Downhome 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 Ok, the new AFI Top 100 list will be revealed on June 20th on CBS. Which films from the past decade do you think they'll add to the top 100 list? Which films will be removed from the list to make room for the new additions? Here are all of the nominated films that they're deciding on that didn't exist when the last list was put together: American Beauty As Good as it Gets Austin Powers The Aviator A Beautiful Mind Being John Malkovich Boogie Nights Brokeback Mountain Chicago Crash Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind Fight Club Finding Nemo Gladiator Good Night and Good Luck Good Will Hunting Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban Hotel Rwanda The Hours The Insider L.A. Confidential The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King Lost in Translation The Matrix Memento Million Dollar Baby Moulin Rouge! Mystic River Pirates of the Carribean: Curse of the Black Pearl Ray Reqiuem for a Dream Rushmore Saving Private Ryan Shakespeare in Love Shrek Sideways The Sixth Sense Spider-man 2 There's Something About Mary Three Kings Titanic Traffic And out of those, I hope the following make the final list: American Beauty Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind Fight Club Lost in Translation Memento Traffic I'm not so sure which ones I'd remove from the current list though - here's the current list: 1. CITIZEN KANE (1941) 2. CASABLANCA (1942) 3. THE GODFATHER (1972) 4. GONE WITH THE WIND (1939) 5. LAWRENCE OF ARABIA (1962) 6. THE WIZARD OF OZ (1939) 7. THE GRADUATE (1967) 8. ON THE WATERFRONT (1954) 9. SCHINDLER'S LIST (1993) 10. SINGIN' IN THE RAIN (1952) 11. IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE (1946) 12. SUNSET BOULEVARD (1950) 13. THE BRIDGE ON THE RIVER KWAI (1957) 14. SOME LIKE IT HOT (1959) 15. STAR WARS (1977) 16. ALL ABOUT EVE (1950) 17. THE AFRICAN QUEEN (1951) 18. PSYCHO (1960) 19. CHINATOWN (1974) 20. ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST (1975) 21. THE GRAPES OF WRATH (1940) 22. 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY (1968) 23. THE MALTESE FALCON (1941) 24. RAGING BULL (1980) 25. E.T. THE EXTRA-TERRESTRIAL (1982) 26. DR. STRANGELOVE (1964) 27. BONNIE AND CLYDE (1967) 28. APOCALYPSE NOW (1979) 29. MR. SMITH GOES TO WASHINGTON (1939) 30. THE TREASURE OF THE SIERRA MADRE (1948) 31. ANNIE HALL (1977) 32. THE GODFATHER PART II (1974) 33. HIGH NOON (1952) 34. TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD (1962) 35. IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT (1934) 36. MIDNIGHT COWBOY (1969) 37. THE BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES (1946) 38. DOUBLE INDEMNITY (1944) 39. DOCTOR ZHIVAGO (1965) 40. NORTH BY NORTHWEST (1959) 41. WEST SIDE STORY (1961) 42. REAR WINDOW (1954) 43. KING KONG (1933) 44. THE BIRTH OF A NATION (1915) 45. A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE (1951) 46. A CLOCKWORK ORANGE (1971) 47. TAXI DRIVER (1976) 48. JAWS (1975) 49. SNOW WHITE AND THE SEVEN DWARFS (1937) 50. BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID (1969) 51. THE PHILADELPHIA STORY (1940) 52. FROM HERE TO ETERNITY (1953) 53. AMADEUS (1984) 54. ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT (1930) 55. THE SOUND OF MUSIC (1965) 56. M*A*S*H (1970) 57. THE THIRD MAN (1949) 58. FANTASIA (1940) 59. REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE (1955) 60. RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK (1981) 61. VERTIGO (1958) 62. TOOTSIE (1982) 63. STAGECOACH (1939) 64. CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND (1977) 65. THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS (1991) 66. NETWORK (1976) 67. THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE (1962) 68. AN AMERICAN IN PARIS (1951) 69. SHANE (1953) 70. THE FRENCH CONNECTION (1971) 71. FORREST GUMP (1994) 72. BEN-HUR (1959) 73. WUTHERING HEIGHTS (1939) 74. THE GOLD RUSH (1925) 75. DANCES WITH WOLVES (1990) 76. CITY LIGHTS (1931) 77. AMERICAN GRAFFITI (1973) 78. ROCKY (1976) 79. THE DEER HUNTER (1978) 80. THE WILD BUNCH (1969) 81. MODERN TIMES (1936) 82. GIANT (1956) 83. PLATOON (1986) 84. FARGO (1996) 85. DUCK SOUP (1933) 86. MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY (1935) 87. FRANKENSTEIN (1931) 88. EASY RIDER (1969) 89. PATTON (1970) 90. THE JAZZ SINGER (1927) 91. MY FAIR LADY (1964) 92. A PLACE IN THE SUN (1951) 93. THE APARTMENT (1960) 94. GOODFELLAS (1990) 95. PULP FICTION (1994) 96. THE SEARCHERS (1956) 97. BRINGING UP BABY (1938) 98. UNFORGIVEN (1992) 99. GUESS WHO'S COMING TO DINNER (1967) 100. YANKEE DOODLE DANDY (1942) Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Shylock Report post Posted May 31, 2007 Lost In Translation being a Top 100 of all time? Are you kidding me? I've seen the movie before and I honestly don't think it's all that great and certainly not good enough to get on the list. LOTR is probably a given to be on the list. At least one of them, if not the whole bunch, I'd assume. I'm not counting on Memento being on the list, but I wouldn't be surprised if it just scratched into the bottom 100. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Craig Th 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 Mystic River, American Beauty and Finding Nemo will get on there no matter what. Though I can see them putting something stupid on it, like There Is Something About Mary. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Hawk 34 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 Wouldn't the movies at the bottom of the list be the ones taken off? What is required to be on the list? Is it just on quality alone? Cultural importance? Because I can't really figure out why a couple movies are on the list other then being popular movies. I'll cap it off at 12 new selections based off the typical love these movies get, not for what I think are quality. American Beauty Crash Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind Gladiator L.A. Confidential The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King The Matrix Mystic River Saving Private Ryan Shrek Titanic Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Hasbeen1 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 American Beauty sucked. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Downhome 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 On Wikipedia it says that films are judged by the following criteria: 1. Feature-length: Narrative format typically over 60 minutes in length. 2. American film: English language, with significant creative and/or financial production elements from the United States. 3. Critical Recognition: Formal commendation in print. 4. Major Award Winner: Recognition from competitive events including awards from organizations in the film community and major film festivals. 5. Popularity Over Time: Including figures for box office adjusted for inflation, television broadcasts and syndication, and home video sales and rentals. 6. Historical Significance: A film's mark on the history of the moving image through technical innovation, visionary narrative devices or other groundbreaking achievements. 7. Cultural Impact: A film's mark on American society in matters of style and substance. Yeah, I know, Wikipedia, but there ya go. Because of the "Cultural Impact", I'd say that The Matrix is a given to make the list, as well as either Finding Nemo or Shrek. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
teke184 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 American Beauty Austin Powers Fight Club L.A. Confidential The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King The Matrix Memento Pirates of the Carribean: Curse of the Black Pearl Ray Requiem for a Dream Saving Private Ryan The Sixth Sense Titanic The above all have a chance of inching in, IMHO. The ones I think have the best shot are: Saving Private Ryan (Much better movie than Deer Hunter, IMHO) The Matrix (Major cultural influence and film-making influence) Austin Powers (Major cultural influence) Sixth Sense " Titanic " LOTR: Return Of The King Movies from the previous AFI 100 most likely NOT to re-appear on this list: Bringing Up Baby Yankee Doodle Dandy Guess Who's Coming To Dinner Dances With Wolves Wuthering Heights Two of the three Chaplin movies (Gold Rush, Modern Times, City Lights) Best Years Of Our Lives Ones that will remain on the list, but shouldn't: Deer Hunter Manchurian Candidate All Quiet On The Western Front Annie Hall An American In Paris All The President's Men Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Report post Posted May 31, 2007 My picks are... Finding Nemo Hotel Rwanda The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King Ray Saving Private Ryan Titanic Yup. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ravenbomb 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 Call me crazy, but I think Being John Malkovich or Eternal Sunshine might make it. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Downhome 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 Well ESotSM damn well better make it. It would be a damn shame if BJM made it and not ESotSM. And yeah, I could see Modern Times being removed from the list since there's two other Chaplin flicks on the list, and this one is pretty far down at the bottom at #81. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ravenbomb 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 IIRC, Eternal Sunshine was more roundly positively reviewed. Though it might just be that Kaufman was more widely known at that point. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Downhome 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 If you ask me, it's a better film in every way. Then again, it's my favorite film so I might be a bit biased. If it was up to me Léon (The Professional) would be added to the AFI Top 100 as well. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ravenbomb 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 well I think Se7en should definately be on that list. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Downhome 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 Now that I think about it I'd say that the only reason that Léon isn't already on the list is because of the French ties, even though it's in English. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ravenbomb 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 well, one could say the same for the Dollars trilogy, though that's more Italian than Leon is French Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
teke184 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 well, one could say the same for the Dollars trilogy, though that's more Italian than Leon is French The qualifications for this are wonky at best. There was a debate about this 9 years ago when the first list was released, as The Third Man was mostly foreign (money, writer, director, most of the actors). If not for Orson Welles and Joseph Cotton starring in it, it would have been a British film instead. That's not to say that The Third Man isn't deserving of being on the list, but it definitely skirts the qualifications of being an "American" film classic. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Youth N Asia 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 Being that the newest movies on the list are 13 years old (Gump and Pulp Fiction) I doubt they're in any hurry to add anything remotely recient to the list. Blah blah, anything made before 1980 is crap, blah blah Citizen Kane, blah blah Personally I say Memento is better than 90% of that list Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
luke-o 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 Im agreeging with the dislike for Lost in Translation, i don't get the appeal. Saying that, I don't see the appeal of the LOtR trilogy either. All 3 movies are boring as hell. For me, its got to be Memento in there as well as ESotSM and Fight Club. Hell, id like to see Rushmore make the list. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Youth N Asia 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 Oh, right, I forgot to throw in my 2 cents... Lost in Translation sucked Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Coffin Surfer 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 Well I think Lost in Translation is great. Surely, there are worse movies on here to bitch about. Austin Powers? The Matrix? Harry Potter? All three of the Lord of the Rings? SPIDERMAN 2?!? These movies have no business being considered other than they made money. And though they were nominated for oscars and sometimes won blah blah.... I think Crash, Gladiator, Sixth Sense, Three Kings, Ray, Requiem for A Dream, Shakespeare in Love, Million Dollar Baby, Brokeback...all range from bland to fucking terrible in my book. I would go with: Rushmore, LA Confidental, and yes Titanic. And if I could pick my own, "The Limey" is the best American Noir of the past several decades even if it's not about an American. Also "The Exorcist" should be added to that shit list before any new movies as there's no denying it's cultural impact as well it's importance to contemporary horror and cinema as a whole but it is a horror movie you can't disguise as a psychological or suspense so you know. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Lord of The Curry 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 Christ almighty Downhome, you make a list featuring Something About Mary, Harry Potter and Shakespeare In Love but neglect stuff like Syriana and The Royal Tennanbaums? Yikes. BTW, Syriana meets and beats said criteria more then pretty much any movie listed there. Most slept-on movie of this decade so far. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Downhome 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 Christ almighty Downhome, you make a list featuring Something About Mary, Harry Potter and Shakespeare In Love but neglect stuff like Syriana and The Royal Tennanbaums? Yikes. I'm not sure if you're being sarcastic or not, but that's the official list, not something that I put together just for the hell of it. Since the entire top 100 is up for grabs, it's likely that the new top 100 list will look quite different this time around. It'll be interesting to see how things change ten years later. Here are a few more of the other films nominated this time around that didn't make the cut last time: -A Christmas Story -Groundhog Day -Halloween -Hoosiers -The King of Comedy And of those, Groundhog Day should be on the list in my opinion. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Lord of The Curry 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 Wow, the official list sucks balls. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
bob_barron 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 1 A C E I N T H E H O L E Paramount, 1951 PRINCIPAL CAST Kirk Douglas, Jan Sterling, Robert Arthur DIRECTOR Billy Wilder PRODUCER Billy Wilder SCREENWRITERS Walter Newman, Lesser Samuels, Billy Wilder Douglas is a reporter in need of a story. A man trapped in a New Mexico cave is the ticket. Wilder’s cynical and amoral journalist prolongs the event and seizes the opportunity to resurrect his dying career. The sensational story becomes a media circus. 2 A D A M ’ S R I B MGM, 1949 PRINCIPAL CAST Spencer Tracy, Katharine Hepburn, Judy Holliday DIRECTOR George Cukor PRODUCER Lawrence Weingarten SCREENWRITERS Ruth Gordon, Garson Kanin Tracy and Hepburn star as married lawyers representing opposing sides of a controversial case about “the double standard.” The battle of the sexes blazes hilariously during the trial, and a gun made of licorice is the answer to their marital woes. 3 T H E A D V E N T U R E S O F R O B I N H O O D Warner Bros., 1938 PRINCIPAL CAST Errol Flynn, Olivia de Havilland, Basil Rathbone DIRECTOR Michael Curtiz, William Keighley PRODUCERS Hal B. Wallis, Henry Blanke SCREENWRITERS Norman Reilly Raine, Seton I. Miller This Technicolor swashbuckler stars Flynn as the rogue of Sherwood Forest: “It’s injustice I hate, not the Normans.” Wolfgang Korngold’s stirring score, a spectacular clash of swords between Flynn and Rathbone and a fairy-tale romance with de Havilland ushered in a new era of historical-costume adventure films. 4 AN A F FA I R T O R E M E M B E R Twentieth Century-Fox, 1957 PRINCIPAL CAST Cary Grant, Deborah Kerr, Richard Denning DIRECTOR Leo McCarey PRODUCER Jerry Wald SCREENWRITERS Delmer Daves, Leo McCarey A shipboard romance changes the lives of Grant and Kerr, embroiled in other affairs. They promise to meet in six months at the top of the Empire State Building, but fate takes a hand and keeps the star-crossed lovers apart, until destiny steps in one more time. “Oh, it’s nobody’s fault but my own! I was looking up... it was the nearest thing to heaven! You were there...” American Film Institute 9 5 T H E A F R I C A N Q U E E N United Artists, 1951 PRINCIPAL CAST Humphrey Bogart, Katharine Hepburn DIRECTOR John Huston PRODUCER S.P. Eagle (Sam Spiegel) SCREENWRITERS James Agee, John Huston Hepburn’s a spinster who’s spent her life saving souls for God and Bogart’s a Godless soul in need of saving. Stuck onboard The African Queen at the outbreak of World War I, they ride the rapids, outsmart the Germans and find true love on location in the middle of Africa. 6 A I R P L A N E ! Paramount, 1980 PRINCIPAL CAST Robert Hays, Julie Hagerty, Lloyd Bridges, Peter Graves, Leslie Nielsen DIRECTORS Jim Abrahams, David Zucker, Jerry Zucker PRODUCER Jon Davison SCREENWRITERS Jim Abrahams, David Zucker, Jerry Zucker Shell-shocked ex-pilot is on a mission to get his girlfriend back, but the plot takes a back seat to the zany, wacky comedy spoof on films such as AIRPORT, FROM HERE TO ETERNITY and SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER. The movie gave birth to Neilson’s comedy career: “Surely you can’t be serious.” “I am serious, and don’t call me Shirley!” 7 A L I E N Twentieth Century-Fox, 1979 PRINCIPAL CAST Sigourney Weaver, Tom Skerritt, John Hurt DIRECTOR Ridley Scott PRODUCERS Gordon Carroll, David Giler, Walter Hill SCREENWRITER Dan O’Bannon Unbeknownst to its crew, spaceship Nostromo has taken on an alien stowaway that incubates in some humans and hunts the rest. A science fiction film that broke new ground by adding horror and gore and, more importantly, Weaver, as the action heroine. 8 A L L A B O U T E V E Twentieth Century-Fox, 1950 PRINCIPAL CAST Bette Davis, Anne Baxter, George Sanders, Gary Merrill DIRECTOR Joseph L. Mankiewicz PRODUCER Darryl F. Zanuck SCREENWRITER Joseph L. Mankiewicz Vanity almost gets the best of aging actress Davis when a ruthless young hopeful worms her way into all aspects of her life. Mankiewicz’s biting script of ambition and betrayal in the New York theatre gave Davis her best role in years and some of her most memorable lines: “Fasten your seatbelts. It’s going to be a bumpy night!” 10 American Film Institute 9 A L L Q U I E T O N T H E W E S T E R N F R O N T Universal, 1930 PRINCIPAL CAST Lew Ayres, Louis Wolheim, John Wray DIRECTOR Lewis Milestone PRODUCER Carl Laemmle, Jr. SCREENWRITERS George Abbott, Maxwell Anderson, Del Andrews This antiwar drama based on Erich Maria Remarque’s novel follows the lives of a group of fresh-faced German boys who join the Army during World War I. In one of the film’s most memorable moments, Ayres reaches for a butterfly, juxtaposing all the violence swirling around him in the trenches. 1 0 A L L T H AT J A Z Z Twentieth Century-Fox, 1979 PRINCIPAL CAST Roy Scheider, Jessica Lange DIRECTOR Bob Fosse PRODUCER Robert Alan Aurthur SCREENWRITERS Robert Alan Aurthur, Bob Fosse This is Fosse’s semi-autobiographical, highly stylized musical of a pill-popping director/choreographer torn between too many women and “Death,” beautifully embodied by Lange. “It’s showtime, folks.” 1 1 A L L T H E K I N G ’ S M E N Columbia, 1949 PRINCIPAL CAST Broderick Crawford, John Ireland, Mercedes McCambridge DIRECTOR Robert Rossen SCREENWRITER Robert Rossen The life of Senator Huey Long inspired this political drama with compelling performances by Crawford and McCambridge. This film is based on Robert Penn Warren’s explosive novel about a once-honest politician corrupted by power. “Man is conceived in sin and born in corruption.” 1 2 A L L T H E P R E S I D E N T ’ S M E N Warner Bros., 1976 PRINCIPAL CAST Dustin Hoffman, Robert Redford, Jason Robards DIRECTOR Alan J. Pakula PRODUCER Walter Coblenz SCREENWRITER William Goldman Both a taut political thriller and detective story, Redford and Hoffman are Woodward and Bernstein, the two novice Washington Post reporters who uncovered the Watergate break-in and cover-up. American Film Institute 11 1 3 AMADEUS Orion, 1984 PRINCIPAL CAST Tom Hulce, F. Murray Abraham DIRECTOR Milos Forman PRODUCER Saul Zaentz SCREENWRITER Peter Shaffer Abraham’s Antonio Salieri declares war against the heavens for speaking through the genius of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, played by Hulce. Flashbacks illuminate the mad, energetic brilliance of Mozart and Salieri’s struggle with his own mediocrity. “There are simply too many notes, that’s all. Just cut a few and it will be perfect.” 1 4 A M E R I C A N B E A U T Y DreamWorks, 1999 PRINCIPAL CAST Kevin Spacey, Annette Bening, Thora Birch, Wes Bentley, Mena Suvari DIRECTOR Sam Mendes PRODUCERS Bruce Cohen, Dan Jinks SCREENWRITER Alan Ball Step inside the red door, and you’ll find a family about to implode. Lester’s depressed, his wife’s carrying on with another man and his daughter hates him. Worst of all, he’s fantasizing about a high school cheerleader covered in red roses. Mendes’ first feature is a biting black comedy on contemporary American life. 1 5 A M E R I C A N G R A F F I T I Universal, 1973 PRINCIPAL CAST Richard Dreyfuss, Ron Howard, Cindy Williams DIRECTOR George Lucas PRODUCERS Francis Ford Coppola, Gary Kurtz SCREENWRITERS Willard Huyck, Gloria Katz, George Lucas One night in the life of some high school grads becomes a turning point on the road to adulthood. Lucas’ breakthrough film featured an ensemble cast of future stars and a non-stop soundtrack of 1950s and ‘60s hits. 1 6 A N A M E R I C A N I N PA R I S MGM, 1951 PRINCIPAL CAST Gene Kelly, Leslie Caron, Oscar Levant DIRECTOR Vincente Minnelli PRODUCER Arthur Freed SCREENWRITER Alan Jay Lerner Kelly and Caron fall in love to the tunes of Gershwin—I Got Rhythm, Our Love Is Here To Stay and S’Wonderful—in postwar Paris. The film’s legendary finale, the 17-minute ballet, was both daring and innovative in 1951. 12 American Film Institute 1 7 A N N I E H A L L United Artists, 1977 PRINCIPAL CAST Woody Allen, Diane Keaton DIRECTOR Woody Allen PRODUCER Charles H. Joffe SCREENWRITERS Woody Allen, Marshall Brickman Alvy Singer has more hang-ups than most neurotic New Yorkers. When he meets his polar opposite, the dingy Annie Hall (“La-di-da, la-di-da”), the die-hard city dweller winds up in a foreign country called Los Angeles! This comedy also launched a women’s fashion trend on Annie Hall’s “look.” 1 8 T H E A PART M E N T United Artists, 1960 PRINCIPAL CAST Jack Lemmon, Shirley MacLaine, Fred MacMurray, Jack Kruschen DIRECTOR Billy Wilder PRODUCER Billy Wilder SCREENWRITERS I.A.L. Diamond, Billy Wilder Wilder’s wry take on corporate America skewers the climb through the bedroom to the boardroom. Lemmon is a career-climbing executive who offers his boss’ the use of his apartment for an extra-marital fling. His foolproof plan falls apart when he falls in love with his boss’s girlfriend. “That’s the way it crumbles, cookie-wise!” 1 9 APOCALYPSE NOW United Artists, 1979 PRINCIPAL CAST Marlon Brando, Martin Sheen, Robert Duvall DIRECTOR Francis Ford Coppola PRODUCER Francis Ford Coppola SCREENWRITERS Francis Ford Coppola, John Milius Coppola and Milius based their script loosely on Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness. Search and destroy; terminate with extreme prejudice—this is Sheen’s mission. But it is the insanity of the Vietnam war (“I love the smell of napalm in the morning…”) that really blows his mind. By the time he reaches renegade Green Beret Brando, his crew is dead, and he has nearly become the man he was sent to kill. 2 0 A P O L L O 1 3 Universal, 1995 PRINCIPAL CAST Tom Hanks, Bill Paxton, Kevin Bacon, Ed Harris, Kathleen Quinlan DIRECTOR Ron Howard PRODUCER Brian Grazer SCREENWRITERS William Broyles, Jr., Al Reinert “Houston, we have a problem.” Things go drastically wrong on the Apollo 13 mission, and astronauts Hanks, Paxton, and Bacon must rely on their wits to get back to earth alive as America holds its collective breath. American Film Institute 13 2 1 A S G O O D A S I T G E T S TriStar, 1997 PRINCIPAL CAST Jack Nicholson, Helen Hunt, Greg Kinnear DIRECTOR James L. Brooks PRODUCERS James L. Brooks, Bridget Johnson, Kristi Zea SCREENWRITER James L. Brooks Nicholson is an obsessive/compulsive romance novelist whose relationships with coffee shop waitress Hunt and gay neighbor Kinnear make him want to be a better man. 2 2 AT L A N T I C C I T Y Paramount, 1980 PRINCIPAL CAST Burt Lancaster, Susan Sarandon DIRECTOR Louis Malle PRODUCER Denis Heroux SCREENWRITER John Guare Parallel stories in this potent character study of an aging gangster and a young woman with dreams rooted in the image of the city’s past. Their worlds collide when they find themselves chased by an unglamorous, modern-day mob. 2 3 A U S T I N P O W E R S : I N T E R N AT I O N A L M A N O F M Y S T E RY New Line, 1997 PRINCIPAL CAST Mike Myers, Elizabeth Hurley, Robert Wagner DIRECTOR Jay Roach PRODUCERS Suzanne Todd, Demi Moore, Jennifer Todd, Mike Myers SCREENWRITER Mike Myers Myers never lets up in this James Bond parody as the cryogenically frozen 1960s spy who is thawed out thirty years later in order to stop Dr. Evil’s plans for world domination. “It’s freedom, baby, yeah!” 2 4 T H E AVI AT O R Miramax, 2004 PRINCIPAL CAST Leonardo DiCaprio, Cate Blanchett, Kate Beckinsale DIRECTOR Martin Scorsese PRODUCERS Michael Mann, Sandy Climan, Graham King, Charles Evans, Jr. SCREENWRITER John Logan Leonardo DiCaprio plays Howard Hughes in this biopic of the legendary engineer, movie producer, pilot and corporate mogul. The film follows his life from the 1920s to the 1940s with overlapping storylines at play, as Hughes rises and falls simultaneously. 14 American Film Institute 2 5 T H E AW F U L T R U T H Columbia, 1937 PRINCIPAL CAST Irene Dunne, Cary Grant, Ralph Bellamy DIRECTOR Leo McCarey PRODUCER Everett Riskin SCREENWRITER Vina Delmar Grant and Dunne try to outwit and outmaneuver each other while waiting for their divorce to become final. The combination of physical slapstick and sophisticated comedy turn this clever movie into a minefield of marital mishaps. “You’ve come back and caught me in the truth, and there’s nothing less logical than the truth.” B 16 American Film Institute 2 6 B A B E Universal, 1995 PRINCIPAL CAST James Cromwell DIRECTOR Chris Noonan PRODUCERS George Miller, Doug Mitchell, Bill Miller SCREENWRITERS George Miller, Chris Noonan This fantasy film tells the story of Babe, an orphaned pig raised by a sheep dog, who becomes an expert herder and forms a special bond with eccentric Farmer Hoggett, as they share “the faintest hint of a common destiny.” 2 7 B A C K T O T H E F U T U R E Universal, 1985 PRINCIPAL CAST Michael J. Fox, Christopher Lloyd DIRECTOR Robert Zemeckis PRODUCERS Neil Canton, Bob Gale SCREENWRITERS Bob Gale, Robert Zemeckis Marty McFly and crazy scientist Doc Brown accidentally time-travel back to the 1950s. “Are you telling me you built a time machine? Out of a DeLorean?” After bungling the moment when his parents first meet, Marty must get them interested in each other to secure his own destiny and get back to the future. 2 8 BADLANDS Warner Bros., 1973 PRINCIPAL CAST Martin Sheen, Sissy Spacek DIRECTOR Terrence Malick PRODUCER Terrence Malick SCREENWRITER Terrence Malick Malick’s directorial debut is based on the true story of Charles Starkweather and teenager Caril Fugate who crossed America in the 1950s leaving a trail of bodies behind them. 2 9 B A M B I Disney, 1942 PRINCIPAL CAST Hardie Albright, Sterling Holloway, Sam Edwards (voices) DIRECTOR David Hand PRODUCER Walt Disney SCREENWRITER Larry Morey It’s hard to keep a dry eye in this visually beautiful, animated story of life in the forest that moves from the idyllic to the horrific and back again for the sweet-natured fawn, Bambi. American Film Institute 17 3 0 T H E B A N D WAGON MGM, 1953 PRINCIPAL CAST Fred Astaire, Cyd Charisse, Jack Buchanan, Oscar Levant, Nanette Fabray DIRECTOR Vincente Minnelli PRODUCER Arthur Freed SCREENWRITERS Betty Comden, Adolph Green Film actor Astaire is washed up in Hollywood and heads to New York to resurrect his career, this time on Broadway. With enduring standards like That’s Entertainment and Dancing In The Dark, Comden and Green take a light-hearted look at how an ill-fated concept, an updated Oedipus, becomes a musical smash. 3 1 T H E B A N K D I C K Universal, 1940 PRINCIPAL CAST W.C. Fields, Cora Witherspoon, Una Merkel DIRECTOR Edward F. Cline PRODUCER Jack Gross SCREENWRITER Mahatma Kane Jeeves (W. C. Fields) Fields plays Egbert Souse, a man who tries to live up to his name but is heralded as a hero and awarded a job as a detective when he inadvertently topples over a bank robber. 3 2 B E A U G E S T E Paramount, 1939 PRINCIPAL CAST Gary Cooper, Ray Milland, Robert Preston, Brian Donlevy DIRECTOR William A. Wellman PRODUCER William A. Wellman SCREENWRITER Robert Carson When the priceless Blue Water sapphire goes missing, so do the Geste Brothers. A tale of high adventure takes John, Digby, and Beau from the splendor of Victorian England to the Foreign Legion of North Africa, all in the name of honor, loyalty, and self-sacrifice. 3 3 A B E A U T I F U L M I N D Universal, 2001 PRINCIPAL CAST Russell Crowe, Ed Harris, Jennifer Connelly DIRECTOR Ron Howard PRODUCERS Brian Grazer, Ron Howard SCREENWRITER Akiva Goldsman Sylvia Nasar’s prize-winning biography of math genius and Nobel winner John Nash is the basis for this skillfully directed film. Howard lulls the audience into both the mad world of Nash’s schizophrenia and the real world of his wife and family, who love him unconditionally. 18 American Film Institute 3 4 B E A U T Y A N D T H E B E A S T Disney, 1991 PRINCIPAL CAST Paige O'Hara, Robby Benson, Jerry Orbach, Angela Lansbury (voices) DIRECTORS Gary Trousdale, Kirk Wise PRODUCER Don Hahn SCREENWRITER Linda Woolverton This animated musical is based on the classic fairy tale of the girl who is trapped in the castle of a hideous beast but eventually falls for his unusual charm. The film’s musical highlights include the title song and the show-stopping Be Our Guest. 3 5 B E I N G J O H N M A L K O V I C H USA Films, 1999 PRINCIPAL CAST John Cusack, Cameron Diaz, Catherine Keener, John Malkovich DIRECTOR Spike Jonze PRODUCERS Steve Golin, Vincent Landay, Sandy Stern, Michael Stipe SCREENWRITER Charlie Kaufman Kaufman’s clever, original comedy of a puppeteer who inadvertently discovers a portal into the brain of actor John Malkovich. Can his discovery become a business? “Meet you in Malkovich in one hour.” 3 6 B E N - H U R MGM, 1926 PRINCIPAL CAST Ramon Novarro, Francis X. Bushman, May McAvoy DIRECTOR Fred Niblo PRODUCERS Louis B. Mayer, Samuel Goldwyn SCREENWRITERS Bess Meredyth, Carey Wilson, June Mathis Judah Ben-Hur loses his home and family at the hands of childhood friend Messala, a young Roman officer. The dramatic chariot race and colossal sea battle are part of the most expensive silent film produced in Hollywood. 3 7 B E N - H U R MGM, 1959 PRINCIPAL CAST Charlton Heston, Stephen Boyd, Hugh Griffith, Jack Hawkins DIRECTOR William Wyler PRODUCER Sam Zimbalist SCREENWRITER Karl Tunberg This is a tale of two friends on the opposite side of politics and power, who come face to face in the film’s explosive chariot race. Heston, the young Jewish Prince, seeks revenge for himself and his family, only to find forgiveness and redemption when he tries to help Jesus Christ, the man who once saved him. American Film Institute 19 3 8 T H E B E S T Y E A R S O F O U R L I V E S RKO, 1946 PRINCIPAL CAST Myrna Loy, Fredric March, Teresa Wright, Dana Andrews, Harold Russell DIRECTOR William Wyler PRODUCER Samuel Goldwyn SCREENWRITER Robert E. Sherwood Released immediately after the World War II, Wyler’s story of three men returning from war was the right film at the right time—mirroring the experiences of so many soldiers adjusting to a new life. Russell, a young vet who lost his hands, plays a man trying to figure out if he can pick up the pieces of his old life. 3 9 B I G Twentieth Century-Fox, 1988 PRINCIPAL CAST Tom Hanks, Elizabeth Perkins DIRECTOR Penny Marshall PRODUCERS James L. Brooks, Robert Greenhut SCREENWRITERS Gary Ross, Anne Spielberg A little boy’s wish comes true and he wakes up big! But there’s still a boy inside that man’s body and he can’t quite navigate the world of grownups. Hanks and Loggia’s piano dance to Heart and Soul is one of the highlights in Marshall’s poignant comedy that proves the old adage, “Be careful what you wish for.” 4 0 T H E B I G C H I L L Columbia, 1983 PRINCIPAL CAST Kevin Kline, Glenn Close, William Hurt, Tom Berenger, Jeff Goldblum DIRECTOR Lawrence Kasdan PRODUCER Michael Shamberg SCREENWRITERS Barbara Benedek, Lawrence Kasdan Baby-boomers regroup to mourn the suicide of their friend. The ensemble reminisce and come to terms with their loss, all done to a soundtrack from their 1960s youth. 4 1 T H E B I G PARADE MGM, 1925 PRINCIPAL CAST John Gilbert, Renee Adoree DIRECTOR King Vidor PRODUCER Irving Thalberg SCREENWRITERS Lawrence Stallings, Harry Behn Vidor’s cadenced staging of a military assault is one of the highlights of this antiwar film featuring box office idol Gilbert as an eager American doughboy. 20 American Film Institute 4 2 T H E B I G S L E E P Warner Bros., 1946 PRINCIPAL CAST Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall DIRECTOR Howard Hawks PRODUCER Howard Hawks SCREENWRITERS William Faulkner, Leigh Brackett, Jules Futhman Bogart and Bacall make sparks fly while trying to outwit the blackmailers, seedy cops, and odd characters who populate the treacherous world of Raymond Chandler’s Los Angeles. 4 3 T H E B I R D S Universal, 1963 PRINCIPAL CAST Tippi Hedren, Rod Taylor, Jessica Tandy DIRECTOR Alfred Hitchcock PRODUCER Alfred Hitchcock SCREENWRITER Evan Hunter Hitchcock’s birds-eye view of the apocalypse has our feathered friends attacking the residents of a small town in Northern California. 4 4 T H E B I RT H O F A N AT I O N Epoch, 1915 PRINCIPAL CAST Lillian Gish, Henry B. Walthall DIRECTOR D.W. Griffith PRODUCER D.W. Griffith SCREENWRITERS D.W. Griffith, Frank E. Woods A groundbreaking technical achievement, this controversial milestone epic about the Civil War and its aftermath still sparks debate today. President Woodrow Wilson said, “It is like writing history with lightning.” 4 5 B L A C K B O A R D J U N G L E MGM, 1955 PRINCIPAL CAST Glenn Ford, Anne Francis, Louis Calhern, Sidney Poitier, Vic Morrow DIRECTOR Richard Brooks PRODUCER Pandro S. Berman SCREENWRITER Richard Brooks A rock ‘n’ roll soundtrack gave a real urgency to this story of juvenile delinquents in a troubled inner-city school. Ford is the earnest, idealistic teacher who tries his best to inspire the students who are almost impossible to tame. American Film Institute 21 4 6 B L A D E R U N N E R Warner Bros., 1982 PRINCIPAL CAST Harrison Ford, Rutger Hauer, Sean Young, Edward James Olmos DIRECTOR Ridley Scott PRODUCER Michael Deely SCREENWRITER Hampton Fancher The dark, rainy opening shot of Los Angeles in 2019 sets the stage for Scott’s futuristic thriller, where “replicants,” a powerful human-like species, have mutinied in an attempt to prolong their lifespans. Ford is the cop Blade Runner cop called on to hunt them down. 4 7 B L A Z I N G S A D D L E S Warner Bros., 1974 PRINCIPAL CAST Cleavon Little, Gene Wilder, Madeline Kahn DIRECTOR Mel Brooks PRODUCER Michael Hertzberg SCREENWRITERS Mel Brooks, Richard Pryor, Norman Steinberg, Alan Uger, Andrew Bergman Brooks’ politically incorrect parody of all things Western spares no one, starting with the dastardly Hedley Lemarr who brings Bart, a black urban sheriff to town. Saloonsinger Lili Von Shtupp’s I’m Tired (à la Dietrich) and the bean-eating campfire scene remain favorites. 4 8 B L U E V E LV E T DEG, 1986 PRINCIPAL CAST Kyle MacLachlan, Isabella Rossellini, Dennis Hopper, Laura Dern DIRECTOR David Lynch PRODUCER Fred C. Caruso SCREENWRITER David Lynch Naive Jeffrey Beaumont finds a severed ear in an empty lot near his bucolic home town. Fed up with do-nothing cops, Jeffrey and girlfriend Sandy’s investigation takes them beyond the white picket fence into the dark evil underworld of Frank Booth and his nightclub singer, Dorothy Vallens. 4 9 B O N N I E A N D C LY D E Warner Bros., 1967 PRINCIPAL CAST Warren Beatty, Faye Dunaway, Gene Hackman, Estelle Parsons DIRECTOR Arthur Penn PRODUCER Warren Beatty SCREENWRITERS Robert Benton, David Newman “We rob banks!” Dunaway and Beatty star in this story of real-life 1930s bank robbers Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow, a film that mixed romance, adventure, glamour, comedy and violence in a way never seen before. 22 American Film Institute 5 0 B O O G I E N I G H T S New Line, 1997 PRINCIPAL CAST Mark Wahlberg, Burt Reynolds, John C. Reilly, Julianne Moore, Heather Graham, Don Cheadle, Philip Seymour Hoffman, William H. Macy DIRECTOR Paul Thomas Anderson PRODUCERS Paul Thomas Anderson, Lloyd Levin, John S. Lyons, Joanne Sellar SCREENWRITER Paul Thomas Anderson This is Anderson’s breakthrough film about the ups and downs of characters in search of love, acceptance, and stardom in the booming porn business of the 1970s and 1980s. No one wants it more than Wahlberg’s Dirk Diggler, blessed with a very special asset. 5 1 B O R N O N T H E F O U RT H O F J U LY Universal, 1989 PRINCIPAL CAST Tom Cruise, Willem Dafoe DIRECTOR Oliver Stone PRODUCERS Oliver Stone, A. Kitman Ho SCREENWRITERS Oliver Stone, Ron Kovic The true story of screenwriter Kovic, an all-American patriot who signs up for Vietnam and comes home in a wheelchair. After long bouts of depression and drowning himself in alcohol, the transformed vet becomes one of the country’s leading antiwar activists. 5 2 B O Y Z N T H E H O O D Columbia, 1991 PRINCIPAL CAST Laurence Fishburne, Cuba Gooding, Jr., Ice Cube, Morris Chestnut, Angela Bassett DIRECTOR John Singleton PRODUCER Steve Nicolaides SCREENWRITER John Singleton The debut of writer/director Singleton rocked Hollywood with this tragic portrait of three young men in South Central LA, and the effects of gang violence on their hopes for the future. “Why is it that there is a gun shop on almost every corner in this community?” 5 3 B R AV E H E A RT Paramount, 1995 PRINCIPAL CAST Mel Gibson, Sophie Marceau, Patrick McGoohan, Brian Cox DIRECTOR Mel Gibson PRODUCERS Mel Gibson, Alan Ladd, Jr., Bruce Davey SCREENWRITER Randall Wallace Inspired by the legendary exploits of 13th century Scottish patriot William Wallace, the film is noteworthy for its intense battle scenes and stirring plea for freedom. American Film Institute 23 5 4 B R A Z I L Universal, 1985 PRINCIPAL CAST Jonathan Pryce, Robert De Niro, Katherine Helmond, Ian Holm, Bob Hoskins DIRECTOR Terry Gilliam PRODUCER Arnon Milchan SCREENWRITERS Terry Gilliam, Tom Stoppard, Charles McKeown Gilliam’s darkly comic sci-fi epic nightmare of the future finds Pryce as a civil servant who desperately tries to hold onto his dreams. Occasionally he allows his fantasies to take flight over the decayed city of London to the strains of Brazil! 5 5 B R E A K FA S T AT T I F FA N Y ’ S Paramount, 1961 PRINCIPAL CAST Audrey Hepburn, George Peppard, Patricia Neal DIRECTOR Blake Edwards PRODUCERS Martin Jurow, Richard Shepherd SCREENWRITER George Axelrod Hepburn is Holly Golightly, a Manhattan party girl with a small-town past. New neighbor Peppard is a struggling writer being kept by Neal. The two tenants free each other from the ties of the past and fall in love. The film features the Henry Mancini/Johnny Mercer song Moon River. 5 6 T H E B R E A K FA S T C L U B Universal, 1985 PRINCIPAL CAST Emilio Estevez, Anthony Michael Hall, Judd Nelson, Molly Ringwald, Ally Sheedy, Paul Gleason DIRECTOR John Hughes PRODUCERS John Hughes, Ned Tanen SCREENWRITER John Hughes Saturday detention is more like a therapy group for five high school teens who are seen and see themselves in clearly defined roles. By the end of the day, Hughes’ dissection of adolescent issues reveals to the group that there’s “a brain, an athlete, a basket case, a princess and a criminal” in all of them. 5 7 B R E A K I N G AWAY Twentieth Century-Fox, 1979 PRINCIPAL CAST Dennis Christopher, Dennis Quaid, Daniel Stern, Jackie Earle Haley DIRECTOR Peter Yates PRODUCER Peter Yates SCREENWRITER Steve Tesich The alienation four boys feel after graduating from high school ultimately leads to a bicycle race that redeems them in the town they represent. 24 American Film Institute 5 8 T H E B R I D G E O N T H E R I V E R K WA I Columbia, 1957 PRINCIPAL CAST William Holden, Jack Hawkins, Alec Guinness, Sessue Hayakawa DIRECTOR David Lean PRODUCER Sam Spiegel SCREENWRITERS Pierre Boulle (Carl Foreman, Michael Wilson) Guinness is the rigid British officer who refuses to bow to torture in a Japanese prison camp during World War II. Holden is an American who escapes from the camp, then must return to sabotage the bridge being constructed to perfection by POWs, now inspired by Guinness’ command! “Madness! Madness!” 5 9 B R I N G I N G U P B A B Y RKO, 1938 PRINCIPAL CAST Katharine Hepburn, Cary Grant, May Robson, Charles Ruggles, Barry Fitzgerald DIRECTOR Howard Hawks PRODUCER Cliff Reid SCREENWRITERS Dudley Nichols, Hagar Wilde Hepburn’s heiress is mad for Grant’s uptight paleontologist. The plot and characters define screwball comedy, not the least of which involves a pet leopard who can be soothed by listening to I Can’t Give You Anything But Love, Baby.” 6 0 BROADCAST NEWS Twentieth Century-Fox, 1987 PRINCIPAL CAST William Hurt, Holly Hunter, Albert Brooks DIRECTOR James L. Brooks PRODUCER James L. Brooks SCREENWRITER James L. Brooks Sparks fly in a network newsroom as dedicated producer Jane Craig tries to figure out whom she wants: Pretty-boy, anchorman, killer-smile Tom? Or serious, committed (and sweaty) reporter Aaron: “Okay, I’ll meet you at the place near the thing where we went that time.” 6 1 BROKEBACK MOUNTA I N Focus, 2005 PRINCIPAL CAST Heath Ledger, Jake Gyllenhaal, Randy Quaid, Michelle Williams DIRECTOR Ang Lee PRODUCERS Diana Ossana, James Schamus SCREENWRITERS Larry McMurtry, Diana Ossana “I wish I knew how to quit you.” This controversial and heartbreaking love story, adapted from Annie Proulx’s New Yorker short story, is a love story about two cowboys, spanning three decades. American Film Institute 25 6 2 B R O K E N B L O S S O M S United Artists, 1919 PRINCIPAL CAST Lillian Gish, Richard Barthelmess, Donald Crisp DIRECTOR D.W. Griffith PRODUCER D.W. Griffith SCREENWRITER D.W. Griffith In London’s foggy slums, the plight of a Cockney girl is witnessed by a Chinese shopkeeper who falls in love with her and wants to remove her from the physical abuse she suffers at the hand of her prizefighter father. 6 3 B U L L D U R H A M Orion, 1988 PRINCIPAL CAST Kevin Costner, Susan Sarandon, Tim Robbins DIRECTOR Ron Shelton PRODUCERS Mark Burg, Thom Mount SCREENWRITER Ron Shelton Costner’s Crash Davis is almost over the hill, but he’s got to curb wild pitcher “Nuke” LaLoosh’s wild ways. They both fall for baseball groupie Sarandon, who sits both men down to explain her one-player-per-season rule—and that they are the finalists. It will take more than philosophy to win her for the season. 6 4 B U T C H C A S S I D Y A N D T H E S U N D A N C E K I D Twentieth Century-Fox, 1969 PRINCIPAL CAST Paul Newman, Robert Redford, Katharine Ross DIRECTOR George Roy Hill PRODUCERS Paul Monash, John Foreman SCREENWRITER William Goldman The chemistry of Newman and Redford redefined the buddy movie. Goldman’s script follows Butch and Sundance as they rob banks from the Old West all the way to Bolivia, making heroes out of anti-heroes. The movie’s key song Raindrops Keep Fallin’ on My Head is a fun counterpart to the actual plight of our friends. C American Film Institute 27 6 5 C A B A R E T Allied Artists, 1972 PRINCIPAL CAST Liza Minnelli, Michael York, Joel Grey DIRECTOR Bob Fosse PRODUCER Cy Feuer SCREENWRITER Jay Presson Allen “Willkommen” to 1930s Berlin and the Kit Kat Club, where mischievous emcee Grey holds court and American entertainer Sally Bowles, played by Minnelli, lives life in divine decadence as the Nazis rise in power. 6 6 C A B I N I N T H E S K Y MGM, 1943 PRINCIPAL CAST Ethel Waters, Eddie “Rochester” Anderson, Lena Horne, Louis Armstrong, Rex Ingram DIRECTOR Vincente Minnelli PRODUCER Arthur Freed SCREENWRITER Joseph Schrank Minnelli’s first feature brought this Broadway musical to the screen, featuring an all-black cast in a fable of the forces of good and evil fighting over the soul of a man. Waters’ rendering of Happiness Is Just a Thing Called Joe is one of the high points. 6 7 C A M I L L E MGM, 1937 PRINCIPAL CAST Greta Garbo, Robert Taylor, Lionel Barrymore DIRECTOR George Cukor PRODUCER David Lewis SCREENWRITERS Zoe Akins, Frances Marion, James Hilton In a signature role, Garbo plays a romantic and moody Parisian courtesan, intrigued by Taylor in 19th century Paris: “His eyes have made love to me all evening.” Taylor falls hard under Garbo’s spell, forgiving much along the way in their relationship. 6 8 C A R R I E United Artists, 1976 PRINCIPAL CAST Sissy Spacek, Piper Laurie DIRECTOR Brian De Palma PRODUCER Paul Monash SCREENWRITER Lawrence D. Cohen Drawn from Stephen King’s first novel, Spacek plays a virginal misfit who unleashes her powers of telekinesis at school, especially when her “in-crowd” counterparts feel like tormenting her—during the high school prom, of course! 28 American Film Institute 6 9 CASABLANCA Warner Bros., 1942 PRINCIPAL CAST Humphrey Bogart, Ingrid Bergman, Claude Rains, Paul Henreid DIRECTOR Michael Curtiz PRODUCER Hal B. Wallis SCREENWRITERS Julius J. Epstein, Philip G. Epstein, Howard Koch Bogart is jaded idealist Rick Blaine, an American nightclub owner in French Morocco who sacrifices the love of a lifetime to join the world’s fight against the Nazis. “Here’s looking at you, kid.” 7 0 CAT B A L L O U Columbia, 1965 PRINCIPAL CAST Lee Marvin, Jane Fonda DIRECTOR Elliot Silverstein PRODUCER Harold Hecht SCREENWRITERS Walter Newman, Frank Pierson Nat King Cole and Stubby Kaye narrate the musical “ballad” of Ms. Ballou, with the stories of malevolent Tim Strawn and dead-drunk Kid Shelleen, who must save Cat from hanging! 7 1 CAT P E O P L E RKO, 1942 PRINCIPAL CAST Simone Simon, Kent Smith, Tom Conway DIRECTOR Jacques Tourneur PRODUCER Val Lewton SCREENWRITER DeWitt Bodeen In New York a young bride believes she carries a curse; if a man touches her she will turn into a panther and kill her prey—even the man she loves! The gripping low-budget horror movie left a great deal off the screen and much to the imagination of the audience. 7 2 C H A R I O T S O F F I R E Twentieth Century-Fox, 1981 PRINCIPAL CAST Ben Cross, Ian Charleson, Ian Holm DIRECTOR Hugh Hudson PRODUCER David Puttnam SCREENWRITER Colin Welland Based on the true story of two English Olympic competitors in 1924. One is a Scottish missionary who runs for God, the other, a Jew who runs for acknowledgment and acceptance. Vangelis’s groud-breaking electronic soundtrack underscored the runners’ passions. American Film Institute 29 7 3 T H E C H E AT Paramount, 1915 PRINCIPAL CAST Fannie Ward, Sessue Hayakawa, Jack Dean DIRECTOR Cecil B. DeMille PRODUCER Jesse L. Lasky SCREENWRITERS Jeanie McPherson, Hector Turnbull Young wife Edith borrows money from a charity for Wall Street investments. She loses it and borrows again, this time from Tori, her Japanese friend. Upon paying him back, he refuses, claiming he owns her. Terrified, she kills him and her protective husband stands trial. Overcome with guilt, Edith confesses all! 7 4 CHICAGO Miramax, 2002 PRINCIPAL CAST Catherine Zeta-Jones, Renée Zellweger, Richard Gere DIRECTOR Rob Marshall PRODUCER Martin Richards SCREENWRITER Bill Conon A razzle-dazzle song and dance extravaganza based on the Broadway musical. A couple of murderesses get away with the crime and claw their way to celebrity in 1920s Chicgao…and all that jazz! 7 5 C H I N ATOWN Paramount, 1974 PRINCIPAL CAST Jack Nicholson, Faye Dunaway, John Huston DIRECTOR Roman Polanski PRODUCER Robert Evans SCREENWRITER Robert Towne An evocative score is the backdrop for 1930s Los Angeles. Nicholson is a private eye investigating the murder of Dunaway’s husband. But that’s just the tip of Towne’s unforgettable screenplay, where water rights, land deals and corruption clash with the unbearable secrets between a father and daughter on a lonely street in Chinatown. “Forget it, Jake. It’s Chinatown.” 7 6 A C H R I S T M A S S T O RY MGM, 1983 PRINCIPAL CAST Peter Billingsley, Melinda Dillon, Darren McGavin DIRECTOR Bob Clark PRODUCERS Bob Clark, Rene Dupont SCREENWRITERS Jean Shepherd, Leigh Brown, Bob Clark All Ralphie wants for Christmas is a Red Ryder carbine-action BB gun. Clark’s modern-day holiday classic is based on Jean Shepherd’s childhood recollections. “You’ll shoot your eye out, kid.” 30 American Film Institute 7 7 C I N D E R E L L A Disney, 1950 PRINCIPAL CAST Ilene Woods, Verna Felton, William Phipps (voices) DIRECTORS Wilfred Jackson, Hamilton Luske, Clyde Geronimi PRODUCER Walt Disney SCREENWRITERS Bill Peet, Erdman Penner, Ted Sears, Winston Hibler, Homer Brightman, Harry Reeves, Ken Anderson, Joe Rinaldi With the help of some mice, her fairy godmother’s magic and a chorus of Bibbidi, Bobbidi, Boo, Cinderella goes to the ball and meets her Prince Charming in this animated version of the Grimms’ fairy tale. 7 8 C I T I Z E N K A N E RKO, 1941 PRINCIPAL CAST Orson Welles, Joseph Cotten, Dorothy Comingore, Agnes Moorehead DIRECTOR Orson Welles PRODUCER Orson Welles SCREENWRITERS Herman J. Mankiewicz, Orson Welles Welles broke all the rules and invented some new ones with his searing story of a newspaper publisher with an uncanny resemblance to William Randolph Hearst. 7 9 C I T Y L I G H T S United Artists, 1931 PRINCIPAL CAST Charles Chaplin, Virginia Cherrill DIRECTOR Charles Chaplin PRODUCER Charles Chaplin SCREENWRITER Charles Chaplin This silent masterpiece was released three years after the start of talkies. In this Chaplin classic, the Little Tramp falls hopelessly in love with a blind flower seller, risking everything to gain money for her much-needed operation. 8 0 A CLOCKWORK ORANGE Warner Bros., 1971 PRINCIPAL CAST Malcolm McDowell, Patrick Magee, Adrienne Corri, Warren Clarke DIRECTOR Stanley Kubrick PRODUCER Stanley Kubrick SCREENWRITER Stanley Kubrick Alex and his “droogs” terrorize the back alleys of London in this dark satire based on Anthony Burgess’ stunning novel. After his capture and incarceration, an experimental aversion therapy seems to have “cured” Alex for good, but not in the expected manner, as it includes Beethoven’s “gorgeousness and gorgeosity made flesh!” American Film Institute 31 8 1 C L O S E E N C O U N T E R S O F T H E T H I R D K I N D Columbia, 1977 PRINCIPAL CAST Richard Dreyfuss, Teri Garr, Francois Truffaut, Melinda Dillon DIRECTOR Steven Spielberg PRODUCERS Julia Phillips, Michael Phillips SCREENWRITER Steven Spielberg Dreyfuss is a power company technician who becomes obsessed with the possibility of extra-terrestrial life after a brief encounter with them. He shuns career and family in pursuit of something that he knows means something: “This is important.” 8 2 T H E C O L O R P U R P L E Warner Bros., 1985 PRINCIPAL CAST Whoopi Goldberg, Danny Glover, Oprah Winfrey DIRECTOR Steven Spielberg PRODUCERS Steven Spielberg, Kathleen Kennedy, Frank Marshall, Quincy Jones SCREENWRITER Menno Meyjes Alice Walker’s prize-winning novel is brought to the big screen in this story of a woman’s survival and dignity on a farm in the South during the early 20th century. Goldberg and Winfrey made their screen debuts in the film. 8 3 COMING HOME United Artists, 1978 PRINCIPAL CAST Jane Fonda, Jon Voight, Bruce Dern DIRECTOR Hal Ashby PRODUCER Jerome Helman SCREENWRITERS Nancy Dowd, Robert Jones, Waldo Salt This drama is a healing film about the effects of the Vietnam War at home. While Fonda’s soldier husband is on a tour of duty, she finds love with Voight, a bitter paraplegic who has returned from the war. 8 4 T H E C O N V E R S AT I O N Paramount, 1974 PRINCIPAL CAST Gene Hackman, John Cazale, Allen Garfield, Frederic Forrest DIRECTOR Francis Ford Coppola PRODUCER Francis Ford Coppola SCREENWRITER Francis Ford Coppola Paranoia, fear and guilt play over and over in the mind of Hackman, a wire-tapper who begins to question his profession when he learns that three people have died after his expert bugging. 32 American Film Institute 8 5 C O O L H A N D L U K E Warner Bros., 1967 PRINCIPAL CAST Paul Newman, George Kennedy DIRECTOR Stuart Rosenberg PRODUCER Gordon Carroll SCREENWRITERS Donn Pearce, Frank Pierson Set in 1948, Newman is a member of a chain gang who will not bow to authority. Strother Martin’s admonition, “What we’ve got here is failure to communicate,” became a slogan for a generation. 8 6 C R A S H Lions’ Gate, 2005 PRINCIPAL CAST Matt Dillon, Terrence Howard, Ryan Phillippe, Sandra Bullock, Don Cheadle DIRECTOR Paul Haggis PRODUCERS Don Cheadle, Paul Haggis, Mark R. Harris, Robert Moresco, Cathy Schulman, Bob Yari SCREENWRITERS Paul Haggis, Robert Moresco An ensemble film of racially and economically interconnected stories that all begins at a crime scene. The movie flashes back two days earlier to the well-meaning lives of a diverse group of Angelenos. 8 7 THE CROWD MGM, 1928 PRINCIPAL CAST Eleanor Boardman, James Murray DIRECTOR King Vidor SCREENWRITERS King Vidor, Harry Behn, John V.A. Weaver Vidor’s astonishing vision of an ordinary man born at the dawn of a new century, who holds the promise and hope of an extraordinary life. Faced with tragedy, the young man heads for New York City, anticipating something better, but he only becomes a faceless part of the crowd. D 34 American Film Institute 8 8 D A N C E S W I T H W O LV E S Orion, 1990 PRINCIPAL CAST Kevin Costner, Mary McDonnell, Graham Greene DIRECTOR Kevin Costner PRODUCERS Kevin Costner, Jim Wilson SCREENWRITER Michael Blake Costner directs and stars in this lasting vision of the old West, where a disillusioned soldier leaves the Civil War and strikes out to the prairie on his own. After a difficult start, he learns to live, love, and respect the land when the Sioux Indians welcome him into their tribe. 8 9 T H E D AY T H E E A R T H S T O O D S T I L L Twentieth Century-Fox, 1951 PRINCIPAL CAST Michael Rennie, Patricia Neal DIRECTOR Robert Wise PRODUCER Julian Blaustein SCREENWRITER Edmund H. North Science fiction meets social commentary when a space ship lands in the center of Washington, DC. Klaatu warns Earthlings to end all things nuclear, but his arrival causes a panic and he’s shot. Gort, his robot companion, vaporizes the guns. The film broke new ground in visual effects and influenced a generation of filmmakers. 9 0 DAY S O F H E AVEN Paramount, 1978 PRINCIPAL CAST Richard Gere, Brooke Adams, Sam Shepard DIRECTOR Terrence Malick PRODUCERS Bert Schneider, Harold Schneider SCREENWRITER Terrence Malick Gere and Adams are lovers who escape the big city and begin a new life as workers in a Texas wheat field. When a love triangle with the farm owner Shepard is revealed, apocalyptic events bring tragedy to their idyllic world. Nestor Alemendros’ cinematography is a towering achievement. 9 1 DAY S O F W I N E A N D R O S E S Warner Bros., 1962 PRINCIPAL CAST Jack Lemmon, Lee Remick DIRECTOR Blake Edwards PRODUCER Martin Manulis SCREENWRITER J.P. Miller Lemmon drags wife Remick with him into the pit of alcoholism. Originally a television drama, the film’s dark story is memorable for its unblinking look behind the closed doors of an everyday couple. American Film Institute 35 9 2 D E A D P O E T S S O C I E T Y Touchstone, 1989 PRINCIPAL CAST Robin Williams, Ethan Hawke DIRECTOR Peter Weir PRODUCERS Steven Haft, Tony Thomas, Paul Junger Witt SCREENWRITER Tom Schulman Williams is a passionate 1950s prep school teacher who inspires his students to “seize the day.” His unorthodox methods of teaching are blamed when one young man commits suicide. 9 3 T H E D E E R H U N T E R Universal, 1978 PRINCIPAL CAST Robert De Niro, Christopher Walken, Meryl Streep DIRECTOR Michael Cimino PRODUCERS Michael Cimino, Michael Deeley, John Peverall, Barry Spikings SCREENWRITERS Michael Cimino, Louis Garfinkle, Quinn K. Redeker, Deric Washburn The effects of the Vietnam war on a tightly knit community challenge the bonds of friendship and love. A game of Russian Roulette, first played in a POW camp, temporarily reunites De Niro with his estranged friend Walken in a back alley of Saigon. 9 4 T H E D E F I A N T O N E S United Artists, 1958 PRINCIPAL CAST Sidney Poitier, Tony Curtis, Theodore Bikel, Cara Williams DIRECTOR Stanley Kramer PRODUCER Stanley Kramer SCREENWRITERS Harold Jacob Smith, Nedrick Young Kramer’s ground-breaking film centered on two embittered, escaped convicts, one white, the other black, who are shackled together. Each learns that their survival depends on trust and mutual respect. 9 5 D E L I V E R A N C E Warner Bros., 1972 PRINCIPAL CAST Jon Voight, Burt Reynolds DIRECTOR John Boorman PRODUCER John Boorman SCREENWRITERS James Dickey Four Atlanta businessmen discover hidden perils in the backwoods when they go for a weekend canoe ride down a river that will soon be flooded by a dam. Dueling Banjos sets an ironic tone for the sinister happenings during the remainder of the film. 36 American Film Institute 9 6 D E S T RY R I D E S A G A I N Universal, 1939 PRINCIPAL CAST Marlene Dietrich, James Stewart DIRECTOR George Marshall PRODUCERS Joe Pasternak, Islin Auster SCREENWRITERS Felix Jackson, Gertrude Purcell, Henry Myers In a western town, peace-loving sheriff Stewart combats lawlessness with homilies along with some help from saloon singer Dietrich, who rallies the town’s womenfolk to take up their rolling pins in his support. The film’s See What the Boys in the Back Room Will Have became Dietrich’s signature songs. 9 7 T H E D I A RY O F A N N E F R A N K Twentieth Century-Fox, 1959 PRINCIPAL CAST Millie Perkins, Shelley Winters, Ed Wynn DIRECTOR George Stevens PRODUCER George Stevens SCREENWRITERS Frances Goodrich, Albert Hackett Based on the diary of a young girl, the film recounts the lives of a small group of Dutch Jews who hide in an attic to avoid capture by the Nazis. Despite the inevitable doom, the story is a touching and hopeful look at life through the eyes of an adolescent. 9 8 D I E H A R D Twentieth Century-Fox, 1988 PRINCIPAL CAST Bruce Willis, Alan Rickman, Bonnie Bedelia DIRECTOR John McTiernan PRODUCERS Joel Silver, Lawrence Gordon SCREENWRITERS Jeb Stuart, Steven E. de Souza Willis, a New York City cop who is hoping to reconcile with his estranged wife, is an unexpected guest at a Los Angeles high-rise office party when terrorists take over. Rickman’s intellectual madman matches wits with Willis’ scrappy cop in this stunt spectacular. 9 9 D I RT Y H A R RY Warner Bros., 1971 PRINCIPAL CAST Clint Eastwood DIRECTOR Don Siegel PRODUCER Don Siegel SCREENWRITERS Dean Riesner, Harry Julian Fink, Rita M. Fink Eastwood is Harry Callahan, a policeman willing to go up against the code and invent his own form of justice to capture a brutal killer. “You’ve got to ask yourself one question: ‘Do I feel lucky?’Well, do ya, punk?” American Film Institute 37 1 0 0 D O T H E R I G H T T H I N G Universal, 1989 PRINCIPAL CAST Danny Aiello, Spike Lee, John Turturro DIRECTOR Spike Lee PRODUCERS Spike Lee, Monty Ross SCREENWRITER Spike Lee It’s a sweltering summer day in the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn, and Sal’s Famous Pizzeria becomes a lightning rod for racial tensions. The muchdiscussed close to the film presents different views on the conflict with quotes from Martin Luther King, Jr., and Malcolm X. 1 0 1 D O C T O R Z H I VAGO MGM, 1965 PRINCIPAL CAST Omar Sharif, Julie Christie, Tom Courtenay, Rod Steiger DIRECTOR David Lean PRODUCER Carlo Ponti SCREENWRITER Robert Bolt Lean’s sweeping saga set against the Russian Revolution is the story of a young doctor/poet torn between two women. But it is his love for Lara that propels the film, memorable for its haunting music score and stunning cinematography. Lean collaborated with cinematographer Freddie Young for the second time. 1 0 2 DODSWORT H United Artists, 1936 PRINCIPAL CAST Walter Huston, Ruth Chatterton, Paul Lukas, Mary Astor DIRECTOR William Wyler PRODUCER Samuel Goldwyn SCREENWRITER Sidney Howard Sinclair Lewis’ novel was the basis for this story of a retired automobile tycoon whose much younger, social-climbing wife drags him on an extended European vacation. While she cavorts with younger men, he eventually finds happiness with a down-to-earth American expatriate. 1 0 3 DOG DAY A F T E R N O O N Warner Bros., 1975 PRINCIPAL CAST Al Pacino, Chris Sarandon DIRECTOR Sidney Lumet PRODUCERS Martin Bregman, Martin Elfand SCREENWRITER Frank Pierson Based on a real incident in lower Manhattan, Pacino holds bank customers hostage in what he thinks will be a simple heist to get money for his lover’s sex change operation, but it turns into a major police and media incident. “Attica! Attica!” 38 American Film Institute 1 0 4 D O U B L E I N D E M N I T Y Paramount, 1944 PRINCIPAL CAST Barbara Stanwyck, Fred MacMurray, Edward G. Robinson DIRECTOR Billy Wilder PRODUCER Joseph Sistrom SCREENWRITERS Billy Wilder, Raymond Chandler Wilder’s searing adaptation of James M. Cain’s novel of duplicity and murder gave “nice guy” MacMurray a shot at film noir. He is the insurance agent seduced by Stanwyck into murdering her husband so that she can file an accident claim. 1 0 5 D R . S T R A N G E L O V E O R : H O W I L E A R N E D T O S T O P W O R RY I N G A N D L O V E T H E B O M B Columbia, 1964 PRINCIPAL CAST Peter Sellers, George C. Scott DIRECTOR Stanley Kubrick PRODUCER Stanley Kubrick SCREENWRITERS Peter George, Stanley Kubrick, Terry Southern Kubrick’s black comedy focuses on an American president, played by Sellers in one of his three roles, who must contend with a Soviet nuclear attack on the United States and his own maniacal staff, including Scott’s memorable General Turgidson. “Gentlemen, you can’t fight in here! This is the War Room.” 1 0 6 D R I V I N G M I S S D A I S Y Warner Bros., 1989 PRINCIPAL CAST Jessica Tandy, Morgan Freeman, Dan Aykroyd DIRECTOR Bruce Beresford PRODUCERS Lili Fini Zanuck, Richard D. Zanuck SCREENWRITER Alfred Uhry Tandy is a stubborn old Southern woman, and Freeman is her resilient chauffeur. The film chronicles their 25 years together as differences dissolve, friendship grows and respect blossoms. Uhry adapted the film from his Pulitzer-Prize winning play. 1 0 7 D U C K S O U P Paramount, 1933 PRINCIPAL CAST Groucho, Harpo, Chico, Zeppo Marx DIRECTOR Leo McCarey PRODUCER Herman J. Mankiewicz SCREENWRITERS Bert Kalmar, Harry Ruby The Brothers Marx defend Freedonia, with their own brand of anarchy and satire in this antiwar comedy that’s a combination of Gilbert and Sullivan and vaudeville. Groucho and Harpo had perfected their “mirror gag” on stage and brought it to Depression-era audiences sorely in need of a laugh. EF 40 American Film Institute 1 0 8 E . T. T H E E X T R A - T E R R E S T R I A L Universal, 1982 PRINCIPAL CAST Henry Thomas, Drew Barrymore DIRECTOR Steven Spielberg PRODUCERS Kathleen Kennedy, Steven Spielberg SCREENWRITER Melissa Mathison Elliot is a young boy from a broken home who discovers an extra-terrestrial creature that has been stranded on earth—light years from home. Together they form a universal friendship, and Elliot helps E.T. “phone home.” 1 0 9 E A S Y R I D E R Columbia, 1969 PRINCIPAL CAST Dennis Hopper, Peter Fonda, Jack Nicholson DIRECTOR Dennis Hopper PRODUCER Peter Fonda SCREENWRITERS Peter Fonda, Dennis Hopper, Terry Southern Fonda and Hopper, better known as Captain America and Wyatt, hit the road on their choppers to find an America bitterly divided by the Vietnam war. On the way they pick up Nicholson, who gets turned on and tuned in. The original independent film was an anthem for the 1960s’ cultural dialogue on freedom, individualism and patriotism. 1 1 0 T H E E M P I R E S T R I K E S B A C K Twentieth Century-Fox, 1980 PRINCIPAL CAST Mark Hamill, Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher DIRECTOR Irving Kershner PRODUCER Gary Kurtz SCREENWRITERS Leigh Brackett, Lawrence Kasdan The further adventures of Luke Skywalker, Princess Leia, and Han Solo in their battle against the dark side of the force. Yoda, a Jedi master, makes his first appearance, and Luke discovers the true identity of his father. 1 1 1 T H E E N G L I S H PAT I E N T Miramax, 1996 PRINCIPAL CAST Ralph Fiennes, Juliette Binoche, Kristen Scott Thomas DIRECTOR Anthony Minghella PRODUCER Saul Zaentz SCREENWRITER Anthony Minghella Fiennes is a horribly burned man who lays dying. Binoche is his nurse, a woman in mourning for her lost love, who listens as he tells of his love affair with an English aristocrat whose life he tried to save in war-torn North Africa. American Film Institute 41 1 1 2 E R I N B R O C K O V I C H Universal, 2000 PRINCIPAL CAST Julia Roberts, Albert Finney DIRECTOR Steven Soderbergh PRODUCERS Danny DeVito, Michael Shamberg, Stacey Sher SCREENWRITER Susannah Grant Roberts sizzles as a sassy single mom who brings a California power company to its knees, in this true story. “By the way, we had that water brought in specially for you folks. Came from a well in Hinkley.” 1 1 3 E T E R N A L S U N S H I N E O F T H E S P O T L E S S M I N D Focus, 2004 PRINCIPAL CAST Jim Carrey, Kate Winslet, Elijah Wood, Mark Ruffalo, Tom Wilkinson, Kirsten Dunst DIRECTOR Michel Gondry PRODUCERS Anthony Bregman, Steve Golin SCREENWRITER Charlie Kaufman Kaufman’s script asks, “What if you could have your memories surgically removed?” Carrey tries it with the memories he shares with ex-girlfriend Winslet, but he soon has regrets and tries to save those cherished moments with her before they’re gone forever. 1 1 4 T H E E X O R C I S T Warner Bros., 1973 PRINCIPAL CAST Ellen Burstyn, Linda Blair, Max von Sydow, Jason Miller DIRECTOR William Friedkin PRODUCER William Peter Blatty SCREENWRITER William Peter Blatty Blain is Regan, a young girl possessed by Satan. Her mother, Burstyn, summons the help of a priest who tries to save the girl while confronting his own private demons. A landmark film that spawned a new generation of horror movies. 1 1 5 A FA C E I N T H E C R O W D Warner Bros., 1957 PRINCIPAL CAST Andy Griffith, Patricia Neal, Walter Matthau DIRECTOR Elia Kazan PRODUCER Elia Kazan SCREENWRITER Budd Schulberg This is Kazan’s scathing portrait of an Arkansas hobo who becomes a media sensation. Drunk with success and influence, the compassionate young TV star is the poster boy for the corruption of power. Griffith’s film debut. 42 American Film Institute 1 1 6 FANTA S I A Disney, 1940 DIRECTORS Joe Grant, Dick Huemer PRODUCER Walt Disney Disney’s groundbreaking union of classical music and animated images is a visual feast for young and old. Mickey Mouse as the Sorcerer’s Apprentice is one of film history’s most indelible icons. 1 1 7 FARGO Gramercy, 1996 PRINCIPAL CAST Frances McDormand, William H. Macy DIRECTOR Joel Coen PRODUCER Ethan Coen SCREENWRITERS Ethan Coen, Joel Coen A frigid Minnesota landscape is the setting for a series of gruesome murders intertwined with a botched kidnapping. McDormand is Marge, the pregnant police officer who reconstructs the crime with a style all her own. “You betcha.” 1 1 8 FA S T T I M E S AT R I D G E M O N T H I G H Universal, 1982 PRINCIPAL CAST Sean Penn, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Judge Reinhold DIRECTOR Amy Heckerling PRODUCERS Art Linson, Irving Azoff SCREENWRITER Cameron Crowe Penn leads an ensemble of newcomers in this sharp and painfully funny look at what’s on the mind of teenagers in a southern California high school—peer pressure, sex and the mall. “Hey, Bud, let’s party!” 1 1 9 FATA L AT T R A C T I O N Paramount, 1987 PRINCIPAL CAST Michael Douglas, Glenn Close, Anne Archer DIRECTOR Adrian Lyne PRODUCERS Stanley R. Jaffe, Sherry Lansing SCREENWRITER James Dearden Douglas is a married man who has a brief but torrid affair with an obsessive woman, played by Close. Her brutal revenge and ultimate demise had America discussing adultery and assigning blame. American Film Institute 43 1 2 0 F E R R I S B U E L L E R ’ S D AY O F F Paramount, 1986 PRINCIPAL CAST Matthew Broderick, Alan Ruck, Mia Sara DIRECTOR John Hughes PRODUCERS John Hughes, Tom Jacobson SCREENWRITER John Hughes Enlisting his best friends, the ultimate high school slacker borrows a Ferrari and roars into Chicago for a day of culture, sports and active parade participation. “Life moves pretty fast. If you don’t stop and look around once in awhile, you could miss it.” 1 2 1 F I E L D O F D R E A M S Universal, 1989 PRINCIPAL CAST Kevin Costner, James Earl Jones, Amy Madigan DIRECTOR Phil Alden Robinson PRODUCERS Charles Gordon, Lawrence Gordon SCREENWRITER Phil Alden Robinson A disembodied voice keeps telling an Iowa farmer to build a baseball diamond in the middle of his cornfield. He does—and miracles, faith, and family arrive in the form of “Shoeless” Joe Jackson and the 1919 White Sox. “If you build it, he will come.” 1 2 2 F I G H T C L U B Twentieth Century-Fox, 1999 PRINCIPAL CAST Edward Norton, Brad Pitt, Helena Bonham Carter DIRECTOR David Fincher PRODUCERS Ross Grayson Bell, Cean Chaffin, Art Linson SCREENWRITER Jim Uhls Tired of just existing, a nameless worker hooks up with a charismatic anarchist to form an underground organization that attracts men desperate to feel something real. “First rule of Fight Club: You do not talk about Fight Club.” 1 2 3 F I N D I N G N E M O Disney/Pixar, 2003 PRINCIPAL CAST Albert Brooks, Ellen DeGeneres, Alexander Gould, Willem Dafoe (voices) DIRECTOR Andrew Stanton PRODUCER Graham Walters SCREENWRITERS Andrew Stanton, Bob Peterson, David Reynolds CGI animation goes underwater to find Nemo, the much loved fish and only child of Marlin. Captured and living in a dentist’s salt-water tank, Nemo struggles to get home while his dad sets out to find him. 44 American Film Institute 1 2 4 F I V E E A S Y P I E C E S Columbia, 1970 PRINCIPAL CAST Jack Nicholson, Karen Black DIRECTOR Bob Rafelson PRODUCERS Bob Rafelson, Richard Wechsler SCREENWRITERS Adrien Joyce, Bob Rafelson Nicholson abandons a promising musical career for life as a blue-collar worker. He comes to terms with this life choice when he visits his ailing father, and eventually abandons everyone to hop a truck to Alaska. Nicholson’s alienation and rebellion hit just the right note with the counter-culture of the 1960s especially when he orders “plain toast.” 1 2 5 F O R C E O F E V I L MGM, 1948 PRINCIPAL CAST John Garfield, Thomas Gomez DIRECTOR Abraham Polonsky PRODUCER Bob Roberts SCREENWRITERS Abraham Polonsky, Ira Wolfert In this forceful, expressionist film, Garfield is on the wrong side of the law as a corrupt mob attorney. But this politically subversive film noir really hinges on two brothers divided by the racketeering and the numbers game. “All that Cain did to Abel was murder him.” 1 2 6 F O R R E S T G U M P Paramount, 1994 PRINCIPAL CAST Tom Hanks, Robin Wright, Gary Sinise, Sally Field DIRECTOR Robert Zemeckis PRODUCERS Wendy Finerman, Steve Starkey, Steve Tisch SCREENWRITER Eric Roth Forrest will tell his story to anyone who will listen. Mentally challenged, he seems to be at the right place at the right time meeting everyone from JFK to Elvis to John Lennon and doesn’t understand his good fortune. Breakthroughs in technology allowed Zemekis to digitally alter history to fit the world of Forrest Gump. 1 2 7 4 2 N D S T R E E T Warner Bros., 1933 PRINCIPAL CAST Warner Baxter, Bebe Daniels, Ruby Keeler, Dick Powell DIRECTOR Lloyd Bacon PRODUCERS Hal B. Wallis, Darryl F. Zanuck SCREENWRITERS Rian James, James Seymour This quintessential backstage musical stars Keeler as the girl whose career begins when she stands in for the leading lady (“You’re going out there a youngster, but you’ve got to come back a star!”), and saves the show from closing. It was the first film to feature choreographer Busby Berkeley’s dizzying overhead shots of dancers in kaleidoscopic patterns. American Film Institute 45 1 2 8 T H E F O U R H O R S E M E N O F T H E A P O C A LY P S E Metro, 1921 PRINCIPAL CAST Rudolph Valentino, Alice Terry DIRECTOR Rex Ingram SCREENWRITER June Mathis Made famous by Valentino’s sensual and seductive tango in an Argentine café, this film is really the story of an adulterous love affair in World War I France. Valentino’s vision of the Four Horsemen forces him to join the army and sacrifice his life on the battlefield. 1 2 9 F R A N K E N S T E I N Universal, 1931 PRINCIPAL CAST Boris Karloff, Colin Clive DIRECTOR James Whale PRODUCER Carl Laemmle, Jr. SCREENWRITERS Garrett Fort, Francis Edward Faragoh Dr. Frankenstein is obsessed with creating a man from parts of dead people. “It’s alive. It’s alive.” But the creature’s grotesque looks and strange manner cause him to be mistaken for a monster. Whale’s movie ushered in a new era of horror films, and Karloff was stuck with the image of the monster for the rest of his career. 1 3 0 F R E A K S MGM, 1932 PRINCIPAL CAST Wallace Ford, Leila Hyams, Olga Baclanova DIRECTOR Tod Browning SCREENWRITERS Willis Goldbeck, Leon Gordon, Edgar Allan Woolf, Al Boasberg Browning’s cult horror film depicts life in a circus where a beautiful but duplicitous high-wire artist marries a fabulously rich midget and plans to kill him. This highly unusual film is populated with real life sideshow characters—a man with no arms or legs, conjoined twins, and more. 1 3 1 T H E F R E N C H C O N N E C T I O N Twentieth Century-Fox, 1971 PRINCIPAL CAST Gene Hackman, Roy Scheider, Fernando Rey DIRECTOR William Friedkin PRODUCER Philip D’Antoni SCREENWRITER Ernest Tidyman Hackman’s Popeye Doyle is based on a NYC cop who busted a heroin-smuggling operation with a French connection. His character is in sharp contrast with that of his nemesis, the elegant and dapper Alain Charnier. They play a game of cat and mouse all over the Big Apple, culminating in one of the most gripping car chases on film. 46 American Film Institute 1 3 2 T H E F R E S H M A N Pathé, 1925 PRINCIPAL CAST Harold Lloyd, Jobyna Ralston, Brooks Benedict DIRECTOR Sam Taylor, Fred Newmeyer PRODUCER Harold Lloyd SCREENWRITERS Sam Taylor, John Grey, Ted Wilde, Tim Wheelan Harold “Speedy” Lamb wants to be a “Big Man on Campus.” His attempts fall short, until a hilarious, freewheeling football game proves that even the most inept of us can become a hero. 1 3 3 F R O M H E R E T O E T E R N I T Y Columbia, 1953 PRINCIPAL CAST Burt Lancaster, Montgomery Clift, Deborah Kerr, Donna Reed, Frank Sinatra DIRECTOR Fred Zinnemann PRODUCER Buddy Adler SCREENWRITER Daniel Taradash The image of waves crashing over the passionately embracing Kerr and Lancaster is one of the most sensual ever filmed, in this story of Army life in Honolulu on the eve of the Pearl Harbor attack. The US’ sudden involvement in World War II interrupts the two love affairs in the film. 1 3 4 F U N N Y G I R L Columbia, 1968 PRINCIPAL CAST Barbra Streisand, Omar Sharif DIRECTOR William Wyler PRODUCER Ray Stark SCREENWRITER Isobel Lennart Streisand, in her film debut, is Fanny Brice, legendary vaudeville comedienne whose career blossoms as her personal life falls apart. Adapted from the hit Broadway musical, Streisand wowed audiences as she chased after Nicky Arnstein singing Don’t Rain on My Parade and lamented his loss with Brice’s iconic My Man. 1 3 5 F U RY MGM, 1936 PRINCIPAL CAST Sylvia Sidney, Spencer Tracy DIRECTOR Fritz Lang PRODUCER Joseph L. Mankiewicz SCREENWRITERS Bartlett Cormack, Norman Krasna, Fritz Lang A good, honorable man is arrested for kidnapping. Convinced of his guilt, a lynch mob sets fire to the jail. He escapes and hides out, planning his revenge—on the mob who “murdered” him. G 48 American Film Institute 1 3 6 GANDHI Columbia, 1982 PRINCIPAL CAST Ben Kingsley, John Mills, Martin Sheen, Edward Fox, Candice Bergen DIRECTOR Richard Attenborough PRODUCER Richard Attenborough SCREENWRITER John Briley Kingsley portrays Mahatma Gandhi—the man who taught the world about passive resistance and brought the British Empire to its knees. Lavishly photographed down to the last epic detail, Attenborough recreated Gandhi’s staggering funeral just as it had been in 1948. 1 3 7 T H E G E N E R A L United Artists, 1927 PRINCIPAL CAST Buster Keaton, Marion Mack DIRECTORS Clyde Bruckman, Buster Keaton SCREENWRITERS Buster Keaton, Clyde Bruckman Keaton’s must retrieve his train from Union soldiers during the Civil War. What he doesn’t know is that his girlfriend Annabelle is aboard. It’s a race against time, but Keaton saves the day, ending in one of the silent era’s most iconic images, Keaton seated on the moving wheels of The General. 1 3 8 G E N T L E M A N ’ S A G R E E M E N T Twentieth Century-Fox, 1947 PRINCIPAL CAST Gregory Peck, Dorothy McGuire, Celeste Holm DIRECTOR Elia Kazan PRODUCER Darryl F. Zanuck SCREENWRITER Moss Hart In this biting expose of anti-Semitism, magazine writer Peck poses as a Jew in order to investigate inequalities in American society. 1 3 9 G E N T L E M E N P R E F E R B L O N D E S Twentieth Century-Fox, 1953 PRINCIPAL CAST Jane Russell, Marilyn Monroe DIRECTOR Howard Hawks PRODUCER Sol C. Siegel SCREENWRITER Charles Lederer Golddigger Monroe knows that diamonds are a girl’s best friend as she and her sardonic pal Russell look for husbands aboard a trans-Atlantic cruise. American Film Institute 49 1 4 0 G H O S T B U S T E R S Columbia, 1984 PRINCIPAL CAST Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, Sigourney Weaver, Harold Ramis DIRECTOR Ivan Reitman PRODUCER Ivan Reitman SCREENWRITERS Dan Aykroyd, Harold Ramis As paranormal happenings strike a Big Apple apartment, three screwball scientists take on Satan, poltergeists, and every other apparition in the known and unknown world. “He slimed me!” 1 4 1 G I A N T Warner Bros., 1956 PRINCIPAL CAST Elizabeth Taylor, Rock Hudson, James Dean DIRECTOR George Stevens PRODUCERS George Stevens, Henry Ginsberg SCREENWRITERS Fred Guiol, Ivan Moffat This sprawling epic is based on the celebrated Edna Ferber novel about two generations of an American ranching family, who clash over money, property and racism in Texas. Dean was killed just prior to the last day of shooting. 1 4 2 G I G I MGM, 1958 PRINCIPAL CAST Leslie Caron, Maurice Chevalier, Louis Jourdan DIRECTOR Vincente Minnelli PRODUCER Arthur Freed SCREENWRITER Alan Jay Lerner Minnelli’s stylish, elegant and lavish musical was based on Colette’s 19th century novel. Caron is a young Parisian girl brought up to become a courtesan. When wealthy bon vivant Jourdan falls in love with her, their plans change. Chevalier singing Thank Heaven for Little Girls and I Remember It Well adds to the charm. 1 4 3 G I L D A Columbia, 1946 PRINCIPAL CAST Rita Hayworth, Glenn Ford, George Macready DIRECTOR Charles Vidor PRODUCER Virginia Van Upp SCREENWRITERS E.A. Ellington, Joe Eisenger, Marion Parsonnet The ravishing Hayworth is unforgettable in this film-noir tale of international intrigue in South America. Hayworth proves once again that sex sells as she hypnotizes Ford with her performance of Put the Blame on Mame. 50 American Film Institute 1 4 4 G L A D I AT O R DreamWorks, 2000 PRINCIPAL CAST Russell Crowe, Joaquin Phoenix DIRECTOR Ridley Scott PRODUCERS David H. Franzoni, Branko Lustig, Douglas Wick SCREENWRITERS David H. Franzoni, John Logan, William Nicholson General Maximus is selected to succeed Emperor Marcus Aurelius, but the Emperor’s son Commodus has other plans. With his family murdered, enslaved Maximus soon becomes a champion gladiator and gets to face his betrayer in the Colosseum of ancient Rome. 1 4 5 GLORY TriStar, 1989 PRINCIPAL CAST Matthew Broderick, Denzel Washington, Morgan Freeman DIRECTOR Edward Zwick PRODUCER Freddie Fields SCREENWRITER Kevin Jarre The little-known true story of the US Army’s first all-black regiment is based on the letters of Civil War officer Colonel Robert Shaw. Forced to deal with racism on all fronts, Shaw and his rag-tag unit march into history as heroes. 1 4 6 T H E G O D FAT H E R Paramount, 1972 PRINCIPAL CAST Marlon Brando, Al Pacino, James Caan DIRECTOR Francis Ford Coppola PRODUCER Albert S. Ruddy SCREENWRITERS Francis Ford Coppola, Mario Puzo Brando is Don Vito Corleone, the sympathetic head of a New York crime family, whose business it is to make offers people can’t refuse. His son Michael’s true nature is revealed at the end, when a christening is intercut with a bloodbath that cements his new position within the family. 1 4 7 T H E G O D FAT H E R PART I I Paramount, 1974 PRINCIPAL CAST Al Pacino, Robert De Niro, Diane Keaton, Talia Shire DIRECTOR Francis Ford Coppola PRODUCER Francis Ford Coppola SCREENWRITERS Francis Ford Coppola, Mario Puzo This sequel to THE GODFATHER shows us the world of the Corleones before and after the events shown in the first film, with new godfather Michael struggling to bring his family into the modern age. In the film’s extended flashback sequences, De Niro is the young Vito as he gains power in the New York City mafia. American Film Institute 51 1 4 8 GOING MY WAY Paramount, 1944 PRINCIPAL CAST Bing Crosby, Barry Fitzgerald DIRECTOR Leo McCarey PRODUCER B.G. DeSylva SCREENWRITERS Frank Butler, Frank Cavett, Leo McCarey Crosby’s progressive young Father O’Malley clashes with Fitzgerald’s old-fashioned priest in this sentimental, often comic film that features the delightful song Swingin’ on a Star. 1 4 9 T H E G O L D R U S H United Artists, 1925 PRINCIPAL CAST Charles Chaplin, Mack Swain DIRECTOR Charles Chaplin PRODUCER Charles Chaplin SCREENWRITER Charles Chaplin In one of his most famous films, lone Alaskan prospector Chaplin attempts to stave off hunger by dining on his shoe, much to the consternation of cabin mate Swain, who imagines that Charlie is a giant chicken. 1 5 0 G O L D F I N G E R United Artists, 1964 PRINCIPAL CAST Sean Connery, Gert Frobe, Honor Blackman DIRECTOR Guy Hamilton PRODUCERS Harry Saltzman, Albert R. Broccoli SCREENWRITERS Richard Maibaum, Paul Dehn The third film in the James Bond series finds Connery trying to stop Auric Goldfinger, “the man with the Midas touch,” from contaminating the United States’ gold supply in Fort Knox. In Bond’s way, however, are the villains Oddjob and Pussy Galore. 1 5 1 G O N E W I T H T H E W I N D MGM, 1939 PRINCIPAL CAST Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh, Leslie Howard, Olivia de Havilland DIRECTOR Victor Fleming PRODUCER David O. Selznick SCREENWRITER Sidney Howard Selznick poured his heart and soul into the filming of Margaret Mitchell’s bestseller about the Old South, the Civil War and Reconstruction. The burning of Atlanta was a high-water mark for screen excitement, as well as Rhett Butler’s delivery of Hollywood’s first four-letter word, “Frankly my dear, I don’t give a damn!” 52 American Film Institute 1 5 2 GOOD NIGHT, A N D G O O D L U C K . Warner Bros., 2005 PRINCIPAL CAST David Strathairn, Robert Downey, Jr., George Clooney, Frank Langella DIRECTOR George Clooney PRODUCER Grant Heslov SCREENWRITERS George Clooney, Grant Heslov Clooney directed this stylish black-and-white biopic of legendary Edward R. Murrow and his CBS news team, during their struggle with red-baiting Senator Joseph McCarthy during the communist scare of the 1950s. The film title comes from Murrow’s signature last words on every broadcast. 1 5 3 G O O D W I L L H U N T I N G Miramax, 1997 PRINCIPAL CAST Matt Damon, Ben Affleck, Robin Williams, Stellan Skarsgård, Minnie Driver DIRECTOR Gus Van Sant PRODUCER Lawrence Bender SCREENWRITERS Matt Damon, Ben Affleck A math genius is afraid to turn his back on his best friend and the south Boston neighborhood he loves. But he also has to work through his troubled childhood and run-ins with the law. A psychiatrist with a difficult past must help Will get beyond what was and onto what is. 1 5 4 G O O D B Y E , M R . C H I P S MGM, 1939 PRINCIPAL CAST Robert Donat, Greer Garson DIRECTOR Sam Wood PRODUCER Victor Saville SCREENWRITERS R.C. Sherriff, Claudine West, Eric Maschwitz James Hilton’s story of a beloved classics teacher parallels life at an English public school with changing social mores from the late 19th century through the mid-1930s. 1 5 5 G O O D F E L L A S Warner Bros., 1990 PRINCIPAL CAST Ray Liotta, Robert De Niro, Joe Pesci DIRECTOR Martin Scorsese PRODUCER Irwin Winkler SCREENWRITERS Nicholas Pileggi, Martin Scorsese This gangster film for modern day is based on the true story of Henry Hill, played by Liotta, who dreamed as a kid of becoming a member of the glamorous mob who ran his New York City neighborhood. De Niro and Pesci are members of the family he ascends to, until he breaks the code and eventually falls from grace. American Film Institute 53 1 5 6 T H E G R A D U AT E Embassy, 1967 PRINCIPAL CAST Dustin Hoffman, Anne Bancroft, Katharine Ross DIRECTOR Mike Nichols PRODUCER Lawrence Turman SCREENWRITERS Buck Henry, Calder Willingham Benjamin Braddock is confused and alienated, stuck in a fishbowl like so many of his peers. It only gets worse when he sinks into an affair with Mrs. Robinson and falls in love with her daughter, Elaine. If only he had followed the advice of his father’s friend, and gone into “Plastics.” Simon and Garfunkel’s songs spoke to a whole new generation of filmgoers. 1 5 7 G R A N D H O T E L MGM, 1932 PRINCIPAL CAST Greta Garbo, John Barrymore, Joan Crawford DIRECTOR Edmund Goulding PRODUCER Paul Bern SCREENWRITER William A. Drake “People come. People go. Nothing ever happens.” But at the Grand Hotel in Berlin the lives of the rich and famous intersect with the poor and the infamous. Everyone is facing some sort of crisis in this classic narrative of multiple stories, but the film is best remembered for Garbo’s unforgettable lament, “I vant to be alone.” 1 5 8 T H E G R A P E S O F W R AT H Twentieth Century-Fox, 1940 PRINCIPAL CAST Henry Fonda, Jane Darwell, John Carradine DIRECTOR John Ford PRODUCER Nunnally Johnson SCREENWRITER Nunnally Johnson This moving Depression-era social drama based on John Steinbeck’s novel follows the hopeful migration of workers from the Oklahoma dust bowl through their subsequent disillusionment upon reaching California. Fonda’s haunting last words to his mother, “Wherever there’s a fight, so hungry people can eat, I’ll be there,” embody his family’s enduring spirit. 1 5 9 G R E A S E Paramount, 1978 PRINCIPAL CAST John Travolta, Olivia Newton-John, Stockard Channing DIRECTOR Randal Kleiser PRODUCERS Robert Stigwood, Allan Carr SCREENWRITERS Bronte Woodward, Allan Carr A love poem to the 1950s, this nostalgic musical follows the exploits of seniors at Rydell High—particularly Newton-John’s Sandy, an innocent teenager who falls in love with Travolta’s Danny, a greaser from the wrong side of the tracks. Based on the Broadway musical, the film’s songs include Hopelessly Devoted to You and Summer Nights. 54 American Film Institute 1 6 0 T H E G R E AT D I C TAT O R United Artists, 1940 PRINCIPAL CAST Charles Chaplin, Paulette Goddard, Jack Oakie DIRECTOR Charles Chaplin PRODUCER Charles Chaplin SCREENWRITER Charles Chaplin Chaplin’s first talking picture was a political satire on Nazi Germany. Chaplin plays a Jewish barber suffering from amnesia, who is mistaken for Adenoid Hynkel, also played by Chaplin. The mesmerizing ballet-with-globe is one of American film’s iconic images. 1 6 1 T H E G R E AT E S C A P E United Artists, 1963 PRINCIPAL CAST Steve McQueen, James Garner, Richard Attenborough, Donald Pleasence, Charles Bronson, James Coburn DIRECTOR John Sturges PRODUCER John Sturges SCREENWRITERS James Clavell, W. R. Burnett Allied POWs locked up in an “escape-proof” German prison camp do the unthinkable and dig a tunnel to freedom. Now they must outwit the citizenry in order to avoid capture. McQueen’s “Cooler King” and his motorcycle ride across the countryside highlight this film. 1 6 2 G R E E D MGM, 1925 PRINCIPAL CAST Gibson Gowland, ZaSu Pitts, Jean Hersholt DIRECTOR Erich von Stroheim SCREENWRITERS Erich von Stroheim, June Mathis Though the film was released in a drastically cut form, von Stroheim’s stylized portrait of San Francisco dentist McTeague’s obsession with his wife’s lottery winnings is an intense, stark analysis of the destructive lure of money. 1 6 3 GROUNDHOG DAY Columbia, 1993 PRINCIPAL CAST Bill Murray, Andie MacDowell, Chris Elliott DIRECTOR Harold Ramis PRODUCERS Trevor Albert, Harold Ramis SCREENWRITERS Danny Rubin, Harold Ramis A self-absorbed, grouchy Pittsburgh weatherman keeps waking up to the same day over and over again. Until he turns over a new leaf and finds true love, he’s doomed to spend his days reporting on Punxsutawney Phil’s shadow. “Well, what if there is no tomorrow? There wasn’t one today.” American Film Institute 55 1 6 4 G U E S S W H O ’ S C O M I N G T O D I N N E R Columbia, 1967 PRINCIPAL CAST Spencer Tracy, Katharine Hepburn, Sidney Poitier, Katharine Houghton DIRECTOR Stanley Kramer PRODUCER Stanley Kramer SCREENWRITER William Rose Tracy and Hepburn, in their final film pairing, are forced to come to terms with their progressive views, when their daughter wants to marry an African-American doctor. Poitier and Houghton, Hepburn’s real life niece, broke some barriers in a movie that sparked controversy and asked many difficult questions. 1 6 5 G U N C R A Z Y United Artists, 1950 PRINCIPAL CAST Peggy Cummins, John Dall DIRECTOR Joseph H. Lewis PRODUCERS Frank King, Maurice King SCREENWRITERS MacKinlay Kantor, Dalton Trumbo, Millard Kaufman A money-loving beauty and a gun-obsessed man combine for a stylish portrayal of a couple on the run. Their crime spree ends when the man is forced to shoot his sweetheart. 1 6 6 GUNGA DIN RKO, 1939 PRINCIPAL CAST Cary Grant, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Victor McLaglen, Sam Jaffe DIRECTOR George Stevens PRODUCERS Pandro S. Berman, George Stevens SCREENWRITERS Fred Guiol, Joel Sayre, Ben Hecht, Charles MacArthur Based loosely on Rudyard Kipling’s poem, Stevens directed this rousing saga of three mischievous, high-spirited British soldiers in 19th century India. But it is Gunga Din, the loyal water-carrier who dreams of becoming a regimental bugler, who saves their lives from the notorious Thuggees. “You’re a better man than I am, Gunga Din.” H I American Film Institute 57 1 6 7 HALLOWEEN Media Home Entertainment, 1978 PRINCIPAL CAST Jamie Lee Curtis, Donald Pleasence, Tony Moran DIRECTOR John Carpenter PRODUCER Debra Hill SCREENWRITERS John Carpenter, Debra Hill Escaped mental patient Michael Myers must be stopped before he kills again—on Halloween! The low-budget slasher movie invented a whole new style of horror filmmaking and made Jamie Lee Curtis a household name. 1 6 8 HAROLD AND MAUDE Paramount, 1971 PRINCIPAL CAST Ruth Gordon, Bud Cort, Vivian Pickles DIRECTOR Hal Ashby PRODUCERS Colin Higgins, Charles B. Mulvehill SCREENWRITER Colin Higgins Higgins and Ashby crafted a quirky and offbeat romance between death-obsessed Harold and life-obsessed Maude. Gordon’s 79-year-old Holocaust survivor gives Cort’s 20-year-old rich kid a reason to live and love. Cat Stevens’ songs punctuate the lovable love story that became a cult favorite. “Oh, Harold,that’s wonderful. Go and love some more.” 1 6 9 HARRY P O T T E R A N D T H E P R I S O N E R O F A Z K A B A N Warner Bros., 2004 PRINCIPAL CAST Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, Rupert Grint, Gary Oldman DIRECTOR Alfonso Cuarón PRODUCERS Chris Columbus, David Heyman, Mark Radcliffe SCREENWRITER Steven Kloves After three years at Hogwarts, Harry has more serious problems than practicing magic outside of school—a serial killer is on the loose and headed straight for Harry. A past connection to the young wizard must be figured out before he’s done in! 1 7 0 T H E H E I R E S S Paramount, 1949 PRINCIPAL CAST Olivia de Havilland, Montgomery Clift, Ralph Richardson DIRECTOR William Wyler PRODUCERS Willaim Wyler, Lester Koenig, Robert Wyler SCREENWRITERS Ruth Goetz, Augustus Goetz Ignored by her tyrannical father, naïve de Havilland falls for a handsome, fortunehunting scoundrel. His empty promises of marriage turn the loving girl into a bitter woman. Aaron Copland’s music enhances the depiction of 19th century New York, and matches the shades of de Havilland’s riveting performance. 58 American Film Institute 1 7 1 HIGH NOON United Artists, 1952 PRINCIPAL CAST Gary Cooper, Grace Kelly, Lloyd Bridges, Katy Jurado DIRECTOR Fred Zinnemann PRODUCER Stanley Kramer SCREENWRITER Carl Foreman On his wedding day, Cooper is forced to face an old enemy alone as the people of his town turn their backs on him. His Quaker bride Kelly ultimately comes to his aid as the clock ticks toward noon and the inevitable shootout. 1 7 2 H I S G I R L F R I D AY Columbia, 1940 PRINCIPAL CAST Cary Grant, Rosalind Russell, Ralph Bellamy DIRECTOR Howard Hawks PRODUCER Howard Hawks SCREENWRITER Charles Lederer Give up the newspaper business for love and marriage? Hildy Johnson would love to, but her ex-husband, editor Walter Burns, can’t lose his ace reporter to a milquetoast. Overlapping dialogue and the speediest conversations on film twist the plot of Hecht and MacArthur’s The Front Page into a witty satire on love and life in the newsroom. 1 7 3 H O O S I E R S Orion, 1986 PRINCIPAL CAST Gene Hackman, Barbara Hershey, Dennis Hopper DIRECTOR David Anspaugh PRODUCER Carter DeHaven, Angelo Pizzo SCREENWRITER Angelo Pizzo A group of underdogs in a small Indiana town become the miracle basketball team the coach, the school, the parents desperately need. This is based on the true 1950s’ story, with a pulsing score by Jerry Goldsmith. “Let’s win this game for all the small schools that never had a chance to get here.” 1 7 4 H O T E L R WA N D A United Artists, 2005 PRINCIPAL CAST Don Cheadle, Sophie Okonedo, Nick Nolte DIRECTOR Terry George PRODUCERS Terry George, A. Kitman Ho SCREENWRITERS Keir Pearson, Terry George Hotel manager Paul Rusesabagina winds up saving over a thousand Tutsis from certain death while the Hutu population ravages Rwanda. Based on the true-life story of this ordinary man, the film brilliantly portrays a genocide largely ignored by the rest of the world. American Film Institute 59 1 7 5 T H E H O U R S Paramount, 2002 PRINCIPAL CAST Nicole Kidman, Julianne Moore, Meryl Streep DIRECTOR Stephen Daldry PRODUCERS Robert Fox, Scott Rudin SCREENWRITER David Hare A triptych of interrelated stories that spans 75 years in the lives of three women, with Virginia Woolf and her novel Mrs. Dalloway as the spine of the movie. 1 7 6 HOW GREEN WA S M Y VA L L E Y Twentieth Century-Fox, 1941 PRINCIPAL CAST Walter Pidgeon, Maureen O’Hara, Roddy McDowall, Donald Crisp, Sara Allgood DIRECTOR John Ford PRODUCER Darryl F. Zanuck SCREENWRITER Philip Dunne This is Ford’s loving, episodic portrait of a Welsh mining family at the turn of the 20th century. The rich soundtrack of Welsh choral singers weaves together the tapestry of Huw Morgan’s memories. “Men like my father cannot die. They are with me still, real in memory as they were in flesh, loving and beloved forever. How green was my valley then.” 1 7 7 T H E H U S T L E R Twentieth Century-Fox, 1961 PRINCIPAL CAST Paul Newman, Jackie Gleason, George C. Scott, Piper Laurie DIRECTOR Robert Rossen PRODUCER Robert Rossen SCREENWRITERS Sidney Carroll, Robert Rossen Newman is a top-notch pool hustler who gets cocky and challenges Gleason’s Minnesota Fats to the match of his life. 1 7 8 I A M A F U G I T I V E F R O M A C H A I N G A N G Warner Bros., 1932 PRINCIPAL CAST Paul Muni, Glenda Farrell DIRECTOR Mervyn LeRoy PRODUCER Hal B. Wallis SCREENWRITERS Howard J. Green, Brown Holmes This scathing attack on the brutality of Southern chain gangs illustrates the social awareness of films of the 1930s. It ends with Muni’s matter-of-fact explanation of the way he lives on the run—“I steal.” 60 American Film Institute 1 7 9 I N T H E H E AT O F T H E N I G H T United Artists, 1967 PRINCIPAL CAST Sidney Poitier, Rod Steiger, Lee Grant DIRECTOR Norman Jewison PRODUCER Walter Mirisch SCREENWRITER Stirling Silliphant Poitier is Virgil Tibbs, the Philadelphia detective drawn into a Mississippi murder case no one knows how to handle. Quincy Jones’ evocative jazz score punctuates the heat and bigotry, but it is Poitier’s “They call me Mister Tibbs” and the slap heard ‘round the world that made audiences cheer. 1 8 0 T H E I N S I D E R Buena Vista, 1999 PRINCIPAL CAST Al Pacino, Russell Crowe, Christopher Plummer, Diane Venora DIRECTOR Michael Mann PRODUCERS Michael Mann, Pieter Jan Brugge SCREENWRITERS Eric Roth, Michael Mann This is based on the true story of a 60 MINUTES producer and a tobacco industry whistle-blower, who come up against big business and the power of the media. “I’m all out of heroes, man. Guys like you are in short supply.” 1 8 1 I N T O L E R A N C E Triangle, 1916 PRINCIPAL CAST Lillian Gish, Robert Harron, Mae Marsh, Constance Talmadge, Bessie Love DIRECTOR D.W. Griffith PRODUCER D.W. Griffith SCREENWRITER D.W. Griffith Griffith’s monumental exploration of intolerance is told through four different but parallel stories from ancient Babylon, to the time of Christ in Judea, to Paris in 1572, to social reformers in contemporary America. A milestone in filmmaking, each story was tinted in a different color. 1 8 2 I N VA S I O N O F T H E B O D Y S N AT C H E R S Allied Artists, 1956 PRINCIPAL CAST Kevin McCarthy, Dana Wynter, Larry Gates, King Donovan, Carolyn Jones DIRECTOR Don Siegel PRODUCER Walter Wanger SCREENWRITER Daniel Mainwaring McCarthy is a small town doctor who discovers to his horror that everyone around him is being replaced by emotionless doubles hatched from pods from outer space. Even at the film’s climax, no one on the busy freeway heeds McCarthy’s frenetic warning: “They’re here already. You’re next!” American Film Institute 61 1 8 3 I T H A P P E N E D O N E N I G H T Columbia, 1934 PRINCIPAL CAST Clark Gable, Claudette Colbert DIRECTOR Frank Capra PRODUCER Harry Cohn SCREENWRITER Robert Riskin This battle of the sexes love story between a runaway heiress who shows her legs to hitch a ride and an unemployed newspaperman who separates their beds at night with a blanket known as the “walls of Jericho,” was an unqualified success and still provides inspiration for many comedies. 1 8 4 I T ’ S A M A D M A D M A D M A D W O R L D United Artists, 1963 PRINCIPAL CAST Spencer Tracy, Milton Berle, Jonathan Winters, Mickey Rooney, Ethel Merman, Jimmy Durante DIRECTOR Stanley Kramer PRODUCER Stanley Kramer SCREENWRITERS Tania Rose, William Rose The chase is on to find the big “W”—the spot where Durante has hidden $350,000 before literally kicking the bucket. Tracy plays the knowing cop who follows the wacky fortune hunters—a who’s who of American comedy legends. 1 8 5 I T ’ S A W O N D E R F U L L I F E RKO, 1946 PRINCIPAL CAST James Stewart, Donna Reed, Lionel Barrymore, Henry Travers DIRECTOR Frank Capra PRODUCER Frank Capra SCREENWRITERS Frances Goodrich, Albert Hackett, Frank Capra This holiday classic features a complex performance by Stewart as a suicidal man redeemed by friendship and the recognition that each man’s life touches many others. Remember—every time a bell rings, an angel gets his wings. J K American Film Institute 63 1 8 6 J AWS Universal, 1975 PRINCIPAL CAST Roy Scheider, Robert Shaw, Richard Dreyfuss DIRECTOR Steven Spielberg PRODUCERS Richard D. Zanuck, David Brown SCREENWRITERS Peter Benchley, Carl Gottlieb A great white shark terrorizes the resort town of Amity. Spielberg shot some scenes at water level, making the audience feel as though they were treading water. John Williams’ pulsating score still haunts swimmers around the world. 1 8 7 T H E J A Z Z S I N G E R Warner Bros., 1927 PRINCIPAL CAST Al Jolson, May McAvoy DIRECTOR Alan Crosland SCREENWRITER Alfred A. Cohn The story of a cantor’s son who rejects tradition and heritage for the stage was supposed to be a movie with only synchronized music. But Jolson’s ad-lib, “You ain’t heard nothin’ yet,” marked the beginning of the end for the silent era. 1 8 8 J E R RY M A G U I R E TriStar, 1996 PRINCIPAL CAST Tom Cruise, Cuba Gooding, Jr., Renée Zellweger DIRECTOR Cameron Crowe PRODUCERS James L. Brooks, Richard Sakai, Laurence Mark, Cameron Crowe SCREENWRITER Cameron Crowe Cruise is a super-slick, morally challenged sports agent who loses his job and leaves with one client, Gooding, and a loyal employee, Zellweger. He falls in love with the employee and her child, while helping the client achieve his full potential. “Show me the money!” 1 8 9 J E Z E B E L Warner Bros., 1938 PRINCIPAL CAST Bette Davis, Henry Fonda, George Brent, Fay Bainter, Donald Crisp DIRECTOR William Wyler PRODUCER Henry Blanke SCREENWRITERS Clements Ripley, Abem Finkel, John Huston, Robert Buckner Davis is the spoiled and headstrong Southern belle who shocks 1850s New Orleans with her audacious independence. She loses the most important man in her life over a red dress, and finds redemption when he is stricken with Yellow Fever. 64 American Film Institute 1 9 0 J U R A S S I C PARK Universal, 1993 PRINCIPAL CAST Sam Neill, Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum, Richard Attenborough DIRECTOR Steven Spielberg PRODUCERS Kathleen Kennedy, Gerald R. Molen SCREENWRITERS Michael Crichton, David Koepp Dinosaurs are recreated from genetic material for a theme park on a remote island. Chaos erupts during a test run when the dinosaurs break free and prey on the park guests. Landmark visual effects brought dinosaurs back to life. 1 9 1 T H E K I D First National, 1921 PRINCIPAL CAST Charles Chaplin, Jackie Coogan DIRECTOR Charles Chaplin PRODUCER Charles Chaplin SCREENWRITER Charles Chaplin Chaplin as “The Little Tramp” combines comedy with heart-tugging poignancy when he adopts young Coogan, the first of the great child stars. 1 9 2 T H E K I L L I N G F I E L D S Warner Bros., 1984 PRINCIPAL CAST Sam Waterston, Haing S. Ngor DIRECTOR Roland Joffé PRODUCER David Puttnam SCREENWRITER Bruce Robinson Waterston is the real-life New York Times reporter who reluctantly leaves his Vietnamese colleague, Ngor, behind in war-torn Cambodia. His seemingly futile searches to find him pay off when they are reunited in the film’s emotional climax. 1 9 3 T H E K I N G A N D I Twentieth Century-Fox, 1956 PRINCIPAL CAST Deborah Kerr, Yul Brynner, Rita Moreno, Martin Benson DIRECTOR Walter Lang PRODUCER Charles Brackett SCREENWRITER Ernest Lehman The East and West collide in Rodgers and Hammerstein’s musical based on the true story of a 19th century English school teacher who teaches the children of the very stubborn, yet forward thinking, King of Siam. Getting to know each other is a hardearned lesson, etc, etc, etc! American Film Institute 65 1 9 4 KING KONG RKO, 1933 PRINCIPAL CAST Fay Wray, Robert Armstrong, Bruce Cabot DIRECTORS Merian C. Cooper, Ernest B. Schoedsack PRODUCERS Merian C. Cooper, Ernest B. Schoedsack SCREENWRITERS James Ashmore Creelman, Ruth Rose With a mixture of live action, animation, and special effects, this film follows the plight of a giant ape whose love for the beautiful Wray leads to his death, as he topples from the Empire State Building. But it wasn’t the airplanes that killed the mighty Kong—“It was beauty killed the beast.” 1 9 5 T H E K I N G O F C O M E D Y Twentieth Century-Fox, 1983 PRINCIPAL CAST Robert De Niro, Jerry Lewis, Sandra Bernhard DIRECTOR Martin Scorsese PRODUCER Arnon Milchan SCREENWRITER Paul D. Zimmerman America’s infatuation with fame is satirized in Scorsese’s dark comedy. In a crazed attempt to get a foothold in show business, deranged would-be comedian De Niro kidnaps late-night talk show host Lewis and demands an appearance on his show. Bernhard is De Niro’s wealthy Lewis-obsessed accomplice. 1 9 6 K R A M E R V S . K R A M E R Columbia, 1979 PRINCIPAL CAST Dustin Hoffman, Meryl Steep, Justin Henry DIRECTOR Robert Benton PRODUCER Stanley R. Jaffe SCREENWRITER Robert Benton Streep walks out on Hoffman, who is suddenly faced with raising their child alone. After a rocky start, the father-son relationship grows until Streep returns to reclaim her role as mother, provoking a custody battle. L American Film Institute 67 1 9 7 L . A . C O N F I D E N T I A L Warner Bros., 1997 PRINCIPAL CAST Kevin Spacey, Russell Crowe, Guy Pearce, James Cromwell, Kim Basinger, Danny DeVito DIRECTOR Curtis Hanson PRODUCERS Curtis Hanson, Arnon Milchan, Michael Nathanson SCREENWRITERS Brian Helgeland, Curtis Hanson Three cops with crosses to bear are caught in the crossfire of police and mob corruption in 1950s Los Angeles. Based on James Ellroy’s multi-layered story, Hanson creates a seedy film-noir collection of Hollywood wanna-be’s and has-been’s, all of whom are just one step away from the truth. 1 9 8 T H E L A D Y E V E Paramount, 1941 PRINCIPAL CAST Barbara Stanwyck, Henry Fonda, Charles Coburn DIRECTOR Preston Sturges PRODUCER Paul Jones SCREENWRITERS Preston Sturges, Monckton Hoffe Fonda is a doltish bachelor and heir to the Pike’s Pale Ale fortune, who prefers snakes to women. Stanwyck is a con woman who tries to fleece him on an ocean voyage and winds up falling in love with him. When he discovers her ruse and dumps her, she decides to fleece him again by assuming a British accent and posing as Lady Eve Sidwich. “They say a moonlit deck is a woman’s business office.” 1 9 9 T H E L A S T E M P E R O R Columbia, 1987 PRINCIPAL CAST John Lone, Peter O’Toole, Joan Chen DIRECTOR Bernardo Bertolucci PRODUCER Jeremy Thomas SCREENWRITERS Bernardo Bertolucci, Mark Peploe This historical epic tells the story of China’s changing political landscape in the 20th century through the life of China’s final emperor, Pu Yi. Told in a non-linear style that spans many decades, Pu Yi goes from an object of adoration to a faceless gardener in communist China. Bertolucci was the first Western filmmaker provided the privilege of filming inside the Forbidden City. 2 0 0 T H E L A S T P I C T U R E S H O W Columbia, 1971 PRINCIPAL CAST Jeff Bridges, Cybill Shepherd, Ben Johnson DIRECTOR Peter Bogdanovich PRODUCER Stephen J. Friedman SCREENWRITERS Peter Bodganovich, Larry McMurtry The closing of a movie theatre in a small Texas town during the 1950s marks the changes that face a group of young people coming of age. 68 American Film Institute 2 0 1 L A S T TA N G O I N PA R I S United Artists, 1973 PRINCIPAL CAST Marlon Brando, Maria Schneider DIRECTOR Bernardo Bertolucci PRODUCER Albert Grimaldi SCREENWRITERS Franco Arcalli, Bernardo Bertolucci Brando is an American in Paris, trying to push away the tragedy of his wife’s suicide through a torrid affair with a woman he hardly knows, played by Schneider. Sexual situations had never been so explicit in a mainstream feature film. 2 0 2 L A U R A Twentieth Century-Fox, 1944 PRINCIPAL CAST Gene Tierney, Clifton Webb, Dana Andrews, Vincent Price, Judith Anderson DIRECTOR Otto Preminger PRODUCER Otto Preminger SCREENWRITERS Jay Dratler, Samuel Hoffenstein, Betty Reinhardt Tierney’s beauty, David Raksin’s haunting soundtrack and Webb’s caustic Waldo Lydecker are the linchpins in this arresting film noir take on detective Andrews’ obsession with the portrait of a mysteriously murdered woman. 2 0 3 L AW R E N C E O F A R A B I A Columbia, 1962 PRINCIPAL CAST Peter O’Toole, Alec Guinness, Omar Sharif DIRECTOR David Lean PRODUCERS Sam Spiegel, David Lean SCREENWRITER Robert Bolt During World War I, young English officer T. E. Lawrence comes to believe he can give Arabia back to the Arabs. The movie made O’Toole a star and introduced Sharif to an international audience. 2 0 4 T H E L I F E O F E M I L E Z O L A Warner Bros., 1937 PRINCIPAL CAST Paul Muni, Joseph Schildkraut, Gale Sondergaard DIRECTOR William Dieterle PRODUCER Hal B. Wallis SCREENWRITERS Norman Reilly Raine, Heinz Herald, Geza Herczeg Muni’s calm but powerful performance as the 19th century French novelist is the highlight of this biographical film with the climactic recitation of Zola’s famous “J’accuse” letter attacking the anti-Semitism of the famous Dreyfus case. American Film Institute 69 2 0 5 T H E L I O N K I N G Disney, 1994 PRINCIPAL CAST Matthew Broderick, James Earl Jones, Jeremy Irons, Nathan Lane, Whoopi Goldberg (voices) DIRECTORS Roger Allers, Rob Minkoff PRODUCER Don Hahn SCREENWRITERS Irene Mecchi, Jonathan Roberts, Linda Woolverton This animated musical opens on a grand scale with the song Circle of Life announcing the birth of Simba, a baby lion. Made to believe he’s responsible for his father’s death by his cruel uncle, Simba disappears in shame. After many years the young man returns home to reclaim his throne. “Hakuna matata!” 2 0 6 L I T T L E C A E S A R First National, 1930 PRINCIPAL CAST Edward G. Robinson, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. DIRECTOR Mervyn LeRoy PRODUCER Hal B. Wallis SCREENWRITERS Francis Edward Faragoh, Robert N. Lee Often called the original modern crime film, gritty and realistic, it set the tone for an entire genre. Robinson portrays Rico, an underworld foot soldier clawing his way to the top of the heap but paying for it with his life: “Mother of mercy! Is this the end of Rico?” 2 0 7 T H E L I T T L E F O X E S Twentieth Century-Fox, 1941 PRINCIPAL CAST Bette Davis, Herbert Marshall, Teresa Wright DIRECTOR William Wyler PRODUCER Samuel Goldwyn SCREENWRITER Lillian Hellman Based on Hellman’s play about a rapacious Southern family, Davis plays the viperous woman who blackmails her way into an unscrupulous business deal with her shady brothers, then kills her husband when he stands in her way. 2 0 8 T H E L O N G E S T D AY Twentieth Century-Fox, 1962 PRINCIPAL CAST John Wayne, Robert Mitchum, Henry Fonda DIRECTORS Andrew Marton, Ken Annakin, Bernhard Wicki PRODUCER Darryl F. Zanuck SCREENWRITER Cornelius Ryan Zanuck’s epic, star-studded account of the D-Day invasion is told from both the Allies’ and Germans’ point of view. The documentary-style black-and-white cinematography set the tone for an unrelenting look at the storming of Normandy. 70 American Film Institute 2 0 9 T H E L O R D O F T H E R I N G S : T H E F E L L O W S H I P O F T H E R I N G New Line, 2001 PRINCIPAL CAST Elijah Wood, Viggo Mortensen, Sean Astin, Cate Blanchett, Orlando Bloom DIRECTOR Peter Jackson PRODUCERS Peter Jackson, Barrie M. Osborne, Tim Sanders, Fran Walsh SCREENWRITERS Fran Walsh, Philippa Boyens, Peter Jackson Jackson’s masterful fantasy epic based on Tolkien’s beloved novel, is the beginning chapter of Frodo’s strange and mighty odyssey to the Cracks of Doom to destroy the ring. “There is only one Lord of the Ring, only one who can bend it to his will. And he does not share power.” 2 1 0 T H E L O R D O F T H E R I N G S : T H E T W O T O W E R S New Line, 2002 PRINCIPAL CAST Elijah Wood, Viggo Mortensen, Sean Astin, Ian McKellen, Christopher Lee, Andy Serkis DIRECTOR Peter Jackson PRODUCERS Peter Jackson, Barrie M. Osborne, Tim Sanders, Fran Walsh SCREENWRITERS Fran Walsh, Philippa Boyens, Peter Jackson Jackson and Tolkien’s grand saga continues, as Sauron’s power increases and his allies stand toe to toe against Aragorn and the people of Rohan. With the Fellowship dead, Frodo and Sam continue their arduous journey alone and unprotected. “My precious.” 2 1 1 T H E L O R D O F T H E R I N G S : T H E R E T U R N O F T H E K I N G New Line, 2003 PRINCIPAL CAST Elijah Wood, Viggo Mortensen, Dominic Monaghan, Billy Boyd, Liv Tyler, Andy Serkis DIRECTOR Peter Jackson PRODUCERS Peter Jackson, Barrie M. Osborne, Tim Sanders, Fran Walsh SCREENWRITERS Fran Walsh, Philippa Boyens, Peter Jackson The final chapter in the visually stunning chronicle of Tolkien’s legendary tale. As the War of the Ring rages, everyone’s goal is to distract the Eye of Sauron against Middle-Earth. Frodo must get to Mount Doom and destroy The Ring before it destroys him. 2 1 2 L O S T H O R I Z O N Columbia, 1937 PRINCIPAL CAST Ronald Colman, Jane Wyatt DIRECTOR Frank Capra PRODUCER Frank Capra SCREENWRITER Robert Riskin Colman is one of several survivors of a place crash in the Himalayas who is brought to the mythical land of Shangri-La where aging and want are non-existent. “There are moments in every man’s life, when he glimpses the eternal.” American Film Institute 71 2 1 3 L O S T I N T R A N S L AT I O N Focus, 2003 PRINCIPAL CAST Scarlett Johansson, Bill Murray DIRECTOR Sofia Coppola PRODUCERS Sofia Coppola, Ross Katz SCREENWRITER Sofia Coppola This is Coppola’s idiosyncratic and touching portrait of two lonely Americans in Tokyo, who meet and spend their free time together, sharing thoughts on celebrity and marriage and finding they need each other in the alien landscape. “Is that everything? It seemed like he said quite a bit more than that.” 2 1 4 T H E L O S T W E E K E N D Paramount, 1945 PRINCIPAL CAST Ray Milland, Jane Wyman DIRECTOR Billy Wilder PRODUCER Charles Brackett SCREENWRITERS Charles Brackett, Billy Wilder Harrowing depictions of an alcoholic’s struggles punctuate Wilder’s ground-breaking study of addiction. When Milland hits his local bar the bartender reminds him, “One’s too many an’ a hundred’s not enough.” 2 1 5 L O V E S T O RY Paramount, 1970 PRINCIPAL CAST Ali MacGraw, Ryan O’Neal, John Marley, Ray Milland DIRECTOR Arthur Hiller PRODUCERS Howard G. Minsky, David Golden SCREENWRITER Erich Segal MacGraw and O’Neal are a young couple who meet and fall in love at Harvard. After marriage, their love is tested when MacGraw’s Jenny becomes fatally ill. “Love means never having to say you’re sorry.” M American Film Institute 73 2 1 6 M * A * S * H Twentieth Century-Fox, 1970 PRINCIPAL CAST Donald Sutherland, Elliott Gould, Sally Kellerman DIRECTOR Robert Altman PRODUCER Ingo Preminger SCREENWRITER Ring Lardner, Jr. Altman’s episodic antiwar film about a mobile medical unit during the Korean War gave American audiences a reason to laugh at the height of Vietnam. The overlapping dialogue and irreverent story thumbed its nose at all things political and pushed the boundaries of filmmaking. 2 1 7 T H E M A G N I F I C E N T A M B E R S O N S RKO, 1942 PRINCIPAL CAST Joseph Cotten, Dolores Costello, Anne Baxter, Agnes Moorehead DIRECTOR Orson Welles PRODUCER Orson Welles SCREENWRITER Orson Welles Welles’ masterful use of sound and cinematography highlight this penetrating adaptation of Booth Tarkington’s study of the disintegration of a turn-of-the-20th century family under the thumb of its spoiled, petulant heir. 2 1 8 T H E M A LT E S E FALCON Warner Bros., 1941 PRINCIPAL CAST Humphrey Bogart, Mary Astor, Sidney Greenstreet, Peter Lorre DIRECTOR John Huston PRODUCERS Hal B. Wallis, Henry Blanke SCREENWRITER John Huston Bogart’s Sam Spade is the detective whose partner is murdered. The cops are after him and he’s after the woman who hired his partner, which leads them to Greenstreet and Lorre, who are all after a priceless statuette. Bogart suggested the take on Shakespeare: “The, uh, stuff that dreams are made of.” 2 1 9 A M A N F O R A L L S E A S O N S Columbia, 1966 PRINCIPAL CAST Paul Scofield, Wendy Hiller, Robert Shaw, Orson Welles DIRECTOR Fred Zinnemann PRODUCER Fred Zinnemann SCREENWRITER Robert Bolt Scofield is Sir Thomas More, who resists Shaw’s Henry VIII when he requests help to break away from the Roman Catholic Church to form the Church of England. 74 American Film Institute 2 2 0 T H E M A N W H O W O U L D B E K I N G Columbia, 1975 PRINCIPAL CAST Sean Connery, Michael Caine DIRECTOR John Huston PRODUCER John Foreman SCREENWRITERS Gladys Hill, John Huston Two ex-British soldiers journey from India to Kafiristan in search of gold and a kingdom of their own. Huston’s rollicking adventure turns deadly when Daniel, who’s mistaken for a God, takes himself too seriously. To the end, however, Peachy, stands by his comrade in this tale based on Rudyard Kipling’s short story. 2 2 1 T H E M A N C H U R I A N C A N D I D AT E United Artists, 1962 PRINCIPAL CAST Frank Sinatra, Laurence Harvey, Janet Leigh, Angela Lansbury DIRECTOR John Frankenheimer PRODUCERS George Axelrod, John Frankenheimer SCREENWRITER George Axelrod An ex-Korean War POW is brainwashed by communists to become a political assassin. This paranoid cold-war thriller shocked audiences with its terrifying look at a Soviet sleeper/mole who can be triggered into action by simply playing a little solitaire. 2 2 2 MANHAT TAN United Artists, 1979 PRINCIPAL CAST Woody Allen, Diane Keaton, Mariel Hemingway DIRECTOR Woody Allen PRODUCER Charles H. Joffe SCREENWRITERS Woody Allen, Marshall Brickman Allen’s black-and-white valentine to New York City finds him as a comedy writer who aspires to credibility while maneuvering through the complexities of friendship and love. George Gershwin’s music provides a foundation for this grand, romantic image of Manhattan. 2 2 3 MART Y United Artists, 1955 PRINCIPAL CAST Ernest Borgnine, Betsy Blair DIRECTOR Delbert Mann PRODUCER Harold Hecht SCREENWRITER Paddy Chayefsky Borgnine plays a lonely, good-hearted Italian-American butcher that nobody notices. When he finally meets a pretty wallflower, he almost misses his chance at love. The film has the distinction of being the first to be based on a television drama. American Film Institute 75 2 2 4 MARY P O P P I N S Disney, 1964 PRINCIPAL CAST Julie Andrews, Dick Van Dyke DIRECTOR Robert Stevenson PRODUCERS Walt Disney, Bill Walsh SCREENWRITERS Bill Walsh, Don DaGradi This supercalifragilisticexpialidocious musical fantasy introduced Andrews to film history as the magical nanny who at arrives at the home of Jane and Michael Banks via umbrella and teaches them that a spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down. 2 2 5 T H E M AT R I X Warner Bros., 1999 PRINCIPAL CAST Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne, Carrie-Anne Moss DIRECTORS Andy Wachowski, Larry Wachowski PRODUCER Joel Silver SCREENWRITERS Andy Wachowski, Larry Wachowski “Unfortunately, no one can be told what the Matrix is. You have to see it for yourself.” Cyber-messiah Reeves and like-minded rebel warriors must defeat the artificial intelligence that has created an alternate reality. The Wachowski Brothers blew the lid off technology, pushing ancient martial arts and visual effects into the 21st century. 2 2 6 M c C A B E A N D M R S . M I L L E R Warner Bros., 1971 PRINCIPAL CAST Warren Beatty, Julie Christie DIRECTOR Robert Altman PRODUCERS Mitchell Brower, David Foster SCREENWRITERS Robert Altman, Brian McKay Altman’s anti-Western disassembles many of the myths of the West created by American film. Beatty, a gambling gunfighter, uses his winnings to open a brothel with the help of Christie’s shrewd hooker. 2 2 7 M E A N S T R E E T S Warner Bros., 1973 PRINCIPAL CAST Robert De Niro, Harvey Keitel DIRECTOR Martin Scorsese PRODUCER Jonathan T. Taplin SCREENWRITERS Martin Scorsese, Mardik Martin Scorsese “arrived” with this low-budget picture about four friends in New York City’s Little Italy. The elements America would come to know as a “Scorsese film” are all here—a gangster world, Catholic guilt, pop music and Keitel and De Niro, in their first collaboration. 76 American Film Institute 2 2 8 M E E T M E I N S T. L O U I S MGM, 1944 PRINCIPAL CAST Judy Garland, Margaret O’Brien DIRECTOR Vincente Minnelli PRODUCER Arthur Freed SCREENWRITERS Irving Brecher, Fred F. Finklehoffe Minnelli’s nostalgic musical picture-post card follows the lives of the Smith Family in four seasonal vignettes as they wait for the 1904 World’s Fair. Garland’s enduring renditions of The Trolley Song and Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas are just two of the film’s many memorable songs. 2 2 9 MEMENTO Newmarket, 2001 PRINCIPAL CAST Guy Pearce, Carrie-Anne Moss, Joe Pantoliano DIRECTOR Christopher Nolan PRODUCERS Jennifer Todd, Suzanne Todd SCREENWRITER Christopher Nolan A groundbreaking screenplay unfolds in reverse order! The film’s episodic structure frames the story of an amnesiac with short-term memory loss, trying to figure what happened when his wife was murdered. “I can’t remember to forget you.” 2 3 0 MIDNIGHT COWBOY United Artists, 1969 PRINCIPAL CAST Dustin Hoffman, Jon Voight DIRECTOR John Schlesinger PRODUCER Jerome Hellman SCREENWRITER Waldo Salt Voight is Joe Buck, a country boy who arrives in New York City to make his fortune as a hustler. As he struggles to maintain a living, he meets Hoffman’s Ratzo Rizzo, and the two friends work together to find a better life. “I’m walkin’ here!” 2 3 1 M I L D R E D P I E R C E Warner Bros., 1945 PRINCIPAL CAST Joan Crawford, Ann Blyth DIRECTOR Michael Curtiz PRODUCER Jerry Wald SCREENWRITER Ranald MacDougall Crawford is Mildred Pierce, a woman forced to become independent after her cheating husband walks out. Curtiz’ film noir is a hard-boiled murder mystery in which the heroine will do anything to save her duplicitous daughter. American Film Institute 77 2 3 2 M I L L I O N D O L L A R B A B Y Warner Bros., 2004 PRINCIPAL CAST Clint Eastwood, Hilary Swank, Morgan Freeman DIRECTOR Clint Eastwood PRODUCERS Clint Eastwood, Paul Haggis, Tom Rosenberg, Albert S. Ruddy SCREENWRITER Paul Haggis A trio of lonely and isolated people meet on uncommon ground when young working class waitress Swank decides to become a boxer. “It’s the magic of risking everything for a dream that nobody sees but you.” Eastwood’s taut and unusual love story reveals how far friends will go for the people they love. 2 3 3 T H E M I R A C L E O F M O R G A N ’ S C R E E K Paramount, 1944 PRINCIPAL CAST Eddie Bracken, Betty Hutton DIRECTOR Preston Sturges PRODUCER B.G. DeSylva SCREENWRITER Preston Sturges The miraculous birth of sextuplets climaxes this satire about a woman who marries during a night of revelry, but the next morning cannot remember her husband’s name. 2 3 4 M I R A C L E O N 3 4 T H S T R E E T Twentieth Century-Fox, 1947 PRINCIPAL CAST Maureen O’Hara, Edmund Gwenn, John Payne, Natalie Wood DIRECTOR George Seaton PRODUCER William Perlberg SCREENWRITERS George Seaton, Valentine Davies Gwenn is Kris Kringle in this yuletide classic of a Macy’s Santa Claus who insists he is the real McCoy. A young Natalie Wood is the skeptical little girl who learns to believe in her dreams. 2 3 5 M O D E R N T I M E S United Artists, 1936 PRINCIPAL CAST Charles Chaplin, Paulette Goddard DIRECTOR Charles Chaplin PRODUCER Charles Chaplin SCREENWRITER Charles Chaplin Chaplin speaks! And ends the silent era with this film about a little man working on an assembly line, who is literally caught in the hub of an industrialized society, and after several trips to the hospital and jail, ultimately finds happiness with a kindred soul. 78 American Film Institute 2 3 6 MOONSTRUCK MGM, 1987 PRINCIPAL CAST Cher, Nicolas Cage, Olympia Dukakis, Danny Aiello DIRECTOR Norman Jewison PRODUCERS Norman Jewison, Patrick J. Palmer SCREENWRITER John Patrick Shanley In this love poem to the Italian-American family, Cher falls for her fiancé’s brother, played by Cage. Then she must contend with her meddling family. That’s amore! 2 3 7 M O U L I N R O U G E ! Twentieth Century-Fox, 2001 PRINCIPAL CAST Nicole Kidman, Ewan McGregor, John Leguizamo, Jim Broadbent DIRECTOR Baz Luhrmann PRODUCERS Fred Baron, Martin Brown, Baz Luhrmann SCREENWRITERS Baz Luhrmann, Craig Pearce Set in late 19th century Paris, Luhrmann’s striking fantasy is a reinvention of the Hollywood musical. Kidman is a consumptive nightclub singer, desired by the world’s most wealthy suitors, but it is struggling writer McGregor whom she loves. Some of the greatest American standards are sung by Kidman and McGregor. 2 3 8 M R . D E E D S G O E S T O T O W N Columbia, 1936 PRINCIPAL CAST Gary Cooper, Jean Arthur DIRECTOR Frank Capra PRODUCER Frank Capra SCREENWRITER Robert Riskin Simple New Englander Cooper inherits a fortune and moves to New York. Ambitious reporter Arthur makes him front-page news and the laughing stock of the city. His sanity is questioned after he gives his millions away to those who need it, and the reporter comes to her senses when she realizes Mr. Deeds is the real thing. 2 3 9 M R . S M I T H G O E S T O WASHINGTON Columbia, 1939 PRINCIPAL CAST James Stewart, Claude Rains, Jean Arthur DIRECTOR Frank Capra PRODUCER Frank Capra SCREENWRITERS Sidney Buchman, Lewis R. Foster Appointed to the US Senate because the power brokers believe they’ve got a hayseed on their hands, Jefferson Smith surprises everyone with his honesty and gravitas. Framed by the political machine that cleverly twists the truth, Smith almost waves a white flag, but Clarissa Saunders gives him a fast lesson in civics. Filibuster!!! American Film Institute 79 2 4 0 M R S . M I N I V E R MGM, 1942 PRINCIPAL CAST Greer Garson, Walter Pidgeon, Teresa Wright DIRECTOR William Wyler PRODUCER Sidney Franklin SCREENWRITERS Arthur Wimperis, Goerge Froeschel, James Hilton, Claudine West Wyler’s story of a British middle-class family stoically meeting the travails brought on by the German blitz of England was such a stunning propaganda success that Winston Churchill declared it worth a fleet of battleships. 2 4 1 M U T I N Y O N T H E B O U N T Y MGM, 1935 PRINCIPAL CAST Charles Laughton, Clark Gable, Franchot Tone DIRECTOR Frank Lloyd PRODUCER Albert Lewin SCREENWRITERS Talbot Jennings, Jules Furthman, Carey Wilson Based on a historical incident, this film features Laughton as Captain William Bligh, an excellent seaman whose lack of humanity and rigid adherence to regulations forces Gable’s Fletcher Christian to lead a mutiny against him. 2 4 2 M Y D A R L I N G C L E M E N T I N E Twentieth Century-Fox, 1946 PRINCIPAL CAST Henry Fonda, Linda Darnell, Victor Mature DIRECTOR John Ford PRODUCER Samuel G. Engel SCREENWRITERS Samuel G. Engel, Sam Hellman, Winston Miller Fonda’s performance as a low-key Wyatt Earp brings the legendary lawman to life in Ford’s unusual take on events leading to the gunfight at the OK Corral. 2 4 3 M Y FA I R L A D Y Warner Bros., 1964 PRINCIPAL CAST Audrey Hepburn, Rex Harrison, Wilfrid Hyde-White DIRECTOR George Cukor PRODUCER Jack L. Warner SCREENWRITERS Alan Jay Lerner, Frederick Loewe Professor Henry Higgins bets he can turn a flower girl into a lady just by teaching her to speak properly. Based on George Bernard Shaw’s Pygmalion, Lerner and Loewe’s celebrated Broadway musical comes to the screen with Hepburn celebrating her transformation with, “The rain in Spain, stays mainly in the plain!” 80 American Film Institute 2 4 4 MY MAN GODFREY Universal, 1936 PRINCIPAL CAST Willaim Powell, Carole Lombard, Alice Brady DIRECTOR Gregory La Cava PRODUCER Charles R. Rogers SCREENWRITERS Eric Hatch, Morrie Ryskind Powell’s Godfrey appears to be one of the Depression’s “forgotten men,” until wacky and wealthy heiress Lombard finds him and turns him into Park Avenue’s classiest butler. But it’s Godfrey who gives the family a lesson in class and humility in this screwball comedy with a social conscience. 2 4 5 M Y S T I C R I V E R Warner Bros., 2003 PRINCIPAL CAST Sean Penn, Tim Robbins, Kevin Bacon, Marcia Gay Harden DIRECTOR Clint Eastwood PRODUCERS Clint Eastwood, Judi Hoyt, Robert Lorenz SCREENWRITER Brian Helgeland Three childhood friends are reunited when the daughter of one is murdered. Betrayal is at the heart of Eastwood’s dark brooding tragedy with a strong ensemble cast. N 82 American Film Institute 2 4 6 N A S H V I L L E Paramount, 1975 PRINCIPAL CAST Keith Carradine, Ned Beatty, Karen Black, Lily Tomlin DIRECTOR Robert Altman PRODUCER Robert Altman SCREENWRITER Joan Tewkesbury A grab bag of over twenty characters from politics and country-western music collide as the United States celebrates the Bicentennial in the capital of country music. Altman casts his director’s eye on the overlapping stories, from a populist candidate to a music songbird on the verge of collapse, which ultimately end in a dramatic climax. 2 4 7 NAT I O N A L L A M P O O N ’ S A N I M A L H O U S E Universal, 1978 PRINCIPAL CAST John Belushi, Tim Matheson, Peter Riegert, Tom Hulce, John Vernon DIRECTOR John Landis PRODUCER Ivan Reitman, Matty Simmons SCREENWRITERS Harold Ramis, Douglas Kenny, Chris Miller The Delta House is scheming to keep itself from being kicked off campus. Anarchy reigns as Belushi’s Bluto leads the charge, “Food fight,” without much hope…but with many laughs. “Toga, toga!” 2 4 8 NETWORK United Artists, 1976 PRINCIPAL CAST Faye Dunaway, William Holden, Peter Finch DIRECTOR Sidney Lumet PRODUCER Howard Gottfried SCREENWRITER Paddy Chayefsky Low ratings make for angry shareholders and veteran news anchorman Howard Beale takes the fall. But his rant, “I’m mad as hell and I’m not going to take it anymore,” suddenly changes the picture and the lives of everyone at fourth-place UBS. 2 4 9 A N I G H T AT T H E O P E R A MGM, 1935 PRINCIPAL CAST Groucho, Chico, Harpo Marx, Kitty Carlisle DIRECTOR Sam Wood PRODUCER Irving Thalberg SCREENWRITERS George S. Kaufman, James Kevin McGuinness, Morrie Ryskind The Marx Brothers take on opera and give a drubbing to anyone who gets in their way. Some of the team’s most famous comic moments are from this film: rearranging the bedroom furniture, Chico and Groucho tearing up the contract, and the overstuffed stateroom scene, where 15 people crowd inside! American Film Institute 83 2 5 0 T H E N I G H T O F T H E H U N T E R United Artists, 1955 PRINCIPAL CAST Robert Mitchum, Shelley Winters, Lillian Gish DIRECTOR Charles Laughton PRODUCER Paul Gregory SCREENWRITER James Agee This somber tale of good vs. evil is actor Laughton’s only directorial effort. Mitchum is the embodiment of evil, but he is thwarted by Gish, a good woman trying to save two children from his grasp. “They abide, and they endure.” 2 5 1 N I G H T O F T H E L I V I N G D E A D Continental, 1968 PRINCIPAL CAST Judith O’Dea, Duane Jones, Karl Hardman, Russell Streiner DIRECTOR George A. Romero PRODUCERS Russell Streiner, Karl Hardman SCREENWRITER John A. Russo Bloodthirsty zombies close in on people barricaded inside a farm house in this lowbudget black-and-white horror film that put people on the edge of their seats. Can the living survive the un-dead? 2 5 2 NINOTCHKA MGM, 1939 PRINCIPAL CAST Greta Garbo, Melvyn Douglas DIRECTOR Ernst Lubitsch PRODUCER Ernst Lubitsch SCREENWRITERS Billy Widler, Charles Brackett, Walter Reisch, Melchior Lengyel Communism collides with capitalism in this “Lubitsch Touch” comedy when staunch party member Garbo comes to Paris to discipline some wayward comrades and falls in love with Douglas’ suave aristocrat. 2 5 3 NORT H B Y N O RT H W E S T MGM, 1959 PRINCIPAL CAST Cary Grant, Eva Marie Saint, James Mason DIRECTOR Alfred Hitchcock PRODUCER Alfred Hitchcock SCREENWRITER Ernest Lehman Grant is the Hitchcockian everyman caught up in something he doesn’t understand as he travels from New York to Mount Rushmore in this mire of spies, counterspies and romance. 84 American Film Institute 2 5 4 NOTORIOUS RKO, 1946 PRINCIPAL CAST Cary Grant, Ingrid Bergman, Claude Rains DIRECTOR Alfred Hitchcock PRODUCER Alfred Hitchcock SCREENWRITER Ben Hecht Political and sexual betrayal unite and divide Grant, Bergman and Rains in this tense triangle of espionage and Nazis in post-World War II Rio de Janeiro. Hitchcock’s use of the MacGuffin, the uranium hidden in the wine bottles, is what drives the plot, but it is the impossible love affair between Grant and Bergman everyone remembers. 2 5 5 NOW, V O YAGER Warner Bros., 1942 PRINCIPAL CAST Bette Davis, Paul Henreid, Claude Rains, Bonita Granville DIRECTOR Irving Rapper PRODUCER Hal B. Wallis SCREENWRITER Casey Robinson Frumpy, dowdy, and horribly insecure, Charlotte Vale gets some help and transforms herself into a self-assured beauty who learns how to stand up to her mother in the quintessential “woman’s film.” Max Steiner’s lush score soars as Henreid lights two cigarettes and Davis utters, “Oh Jerry, don’t let’s ask for the moon. We have the stars.” O 86 American Film Institute 2 5 6 ON GOLDEN POND Universal, 1981 PRINCIPAL CAST Katharine Hepburn, Henry Fonda, Jane Fonda DIRECTOR Mark Rydell PRODUCERS Terry Carr, Bruce Gilbert SCREENWRITER Ernest Thompson The Thayer family’s annual visit to their lakeside cottage in New England is fraught with tension, confrontations, and some peace just as Norman celebrates his 80th birthday. Fear of aging, and a daughter’s desperate need for approval gently collide as the loons linger nearby. “You’re my knight in shining armor. Don’t you forget it.” 2 5 7 O N T H E WAT E R F R O N T Columbia, 1954 PRINCIPAL CAST Marlon Brando, Karl Malden, Rod Steiger, Eva Marie Saint DIRECTOR Elia Kazan PRODUCER Sam Spiegel SCREENWRITER Budd Schulberg Brando, a longshoreman who “coulda been a contender,” rebels against his brother and corruption on the New York City docks in this powerful story that mirrors the political climate of the early 1950s. 2 5 8 O N E F L E W O V E R T H E C U C K O O ’ S N E S T United Artists, 1975 PRINCIPAL CAST Jack Nicholson, Louise Fletcher DIRECTOR Milos Forman PRODUCERS Saul Zaentz, Michael Douglas SCREENWRITERS Bo Goldman, Lawrence Hauben Nicholson is a troublemaker committed to a mental institution who sparks new life in the downtrodden inmates, giving them purpose and self-worth. His war on the system is fought at every step by Fletcher’s Nurse Ratched. 2 5 9 O R D I N A RY P E O P L E Paramount, 1980 PRINCIPAL CAST Donald Sutherland, Mary Tyler Moore, Timothy Hutton, Judd Hirsch DIRECTOR Robert Redford PRODUCER Ronald L. Schwary SCREENWRITER Alvin Sargent Redford’s directorial debut examines the disintegration of a family after the accidental drowning of the eldest son in a terrible storm. Hutton, the son who survives, struggles to overcome his guilt while attempting to gain the love and respect of his icy mother, played to chilling perfection by Moore. American Film Institute 87 2 6 0 O U T O F A F R I C A Universal, 1985 PRINCIPAL CAST Meryl Streep, Robert Redford, Klaus Maria Brandauer DIRECTOR Sydney Pollack PRODUCER Sydney Pollack SCREENWRITER Kurk Luedtke “I had a farm in Africa.” This epic romance pairs Streep as Karen Blixen, a Danish woman who arrives in Africa for a marriage of convenience, and Redford’s British hunter, with whom she shares an unbounded sense of adventure. John Barry’s musical score captures the scope of their love across the plains of Africa. 2 6 1 O U T O F T H E PA S T RKO, 1947 PRINCIPAL CAST Robert Mitchum, Kirk Douglas, Jane Greer DIRECTOR Jacques Tourneur PRODUCERS Warren Duff, Robert Sparks SCREENWRITER Geoffrey Homes Mitchum is trying to escape the past that’s catching up with him. The cunning and seductive Greer betrays him and Douglas, men on opposite sides of the law. In this film noir tour de force, all three are caught in a deadly showdown. 2 6 2 T H E O U T L AW J O S E Y WA L E S Warner Bros., 1976 PRINCIPAL CAST Clint Eastwood, Chief Dan George, Sondra Locke DIRECTOR Clint Eastwood PRODUCER Robert Daley SCREENWRITERS Philip Kaufman, Sonia Chernus Eastwood directs and plays the title role in the story of a Southern man whose family is killed by Union soldiers during the Civil War, then takes the law into his own hands and becomes a marked man. Bounty hunters follow him across the great West, though they are often no match for this loner’s quick draw. 2 6 3 T H E O X - B O W I N C I D E N T Twentieth Century-Fox, 1943 PRINCIPAL CAST Henry Fonda, Dona Andrews, Anthony Quinn DIRECTOR William A. Wellman PRODUCER Lamar Trotti SCREENWRITER Lamar Trotti Wellman’s stunningly stark social conscience film is presented in the guise of a Western when a lynch mob righteously, then recklessly, pursues and hangs the wrong men. P American Film Institute 89 2 6 4 PAT H S O F G L O RY United Artists, 1957 PRINCIPAL CAST Kirk Douglas, Ralph Meeker, Adolphe Menjou DIRECTOR Stanley Kubrick PRODUCER James B. Harris SCREENWRITERS Stanley Kubrick, Calder Willingham, Jim Thompson Douglas is a French World War I officer with a mutiny on his hands because his men refuse to engage in a suicidal battle. He defends three of his men when they are later court-martialed for cowardice. Kubrick’s consummate antiwar film highlights the differences between those who give orders and those who carry them out. 2 6 5 PATTON Twentieth Century-Fox, 1970 PRINCIPAL CAST George C. Scott, Karl Malden DIRECTOR Franklin J. Schaffner PRODUCER Frank McCarthy SCREENWRITERS Francis Ford Coppola, Edmund H. North The film’s opening scene—Scott as Patton speaking in front of a giant American flag—sets the stage for an epic biography of the controversial World War II general. “Now I want you to remember that no bastard ever won a war by dying for his country. He won it by making the other poor dumb bastard die for his country.” 2 6 6 T H E P H A N T O M O F T H E O P E R A Universal, 1925 PRINCIPAL CAST Lon Chaney, Mary Philbin DIRECTOR Rupert Julian SCREENWRITERS Raymond Schrock, Elliott J. Clawson Chaney’s Phantom was more frightening in this early horror classic than later romanticized versions of the Victor Hugo novel, about a disfigured man who haunts the Paris Opera House. 2 6 7 P H I L A D E L P H I A TriStar, 1993 PRINCIPAL CAST Tom Hanks, Denzel Washington DIRECTOR Jonathan Demme PRODUCERS Jonathan Demme, Edward Saxon SCREENWRITER Ron Nyswaner Hanks is fired after revealing he is HIV-positive, and Washington overcomes his prejudice of homosexuals to defend him in a lawsuit against his former employer. This film brought the subject of compassion and understanding for people with AIDS to a wide audience. 90 American Film Institute 2 6 8 T H E P H I L A D E L P H I A S T O RY MGM, 1940 PRINCIPAL CAST Cary Grant, Katharine Hepburn, James Stewart DIRECTOR George Cukor PRODUCER Joseph L. Mankiewicz SCREENWRITER Donald Ogden Stewart Sophisticated and screwball all at once, Hepburn’s cool, icy heiress really belongs with Grant, her ex. It takes tabloid newsman Stewart to bring out the fires buried deep inside her. This is a comedy of manners and class distinction. “The prettiest sight in this fine, pretty world is the privileged class enjoying its privileges.” 2 6 9 P I L L O W TA L K Universal, 1959 PRINCIPAL CAST Rock Hudson, Doris Day, Tony Randall, Thelma Ritter DIRECTOR Michael Gordon PRODUCERS Ross Hunter, Martin Melcher SCREENWRITERS Stanley Shapiro, Maurice Richlin, Russell Rouse, Clarence Green Prim interior decorator Day is chagrined to share a party line with womanizing songwriter Hudson. The witty script makes hay out of Day’s “virginal” image and Hudson’s masculine prowess. “Mr. Allen, this may come as a surprise to you, but there are some men who don’t end every sentence with a proposition.” 2 7 0 P I N O C C H I O Disney, 1940 PRINCIPAL CAST Dickie Jones, Cliff Edwards, Christian Rub, Evelyn Venable, Walter Catlett (voices) DIRECTOR Ben Sharpsteen, Hamilton Luske PRODUCER Walt Disney SCREENWRITERS Ted Sears, Webb Smith, Joseph Sabo, Otto Englander, William Cottrell, Erdman Penner, Aurelius Battaglia Puppeteer Geppetto’s fantasy of having a real-life son comes true with help provided by Jiminy Cricket. The song When You Wish Upon a Star became a signature Disney tune. 2 7 1 P I R AT E S O F T H E C A R I B B E A N : T H E C U R S E O F T H E B L A C K P E A R L Disney, 2003 PRINCIPAL CAST Johnny Depp, Geoffrey Rush, Orlando Bloom, Keira Knightley DIRECTOR Gore Verbinski PRODUCER Jerry Bruckheimer SCREENWRITERS Ted Elliott, Terry Rossio Barbossa and his evil pack of pirates need Elizabeth Swann to reverse the ancient curse that keeps them in a nether world, somewhere between the living and the dead. It’s up to Will Turner and Captain Jack Sparrow to rescue her from the skeletons who glide across the ocean floor. American Film Institute 91 2 7 2 A P L A C E I N T H E S U N Paramount, 1951 PRINCIPAL CAST Montgomery Clift, Elizabeth Taylor, Shelley Winters DIRECTOR George Stevens PRODUCER George Stevens SCREENWRITERS Michael Wilson, Harry Brown Theodore Dreiser’s celebrated novel, An American Tragedy, comes to the silver screen in Stevens’ re-telling of the tragic story. When the brooding Clift meets beautiful socialite Taylor, he has to do something about his pregnant girlfriend Winters. Whether or not Winter’s drowning death is accidental, Clift must pay the ultimate price. 2 7 3 P L A N E T O F T H E A P E S Twentieth Century-Fox, 1968 PRINCIPAL CAST Charlton Heston, Kim Hunter, Roddy McDowall DIRECTOR Franklin J. Schaffner PRODUCER Arthur P. Jacobs SCREENWRITERS Michael Wilson, Rod Serling Three astronauts crash after a long space flight, only to discover that apes rule their planet. Just as Heston is about to be lobotomized, he yells, “Get your stinking paws off me, you damn dirty ape!” The race is on in this science fiction thriller that takes Heston to the Forbidden Zone, where he discovers the awful truth about mankind. 2 7 4 P L ATOON Orion, 1986 PRINCIPAL CAST Charlie Sheen, Tom Berenger, Willem Dafoe DIRECTOR Oliver Stone PRODUCER Arnold Kopelson SCREENWRITER Oliver Stone Based on Stone’s own experiences as a grunt in Vietnam, Sheen is a young man from a privileged background who suddenly finds himself stuck between two officers with opposing ideas of right and wrong in a war filled with uncertainties. The conflict within a conflict results in the massacre of a village. 2 7 5 T H E P O O R L I T T L E R I C H G I R L Artcraft, 1917 PRINCIPAL CAST Mary Pickford DIRECTOR Maurice Tourneur SCREENWRITER Frances Marion Pickford takes on the title role of the little girl everyone ignores, most of all her socially consumed parents. It takes a tragedy involving one of the servants to make them all see the error of their ways. 92 American Film Institute 2 7 6 P O R G Y A N D B E S S Columbia, 1959 PRINCIPAL CAST Sidney Poitier, Dorothy Dandridge, Sammy Davis, Jr., Diahann Carroll, Brock Peters, Pearl Bailey DIRECTOR Otto Preminger PRODUCER Samuel Goldwyn SCREENWRITERS DuBose Heyward, N. Richard Nash This production of Gershwin’s legendary opera gained controversy as it made its way to the screen. A shabby fishing village in South Carolina is the setting for this allsinging love story. Crown, wanted for murder, has gone into hiding, leaving girlfriend Bess behind. Her high-life background makes her an outcast in Catfish Row, but crippled Porgy provides shelter and soon falls under her spell. 2 7 7 T H E P O S T M A N A LWAY S R I N G S T W I C E MGM, 1946 PRINCIPAL CAST Lana Turner, John Garfield, Cecil Kellaway DIRECTOR Tay Garnett PRODUCER Carey Wilson SCREENWRITERS Harry Ruskin, Niven Busch Turner and Garfield steam up the screen as the illicit lovers who “accidentally” murder her husband. Based on James M. Cain’s potboiler, Turner’s scorching siren is only out for herself, but their mutual obsession destroys them both in this classic film noir. 2 7 8 T H E P R I D E O F T H E YA N K E E S RKO, 1942 PRINCIPAL CAST Gary Cooper, Teresa Wright, Walter Brennan DIRECTOR Sam Wood PRODUCER Samuel Goldwyn SCREENWRITERS Herman J. Mankiewicz, Jo Swerling, Paul Gallico The beloved New York Yankee’s career was cut too short when he was diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Cooper’s touching delivery of Gehrig’s farewell, “Today I consider myself the luckiest man on the face of the earth,” is one of the film’s most poignant moments. 2 7 9 T H E P R O D U C E R S Embassy, 1967 PRINCIPAL CAST Zero Mostel, Gene Wilder, Kenneth Mars, Dick Shawn DIRECTOR Mel Brooks PRODUCER Sidney Glazier SCREENWRITER Mel Brooks Mostel is a Broadway producer and Wilder is his meek accountant who scheme to produce an enormous flop in an effort to bilk the “little old ladies” for money. When the curtain goes up on Springtime for Hitler, their sure-fire flop becomes a sure-fire hit, sending them to prison. American Film Institute 93 2 8 0 PSYCHO Paramount, 1960 PRINCIPAL CAST Anthony Perkins, Janet Leigh, Vera Miles DIRECTOR Alfred Hitchcock PRODUCER Alfred Hitchcock SCREENWRITER Joseph Stefano Leigh is on the lam with stolen money and makes the mistake of checking into the Bates Motel, run by Perkins…and his mother. Hitchcock’s horror film is best remembered for the shower scene and Bernard Herrmann’s chilling score. 2 8 1 T H E P U B L I C E N E M Y Warner Bros., 1931 PRINCIPAL CAST James Cagney, Jean Harlow, Mae Clarke DIRECTOR William A. Wellman PRODUCER Darryl F. Zanuck SCREENWRITERS John Bright, Kubec Glasmon, Harvey F. Thew Cagney showed that an amoral, cocky criminal could be popular with audiences, even when he shoved a grapefruit in the face of his long-suffering girlfriend, Clarke. 2 8 2 P U L P F I C T I O N Miramax, 1994 PRINCIPAL CAST John Travolta, Samuel L. Jackson, Uma Thurman, Bruce Willis DIRECTOR Quentin Tarantino PRODUCER Lawrence Bender SCREENWRITERS Roger Avery, Quentin Tarantino Tarantino’s tale of violence, corruption and redemption broke new ground with his non-linear story of two hit men who live by a strict moral code. They intersect the lives of a boxer, a crime boss, his drug-using wife, a couple of small-time crooks and of course—the Gimp! Q R American Film Institute 95 2 8 3 Q U E E N C H R I S T I N A MGM, 1933 PRINCIPAL CAST Greta Garbo, John Gilbert, Ian Keith, Lewis Stone DIRECTOR Rouben Mamoulian PRODUCER Walter Wanger SCREENWRITERS H.M. Harwood, Salka Viertel Based loosely on the life of Sweden’s noble queen, a woman with 20th century sensibilities. Beloved by her people, Christina refuses to marry for political reasons and gives up her throne. Garbo’s beauty and enigmatic mystery are captured in the last lingering closeup. 2 8 4 T H E Q U I E T M A N Republic, 1952 PRINCIPAL CAST John Wayne, Maureen O’Hara, Victor McLaglen DIRECTOR John Ford PRODUCER Merian C. Cooper SCREENWRITER Frank S. Nugent Ford’s nostalgic homage to Ireland is photographed in deep rich tones, reflecting the romantic Gaelic countryside. Wayne, a boxer with a past he’d like to forget, returns to Innishfree hoping to start over. But, he falls in love with a fiery O’Hara and mixes it up with her stubborn brother in a boxing match that’s got the Methodists and Catholics placing bets. 2 8 5 R A G I N G B U L L United Artists, 1980 PRINCIPAL CAST Robert De Niro, Cathy Moriarty, Joe Pesci DIRECTOR Martin Scorsese PRODUCER Robert Chartoff, Irwin Winkler SCREENWRITERS Mardik Martin, Paul Schrader De Niro is Jake LaMotta, the middleweight boxing champ whose opponents in the ring are no match for the demons he fights in his personal life. The film is often noted for Thelma Schoonmaker’s achievement in editing. 2 8 6 R A I D E R S O F T H E L O S T A R K Paramount, 1981 PRINCIPAL CAST Harrison Ford, Karen Allen DIRECTOR Steven Spielberg PRODUCER Frank Marshall SCREENWRITERS Lawrence Kasdan, George Lucas, Phillip Kaufman Lucas and Spielberg’s cliff hanging, action-adventure, propels archaeologist Indiana Jones across five continents in a race against the Nazis to find the Ark of the Covenant. 96 American Film Institute 2 8 7 R A I N M A N United Artists, 1988 PRINCIPAL CAST Dustin Hoffman, Tom Cruise DIRECTOR Barry Levinson PRODUCER Mark Johnson SCREENWRITERS Ronald Bass, Barry Morrow Hoffman is an autistic man who inherits his father’s estate, and Cruise is his hustling brother who assumes custody hoping to cash in. When Raymond refuses to board an airplane, they drive across country in their father’s classic convertible and discover their mutual need for each other. 2 8 8 A R A I S I N I N T H E S U N Columbia, 1961 PRINCIPAL CAST Sidney Poitier, Claudia McNeil, Ruby Dee DIRECTOR Daniel Petrie PRODUCERS David Sussking, Philip Rose SCREENWRITER Lorraine Hansberry An African-American family just getting by in a tiny Chicago apartment receives a $10,000 life insurance check that could change their lives. Years of frustration and family conflicts intrude on how to spend the money and make their dreams come true. 2 8 9 RAY Universal, 2004 PRINCIPAL CAST Jamie Foxx, Kerry Washington, Regina King, Clifton Powell, Bokeem Woodbine DIRECTOR Taylor Hackford PRODUCERS Howard Baldwin, Karen Elise Baldwin, Stuart Benjamin, Taylor Hackford SCREENWRITER James L. White Ray Charles overcomes poverty, blindness, drug addiction, and racism to become one of the pioneers of rock ’n’ roll and a musical legend. 2 9 0 REAR WINDOW Paramount, 1954 PRINCIPAL CAST James Stewart, Grace Kelly DIRECTOR Alfred Hitchcock PRODUCER Alfred Hitchcock SCREENWRITER John Michael Hayes When a broken leg forces photographer Stewart to become wheelchair-bound in his New York City apartment, he amuses himself by spying on his neighbors and soon becomes obsessed when he thinks he has witnessed a murder. Kelly, as his fashionmodel girlfriend, helps with amateur detective work. American Film Institute 97 2 9 1 R E B E C C A United Artists, 1940 PRINCIPAL CAST Laurence Olivier, Joan Fontaine, Judith Anderson DIRECTOR Alfred Hitchcock PRODUCER David O. Selznick SCREENWRITERS Robert E. Sherwood, Joan Harrison, Philip MacDonald, Michael Hogan “Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again.” These words that open the dark and brooding tale of a shy young woman married to a powerful and wealthy Englishman set the tone for a mystery of lies, transgressions, and maybe even murder. 2 9 2 R E B E L W I T H O U T A C A U S E Warner Bros., 1955 PRINCIPAL CAST James Dean, Natalie Wood, Sal Mineo DIRECTOR Nicholas Ray PRODUCER David Weisbart SCREENWRITERS Nicholas Ray, Irving Shulman, Stewart Stern Dean’s defining role as a tortured high-school student also seemed to define a generation of 1950s teenagers who felt isolated from their parents and sought solace with friends and authority-defying drag racing. 2 9 3 R E D R I V E R United Artists, 1948 PRINCIPAL CAST John Wayne, Montgomery Clift DIRECTOR Howard Hawks PRODUCER Howard Hawks SCREENWRITERS Borden Chase, Charles Schnee Both a sweeping and complex Western, the epic cattle drive tests the wills of Wayne and his “adopted” son, Clift, in his first film. 2 9 4 R E D S Paramount, 1981 PRINCIPAL CAST Warren Beatty, Diane Keaton, Jack Nicholson, Maureen Stapleton DIRECTOR Warren Beatty PRODUCER Warren Beatty SCREENWRITERS Warren Beatty, Trevor Griffiths Beatty directs, produces, co-writes, and stars in this sweeping epic of John Reed, the American reporter who was on the cutting edge of journalism and politics in the years leading up to the Russian Revolution. His devotion to his work and his love for Louise Bryant is told through “witnesses,” real men and women whose lives intersected the long-forgotten political writer. 98 American Film Institute 2 9 5 R E Q U I E M F O R A D R E A M Artisan, 2000 PRINCIPAL CAST Ellen Burstyn, Jared Leto, Jennifer Connelly, Marlon Wayans DIRECTOR Darren Aronofsky PRODUCERS Eric Watson, Palmer West SCREENWRITERS Hubert Selby, Jr., Darren Aronofsky Aronofsky’s alarming and graphic study bears witness to the downward spiral of four parallel lives struggling to survive the pain and terror of drug addiction. 2 9 6 R E T U R N O F T H E S E C A U C U S 7 Salsipuedes, 1980 PRINCIPAL CAST Mark Arnott, Gordon Clapp, David Strathairn DIRECTOR John Sayles PRODUCERS William Aydelott, Jeffrey Nelson SCREENWRITER John Sayles Sayles’ low-budget classic tells the story of seven college buddies who reunite for a weekend and reminisce about the time they were arrested in Secaucus, New Jersey, on their way to a Vietnam war demonstration in Washington, DC. “What’s a little reunion without a little drama?” 2 9 7 T H E R I G H T S T U F F Warner Bros., 1983 PRINCIPAL CAST Sam Shepard, Scott Glenn, Ed Harris, Dennis Quaid DIRECTOR Philip Kaufman PRODUCER Irwin Winkler SCREENWRITER Philip Kaufman Writer-director Kaufman celebrates the birth of America’s Mercury Space program by focusing on the daring test pilots who were first recruited by NASA to become America’s pioneers in space. Bill Conti’s powerful soundtrack heralds in the dawn of the space age. 2 9 8 R I S K Y B U S I N E S S Warner Bros., 1983 PRINCIPAL CAST Tom Cruise, Rebecca De Mornay DIRECTOR Paul Brickman PRODUCERS Jon Avnet, Steve Tisch SCREENWRITER Paul Brickman Cruise slid into the American consciousness in his underwear as Joel, the high school senior who turns his parents’ house into a bordello while they are away for the weekend. American Film Institute 99 2 9 9 ROAD TO MOROCCO Paramount, 1942 PRINCIPAL CAST Bing Crosby, Bob Hope, Dorothy Lamour DIRECTOR David Butler PRODUCER Paul Jones SCREENWRITERS Frank Butler, Don Hartman The third in the popular Hope, Crosby and Lamour “road” pictures is kicked off by Crosby selling Hope into slavery and both getting tangled up with the alluring Princess Shalmar, played by Lamour. As usual, however, the plot is just a jumping off point for some terrific gags. 3 0 0 ROCKY United Artists, 1976 PRINCIPAL CAST Sylvester Stallone, Talia Shire, Burt Young, Burgess Meredith, Carl Weathers DIRECTOR John G. Avildsen PRODUCERS Irwin Winkler, Robert Chartoff SCREENWRITER Sylvester Stallone No one believes a loser like Rocky Balboa can go the distance. When world heavyweight champ Apollo Creed wants to fight an “unknown,” Rocky gets his shot in the ring and at love. “Yo, Adrian!” 3 0 1 T H E R O C K Y H O R R O R P I C T U R E S H O W Twentieth Century-Fox, 1975 PRINCIPAL CAST Tim Curry, Susan Sarandon, Barry Bostwick DIRECTOR Jim Sharman PRODUCER Michael White SCREENWRITERS Jim Sharman, Richard O’Brien The gender-bender musical cult favorite is a tale of two innocents stranded in a mysterious castle with the kinky mad scientist Dr. Frank-N-Furter. Midnight screenings in theatres from coast to coast included must-do audience participation. 3 0 2 ROMAN HOLIDAY Paramount, 1953 PRINCIPAL CAST Gregory Peck, Audrey Hepburn, Eddie Albert DIRECTOR William Wyler PRODUCER William Wyler SCREENWRITERS Ian McLellan Hunter (Dalton Trumbo), John Dighton In this captivating modern-day fairy tale, Hepburn is a princess under lock and key who runs away and falls in love with Peck, a journalist who happens to be in need of a great story. Hepburn in her first American film became an overnight sensation. 100 American Film Institute 3 0 3 ROSEMARY ’ S B A B Y Paramount, 1968 PRINCIPAL CAST Mia Farrow, John Cassavetes, Ruth Gordon DIRECTOR Roman Polanski PRODUCER William Castle SCREENWRITER Roman Polanski Farrow is a young wife who becomes pregnant and slowly learns to her horror that her husband is involved with a group of people who worship the forces of darkness. Pray for Rosemary’s baby. 3 0 4 R U S H M O R E Touchstone, 1998 PRINCIPAL CAST Jason Schwartzman, Bill Murray, Olivia Williams, Seymour Cassel DIRECTOR Wes Anderson PRODUCERS Barry Mendel, Paul Schiff SCREENWRITERS Wes Anderson, Owen Wilson Anderson established himself with this stylish film about a quirky prep school lad and a steel tycoon who are in love with the same first grade teacher at Rushmore. “She’s my Rushmore.” “I know. She was mine too.” S 102 American Film Institute 3 0 5 S A F E T Y L A S T Pathé, 1923 PRINCIPAL CAST Harold Lloyd, Mildred Davis DIRECTOR Fred C. Newmeyer, Sam Taylor PRODUCER Hal Roach SCREENWRITERS Hal Roach, Sam Taylor, Tim Whelan The simple story of a boy coming to the city to make good and impress his girl becomes comical when showcased with Lloyd’s physical style, particularly the famous scene in which he hangs above the city streets from the hands of a giant clock. 3 0 6 S AT U R D AY N I G H T F E V E R Paramount, 1977 PRINCIPAL CAST John Travolta, Karen Lynn Gorney DIRECTOR John Badham PRODUCER Robert Stigwood SCREENWRITERS Norman Wexler, Nik Cohn Brooklyn youth Travolta feels he has no meaning to his life, except when he’s dancing at the disco. The Bee-Gees soundtrack and Travolta’s white suit and stylized moves have become internationally recognized icons of the 1970s. 3 0 7 S AV I N G P R I VAT E RYA N DreamWorks, 1998 PRINCIPAL CAST Tom Hanks, Tom Sizemore, Matt Damon DIRECTOR Steven Spielberg PRODUCERS Steven Spielberg, Ian Bryce, Mark Gordon, Gary Levinsohn SCREENWRITER Robert Rodat All of Private James Ryan’s brothers have been killed in the line of duty. A unit of war-weary soldiers is forced to risk their lives to find the young man and bring him home. The film was a realistic and uncompromising account of the war often romanticized by Hollywood. 3 0 8 S C A R FA C E : T H E S H A M E O F A N AT I O N United Artists, 1932 PRINCIPAL CAST Paul Muni, Ann Dvorak, George Raft DIRECTOR Howard Hawks PRODUCER Howard Hawks SCREENWRITERS Ben Hecht, W.R. Burnett, Fred Pasley, John Lee Mahin, Seton I. Miller Hawks’ sensational and searing crime drama is ripped from the headlines of the 1930s. Muni delivers a powerful depiction of a twisted, Al Capone-like figure with an unnatural attraction to his sister in this brutal story of a gangster who rises to the top, only to die beneath a neon sign proclaiming “The World’s At Your Feet.” American Film Institute 103 3 0 9 T H E S C A R L E T E M P R E S S Paramount, 1934 PRINCIPAL CAST Marlene Dietrich, John Lodge, Sam Jaffe DIRECTOR Josef von Sternberg PRODUCER Josef von Sternberg SCREENWRITERS Manuel Komroff, Eleanor McGeary Visually sumptuous and ostentatious, Sternberg’s fictionalized version of Catherine the Great’s life was one of the most daring films to reach the screen in the 1930s. Illicit love affairs, nudity, and political subversion told the story of a shy young German princess’ transformation to Empress of Russia. 3 1 0 S C H I N D L E R ’ S L I S T Universal, 1993 PRINCIPAL CAST Liam Neeson, Ralph Fiennes DIRECTOR Steven Spielberg PRODUCERS Steven Spielberg, Branko Lustig, Gerald R. Molen SCREENWRITER Steven Zaillian The film is based on the true, complex, and often puzzling story of Oskar Schindler, the Czech industrialist who saved hundreds of Jews from the gas chambers during the Holocaust. “This list is an absolute good. The list is life.” 3 1 1 T H E S E A R C H E R S Warner Bros., 1956 PRINCIPAL CAST John Wayne, Jeffrey Hunter, Vera Miles, Natalie Wood DIRECTOR John Ford PRODUCERS Merian C. Cooper, Patrick Ford SCREENWRITER Frank S. Nugent Ford’s landmark saga is a quest to find a child abducted by Comanches right after the Civil War. Wayne, an Indian-hating ex-soldier, wages an internal battle while devoting years to searching for his niece, abducted during an Indian raid. 3 1 2 S E N S E A N D S E N S I B I L I T Y Columbia, 1995 PRINCIPAL CAST Emma Thompson, Kate Winslet, Alan Rickman, Hugh Grant DIRECTOR Ang Lee PRODUCER Lindsay Doran SCREENWRITER Emma Thompson Thompson adapted Jane Austen’s 18th century novel about the Dashwood sisters, who approach love and life very differently. Elinor is all sense, Marianne all sensibility. They struggle to make proper marriages after the family loses its fortune. In the end, true love triumphs. 104 American Film Institute 3 1 3 S E R G E A N T Y O R K Warner Bros., 1941 PRINCIPAL CAST Gary Cooper, Walter Brennan, Margaret Wycherly DIRECTOR Howard Hawks PRODUCERS Jesse L. Lasky, Hal B. Wallis SCREENWRITERS Abem Finkel, Harry Chandlee, John Huston, Howard Koch The biographical story follows the experiences of rural Tennessee farmer, Alvin York, who went from pacifist to the hero of a “turkey shoot” on the battlefields of France. Single-handedly he captured over one hundred German soldiers and became the most decorated soldier of World War I. 3 1 4 S E X , L I E S , A N D V I D E O TA P E Miramax, 1989 PRINCIPAL CAST James Spader, Andie MacDowell, Peter Gallagher, Laura San Giacomo DIRECTOR Steven Soderbergh PRODUCERS Robert F. Newmyer, John Hardy SCREENWRITERS Steven Soderbergh, Robert W. Soderbergh Videotaping women’s frank and intimate details about sex and fantasies fills up Spader’s empty and impotent life. A visit with an old friend and his wife opens up a Pandora’s Box of lies. Independent filmmaking got a real boost in the American mainstream with the huge commercial success of Soderbergh’s cost-conscious feature. 3 1 5 S H A D O W O F A D O U B T Universal, 1943 PRINCIPAL CAST Joseph Cotten, Teresa Wright, Macdonald Carey, Hume Cronyn DIRECTOR Alfred Hitchock PRODUCER Jack H. Skirball SCREENWRITERS Thornton Wilder, Alma Reville, Sally Benson, Gordon McDonell Strauss’ Merry Widow Waltz takes on sinister connotations in this story of a man who comes to stay with his sister’s family while he is on the run from a series of murders of wealthy older women. 3 1 6 S H A K E S P E A R E I N L O V E Miramax, 1998 PRINCIPAL CAST Joseph Fiennes, Gwyneth Paltrow, Judi Dench, Geoffrey Rush DIRECTOR John Madden PRODUCERS David Parfitt, Donna Gigliotti, Harvey Weinstein, Edward Zwick, Marc Norman SCREENWRITERS Marc Norman, Tom Stoppard Of all people, William Shakespeare is cursed with writer’s block, and his muse, Lady Viola, keeps vanishing into thin air. Viola is dying to be part of a company of players, so she transforms herself to a he, and gets a part in Will’s half-hearted attempt at greatness, Romeo and Ethel, The Sea Pirate’s Daughter. When he discovers he is a she, this gender-bender comedy-drama ends as all great love stories must—with love denied. “You will never age for me, nor fade, nor die.” American Film Institute 105 3 1 7 SHANE Paramount, 1953 PRINCIPAL CAST Alan Ladd, Jean Arthur, Van Heflin, Brandon De Wilde, Jack Palance DIRECTOR George Stevens PRODUCERS Ivan Moffat, George Stevens SCREENWRITERS A.B. Guthrie, Jr., Jack Sher Told through the eyes of a young boy, Shane is a former gunslinger who appears out of nowhere and helps a group of settlers defend themselves against the cattlemen who want their land. 3 1 8 T H E S H AWSHANK REDEMPTION Columbia, 1994 PRINCIPAL CAST Tim Robbins, Morgan Freeman DIRECTOR Frank Darabont PRODUCER Niki Marvin SCREENWRITER Frank Darabont Banker Robbins is wrongly convicted of murder and sentenced to life in a harsh Maine prison, which drips with corruption. His intelligence helps him gain the respect of his fellow inmates, including Freeman’s entrepreneurial “Red,” while secretly devising a plan to escape. 3 1 9 S H E D O N E H I M W R O N G Paramount, 1933 PRINCIPAL CAST Mae West, Cary Grant DIRECTOR Lowell Sherman PRODUCER William Le Baron SCREENWRITERS Mae West, John Bright, Harvey F. Thew Grant’s Salvation Army captain proves no match for the spicy humor and playful sexiness of West’s Lady Lou when she asks him, “Why don’t you come up sometime and see me?” 3 2 0 S H E R L O C K , J R . Metro, 1924 PRINCIPAL CAST Buster Keaton, Kathryn McGuire DIRECTOR Buster Keaton PRODUCER Joseph M. Schenck SCREENWRITERS Clyde Bruckman, Jean Havez, Joseph Mitchell This surreal fantasy finds Keaton as a projectionist who steps into the film he’s screening, assumes the role of master sleuth, solves the crime and saves the girl…all this before waking in the projection booth to find his real girlfriend waiting for him. 106 American Film Institute 3 2 1 T H E S H I N I N G Warner Bros., 1980 PRINCIPAL CAST Jack Nicholson, Shelley Duvall, Danny Lloyd DIRECTOR Stanley Kubrick PRODUCERS Robert Fryer, Stanley Kubrick SCREENWRITERS Diane Johnson, Stanley Kubrick A family of three are the snowbound caretakers of an enormous resort in Kubrick’s terrifyingly intense gothic horror thriller. Cabin-fever and telepathy collide, as frustrated writer Nicholson goes completely insane. “Here’s Johnny!” 3 2 2 S H R E K DreamWorks, 2001 PRINCIPAL CAST Mike Myers, Eddie Murphy, Cameron Diaz, John Lithgow (voices) DIRECTOR Andrew Adamson, Vicky Jenson PRODUCERS Jeffrey Katzenberg, Aron Warner, John H. Williams SCREENWRITERS Ted Elliott, Terry Rossio, Joe Stillman, Roger S. H. Schulman In this hilarious animated musical, Shrek is a green slimy ogre and the hero of his own story, but there’s a princess, who doesn’t look like any conventional heroine in the storybooks. They create a revisionist fairy tale, by righting the wrongs of dastardly Lord Farquaad! 3 2 3 S I D E WAY S Twentieth Century-Fox, 2004 PRINCIPAL CAST Paul Giamatti, Thomas Haden Church, Viginia Madsen, Sandra Oh DIRECTOR Alexander Payne PRODUCER Michael London SCREENWRITERS Alexander Payne, Jim Taylor Two middle-aged guys who don’t believe they’ve accomplished much head to Central California’s wine country and discover a lot more about themselves and love than they ever imagined. Like a fine wine, they continuously evolve, because they’re alive. 3 2 4 T H E S I L E N C E O F T H E L A M B S Orion, 1991 PRINCIPAL CAST Jodie Foster, Anthony Hopkins DIRECTOR Jonathan Demme PRODUCERS Edward Saxton, Kenneth Utt, Ronald M. Bozman SCREENWRITER Ted Tally “I ate his liver with some fava beans and a nice chianti,” hisses Hopkins’ Hannibal Lecter, a brilliant serial killer engaged by Foster’s FBI agent in an effort to capture another killer on the loose. American Film Institute 107 3 2 5 S I N G I N ’ I N T H E R A I N MGM, 1952 PRINCIPAL CAST Gene Kelly, Debbie Reynolds, Donald O’Connor, Jean Hagen DIRECTOR Gene Kelly, Stanley Donen PRODUCER Arthur Freed SCREENWRITERS Adolph Green, Betty Comden This musical set in Hollywood during the conversion from silent to sound films has Kelly singing, dancing and splashing in puddles. Reynolds and O’Connor lend support in some of the most delightful song and dance numbers ever filmed. 3 2 6 T H E S I X T H S E N S E Hollywood, 1999 PRINCIPAL CAST Bruce Willis, Haley Joel Osment, Toni Collette DIRECTOR M. Night Shyamalan PRODUCERS Kathleen Kennedy, Frank Marshall, Barry Mendel SCREENWRITER M. Night Shyamalan “I see dead people.” That’s what young Cole Sears claims. At first, psychologist Malcolm Crowe thinks the boy is seeing things. Little by little he begins to understand. 3 2 7 S L E E P E R United Artists, 1973 PRINCIPAL CAST Woody Allen, Diane Keaton DIRECTOR Woody Allen PRODUCER Jack Grossberg SCREENWRITERS Woody Allen, Marshall Brickman Allen takes a comical swipe at science fiction, when his geeky Miles Monroe wakes up 200 years in the future. An homage to Chaplin, Keaton and Lloyd, Allen’s characters can’t quite figure out how to deal with technology and love. “Sex and death. Two things that come once in a lifetime. But at least after death, you’re not nauseous.” 3 2 8 S L E E P L E S S I N S E AT T L E TriStar, 1993 PRINCIPAL CAST Tom Hanks, Meg Ryan, Bill Pullman, Ross Malinger DIRECTOR Nora Ephron PRODUCER Gary Foster SCREENWRITERS Nora Ephron, David S. Ward, Jeff Arch Ryan unexpectedly falls for widower Hanks when she hears him on talk radio. Hanks’ young son does everything he can to unite them at the top of the Empire State Building in this unabashed valentine to AN AFFAIR TO REMEMBER. 108 American Film Institute 3 2 9 S N O W W H I T E A N D T H E S E V E N D WA R F S Disney, 1937 PRINCIPAL CAST Adriana Caselotti, Lucille La Verne, Moroni Olsen, Harry Stockwell, Billy Gilbert (voices) DIRECTOR David Hand PRODUCER Walt Disney SCREENWRITERS Ted Sears, Richard Creedon, Otto Englander, Dick Richard, Earl Hurd, Merrill De Maris, Dorothy Ann Blank, Webb Smith Disney’s first full-length animated feature still resonates with audiences young and old as the beautiful young princess is saved from the wicked queen by the dwarfs who whistle while they work. 3 3 0 S O M E L I K E I T H O T United Artists, 1959 PRINCIPAL CAST Marilyn Monroe, Tony Curtis, Jack Lemmon DIRECTOR Billy Wilder PRODUCER Billy Wilder SCREENWRITERS Billy Wilder, I.A.L. Diamond A couple of guys on the run from the mob dress in drag and join an all-girl band. But when they meet Monroe’s Sugar ‘Kane’ Kowalczyk, (“Look how she moves! It’s like Jell-O on springs!”), they’re a couple of goners. “Well, nobody’s perfect.” 3 3 1 S O N S O F T H E D E S E RT MGM, 1933 PRINCIPAL CAST Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy DIRECTOR William A. Seiter PRODUCER Hal Roach SCREENWRITERS Frank Craven, Byron Morgan Stan and Ollie want to attend the annual Sons of the Desert convention in Chicago, so they lie to their wives and tell them they are going on a health cruise to Hawaii. The wives worry when that ship sinks, but then they see a newsreel of their husbands’ hi-jinks in Chicago. “Well, here’s another nice mess you’ve gotten me into!” 3 3 2 S O P H I E ’ S C H O I C E Universal, 1982 PRINCIPAL CAST Meryl Streep, Kevin Kline, Peter MacNicol DIRECTOR Alan J. Pakula PRODUCERS Keith Barish, Alan J. Pakula SCREENWRITER Alan J. Pakula Streep is a Polish immigrant living in Brooklyn with her flamboyant lover, played by Kline, and their Southern writer friend, Stingo. The more Sophie reflects on her painful life, the more she is haunted by her years in a concentration camp and the unthinkable decision she was forced to make. American Film Institute 109 3 3 3 T H E S O U N D O F M U S I C Twentieth Century-Fox, 1965 PRINCIPAL CAST Julie Andrews, Christopher Plummer, Peggy Wood DIRECTOR Robert Wise PRODUCER Robert Wise SCREENWRITER Ernest Lehman Andrews is Maria, a nun who becomes governess to the Von Trapp family in this film adaptation of the Rodgers and Hammerstein Broadway musical. Maria falls in love with the children and their handsome widowed father just as Austria is being annexed by the Nazis. The film’s songs include the title song, Do-Re-Mi and Climb Every Mountain. 3 3 4 SOUNDER Twentieth Century-Fox, 1972 PRINCIPAL CAST Cicely Tyson, Paul Winfield DIRECTOR Martin Ritt PRODUCER Robert B. Radnitz SCREENWRITER Lonne Elder III The setting is 1930s Louisiana, and Tyson is the matriarch of a sharecropper family who must do without her husband when he is arrested for stealing food. The struggle to survive and the dream of an education for their son are at the core of this film about the power of family. 3 3 5 S PARTACUS Universal, 1960 PRINCIPAL CAST Kirk Douglas, Laurence Olivier, Peter Ustinov DIRECTOR Stanley Kubrick PRODUCER Edward Lewis SCREENWRITER Dalton Trumbo Kubrick’s historic epic stars Douglas in the title role of the slave who leads a rebellion for freedom against the rulers of the Roman Empire. “I am Spartacus!” 3 3 6 S P I D E R - M A N 2 Columbia, 2004 PRINCIPAL CAST Tobey Maguire, Kirsten Dunst, James Franco, Alfred Molina DIRECTOR Sam Raimi PRODUCERS Avi Arad, Laura Ziskin SCREENWRITER Alvin Sargent Being a superhero is anything but easy! It’s a taking a toll on Peter Parker’s civilian life. Time to hang up the suit until Doctor Octopus, the menacing villain with four mechanical tentacles, makes the young hero accept his calling. 110 American Film Institute 3 3 7 S P L E N D O R I N T H E G R A S S Warner Bros., 1961 PRINCIPAL CAST Warren Beatty, Natalie Wood DIRECTOR Elia Kazan PRODUCER Elia Kazan SCREENWRITER William Inge Wood and Beatty, in his screen debut, play sweethearts in 1920s rural Kansas. Sexual repression, class distinctions, and parental expectations crash along with the stock market. Wood suffers a mental breakdown as Beatty finds a simple future with another woman. 3 3 8 S TAGECOACH United Artists, 1939 PRINCIPAL CAST John Wayne, Claire Trevor, Thomas Mitchell DIRECTOR John Ford PRODUCER Walter Wanger SCREENWRITER Dudley Nichols Ford’s first film shot in his beloved Monument Valley, the film single-handedly reinvented the Western genre. The movie also made a star out of Wayne, a vengeance-seeking fugitive transformed when he boards the stagecoach. 3 3 9 S TA L A G 1 7 Paramount, 1953 PRINCIPAL CAST William Holden, Don Taylor, Otto Preminger, Robert Strauss DIRECTOR Billy Wilder PRODUCER Billy Wilder SCREENWRITERS Billy Wilder, Edwin Blum Life in a German POW camp provides the backdrop for Wilder’s dark, but often hilarious take on World War II. Holden gives an outstanding performance as the cynical outsider falsely accused of being a Nazi plant. 3 4 0 S TA N D B Y M E Columbia, 1986 PRINCIPAL CAST Wil Wheaton, River Phoenix, Corey Feldman, Jerry O’Connell, Kiefer Sutherland DIRECTOR Rob Reiner PRODUCERS Bruce A. Evans, Raynold Gideon, Andrew Scheinman SCREENWRITERS Raynold Gideon, Bruce A. Evans “Mickey is a mouse, Donald is a duck, Pluto is a dog. What’s Goofy...?” Four young teens take off in search of a dead body, and discover much more about themselves in a memory piece about coming of age and loss. The campfire scene is a touching confessional between Wheaton and Phoenix that digs deep into an adolescent boy’s insecurities and deepest fears. American Film Institute 111 3 4 1 A S TA R I S B O R N Warner Bros., 1954 PRINCIPAL CAST Judy Garland, James Mason DIRECTOR George Cukor PRODUCER Sidney Luft SCREENWRITERS Moss Hart, William A. Wellman, Robert Carson Garland’s comeback performance highlighted this remake of the 1937 film in which a young film star’s rise to fame coincides with the decline of her once famous, alcoholic husband. 3 4 2 S TAR WA R S Twentieth Century-Fox, 1977 PRINCIPAL CAST Mark Hamill, Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher, Alec Guinness DIRECTOR George Lucas PRODUCER Gary Kurtz SCREENWRITER George Lucas A landmark science fiction fantasy about a young man, Luke Skywalker, who finds his calling as a Jedi warrior and with the help of “droids” and an outlaw named Han Solo embarks on a mission to rescue a princess and save the galaxy from the Dark Side. “May the force be with you.” 3 4 3 T H E S T I N G Universal, 1973 PRINCIPAL CAST Paul Newman, Robert Redford DIRECTOR George Roy Hill PRODUCERS Tony Bill, Julia Phillips, Michael Phillips SCREENWRITER David S. Ward Newman and Redford reunited with director Hill and produced this comedic caper about two con men out to put the “the sting” on a hood who had one of their friends bumped off. Scott Joplin’s rags—adapted by Marvin Hamlisch—underscore the action with a rollicking flair. 3 4 4 STORMY WEAT H E R Twentieth Century-Fox, 1943 PRINCIPAL CAST Lena Horne, Bill Robinson, Cab Calloway, Nicholas Brothers, Fats Waller DIRECTOR Andrew Stone PRODUCER William LeBaron SCREENWRITERS Frederick Jackson, Ted Koehler This film is a who’s who of African-American singers and dancers led by Robinson as a dancer just back from World War I and his memories of the theatre, and Horne, the elusive woman in his life. Horne’s rendition of Stormy Weather became her signature song. 112 American Film Institute 3 4 5 S T R A N G E R T H A N PA R A D I S E Samuel Goldwyn, 1984 PRINCIPAL CAST John Lurie, Eszter Balint, Richard Edson DIRECTOR Jim Jarmusch PRODUCER Sara Driver SCREENWRITER Jim Jarmusch A road trip from New York to Cleveland to Miami, where three strangers hang out and actually find a little piece of heaven in the most unexpected locales. “Does Cleveland look a little like, uh, Budapest?” 3 4 6 S T R A N G E R S O N A T R A I N Warner Bros., 1951 PRINCIPAL CAST Farley Granger, Robert Walker, Ruth Roman DIRECTOR Alfred Hitchcock PRODUCER Alfred Hitchcock SCREENWRITERS Raymond Chandler, Czenzi Ormonde, Whitfield Cook Two strangers on a train, each with a motive to commit murder, swap stories about the possibilities, but the psychotic one goes over the edge. Some of Hitchcock’s most iconic images still haunt movie audiences: a murder reflected in some eyeglasses and an out-of-control carnival ride in the film’s harrowing finale. 3 4 7 A S T R E E T C A R N A M E D D E S I R E Warner Bros., 1951 PRINCIPAL CAST Vivien Leigh, Marlon Brando, Kim Hunter, Karl Malden DIRECTOR Elia Kazan PRODUCER Charles K. Feldman SCREENWRITERS Tennessee Williams, Oscar Saul Recreating the role that made him a star on Broadway, Brando is Stanley Kowalski, the blue-collared brute married to the sister of a neurotic, fragile, aging Southern belle named Blanche, who has always depended on the kindness of strangers. 3 4 8 S U L L I VA N ’ S T R AV E L S Paramount, 1941 PRINCIPAL CAST Joel McCrea, Veronica Lake DIRECTOR Preston Sturges PRODUCERS B.G. DeSylva, Paul Jones SCREENWRITER Preston Sturges Hugely successful film director John L. Sullivan wants to make a picture that means something, “A true canvas of human suffering.” What he learns on his journey, as he becomes the architect of his own story is: “There’s a lot to be said for making people laugh. Did you know that that’s all some people have? It isn’t much, but it’s better than nothing in this cockeyed caravan.” American Film Institute 113 3 4 9 S U N R I S E Twentieth Century-Fox, 1927 PRINCIPAL CAST George O’Brien, Janet Gaynor DIRECTOR F.W. Murnau SCREENWRITER Carl Mayer Murnau’s shattering film of redemption and forgiveness is told in a simple story of a married farmer, lured to the big city by a “wicked woman.” A cavalcade of urban images and horrific storms almost destroy the farmer when he thinks his wife is lost at sea in this expressionistic masterpiece. 3 5 0 S U N S E T B LV D . Paramount, 1950 PRINCIPAL CAST Gloria Swanson, William Holden, Erich von Stroheim DIRECTOR Billy Wilder PRODUCER Charles Brackett SCREENWRITERS Charles Brackett, Billy Wilder, D. M. Marshman, Jr. Struggling writer Holden hides out from car repossessors in the ancient mansion of aging silent star Swanson (“I am big. It’s the pictures that got small.”). He sees a lucrative break for himself when she wants to make a return to the screen, but he is unaware of the price he will have to pay. 3 5 1 T H E S W E E T S M E L L O F S U C C E S S United Artists, 1957 PRINCIPAL CAST Burt Lancaster, Tony Curtis, Susan Harrison, Barbara Nichols DIRECTOR Alexander Mackendrick PRODUCER James Hill SCREENWRITERS Clifford Odets, Ernest Lehman James Wong Howe’s masterful black-and-white cinematography casts a low light on the cynical and seamy side of New York’s press agents and the deals they make with the devil, just to get a bit in J.J. Hunsecker’s column. Lehman and Odets’ barbs still pack a punch: “I’d hate to take a bite outta you. You’re a cookie full of arsenic.” 3 5 2 S W I N G T I M E RKO, 1936 PRINCIPAL CAST Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers DIRECTOR George Stevens PRODUCER Pandro S. Berman SCREENWRITERS Howard Lindsay, Allan Scott, Erwin Gelsey Prospective groom Astaire misses his wedding and must prove that he is marriage material. He heads to NYC, where he dances his heart out with Rogers to the songs of Jerome Kern and Dorothy Fields. Every song advances the plot and the courtship of two hoofers looking for A Fine Romance. T American Film Institute 115 3 5 3 TA X I D R I V E R Columbia, 1976 PRINCIPAL CAST Robert De Niro, Cybill Shepherd, Jodie Foster DIRECTOR Martin Scorsese PRODUCERS Julia Phillips, Michael Phillips SCREENWRITER Paul Schrader De Niro is Travis Bickle, a New York City cab driver whose rage builds in a lonely, dark world, until his attempt to befriend and free Foster’s 12-year-old prostitute from her pimp culminates in a violent shootout. “You talkin’ to me?” 3 5 4 T H E T E N C O M M A N D M E N T S Paramount, 1956 PRINCIPAL CAST Charlton Heston, Yul Brynner, Anne Baxter DIRECTOR Cecil B. DeMille PRODUCER Cecil B. DeMille SCREENWRITERS Aeneas MacKenzie, Jesse Lasky, Jr., Jack Gariss, Fredric M. Frank DeMille remade his own silent film epic into a sweeping blockbuster that tells the story of Moses’ transformation as a prince of Egypt to the savior of the Hebrews locked in bondage. The parting of the Red Sea is still one of film history’s iconic images. 3 5 5 T E R M I N AT O R 2 : J U D G M E N T D AY TriStar, 1991 PRINCIPAL CAST Arnold Schwarzenegger, Robert Patrick, Linda Hamilton, Edward Furlong DIRECTOR James Cameron PRODUCER James Cameron SCREENWRITERS James Cameron, William Wisher, Jr. Dazzling visual effects pushed the boundaries of filmmaking and gave incredible life to the T-1000, a Terminator sent from the future to destroy a young man who will one day save humanity. Schwarzenegger, playing an older T-800 model, is “back” to defend him. “Hasta la vista, baby.” 3 5 6 T E R M S O F E N D E A R M E N T Paramount, 1983 PRINCIPAL CAST Shirley MacLaine, Debra Winger, Jack Nicholson DIRECTOR James L. Brooks PRODUCER James L. Brooks SCREENWRITER James L. Brooks Over a period of thirty years, MacLaine and Winger’s challenging mother-daughter relationship is sorely tested by MacLaine’s smothering advice regarding marriage, children and every possible life choice. Ultimately, they find their closest bond when Winger contracts a terminal illness. 116 American Film Institute 3 5 7 T H E L M A & L O U I S E MGM, 1991 PRINCIPAL CAST Geena Davis, Susan Sarandon DIRECTOR Ridley Scott PRODUCERS Ridley Scott, Mimi Polk SCREENWRITER Callie Khouri What should be a weekend away from it all, turns into a tragic female-buddy road movie that broke all the conventional rules. Davis and Sarandon become fugitives from justice after great injustices have been hurled on them. 3 5 8 T H E R E ’ S S O M E T H I N G A B O U T M A RY Twentieth Century-Fox, 1999 PRINCIPAL CAST Ben Stiller, Cameron Diaz, Matt Dillon DIRECTOR Peter Farrelly, Bobby Farrelly PRODUCERS Frank Beddor, Michael Steinberg, Charles B. Wessler, Bradley Thomas SCREENWRITERS Ed Decter, John J. Strauss, Peter Farrelly, Bobby Farrelly Ted is still pining for Mary, the girl he almost took to the prom if not for an unfortunate accident with a zipper. But he’ll have to contend with con-artists, lap dogs and even Brett Favre if he wants to get the girl. “Is that... is that hair gel?” 3 5 9 T H E T H I E F O F B A G D A D United Artists, 1924 PRINCIPAL CAST Douglas Fairbanks, Anna May Wong, Noble Johnson DIRECTOR Raoul Walsh PRODUCER Douglas Fairbanks SCREENWRITERS Elton Thomas (Douglas Fairbanks), Achmed Abdullah, Lotta Woods Ultimate swashbuckler Fairbanks is a thief who falls in love with the caliph’s daughter and takes off on a magical carpet ride to find the treasure of the seven moons. 3 6 0 T H E T H I N M A N MGM, 1934 PRINCIPAL CAST William Powell, Myrna Loy DIRECTOR W.S. Van Dyke PRODUCER Hunt Stromberg SCREENWRITERS Frances Goodrich, Albert Hackett The first film to feature stylish detective Nick Charles, wife Nora and beloved terrier Asta launched the popular “Thin Man” series and ushered in a new era of sophisticated comedies. Contrary to popular belief the thin man is one of the film’s many characters, not Nicky, as Nora affectionately called him. American Film Institute 117 3 6 1 T H E T H I N G F R O M A N O T H E R W O R L D RKO, 1951 PRINCIPAL CAST Kenneth Tobey, James Arness, Margaret Sheridan, Douglas Spencer DIRECTOR Christian Nyby PRODUCER Howard Hawks SCREENWRITER Charles Lederer In Hawks’ sole venture into the sci-fi horror world, a group of scientists, isolated up at the Arctic Circle, uncover a buried flying saucer in the snow, as well as a giant alien. Once he accidentally thaws out, the blood-sucking creature goes on a rampage. “Watch the skies, everywhere! Keep looking, keep watching the skies!” 3 6 2 T H E T H I R D M A N Selznick, 1949 PRINCIPAL CAST Orson Welles, Joseph Cotten, Alida Valli DIRECTOR Carol Reed PRODUCERS Alexander Korda, Carol Reed, David O. Selznick SCREENWRITER Graham Greene The rotting streets of postwar Vienna are a metaphor for the paranoia in this bleak film noir of a supposed dead man and the old friend who wants to get to the bottom of the mystery. Mercury Theatre collaborators Welles and Cotten play a chilling game of cat and mouse. 3 6 3 T H I S I S S P I N A L TAP Embassy, 1984 PRINCIPAL CAST Rob Reiner, Michael McKean, Christopher Guest, Harry Shearer DIRECTOR Rob Reiner PRODUCER Karen Murphy SCREENWRITERS Christopher Guest, Michael McKean, Harry Shearer, Rob Reiner Reiner’s directorial debut ushered in a new kind of comedy, the mockumentary! Improvisation, parody and conventional filmmaking collide with a behind-the-scenes look at a second-rate heavy metal band trying to make a comeback. “These go to eleven.” 3 6 4 T H R E E K I N G S Warner Bros., 1999 PRINCIPAL CAST George Clooney, Mark Wahlberg, Ice Cube DIRECTOR David O. Russell PRODUCERS Paul Junger Witt, Edward McDonnell, Charles Roven SCREENWRITER David O. Russell In the immediate aftermath of the Gulf War, three adventurous soldiers discover an Iraqi map that could lead them to a cache of gold. But somewhere along the way, the three kings come up against a crisis of conscience when a rag-tag group of civilians, abandoned by US forces, face certain death from the Iraqi army. 118 American Film Institute 3 6 5 T I TA N I C Paramount, 1997 PRINCIPAL CAST Leonardo DiCaprio, Kate Winslet, Kathy Bates, Billy Zane DIRECTOR James Cameron PRODUCERS James Cameron, Jon Landau SCREENWRITER James Cameron Cameron’s fictionalized account of the “ship of dreams” was both a grand love story and a monumental visual effects undertaking. “I’m king of the world!” 3 6 6 T O B E O R N O T T O B E United Artists, 1942 PRINCIPAL CAST Carole Lombard, Jack Benny, Robert Stack DIRECTOR Ernst Lubitsch PRODUCER Ernst Lubitsch SCREENWRITERS Edwin Justus Mayer, Melchior Lengyel Benny plays the role of a hammy actor who is the head of a Polish acting troupe that hoodwinks the Nazis in this black comedy. This was Lombard’s last film. 3 6 7 T O H AV E A N D H AV E N O T Warner Bros., 1944 PRINCIPAL CAST Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall, Walter Brennan DIRECTOR Howard Hawks PRODUCER Howard Hawks SCREENWRITERS Jules Furthman, William Faulkner In their first film together, Bacall instructs Bogart on how to whistle in this Ernest Hemingway-based story of intrigue on the island of Martinique during World War II. 3 6 8 T O K I L L A M O C K I N G B I R D Universal, 1962 PRINCIPAL CAST Gregory Peck, Mary Badham, Brock Peters DIRECTOR Robert Mulligan PRODUCER Alan J. Parker SCREENWRITER Horton Foote Foote adapted Harper Lee’s award-winning novel into one of Peck’s most memorable movies. Seen through the eyes of his young daughter, Atticus Finch defends an innocent black man accused of rape in a racially divided Alabama town during the Depression. American Film Institute 119 3 6 9 T O O T S I E Columbia, 1982 PRINCIPAL CAST Dustin Hoffman, Jessica Lange, Teri Garr DIRECTOR Sydney Pollack PRODUCERS Sydney Pollack, Dick Richards SCREENWRITERS Larry Gelbart, Don McGuire, Murray Schisgal Hoffman stars in this comedy about a temperamental out-of-work actor who puts on a dress and lands the role of a lifetime in a TV soap opera. Love interest Lange and her lonely father make situations even more complicated in this gender-bending love story. 3 7 0 T O P H AT RKO, 1935 PRINCIPAL CAST Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers DIRECTOR Mark Sandrich PRODUCER Pandro S. Berman SCREENWRITERS Dwight Taylor, Allan Scott This was the first original screenplay specifically written for Rogers and Astaire, who “meet cute” in a London hotel and dance along the canals of Venice. The film contains some of Irving Berlin’s most memorable hits, Cheek to Cheek and Isn’t This a Lovely Day to Be Caught in the Rain? 3 7 1 T O U C H O F E V I L Universal, 1958 PRINCIPAL CAST Charlton Heston, Janet Leigh, Orson Welles DIRECTOR Orson Welles PRODUCER Albert Zugsmith SCREENWRITER Orson Welles Heston is a Mexican narcotics agent and Welles is the corrupt American police official who are at odds when a murder takes place in a border town. More than a “touch” of evil is uncovered in this tightly directed and brilliantly scripted film. 3 7 2 T O Y S T O RY Disney, 1995 PRINCIPAL CAST Tom Hanks, Tim Allen, Don Rickles, Annie Potts (voices) DIRECTOR John Lasseter PRODUCERS Ralph J. Guggenhein, Bonnie Arnold SCREENWRITERS Joss Whedon, Andrew Stanton, Joel Cohen, Alec Sokolow Groundbreaking computer animation creates the world of Woody, a toy cowboy who suddenly finds himself as the second-favorite toy. Replaced by the newer and very high tech, but doltish, Buzz Lightyear, Woody gets accused of killing Buzz by tossing him out the window. It’s a race to get him back. “To infinity and beyond!” 3 7 3 T R A F F I C USA Films, 2000 PRINCIPAL CAST Benicio Del Toro, Michael Douglas, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Don Cheadle, Miguel Ferrer, Topher Grace DIRECTOR Steven Soderbergh PRODUCERS Laura Bickford, Marshall Herskovitz, Edward Zwick SCREENWRITER Stephen Gaghan In this unusual three-layered story with a large ensemble cast, Soderbergh turns his cameras on the North American drug trade. From the growers to the sellers to the users to law enforcement, each link in the chain is put under the microscope. Gaghan adapted the movie from the award-winning British miniseries, TRAFFIK. 3 7 4 T H E T R E A S U R E O F T H E S I E R R A M A D R E Warner Bros., 1948 PRINCIPAL CAST Humphrey Bogart, Walter Huston, Tim Holt DIRECTOR John Huston PRODUCER Henry Blanke SCREENWRITER John Huston Huston’s classic tale of greed is both an adventure and Western. Three mismatched prospectors rummage the hills of Tampico, Mexico, for that elusive pot of gold. Once they strike it rich, suspicion takes over and destroys their lives. The writer/director gave his father one of his best parts on film. 3 7 5 T R O U B L E I N PA R A D I S E Paramount, 1932 PRINCIPAL CAST Miriam Hopkins, Kay Francis, Herbert Marshall DIRECTOR Ernst Lubitsch PRODUCER Ernst Lubitsch SCREENWRITERS Samson Raphaelson, Grover Jones This sophisticated comedy exemplifies the famous “Lubitsch Touch” as two jewel thieves’ relationship is threatened when one is tempted by a beautiful wealthy woman. 3 7 6 1 2 A N G RY M E N United Artists, 1957 PRINCIPAL CAST Henry Fonda, Lee J. Cobb, Ed Begley DIRECTOR Sidney Lumet PRODUCERS Henry Fonda, Reginald Rose SCREENWRITER Reginald Rose In a jury room, Fonda methodically faces class and racial prejudices, and convinces eleven other jurors to change their verdict from guilty to not guilty, thus enabling an innocent young man to go free. American Film Institute 121 3 7 7 T W E LV E O ’ C L O C K H I G H Twentieth Century-Fox, 1949 PRINCIPAL CAST Gregory Peck, Dean Jagger DIRECTOR Henry King PRODUCER Darryl F. Zanuck SCREENWRITERS Sy Bartlett, Beirne Lay, Jr. This was one of a new breed of post-World War II films displaying a different perspective. Peck is the tough, stoic Savage, commander of a US air base in Britain, who must keep his pilots inspired by enforcing strict military discipline. 3 7 8 2 0 0 1 : A S PA C E O D Y S S E Y MGM, 1968 PRINCIPAL CAST Keir Dullea, Gary Lockwood DIRECTOR Stanley Kubrick PRODUCER Stanley Kubrick SCREENWRITERS Stanley Kubrick, Arthur C. Clarke Kubrick’s science fiction epic puts mankind in context between ape and space voyager. The film created a stir for its special effects, the computer HAL, and the debate about the meaning of the film’s final sequence. U V American Film Institute 123 3 7 9 UNFORGIVEN Warner Bros., 1992 PRINCIPAL CAST Clint Eastwood, Gene Hackman, Morgan Freeman DIRECTOR Clint Eastwood PRODUCER Clint Eastwood SCREENWRITER David Webb Peoples Eastwood directs and stars as a formerly notorious gunslinger forced to return to his murderous ways after his wife dies and his family needs money. The film was noted for challenging the morality of Western stereotypes created by American film. 3 8 0 T H E U S U A L S U S P E C T S PolyGram, 1995 PRINCIPAL CAST Stephen Baldwin, Gabriel Byrne, Chazz Palminteri, Kevin Pollak, Benicio Del Toro, Kevin Spacey DIRECTOR Bryan Singer PRODUCERS Michael McDonnell, Bryan Singer SCREENWRITER Christopher McQuarrie A non-linear, complicated, neo-noir is told through flashback by Verbal Kint, the only survivor of a waterfront explosion that produced 27 bodies and a mystery surrounding millions of dollars of cocaine. But who was the mastermind, and what truths and half-truths are Verbal shelling out to the cops? “You think you can catch Keyser Soze?” 3 8 1 V E RT I G O Paramount, 1958 PRINCIPAL CAST James Stewart, Kim Novak DIRECTOR Alfred Hitchcock PRODUCER Alfred Hitchcock SCREENWRITERS Alec Coppel, Samuel A. Taylor Stewart’s fear of heights, Novak’s woman of mystery, Bernard Herrmann’s haunting score, and the city of San Francisco provide Hitchcock with a great love story and sexual obsession on a grand psychological level. W American Film Institute 125 3 8 2 T H E WAY W E W E R E Columbia, 1973 PRINCIPAL CAST Barbra Streisand, Robert Redford, Bradford Dillman DIRECTOR Sydney Pollack PRODUCER Ray Stark SCREENWRITER Arthur Laurents Streisand portrays a passionately political activist, at odds with Redford’s WASPish writer, in a love story that spans many decades. But their cross-class marriage is not strong enough to withstand the McCarthy inquests that are heading their way. 3 8 3 W E S T S I D E S T O RY United Artists, 1961 PRINCIPAL CAST Natalie Wood, Richard Beymer, Rita Moreno, George Chakiris DIRECTORS Jerome Robbins, Robert Wise PRODUCER Robert Wise SCREENWRITER Ernest Lehman The Romeo and Juliet tale gets resurfaced on the streets of New York with music by Leonard Bernstein and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim, based on their breakthrough Broadway hit. The Sharks and the Jets mix it up for some of the most memorable dance sequences in film history. 3 8 4 WHAT E V E R H A P P E N E D T O B A B Y J A N E ? Warner Bros., 1962 PRINCIPAL CAST Bette Davis, Joan Crawford, Victor Buono DIRECTOR Robert Aldrich PRODUCER Robert Aldrich SCREENWRITER Lukas Heller Crawford plays wheelchair-bound former star Blanche Hudson, who is now at the mercy of her demented sister, aging vaudevillean Baby Jane, played by Davis. While Jane is focused on a comeback that will never happen, Blanche wonders where her next meal is going to come from. 3 8 5 WHEN HARRY M E T S A L LY… Columbia, 1989 PRINCIPAL CAST Billy Crystal, Meg Ryan, Carrie Fisher, Bruno Kirby DIRECTOR Rob Reiner PRODUCERS Rob Reiner, Andrew Scheinman SCREENWRITER Nora Ephron Ephron and Reiner ask the eternal question, “Can two friends sleep together and still love each other in the morning?” Over a dozen years, Harry and Sally come to grips with the answer in this episodic journey of love and romance seen through the eyes of couples of all ages. 126 American Film Institute 3 8 6 W H I T E H E AT Warner Bros., 1949 PRINCIPAL CAST James Cagney, Virginia Mayo, Edmond O’Brien, Margaret Wycherly DIRECTOR Raoul Walsh PRODUCER Louis F. Edelman SCREENWRITERS Ivan Goff, Ben Roberts Cagney made an unparalleled comeback as vicious gangleader Cody Jarrett. The Freudian melodrama is highlighted by Cagney’s crazed reaction to his mother’s death and his own fiery demise: “Made it, Ma! Top of the world!” 3 8 7 W H O ’ S A F R A I D O F V I R G I N I A W O O L F ? Warner Bros., 1966 PRINCIPAL CAST Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, George Segal, Sandy Dennis DIRECTOR Mike Nichols PRODUCER Ernest Lehman SCREENWRITER Ernest Lehman Edward Albee’s grueling play about marriage and deception features Taylor and Burton as battling spouses Martha and George who spend one Saturday night pouring out bitterness and recriminations when they invite a younger couple over for a drink. 3 8 8 T H E W I L D B U N C H Warner Bros., 1969 PRINCIPAL CAST William Holden, Ernest Borgnine, Robert Ryan, Edmond O’Brien, Warren Oates DIRECTOR Sam Peckinpah PRODUCER Phil Feldman SCREENWRITERS Walon Green, Sam Peckinpah, Roy N. Sickner Aging outlaws and relentless bounty hunters converge at the US-Mexico border in 1913. Slow-motion action violence became Peckinpah’s calling card after the success of this Western masterpiece. 3 8 9 W I N C H E S T E R ‘ 7 3 Warner Bros., 1950 PRINCIPAL CAST James Stewart, Shelley Winters, Dan Duryea DIRECTOR Anthony Mann PRODUCER Aaron Rosenberg SCREENWRITERS Robert L. Richards, Borden Chase, Stuart N. Lake A precision rifle and a quest for vengeance spark this episodic story of one man’s obsessive search for a stolen weapon. The film was the first of several Mann-directed Westerns featuring a darker Stewart persona. American Film Institute 127 3 9 0 T H E W I N D MGM, 1928 PRINCIPAL CAST Lillian Gish, Lars Hanson DIRECTOR Victor Sjöström SCREENWRITER Frances Marion The Texas prairie wind is really the antagonist in this haunting story of a gentle woman suffering from loneliness and cabin fever who kills a rapist, but is almost driven mad as the relentless wind uncovers his body. 3 9 1 WINGS Paramount, 1927 PRINCIPAL CAST Clara Bow, Charles “Buddy” Rogers, Richard Arlen, Gary Cooper DIRECTOR William A. Wellman PRODUCER Lucien Hubbard SCREENWRITERS Louis D. Lighton, Hope Loring In one of the first popular aviation pictures, this story of two men in love with the same woman is overwhelmed by the spectacular aerial combat sequences. 3 9 2 W I T N E S S Paramount, 1985 PRINCIPAL CAST Harrison Ford, Kelly McGillis, Lukas Haas DIRECTOR Peter Weir PRODUCER Edward S. Feldman SCREENWRITERS William Kelley, Earl W. Wallace Ford is John Book, a Philadelphia cop goes into hiding to protect himself and a young Amish boy who witnesses a murder tied to police corruption. These worlds collide when Ford falls in love with the boy’s widowed mother. The Amish barnraising segment highlights Weir’s look at a tiny community isolated within the larger world. 3 9 3 T H E W I Z A R D O F O Z MGM, 1939 PRINCIPAL CAST Judy Garland, Ray Bolger, Jack Haley, Bert Lahr, Margaret Hamilton, Frank Morgan DIRECTOR Victor Fleming PRODUCER Mervyn LeRoy SCREENWRITERS Noel Langley, Florence Ryerson, Edgar Allan Woolf Garland’s Dorothy Gale is transported from her black-and-white Kansas home to the colorful land of Oz via tornado. From here she journeys down the Yellow Brick Road and is helped by a Scarecrow, a Tin Man, and a Cowardly Lion on their way to see the Wizard. The Harold Arlen/E.Y. Harburg score is highlighted by Somewhere Over the Rainbow. 128 American Film Institute 3 9 4 W O M A N O F T H E Y E A R MGM, 1942 PRINCIPAL CAST Spencer Tracy, Katharine Hepburn DIRECTOR George Stevens PRODUCER Joseph L. Mankiewicz SCREENWRITERS Ring Lardner, Jr., Michael Kanin This initial pairing of Hepburn and Tracy resulted in an electric battle-of-the-sexes comedy about a brilliant political columnist who meets her match in a world-wise sportswriter. 3 9 5 A W O M A N U N D E R T H E I N F L U E N C E Faces, 1974 PRINCIPAL CAST Peter Falk, Gena Rowlands DIRECTOR John Cassavetes PRODUCER Sam Shaw SCREENWRITER John Cassavetes Cassavetes pointed his cameras on the actors and let them take off in this unyielding and improvisational film that follows the slow disintegration of a family. Rowlands is harrowing as the wife and mother struggling with mental illness. 3 9 6 W U T H E R I N G H E I G H T S United Artists, 1939 PRINCIPAL CAST Laurence Olivier, Merle Oberon, Donald Crisp, David Niven DIRECTOR William Wyler PRODUCER Samuel Goldwyn SCREENWRITERS Charles MacArthur, Ben Hecht Olivier stars as the brooding master of Wuthering Heights, who roams the English moors in search of his lost love, Cathy, played by Oberon. Gregg Toland’s moody cinematography infuses the Emily Brontë-based film with a haunting atmosphere. Y 130 American Film Institute 3 9 7 YA N K E E D O O D L E D A N D Y Warner Bros., 1942 PRINCIPAL CAST James Cagney, Joan Leslie, Walter Huston DIRECTOR Michael Curtiz PRODUCER Hal B. Wallis SCREENWRITERS Robert Buckner, Edmund Joseph Cagney sings and dances his way through the patriotic songs George M. Cohan composed in the early years of American vaudeville and musical theatre. Songs like Over There, It’s A Grand Old Flag and Yankee Doodle Dandy inspired generations when the world was at war. 3 9 8 Y O U C A N ’ T TA K E I T W I T H Y O U Columbia, 1938 PRINCIPAL CAST Jean Arthur, Lionel Barrymore, James Stewart DIRECTOR Frank Capra PRODUCER Frank Capra SCREENWRITER Robert Riskin Arthur’s eccentric and free-spirited family is about to lose their home to a stuffy Wall Street financier, who just happens to be the father of the man she loves. When these two families collide, in this typically Capraesque comedy, everyone learns that happiness is the greatest wealth. 3 9 9 Y O U N G F R A N K E N S T E I N Twentieth Century-Fox, 1974 PRINCIPAL CAST Gene Wilder, Peter Boyle, Marty Feldman, Cloris Leachman, Madeline Kahn, Teri Garr, Kenneth Mars DIRECTOR Mel Brooks PRODUCER Michael Gruskoff SCREENWRITERS Gene Wilder, Mel Brooks A 20th century heir to the Frankenstein diaries makes his way to Transylvania, where he tries to continue the mad experimentation. Gerald Hirshfeld’s sharp black-and-white cinematography made the most of the original 1931 FRANKENSTEIN sets (“Stay close to the candles…”) and gave a special kick to Wilder and Boyle’s Puttin’ on the Ritz! 4 0 0 Y O U N G M R . L I N C O L N Twentieth Century-Fox, 1939 PRINCIPAL CAST Henry Fonda, Alice Brady, Marjorie Weaver DIRECTOR John Ford PRODUCER Darryl F. Zanuck SCREENWRITER Lamar Trotti Ford and Fonda collaborated on the 16th US President’s path from a cabin in Kentucky to his law practice in Springfield, Illinois. Lincoln reveres the law, but his heart belongs to two women, one who dies tragically, the other who stands beside him as he enters politics. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
teke184 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 Anyone who wants to see the full ballot of 400 movies can look here: http://www.afi.com/drop/ballot.pdf The password is "AFIpress". I think that the list itself will certainly cause some debate, as there are some nominated pictures here that are SEVERELY overrated. Example - Some nominees include The Big Chill (1983), Broadcast News (1987), Jerry Maguire (1996), Born On The Fourth Of July (1989), Thelma And Louise (1991), Days Of Heaven (1978), Manhattan (1979), and The Man Who Would Be King (1975) IMHO, Days Of Heaven (1987) only appears on the list because the critics have a huge hard-on for Terrence Malick. Very visual movie with good cinematography, but not what I'd consider one of the top 400 American movies. (I won't debate Malick's "Badlands" appearing, though.) Broadcast News (1987) is a movie that's barely remembered today and it only came out 20 years ago. Hell, I think it was barely remembered 5 years after it came out. Manhattan (1979) was the start of Woody Allen's period of completely unwatchable "critically acclaimed" movies. Christ, put Bananas or Love And Death on there instead. (Sleeper is listed, though, which I feel is a good call.) Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
teke184 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 Goddammit, Bob. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
bob_barron 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 American Beauty, Lost in Translation, Empire Strikes Back, either the first or third LOTR, Titanic and Brokeback I could see making the list. Oh yea, Saving Private Ryan too. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
bob_barron 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 Goddammit, Bob. I know, I wish it was formatted better. But there's the list. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Insane Bump Machine 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 is that the list they can choose from? here's some films from the last decade I would consider: As Good As It Gets Wag the Dog American History X The Big Lebowski Fight Club Almost Famous Memento American Beauty LOTR The Fellowship The Matrix Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind Sin City Hustle & Flow Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
teke184 0 Report post Posted May 31, 2007 American Beauty, Lost in Translation, Empire Strikes Back, either the first or third LOTR, Titanic and Brokeback I could see making the list. While I'm a notorious hater on Brokeback, I feel justified in saying that it shouldn't make the list because it's too soon after its release to judge it on its merits. Much like its Best Picture nomination, IMHO, I feel it's making it onto the nominee list here solely because it's controversial and pisses off all the right people, not because it's a particularly good film. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites