Top 10 Witches
Gallery from Eonline via Whedonesque. Culled from movies and tv shows. Fairly representative, I think. If you want more, I have a sexy witches post, taken from comics and animation.
Gallery from Eonline via Whedonesque. Culled from movies and tv shows. Fairly representative, I think. If you want more, I have a sexy witches post, taken from comics and animation.
This list is taken from Digital Dream Door’s list of 100 best movies from the silent film era. These are only the first 25.
Here are my other top 25 lists:
Silent :: 1930s :: 1940s :: 1950s :: 1960s :: 1970s :: 1980s :: 1990s :: 2000s
Underlined means I’ve seen it. Blue text means I haven’t.
1. The Birth of a Nation – (1915, D.W. Griffith)
2. Wings - (1927, William A. Wellman)
3. Modern Times – (1936, Charles Chaplin)
4. Intolerance – (1916, D.W. Griffith)
5. Metropolis – (1927, Fritz Lang)
6. The Battleship Potemkin – (1925, Sergei M. Eisenstein)
7. City Lights – (1931, Charles Chaplin)
8. Napoleon – (1927, Abel Gance)
9. The General – (1927, Clyde Bruckman)
10. The Phantom of the Opera – (1925, Rupert Julian)
11. The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse – (1921, Rex Ingram)
12. Nosferatu, the Vampire – (1922, F.W. Murnau)
13. The Hunchback of Notre Dame – (1923, Wallace Worsley)
14. The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari – (1920, Robert Wiene)
15. Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ – (1925, Fred Niblo)
16. The Passion of Joan of Arc – (1928, Carl Theodor Dreyer)
17. The Gold Rush – (1925, Charles Chaplin)
18. The Big Parade – (1925, King Vidor)
19. The Wind – (1928, Victor Sjöström)
20. Greed - (1924, Erich von Stroheim)
21. Beau Geste – (1926, Herbert Brenon)
22. The Circus - (1928, Charles Chaplin)
23. Sunrise – (1927, F.W. Murnau)
24. Orphans of the Storm – (1921, D.W. Griffith)
25. Show People – (1928, King Vidor)
David Bordwell on the missing scenes of Metropolis.
Movies 1-60 :: Movies 61-100 :: Movies 101-160 :: Movies 161-220
Movies 221-260 :: Movies 261-300
You know that book, 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die by Stephen Jay Schneider? I don’t know if I would watch some of these if I only had a little time left. I mean I’m sure they all have cinematic significance but not all of them are fun. If I were about to shuffle off the mortal coil, I wouldn’t want to watch a bunch of lame movies just beforehand.
So, I went through the ones I’d seen to check.
Note on the rating system:
Watch anytime: Superb entertainment
Repeat viewing: Good entertainment
Worth once: if you’ve nothing better to do
Historical significance: not for pleasure
No. 6 on the list: The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920).
Type: suspense
Rating: historical significance
Comments: The sets are great and if you really like sets, I encourage you to watch for it for them. They are amazing and I rewound it for a couple of them. The story has been done much better and much worse by every filmmaker ever since. Also, the villain in it reminds me of Edward Scissorhands, especially the bit where he’s stalking the girl. I’d rather re-watch Suspicion.
No. 7 on the list: Broken Blossoms (1919).
Type: drama
Rating: historical significance
Comments: The racist characterization of the protagonist Cheng Huan (Richard Barthelmess) is painful and disturbing. Other than that, you’ve a got a physically (and possibly sexually) abusive father terrorizing his teenage daughter till she runs away. I’d rather watch Night of the Hunter again.
No. 15 on the list: Nosferatu (1922). Now this is pretty good. In a way, I thought it much creepier than the 1930s Dracula. Good stuff, a little more robust than horror movies were for a long time. Cool ending too.
No. 16 on the list: Haxen (1923).
Type: historical drama
Rating: Worth viewing once
Comments: Other people watching this one with me liked it. But I was repulsed by the torturing of the elderly woman, and didn’t finish it. Can’t say it was dull though.
No. 20 on the list: The Thief of Bagdad (1924).
Type: Fantasy Adventure
Rating: repeat viewing
Comments: This is a great movie. You can tell it was an inspiration for the Disney artists on Aladdin. Just a fun, fast-paced movie (and that’s a lot to say, considering it’s a silent film). Plus, Anna May Wong is it, and thus the movie earns many bonus points.
No. 26 on the list: The Phantom of the Opera (1925).
Type: suspense
Rating: Worth watching once
Comments: I thought this phantom’s real threats and real deformity makes the story a lot more interesting. Closer to the book too.
No. 28 on the list: The Gold Rush (1925).
Type: comedy
Rating: repeat viewing
Comments: This is genuinely funny and the pathos doesn’t overwhelm it. Those shoes do look tasty.
No. 30 on the list: Metropolis (1927).
Type: Science Fiction
Rating: worth viewing once
Comments: The end is marred by an endless chase scene. Otherwise, it’s got an evil robot and mad scientists and a befuddled hero and a noble heroine and a nice futuristic city scape. Just start fast-forwarding when they start the running parts.
No. 51 on the list: All Quiet on the Western Front (1930).
Type: war drama, social conscience movie
Rating: historical significance
Comments: This is a well-meaning movie and it’s not meant to be a diversion but still it’s kind of dry. If I want to watch an anti-war movie, I’d prefer Grave of the Fireflies.
No. 55 on the list: Dracula (1931).
Type: horror
Rating: historical significance
Comments: The first half is pretty good. I especially liked Dracula’s brides stalking the camera. (heh.) But once Dracula gets to London, the movie pretty much dies and not in the fun way. I enjoyed Coppola’s Dracula much more.
No. 56. on the list: Frankenstein (1931).
Type: horror
Rating: historical significance
Comments: This is a well-made movie but it took pains to exonerate Dr. Frankenstein at every turn. I’m not sure what was going on. But the sequel – Bride of Frankenstein – is worth watching, especially the prologue with Mary Shelley. Also, ‘we belong dead’ makes me start to tear up.
No. 58 on the list: Public Enemy (1931).
Type: Crime
Rating: worth watching once
Comments: Gangster movies don’t really do much for me. But this was good drama and surprisingly violent in places. I should really watch more Cagney movies…
After the break is the full list from 1 to 60:
Read more…
This list is taken from Digital Dream Door’s list of 100 best movies from the 2000s These are only the first 25.
Here are my other top 25 lists:
Silent :: 1930s :: 1940s :: 1950s :: 1960s :: 1970s :: 1980s :: 1990s :: 2000s
Underlined means I’ve seen it. Blue text means I haven’t. A ♣ means I want to see it.
1. Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King – (2003, Peter Jackson)
2. City of God – (2002, Fernando Meirelles)
3. Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon – (2000, Ang Lee)
4. The Pianist – (2002, Roman Polinski)
5. Traffic – (2000, Steven Soderbergh)
6. Mystic River – (2003, Clint Eastwood)
7. The Departed (2006, Martin Scorsese)
8. Pan’s Labyrinth- (2006, Guillermo del Toro)♣
9. Brokeback Mountain -(2005, Ang Lee)
10. Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Rings – (2001, Peter Jackson)
11. Gladiator – (2000, Ridley Scott)
12. Shrek – (2001, Andrew Adamson)
13. Moulin Rouge – (2001, Baz Luhrmann)
14. Crash – (2005, Paul Haggis)
15. Mulholland Dr. – (2001, David Lynch)
16. Almost Famous – (2000, Cameron Crowe)
17. Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers – (2002, Peter Jackson)
18. Children Of Men – (2006, Alfonso Cuaron)
19. Chicago – (2002, Rob Marshall)
20. Letters From Iwo Jima – (2006, Clint Eastwood)
21. A Beautiful Mind – (2001, Ron Howard)
22. Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind – (2004, Michael Gondry)
23. Million Dollar Baby – (2004, Clint Eastwood)
24. Yi Yi - (2000, Edward Yang)♣
25. Spirited Away – (2001, Hayao Miyazaki)
This list is taken from Digital Dream Door’s list of 100 best movies from the 1980s. These are only the first 25. The most interesting ones were after the cut for consistency’s sake.
Here are my other top 25 lists:
Silent :: 1930s :: 1940s :: 1950s :: 1960s :: 1970s :: 1980s :: 1990s :: 2000s
Underlined means I’ve seen it. Blue text means I haven’t.
1. Raging Bull - (1980, Martin Scorsese)
2. E.T. The Extra Terrestrial- (1982, Steven Spielberg)
3. Raiders of the Lost Ark- (1981, Steven Spielberg)
4. Amadeus- (1984, Milos Forman)
5. Platoon- (1986, Oliver Stone)
6. Cinema Paradiso- (1988, Giuseppe Tornatore)
7. Once Upon a Time in America- (1984, Sergio Leone)
8. Blade Runner- (1982, Ridley Scott)
9. Ran- (1985, Akira Kurosawa)
10. Do the Right Thing- (1989, Spike Lee)
11. Blue Velvet- (1986, David Lynch)
12. The Empire Strikes Back- (1980, Irvin Kershner)
13. The Elephant Man- (1980, David Lynch)
14. The Shining- (1980, Stanley Kubrick)
15. Full Metal Jacket- (1987, Stanley Kubrick)
16. Brazil- (1985, Terry Gilliam)
17. Airplane!- (1980, Jim Abrahams)
18. Das Boot- (1981, Wolfgang Peterson)
19. Tootsie- (1982, Sydney Pollack)
20. The Untouchables- (1987, Brian De Palma)
21. The Terminator- (1984, James Cameron)
22. Die Hard- (1988, John McTiernan)
23. The Last Emperor- (1987, Bernardo Bertolucci)
24. Gandhi- (1982, Richard Attenborough)
25. Raising Arizona- (1987, Joel Coen)
This list is taken from Digital Dream Door’s list of 100 best movies from the 1970s. These are only the first 25. I really didn’t do so well this time.
Here are my other top 25 lists:
Silent :: 1930s :: 1940s :: 1950s :: 1960s :: 1970s :: 1980s :: 1990s :: 2000s
Underlined means I’ve seen it. Blue text means I haven’t. A ♣ means I want to see it.
This list is taken from Digital Dream Door’s list of 100 best movies from the 1960s. These are only the first 25. I really didn’t do so well this time.
Here are my other top 25 lists:
Silent :: 1930s :: 1940s :: 1950s :: 1960s :: 1970s :: 1980s :: 1990s :: 2000s
Underlined means I’ve seen it. Blue text means I haven’t. A ♣ means I want to see it.