullmanPatricia ArquetteJohn Roselius
    Copy/Paste my comment on Mulholland Drive here...
  • The Lower Depths (1957)

    24. The Lower Depths

    19572h 17mNot Rated
    7.2 (6.3K)
    In a Japanese slum, various residents play out their lives, dreaming of better things or settling for their lot. Among them is a man who pines for a young woman but is stymied by her deceptive family.
    DirectorAkira KurosawaStarsToshirô MifuneIsuzu YamadaKyôko Kagawa
    Picture Maxim Gorky's the lower depths, which story takes place in 19th century Russia, right in the middle of Japan's Edo era. Nonsensical ? Not at all. No one, even Jean Renoir in his 1936 version, understood Gorky's message about mankind better than Kurosawa. This is the kind of project that really shows just how great a filmmaker can be, and Kurosawa is totally up to the challenge.
  • Jean-Paul Belmondo and Anna Karina in Pierrot le fou (1965)

    25. Pierrot le fou

    19651h 50mPG-13
    7.4 (39K)
    Pierrot escapes his boring society and travels from Paris to the Mediterranean Sea with Marianne, a girl chased by hit-men from Algeria. They lead an unorthodox life, always on the run.
    DirectorJean-Luc GodardStarsJean-Paul BelmondoAnna KarinaGraziella Galvani
    Godard does not lose any bit of talent using colour - he actually gets better. Belmondo's lines are even funnier and spirited than in Breathless, but it's Karina who steals the show here. There's love between the actress and the filmmaker (they were a couple in real life at the time), and you can feel it through the screen.

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