Canada also has Wavelength and Australia has Walkabout.
I would go with M for Germany.
I would go with M for Germany.
That's the greatest film in the world.The Third Man
I'll give that the best film of 1990, though CLEAR AND PRESENT DANGER reaches a slightly higher level of excellence.
I felt guilty about my choice, but when I went to the AFI's top 100 list, I discovered my choice was on their top 10.
"The Wizard of Oz"
I'll give that the best film of 1990, though CLEAR AND PRESENT DANGER reaches a slightly higher level of excellence.
1. In my opinion the best movies produced in the USA are war films.
2. Of those, the best are naval war films.
3. Red October's the best naval war film, period.
1. In my opinion the best movies produced in the USA are war films.
2. Of those, the best are naval war films.
3. Red October's the best naval war film, period.
Good movie. Personally I'd put They Were Expendable as the best,
with The Sand Pebbles,
The Caine Mutiny,
The Bridges at Toko-Ri,
Run Silent, Run Deep,
and The Enemy Below above "Red October."
And BTW for my money probably the best movie about being in the navy is not a war picture at all: The Last Detail.
I have to go with Coppola again with The Godfather (1972) - USA.
TV movies, uh, I guess, okay, maybe if you're from a tiny country and that's most of what you've got. For the US? Not so much. Also, there's a big and real difference between a TV movie, like HBO's Warm Springs, and a miniseries, which is what Shogun is.Gaith, are non-theatrical TV movies allowed? (Such as the two mentioned above?)
If they are, my best three would be THE NIGHT STALKER, SHOGUN or SPECIAL BULLETIN, with TNS as #1. (It's still no PSYCHO.)
Clear and Present Danger, IIRC, isn't even as good as The Sum of All Fears, which is itself nowhere near the US' greatest film.As for comparing Red October and Clear and Present Danger, I go by which adapted the material better. By that metric, there's no contest. Baldwin's a better Ryan than Ford and the first movie got closer to the original material.
So did II felt guilty about my choice, but when I went to the AFI's top 100 list, I discovered my choice was on their top 10.
"The Wizard of Oz"
I'm glad to see it, I seriously considered it myself.
Also, there's a big and real difference between a TV movie, like HBO's Warm Springs, and a miniseries, which is what Shogun is.
I'd rule both categories out myself on general principles, even when a TV movie is good (almost never) or when a miniseries is great (occasionally).
Full disclosure: what's an IIRC?![]()
Clear and Present Danger, IIRC, isn't even as good as The Sum of All Fears, which is itself nowhere near the US' greatest film.As for comparing Red October and Clear and Present Danger, I go by which adapted the material better. By that metric, there's no contest. Baldwin's a better Ryan than Ford and the first movie got closer to the original material.
Also, K-19: The Widowmaker is a better film than any of the Ryan flicks.
I felt guilty about my choice, but when I went to the AFI's top 100 list, I discovered my choice was on their top 10.
"The Wizard of Oz"
I'm glad to see it, I seriously considered it myself. For people of a certain age (like me), The Wizard of Oz on TV was an annual event as anticipated and expected as a school holiday. It was so familiar that you took it for granted and could forget how very good it was. The performances are outstanding. Young Judy Garland is incredible, I can think of few whose personality connects through the screen so directly and effectively. Wistful, homesick, bewildered, afraid, indignant, defiant, you're there with her all the way. Margaret Hamilton and Frank Morgan are wonderful, too.
In recent viewings I've been impressed by many sequences, but I'll just mention one: When Dorothy sees Auntie Em through the crystal, looking for her. Wow, what an effective scene. Young or old, that feeling of being cut off from the mother, to see her looking for you but being unable to reach her, is so powerful. A brilliant moment, and Garland plays it so well.
Also, anybody interested in pre-CG effects should take a look at the swooping aerial abduction sequence with the flying monkeys. Amazing looking soundstage sequence, with even some camera movement.
The Caine Mutiny
Good, but like JAG, more about lawyers and law than the navy and war.
Run Silent, Run Deep
Goes back to the "original material" argument. Great, but essentially a new story with Ed Beach's book title tacked on.
It's not the all-time best except for its year, but what are your thoughts on BATAAN? It's not as great as CASABLANCA, but it's better directed.
Also, there's a big and real difference between a TV movie, like HBO's Warm Springs, and a miniseries, which is what Shogun is.
Good heavens... I can't believe the amount of trivia associated with this film.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0032138/trivia?ref_=tt_trv_trv
Because, for all its technical and artistic achievement, and undeniable notability in the history of American film, it's a children's story about a fairly uninteresting little kid who can't wait to escape the magical realm she finds herself in to return to a probable lifetime of Kansas drudgery?Is OZ not in anyone's top four? And if not, why not?
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