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Cinema as an art: Everyone post 5 Greatest Films

Keenan DeMarsi​co

over 1 year ago

1. Citizen Kane
2. Vertigo
3. The Rules of the Game
4. The General
5. L’Atalante

Kenji

over 1 year ago

All your 5 are certainly great, but only 5?

Sansho the Bailiff
Zerkalo/Mirror
Rules of the Game
Sunrise
Andrei Rublev

+ Hiroshima mon Amour…well, it could go on, and should include some from Africa, Latin America and neglected countries, since the idea of greatness is partially attributable to received wisdom and the power of some cultures and countries to elicit respect for certain norms and their grandeur

Mathieu Langloi​s

over 1 year ago

1. Eros Plus Massacre
2. Woman in the Dunes
3. Last Year at Marienbad
4. Un homme qui dort
5. Meshes of the Afternoon

Kenji

over 1 year ago

So far, not unusually, we’ve only come up with films from powerful nations with histories of imperialism. So, how about an alternative 5:

Lucia
Hour of the Furnaces
Yeelen
The Colour of Pomegranates
Gamperaliya

and still no women…

moglis

over 1 year ago

Zerkalo

The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie
Nostalghia
Man of Marble

Ingrid Hoeben

over 1 year ago

Playtime
Brief Encounter
Les Vacances de Monsieur Hulot
Wild Strawberries
Safety Last!

Dennis Brian

over 1 year ago

“we’ve only come up with films from powerful nations with histories of imperialism…and still no women…”

This place is getting awfully PC

javier quinter​o

over 1 year ago

Five random:

Antonio das Mortes
Heroic Purgatory
The Courage of the People (El coraje del pueblo)
Manuel on the Island of Wonders
The Quince Tree Sun

Kenji

over 1 year ago

Dennis, i just like to keep the idea floating, even if to question myself, more than wanting to set rules. People are perfectly entitled to their own judgment on greatness.

Ogier de Beausea​nt

over 1 year ago

Beau Travail
The Conformist
Fellini’s Satyricon
Blade Runner
Enter the Void

Kenji

over 1 year ago

I see PC as following what’s prescribed without proper questioning- swallowing hook line and sinker the media and establishment guff on imperialism, the army, the royal family, patriotism etc. And also their brainwashing on what PC is

Brad S.

over 1 year ago

I would like to propose that there is zero relationship between the country of origin of one’s favorite films and the inclination to support imperialism.

Kenji

over 1 year ago

We’re talking greatness, which is slightly different from favourites. I’m not even taking my own selection as inclination to support imperialism. Don’t mind me, carry on; i was just putting into the thread the pricking of my mind, not wishing to undermine the fun as i may have done.

Scottie Ferguso​n

over 1 year ago

1. Vertigo
2. 2001: A Space Odyssey
3. Apocalypse Now
4. Raging Bull
5. The Godfather

I love all five, #1 is my favorite film of all time, but it’s a bit different from my top 5. Compared to my favorites:

1. Vertigo
2. The Godfather
3. Psycho
4. Taxi Driver
5. 2001: A Space Odyssey

ethan

over 1 year ago

Days of Heaven
L’Avventura
Point Blank
Stalker
Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy

IMDben

over 1 year ago

Where does the “cinema as an art” part of this thread fit in?

Brad S.

over 1 year ago

1) Nashville
2) Taxi Driver
3) 2001: A Space Odyssey
4) Citizen Kane
5) Psycho

KingofP​ain

over 1 year ago

Movies that I consider Artistically Great

Who Wants to Kill Jessie? (CZECH)
Variety (WOMAN DIRECTOR)
Possession (POLISH DIRECTOR)
The Ring Finger (WOMAN DIRECTOR)
Le bonheur (WOMAN DIRECTOR)

Ogier de Beausea​nt

over 1 year ago

Don’t mind me, carry on; i was just putting into the thread the pricking of my mind, not wishing to undermine the fun as i may have done

Damn! Now I’m on a guilt trip that won’t quit. All the awful images of the brutalities of France in North Africa, the rape of Nanjing, Hiroshima, lions eating Christians…mea maxima culpa. …

House of Leaves

-moderator-
over 1 year ago

Den, Den… (shakes head)

Elisa

over 1 year ago

1. Vertigo (Hitchcock)
2. Broken Blossoms (Griffith)
3. L’Avventura (Antonioni)
4. In A Lonely Place (Ray)
5. Le Notti Bianche (Visconti)

5 that came to mind since there are many more that are cinematic art.

Scampi

over 1 year ago

What’s the definition of a ‘great’ film? To me if it explores peoples’ psychology with honesty and authenticity, and/or offers some sort of insight into the human condition and does so with supreme technical ability then it’s great. I think you could make a case for these five:

The Human Condition (1959-1961)
Scenes From A Marriage (1973)
Aparajito (1956)
The Browning Version (1951)
There Will Be Blood (2007)

IMDben

over 1 year ago

Of course, anyone who applies a star-rating to a film immediately undermines any notion they may have about it being art by fitting it into a mode of analysis created for entertainment. Just saying.

Brad S.

over 1 year ago

The Complete works of William Shakespeare – 1/5 (Anglophone)
Beethoven’s 9th Symphony – 3/5 (too commercial)
The Mona Lisa 2/5 (overrated)

TheArsh​Man

over 1 year ago

2001: A Space Odyssey (usa)
The Leopoard (italy)
Citizen Kane (usa)
M (germany)
A Man Escaped (france)

Meldini

over 1 year ago

1. The Conformist (Bertolucci)
2. L’Avventura (Antonioni)
3. Nashville (Altman)
4. Blue Velvet (Lynch)
5. Contempt (Godard)

Peter

over 1 year ago

GERTRUD (Dreyer)

juan jose namnun

over 1 year ago

1-zerkalo
2-eyes wide shut
3-simon of the desert
4-badlands
5-metropolis

juan jose namnun

over 1 year ago

1-zerkalo
2-eyes wide shut
3-simon of the desert
4-badlands
5-metropolis

Jerry G

over 1 year ago

Trois Couleurs: Bleu

Trois Couleurs:Rouge

Persona

Ivan’s Childhood

Sansho the Bailiff