Warning

 

Close
Confirm Action

Are you sure you wish to do this?

Cancel Confirm
AR15.COM
Previous Page
/ 6
Next Page
6/8/2017 10:50:18 PM EDT
The Matrix thred jogged a thot for a thred that I have had for a long time: those few, absolutely PERFECT masterpieces of film, that LITERALLY cannot be improved upon.  In the Matrix thred, I posted this:

Quoted:
I haven't seen a movie before or since that got inside my head like The Matrix did.

Quoted:
It's a near perfect film.

Originally Posted by Yours Truly:
These.   Like "The Terminator", it was an epochal, breakthrough film; everything worked.  There are literally only a handful of truly epic films like this.
View Quote
Indeed, there truly are only a handful of absolutely great films, that honestly cannot be improved upon.  My nominations follow:

NUMBER ONE:
2001: A Space Odyssey.  I nominate this as THE.  SINGLE.  GREATEST.  FILM.  EVER.  MADE.  PERIOD.  Breathtaking in the sheer sweep and scope of the story.  Breathtaking in the cinematography.  This was one of those exceedingly rare times in history when there was one of those "Gilbert and Sullivan" level collaborations, between Arthur C. Clark, arguably one of the GREATEST sci-fi authors to have ever lived, and Stanley Kubrick, arguably one of the GREATEST directors to have ever lived.  That the two of these geniuses came together, at the same era and in the same place to work on the same project is, to my mind, the truest proof of the existence of God.

NUMBER TWO:
The Terminator.  What a PERFECT story!   Everything worked PERFECTLY!  The storyline was tight, with ZERO plot holes!  Most storylines have holes in them you could drive a BATTLESHIP thru!   But the Terminator was perfect: Kyle Reese was ordered by John Conner to come back in time to save Sarah Conner... where he fathered his own commander.   Wow.  Mind blown, and circle closed.  Ahhnold Schwarzenegger was born for that role, just as he was born to be Conan.  And James Cameron proved himself to be such a fantastic director that, some years later, he had the gravitas to walk into a room full of investors and say, with a straight face, "I'd like to borrow several hundred millions of your dollars, to make a film called Avatar...

NUMBER THREE:
Really, the only other film I could think of off hand that would be on the same level would be Amadeus.  The cinematography was flawless.  The productions values were flawless.  The storyline was flawless.  You starting to see a trend here?   The story of true, raw, TALENT.  AND.  GENIUS.  Salieri is the jealous little bitch that any of us would be, seeing our best efforts as nothing, a child playing the kazoo while our older brother composed a symphony for full orchestra.   Genius indeed.

Those are my top three nominations for the best films ever made.  God knows I have more; The Matrix is definitely in there, as well as All That Jazz and West Side Story.  What are your nominations?  And ya know what?  Transformers and Fast And Furious somehow missed out on making the first cut...
6/8/2017 10:51:44 PM EDT
[#1]
Shawshank.
6/8/2017 10:51:47 PM EDT
[#2]
No Country For Old Men
6/8/2017 10:52:06 PM EDT
[#3]
tommy boy
6/8/2017 10:52:48 PM EDT
[#4]
Attached File


Attached File


Attached File


Attached File
6/8/2017 10:54:56 PM EDT
[#5]
Logjammin, starring Karl Hungus.
6/8/2017 10:56:48 PM EDT
[#6]
Little Big Man

Die Hard

Back to the Future

Unforgiven

Dances with Wolves

...all amazing films
6/8/2017 10:56:56 PM EDT
[#7]
The dark knight
6/8/2017 10:57:21 PM EDT
[#8]
The godfather
6/8/2017 10:57:35 PM EDT
[#9]
Waaaat?!?!


Have you ever watched an Alfred Hitchcock film??

Casablanca?

Maltese Falcon?


The use of anticipation, lighting without color, close ups, Ingrid Bergman....

Seriously. Cmon man, there is more to cinema.
6/8/2017 10:57:57 PM EDT
[#10]
Howard the Duck
6/8/2017 10:57:59 PM EDT
[#11]
Braveheart.

Toy Story 3.
6/8/2017 10:58:18 PM EDT
[#12]
alien
6/8/2017 10:58:33 PM EDT
[#13]
The Godfather: Part II

/thread
6/8/2017 10:58:35 PM EDT
[#14]
Quote History
Quoted:
Braveheart.

Toy Story 3.
View Quote
I cried at both of them.
6/8/2017 10:58:45 PM EDT
[#15]
Jaws
6/8/2017 10:59:17 PM EDT
[#16]
The Three Musketeers/The Four Musketeers - the Oliver Reed, Raquel Welch, Richard Chamberlain, Michael York, Christopher Lee, Faye Dunaway, & Charlton Heston film

The Bridge On The River Kwai - multiple stories collide throughout the movie and at the end

Casablanca - the story of two lovers caught up in WW2

Lawrence of Arabia - some of the best cinematography


I sometimes throw BoB into the mix even though it's technically not a movie.
6/8/2017 10:59:25 PM EDT
[#17]
Quote History
View Quote
  Now, THIS could be on this list.  But the rest, not so much.
6/8/2017 11:00:08 PM EDT
[#18]
In no particular order:
Coneheads

Bloodsport

Tropic Thunder

Gremlins
6/8/2017 11:00:33 PM EDT
[#19]
Das Boot
6/8/2017 11:00:42 PM EDT
[#20]
Quote History
Quoted:
Howard the Duck
View Quote
Pfft!   He can't even get a job better than being a cabbie!
6/8/2017 11:01:30 PM EDT
[#21]
Perhaps, Master and Commander?

Not epic, but enjoyable nonetheless.
6/8/2017 11:02:01 PM EDT
[#22]
Quote History
Quoted:
The godfather
View Quote
+1..... THOUSAND!!!
6/8/2017 11:02:12 PM EDT
[#23]
Forrest Gump
Sling Blade
Observe and Report
6/8/2017 11:02:46 PM EDT
[#24]
Quote History
Quoted:
Braveheart.
View Quote
That could be a contender.
6/8/2017 11:02:47 PM EDT
[#25]
Run Lola, Run
Red Dawn
1984
(miniseries) Lonesome Dove
Fight Club
6/8/2017 11:03:01 PM EDT
[#26]
Quote History
Quoted:
Little Big Man

Die Hard

Back to the Future

Unforgiven

Dances with Wolves

...all amazing films
View Quote
Unforgiven has my vote.  Fantastic film.
6/8/2017 11:03:07 PM EDT
[#27]
Quote History
Quoted:
alien
View Quote
Aliens was better.
6/8/2017 11:03:21 PM EDT
[#28]
Quote History
Quoted:
The Three Musketeers/The Four Musketeers - the Oliver Reed, Raquel Welch, Richard Chamberlain, Michael York, Christopher Lee, Faye Dunaway, & Charlton Heston film

The Bridge On The River Kwai - multiple stories collide throughout the movie and at the end

Casablanca - the story of two lovers caught up in WW2

Lawrence of Arabia - some of the best cinematography


I sometimes throw BoB into the mix even though it's technically not a movie.
View Quote
Yes, I'll add The Good, The Bad and The Ugly or Once Upon A Time In The West. To this list.
6/8/2017 11:04:02 PM EDT
[#29]
Quote History
Quoted:
Lawrence of Arabia - some of the best cinematography
View Quote
I will DEFINITELY allow that one!
6/8/2017 11:04:06 PM EDT
[#30]
Shawshank
Forrest Gump
Godfather 1 and 2
Casino
6/8/2017 11:04:17 PM EDT
[#31]
Quote History
Quoted:
Logjammin, starring Karl Hungus.
View Quote
He fixes the cable?
6/8/2017 11:05:04 PM EDT
[#32]
1) The origional STAR WARS (Episode IV, A New Hope).  Although it's sequal, The Empire Strikes Back was superior in many ways; the first film changed cinema and blew our minds.

2) The Godfather.  Similar to the above, it's sequal was better in many ways but they can almost be looked at as one film.

3) Raiders of the Lost Ark (Indiana Jones).  The creator of Star Wars, Speilberg, Harrison Ford, Nazis, and the power of God smited into Cinema.
6/8/2017 11:05:14 PM EDT
[#33]
I can't complain about Legends of the Fall  or A River Runs Through It...
6/8/2017 11:06:00 PM EDT
[#34]
Gladiator.

The Last of the Mohicans

Endings for both were masterpieces.

Maximus going to his wife and kid, brushing his hands in the fields of gold with is wife and kid smiling and waiting for him.

Mohicans as they went to rescues the daughters on the limestone cliffs.
6/8/2017 11:06:11 PM EDT
[#35]


Seriously.



That as well.
6/8/2017 11:06:33 PM EDT
[#36]
Quote History
Quoted:
Shawshank.
View Quote
Some of the framing of scenes and cinematography is very well done and it is a great story that connects you to characters.
6/8/2017 11:07:45 PM EDT
[#37]
Predator
Robocop
Aliens
Backdraft
Unforgiven
The abyss
Pan's labyrinth
Leon
The hunt for red October
U571
The dark knight
Pirates of the Caribbean dead men tell no tales
The last of the mohicans
Glory
Tombstone
Jaws
Guardians of the galaxy
Saw
Phone booth
Young guns
Monsters inc.
The thing
6/8/2017 11:08:01 PM EDT
[#38]
Quote History
Quoted:
Das Boot
View Quote
Yes.  Brilliant film.   Constant, unrelenting stress: truly men pushed to the extremes, bringing out the best (and worst! ) inside them.
6/8/2017 11:08:09 PM EDT
[#39]
Quote History
Quoted:


He fixes the cable?
View Quote
Don't be fatuous, Jeffrey.
6/8/2017 11:08:56 PM EDT
[#40]
Quote History
Quoted:


Some of the framing of scenes and cinematography is very well done and it is a great story that connects you to characters.
View Quote
One of the fee Stephen King adaptations I can say is as good, if not marginally better than the story.
6/8/2017 11:09:04 PM EDT
[#41]
Quote History
Quoted:
Forrest Gump
Sling Blade
Observe and Report
View Quote
  Really, dude, only this one...
6/8/2017 11:09:51 PM EDT
[#42]
Out of Africa

Jeremiah Johnson
6/8/2017 11:10:41 PM EDT
[#43]
Quote History
Quoted:
Yes, I'll add The Good, The Bad and The Ugly or Once Upon A Time In The West. To this list.
View Quote
I will DEFINITELY accept this one.  Henry Fonda was an amazing actor... even if his daughter was a piece of shit.
6/8/2017 11:10:57 PM EDT
[#44]
6/8/2017 11:11:16 PM EDT
[#45]

6/8/2017 11:11:47 PM EDT
[#46]


Last film that did it for me.
6/8/2017 11:11:54 PM EDT
[#47]
Quote History
Quoted:
Shawshank
Forrest Gump
Godfather 1 and 2
Casino
View Quote
Already covered & accepted.  You sure you aren't gonna include any Pee Wee Herman?
6/8/2017 11:12:03 PM EDT
[#48]
Quote History
Never even heard of Michael Clayton but that sounds like a good movie just reading about it.
6/8/2017 11:12:50 PM EDT
[#49]



6/8/2017 11:13:23 PM EDT
[#50]
Quote History
I am Shiva the God of Death.

ETA: It was cool to see Kent from Real Genius still getting work.
Previous Page
/ 6
Next Page