Here's the link: http://movies.msn.com/100-favorite-films-intro/photo-gallery/feature/ Two things stand out. First, it's really a hundred best movies men 18-49 remember. Second, as these things go, it's not very culty or eccentric, nor is it fixated either on trendy critics or the box office.
this is probably the first movie list where I have seen most of those movies. However, I have no idea why people love the Wizard of Oz so much. I HATE that movie.
Good list, and likewise, made up mostly of movies I've actually seen. Some of the placements of one film over the other are strange, but that's almost always the case with such lists. Kudos to them for also putting the entire list on one page instead of exclusively making you click through to each individual entry, which, on a list this long usually would make me just skip it.
For those who hate THE WIZARD OF OZ, I think THE SOUND OF MUSIC's much more hateable. Even one of the co-stars despised it. (And it appears as if STAR TREK is just about the newest film in this list of 100. Yeesh. But no sign of ALIEN or THE EXORCIST. Yeesh.) Here are the surviving films which overlap in my top 100, with their approximate positions. 4. The Wizard of Oz 70ish. North By Northwest 29. The Fellowship of the Ring 60ish.The Searchers 44. Star Wars — The Empire Strikes Back 46. Raiders of the Lost Ark 14. Jaws 39. The Breakfast Club 12. 2001: A Space Odyssey 40ish. Blade Runner 15. Aliens 43. Planet of the Apes (1968 16. Star Wars: Ep. IV 3. The Godfather (45th place in the other????) 77. Terms of Endearment 19. Apocalypse Now 18. Die Hard 68. Broadcast News 42. Pulp Fiction 1. Psycho 17. A Fish Called Wanda 94. One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest 84. Excalibur 20. West Side Story 45. Monty Python and the Holy Grail[/COLOR] 13,387. Star Trek (2009 37. Tootsie 29. Fight Club
This is a nice list . Ones I've seen: 1. The Wizard of Oz — Danny Miller 3. The Fellowship of the Ring — Myriam Gabriel-Pollock 6. The Shawshank Redemption — Martha Brockenbrough 11. Dr. Strangelove or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb — Kim Morgan 12. Star Wars — The Empire Strikes Back — Bryan Reesman 16. Airplane! — Jeff Michael Vice 21. The Breakfast Club — Kate Erbland 31. The Princess Bride — Martha Brockenbrough 34. When Harry Met Sally — William Goss 40. Blazing Saddles — Corwin Neuse 42. Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkhaban — Myriam Gabriel-Pollock 44. Star Wars: Ep. IV — Danny Miller 47. The Big Lebowski — Mary Pols 49. Forest Gump — Lauren Choi 54. Apocalypse Now — Don Kaye 58. Silence of the Lambs — Corwin Neuse 59. Die Hard — Glenn Kenny 64. WALL-E — Martha Brockenbrough 69. A Fish Called Wanda — Noah Walden 76. Back to the Future — Myriam Gabriel-Pollock 79. Some Like it Hot — Richard T. Jameson 89. Star Trek (2009) — Myriam Gabriel-Pollock 94. Tootsie — Sheri Quirt 96. Donnie Darko — William Goss 100. Young Frankenstein — David Walker
I hate Oz, but honestly I've never really seen all of The Sound of Music. Just looking at it, it looks like its not my kind of movie, and the parts of it I have seen haven't really wanted to make me see more of it. Fortunately I was never required to see The Sound of Music, but The Wizard of Oz was forced upon me several times as a child. And yeah, WTF happened to Alien?
Good question. That's my number two. When the AFI chose their first ''best 100'' in the 90s they had no room for ALIEN or THE EXORCIST either.
Hmm. The Big Lebowski and Star Trek XI are higher than Seven Samurai? This list is a bit eccentric, to say the least. I'm not a big fan of it either, although I recognize it as being "good". I'm pretty sure it's not the best movie ever.
I never could get why the 2009 reboot's always called STAR TREK XI. Since it's taking place long before the events of TMP, it'll always be STAR TREK 0.5 to me. I may be the in the minority here, but OZ kicks GWTW's ass. Its scope is smaller but makes up for it in emotional power.
Oh. George Lucas is going to have to do some serious renumbering in that case. Now we'll have to buy his special editions AGAIN.
Lucas explicitly used a different numbering system (retroactively, in the case of the first film). The Star Trek movies have been referred to with sequential numbering. I count eight female contributors to that list.
STAR TREKS ''Seven through Eleven'' have been referred to by their directors, writers and their studio as GENERATIONS, FIRST CONTACT, INSURRECTION, NEMESIS and simply STAR TREK. Only the fans use the Romans for the last five. I can see doing it unofficially for the 7th-10th chapters, but since the whole point of {Chapter 11} was a reboot, and STAR TREK takes less time to type than STAR TREK 11..... Guess I'm obsessing about it because my father was a proofreader. Anyway, so far, only the FRIDAY the 13th series has shown the integrity and the guts to officially title their films by 7s, 8s and 9s. (SAW ''7'' being SAW 3-D originally. I have a feeling PARANORMAL ACTIVITY will continue FRIDAY's proud tradition.)
Women can contribute to a list for men 18-49. It's very chauvinist to imply they can't. As these things go, this is a very good list, but it really does seem to be aimed more at men, most notably the disinterest in black and white. Also the resolute rejection of so-called weepers. Terms of Endearment for one could fit in. And I think one symptom, picking The Sound of Music over Cabaret.
How is a "disinterest in black and white" indicative of gender bias? (For the record, I count 21 films on the list in black and white.)
^^^Black and white means older movies. I've never heard/seen a woman reject a movie unseen for being in black and white, while I've heard/seen a number of men do so. Maybe that's some bizarre fluke in my personal experience. But sometimes you can't just wait for a scientific survey to tell you what to think. Those of you who aren't interested in the list but some sort of weird carping aren't doing a very good job: I overlooked Terms of Endearment and that really is an error. Does that mean you lose because you missed it, or did you win because I made an error? No doubt this conundrum has to be solved in order to be a genuinely sensitive and tasteful judge of cinema
As slang, I don't think that's particularly common, but I see your point. The list is certainly slanted to the contemporary more so than the Sight & Sound poll, for example, but it doesn't seem particularly bereft of older movies (depending, of course, on how old the movies have to be to be considered "older"). By my count, only 35 films on the list were released after the year 1980, and many of the films are significantly older than that. On the specific point of women being more accepting of older films than men, my personal experience has indicated no such difference. But, of course, YMMV.
One of the things that makes this a better (i.e., less cracked) list of best movies is that they are cautious about including every recent combined popular and critical hit that everyone can bring to mind. The reviewers tended to choose more films that have a claim to be able to stand the test of time. This list is even sensible enough that there isn't a lively discussion ragging on it for the weird choices. Even so, 35 from after 1985 is quite a lot.
1980, not 1985. From the past ten years, I think the only film on the list is Star Trek (2009). I don't think either of us would choose that film if we were one of the list-makers, but for very different reasons. And, to split hairs, according to MSN it is a list of staff favorites, not a list of the "best" movies. What lists do you have in mind that are flooded with recent hits rather than established classics? The lists I have in mind (AFI's 100 Years, 100 Movies; Sight & Sound's critics' and directors' polls) are just the opposite.
The kind of lists thrown done as occasional features by popular media. Or on a blog. No I can't remember an example, since those lists are so terrible for anything but tearing apart. It's true that the movies on this list are formally staff favorites, but who is interested in citing their worst taste, instead of their best? Except for a guilty pleasure list, that is. Not even Star Trek (2009) is justified on that basis. The AFI and Sight & Sound lists are marked by an interest in films that are historically significant but not necessarily alive in popular memory. This is a perfectly valid approach of course. I posted a link to this particular list because it was a rare example of a different approach that wasn't fodder for humor. AFI or Sight & Sound lists would almost certainly include Avatar just for its role in popularizing new 3D tech, for instance.