count me in the group that likes to live & die... i liked peterson in that & manhunter (the original red dragon)... i still like sorceror best, though, in friedkin's body of work (while on the subject of music, a haunting tangerine dream score that is one of their best, along with michael mann's thief - mann also did the aforementioned manhunter)...
i had tried to watch wim wenders wings of desire several times before, but didn't make it to the end... it wasn't boredom, i thought the beginning was interesting, but it did have a loose plot and languid pace... probably i was just coincidentally tired and busy, so there were long gaps between aborted viewings. anyway, i watched it recently, found it enthralling, got the criterion blu-ray, and have watched it a few times recently (once with the commentary)... when i checked out since the reviews, they seemed to be universally good... no doubt not for everybody, especially if you aren't into foreign, sub-titled, existential-themed movies & prefer action/adventure...
this experience has made me re-appraise wenders... my favorite by him is alas OOP, the state of things (trailer below)... i really like the score by jurgen knieper, who also contributed to the soundtrack for WOD... state of things had an unusual genesis... after the success of american friend (which is near the top of my netflix queu... like with most of wenders movies, haven't seen for a while, and this is supposed to be one of his best), coppola invited him to the US to helm a script called hammett for zoetrope studio... to make a long story short, it took four years and was plagued by difficulty (it is available on on netflix & i found worth a watch, if a flawed, blurring of noir and biographical genre, about the author of the maltese falcon... coppola forced him to reshoot it, i think took control of editing and ultimately only 30% was wenders footage, so hard to sy what it could have been?)...
at one point coppola took over the studio and resources, interrupting the production... not one to sit idle, he used the time to make a few movies (3-4?!), one of which was the state of things... in some ways it is a lot like fellini's probable best 8 1/2... in that case, the director uses his writer's block as material for the movie itself, informing the subject matter, structure and direction... wenders was in portugal and helped out a broke project/production team complete their film out of his own stock, if they helped him make a film once they were done... it turned out to be state of things, which mirrored events in portugal and in his dealings with coppola...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BrWzvW4a87A
for movies that are IN PRINT (

), i had seen paris, texas a few times, but not for a while, and remembered it as ponderous but intriguing as the puzzle of harry dean stanton's (only starring role?) shattered life unfolds SLOOWLY!

on the strength of WOD, i got this on blu-ray, too (both came out on criterion just within past few months)... this was right after state of things and before WOD, and those movies (along with the later until the end of the world, probably his creative peak)...
watched wenders until the end of the world on itunes recently... it was another movie i recalled as having potential but being severely flawed, due to its rambling and disjointed nature... a 4-5 hour version exists (highly recommended by a critic i respect, the DVD savant site), but it is only avail on region 2... an amazon reviewer there said it is easy to convert most DVD players (not sure about blu-ray) to region 0, which is universal? in the z channell doc (a movie about movies if there ever was one), james woods talked about how once upon a time in america was initially butchered by severly truncated 2 1/2 hour edit... when it was later released in a pioneering (at the time - now routine and almost de rigeuer), restored, director's cut of four hours, it was called a masterpiece (woods laughed that critic maslin went from calling it one of the worst movies she had scene and incoherent to one of the best movies of the decade - what a difference editing and respecting the director's original vision of length, tempo, intercutting plot elements, etc makes)...
of course buena vista social club about the cuban music scene (with ry cooder, who scored paris, texas - wenders worked with familiar people a lot, writers, DPs, scorers, editors, etc) was a great doc and musical document...
also in netflix queu, two movies that were sequels to WOD and state of things (reportedly not as good - i just found out they had sequels) - so close, so far (?) for WOD and lisbon story (?) for state of things...
* my art film criticism penance for dabbling on the dark side (avatar)