Yankee23Fan
Fair Tax!
We have close to the same taste in movies. HAving said that......
.....Castaway sucked. Like really sucked.
.....Castaway sucked. Like really sucked.
The best ending of any Hitch film. Hitch sucked at endings, often added 1 scene too many.#93 - Notorioius
Ingrid Bergman's Alicia is recruited by Cary Grant's Devlin to spy on a Nazi ring that includes Claude Rains' Alexander. Because she falls so in love with Devlin, she agrees to the scheme of marrying Alexander. Its not long, however, before she's found out and Devlin is forced to find her a way out before she's killed.
Filmed immediately after the end of WW2, this is one of the first movies to deal with Cold War (although we still have Nazis instead of Communists).
I like that the ending is subdued in the surface (there's no shoot out, for example) but is boiling over just beneath. The plot solution is terrifically clever and the final line wickedly ominous.
Trivia:
While filming one shot, Cary Grant carped that he was supposed to open the door with his right hand but he was holding his hat in that hand. "Have you considered the possibility of transferring the hat to the other hand?" Alfred Hitchcock replied.
The legendary on-again, off-again kiss between Cary Grant and Ingrid Bergman was designed to skirt the Hayes Code that restricted kisses to no more than three seconds each.
That's the last Hitchcock for a while, I promise.
Check this out...I loved Donnie Darko. I need to watch it again. The soundtrack was pretty great too.
I am opposite (but it's been a bit since I've seen it), I just remember thinking that the DC seemed dumbed down somehow - maybe the extra scenes were more trying to explain stuff instead of leaving it open ended? Just remember feeling like my hand was being held more with the DC.#59 - Donnie Darko
I prefer the original version's music arrangement but like the additions in the Director's Cut - especially the part about Watership Down.
At it's heart it's a superhero movie. With lots of 80's music. And I think that's awesome.
Kitty Farmer: [loudly interjecting] I'll tell you what he said! He asked me to forcibly insert the lifeline exercise card into my ######!
Trivia:
Frank says the world will end in "28 days 6 hours 42 minutes 12 seconds." That figure is not random: it comes from adding or subtracting 1 from each part of the figure 27d 7h 43m 11s, which is the precise length of one lunar month (by one of the less-used definitions - sidereal instead of the usual synodic).
Richard Kelly came up with the idea for the future blobs while watching football. John Madden used to use a "telestrator," where he'd diagram a paused video to show where the players were about to go moments before letting the tape roll. Kelly watched this while high and started to think about what would happen, hypothetically, if "someone upstairs" was doing that to humans.
Come on, why would they want to forget THIS stage of their career?Check this out...
"Proud to Be Loud" Performed by The Dead Green Mummies -- this song is actually performed by the band Pantera. (The Dead Green Mummies do not exist.) Pantera has all but disowned their first four albums, this song is track 5 on the fourth of those albums, "Power Metal." The band presumably did not want to be credited with the song (as they don't consider any of their pre-1990 material part of their discography) and made up the name The Dead Green Mummies.
I don't have much to do at the project I'm on.You'll be done before I've gotten to 70. I'm much slower at this.
I do like this movie.#56 - Run Lola, Run
Franke Potente is mesmerizing as Lola, a girl that for some reason loves Manni, who has gotten himself in trouble with the local gang. She loves him so much that her force of will is unstoppable.
Director Tom Tykwer also wrote the kick butt music, itself almost a character of the movie.
This film grabs you by the scruff of the neck and drags you through 81 minutes of awesomeness.
Trivia:
Yoshiaki Koizumi who is a game-designer at Nintendo(R) called 'Run Lola, Run' one of the main inspirations he had when he came up with the idea behind the game 'The Legend of Zelda - Majora's Mask' (released on Nintendo 64 in year 2000). Like Run Lola, Run, the game is centered around the experience of time rewinding which will make you experience the same days and events reoccur over and over until you eventually have what you need to achieve your main goal.
There are many spirals in the film (stair cases, bar behind phone booth etc). This is because director Tom Tykwer was a fan of 'Alfred Hitchcock''s Vertigo.
Great run here to save this train wreck. Psycho and DD would be in my top 20 I'm guessing.#59 - Donnie Darko
#58 - Memento
#57 - Psycho
#56 - Run Lola, Run
True of most things I think.If the upper regions of a person's Top 100 movie list doesn't include a few "WTH do you like THAT movie for" entries then I doubt that person is much of a free thinker.
andy- these write-ups are fantastic. been a lot of fun reading along with this disaster of a list
I don't know about this one.All the exterior shots of the plane while flying use a sound track of a propeller plane although it is a jet because the studio would not let the producers use a propeller plane in the movie.
The pilot and co-pilot are struck ill with food-poisoning. The only man on board with any flying experience is a veteran who is haunted by a fatal mistake he made the last time he flew a plane. Lives hang in the balance. The crew on the ground nervously try to talk him through safely landing the plane in a horrible storm as his fuel supply dwindles.
If the plot of this 1957 film seems familiar, it’s likely because the comedy classic Airplane! parodies it in detail. The makers of the 1980 comedy actually bought the rights to Zero Hour, so they could use the script as the basis for their film. In fact they left many lines in verbatim from the original screenplay
never know when I have to write a
or not... glad I don't have to for you.Big fan of this movie. Even bigger fan of the soundtrack, so I dig that you singled that out. It is a character in the film.Andy Dufresne said:#56 - Run Lola, Run
Franke Potente is mesmerizing as Lola, a girl that for some reason loves Manni, who has gotten himself in trouble with the local gang. She loves him so much that her force of will is unstoppable.
Director Tom Tykwer also wrote the kick butt music, itself almost a character of the movie.
This film grabs you by the scruff of the neck and drags you through 81 minutes of awesomeness.
IIRC, Airplane! is technically a remake of Zero Hour. ZAZ bought the rights to remake Zero Hour when they realized it would be easier to just stick with that movie's structure and concentrate on the jokes.One of the lines in Airplane is lifted right from Zero Hour....
The film is mostly a parody of Zero Hour! (1957), a film that had a main character named Ted Stryker and such famous "not meant to be funny" lines like "We have to find someone who can not only fly this plane, but who didn't have fish for dinner."
One of my favorite movies. You are correct. The real stars of the movie are the look and feel. It looks and feels creepy throughout.Andy Dufresne said:#54 - The Shining
I'm not a Kubrick worshipper. I think people go way overboard when discussing his genius or "deciphering" what he "really meant."
But that doesn't change the fact that this movie is incredible.
The novel was essentially about alcoholosm as King was an alcoholic when he wrote it.
I think the movie begins with this motif but also expands on it to include other madness inducing triggers. What's underestimated is Duvall's Wendy - her emptiness even fills the Overlook Hotel. Being married to her must be a nightmare in itself.
But the real stars are the look and feel of the movie. The images play on your mind just like they would on Jack's.
The niggling details of what doesn't work can be disregarded because of the remaining awesomeness.
Trivia:
For the scene in which Jack breaks down the bathroom door, the props department built a door that could be easily broken. However, Jack Nicholson had worked as a volunteer fire marshal and tore it apart far too easily. The props department were then forced to build a stronger door.
The "snowy" maze near the conclusion of the movie consisted of 900 tons of salt and crushed Styrofoam.
Great call on both the movie and the David vs Goliath feeling. Definitely know what you mean re: Out State vs Metro in MN.#51 - Hoosiers
I didn't grow up in the smallest town in Minnesota (proud Moorhead Spud!), but I do love small towns. In MN there's a feeling of Out State vs Metro - small versus big school. It used to manifest itself more in hockey than basketball, but the team in Hoosiers suffices as a proxy.
Sure it features one of cinema's most awkward kisses ever, but who cares?
Trivia:
For the scene where Dennis Hopper walks onto the court drunk in the middle of the game, Hopper wanted a ten-second notice before calling action. At the ten-second notice, he spun around in circles until action was called, allowing him to stagger onto the court in an awkward fashion in order to appear drunk.
Steve Hollar was actually playing basketball for DePauw University at the time. The NCAA noticed when the film was released. The NCAA eventually decided that Hollar had been hired as an actor, not a basketball player. He still got a three-game suspension and was told to return 5% of his pay.
Hey, I think the First Ironman, the Dark Knight and Guardians can make this list.i sense some comic books masquerading as movies coming
Nope. None of them.Hey, I think the First Ironman, the Dark Knight and Guardians can make this list.
The year before I moved to Minnesota, the state hockey tournament featured Edina v Warroad, which was pretty much Hoosiers On Ice... if Chitwood missed the shot at the end.#51 - Hoosiers
I didn't grow up in the smallest town in Minnesota (proud Moorhead Spud!), but I do love small towns. In MN there's a feeling of Out State vs Metro - small versus big school. It used to manifest itself more in hockey than basketball, but the team in Hoosiers suffices as a proxy.
Sure it features one of cinema's most awkward kisses ever, but who cares?
Awesome you included this. Love it!#49 - Army of Darkness
All right you primitive screwheads...LISTEN UP!
My friends and I got a laugh or three out of Evil Dead 2 so we were excited for this one.
We saw it opening night with about six total people in the theater. We didn't know Raimi was going strictly for camp until Ash leapt toward the chainsaw and caught it with his stumpy arm - at which point I actually leaped from my chair with a cheer. So many great lines.
Good...bad...I'm the guy with the GUN!
Trivia:
The original title for this film was "Medieval Dead".
During filming the Oldsmobile Delta 88 falling out of the sky was shot twice. During the first attempt, the 25-ton crane lifting the car failed due to mechanical problems and toppled over the edge of a cliff at the quarry location where filming was taking place. Fortunately, no injuries occurred because the crane operator jumped from the cab before the crane went over the edge. Days later a larger 80-ton crane was brought in to remove the damaged crane and re-shoot the car drop.
is this the one with the whales? or is that all of them.#48 - Star Trek III: The Search For Spock
I'm a fan of the original Trek series. This isn't the best Trek movie, but it does contain its greatest scene. Years spent in deep space forged a bond that the crew wasn't going to let some bureaucratic Starfleet break.
And if that meant stealing the Enterprise then so be it.
The score is some of Horner's best. In addition to Stealing the Enterprise, the Mind Meld and Katra Ritual are just beautiful
Trivia:
According to Robin Curtis in the DVD Special Edition "making of" documentary, Christopher Lloyd didn't fully understand the use of the communicators. He would often shout his lines into the air rather than speak into the communicator. (An example she used:: When he says "Bring me up." while in Genesis, He yelled at the sky as if the ship could hear him) He had to be repeatedly told not to yell at the sky.
In the earlier drafts of the screenplay, the Enterprise's auto destruct finished with the ship's engine core exploding, resulting in a massive matter/antimatter explosion, visible from the planet's surface. Harve Bennett later changed this to the primary hull exploding, and the secondary being destroyed in the planet's atmosphere, reasoning that an antimatter explosion would probably destroy the Klingon ship as well. However, a mix-up resulted in the ILM crew doing the sequence according to the earlier version. Bennett considered using this version in the final film, but asked ILM to redo it, this time saying it would make the scene afterward look too much like the ending of Star Wars: Episode VI - Return of the Jedi (1983). They saved money by re-using the footage from the initial sequence up to the point where the primary hull exploded, then started the new sequence just after.
No, that's ST4: The Voyage Home.is this the one with the whales? or is that all of them.
Love that scene. Haven't seen that movie in ages. Might have to queue it up on a lazy weekend.
Andy you are a movie rating god!#47 - The Last Starfighter
Back in the olden days, when the most important peripheral you could have for your video games was something called an imagination, the closest you could come to being a galaxy saving star pilot (and who doesn't want to be THAT?) was a game called Star Raiders. Movies that required special effects needed model builders and blue screens.
But then Moore's Law kicked in and the fusion of art and technology blossomed. The Last Starfighter was the first movie to do all special effects on a computer.
Compared to the effects of today, those of TLS are primitive. But to those of us who never traded in our imagination at Gamestop, they're still as glorious as ever. And we all still hope to be recruited by the Star League to defend the frontier against Xur and the Ko-Dan Ramada!
Trivia:
The director, Nick Castle, played "The Shape" aka Michael Myers in Halloween and wrote Escape From New York and August Rush (among other credits).
Released a few years after the alleged release of the mysterious arcade game 'Polybius' which allegedly caused epileptic seizures and nightmares among the children who played it. The existence of this game is never been proven but there are strong similarities between the plot of the movie and the Polybius conspiracy that is still alive on various online forums.