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Top 101 Movies of the 90s. We are done. If I knock out Amadeus/Brazil/Ran, We get to have an 80s countdown!! (2 Viewers)

You hint on some of the layers of genius.   

- philosophy

- love

- true happiness

- maturity 
I wish I could remember her article... I want to say it was a direct comparison to some religion's ascent to enlightenment- comparing each step along the way to each part of the movie and Murray's (Phil... PHIL?!) acceptance of his situation.

 
I wish I could remember her article... I want to say it was a direct comparison to some religion's ascent to enlightenment- comparing each step along the way to each part of the movie and Murray's (Phil... PHIL?!) acceptance of his situation.
If you find it please share.

 
"Needlenose Ned"? "Ned the Head"? C'mon, buddy. Case Western High. Ned Ryerson: I did the whistling belly-button trick at the high school talent show? Bing! Ned Ryerson: got the shingles real bad senior year, almost didn't graduate? Bing, again. Ned Ryerson: I dated your sister Mary Pat a couple times until you told me not to anymore?

Ned Ryerson Makes me laugh every time he's on the screen.
Needlenose Ned is a highlight in a fantastic movie.  His scenes are still amusing after many watches.   

 
17 movies left, i have 12 left on my list, of which 5 i had assumed would be left out, but seems like maybe more. anticipation grows. solid list so far gents and great commentary by everyone too.

 
Just curious how rewatches of Groundhog Day are for people now with that trope popping up so much in movies now.  Edge of Tomorrow, Palm Springs, Happy Death Dsy, etc.   

 
Ilov80s said:
I’m not a huge horror fan so 52 is pretty high for me.


I enjoy a good horror flick but Scream was more of a comedy for me.  I'd probably rank Blair Witch as my top 90s horror film.  Not sure Scream would break my 100 list.  

 
Just curious how rewatches of Groundhog Day are for people now with that trope popping up so much in movies now.  Edge of Tomorrow, Palm Springs, Happy Death Dsy, etc.   
Yeah, one of the tropes that is now frequently copied.  That alone speaks to its effectiveness.

 
KarmaPolice said:
Another personal favorite that has been talked about a bit at the start of the draft.  I'd have to look at home, but I think this was my #15 of the decade.  

#47:  THE ICE STORM

This is the flick people were talking about that unlike American Beauty gets the look behind the curtains of suburbia a bit more correct. 


Playing catchup with the rankings but this movie has really grown on me over the years.   Fascinating watch with a lot of great young actors before they reached stardom. 

 
Just curious how rewatches of Groundhog Day are for people now with that trope popping up so much in movies now.  Edge of Tomorrow, Palm Springs, Happy Death Dsy, etc.   
I think it is still tremendous as its greatness wasn't in the repetitive day premise but Murray's comedy (he was at his peak here) as well as a universal social commentary on the value of living a good life vs a miserable self-absorbed existence.  Those things made the movie far more than the concept.

 
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Dan Lambskin said:
Also think I was one of the few people that like The Tree of Life


Dan Lambskin said:
Never seen this, I generally like war movies but I recall hearing this was boring 

also never saw Platoon
Yeah, if you like Tree of Life, I think you will like Thin Red Line.  I would say that Tree of Life is more "boring" than Thin Red Line is. 

 
Love this movie, marketing killed it trying to sell it as a typical war film. It’s a philosophical epic (original cut was 5 hours long!) on the horrors of war and what it does to the men that fight in them. It’s a war film in the same way that films like The English Patient or the Deer Hunter are war films.

Didn’t help that SPR came out 6 months before it either which it was of course compared to when they are very different kinds of films.
2 very good points here.   I keep forgetting they were the same year, and can imagine the reactions in the theater from people sitting down expecting another Private Ryan.  :lol:   

 
I think it is still tremendous as its greatness wasn't in the repetitive day premise but Murray's comedy (he was at his peak here) as well as a universal social commentary on the value of living a good life vs a miserable self-absorbed existence.  Those things made the movie far more than the concept.
Great post, and you are right the movies I were thinking of don't lean into the bolded that much.  

 
I enjoy a good horror flick but Scream was more of a comedy for me.  I'd probably rank Blair Witch as my top 90s horror film.  Not sure Scream would break my 100 list.  
I think part of that is slashers generally not being scary to begin with.    Most of the time is just T&A and watching teens die in funny ways.   That said, I think the opening of the movie is genuinely scary - especially when the parents come home and hear her on the phone.    That's nightmare material there for me.    Agree the rest isn't quite to that level of scare though.  

 
I admire you as a policeman - particularly your adherence to violence as a necessary adjunct to the job.

#17:  L.A. CONFIDENTIAL 

Fantastic modern noir.   One of 80s' favorite genres, I believe which is why it's in his top 10.   #46 for me, #6 for him.   I probably should have watched this one again last month.    I will let him gush over this one....  

 
Just curious how rewatches of Groundhog Day are for people now with that trope popping up so much in movies now.  Edge of Tomorrow, Palm Springs, Happy Death Dsy, etc.   
if it’s not a Star Wars or Coen Brothers film, chances are I haven’t rewatched it. There’s one major exception that comes from the 90s so I’ll wait to see if it surfaces.

 
I admire you as a policeman - particularly your adherence to violence as a necessary adjunct to the job.

#17:  L.A. CONFIDENTIAL 

Fantastic modern noir.   One of 80s' favorite genres, I believe which is why it's in his top 10.   #46 for me, #6 for him.   I probably should have watched this one again last month.    I will let him gush over this one....  
Yeah, you unnecessarily brought this one down.  Should be a tad higher around 12-15, IMO.  An all-time great movie.

 
if it’s not a Star Wars or Coen Brothers film, chances are I haven’t rewatched it. There’s one major exception that comes from the 90s so I’ll wait to see if it surfaces.
Interesting - why is that?  

I am so opposite that, I am curious what the reasons are for people not rewatching movies.  

 
Yeah, you unnecessarily brought this one down.  Should be a tad higher around 12-15, IMO.  An all-time great movie.
Maybe.   Looking at my list, I think I'd have a hard time seeing it crack the top 30-35 or so.   I really dig the movie, just love the movies above it more.  

ETA:  also looking at the list of what's to come, I'd be very curious as to what you think should be bumped in favor of it.   My guess is the next one up is one of them.  

 
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I admire you as a policeman - particularly your adherence to violence as a necessary adjunct to the job.

#17:  L.A. CONFIDENTIAL 

Fantastic modern noir.   One of 80s' favorite genres, I believe which is why it's in his top 10.   #46 for me, #6 for him.   I probably should have watched this one again last month.    I will let him gush over this one....  
Oh yeah this is very much my ####. I love a good noir. This is an all timer. 

 
KP: Hey, otb? I don't know a lot. You see this? All these bad movie takes?

[Holds up the file, and drops it on his desk]

KP: It's not your fault.

otb:  Yeah, I know that.

KP: Look at me son.

KP: It's not your fault.

Otb:  [otb nods] I know.

KP: No. It's not your fault.

OTb: I know

KP: No, no, you don't. It's not your fault.

[KP moves closer to otb]

KP: Hmm?

Otb: I know.

[Otb stands up, trying to keep distance]

KP: It's not your fault.

Otb: Alright.

KP: It's not your fault.

[Otb closes his eyes, he's fighting for control]

KP: It's not your fault.

Otb: Don't #### with me.

[Otb shoves KP back]

Otb: Don't #### with me, KP, not you!

KP: It's not your fault. It's not your fault.

 
Needlenose Ned is a highlight in a fantastic movie.  His scenes are still amusing after many watches.   
I can't see Tobolowsky in any other role and not think of Ned. Even Jarry from Deadwood, I'm waiting to see how Milch will work needle nose ned in to the dialogue.

 
I admire you as a policeman - particularly your adherence to violence as a necessary adjunct to the job.

#17:  L.A. CONFIDENTIAL 

Fantastic modern noir.   One of 80s' favorite genres, I believe which is why it's in his top 10.   #46 for me, #6 for him.   I probably should have watched this one again last month.    I will let him gush over this one....  
Recently rewatched this and felt it holds up great. Stellar cast, love the dynamic between Crowe & Pearce, and I know Spacey's a creep in real life but he's terrific in this. Really Excellent film, would have been in my top 10 (behind Se7en lol)

 
Now, no more shenanigans, no more tomfoolery, no more ballyhoo.

16:  GOOD WILL HUNTING

I guess I am full of crap.  I said I needed a break from the 90s, then the wife and I watched this one last night.  Still love it, and miss the hell out of Robin Williams.   This is my #30 and 80s' #21.   It's dropped in my rankings a tad, but there are still so many fantastic little moments in the movie that make me tear up or make me laugh that I think it deserves this ranking.  Plus it's the movie that my wife and I made out to for the first time so it has that sentimental value as well.  

 
KP: Hey, otb? I don't know a lot. You see this? All these bad movie takes?

[Holds up the file, and drops it on his desk]

KP: It's not your fault.

otb:  Yeah, I know that.

KP: Look at me son.

KP: It's not your fault.

Otb:  [otb nods] I know.

KP: No. It's not your fault.

OTb: I know

KP: No, no, you don't. It's not your fault.

[KP moves closer to otb]

KP: Hmm?

Otb: I know.

[Otb stands up, trying to keep distance]

KP: It's not your fault.

Otb: Alright.

KP: It's not your fault.

[Otb closes his eyes, he's fighting for control]

KP: It's not your fault.

Otb: Don't #### with me.

[Otb shoves KP back]

Otb: Don't #### with me, KP, not you!

KP: It's not your fault. It's not your fault.


looks like i gotta dust off the Elliot (KP) elevator scene when ya get to True Romance. 

you ain't no Drexel. 

:gang2:

 
I admire you as a policeman - particularly your adherence to violence as a necessary adjunct to the job.

#17:  L.A. CONFIDENTIAL 

Fantastic modern noir.   One of 80s' favorite genres, I believe which is why it's in his top 10.   #46 for me, #6 for him.   I probably should have watched this one again last month.    I will let him gush over this one....  


I need to rewatch.   Thought it was just okay when it came out and haven't rewatched since.  Wouldn't crack my top 100 as of now.

 
I need to rewatch.   Thought it was just okay when it came out and haven't rewatched since.  Wouldn't crack my top 100 as of now.
Maybe I am wrong and @Ilov80s can verify, but I'd say 2 movies that have been picked recently that we both dug, but where one is basically tailor made for just one of us to fall head over heels for are Scream and L.A. Confidential.   100% hit our movie soft spots

 
Now, no more shenanigans, no more tomfoolery, no more ballyhoo.

16:  GOOD WILL HUNTING

I guess I am full of crap.  I said I needed a break from the 90s, then the wife and I watched this one last night.  Still love it, and miss the hell out of Robin Williams.   This is my #30 and 80s' #21.   It's dropped in my rankings a tad, but there are still so many fantastic little moments in the movie that make me tear up or make me laugh that I think it deserves this ranking.  Plus it's the movie that my wife and I made out to for the first time so it has that sentimental value as well.  
Louis CK would like a word.

 
The secret, I don't know... I guess you've just gotta find something you love to do and then... do it for the rest of your life. For me, it's going to Rushmore.

#15:  RUSHMORE

There are 3 specific movies that I believe I am going to take heat for bringing down the ranking in the top 15.  As I said, keep two things in mind - this is why I thought the collaborative list would be the best way to go, and a few years ago none of the 3 would have made my rankings, or if they did it would be way closer to 100.   This is the first, but I think the one with the least anger attached.   Yes, for the most part I hate Wes Anderson movies, but this is the exception.    This was my #34, and 80s' #17.   

 
The random scene in Good Will Hunting that always cracks me up is Ben busting his brother's chops about the double burger.   

The park bench scene is the highlight for me on the dramatic side.  

 

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