What's your favourite classic movie you think everyone should have seen once in their life?
Me and two friends had "classic movie nights" for a couple of years before I moved away. We would watch something which is considered a classic and it had to have been released before 2000. We watched only those which none of us three have seen before and we would watch it like once every two months or so. Movies like:
M
Gone with the Wind
The Godfather
Taxi Driver
Murder on the Orient Express
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
Rear Window
Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb
Chinatown
Le Grande Bouffe
L'Avventura
Tengoku to jigoku
etc.
It was a ton of fun and we talked about the movie before, what our expectations are and after just generally and each of us would give it a IMDB star rating.
Now sadly my friends live 9 time zones away, so we can't really do that anymore. But I was thinking to try to convince my wife to do this classic movies night with me. Right now she is reluctant because English is her 4rth language and especially older movies are using language differently too, but one day she will give in :D.
Anyway, now that you know the rules, what movies do you think I still missed and should watch?
Hell yea brother. So many "movies you must see lists" are like Come & See, Grave of the Fireflies and the whole Decalogue. Don't get me wrong these are all great but we so often leave silly joy out of the great film canon. I'm gonna continue this vibe
As a fan of animated films, some of my top picks are:
• An American Tail/Fivel Goes West
• The Land Before Time (the first one)
• The Secret of NIHM
• Robin Hood (you can guess which one, given my other answers)
• The original 1984 (love that film, not animated but still pretty good)
• Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind
Don't know if any of these fit the bill, but I still personally stand by them due to nostalgia for the first 3 and just how much I like the remaining 2 movies.
Okay, I've been told for years and years to watch this and I wish I understood the love. I really respect all the people who forced me to watch it, I just don't get it. I think it's good?
One that may be less watched by younger generations but is still a classic could be the original Fantasia movie. Beautiful film set entirely to music, and where Mickey Mouse drawn in an oversized wizard costume comes from.
In the ‘30s and ‘40s animated Disney films were targeted at the general populace rather than just children.
1937 saw Snow White, the first feature-length animated film in the US. Animation on this scale was still relatively new so part of the appeal may have been novelty and awe at the technology, not unlike Pixar films in the mid-to-late ‘90s.
It’s usually the one I’ve watched recently. I’ve been quoting Annie Hall all week, it’s living in my head. Definitely worth a watch with the other half.
If you’re a Simon and Garfunkel fan, The Graduate. The original song was Hello Mrs Roosevelt but the director particularly liked that song and convinced them to change it to Hello Mrs Robinson for the movie.