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Avatar List added by Moon on 5 January 2009 03:04

Watched in 2009

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People who added this item 62  Average listal rating (40 ratings) 7.9  IMDB Rating 7.6 
1. Mr. Hulot's Holiday (1953)
(Dir. Jacques Tati)

Probably my favorite Jacques Tati film. The film has some unbelievably funny moments. There's no plot, but who cares when it's this much fun?
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 24  Average listal rating (9 ratings) 7.7  IMDB Rating 7.8 
2. Dead of Night (1945)
(Dir. Alberto Cavalcanti; Charles Crichton; Basil Dearden; Robert Hamer)

An uneven film with moments of brilliance. I remember "The Ventriloquist's Dummy" being the only segment in which I felt I was totally inside the film.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 10  Average listal rating (6 ratings) 5.3  IMDB Rating 6.3 
3. The Dark Hours (2005)
(Dir. Paul Fox)

Yet another horror film completely ruined by a crappy twist ending. Stay away from this one.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 23  Average listal rating (10 ratings) 7.6  IMDB Rating 7.5 
4. Charley Varrick (1973)
(Dir. Don Siegel)

WOW! I'm just completely in awe about this mind-blowing masterpiece. Without a doubt Don Siegel's best film. Do see it!
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 199  Average listal rating (131 ratings) 7.5  IMDB Rating 8.1 
5. The African Queen (1951)
(Dir. John Huston)

Not nearly as great as its reputation suggests. I thought Katherine Hepburn was annoying and I've never been a big fan of her acting style, even though she was great in Sidney Lumet's Long Day's Journey Into Night.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 12  Average listal rating (8 ratings) 8.4  IMDB Rating 7.6 
6. The Big Combo (1955)
(Dir. Joseph H. Lewis)

Worthwhile seeing for John Alton's cinematography, but not much else here.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 128  Average listal rating (90 ratings) 6.1  IMDB Rating 6.8 
7. Dog Soldiers (2002)
(Dir. Neil Marshall)

Pretty decent horror film with cheesy dialogue and acting. I don't understand why Neil Marshall along with so many other film directors always feel the need to pay tribute to their favorite movies in their own work. It's a bad tendency, I think.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 330  Average listal rating (229 ratings) 6.8  IMDB Rating 7.4 
8. The Descent (2005)
(Dir. Neil Marshall)

One of the few great horror films of this decade, though it could have worked better without the monsters, because clearly the best thing about this movie is the sense of claustrophobia achieved so well in some of the scenes where the monsters had not showed up yet.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 197  Average listal rating (131 ratings) 7.1  IMDB Rating 7.5 
9. Rescue Dawn (2006)
(Dir. Werner Herzog)

Rescue Dawn is a great movie with beautiful cinematography and great central performances. Steve Zahn should have won an Oscar, dammit. He is mesmerizing in his role.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 23  Average listal rating (13 ratings) 7.6  IMDB Rating 7.4 
10. Panic in the Streets (1950)
(Dir. Elia Kazan)

What a moody noir! The action scenes have a very true-to-life feel to them, thanks to Kazan's fantastic use of location.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 35  Average listal rating (21 ratings) 7.8  IMDB Rating 7.3 
11. Man of the West (1958)
(Dir. Anthony Mann)

What starts out as a traditionally romantic look at the American old west ends up being one of the most brutal and intelligent films of the genre. An outstanding western, one of the best I've seen.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 5  Average listal rating (3 ratings) 6.7  IMDB Rating 7.2 
12. Look Back in Anger (1958)
(Dir. Tony Richardson)

Based on the famous play by John Osborne, Look Back in Anger is one of the very first films of the British New Wave, but it is not amongst the best. The film drags a bit, but the main reason I didn't enjoy it that much was because of Richard Burton's theatrical acting style, which in my opinion didn't fit in the film at all.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 16  Average listal rating (6 ratings) 7.7  IMDB Rating
13. Room at the Top (1959)
(Dir. Jack Clayton)

This was a very controversial film at the time, but since then it has become one of the most loved films of the British New Wave. I liked it very much. Simone Sigornet got an Oscar for her performance, deservedly so.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 11  Average listal rating (7 ratings) 7.3  IMDB Rating 7.7 
14. A Taste of Honey (1961)
(Dir. Tony Richardson)

A Taste of Honey is certainly not a waste of money. This tragic yet funny film is among my favorites of the British New Wave.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 16  Average listal rating (10 ratings) 8  IMDB Rating 7.7 
15. The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner (1962)
(Dir. Tony Richardson)

Along with 'Saturday Night and Sunday Morning' this is probably the greatest film to come out of the British New Wave. What is captured here is nothing less than the essence of the British youth of the 60's. A masterpiece.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 6  Average listal rating (3 ratings) 5.7  IMDB Rating 7.2 
16. This Happy Breed (1944)
(Dir. David Lean)

My God, what on earth was this? Now, David Lean has made some of the greatest films in history, but I assure you this isn't one of them. I guess he wanted to make a simple movie about ordinary people, but watching ordinary people going about their ordinary business isn't my idea of good entertainment.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 17  Average listal rating (11 ratings) 6.8  IMDB Rating 7.1 
17. Blithe Spirit (1945)
(Dir. David Lean)

A delightful improvement over the last one. A witty little film which doesn't take itself too seriously. I had fun time watching this comedy, but it's still one of Lean's lesser films.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 229  Average listal rating (126 ratings) 8.2  IMDB Rating 7.9 
18. Jules and Jim (1962)
(Dir. François Truffaut)

This film means almost nothing to me. I usually like the playful films of Nouvelle Vague and some of them are among my top favorites, but this one just bored the hell out of me. It's a film of high historical importance, though, and one can clearly see the influence it had on many American filmmakers such as Arthur Penn and William Friedkin.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 1132  Average listal rating (820 ratings) 7.7  IMDB Rating
19. Shaun of the Dead (2004)
(Dir. Edgar Wright)

I think there is a lesson to be learned here. One should be very careful when mixing comedy and horror, because the results can be disasterous. Shaun of the Dead is neither funny nor scary. There were some amusing moments, but most of the jokes were incredibly bad.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 474  Average listal rating (311 ratings) 8.3  IMDB Rating 8.6 
20. North by Northwest (1959)
(Dir. Alfred Hitchcock)

This is grand entertainment and one of Hitchcock's best. I had a hard time watching some of the scenes (especially the bit where Grant's character is drunk driving, which reminded me of the ridiculous downhill skiing scene in Spellbound) but when the film starts truly rolling there's nothing to stop it. Hitchcock's odd sense of humour can be seen in the airport scene where the guy says something crucial to our hero and we can't hear it because of the loud noise of the planes... James Mason is worth mentioning here, because he is such a marvel.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 663  Average listal rating (472 ratings) 6.8  IMDB Rating 7.4 
21. Total Recall (1990)
(Dir. Paul Verhoeven)

I don't like this movie as much as I used to, but it's still a good movie. The image of Arnold running around with a wet towel wrapped around his head always gives me a laugh.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 12  Average listal rating (6 ratings) 9  IMDB Rating 7.6 
22. The Endless Summer (1966)
(Dir. Bruce Brown)

This is definitely one of my top favorite documentaries. It's like a time capsule to the 60's. A great summer film, too.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 7  Average listal rating (4 ratings) 8  IMDB Rating 7.3 
23. The Wanderers (1979)
(Dir. Philip Kaufman)

The Wanderers is one of the better films about the adolescent life in the 60's. A tough, energetic and playful film with lots of fighting and some surreal elements. A cult favorite.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 42  Average listal rating (16 ratings) 7.8  IMDB Rating
24. The Indian Runner (1991)
(Dir. Sean Penn)

With a better ending this movie would have been a masterpiece. Still, it's a stunning movie with great atmosphere and incredible acting. A film nobody should miss.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 24  Average listal rating (12 ratings) 8.3  IMDB Rating 7.5 
25. Trust (1990)
(Dir. Hal Hartley)

I have few positive words to say about this film. Hal Hartley is an interesting director, but there's something about his literary style that I find extremely irritating. I can recommend Henry Fool to some extent, but this one was barely watchable.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 176  Average listal rating (111 ratings) 5.8  IMDB Rating 6.3 
26. Wolf Creek (2005)
(Dir. Greg Mclean)

Wolf Creek is surprisingly good, but you always know something isn't quite right when you find yourself rooting for the bad guy. I didn't care for the protagonists at all, which is always a bad thing in a horror movie.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 277  Average listal rating (190 ratings) 7.3  IMDB Rating 7.5 
27. Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai (1999)
(Dir. Jim Jarmusch)

I like Ghost Dog very much. Robby Müller's cinematography is simple but very stylistic and amplifying at the same time. This may not be Jarmusch's most original work but it is, without a doubt, one of his best.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 77  Average listal rating (41 ratings) 8.4  IMDB Rating 8.1 
28. Stroszek (1977)
(Dir. Werner Herzog)

This movie has that deeper truth to it, at times it's almost unbearable to watch. Stroszek is unlike anything I've ever seen, it's a movie which at some point becomes so real that it almost becomes a documentary.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 93  Average listal rating (46 ratings) 7.6  IMDB Rating 7.8 
29. The Tenant (1976)
(Dir. Roman Polanski)

What Polanski has achieved with this haunting horror film is beyond me. The movie is so rich in detail that it manages to surprise me time after time. To me, this is not only the greatest achievement in the history of film in which the director plays the leading role, but it's also one of the best on any standards. I couldn't imagine anyone else playing Trelkovsky, Roman does it perfectly.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 33  Average listal rating (17 ratings) 7.9  IMDB Rating 7.5 
30. Targets (1968)
(Dir. Peter Bogdanovich)

Not as good as I remembered, but still, it's pretty darn good. The scene where the killer is shooting random people off the highway is remarkably structured and the movie is worth watching for that sequence alone.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 207  Average listal rating (132 ratings) 7.6  IMDB Rating 7.4 
31. Suspiria (1977)
(Dir. Dario Argento)

For some reason I don't like this movie as much as I used to. I can definitely recommend it for the fans of the horror genre as it has some truly horrifying moments, but but for me the movie doesn't do much anymore.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 62  Average listal rating (27 ratings) 7.3  IMDB Rating 6.7 
32. Inferno (1980)
(Dir. Dario Argento)

The story doesn't amount to much, but the atmosphere is dense, which makes this Argento's best film. Argento says that this is in many ways his purest film, and I can see that. He does his thing and doesn't let the cardboard characters get in the way of the visuals.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 55  Average listal rating (36 ratings) 7.9  IMDB Rating 7.8 
33. My Best Fiend - Klaus Kinski (1999)
(Dir. Werner Herzog)

Beautiful, passionate and an in-depth documentary of a mind that will always remain a mystery. If there ever was a right person to make a movie about Kinski, Herzog is the one.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 290  Average listal rating (182 ratings) 7.3  IMDB Rating 7.1 
34. Wild at Heart (1990)
(Dir. David Lynch)

Wild, sexy, dirty and traumatizing film about love between two people in a sick world. Love it.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 430  Average listal rating (272 ratings) 7.9  IMDB Rating 8.3 
35. The Wrestler (2008)
(Dir. Darren Aronofsky)

The Wrestler is one of the few movies where Rourke really gets to bring his own spirit into his character. One of the best movies of the year, for sure.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 115  Average listal rating (74 ratings) 6.7  IMDB Rating 7.3 
36. Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978)
(Dir. Philip Kaufman)

Along with The Thing and The Fly, Invasion of the Body Snatchers is the best of horror movie remakes. The movie flows naturally and the pace is right. The sense of paranoia is also one of the reasons why I like this movie so much.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 230  Average listal rating (148 ratings) 5.1  IMDB Rating 5.3 
37. Cabin Fever (2002)
(Dir. Eli Roth)

I don't like Cabin Fever very much, I think it is a turd for a film that should be buried and forever forgotten.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 902  Average listal rating (567 ratings) 7.1  IMDB Rating 7.9 
38. Zodiac (2007)
(Dir. David Fincher)

I'm not a big fan of Fincher's, but this movie I love. It reminds me of Pakula's All the President's Men. Zodiac is definitely Fincher's best movie since Seven, if not his best.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 765  Average listal rating (527 ratings) 7.7  IMDB Rating 8.3 
39. Heat (1995)
(Dir. Michael Mann)

What Lawrence of Arabia is to the adventure genre, Heat is to the crime genre. An epic film. I think Michael Mann, in his prime, had the rare talent of making his movies stylish without stylising them like Scorsese always does, for example. One of the key films of the 90's.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 136  Average listal rating (78 ratings) 7.6  IMDB Rating 7.7 
40. Lust, Caution (2007)
(Dir. Ang Lee)

Some nice sex scenes here, lots of tits and ass.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 197  Average listal rating (117 ratings) 6.3  IMDB Rating 6.8 
41. To Die For (1995)
(Dir. Gus Van Sant)

This is actually a good film, very close to four stars but not quite. Nicole Kidman proves that she is not only a piece of ass but can act, too! Joaquin Phoenix also shows that he is one to watch by giving a memorable supporting performance.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 100  Average listal rating (60 ratings) 8  IMDB Rating 8.3 
42. Brief Encounter (1945)
(Dir. David Lean)

I can see why this is a big favorite among the movie romantics, but honestly Brief Encounter isn't that great of a film. It has no real emotions in it.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 50  Average listal rating (25 ratings) 8.9  IMDB Rating 8.1 
43. Harakiri (1962)
(Dir. Masaki Kobayashi)

A great film which is right up there with Seven Samurai and Rashomon. There is nothing quite like the deep and thundering voice of Tatsuya Nakadai and the way he controls his space.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 23  Average listal rating (15 ratings) 7.7  IMDB Rating 7.6 
44. Viva Zapata! (1952)
(Dir. Elia Kazan)

An electrifying performance by Brando as the man of the people, Emiliano Zapata. One of Kazan's best.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 12  Average listal rating (5 ratings) 7.6  IMDB Rating
45. The Hit (1984)
(Dir. Stephen Frears)

A disjointed film with lots of randomness and other forgettable stuff.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 457  Average listal rating (222 ratings) 7.9  IMDB Rating 7.9 
46. Milk (2008)
(Dir. Gus Van Sant)

The best movie of the year and the best performance of the year by Sean Penn. Milk I think is a mixture of Van Sant's Hollywood sell out style and his more experimental style he employed with his earlier work such as My Own Private Idaho and Drugstore Cowboy. Beautifully done.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 119  Average listal rating (72 ratings) 7.8  IMDB Rating 8.1 
47. East of Eden (1955)
(Dir. Elia Kazan)

A solid film in all aspects, but also not a personal favorite of mine. Nothing bad to say about it, though.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 333  Average listal rating (196 ratings) 7.6  IMDB Rating 7.9 
48. Rebel Without a Cause (1955)
(Dir. Nicholas Ray)

Definitely Ray's best and most important film. A daring movie that's all about the angst and frustration of the 50's teens. The image of James Dean in his white shirt, blue jeans and that cool red coat is one of the most simplistic yet the most brilliant examples of costume design as you'll ever see.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 7  Average listal rating (7 ratings) 8.4  IMDB Rating 8.4 
49. Amazing Journey: The Story of The Who (2007)
(Dir. Paul Crowder, Murray Lerner & Parris Patton)

It's always nice to see a well made documentary about one of your favorite bands, even if nothing new is revealed, like in this case. The Kids Are Alright is still the definitive Who-movie.
Moon's rating:

People who added this item 36  Average listal rating (14 ratings) 7.9  IMDB Rating 7.8 
50. O Lucky Man! (1973)
(Dir. Lindsay Anderson)

For me Malcolm McDowell will always have that little bit of Alex in him, no matter who he's playing. O Lucky Man is one of Malcolm's personal favorites among his movies, which must have something to do with how 'overlooked' this was back in the day. I think it's and overly long, occasionally very funny but also very incoherent and disjointed movie.
Moon's rating:


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It seems that I've got a lot of catching up to do with the comments here...
Remember that these notes presented under the titles are not trying to be anything but random thoughts and ramblings so they are not to be taken too seriously. Feel free to add any comments.

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