|
Audio Asylum Thread Printer Get a view of an entire thread on one page |
For Sale Ads |
207.67.53.106
In Reply to: which 70's films would you recommend... posted by BJordan on August 16, 2006 at 14:53:14:
...and proceed to Apocalypse Now, and of course the Godfathers I & II.Martin Scorsese's Mean Streets, Taxi Driver & The Last Waltz.
John Houston's The Man Who Would Be King, Wise Blood & Fat City
Peter Bogdanovich's The Last Picture Show & Paper Moon
Roman Polanski's Chinatown
Robert Altman's Nashville, McCabe & Mrs. Miller, Thieves Like Us & A Wedding
Stanley Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange & Barry Lyndon
Robert Fosse's Cabaret & All That Jazz (gotta have a little song & dance)
Robert Wiseman's groundbreaking documentary Titicut Follies
John Cassevetes' Minnie & Moskowitz, A Woman Under The Influence & Opening Night
Don Siegel's The Shootist (Farewell, Duke)
Michael Cimino's The Deer Hunter
William Fredkin's The French Connection
Fred Zinneman's The Day of The Jackal
Ridley Scott's The Duellists
Sam Peckinpah's The Ballad of Cable Hogue
Just for fun & kicks throw in Hitchcock's Frenzy and Monty Python & the Holy Grail, Eastwood's High Plains Drifter and Ridley Scott's Alien as the anti-Star Wars. Spielberg's Close Encounters has held up reasonably well (but I so despise Jaws I would never recommend it to anyone).
All in all, not a bad Hollywood decade at all.
The 60's weren't so bad in Tinsel Town either:
Lean's Lawrence of Arabia
Kubrick's Dr. Strangelove, 2001 & Spartacus
Rossen's The Hustler
Sam Fuller's Shock Corridor & The Naked Kiss
Wilder's The Apartment
To Kill A Mockingbird
Polanski's Rosemary's Baby & Repulsion
Ford's The Man WHo Shot Liberty Valance
Frankenheimer's The Manchurian Candidate
Cassevetes' Faces
Peckinpah's The Wild Bunch
Mike Nichol's Who's Afraid Of Virginia Wolf
Hitchock's Psycho & The Birds
In Cold Bloodetc.
Follow Ups:
just why do you so despise "Jaws"?
While there are definitely some good ones on the list (not all of them in my view, but that is of course quite subjective, so I am not going to start an argument...) for the industry that produces what... hundreds films a year?... this is not particularly impressive.Subjective... yes... and yet... if we put things like Shootist and Cabaret on that list - we are like REALLY scraping the bottom of the barrel.
This post is made possible by the generous support of people like you and our sponsors: