""Casablanca"; Charlie Chaplin's "City Lights"; any film by Eric Rohmer; most films by Woody Allen."
..a few of my favorite films:
1.All About Eve
2.A Woman Under The Influence
3.Cherry Blossoms (new addition)- a film by director Doris Dorrie
4.Chinatown
5.Citizen Kane
6.Forbidden Games
7.400 Blows
8.Hannah and her Sisters
9.I Am Cuba
10.Knife in the Water (and/or Crazed Fruit: boats and sensuality big in both films)
11.La Strada
12.Nights of Cabiria
13.Notorious
14.Pandora's Box
15.Raging Bull
16.Rebecca
17.Sansho the Bailiff
18.Seventh Seal
19.Stroszek
20.Sunset Boulevard
21.The Battle of Algiers
22.The Marriage of Maria Braun
23.The Third Man
24.The Umbrellas of Cherbourg
25.Through a Glass Darkly
26.To Kill a Mockingbird
27.Ugetsu
28.Vertigo
29.Virgin Spring
30.Wages of Fear
31.Winter Light
I don't like calling this a "best of" list because there are just so many great films from every corner of the world that I have not seen. Note: Chaplin and Keaton favorites not on this list, but 'City Lights' and 'The General' are certainly classics films, and lest we forget the insightful documentaries from the Maysles brothers. The films "The Man with a Camera" and "Berlin: Symphony of a Great City" are well worth watching for an insight into human activity and sights from the final year of the 1920's. "The Man with the Camera" has a superbly imaginative soundtrack as well. With increasingly short attention spans, many film viewers don't have the patience to sit through an epic 4-disc saga, but if you are willing - please do yourself a favor and see Masaki Kobayashi's "The Human Condition".
..a few of my favorite films:
1.All About Eve
2.A Woman Under The Influence
3.Cherry Blossoms (new addition)- a film by director Doris Dorrie
4.Chinatown
5.Citizen Kane
6.Forbidden Games
7.400 Blows
8.Hannah and her Sisters
9.I Am Cuba
10.Knife in the Water (and/or Crazed Fruit: boats and sensuality big in both films)
11.La Strada
12.Nights of Cabiria
13.Notorious
14.Pandora's Box
15.Raging Bull
16.Rebecca
17.Sansho the Bailiff
18.Seventh Seal
19.Stroszek
20.Sunset Boulevard
21.The Battle of Algiers
22.The Marriage of Maria Braun
23.The Third Man
24.The Umbrellas of Cherbourg
25.Through a Glass Darkly
26.To Kill a Mockingbird
27.Ugetsu
28.Vertigo
29.Virgin Spring
30.Wages of Fear
31.Winter Light
I don't like calling this a "best of" list because there are just so many great films from every corner of the world that I have not seen. Note: Chaplin and Keaton favorites not on this list, but 'City Lights' and 'The General' are certainly classics films, and lest we forget the insightful documentaries from the Maysles brothers. The films "The Man with a Camera" and "Berlin: Symphony of a Great City" are well worth watching for an insight into human activity and sights from the final year of the 1920's. "The Man with the Camera" has a superbly imaginative soundtrack as well. With increasingly short attention spans, many film viewers don't have the patience to sit through an epic 4-disc saga, but if you are willing - please do yourself a favor and see Masaki Kobayashi's "The Human Condition".