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90s best movies

-VAHID-

over 2 years ago

Hi everybody I would like to know your suggestions and your opinion about the 90s movies and your best movie you see thanks.

like2sl​eep

over 2 years ago

titanic is the best :O)

like2sl​eep

over 2 years ago

ebola syndrome is shocking :O(

Law

over 2 years ago

Histoire(s) du cinema is the culmination of popular cinema in the 20th century.

Fable Pics

over 2 years ago

Truman Show and Shawshank Redemption for me.

like2sl​eep

over 2 years ago

seriously though 4 me the 90’s was a great decade 4 independent films and i started 2 like them more than hollywood productions i mostly watched in the 80’s

saeed

over 2 years ago

Le huitième jour

Robley

over 2 years ago

E W S

-VAHID-

over 2 years ago

what’s your opinion about Breaking the Waves

Learn2S​wim

over 2 years ago

American Beauty… by far

Dennis Brian

over 2 years ago

deconstructing harry
germany year zero
venice/venice
carried away
endurance
bugsy
bulworth
manhattan murder mystery
new wave

Learn2S​wim

over 2 years ago

let’s not forget Se7en and Heat

Dennis Brian

over 2 years ago

let’s try

-VAHID-

over 2 years ago

damn right Seven also is a good movie

-VAHID-

over 2 years ago

damn right Seven also is a good movie

Brad S.

over 2 years ago

Pulp Fiction, of course.

Black Irish

over 2 years ago

Trois Couleurs: Bleu is my favorite so far.

Patrick

over 2 years ago

Tarr’s Satantango is the most visually and thematically ambitious movie I saw made in the 1990s. It’s the quickest 7 1/4 hour in all of cinema.

The Piano and Pulp Fiction stand out as auteur-driven masterpieces. Dead Man stands in a class all its own. Eyes Wide Shut was the perfect final work of one of the U.S.’s greatest filmmakers.

I also loved Peter Tscherkassky’s Outer Space, for more of an avant-garde vibe.

for a dark horse, I really really enjoyed Three Kings, and have found myself returning to that movie in my mind this past decade whenever I think of U.S. foreign policy.

the 1990’s Best Popcorn Movies included:

Spielberg’s Jurassic Park…. I’m a total sucker for this brainless roller coaster ride.

Terminator 2: Judgment Day …. still one of the best instances where a proper balance between technology and its limitations was reached. Because of this, the effects still look fresh, even now that the Matrix movies, made almost a decade later, look like garbage.

Batman Returns…. still for my money the best Tim Burton movie. Completely fun, completely goofy (without a descent into camp) and completely entertaining throughout.

Seven… it may be Fincher’s most complete movie. I liked Zodiac a helluvalot more, but even that film’s ambition cannot completely compensate for its flaws. Seven, however, is far more modest and successful in creating and maintaining a mood, a story, and its characters.

The Big Lebowski…. is it still blasphemous to call this the best film by the Coens? If so, just wait five or ten more years. Yes, it’s great when they’re serious and they get all existential and mopey….. but this is one of the funniest movies ever made.

Jesse Richards

over 2 years ago

For 1990’s I’d say Satantango…for 1890’s I’d say anything by the Lumiere brothers.

tmo

over 2 years ago

Close-Up
Goodfellas
Days of Being Wild
Hana-Bi
The Thin Red Line
Hoop Dreams… What do you guys think of Hoop Dreams?
Bad Lieutenant
Three Colors Trilogy
Ulysses’ Gaze
Crash
Lessons of Darkness

I’ve got a sweet spot for The Big Lebowski but I would have to say Fargo

@VAHID: Breaking the Waves seems more and more like von Trier’s greatest film for me

Robley

over 2 years ago

I <3 Hoop Dreams.

saeed

over 2 years ago

90s means 1980 until 1990 or 1990 until 2000?

Black Irish

over 2 years ago

Saeed: 1990-2000

Prismat​ic

over 2 years ago

Silence of The Lambs, The Insider, and Rob Roy would be my Top 3.

Ercan

over 2 years ago

Eyes Wide Shut (Stanley Kubrick ,1999)
Goodfellas (Martin Scorsese, 1990)
Leaving Las Vegas (Mike Figgis, 1995)
Naked (Mike Leigh, 1993)
The Piano (Jane Campion, 1993)
Pulp Fiction (Quentin Tarantino, 1994)
Secrets & Lies (Mike Leigh, 1996)
The Silence of the Lambs (Jonathan Demme, 1991)
The Sweet Hereafter (Atom Egoyan, 1997)
The Thin Red Line (Terrence Malick, 1998)
Three Colors: Blue (Krzysztof Kieslowski, 1993)
Three Colors: Red (Krzysztof Kieslowski, 1994)
Unforgiven (Clint Eastwood, 1992)

In my opinion, these are the best examples of filmmaking in the 90s. All are masterful classics that will be remembered even 50 years from now on.