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In the London Mayoralty betting the Brian Rose collapse continues – politicalbetting.com

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  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,410
    edited February 2021
    Leon said:

    OK, comedy

    This is a tricky one, as comedy ages SO badly. Not many comedies can elicit a laugh 20 0r 30 years later. Or even 10

    I would go for either of the two Monty Python masterpieces, Holy Grail and/or Life of Brian. Both of them are, stilll, constantly referenced in popular culture, in Anglophone countries, from the Knight who loses all his limbs and asks for a draw, to What Have The Romans Done For Us

    Or Airplane. But I wonder if Airplane would stand up to a viewing now?

    The Producers? Early Woody Allen?

    My inner 15 year old still finds Animal House hilarious. Belushi at his best.
    The original cut is much darker.
    After the chaotic homecoming parade, JFK is shot the next day, and the cast is expelled and drafted to go to Vietnam to die.
    End of an era of innocence.
  • Leon said:

    OK, comedy

    This is a tricky one, as comedy ages SO badly. Not many comedies can elicit a laugh 20 0r 30 years later. Or even 10

    I would go for either of the two Monty Python masterpieces, Holy Grail and/or Life of Brian. Both of them are, stilll, constantly referenced in popular culture, in Anglophone countries, from the Knight who loses all his limbs and asks for a draw, to What Have The Romans Done For Us

    Or Airplane. But I wonder if Airplane would stand up to a viewing now?

    The Producers? Early Woody Allen?

    Some Like it Hot.
  • Blimey, you lot watch some rubbish movies. Try Some like it hot, The General, The Apartment, any of the Ealing comedies, Tirez sur le pianiste, The life and times of Colonel Blimp...
  • Blimey, you lot watch some rubbish movies. Try Some like it hot,

    "Nobody's perfect!"
  • Sci-Fi?

    Has to be "Aliens" :)

    Aliens is fricking brilliant, and better than Alien.

    They really shouldn't have bothered with any further sequels, until Prometheus.
  • IanB2 said:

    Leon said:

    Foxy said:

    Leon said:

    Omnium said:

    Foxy said:

    Omnium said:

    Re previous posts. "Lawrence of Arabia" is easily my favourite film. The best film ever made, and what cinemas are for.

    I think Apocalypse Now is my favourite. Every time that I watch it, I see something new.
    For a very long period of my life I'd also have said the same. I went to see it when I was perhaps 15, and I'd had to drag my Dad along because it was AA certificate. I rather love the film because we saw it together - the only film that I ever saw just the two of us. We both emerged a little shocked and speechless.

    Anyway in recent years I've come to view David Lean's masterpiece as edging it.

    ZULU is peerless: so many superb scenes

    Asking what is the best movie is like asking "what is the best country" or "what is the best weather" or "what is the best form of cooking eggs". You have to choose a genre

    As a war movie, Zulu beats Apocalypse Now, shorter, sharper, more wrenching and yet exhilarating

    Rom coms? Notting Hill? Richard Curtis is much maligned these days, but that was excellently done

    Boxing? Raging Bull. Maybe indeed the best movie about masculinity in general

    Gangsters: Goodfellas, for sure.

    Damn that's two Scorseses in one list. He is impressive

    Groundhog Day is the best Romcom.

    Apocalyse Now is better than Zulu because of its complex themes and exploration of the human condition. A war film purely about war is something less.

    Similarly Black Book, Full Metal Jacket or In the Fog are better war films than Zulu.

    Nah, the redcoats' "front rank, second rank" shooting scene from Zulu, by itself, puts in a league of its own

    I will also give an honourable mention to 1917, which kinda got overlooked as the Plague swept all aside. Sam Mendes' war movie is the best of the 21st century. The hallucinatory quality of the nocturnal scenes is pure directorial genius
    Fury, enemy at the gates, Patton, das boot (originally tv), private Ryan, are all a better watch than 1917 let alone Zulu.
    Fury? F-off mate, that's Shia Le Boeuf toilet.

    Other picks are good.

    Are there any British warfilms you like?
    Repeat please?

    Battle of Britain.
    Flood the cowling; plenty of it. Great music; great aerial combat scenes; yet somehow a little dull.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,209

    Leon said:

    OK, comedy

    This is a tricky one, as comedy ages SO badly. Not many comedies can elicit a laugh 20 0r 30 years later. Or even 10

    I would go for either of the two Monty Python masterpieces, Holy Grail and/or Life of Brian. Both of them are, stilll, constantly referenced in popular culture, in Anglophone countries, from the Knight who loses all his limbs and asks for a draw, to What Have The Romans Done For Us

    Or Airplane. But I wonder if Airplane would stand up to a viewing now?

    The Producers? Early Woody Allen?

    Some Like it Hot.
    My 13 year old daughter thinks that is one of the greatest movies of all time.
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 6,725

    As I see it's film night on PB.com, here goes:

    Overall: Shawshank Redemption
    Animated: Shrek
    Space: Apollo 13
    Romcom: Four Weddings (obvs)
    Murder mystery: Gosford Park
    Sports: Chariots of Fire
    War: Dunkirk
    Musical: Yesterday
    Costume drama: Pride & Prejudice (2005 version)
    ...and Comedy: Shirley you don't need to ask?

    Concur with the Shawshank Redemption. Best film I have ever seen.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 55,429
    rcs1000 said:

    Leon said:

    OK, comedy

    This is a tricky one, as comedy ages SO badly. Not many comedies can elicit a laugh 20 0r 30 years later. Or even 10

    I would go for either of the two Monty Python masterpieces, Holy Grail and/or Life of Brian. Both of them are, stilll, constantly referenced in popular culture, in Anglophone countries, from the Knight who loses all his limbs and asks for a draw, to What Have The Romans Done For Us

    Or Airplane. But I wonder if Airplane would stand up to a viewing now?

    The Producers? Early Woody Allen?

    Life of Brian holds up better than Holy Grail which holds up better than anything else in the Python universe.

    Yes, if you actually watch the Python TV series, there are many dragging minutes of totally unfunny, laughless cringe. But then suddenly they hit you with a genius sketch - Shortened Proust = then its back to cringe or yawns.

    Very variable. Holy Grail is similar, but better, the good bits are ace, the bad bits are less frequent, but they exist. Life of Brian is their Ulysses, nearly perfect from beginning to end, and endlessly clever and inventive.

    Even now the humour bites.

    Judean Popular Front? Where is he?

    Where you gonna grow the baby? In a box?

    Always Look On The Bright Side Of Life: with a whistle, on the crucifix

    Romans, Did For Us?

    We're all different, we're all individuals! (Voice aside): I'm not

    I am happy to nominate it as the best comedy ever, and one of the very very few that remains amusing AND relevant decades after it was made
  • Any love for The Princess Bride? Easily my favourite sword fight in film history plus "Hello. My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die." I have seen that held up as a perfect introduction: a greeting, my name, my relationship with you, and what I want to get out of the meeting.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,209
    OK...

    Oceans Eleven
    Die Hard
    Die Hard 3
    Raiders of the Lost Ark
    Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
    Casino Royale
    The Ladykillers
    Shawshank Redemption

    There may be some other movies worth watching, but if so, I haven't seen them.
  • Some great films mentioned but I am not sure if anyone has named any of my favourites yet.

    For my top 3 - in no particular order and based on he number of times I have rewatched them even though I know every line:

    Bladerunner.
    Casablanca.
    Local Hero.

    3 films which are, to me, perfect in every frame.

    That said there are huge numbers of great films that can run these very close.

    My guilty secret is The Great Race with Tony Curtis, Jack Lemmon and Natalie Wood. Even if only for Jack Lemmon and Peter Falk's Laurel and Hardy tributes and the best pie fight ever filmed.
  • TheValiantTheValiant Posts: 1,878
    Leon said:

    IanB2 said:

    Leon said:

    Foxy said:

    Leon said:

    Omnium said:

    Foxy said:

    Omnium said:

    Re previous posts. "Lawrence of Arabia" is easily my favourite film. The best film ever made, and what cinemas are for.

    I think Apocalypse Now is my favourite. Every time that I watch it, I see something new.
    For a very long period of my life I'd also have said the same. I went to see it when I was perhaps 15, and I'd had to drag my Dad along because it was AA certificate. I rather love the film because we saw it together - the only film that I ever saw just the two of us. We both emerged a little shocked and speechless.

    Anyway in recent years I've come to view David Lean's masterpiece as edging it.

    ZULU is peerless: so many superb scenes

    Asking what is the best movie is like asking "what is the best country" or "what is the best weather" or "what is the best form of cooking eggs". You have to choose a genre

    As a war movie, Zulu beats Apocalypse Now, shorter, sharper, more wrenching and yet exhilarating

    Rom coms? Notting Hill? Richard Curtis is much maligned these days, but that was excellently done

    Boxing? Raging Bull. Maybe indeed the best movie about masculinity in general

    Gangsters: Goodfellas, for sure.

    Damn that's two Scorseses in one list. He is impressive

    Groundhog Day is the best Romcom.

    Apocalyse Now is better than Zulu because of its complex themes and exploration of the human condition. A war film purely about war is something less.

    Similarly Black Book, Full Metal Jacket or In the Fog are better war films than Zulu.

    Nah, the redcoats' "front rank, second rank" shooting scene from Zulu, by itself, puts in a league of its own

    I will also give an honourable mention to 1917, which kinda got overlooked as the Plague swept all aside. Sam Mendes' war movie is the best of the 21st century. The hallucinatory quality of the nocturnal scenes is pure directorial genius
    Fury, enemy at the gates, Patton, das boot (originally tv), private Ryan, are all a better watch than 1917 let alone Zulu.
    Patton?? Jeez and lol. No
    This guy has been reviewing movies for well over twenty years. Back in the early 2000s he made a top 100 list.
    Patton was number 1.
    He's been updating and adding.
    Nothing has shifted Patton from his number 1 spot.
    I don't agree, but I'd put it in my top 20 (maybe top 10).
    https://www.reelviews.net/reelthoughts/reelthought_1524425989
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,600
    Best start to a film? Up

    Best rom com/relationship comedy? When Harry Met Sally

    Best noir? Chinatown

    Best cheap sci-fi you've probably never heard of? Primer

    Best Film to make Blokes Cry: Field of Dreams

    Best Single Blubbing Moment in Cinema? "Daddy my Daddy", The Railway Children

  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,673

    IanB2 said:

    Leon said:

    Foxy said:

    Leon said:

    Omnium said:

    Foxy said:

    Omnium said:

    Re previous posts. "Lawrence of Arabia" is easily my favourite film. The best film ever made, and what cinemas are for.

    I think Apocalypse Now is my favourite. Every time that I watch it, I see something new.
    For a very long period of my life I'd also have said the same. I went to see it when I was perhaps 15, and I'd had to drag my Dad along because it was AA certificate. I rather love the film because we saw it together - the only film that I ever saw just the two of us. We both emerged a little shocked and speechless.

    Anyway in recent years I've come to view David Lean's masterpiece as edging it.

    ZULU is peerless: so many superb scenes

    Asking what is the best movie is like asking "what is the best country" or "what is the best weather" or "what is the best form of cooking eggs". You have to choose a genre

    As a war movie, Zulu beats Apocalypse Now, shorter, sharper, more wrenching and yet exhilarating

    Rom coms? Notting Hill? Richard Curtis is much maligned these days, but that was excellently done

    Boxing? Raging Bull. Maybe indeed the best movie about masculinity in general

    Gangsters: Goodfellas, for sure.

    Damn that's two Scorseses in one list. He is impressive

    Groundhog Day is the best Romcom.

    Apocalyse Now is better than Zulu because of its complex themes and exploration of the human condition. A war film purely about war is something less.

    Similarly Black Book, Full Metal Jacket or In the Fog are better war films than Zulu.

    Nah, the redcoats' "front rank, second rank" shooting scene from Zulu, by itself, puts in a league of its own

    I will also give an honourable mention to 1917, which kinda got overlooked as the Plague swept all aside. Sam Mendes' war movie is the best of the 21st century. The hallucinatory quality of the nocturnal scenes is pure directorial genius
    Fury, enemy at the gates, Patton, das boot (originally tv), private Ryan, are all a better watch than 1917 let alone Zulu.
    Fury? F-off mate, that's Shia Le Boeuf toilet.

    Other picks are good.

    Are there any British warfilms you like?
    Repeat please?

    Battle of Britain.
    Surely BoB is ripe for a remake with modern CGI?

    Also, the original has to be a serious contender for the worst case of fashimposing - which is a word I have just made up meaning: imposing the fashions of the time of shooting over the fashions of the era depicted. See especially Susannah York.
  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,285
    edited February 2021

    Leon said:

    OK, comedy

    This is a tricky one, as comedy ages SO badly. Not many comedies can elicit a laugh 20 0r 30 years later. Or even 10

    I would go for either of the two Monty Python masterpieces, Holy Grail and/or Life of Brian. Both of them are, stilll, constantly referenced in popular culture, in Anglophone countries, from the Knight who loses all his limbs and asks for a draw, to What Have The Romans Done For Us

    Or Airplane. But I wonder if Airplane would stand up to a viewing now?

    The Producers? Early Woody Allen?

    Some Like it Hot.
    Nobody's perfect.

    Edit @Sunil_Prasannan got there before me!
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,710

    Blimey, you lot watch some rubbish movies. Try Some like it hot, The General, The Apartment, any of the Ealing comedies, Tirez sur le pianiste, The life and times of Colonel Blimp...

    Life and Death of Colonel Blimp is another contender for best British War film.

  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 32,588
    edited February 2021
    This is pretty astonishing.

    "Not a single case of flu detected by Public Health England this year as Covid restrictions suppress virus
    Experts say decline in infections could justify continued use of hand sanitiser and masks following coronavirus pandemic"

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/health/flu-cases-covid-england-phe-latest-b1805124.html
  • Foxy said:

    Blimey, you lot watch some rubbish movies. Try Some like it hot, The General, The Apartment, any of the Ealing comedies, Tirez sur le pianiste, The life and times of Colonel Blimp...

    Life and Death of Colonel Blimp is another contender for best British War film.

    Yep. A fantastic film.
  • Leon said:

    OK, comedy

    This is a tricky one, as comedy ages SO badly. Not many comedies can elicit a laugh 20 0r 30 years later. Or even 10

    I would go for either of the two Monty Python masterpieces, Holy Grail and/or Life of Brian. Both of them are, stilll, constantly referenced in popular culture, in Anglophone countries, from the Knight who loses all his limbs and asks for a draw, to What Have The Romans Done For Us

    Or Airplane. But I wonder if Airplane would stand up to a viewing now?

    The Producers? Early Woody Allen?

    Spinal Tap. Still has umpteen references in modern culture.
    Too much fucking perspective.
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    Foxy said:

    Blimey, you lot watch some rubbish movies. Try Some like it hot, The General, The Apartment, any of the Ealing comedies, Tirez sur le pianiste, The life and times of Colonel Blimp...

    Life and Death of Colonel Blimp is another contender for best British War film.

    Hopscotch for a classic spy romantic comedy.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,710
    dixiedean said:

    Leon said:

    OK, comedy

    This is a tricky one, as comedy ages SO badly. Not many comedies can elicit a laugh 20 0r 30 years later. Or even 10

    I would go for either of the two Monty Python masterpieces, Holy Grail and/or Life of Brian. Both of them are, stilll, constantly referenced in popular culture, in Anglophone countries, from the Knight who loses all his limbs and asks for a draw, to What Have The Romans Done For Us

    Or Airplane. But I wonder if Airplane would stand up to a viewing now?

    The Producers? Early Woody Allen?

    My inner 15 year old still finds Animal House hilarious. Belushi at his best.
    The original cut is much darker.
    After the chaotic homecoming parade, JFK is shot the next day, and the cast is expelled and drafted to go to Vietnam to die.
    Animal House is quite subversive, in a good way.

    The Blues Brothers has aged well too.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,126

    kle4 said:

    Leon said:

    Foxy said:

    Leon said:

    Omnium said:

    Foxy said:

    Omnium said:

    Re previous posts. "Lawrence of Arabia" is easily my favourite film. The best film ever made, and what cinemas are for.

    I think Apocalypse Now is my favourite. Every time that I watch it, I see something new.
    For a very long period of my life I'd also have said the same. I went to see it when I was perhaps 15, and I'd had to drag my Dad along because it was AA certificate. I rather love the film because we saw it together - the only film that I ever saw just the two of us. We both emerged a little shocked and speechless.

    Anyway in recent years I've come to view David Lean's masterpiece as edging it.

    ZULU is peerless: so many superb scenes

    Asking what is the best movie is like asking "what is the best country" or "what is the best weather" or "what is the best form of cooking eggs". You have to choose a genre

    As a war movie, Zulu beats Apocalypse Now, shorter, sharper, more wrenching and yet exhilarating

    Rom coms? Notting Hill? Richard Curtis is much maligned these days, but that was excellently done

    Boxing? Raging Bull. Maybe indeed the best movie about masculinity in general

    Gangsters: Goodfellas, for sure.

    Damn that's two Scorseses in one list. He is impressive

    Groundhog Day is the best Romcom.

    Apocalyse Now is better than Zulu because of its complex themes and exploration of the human condition. A war film purely about war is something less.

    Similarly Black Book, Full Metal Jacket or In the Fog are better war films than Zulu.

    Nah, the redcoats' "front rank, second rank" shooting scene from Zulu, by itself, puts in a league of its own

    I will also give an honourable mention to 1917, which kinda got overlooked as the Plague swept all aside. Sam Mendes' war movie is the best of the 21st century. The hallucinatory quality of the nocturnal scenes is pure directorial genius
    1917 is one stunningly directed movie, but I could never give it truly great movie status when the plot totally unravels for the sake of visual dramatics. I find it impossible to watch the poor hero understandably take a 5 minute breather at the end without reflecting that if he had just spoken up instead he'd literally have saved hundreds of lives, because then we'd miss out on an (awesome) shot if he didn't.
    Best animated comedy detective film noir is Who Framed Roger Rabbit.
    Niche genre
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,600

    Some great films mentioned but I am not sure if anyone has named any of my favourites yet.

    For my top 3 - in no particular order and based on he number of times I have rewatched them even though I know every line:

    Bladerunner.
    Casablanca.
    Local Hero.

    3 films which are, to me, perfect in every frame.

    That said there are huge numbers of great films that can run these very close.

    My guilty secret is The Great Race with Tony Curtis, Jack Lemmon and Natalie Wood. Even if only for Jack Lemmon and Peter Falk's Laurel and Hardy tributes and the best pie fight ever filmed.

    Very fine choices!
  • Best start to a film? Up

    Best rom com/relationship comedy? When Harry Met Sally

    Best noir? Chinatown

    Best cheap sci-fi you've probably never heard of? Primer

    Best Film to make Blokes Cry: Field of Dreams

    Best Single Blubbing Moment in Cinema? "Daddy my Daddy", The Railway Children

    Your best film to make blokes cry should have been the start of Up...
  • IanB2 said:

    Leon said:

    Foxy said:

    Leon said:

    Omnium said:

    Foxy said:

    Omnium said:

    Re previous posts. "Lawrence of Arabia" is easily my favourite film. The best film ever made, and what cinemas are for.

    I think Apocalypse Now is my favourite. Every time that I watch it, I see something new.
    For a very long period of my life I'd also have said the same. I went to see it when I was perhaps 15, and I'd had to drag my Dad along because it was AA certificate. I rather love the film because we saw it together - the only film that I ever saw just the two of us. We both emerged a little shocked and speechless.

    Anyway in recent years I've come to view David Lean's masterpiece as edging it.

    ZULU is peerless: so many superb scenes

    Asking what is the best movie is like asking "what is the best country" or "what is the best weather" or "what is the best form of cooking eggs". You have to choose a genre

    As a war movie, Zulu beats Apocalypse Now, shorter, sharper, more wrenching and yet exhilarating

    Rom coms? Notting Hill? Richard Curtis is much maligned these days, but that was excellently done

    Boxing? Raging Bull. Maybe indeed the best movie about masculinity in general

    Gangsters: Goodfellas, for sure.

    Damn that's two Scorseses in one list. He is impressive

    Groundhog Day is the best Romcom.

    Apocalyse Now is better than Zulu because of its complex themes and exploration of the human condition. A war film purely about war is something less.

    Similarly Black Book, Full Metal Jacket or In the Fog are better war films than Zulu.

    Nah, the redcoats' "front rank, second rank" shooting scene from Zulu, by itself, puts in a league of its own

    I will also give an honourable mention to 1917, which kinda got overlooked as the Plague swept all aside. Sam Mendes' war movie is the best of the 21st century. The hallucinatory quality of the nocturnal scenes is pure directorial genius
    Fury, enemy at the gates, Patton, das boot (originally tv), private Ryan, are all a better watch than 1917 let alone Zulu.
    Fury? F-off mate, that's Shia Le Boeuf toilet.

    Other picks are good.

    Are there any British warfilms you like?
    Repeat please?

    Battle of Britain.
    Surely BoB is ripe for a remake with modern CGI?

    Also, the original has to be a serious contender for the worst case of fashimposing - which is a word I have just made up meaning: imposing the fashions of the time of shooting over the fashions of the era depicted. See especially Susannah York.
    Nope. It'd be shite CGI.

    Original had superb all-star cast, nice script, and real aircraft from both sides.
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468

    IanB2 said:

    Leon said:

    Foxy said:

    Leon said:

    Omnium said:

    Foxy said:

    Omnium said:

    Re previous posts. "Lawrence of Arabia" is easily my favourite film. The best film ever made, and what cinemas are for.

    I think Apocalypse Now is my favourite. Every time that I watch it, I see something new.
    For a very long period of my life I'd also have said the same. I went to see it when I was perhaps 15, and I'd had to drag my Dad along because it was AA certificate. I rather love the film because we saw it together - the only film that I ever saw just the two of us. We both emerged a little shocked and speechless.

    Anyway in recent years I've come to view David Lean's masterpiece as edging it.

    ZULU is peerless: so many superb scenes

    Asking what is the best movie is like asking "what is the best country" or "what is the best weather" or "what is the best form of cooking eggs". You have to choose a genre

    As a war movie, Zulu beats Apocalypse Now, shorter, sharper, more wrenching and yet exhilarating

    Rom coms? Notting Hill? Richard Curtis is much maligned these days, but that was excellently done

    Boxing? Raging Bull. Maybe indeed the best movie about masculinity in general

    Gangsters: Goodfellas, for sure.

    Damn that's two Scorseses in one list. He is impressive

    Groundhog Day is the best Romcom.

    Apocalyse Now is better than Zulu because of its complex themes and exploration of the human condition. A war film purely about war is something less.

    Similarly Black Book, Full Metal Jacket or In the Fog are better war films than Zulu.

    Nah, the redcoats' "front rank, second rank" shooting scene from Zulu, by itself, puts in a league of its own

    I will also give an honourable mention to 1917, which kinda got overlooked as the Plague swept all aside. Sam Mendes' war movie is the best of the 21st century. The hallucinatory quality of the nocturnal scenes is pure directorial genius
    Fury, enemy at the gates, Patton, das boot (originally tv), private Ryan, are all a better watch than 1917 let alone Zulu.
    Fury? F-off mate, that's Shia Le Boeuf toilet.

    Other picks are good.

    Are there any British warfilms you like?
    Repeat please?

    Battle of Britain.
    Surely BoB is ripe for a remake with modern CGI?

    Also, the original has to be a serious contender for the worst case of fashimposing - which is a word I have just made up meaning: imposing the fashions of the time of shooting over the fashions of the era depicted. See especially Susannah York.
    You mean like McKellan's Richard III?
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,209

    Any love for The Princess Bride? Easily my favourite sword fight in film history plus "Hello. My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die." I have seen that held up as a perfect introduction: a greeting, my name, my relationship with you, and what I want to get out of the meeting.

    I have three (tenuous) connections with that movie.

    (1) My daughter is in the same school class as Fred Savage's daughter. Her name, believe it or not, is Lily.
    (2) My wife is very good friends with Damian Elwes, and Damian's brother played Wesley.
    (3) I was once at a very nice Japanese restaurant and was asked (as I was dining alone) if I would mind sharing my table with two ladies. I said, "sure". And one of the ladies was Robin Wright.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,710
    Andy_JS said:

    This is pretty astonishing.

    "Not a single case of flu detected by Public Health England this year as Covid restrictions suppress virus
    Experts say decline in infections could justify continued use of hand sanitiser and masks following coronavirus pandemic"

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/health/flu-cases-covid-england-phe-latest-b1805124.html

    Our ECMO team are nostalgic for a good flu season. They could cure that...
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 6,725
    Foxy said:

    Blimey, you lot watch some rubbish movies. Try Some like it hot, The General, The Apartment, any of the Ealing comedies, Tirez sur le pianiste, The life and times of Colonel Blimp...

    Life and Death of Colonel Blimp is another contender for best British War film.

    Tge Apartment is there and thereabouts. Very good performances..
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,673

    Leon said:

    OK, comedy

    This is a tricky one, as comedy ages SO badly. Not many comedies can elicit a laugh 20 0r 30 years later. Or even 10

    I would go for either of the two Monty Python masterpieces, Holy Grail and/or Life of Brian. Both of them are, stilll, constantly referenced in popular culture, in Anglophone countries, from the Knight who loses all his limbs and asks for a draw, to What Have The Romans Done For Us

    Or Airplane. But I wonder if Airplane would stand up to a viewing now?

    The Producers? Early Woody Allen?

    Some Like it Hot.
    Actually that's a good point. I need a new category: Best musical comedy.

    That Marilyn Monroe performance of I Wanna Be Loved By You - wow!
  • kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,948
    isam said:

    Leon said:

    Omnium said:

    Foxy said:

    Omnium said:

    Re previous posts. "Lawrence of Arabia" is easily my favourite film. The best film ever made, and what cinemas are for.

    I think Apocalypse Now is my favourite. Every time that I watch it, I see something new.
    For a very long period of my life I'd also have said the same. I went to see it when I was perhaps 15, and I'd had to drag my Dad along because it was AA certificate. I rather love the film because we saw it together - the only film that I ever saw just the two of us. We both emerged a little shocked and speechless.

    Anyway in recent years I've come to view David Lean's masterpiece as edging it.

    ZULU is peerless: so many superb scenes

    Asking what is the best movie is like asking "what is the best country" or "what is the best weather" or "what is the best form of cooking eggs". You have to choose a genre

    As a war movie, Zulu beats Apocalypse Now, shorter, sharper, more wrenching and yet exhilarating

    Rom coms? Notting Hill? Richard Curtis is much maligned these days, but that was excellently done

    Boxing? Raging Bull. Maybe indeed the best movie about masculinity in general

    Gangsters: Goodfellas, for sure.

    Damn that's two Scorseses in one list. He is impressive

    The best RomCom is There's Something About Mary, it is probably the best film in a whole host of other categories as well.

    The Godfather pts I & II rival Goodfellas as best gangster, wouldn't you say? All three are great (Gf I & II + Goodfellas)

    Raging Bull is probably the only Boxing film I have seen other than Champ... Champ affected me quite deeply though, I bawled my eyes out. Oh and a couple of the Rocky's I suppose. Never really got into them

    The best Gambling film is The Sting

    The Lives of Others is great @Casino_Royale, so is Play Misty For Me, and two of my all time faves, Cool Hand Luke, and Hombre
    Once Upon a Time in America comes close, but doesn't quite beat, Godfather pts I & II, especially not together.

    However Once Upon a Time in the West is definitely the best Western of all time.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,600
    kle4 said:

    kle4 said:

    Leon said:

    Foxy said:

    Leon said:

    Omnium said:

    Foxy said:

    Omnium said:

    Re previous posts. "Lawrence of Arabia" is easily my favourite film. The best film ever made, and what cinemas are for.

    I think Apocalypse Now is my favourite. Every time that I watch it, I see something new.
    For a very long period of my life I'd also have said the same. I went to see it when I was perhaps 15, and I'd had to drag my Dad along because it was AA certificate. I rather love the film because we saw it together - the only film that I ever saw just the two of us. We both emerged a little shocked and speechless.

    Anyway in recent years I've come to view David Lean's masterpiece as edging it.

    ZULU is peerless: so many superb scenes

    Asking what is the best movie is like asking "what is the best country" or "what is the best weather" or "what is the best form of cooking eggs". You have to choose a genre

    As a war movie, Zulu beats Apocalypse Now, shorter, sharper, more wrenching and yet exhilarating

    Rom coms? Notting Hill? Richard Curtis is much maligned these days, but that was excellently done

    Boxing? Raging Bull. Maybe indeed the best movie about masculinity in general

    Gangsters: Goodfellas, for sure.

    Damn that's two Scorseses in one list. He is impressive

    Groundhog Day is the best Romcom.

    Apocalyse Now is better than Zulu because of its complex themes and exploration of the human condition. A war film purely about war is something less.

    Similarly Black Book, Full Metal Jacket or In the Fog are better war films than Zulu.

    Nah, the redcoats' "front rank, second rank" shooting scene from Zulu, by itself, puts in a league of its own

    I will also give an honourable mention to 1917, which kinda got overlooked as the Plague swept all aside. Sam Mendes' war movie is the best of the 21st century. The hallucinatory quality of the nocturnal scenes is pure directorial genius
    1917 is one stunningly directed movie, but I could never give it truly great movie status when the plot totally unravels for the sake of visual dramatics. I find it impossible to watch the poor hero understandably take a 5 minute breather at the end without reflecting that if he had just spoken up instead he'd literally have saved hundreds of lives, because then we'd miss out on an (awesome) shot if he didn't.
    Best animated comedy detective film noir is Who Framed Roger Rabbit.
    Niche genre
    Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid runs it close....
  • Foxy said:

    IanB2 said:

    Leon said:

    Foxy said:

    Leon said:

    Omnium said:

    Foxy said:

    Omnium said:

    Re previous posts. "Lawrence of Arabia" is easily my favourite film. The best film ever made, and what cinemas are for.

    I think Apocalypse Now is my favourite. Every time that I watch it, I see something new.
    For a very long period of my life I'd also have said the same. I went to see it when I was perhaps 15, and I'd had to drag my Dad along because it was AA certificate. I rather love the film because we saw it together - the only film that I ever saw just the two of us. We both emerged a little shocked and speechless.

    Anyway in recent years I've come to view David Lean's masterpiece as edging it.

    ZULU is peerless: so many superb scenes

    Asking what is the best movie is like asking "what is the best country" or "what is the best weather" or "what is the best form of cooking eggs". You have to choose a genre

    As a war movie, Zulu beats Apocalypse Now, shorter, sharper, more wrenching and yet exhilarating

    Rom coms? Notting Hill? Richard Curtis is much maligned these days, but that was excellently done

    Boxing? Raging Bull. Maybe indeed the best movie about masculinity in general

    Gangsters: Goodfellas, for sure.

    Damn that's two Scorseses in one list. He is impressive

    Groundhog Day is the best Romcom.

    Apocalyse Now is better than Zulu because of its complex themes and exploration of the human condition. A war film purely about war is something less.

    Similarly Black Book, Full Metal Jacket or In the Fog are better war films than Zulu.

    Nah, the redcoats' "front rank, second rank" shooting scene from Zulu, by itself, puts in a league of its own

    I will also give an honourable mention to 1917, which kinda got overlooked as the Plague swept all aside. Sam Mendes' war movie is the best of the 21st century. The hallucinatory quality of the nocturnal scenes is pure directorial genius
    Fury, enemy at the gates, Patton, das boot (originally tv), private Ryan, are all a better watch than 1917 let alone Zulu.
    Fury? F-off mate, that's Shia Le Boeuf toilet.

    Other picks are good.

    Are there any British warfilms you like?
    The Way Ahead is a truly great British War film. Propaganda, but very well done.
    Angels One Five is surprisingly good. The Cruel Sea and In Which We Serve. The 1950s war films and even the wartime propaganda films hold up surprisingly well. Twenty years ahead of Hollywood in showing the darker side of war.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 71,220
    Foxy said:

    Leon said:

    Omnium said:

    Foxy said:

    Omnium said:

    Re previous posts. "Lawrence of Arabia" is easily my favourite film. The best film ever made, and what cinemas are for.

    I think Apocalypse Now is my favourite. Every time that I watch it, I see something new.
    For a very long period of my life I'd also have said the same. I went to see it when I was perhaps 15, and I'd had to drag my Dad along because it was AA certificate. I rather love the film because we saw it together - the only film that I ever saw just the two of us. We both emerged a little shocked and speechless.

    Anyway in recent years I've come to view David Lean's masterpiece as edging it.

    ZULU is peerless: so many superb scenes

    Asking what is the best movie is like asking "what is the best country" or "what is the best weather" or "what is the best form of cooking eggs". You have to choose a genre

    As a war movie, Zulu beats Apocalypse Now, shorter, sharper, more wrenching and yet exhilarating

    Rom coms? Notting Hill? Richard Curtis is much maligned these days, but that was excellently done

    Boxing? Raging Bull. Maybe indeed the best movie about masculinity in general

    Gangsters: Goodfellas, for sure.

    Damn that's two Scorseses in one list. He is impressive

    Groundhog Day is the best Romcom.

    Apocalyse Now is better than Zulu because of its complex themes and exploration of the human condition. A war film purely about war is something less...
    Not to mention the sound editing.
    Leon said:

    OK, comedy

    This is a tricky one, as comedy ages SO badly. Not many comedies can elicit a laugh 20 0r 30 years later. Or even 10

    I would go for either of the two Monty Python masterpieces, Holy Grail and/or Life of Brian. Both of them are, stilll, constantly referenced in popular culture, in Anglophone countries, from the Knight who loses all his limbs and asks for a draw, to What Have The Romans Done For Us

    Or Airplane. But I wonder if Airplane would stand up to a viewing now?

    The Producers? Early Woody Allen?

    Dr Strangelove, if we’re including black comedy.

    His Girl Friday still works (and was extendedly referenced in BoJack Horseman, so also still popular-ish culture.)
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,126
    rcs1000 said:

    Leon said:

    OK, comedy

    This is a tricky one, as comedy ages SO badly. Not many comedies can elicit a laugh 20 0r 30 years later. Or even 10

    I would go for either of the two Monty Python masterpieces, Holy Grail and/or Life of Brian. Both of them are, stilll, constantly referenced in popular culture, in Anglophone countries, from the Knight who loses all his limbs and asks for a draw, to What Have The Romans Done For Us

    Or Airplane. But I wonder if Airplane would stand up to a viewing now?

    The Producers? Early Woody Allen?

    Life of Brian holds up better than Holy Grail which holds up better than anything else in the Python universe.

    Saw it in the cinema on an anniversary release, place was packed. Bar the weird alien bit, it works in near every scene. So quotable.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 32,588
    edited February 2021
    I stopped watching The Shawshank Redemption half-way through and never got round to the rest of it. Just didnt click for me.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,486

    Some great films mentioned but I am not sure if anyone has named any of my favourites yet.

    For my top 3 - in no particular order and based on he number of times I have rewatched them even though I know every line:

    Bladerunner.
    Casablanca.
    Local Hero.

    3 films which are, to me, perfect in every frame.

    That said there are huge numbers of great films that can run these very close.

    My guilty secret is The Great Race with Tony Curtis, Jack Lemmon and Natalie Wood. Even if only for Jack Lemmon and Peter Falk's Laurel and Hardy tributes and the best pie fight ever filmed.

    Nothing guilty about The Great Race, I nominated it above as Best Comedy.

    It’s actually a great story, and the casting is superb.

    I still wonder and worry about what actually happened to Miss Wood. A dark Hollywood secret.
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    rcs1000 said:

    OK...

    Oceans Eleven
    Die Hard
    Die Hard 3
    Raiders of the Lost Ark
    Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
    Casino Royale
    The Ladykillers
    Shawshank Redemption

    There may be some other movies worth watching, but if so, I haven't seen them.


    Try The Accountant, and R.E.D.
  • Emmanuelle. Oh bugger, I actually pressed “send” didn’t I?
  • Leon said:

    OK, comedy

    This is a tricky one, as comedy ages SO badly. Not many comedies can elicit a laugh 20 0r 30 years later. Or even 10

    I would go for either of the two Monty Python masterpieces, Holy Grail and/or Life of Brian. Both of them are, stilll, constantly referenced in popular culture, in Anglophone countries, from the Knight who loses all his limbs and asks for a draw, to What Have The Romans Done For Us

    Or Airplane. But I wonder if Airplane would stand up to a viewing now?

    The Producers? Early Woody Allen?

    Some Like it Hot.
    Actually that's a good point. I need a new category: Best musical comedy.

    That Marilyn Monroe performance of I Wanna Be Loved By You - wow!
    "We like them so much we named the company after them..."
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,673

    IanB2 said:

    Leon said:

    Foxy said:

    Leon said:

    Omnium said:

    Foxy said:

    Omnium said:

    Re previous posts. "Lawrence of Arabia" is easily my favourite film. The best film ever made, and what cinemas are for.

    I think Apocalypse Now is my favourite. Every time that I watch it, I see something new.
    For a very long period of my life I'd also have said the same. I went to see it when I was perhaps 15, and I'd had to drag my Dad along because it was AA certificate. I rather love the film because we saw it together - the only film that I ever saw just the two of us. We both emerged a little shocked and speechless.

    Anyway in recent years I've come to view David Lean's masterpiece as edging it.

    ZULU is peerless: so many superb scenes

    Asking what is the best movie is like asking "what is the best country" or "what is the best weather" or "what is the best form of cooking eggs". You have to choose a genre

    As a war movie, Zulu beats Apocalypse Now, shorter, sharper, more wrenching and yet exhilarating

    Rom coms? Notting Hill? Richard Curtis is much maligned these days, but that was excellently done

    Boxing? Raging Bull. Maybe indeed the best movie about masculinity in general

    Gangsters: Goodfellas, for sure.

    Damn that's two Scorseses in one list. He is impressive

    Groundhog Day is the best Romcom.

    Apocalyse Now is better than Zulu because of its complex themes and exploration of the human condition. A war film purely about war is something less.

    Similarly Black Book, Full Metal Jacket or In the Fog are better war films than Zulu.

    Nah, the redcoats' "front rank, second rank" shooting scene from Zulu, by itself, puts in a league of its own

    I will also give an honourable mention to 1917, which kinda got overlooked as the Plague swept all aside. Sam Mendes' war movie is the best of the 21st century. The hallucinatory quality of the nocturnal scenes is pure directorial genius
    Fury, enemy at the gates, Patton, das boot (originally tv), private Ryan, are all a better watch than 1917 let alone Zulu.
    Fury? F-off mate, that's Shia Le Boeuf toilet.

    Other picks are good.

    Are there any British warfilms you like?
    Repeat please?

    Battle of Britain.
    Surely BoB is ripe for a remake with modern CGI?

    Also, the original has to be a serious contender for the worst case of fashimposing - which is a word I have just made up meaning: imposing the fashions of the time of shooting over the fashions of the era depicted. See especially Susannah York.
    Nope. It'd be shite CGI.

    Original had superb all-star cast, nice script, and real aircraft from both sides.
    To be fair there are still plenty of the real aircraft flying for a real action version.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,209
    TimT said:

    rcs1000 said:

    OK...

    Oceans Eleven
    Die Hard
    Die Hard 3
    Raiders of the Lost Ark
    Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
    Casino Royale
    The Ladykillers
    Shawshank Redemption

    There may be some other movies worth watching, but if so, I haven't seen them.


    Try The Accountant, and R.E.D.
    Enjoyed R.E.D.

    My wife says The Accountant is incredibly stressful.
  • YBarddCwscYBarddCwsc Posts: 7,172

    Blimey, you lot watch some rubbish movies. Try Some like it hot, The General, The Apartment, any of the Ealing comedies, Tirez sur le pianiste, The life and times of Colonel Blimp...

    Would add; Double Indemnity, The Sweet Smell of Success, Les Quatre Cent Coups, I Know Where I'm Going, The Third Man, All About Eve.

    And also .. a movie I saw for the first time as lockdown began & it cheered me up immensely, The Lady Eve.
  • Andy_JS said:

    I stopped watching The Shawshank Redemption half-way through and never got round to the rest of it. Just didnt click for me.

    “A lot of Shawshank before you get to the redemption”.

    However I rather like it.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,600
    edited February 2021
    Leon said:

    rcs1000 said:

    Leon said:

    OK, comedy

    This is a tricky one, as comedy ages SO badly. Not many comedies can elicit a laugh 20 0r 30 years later. Or even 10

    I would go for either of the two Monty Python masterpieces, Holy Grail and/or Life of Brian. Both of them are, stilll, constantly referenced in popular culture, in Anglophone countries, from the Knight who loses all his limbs and asks for a draw, to What Have The Romans Done For Us

    Or Airplane. But I wonder if Airplane would stand up to a viewing now?

    The Producers? Early Woody Allen?

    Life of Brian holds up better than Holy Grail which holds up better than anything else in the Python universe.

    Yes, if you actually watch the Python TV series, there are many dragging minutes of totally unfunny, laughless cringe. But then suddenly they hit you with a genius sketch - Shortened Proust = then its back to cringe or yawns.

    Very variable. Holy Grail is similar, but better, the good bits are ace, the bad bits are less frequent, but they exist. Life of Brian is their Ulysses, nearly perfect from beginning to end, and endlessly clever and inventive.

    Even now the humour bites.

    Judean Popular Front? Where is he?

    Where you gonna grow the baby? In a box?

    Always Look On The Bright Side Of Life: with a whistle, on the crucifix

    Romans, Did For Us?

    We're all different, we're all individuals! (Voice aside): I'm not

    I am happy to nominate it as the best comedy ever, and one of the very very few that remains amusing AND relevant decades after it was made
    "How shall we fuck off, oh Lord?"

    and

    "Blessed are the cheese-makers?"
  • isamisam Posts: 41,118
    Has no one else seen Hombre?!
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,673
    kle4 said:

    kle4 said:

    Leon said:

    Foxy said:

    Leon said:

    Omnium said:

    Foxy said:

    Omnium said:

    Re previous posts. "Lawrence of Arabia" is easily my favourite film. The best film ever made, and what cinemas are for.

    I think Apocalypse Now is my favourite. Every time that I watch it, I see something new.
    For a very long period of my life I'd also have said the same. I went to see it when I was perhaps 15, and I'd had to drag my Dad along because it was AA certificate. I rather love the film because we saw it together - the only film that I ever saw just the two of us. We both emerged a little shocked and speechless.

    Anyway in recent years I've come to view David Lean's masterpiece as edging it.

    ZULU is peerless: so many superb scenes

    Asking what is the best movie is like asking "what is the best country" or "what is the best weather" or "what is the best form of cooking eggs". You have to choose a genre

    As a war movie, Zulu beats Apocalypse Now, shorter, sharper, more wrenching and yet exhilarating

    Rom coms? Notting Hill? Richard Curtis is much maligned these days, but that was excellently done

    Boxing? Raging Bull. Maybe indeed the best movie about masculinity in general

    Gangsters: Goodfellas, for sure.

    Damn that's two Scorseses in one list. He is impressive

    Groundhog Day is the best Romcom.

    Apocalyse Now is better than Zulu because of its complex themes and exploration of the human condition. A war film purely about war is something less.

    Similarly Black Book, Full Metal Jacket or In the Fog are better war films than Zulu.

    Nah, the redcoats' "front rank, second rank" shooting scene from Zulu, by itself, puts in a league of its own

    I will also give an honourable mention to 1917, which kinda got overlooked as the Plague swept all aside. Sam Mendes' war movie is the best of the 21st century. The hallucinatory quality of the nocturnal scenes is pure directorial genius
    1917 is one stunningly directed movie, but I could never give it truly great movie status when the plot totally unravels for the sake of visual dramatics. I find it impossible to watch the poor hero understandably take a 5 minute breather at the end without reflecting that if he had just spoken up instead he'd literally have saved hundreds of lives, because then we'd miss out on an (awesome) shot if he didn't.
    Best animated comedy detective film noir is Who Framed Roger Rabbit.
    Niche genre

    True but Who Framed Roger Rabbit wins it hands down.
  • rcs1000 said:

    Any love for The Princess Bride? Easily my favourite sword fight in film history plus "Hello. My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die." I have seen that held up as a perfect introduction: a greeting, my name, my relationship with you, and what I want to get out of the meeting.

    I have three (tenuous) connections with that movie.

    (1) My daughter is in the same school class as Fred Savage's daughter. Her name, believe it or not, is Lily.
    (2) My wife is very good friends with Damian Elwes, and Damian's brother played Wesley.
    (3) I was once at a very nice Japanese restaurant and was asked (as I was dining alone) if I would mind sharing my table with two ladies. I said, "sure". And one of the ladies was Robin Wright.
    Best name drop! :wink:
  • IanB2 said:

    Leon said:

    Foxy said:

    Leon said:

    Omnium said:

    Foxy said:

    Omnium said:

    Re previous posts. "Lawrence of Arabia" is easily my favourite film. The best film ever made, and what cinemas are for.

    I think Apocalypse Now is my favourite. Every time that I watch it, I see something new.
    For a very long period of my life I'd also have said the same. I went to see it when I was perhaps 15, and I'd had to drag my Dad along because it was AA certificate. I rather love the film because we saw it together - the only film that I ever saw just the two of us. We both emerged a little shocked and speechless.

    Anyway in recent years I've come to view David Lean's masterpiece as edging it.

    ZULU is peerless: so many superb scenes

    Asking what is the best movie is like asking "what is the best country" or "what is the best weather" or "what is the best form of cooking eggs". You have to choose a genre

    As a war movie, Zulu beats Apocalypse Now, shorter, sharper, more wrenching and yet exhilarating

    Rom coms? Notting Hill? Richard Curtis is much maligned these days, but that was excellently done

    Boxing? Raging Bull. Maybe indeed the best movie about masculinity in general

    Gangsters: Goodfellas, for sure.

    Damn that's two Scorseses in one list. He is impressive

    Groundhog Day is the best Romcom.

    Apocalyse Now is better than Zulu because of its complex themes and exploration of the human condition. A war film purely about war is something less.

    Similarly Black Book, Full Metal Jacket or In the Fog are better war films than Zulu.

    Nah, the redcoats' "front rank, second rank" shooting scene from Zulu, by itself, puts in a league of its own

    I will also give an honourable mention to 1917, which kinda got overlooked as the Plague swept all aside. Sam Mendes' war movie is the best of the 21st century. The hallucinatory quality of the nocturnal scenes is pure directorial genius
    Fury, enemy at the gates, Patton, das boot (originally tv), private Ryan, are all a better watch than 1917 let alone Zulu.
    Fury? F-off mate, that's Shia Le Boeuf toilet.

    Other picks are good.

    Are there any British warfilms you like?
    Repeat please?

    Battle of Britain.
    Surely BoB is ripe for a remake with modern CGI?

    Also, the original has to be a serious contender for the worst case of fashimposing - which is a word I have just made up meaning: imposing the fashions of the time of shooting over the fashions of the era depicted. See especially Susannah York.
    Nope. It'd be shite CGI.

    Original had superb all-star cast, nice script, and real aircraft from both sides.
    To be fair there are still plenty of the real aircraft flying for a real action version.
    Not sure about that. The Spanish (Franco era) air force at the time still had lots of Junkers and Heinkels, as well as Me109s.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,126
    I am a huge fan of Hot Fuzz - funny, endearing, and one of the greatest third acts in movie history. The action movie tropes alongside english quaintness is genius.
  • Any love for The Princess Bride? Easily my favourite sword fight in film history plus "Hello. My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die." I have seen that held up as a perfect introduction: a greeting, my name, my relationship with you, and what I want to get out of the meeting.

    Fantastic film.
  • One of my favourite bits of Spinal Tap:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H7vk5keNbRc

    The best bit being Mozart would have thoroughly approved of the name...
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,410
    Leon said:

    rcs1000 said:

    Leon said:

    OK, comedy

    This is a tricky one, as comedy ages SO badly. Not many comedies can elicit a laugh 20 0r 30 years later. Or even 10

    I would go for either of the two Monty Python masterpieces, Holy Grail and/or Life of Brian. Both of them are, stilll, constantly referenced in popular culture, in Anglophone countries, from the Knight who loses all his limbs and asks for a draw, to What Have The Romans Done For Us

    Or Airplane. But I wonder if Airplane would stand up to a viewing now?

    The Producers? Early Woody Allen?

    Life of Brian holds up better than Holy Grail which holds up better than anything else in the Python universe.

    Yes, if you actually watch the Python TV series, there are many dragging minutes of totally unfunny, laughless cringe. But then suddenly they hit you with a genius sketch - Shortened Proust = then its back to cringe or yawns.

    Very variable. Holy Grail is similar, but better, the good bits are ace, the bad bits are less frequent, but they exist. Life of Brian is their Ulysses, nearly perfect from beginning to end, and endlessly clever and inventive.

    Even now the humour bites.

    Judean Popular Front? Where is he?

    Where you gonna grow the baby? In a box?

    Always Look On The Bright Side Of Life: with a whistle, on the crucifix

    Romans, Did For Us?

    We're all different, we're all individuals! (Voice aside): I'm not

    I am happy to nominate it as the best comedy ever, and one of the very very few that remains amusing AND relevant decades after it was made
    You've missed the best line.
    "He's not the Messiah, he's a very naughty boy."

    A remarkably prescient critique of the Johnson administration to boot.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 51,695
    The Czech Republic is clearly the epicentre of the third wave on the continent.
    image

    The Commission has decided now is a good time to question border closures...
    https://twitter.com/DaveKeating/status/1364336259087429637
  • Leon said:

    rcs1000 said:

    Leon said:

    OK, comedy

    This is a tricky one, as comedy ages SO badly. Not many comedies can elicit a laugh 20 0r 30 years later. Or even 10

    I would go for either of the two Monty Python masterpieces, Holy Grail and/or Life of Brian. Both of them are, stilll, constantly referenced in popular culture, in Anglophone countries, from the Knight who loses all his limbs and asks for a draw, to What Have The Romans Done For Us

    Or Airplane. But I wonder if Airplane would stand up to a viewing now?

    The Producers? Early Woody Allen?

    Life of Brian holds up better than Holy Grail which holds up better than anything else in the Python universe.

    Yes, if you actually watch the Python TV series, there are many dragging minutes of totally unfunny, laughless cringe. But then suddenly they hit you with a genius sketch - Shortened Proust = then its back to cringe or yawns.

    Very variable. Holy Grail is similar, but better, the good bits are ace, the bad bits are less frequent, but they exist. Life of Brian is their Ulysses, nearly perfect from beginning to end, and endlessly clever and inventive.

    Even now the humour bites.

    Judean Popular Front? Where is he?

    Where you gonna grow the baby? In a box?

    Always Look On The Bright Side Of Life: with a whistle, on the crucifix

    Romans, Did For Us?

    We're all different, we're all individuals! (Voice aside): I'm not

    I am happy to nominate it as the best comedy ever, and one of the very very few that remains amusing AND relevant decades after it was made
    "How shall we fuck off, oh Lord?"

    and

    "Blessed are the cheese-makers?"
    "He wanks highly in Rome!"
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 32,588
    I agree with Kermode and Leon about the Exorcist being the best film of all time.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,673
    Forgot The Graduate. Not sure what category but it's got to be on the list somewhere.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,118
    Foxy said:

    Andy_JS said:

    This is pretty astonishing.

    "Not a single case of flu detected by Public Health England this year as Covid restrictions suppress virus
    Experts say decline in infections could justify continued use of hand sanitiser and masks following coronavirus pandemic"

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/health/flu-cases-covid-england-phe-latest-b1805124.html

    Our ECMO team are nostalgic for a good flu season. They could cure that...
    I can’t believe there is much more to it than everyone who died and had flu also had Covid
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,126

    Emmanuelle. Oh bugger, I actually pressed “send” didn’t I?

    I think my previous reveal that Debbie Does Dallas had many sequels beats that.
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,671
    edited February 2021
    Two of Mrs Flatlander's favourites:
    Fight Club
    Taxi Driver

    Should I be worried?
  • The Czech Republic is clearly the epicentre of the third wave on the continent.
    image

    "Presumably, Steiner will bring it all under control..?"
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,710

    IanB2 said:

    Leon said:

    Foxy said:

    Leon said:

    Omnium said:

    Foxy said:

    Omnium said:

    Re previous posts. "Lawrence of Arabia" is easily my favourite film. The best film ever made, and what cinemas are for.

    I think Apocalypse Now is my favourite. Every time that I watch it, I see something new.
    For a very long period of my life I'd also have said the same. I went to see it when I was perhaps 15, and I'd had to drag my Dad along because it was AA certificate. I rather love the film because we saw it together - the only film that I ever saw just the two of us. We both emerged a little shocked and speechless.

    Anyway in recent years I've come to view David Lean's masterpiece as edging it.

    ZULU is peerless: so many superb scenes

    Asking what is the best movie is like asking "what is the best country" or "what is the best weather" or "what is the best form of cooking eggs". You have to choose a genre

    As a war movie, Zulu beats Apocalypse Now, shorter, sharper, more wrenching and yet exhilarating

    Rom coms? Notting Hill? Richard Curtis is much maligned these days, but that was excellently done

    Boxing? Raging Bull. Maybe indeed the best movie about masculinity in general

    Gangsters: Goodfellas, for sure.

    Damn that's two Scorseses in one list. He is impressive

    Groundhog Day is the best Romcom.

    Apocalyse Now is better than Zulu because of its complex themes and exploration of the human condition. A war film purely about war is something less.

    Similarly Black Book, Full Metal Jacket or In the Fog are better war films than Zulu.

    Nah, the redcoats' "front rank, second rank" shooting scene from Zulu, by itself, puts in a league of its own

    I will also give an honourable mention to 1917, which kinda got overlooked as the Plague swept all aside. Sam Mendes' war movie is the best of the 21st century. The hallucinatory quality of the nocturnal scenes is pure directorial genius
    Fury, enemy at the gates, Patton, das boot (originally tv), private Ryan, are all a better watch than 1917 let alone Zulu.
    Fury? F-off mate, that's Shia Le Boeuf toilet.

    Other picks are good.

    Are there any British warfilms you like?
    Repeat please?

    Battle of Britain.
    Surely BoB is ripe for a remake with modern CGI?

    Also, the original has to be a serious contender for the worst case of fashimposing - which is a word I have just made up meaning: imposing the fashions of the time of shooting over the fashions of the era depicted. See especially Susannah York.
    I get the idea, but often only visible in retrospect, like 1950s hair and make up in westerns.

    We need some distance to see these things. The Sixties and Seventies look very different in contemporaneous films to their depiction in more recent films
  • LeonLeon Posts: 55,429

    As I see it's film night on PB.com, here goes:

    Overall: Shawshank Redemption
    Animated: Shrek
    Space: Apollo 13
    Romcom: Four Weddings (obvs)
    Murder mystery: Gosford Park
    Sports: Chariots of Fire
    War: Dunkirk
    Musical: Yesterday
    Costume drama: Pride & Prejudice (2005 version)
    ...and Comedy: Shirley you don't need to ask?

    Some interesting calls there

    I agree the 2005 version of Pride and Prejudice is an overlooked masterpiece. For a start it had some of the finest movie music ever written. It's like Chopin

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f4upyq5QztM

    Watch from 0:00 until you get bored
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,486

    Some great films mentioned but I am not sure if anyone has named any of my favourites yet.

    For my top 3 - in no particular order and based on he number of times I have rewatched them even though I know every line:

    Bladerunner.
    Casablanca.
    Local Hero.

    3 films which are, to me, perfect in every frame.

    That said there are huge numbers of great films that can run these very close.

    My guilty secret is The Great Race with Tony Curtis, Jack Lemmon and Natalie Wood. Even if only for Jack Lemmon and Peter Falk's Laurel and Hardy tributes and the best pie fight ever filmed.

    Very fine choices!
    Casablanca is a very obvious choice for the very obvious reason that it is a perfect picture. I’m in the market for the anniversary Blu-Ray edition which is supposed to be an impressive master.
  • kle4 said:

    I am a huge fan of Hot Fuzz - funny, endearing, and one of the greatest third acts in movie history. The action movie tropes alongside english quaintness is genius.

    I do think Hot Fuzz is the best of all the Cornetto Trilogy films.

    I really like Paul as well. Love all the sci-fi references thrown in.

    Oh and in the same vein of Sci-Fi comedy, Galaxy Quest.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,209

    rcs1000 said:

    Any love for The Princess Bride? Easily my favourite sword fight in film history plus "Hello. My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die." I have seen that held up as a perfect introduction: a greeting, my name, my relationship with you, and what I want to get out of the meeting.

    I have three (tenuous) connections with that movie.

    (1) My daughter is in the same school class as Fred Savage's daughter. Her name, believe it or not, is Lily.
    (2) My wife is very good friends with Damian Elwes, and Damian's brother played Wesley.
    (3) I was once at a very nice Japanese restaurant and was asked (as I was dining alone) if I would mind sharing my table with two ladies. I said, "sure". And one of the ladies was Robin Wright.
    Best name drop! :wink:
    If you're going to drop a name, I reckon Robin Wright is one of the better ones to drop.
  • Blimey, you lot watch some rubbish movies. Try Some like it hot, The General, The Apartment, any of the Ealing comedies, Tirez sur le pianiste, The life and times of Colonel Blimp...

    Would add; Double Indemnity, The Sweet Smell of Success, Les Quatre Cent Coups, I Know Where I'm Going, The Third Man, All About Eve.

    And also .. a movie I saw for the first time as lockdown began & it cheered me up immensely, The Lady Eve.
    Yep. I don't know The Lady Eve - I'll check it out.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,126
    edited February 2021

    Leon said:

    rcs1000 said:

    Leon said:

    OK, comedy

    This is a tricky one, as comedy ages SO badly. Not many comedies can elicit a laugh 20 0r 30 years later. Or even 10

    I would go for either of the two Monty Python masterpieces, Holy Grail and/or Life of Brian. Both of them are, stilll, constantly referenced in popular culture, in Anglophone countries, from the Knight who loses all his limbs and asks for a draw, to What Have The Romans Done For Us

    Or Airplane. But I wonder if Airplane would stand up to a viewing now?

    The Producers? Early Woody Allen?

    Life of Brian holds up better than Holy Grail which holds up better than anything else in the Python universe.

    Yes, if you actually watch the Python TV series, there are many dragging minutes of totally unfunny, laughless cringe. But then suddenly they hit you with a genius sketch - Shortened Proust = then its back to cringe or yawns.

    Very variable. Holy Grail is similar, but better, the good bits are ace, the bad bits are less frequent, but they exist. Life of Brian is their Ulysses, nearly perfect from beginning to end, and endlessly clever and inventive.

    Even now the humour bites.

    Judean Popular Front? Where is he?

    Where you gonna grow the baby? In a box?

    Always Look On The Bright Side Of Life: with a whistle, on the crucifix

    Romans, Did For Us?

    We're all different, we're all individuals! (Voice aside): I'm not

    I am happy to nominate it as the best comedy ever, and one of the very very few that remains amusing AND relevant decades after it was made
    "How shall we fuck off, oh Lord?"

    and

    "Blessed are the cheese-makers?"
    "He wanks highly in Rome!"
    "Found this spoon, sir"

    "Get away with crucifixion?"

    A night spent quoting the movie is a good time. Although people who don't like the movie must be tearing their hair out.

    Pleasant dreams.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,600

    Two of Mrs Flatlander's favourites:
    Fight Club
    Taxi Driver

    Should I be worried?

    First rule of Mrs Flatlanders movie choices? Don't talk about.....
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,710

    Forgot The Graduate. Not sure what category but it's got to be on the list somewhere.

    Coming of Age?

  • And of course we shouldn't forget The Seventh Seal.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,600

    Some great films mentioned but I am not sure if anyone has named any of my favourites yet.

    For my top 3 - in no particular order and based on he number of times I have rewatched them even though I know every line:

    Bladerunner.
    Casablanca.
    Local Hero.

    3 films which are, to me, perfect in every frame.

    That said there are huge numbers of great films that can run these very close.

    My guilty secret is The Great Race with Tony Curtis, Jack Lemmon and Natalie Wood. Even if only for Jack Lemmon and Peter Falk's Laurel and Hardy tributes and the best pie fight ever filmed.

    Very fine choices!
    Casablanca is a very obvious choice for the very obvious reason that it is a perfect picture. I’m in the market for the anniversary Blu-Ray edition which is supposed to be an impressive master.
    It is!
  • As I see it's film night on PB.com, here goes:

    Overall: Shawshank Redemption
    Animated: Shrek
    Space: Apollo 13
    Romcom: Four Weddings (obvs)
    Murder mystery: Gosford Park
    Sports: Chariots of Fire
    War: Dunkirk
    Musical: Yesterday
    Costume drama: Pride & Prejudice (2005 version)
    ...and Comedy: Shirley you don't need to ask?

    Concur with the Shawshank Redemption. Best film I have ever seen.
    The 67th Academy Awards saw a real duel between two all-time classics for the Best Picture Oscar. Shawshank Redemption vs Pulp Fiction.

    Which film walked off with the gong? Forrest Gump, FFS.

  • kyf_100 said:

    isam said:

    Leon said:

    Omnium said:

    Foxy said:

    Omnium said:

    Re previous posts. "Lawrence of Arabia" is easily my favourite film. The best film ever made, and what cinemas are for.

    I think Apocalypse Now is my favourite. Every time that I watch it, I see something new.
    For a very long period of my life I'd also have said the same. I went to see it when I was perhaps 15, and I'd had to drag my Dad along because it was AA certificate. I rather love the film because we saw it together - the only film that I ever saw just the two of us. We both emerged a little shocked and speechless.

    Anyway in recent years I've come to view David Lean's masterpiece as edging it.

    ZULU is peerless: so many superb scenes

    Asking what is the best movie is like asking "what is the best country" or "what is the best weather" or "what is the best form of cooking eggs". You have to choose a genre

    As a war movie, Zulu beats Apocalypse Now, shorter, sharper, more wrenching and yet exhilarating

    Rom coms? Notting Hill? Richard Curtis is much maligned these days, but that was excellently done

    Boxing? Raging Bull. Maybe indeed the best movie about masculinity in general

    Gangsters: Goodfellas, for sure.

    Damn that's two Scorseses in one list. He is impressive

    The best RomCom is There's Something About Mary, it is probably the best film in a whole host of other categories as well.

    The Godfather pts I & II rival Goodfellas as best gangster, wouldn't you say? All three are great (Gf I & II + Goodfellas)

    Raging Bull is probably the only Boxing film I have seen other than Champ... Champ affected me quite deeply though, I bawled my eyes out. Oh and a couple of the Rocky's I suppose. Never really got into them

    The best Gambling film is The Sting

    The Lives of Others is great @Casino_Royale, so is Play Misty For Me, and two of my all time faves, Cool Hand Luke, and Hombre
    Once Upon a Time in America comes close, but doesn't quite beat, Godfather pts I & II, especially not together.

    However Once Upon a Time in the West is definitely the best Western of all time.
    True, but the final gunfight in The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly is one of the best scenes in cinema, showing just how to put score and cinematography together.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 55,429

    Leon said:

    rcs1000 said:

    Leon said:

    OK, comedy

    This is a tricky one, as comedy ages SO badly. Not many comedies can elicit a laugh 20 0r 30 years later. Or even 10

    I would go for either of the two Monty Python masterpieces, Holy Grail and/or Life of Brian. Both of them are, stilll, constantly referenced in popular culture, in Anglophone countries, from the Knight who loses all his limbs and asks for a draw, to What Have The Romans Done For Us

    Or Airplane. But I wonder if Airplane would stand up to a viewing now?

    The Producers? Early Woody Allen?

    Life of Brian holds up better than Holy Grail which holds up better than anything else in the Python universe.

    Yes, if you actually watch the Python TV series, there are many dragging minutes of totally unfunny, laughless cringe. But then suddenly they hit you with a genius sketch - Shortened Proust = then its back to cringe or yawns.

    Very variable. Holy Grail is similar, but better, the good bits are ace, the bad bits are less frequent, but they exist. Life of Brian is their Ulysses, nearly perfect from beginning to end, and endlessly clever and inventive.

    Even now the humour bites.

    Judean Popular Front? Where is he?

    Where you gonna grow the baby? In a box?

    Always Look On The Bright Side Of Life: with a whistle, on the crucifix

    Romans, Did For Us?

    We're all different, we're all individuals! (Voice aside): I'm not

    I am happy to nominate it as the best comedy ever, and one of the very very few that remains amusing AND relevant decades after it was made
    "How shall we fuck off, oh Lord?"

    and

    "Blessed are the cheese-makers?"
    Also: the stoning scene. "He said Jehovah". "You just said it". Cue more stoning.

    A prescient prediction of the desolate lunacies of Islamism

    Looking back, it was pure genius, in multiple ways
  • The Czech Republic is clearly the epicentre of the third wave on the continent.
    image

    The Commission has decided now is a good time to question border closures...
    https://twitter.com/DaveKeating/status/1364336259087429637

    They are genuinely mad. Do they actually want the EU to fall apart?
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    edited February 2021
    rcs1000 said:

    TimT said:

    rcs1000 said:

    OK...

    Oceans Eleven
    Die Hard
    Die Hard 3
    Raiders of the Lost Ark
    Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
    Casino Royale
    The Ladykillers
    Shawshank Redemption

    There may be some other movies worth watching, but if so, I haven't seen them.


    Try The Accountant, and R.E.D.
    Enjoyed R.E.D.

    My wife says The Accountant is incredibly stressful.
    If you like the Die Hard movies, you should like the Accountant. I am anything but a Ben Affleck fan, but he and Anna Kendrick are perfect in this. Throw in John Lithgow, Jeffrey Tambor, JK Simmons and Jean Smart and it is quite something. One of those films that if it is on the TV, I'll watch it regardless of where it is in the movie.

    There are a couple of stressful parts of the movie where it shows how the Ben Affleck character deals with his autism.
  • Best film about politics? Can't think of many. All the President's Men wins almost by default.

    Meryl Streep did a good Mrs T in The Iron Lady but the film seemed a bit pointless, as do many biopics which descend into romps through over-familiar chat show anecdotes.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,410

    And of course we shouldn't forget The Seventh Seal.

    In which case Bill and Ted.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 32,588
    Most of Stanley Kubrick's films are 10/10 IMO. Difficult to choose one in particular.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,126

    The Czech Republic is clearly the epicentre of the third wave on the continent.
    image

    The Commission has decided now is a good time to question border closures...
    https://twitter.com/DaveKeating/status/1364336259087429637

    They are genuinely mad. Do they actually want the EU to fall apart?
    They know it won't, so can afford to cock up.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,209

    The Czech Republic is clearly the epicentre of the third wave on the continent.
    image

    The Commission has decided now is a good time to question border closures...
    https://twitter.com/DaveKeating/status/1364336259087429637

    They are genuinely mad. Do they actually want the EU to fall apart?
    Maybe the EU is playing like a poker player in a tournament who's now on tilt, and determined to throw it all away and walk away from the table.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,710
    isam said:

    Foxy said:

    Andy_JS said:

    This is pretty astonishing.

    "Not a single case of flu detected by Public Health England this year as Covid restrictions suppress virus
    Experts say decline in infections could justify continued use of hand sanitiser and masks following coronavirus pandemic"

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/health/flu-cases-covid-england-phe-latest-b1805124.html

    Our ECMO team are nostalgic for a good flu season. They could cure that...
    I can’t believe there is much more to it than everyone who died and had flu also had Covid
    What they do to the lungs are quite different. They are two completely different clinical pictures.
  • Leon said:

    Leon said:

    rcs1000 said:

    Leon said:

    OK, comedy

    This is a tricky one, as comedy ages SO badly. Not many comedies can elicit a laugh 20 0r 30 years later. Or even 10

    I would go for either of the two Monty Python masterpieces, Holy Grail and/or Life of Brian. Both of them are, stilll, constantly referenced in popular culture, in Anglophone countries, from the Knight who loses all his limbs and asks for a draw, to What Have The Romans Done For Us

    Or Airplane. But I wonder if Airplane would stand up to a viewing now?

    The Producers? Early Woody Allen?

    Life of Brian holds up better than Holy Grail which holds up better than anything else in the Python universe.

    Yes, if you actually watch the Python TV series, there are many dragging minutes of totally unfunny, laughless cringe. But then suddenly they hit you with a genius sketch - Shortened Proust = then its back to cringe or yawns.

    Very variable. Holy Grail is similar, but better, the good bits are ace, the bad bits are less frequent, but they exist. Life of Brian is their Ulysses, nearly perfect from beginning to end, and endlessly clever and inventive.

    Even now the humour bites.

    Judean Popular Front? Where is he?

    Where you gonna grow the baby? In a box?

    Always Look On The Bright Side Of Life: with a whistle, on the crucifix

    Romans, Did For Us?

    We're all different, we're all individuals! (Voice aside): I'm not

    I am happy to nominate it as the best comedy ever, and one of the very very few that remains amusing AND relevant decades after it was made
    "How shall we fuck off, oh Lord?"

    and

    "Blessed are the cheese-makers?"
    Also: the stoning scene. "He said Jehovah". "You just said it". Cue more stoning.

    A prescient prediction of the desolate lunacies of Islamism

    Looking back, it was pure genius, in multiple ways
    It is my favourite. But, you you have to allow for “strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government” in the Holy Grail. Also, Brave Sir Robin.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,600
    kle4 said:

    rcs1000 said:

    Leon said:

    OK, comedy

    This is a tricky one, as comedy ages SO badly. Not many comedies can elicit a laugh 20 0r 30 years later. Or even 10

    I would go for either of the two Monty Python masterpieces, Holy Grail and/or Life of Brian. Both of them are, stilll, constantly referenced in popular culture, in Anglophone countries, from the Knight who loses all his limbs and asks for a draw, to What Have The Romans Done For Us

    Or Airplane. But I wonder if Airplane would stand up to a viewing now?

    The Producers? Early Woody Allen?

    Life of Brian holds up better than Holy Grail which holds up better than anything else in the Python universe.

    Saw it in the cinema on an anniversary release, place was packed. Bar the weird alien bit, it works in near every scene. So quotable.
    "You lucky bastard...."
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 28,477
    Thanks @Benpointer for the category titles. Here are mine.

    Overall:
    Animated: Wallace and Gromit: The Wrong Trousers
    Space: I don't think I have a fave space film
    Romcom: Four Weddings (agree!)
    Murder mystery: Gosford Park (agree!)
    Sports: Chariots of Fire (hattrick - worrying!)
    War: Where Eagles Dare
    Musical: Chitty Chitty Bang Bang
    Costume drama: The Railway Children
    I am adding:
    Thriller (not horror): Rear Window
    Sci Fi: The Fifth Element
    Comedy: Rat Race (I know it's a crap film, but when I saw it I absolutely howled)
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,126
    TimT said:

    rcs1000 said:

    TimT said:

    rcs1000 said:

    OK...

    Oceans Eleven
    Die Hard
    Die Hard 3
    Raiders of the Lost Ark
    Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
    Casino Royale
    The Ladykillers
    Shawshank Redemption

    There may be some other movies worth watching, but if so, I haven't seen them.


    Try The Accountant, and R.E.D.
    Enjoyed R.E.D.

    My wife says The Accountant is incredibly stressful.
    If you like the Die Hard movies, you should like the Accountant. I am anything but a Ben Affleck fan, but he and Anna Kendrick are perfect in this. Throw in John Lithgow, Jeffrey Tambor, JK Simmons and Jean Smart and it is quite something. One of those films that if it is on the TV, I'll watch it regardless of where it is in the movie.

    There are a couple of stressful parts of the movie where it shows how the Ben Affleck character deals with his autism.
    Anna Kendrick is underrated. A Simple Favour was hilariously bonkers. The Accountant was no masterpiece, and makes no sense, but it was entertaining.
  • Some great films mentioned but I am not sure if anyone has named any of my favourites yet.

    For my top 3 - in no particular order and based on he number of times I have rewatched them even though I know every line:

    Bladerunner.
    Casablanca.
    Local Hero.

    3 films which are, to me, perfect in every frame.

    That said there are huge numbers of great films that can run these very close.

    My guilty secret is The Great Race with Tony Curtis, Jack Lemmon and Natalie Wood. Even if only for Jack Lemmon and Peter Falk's Laurel and Hardy tributes and the best pie fight ever filmed.

    Very fine choices!
    Casablanca is a very obvious choice for the very obvious reason that it is a perfect picture. I’m in the market for the anniversary Blu-Ray edition which is supposed to be an impressive master.
    Anabob, I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship.
  • Andy_JS said:

    Most of Stanley Kubrick's films are 10/10 IMO. Difficult to choose one in particular.

    Easy to NOT choose Eyes Wide Shut though.....
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 71,220

    Nigelb said:

    Foxy said:

    Omnium said:

    Re previous posts. "Lawrence of Arabia" is easily my favourite film. The best film ever made, and what cinemas are for.

    I think Apocalypse Now is my favourite. Every time that I watch it, I see something new.
    Well there are several different versions of it....

    One I recently rewatched is Brazil. Still great.
    Brazil is seriously underrated; a film which cast Robert D Nero at the height of his powers as a heating engineer and Michael Palin as a torturer.
    Both their best roles, I think.
    De Niro in particular, as there’s just too much of him when he plays the lead.

    The cast, with great actors scattered around in cameo roles, is simply amazing.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,126
    rcs1000 said:
    The anniversary release I attended definitely had some people shifting a bit more at that scene than I bet they did at the time (granted, I wasn't even a sperm back then). But I think it holds up
  • LeonLeon Posts: 55,429

    Best start to a film? Up

    Best rom com/relationship comedy? When Harry Met Sally

    Best noir? Chinatown

    Best cheap sci-fi you've probably never heard of? Primer

    Best Film to make Blokes Cry: Field of Dreams

    Best Single Blubbing Moment in Cinema? "Daddy my Daddy", The Railway Children

    Field of Dreams, Nice call.

    Made me blub as its all about father and son, and any father, or any son, will be moved by it, even as they fight to be stony faced, and unmoved, as any father or son should do
  • isamisam Posts: 41,118
    Foxy said:

    isam said:

    Foxy said:

    Andy_JS said:

    This is pretty astonishing.

    "Not a single case of flu detected by Public Health England this year as Covid restrictions suppress virus
    Experts say decline in infections could justify continued use of hand sanitiser and masks following coronavirus pandemic"

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/health/flu-cases-covid-england-phe-latest-b1805124.html

    Our ECMO team are nostalgic for a good flu season. They could cure that...
    I can’t believe there is much more to it than everyone who died and had flu also had Covid
    What they do to the lungs are quite different. They are two completely different clinical pictures.
    I just can’t believe there wasn’t a single case of flu this year
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 78,204
    Foxy said:

    isam said:

    Foxy said:

    Andy_JS said:

    This is pretty astonishing.

    "Not a single case of flu detected by Public Health England this year as Covid restrictions suppress virus
    Experts say decline in infections could justify continued use of hand sanitiser and masks following coronavirus pandemic"

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/health/flu-cases-covid-england-phe-latest-b1805124.html

    Our ECMO team are nostalgic for a good flu season. They could cure that...
    I can’t believe there is much more to it than everyone who died and had flu also had Covid
    What they do to the lungs are quite different. They are two completely different clinical pictures.
    It's not non descript fatigue that's the danger with Covid (That can happen with any virus) it's the swiss cheesed lungs !
  • Oh, and The Leopard. The only recorded instance in history where both the original novel and the movie adaptation are such masterpieces that neither disappoints. I think I'd recommend reading the novel first, but either way round works.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,600

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    rcs1000 said:

    Leon said:

    OK, comedy

    This is a tricky one, as comedy ages SO badly. Not many comedies can elicit a laugh 20 0r 30 years later. Or even 10

    I would go for either of the two Monty Python masterpieces, Holy Grail and/or Life of Brian. Both of them are, stilll, constantly referenced in popular culture, in Anglophone countries, from the Knight who loses all his limbs and asks for a draw, to What Have The Romans Done For Us

    Or Airplane. But I wonder if Airplane would stand up to a viewing now?

    The Producers? Early Woody Allen?

    Life of Brian holds up better than Holy Grail which holds up better than anything else in the Python universe.

    Yes, if you actually watch the Python TV series, there are many dragging minutes of totally unfunny, laughless cringe. But then suddenly they hit you with a genius sketch - Shortened Proust = then its back to cringe or yawns.

    Very variable. Holy Grail is similar, but better, the good bits are ace, the bad bits are less frequent, but they exist. Life of Brian is their Ulysses, nearly perfect from beginning to end, and endlessly clever and inventive.

    Even now the humour bites.

    Judean Popular Front? Where is he?

    Where you gonna grow the baby? In a box?

    Always Look On The Bright Side Of Life: with a whistle, on the crucifix

    Romans, Did For Us?

    We're all different, we're all individuals! (Voice aside): I'm not

    I am happy to nominate it as the best comedy ever, and one of the very very few that remains amusing AND relevant decades after it was made
    "How shall we fuck off, oh Lord?"

    and

    "Blessed are the cheese-makers?"
    Also: the stoning scene. "He said Jehovah". "You just said it". Cue more stoning.

    A prescient prediction of the desolate lunacies of Islamism

    Looking back, it was pure genius, in multiple ways
    It is my favourite. But, you you have to allow for “strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government” in the Holy Grail. Also, Brave Sir Robin.
    Holy Hand-grenade of Antioch?

    What's your favourite colour?

    The Knights who say Ni.

    How do you KNOW she's a witch?

    "What - the curtains?"
  • It was not exactly a vintage year for films last year (and having checked it actually came out in 2019) but Knives Out was a recent film that might make it into my personal favourite list. It is certainly a film you want to see at least twice.
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