Saturday, July 02, 2022

Weekend Post

And you are under no obligation to say VOLUNTEERS. 

For me, some would be:

What is THE GODFATHER?
What is  THE GODFATHER Part 2?
What is AMERICAN GRAFFITI?
What is CASABLANCA?
What is THE GRADUATE?
What is BRIDGE ON THE RIVER KWAI?
What is PLAY IT AGAIN, SAM?
What is BLAZING SADDLES?
What is THE HEARTBREAK KID?
What is ROMANCING THE STONE?
What is NETWORK?
What is GUNGA DIN?
What is BANANAS?
What is ARTHUR?
What is SOME LIKE IT HOT?
What is THE LADY EVE?
What is ALL ABOUT EVE?
What is YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN?
What is GOLDFINGER?
What is DR. NO?
What is GIDGET?
What is TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN?
What is ANNIE HALL?
What is DR. STRANGELOVE?
What is STAR WARS?
What is PULP FICTION?
What is ON THE WATERFRONT?
What is THE INCREDIBLES?
What is THE LITTLE MERMAID?
What is SUNSET BOULEVARD?
What is CITIZEN KANE?
What is CHARADE?
What is NORTH BY NORTHWEST?
What is PALM BEACH STORY?
What is MY MAN GODFREY?
What is VALLEY OF THE DOLLS?
What is CHINATOWN?
What is THE BIG SLEEP?
What is LOVE AND DEATH?
What is MY FAVORITE BRUNETTE?
What is BULL DURHAM?
What is HOOSIERS?
What is FRENCH CONNECTION?
What is BUTCH CASSIDY & THE SUNDANCE KID?
What is ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN?
What is ALL THAT JAZZ?
What is THE IN-LAWS
What is THE HOT ROCK?
What is FAST TIMES AT RIDGEMONT HIGH?
What is BROADCAST NEWS?
What is THE THIN MAN?
What is SPLENDOR IN THE GRASS?
What is PINOCCHIO?
What is RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK? 
What is WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF?
What is THE BIG PICTURE?
What is FIDDLER ON THE ROOF?
What is HUD?
What is HARPER?
What is COOL HAND LUKE?
What is HIS GIRL FRIDAY?
What is THE PHILADELPHIA STORY?
What is DINER?
What is TOPPER?
What is THE STING?
What is BODY HEAT?

So what are some of yours? 

123 comments :

  1. For me, I've watched several on your list multiple times. Three that aren't (unless I overlooked them): The Back to the Future trilogy.

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  2. The Dirty Dozen.

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  3. Tim Rifenburg7/02/2022 6:15 AM

    Movies I have purposely gone out of my way to watch (and not just because they showed up on
    Cable or I was filling time while HBO or some service was on). There are probably a lot more but these are the ones that came to mind:

    Broadcast Mews
    Almost Famous
    Tootsie
    Arthur
    The Fugitive
    The Goodbye Girl
    The Apartment
    Jerry Maguire
    Every Mission Impossible Movie (except 2)
    Iron Man
    The Maltese Falcon
    Knives Out
    Rear Window
    In The Heat of the Night
    Cool Hand Luke
    The Sting
    Coming Home
    Murphy's Romance
    Romancing the Stone
    Raiders of the Lost Ark
    Jaws
    The House Bunny (A guilty pleasure)

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  4. Bad Day at Black Rock. The message is still valid.

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  5. Some Like It Hot
    North by Northwest
    The Errand Boy
    Singing in the Rain
    The Graduate
    The Godfather
    Funny Face
    E.T.
    When Harry Met Sally
    Citizen Kane
    Hellzapoppin

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  6. Family tradition is to watch The Blues Brothers whenever we’re together. Also A Christmas Story.

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  7. Fun post! Certainly some of yours, but here are some that come to mind for me — see if you can discern the year I was born from these. (Answer at the bottom):
    When Harry Met Sally
    City Slickers
    Three Little Words
    Top Hat
    Swing Time
    Sound of Music
    Top Gun
    Wizard of Oz
    The Princess Bride
    Romancing the Stone
    Dances with Wolves
    The Apple Dumpling Gang
    The Pink Panther
    The Silence of the Lambs
    LA Confidential
    Whiplash
    Forrest Gump
    Gladiator
    Round Midnight
    The Sixfh Sense
    Braveheart
    A Few Good Men
    Unforgiven
    ET
    12 Angry Men
    Wayne’s World
    Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery
    Fast Times at Ridgemont High
    Toy Story
    Moana
    Beauty and the Beast
    The Little Mermaid
    Frozen (can you tell I have a daughter?!)
    Star Wars (a New Hope)
    Star Wars (The Empire Strikes Back)
    Star Wars (The Last Jedi)
    Solo (A Star Wars Story)
    Star Trek Wrath of Khan
    Out of all of these, I’ve seen Star Wars a New Hope the most — I was born in 1968 and was 9 when it came out and I saw it 7 times in the theater —I was so mesmerized by the story and space action.
    Happy 4th of July Ken and friends! Go Mariners — there’s still time to make the playoffs for the first time in my 17-year-old’s lifetime!

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  8. N. Zakharenko7/02/2022 6:51 AM

    Every Disney movie (animation & live action) released prior to 1982
    Every James Bond prior to Pierce Brosnan
    All Rodgers And Hammerstein theatricals

    Others include:
    Around The World In 80 Days (1956)
    Blame It On Rio (1984)
    Brigadoon (1954)
    Bus Stop (1956)
    Camelot (1967)
    Darling Lili (1970)
    Day Of The Triffids (1963)
    Earthquake (1974)
    Fly (1959)
    Ghost And Mrs Muir (1947) Natalie Wood
    Inside Daisy Clover (1965) Natalie Wood
    Invasion Of The Body Snatchers (1956)
    Journey To The Center Of The Earth (1959)
    Laura (1944)
    Live A Little Love A Little (1968)
    Lost Horizon (1973)
    Love Is A Many Splendored Thing (1955)
    My Fair Lady (1964)
    My Tutor (1982)
    MacKenna's Gold (1969)
    Oliver (1968)
    Pal Joey (1957)
    Picnic (1955)
    Poseidon Adventure (1972)
    Razor's Edge (1945)
    Rome Adventure (1962)
    Showboat (1936)
    Slipper And The Rose (1976)
    Snow White And The Three Stooges (1961)
    Steptoe And Son (1972)
    Summer Of 42 (1971)
    Time Machine (1960)
    Titanic (1997)
    Towering Inferno (1974)
    Valley Of The Dolls (1967)
    Where Eagles Dare (1968)
    Wolf Man (1941)
    World Of Suzie Wong (1960)

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  9. Airplane!
    Ruthless People
    The Naked Gun
    Johnny Dangerously
    La La Land
    Movie, Movie
    The Producers (1968 Version with Zero Mostel and Gene Wilder)
    Miracle on 34th Street (1947 Version, B&W only)
    Hail Caesar!
    Burn After Reading
    Bend It Like Beckham
    My Big Fat Greek Wedding
    Little Miss Sunshine
    Yellow Submarine
    JoJo Rabbit
    Chicago
    Annie Hall
    Take The Money and Run
    Radio Days
    Once Upon a Time in Hollywood
    Pulp Fiction
    The Birdcage
    That Thing You Do

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  10. Monkey Business
    Duck Soup
    Never Give a Sucker an Even Break
    It's a Gift
    The Bank Dick
    Dr. No
    It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World
    The Maltese Falcon
    The Music Man
    The King and I
    Back to the Beach

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  11. What are...

    2001. FANTASIA. A CLOCKWORK ORANGE. NASHVILLE. DUCK SOUP. IT'S A GIFT. CITIZEN KANE. THE SHOP AROUND THE CORNER. BANANAS. CASABLANCA. THE ADVENTURES OF ROBIN HOOD. STOLEN KISSES. VERTIGO. SECONDS. BONNIE AND CLYDE. PINOCCHIO. BOB LE FLAMBEUR. THE WIZARD OF OZ. BREWSTER McCLOUD. NORTH BY NORTHWEST. THE BLUES BROTHERS. TROUBLE IN PARADISE. National Lampoon's ANIMAL HOUSE. NOTORIOUS. DOCTOR STRANGELOVE. HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS WITHOUT REALLY TRYING. ON THE WATERFRONT. THE GODFATHER, PART II. WAY OUT WEST. JAWS. HAROLD AND MAUDE. DOUBLE INDEMNITY. McCABE & MRS. MILLER. CHINATOWN. SONS OF THE DESERT. THE MUSIC MAN. RULES OF THE GAME. 8½. AMERICAN GRAFFITI. ANNIE HALL. LAWRENCE OF ARABIA. REAR WINDOW. MILLION DOLLAR LEGS.

    Yes, there are others.

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  12. I'll say the Kevin Smith movies, with "Clerks" leading the pack.
    Hell, I own three copies of Clerks in various formats!
    All the Mel Brooks movies.
    Most of the Star Wars, the last two not there yet, but will be.
    Many others already listed in other comments or main post.

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  13. What are Wall Street and Top Gun.

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  14. Risky Business
    Shawshank
    Talk Radio
    The Player
    Swingers

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    Replies
    1. I loved Risky Business, but watching it again, why does the guy who has everything, have his life run by those dorky friends?

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    2. Also Singles and The Doors

      Delete
  15. Jim, Cheers Fan7/02/2022 7:37 AM

    I'd break the blog, but off the top of my head and reminded by what I'm seeing here: Godfather 1&2 * The Producers * Animal House * The Blues Brothers * Young Frankenstein * Casablanca * The Matese Falcon * The Lady Eve * My Man Godfrey * Gosford Park * A Christmas Story * Remains of the Day * Halloween * Arthur * Harold and Maude * Caddyshack * Back To School * Stripes * Ghostbusters * The Grifters * Lonesome Dove (does that count?) * Defending Your Life* Lost In America * Mother * Duck Soup * Desk Set * The Last Seduction * Dogma *

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  16. BOB & CAROL & TED & ALICE for one. The DVD commentary has Mazursky and the three remaining characters laughing their asses off like it was a family reunion. Never get tired of revisiting it. It's the jet-set 1969 LA world Tarentino adapted for his recent movie.

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  17. Well, 31 of the ones on your list would be on mine. 20 of the ones on your list I own. 1 of the ones on your list I watched (for the billionth time) last night. (And Godfather III would be on my list with its big, more-respected, brothers.) There were only four on your list that I've never seen, Hoosiers, The In-Laws, Diner and Cool Hand Luke, though you had a couple I will never watch a second time. For example (Not the only one), I saw Harper in a theater when it opened and deeply hated it. And to be perfectly frank, I don't remember if I ever saw Gidget at all. I may have, but if I did, it was once, 60 years ago. I know I saw Tammy.

    For me to even begin a list it would have to be which movies have I seen so many times I've lost count, or what movies do I watch at least annually.

    On my list you'd find all Marx Brothers movies (Even The Story of Mankind), most of Mae West and most of WC Fields, all Laurel & Hardy sound films at Roach, with Way Out West and Sons of the Desert on the "At Least Annually" list. For Chaplin: The Gold Rush, City Lights, Modern Times, The Great Dictator and Monsieur Verdoux are all in my collection and watched many times. For Keaton: all of his silent shorts, The Three Ages, Sherlock Jr. (My favorite), Our Hospitality, The Navigator, The General and Steamboat Bill Jr. are all in my collection, and watched more than the Chaplins. (I also own Keaton's The Saphead but it was such a disappointment that its third viewing has not yet occurred.)

    With Hitchcock, it would be easier to list the ones I have not seen so many times I've lost count, with the trio Vertigo, North By Northwest, and Psycho on the "At Least Annually" list, and North By Northwest at times nearly monthly. I can not tire of it.

    The major Universal monster movies of the 1930s and '40s all would make the "Long Ago Lost Count" list. (I wrote a book about them.) Same for many of the Hammer Horrors, especially if Cushing and Lee are both in it. (I last watched a Cushing & Lee horror movie last night.)

    The six Peter Jackson Tolkien movies are on the "At Least Annually" list. And if I dare mention TV series, I've watched all of Lost and all of Game of Thrones over three times each. Those DVDs do not gather dust on my shelves. And frankly, for the last year, I've watched Peter Pan Goes Wrong almost weekly.

    The three movies I give as the answer to "What is your favorite movie?" are, in no particular order, Bride of Frankenstein, A Night at the Opera and Psycho

    Wouldn't Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs and The Wizard of Oz be on everyone's list?

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  18. "Citizen Kane," "Duck Soup," "Radio Days"...oh hell, there are way too many to list. If you raised it to 10 times, it might be manageable. But I will mention one that I bet nobody else will: the 1967 version of "Casino Royale" with David Niven and Peter Sellers. I know it's considered an overlong mess, but there's just something about it I like. Whenever I'm flipping channels and land on it, I have to watch it to the end, even though I now have it on DVD. Maybe it's that Tijuana Brass theme song. Or Woody Allen's appearance at the end. Or a naked Daliah Lavi strapped to a lab table. It's all golden to me.

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  19. What is Grease? What is The Sound of Music? What is Singin' in the Rain? What is Airplane!? What is It's a Wonderful Life (My all-time favorite!)?

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  20. Jeff Boise, your entire list, except for Back to the Beach (Once was enough) are on mine. In fact I own copies of your entire list except the aforementioned BTTB and The King and I. The more I read and learned about the real adventures of Anna Leonowens (who was Boris Karloff's great-aunt, his maternal grandmother's sister) and that king, the more its whitewashing in Rogers & Hammerstein repels me. There's no "Something Wonderful" about a man who had slaves BURNED ALIVE AT THE STAKE for the crime of loving someone other than him. That's what really happened to Tuptim. Burned alive at the stake for not being in love with that MONSTROUS king!

    Griff, great list. Most (not all) of yours would be on mine.

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  21. If I like a movie, I'll watch it several times, but these are some that immediately come to mind:

    Rosemary's Baby
    The King of Comedy
    House of Dark Shadows
    Nashville
    Night of the Iguana
    Mommie Dearest
    Red Line 7000
    Legend of Lylah Clare
    Inside Daisy Clover
    Suddenly, Last Summer
    1776
    Planet of the Apes (the original, along with the four sequels, which I usually watch as a miniseries on five consecutive nights)
    The so-called "Karnstein Trilogy" of Hammer films (The Vampire Lovers, Lust for a Vampire, and Twins of Evil)

    Every November/December, I rewatch a number of Christmas favorites as well as Funny Girl, which I associate with the holiday season due to Gimbels department store presenting it one Thanksgiving night on Channel 29.

    Every October, I revisit my favorite horror movies, usually picking a theme of some sort (film studio, horror actor, decade, etc.)

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  22. VHS Village (Formerly The Beta Barn)7/02/2022 8:10 AM

    BACK TO THE FUTURE TRILOGY
    E. T.
    EYES WIDE SHUT
    PSYCHO
    THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS
    TAXI DRIVER
    MULHOLLAND DRIVE
    JAWS
    BLUE VELVET
    THE GODFATHER
    ROSEMARY'S BABY
    THE TERMINATOR
    TERMINATOR 2
    SUPERMAN
    SUPERMAN II (Both the theatrical cut and the Richard Donner cut)
    GOODFELLAS
    ROBOCOP
    BASIC INSTINCT
    GHOSTBUSTERS
    ROMANCING THE STONE
    THE SHINING
    CHILD'S PLAY
    2001 A SPACE ODYSSEY
    DIE HARD
    INDIANA JONES TRILOGY (Yes, I said trilogy)
    STAR TREK II THE WRATH OF KAHN
    STAR WARS
    THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK
    RETURN OF THE JEDI
    THE FORCE AWAKENS
    JURASSIC PARK
    HALLOWEEN (1978)
    GET OUT
    FULL METAL JACKET
    LICENCE TO KILL
    DR. STRANGELOVE
    PULP FICTION
    GREMLINS
    THE GOONIES
    POLTERGEIST
    TAKEN
    BATMAN (1989)
    BATMAN RETURNS
    AIRPLANE
    A CLOCKWORK ORANGE
    ALIEN
    ALIENS

    And now some of my guilty pleasures. Don't judge me.

    COMMANDO
    BAD BOYS II
    ROCKY III
    ROCKY IV
    HARD TO KILL
    EVIL DEAD II
    GHOSTBUSTERS II
    DEATH WISH 3
    FREDDY VS JASON

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  23. There are, likely, hundreds of them. A good number are on the lists already presented. I would add these more obscure films:
    Head (The Monkees movie)
    French Postcards
    Starstruck (Gillian Armstrong New Wave musical)
    Black Orpheus
    My Man Godfrey (William Powell/Carole Lombard)

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  24. I'd be here all day if I listed off any movie I've seen more than three times.

    However, what is one movie that I have only seen once, and will never see again?

    What is AVATAR?

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  25. Imagine a "What is...?" surrounding each one. Also, the movies listed are the originals.

    And although Forrest Gump is tied with the 1st on the list as my favorite movie of all time, I've don't believe I've watched it enough times to make the list. It's one of those "Watching it is a special occasion" type movies. There are a few favorites I haven't watched enough times as well.

    Who Framed Roger Rabbit?
    Animal House
    What's Up, Doc?
    (By now every movie contained in classic Mystery Science Theater 3000 episode, and at least a couple from modern day MST3K. Esp. "Manos: The Hands of Fate" since 1993)
    The Jerk
    Airplane!
    The Wizard of Oz
    A Hard Day's Night
    Yellow Submarine
    This Is Spinal Tap
    Take the Money and Run
    A Shot in the Dark
    Return of the Pink Panther
    The Pink Panther Strikes Again
    Planet of the Apes
    The Odd Couple
    Head
    Possibly a couple of the Disney Live action comedies of the early '70s. It's been a while.

    There are a few I'm not sure about, like Dick, Naked Gun, and National Lampoon's Vacation. I'm a movie fan for sure, but I'm more of a TV person, ultimately - MST3K notwithstanding...

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  26. "Pat Reeder said...
    I will mention one that I bet nobody else will: the 1967 version of "Casino Royale" with David Niven and Peter Sellers."


    Oh, I've seen that at least three times. In fact, it may be four times, including in a theater when it first opened. It is entertaining for all the wrong reasons. It's not merely a bad movie, it is ASTOUNDINGLY bad, mind-bogglingly bad! It's like three or four different bad movies in different bad styles all stapled together, and then thrown into a mixmaster for the beyond-belief finale.

    But it has wonderful music, and would be worth it just for Dusty Springfield singing The Look of Love alone. Where else can you see Deborah Kerr so enormously embarrass herself? What other movie changes leading man three-quarters of the way through because the star quit? Peter Sellers, a highly-talented but DEEPLY neurotic man, was so intimidated by the mere presence of Orson Welles that he refused ever to be on the set with him. You'll notice that they are never in the same shot. Then Sellers couldn't take the imaginary pressure of his fear of Welles, and walked off the movie, never to return. (The source of the fear is clear. Sellers was highly insecure, feeling himself to be a fake deep inside, a hollow man, and he felt that Welles could see into his inadequacy like an X-ray, an inadequacy that existed only in Sellers's mind.)

    I even have it on DVD, though I have it primarily for the 1954 TV version of Casino Royale with Peter Lorre, which is included as a bonus on the disc. My DVD of the Daniel Craig Casino Royale sits beside it on the shelf and laughs at it.

    I have never seen any Pierce Brosnan Bond film a second time.

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  27. Fed by the muse7/02/2022 8:38 AM

    Outside of Star Wars and Citizen Kane, both of which I've seen more than a dozen times:

    3-10 times:

    A Hard Days Night
    Time After Time
    Field of Dreams
    House of Games
    The Front
    Take the Money and Run
    Broadway Danny Rose
    Superman: The Movie
    Raiders of the Lost Ark
    Something Wicked This Way Comes
    Close Encounters of the Third Kind
    Cocoon
    Jaws
    Silver Streak
    The Ghost and Mr. Chicken
    Logan's Run
    Planet of the Apes
    Our Man Flint
    In Like Flint

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  28. I agree that five, or ten, viewings might be the better standard. A THOUSAND CLOWNS Is the one movie that I have seen the most that hasn’t been mentioned.

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  29. All the President's Men
    Bad Manners
    Broadcast News
    Bull Durham
    Crimes and Misdemeanors
    Deathtrap
    Dirty Rotten Scoundrels
    The Fabulous Baker Boys
    Ferris Bueller's Day Off
    A Fish Called Wanda
    Four Weddings and a Funeral
    Funny Farm
    Hannah and Her Sisters
    House of Games
    Husbands and Wives
    Metropolitan
    Moonstruck
    Mr. Jealousy
    No Way Out
    Rear Window
    Roxanne
    The Russia House
    Say Anything...
    The Secret of Kells
    Shirley Valentine
    Song of the Sea
    Talk Radio
    The Third Man
    Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
    Tootsie
    Truly Madly Deeply
    Wolfwalkers
    Dune (2021)
    Infernal Affairs
    Infernal Affairs II
    Infernal Affairs III
    Justice League 1: Man of Steel
    Justice League 2: Batman v Superman - Ultimate Edition
    Justice League 3: Zack Snyder's Justice League
    Worricker 1: Page Eight
    Worricker 2: Turks & Caicos
    Worricker 3: Salting the Battlefield

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    Replies
    1. Bull Durham and Fabulous Baker Boys great. The 80s were great to Kevin Costner and Jeff Bridges

      Delete
  30. Any Marx Brothers movie, Safety Last, Head, Girl Happy

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  31. N. Zakharenko7/02/2022 9:19 AM

    D. McEwan

    Finally someone else who finds The Story Of Mankind a fun film.

    So what if the Marx Brothers are featured separately?
    It's an enjoyable romp.

    (this title would also feature on my list)

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  32. Groundhog Day

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  33. Jim, Cheers Fan7/02/2022 9:27 AM

    oseph Scarbrough said...

    However, what is one movie that I have only seen once, and will never see again?


    along those lines, movies that everyone you know loved, and while you didn't hate it, you thought it was, like Joyce Randolph, "fine". Mine would be "Four Weddings and a Funeral" and "Muriel's Wedding", which was not un-interesting but was sold to me as a comedy and I found it really bleak.

    I can't believe I forgot the original Star Wars trilogy-- I think they're called the prequels now. I was right in their target demo and saw every one, in the theatre, at least five times.

    I can believe I forgot Grease, which when you were twelve years old in a leafy, boring suburb (and in middle age I miss all that quiet leafiness) with one old school theatre, was something to do, so I think I saw it, in that theatre, more than three times.

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  34. Three Stooges - Punch Drunks - Curly’s entry into the MCU universe
    Alfred Hitchcock - Steps; Lady; Train; Window; N x NW.
    W C Fields - Dick; Sucker
    Orson Welles - Citizen Kane Mutiny on the Bounty...the Better Picker Upper
    Buster Keaton - The Two Jrs
    Harold Lloyd - Safety Last! (with its inside joke title)
    Preston Sturges - The Palm Beach Story; Easy Living; Sullivan’s Travels; Unfaithfully Yours; Remember The Night
    Sidney Lumet -Twelve Angry Men
    Ernst Lubitsch - To Be or Not to Be; The Shop Around The Corner
    Laurel and Hardy - Block-Heads; Way Out West etc
    George Cukor - Holiday
    Charley Chase - The Rat’s Knuckles
    King Vidor - The Wizard of Oz
    Michael Powell - A Matter of Life and Death; The Red Shoes
    Keenan Wynn - Dr Strangelove
    Max Davidson - Pass the Gravy





    ReplyDelete
  35. Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf
    Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
    Babes in Arms
    Dances with Wolves
    Empire of the Sun
    The Treasure of the Sierra Madre
    North by Northwest
    Rear Window
    Cool Hand Luke
    Gunga Din
    The Lost Weekend
    Ferris Bueller's Day Off
    Sleepless in Seattle
    The Night of the Hunter
    Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
    A Christmas Story
    The Last of the Mohicans
    Wonder Boys
    Jojo Rabbit
    American Beauty
    Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil
    Some Came Running
    Days of Wine and Roses
    Glengarry Glen Ross
    A Bronx Tale
    Goodfellas
    Sabrina
    A Star is Born
    Mr. Blandings Builds his Dream House
    The Searchers
    Lawrence of Arabia
    Captains Courageous
    Boys Town
    Pulp Fiction
    Desk Set
    Lord Jeff

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  36. What is Fast Times at Ridgemont High?
    What is Pulp Fiction?
    What is Forrest Gump?
    What is The Sandlot?
    What is Coming to America?

    ReplyDelete
  37. As a Canadian, I would like to add two Cancon classics that I have watched many times: "Strange Brew," and "Goin' Down the Road".

    ReplyDelete
  38. Ken, your list shows real taste. Here's mine:

    THE HIDDEN BLADE
    BLADE RUNNER
    DAYS OF HEAVEN
    ALIEN
    APOCALYPSE NOW
    ASSASSINATION OF JESSE JAMES BY THE COWARD ROBERT FORD
    WAR OF THE GARGANTUAS
    GOJIRA
    GOODFELLAS
    AMERICAN POP
    WIZARDS
    ALTERED STATES
    TREASURE OF SIERRA MADRE
    DRACULA (1979 VERSION)
    THE CHANGELING (starring George C. Scott)
    BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN
    MARTY
    THE WOLFMAN (1940)
    PEE WEE'S BIG ADVENTURE
    CITY LIGHTS
    ON THE WATERFRONT
    BARRY LYNDON
    STAR WARS (none of this new hope jazz, the original as it was released in 1977
    RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK
    SUPERMAN: THE MOVIE
    HAIRSPRAY (John Waters)
    2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY
    SHAWSHANK REDEMPTION
    THE FAST RUNNER
    SON OF DRACULA
    VAMPYR (Carl Dreyer)

    and, even though they aren't feature films, every Three Stooges short with Curly Howard

    I could add a lot more but I think I'll just leave it at those

    ReplyDelete
  39. Kevin FitzMaurice7/02/2022 10:11 AM

    The Paper Chase--1973
    Tribute--with Jack Lemmon, 1980
    The Graduate--1967
    Hannah and her Sisters--1986
    Crimes and Misdemeanors--1989
    The Big Chill--1983
    Diner--1982
    Same Time, Next Year--1978
    MASH--although I fast forward through the too-long football game, 1970

    ReplyDelete
  40. "Anonymous N. Zakharenko said...
    D. McEwan
    Finally someone else who finds The Story Of Mankind a fun film."


    And not just for the Marx Brothers. Right off, any movie with Vincent Price clearly having fun playing Satan is OK in my book. And so much of it is almost as mind-boggling as the Peter Sellers Casino Royale. The spectacle on a budget that would be inadequate for a high school play! Peter Lorre as Nero, chanting, "Burn! Burn! Buuuuuurrrrn!" Dennis Hopper as Napoleon, acting in a wholly different acting style than the entire rest of the cast. Sets that are just drapes. Everything about Groucho's scene as Peter Minuit, with Groucho's then-current wife Eden as an Indian maiden. Seeing Harpo in color!

    Plus the whole thing is so Eurocentric that it should be titled The Story of White People.

    Yes, I have a DVD of The Story of Mankind, whereas I do not have one of Love Happy. I dislike The Big Store quite a bit, but I have it. Love Happy is a bridge too far for me.

    ReplyDelete
  41. "Anonymous Anonymous said...
    Groundhog Day
    "

    So you're going to watch it, and just it, over and over and over and over, until you get it perfected, and then find you can move on to other movies?

    (My late beloved Grandfather's birthday was Groundhog's Day. I wish I could have him over.)

    ReplyDelete
  42. Double Indemnity
    Ninotchka
    Singin' In the Rain
    Casablanca
    Dr. Strangelove
    The Band Wagon
    The Asphalt Jungle
    Billy Liar
    Kind Hearts and Coronets
    My Man Godfrey
    Holiday
    Defending Your Life
    Casino
    Slap Shot
    Nobody's Fool (Paul Newman)
    Absence of Malice
    Vertigo
    Sullivan's Travels
    The Bishop's Wife
    Zelig
    Radio Days
    The Big Easy
    A Private Function
    The Grand Budapest Hotel
    Modern Times
    A Place In the Sun
    The Heiress
    One Week (Keaton)
    The Life of Brian
    White Heat
    The Mummy (Karloff)
    The Third Man
    A Christmas Carol (Sim)
    Gods and Monsters
    Million Dollar Legs (Fields)
    (oh, all right) Citizen Kane


    ReplyDelete
  43. Another interesting list would be movies most people loved that you hate.

    Topping my list would be Woody Allen's Manhattan. Yes, it is funny. Yes, it is gorgeously photographed. Yes, the Gershwin music is wonderful. (I have the soundtrack album on vinyl.) But all that artistry and talent is laid in service of a movie which is about a pedophile's lust for a high school girl, told, like Lolita, from the P.O.V. of the pedophile. But Lolita knows Humbert Humbert is a disgusting perv. Manhattan is like Lolita if Humbert had made the movie himself, in order to defend his own perversion.

    I remember seeing Manhattan with three friends, two of the women. I remember us walking back to the car after the film and the three of them praising the movie to the skies, and my objecting that it was creepy and disgusting, a movie by a child molester justifying himself. One girl told me "But she was the most-mature and intelligent of the characters, and he saw that and connected with it." I replied "It's still STATUTORY RAPE!

    So when, years later, the Soon Ye scandal hit, I was saying, "I've been waiting for something like this ever since Manhattan, when he applied all his talent and genius to justifying statutory rape. He told us who he was way back then. When folks tell you who they are, believe them"

    ReplyDelete
  44. So interesting to read others' choices and reasons.

    The first that come to mind for me are
    The Wizard of Oz
    The Last Picture Show
    New York, New York
    The Sergeant
    Cruising
    Hexed
    The Brady Bunch Movie
    Can't Stop the Music (in a horrible class by itself, at one point an annual Christmas tradition)
    Lone Star
    Limbo
    Psycho
    Vertigo

    ReplyDelete
  45. The Blues Brothers (the first one)
    Office Space
    Airplane

    ReplyDelete
  46. What is The Wizard of Oz (from annual CBS airings)? What is The Ten Commendments (same for Easter showings on ABC)? What is Stripes (from frequent HBO airings in '81)? What is Back to the Future (from theatre/VHS/rerelease during 2017 with sequels of which the last one takes place in that very year with the Cubs win World Series prediction!)?

    ReplyDelete
  47. VHS Village (Formerly The Beta Barn)7/02/2022 11:36 AM

    Can you do a future blog post about movies you couldn't get through? I once tried to watch 1941 but I gave up after ten minutes.

    ReplyDelete
  48. Some I didn't think of in my earlier post that apply:

    A Christmas Story
    The Sound of Music (like Oz, an annual staple of childhood)
    It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World
    The Blues Brothers (1980)
    FM

    When it comes to movie parodies in MAD magazine, I've "seen" those thousands of times over the years (esp. if illustrated by Mort Drucker).

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Spike de Beauvoir7/03/2022 11:35 PM

      Loved "Flawrence," hated "Lawrence."

      Can't recall the title but still remember fondly the MAD parody of "My Fair Lady" set on Madison Avenue. But I think that was George Woodbridge?

      Delete
  49. I'll try to keep this short. To avoid redundancy I won't mention movies that other people already have.

    Ken, I'm surprised that "Splendor in the Grass" was the only NATALIE movie you mentioned.

    This movie the majority of people have never heard of, yet I have seen it more times than I can remember: "Phantom of the Paradise" starring Paul Williams and Jessica Harper. It is truly a cult film. "Eating Raoul" and "Joe Verses the Volcano" are others.

    My number one guilty pleasure is "Smokey and the Bandit." I also like the "Godzilla" movies especially the first* one with Raymond Burr and "Godzilla vs the Astromonster." AKA "Godzilla vs Monster Zero."
    *@Oscar Solis mentioned "Gojira." That was the original Japanase version. The "Godzilla" we know was cut together from that film.

    Yes. I know. What is I didn't answer in the form of a question?

    M.B.

    ReplyDelete
  50. Ah yes ... The Story Of Mankind!
    The most lavishly expensive High School history pageant ever made!
    Ronald Colman's final film! (That he died just before its release is likely not a coincidence ...)
    But most above all -
    - the triumphant performance of Nick Cravat as the Devil's Assistant!
    You all remember Nick Cravat, don't you?
    Little guy with a heavy dark beard?
    Never said a word, just reacted to everybody else's profundities?
    Here's a note for the Twilight Zone fans in the house:
    Remember the show where Bill Shatner sees the furry gremlin on the airliner's wing?
    That's Nick Cravat!
    See it next time it turns up; you'll wonder why they bothered with a rubber mask and furry suit, when all they had to do was use dark clothes and his own furry face for a Perfect Gremlin!
    THE STORY OF MANKIND!
    Don't Miss It If You Can!

    ReplyDelete
  51. No one else for ALL THAT JAZZ?

    wg

    ReplyDelete
  52. Chicago, The Birdcage, Cats (I know, sigh), Les Miserables, Midnight Cowboy, Citizen Kane, Gone with the Wind, A Place in the Sun, The Misfits, The Sound of Music, The Princess Bride, The Grifters, October Sky, The Fisher King, L.A. Story (Sarah Jessica Parker NEVER stops moving throughout and the name of the hotel, Pollo del Mar, still makes me laugh), West Side Story (original), Saturday Night Fever, Grease, Bambi, Beetlejuice, Bowfinger, Best in Show, A Mighty Wind

    ReplyDelete
  53. Three times and counting. List from off the top of the cranium:

    What are
    The Best Years of Our Lives
    Miracle at Morgan's Creek
    The Lady Eve
    The Palm Beach Story
    The Heiress
    Blithe Spirit (David Lean's production)
    La Belle et la Bête (Cocteau)
    Fanny and Alexander
    The Adventures of Robin Hood
    All the President's Men
    The Shop Around the Corner
    Trouble in Paradise
    To Be Or Not to Be (Lubitsch)
    North by Northwest (well into the double digits by now)
    Rear Window
    The Birds
    Rebecca
    The Sound of Music (yes, and I mean it)
    E.T.
    Jaws
    Close Encounters of the Third Kind
    Indiana Jones (all of them, including Crystal Skull, which was just as much a kick as the others)
    The Color Purple
    Casablanca
    They Might Be Giants
    The Last of Sheila
    Murder on the Orient Express (Lumet)
    Network
    The Fanny Trilogy (Pagnol)
    Singin' in the Rain
    The Bandwagon
    Oliver!
    The Maltese Falcon
    The African Queen
    The Music Man (perfect)
    Sounder
    To Kill a Mockingbird
    Avalon ("An elephant just vent by the vindow.")
    The Miracle Worker
    The Accidental Tourist
    The Ice Storm
    Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
    Citizen Kane
    Swing Time
    In the Heat of the Night
    The Age of Innocence
    The Godfather Parts 1 & 2
    Cabaret
    The Court Jester
    Wonder Man
    The More the Merrier
    Pocahontas (Disney's down on it now, but it has terrific music with the best lyrics of any of the hand-drawn epics, and a story that breaks the usual rules in a beautiful way)
    Dead End (not as good as the play, but...)
    The Little Foxes
    The King and I
    Oklahoma! (it's always better than I remember)

    There's at least a dozen more, some of which just count as re-watching with kids.

    How nice to have a positive thing to think about this weekend! Thank you!

    ReplyDelete
  54. A Man For All Seasons (forgotten Best Picture Winner, 1966)
    Jumpin' Jack Flash (great Bond spoof from the 1980s)
    National Lampoon's Vacation
    Vertigo
    "10"
    Predator
    A Boy Named Charlie Brown
    The King Of Comedy
    Poltergeist
    The Good The Bad And The Ugly
    Tootsie
    Elvis' 1968 Comeback Special (not a movie, but still love it)
    Special Bulletin (fantastic nuclear terrorism TV movie from 1983)

    And, because I'm a Stanley Kubrick fanatic:
    Paths Of Glory
    Spartacus
    2001 A Space Odyssey
    Dr Strangelove
    The Shining

    ReplyDelete
  55. I have enjoyed almost all of the movies you and your commenters have mentioned. Most of those I've watched multiple times.

    One of my very favorite movies is not on anyone's list yet. I like The Natural as much for Randy Newman's score as I do for the spectacle of its baseball story (although Glenn Close and Robert Redford playing teenagers in the beginning is silly).

    Another movie I've watched multiple times is Das Boot (The Boat) the German submarine story.

    ReplyDelete
  56. tavm, Back to the Future II predicted the Cubs would win in 2015. They actually won it in 2016.

    ReplyDelete
  57. On the excellent movie history site Greenbriar Picture Shows it's come up how the most re-watchable movies are rarely the great classics. They're comfort food, friendly and familiar rather than challenging and emotionally demanding.

    I've been through the Rathbone-Bruce Sherlock Holmes movies several times each, and likewise many other B detectives (Even Boris Karloff as Mr. Wong). Silent clowns, cartoons, short subjects, cozy Universal horrors, boomer-era Disney, classic comedians, tidy Jane Austen adaptations, Ray Harryhausen, light fantasies and musicals, etc.

    A few nights ago revisited "In Search of the Castaways", a very Disney item about a bunch of characters braving exotic locales to find a missing captain. Most of it is shot indoors with matte paintings and miniatures; in one scene natives climbing a rope are supported by visible wires. Hayley Mills is cute as heck, Maurice Chevalier works to be even cuter, and George Sanders turns up late in the game as a cheery villain. This weekend may dig out "Johnny Tremain", which does an honorable job of American history while still chin-deep in classic Disneyness.

    ReplyDelete
  58. I was surprised you mentioned Young Frankenstein but not Blazing Saddles.

    My list would include

    The first Star Wars Trilogy,
    All but the last Indiana Jones Films,
    Get shorty,
    Wizard of Oz and Willy Wonka (largely because they were on every year),
    Most the James Bond films led by Casino Royal,
    Knives Out,
    All the Harry Potter Films, hard to avoid them,
    Fast Times,
    Dirty Dancing because my college girlfriend,
    Fletch,
    Die Hard series,
    Lethal Weapon Series,
    Excalibur
    Monty Python and the Holy Grail,
    The Life of Brian,
    First two Godfathers, not the third,
    Goodfellas

    I have made a tremendous effort not to see Its a Wonderful Life that many times.

    ReplyDelete
  59. I'll only mention a couple that I haven't seen listed so far (unless I missed them):
    Philadelphia
    The Verdict
    Lord of the Rings trilogy

    ReplyDelete
  60. Animal House
    Antwone Fisher
    Apollo 13
    Back to the Future
    Bad Boys (Penn)
    Blues Brothers
    Caddyshack
    Christmas Story
    Cliffhanger
    Dead Zone
    Deliverance
    Die Hard
    Escape from Alcatraz
    ET
    Evil Dead
    Fast Times
    Field of Dreams
    Friday the 13th 1 and 2
    Ghostbusters
    Godfather 1 and 2
    Halloween 1 and 3
    Hooper
    Hoosiers
    Iron Giant
    It's a Wonderful Life
    Jaws
    King of the Hill
    Mask (Cher)
    Memphis Belle
    Million Dollar Baby
    Miracle
    Mr. Holland's Opus
    My Bloody Valentine
    My Bodyguard
    October Sky
    On Golden Pond
    Pulp Fiction
    Raiders and Last Crusade
    Revenge of the Nerds
    Road to Perdition
    Rocky
    The Rookie (Quaid)
    Rudy
    Sandlot
    Searching for Bobby Fischer
    Shawshank Redemption
    Smokey & the Bandit
    Sounder
    Speed
    U2 Rattle and Hum
    Untouchables
    Vacation
    Valley Girl
    What's Eating Gilbert Grape
    Wizard of Oz
    Yours Mine and Ours

    ReplyDelete
  61. Best years of our lives
    12oclock high
    Meatballs
    American graffiti
    They were expendable
    Back to baton
    Stage door canteen
    Hollywood canteen
    4jills in a Jeep

    ReplyDelete
  62. Forgot to add KING KONG, the 1933 film (all others are pretenders)

    and kudos to @DBenton for mentioning IN SEARCH OF THE CASTAWAYS.

    I have to add the Doug McClure films he starred in during the 70s:
    THE LAND THAT TIME FORGOT
    AT THE EARTH'S CORE
    THE PEOPLE THAT TIME FORGOT
    WARLORDS OF ATLANTIS

    ReplyDelete
  63. Limiting myself to films seen in a theater with an audience:
    2001: A Space Odyssey
    Fellini's Casanova
    Star Wars (1977)
    Close Encounters of the Third Kind (one was the 1980 "special edition," a disappointment)
    All That Jazz
    Back to the Future

    D. McEwan: "Love Happy is a bridge too far for me" is the funniest thing I've read all week, and I sorely needed the laugh. (I've seen it, on broadcast TV in the 1980s; once was enough.)

    ReplyDelete
  64. Kevin from VA7/02/2022 4:20 PM

    I'll just mention three that so far I not sure have been mentioned: Hombre (1967), Hard Times (1975), and The Thing (1982).

    Three that many critics and viewers loved that I strongly disliked: Taxi Driver, walked out of the theatre, Looking for Mr. Goodbar, should have walked out of the theater, and The Deer Hunter, waited forty years to finally watch it on tv, should have waited forty more.

    ReplyDelete
  65. My Neighbor Totoro
    The Castle in the sky Laputa
    Nausicaa in the Valley of the Wind
    Spirited Away
    Kiki’s Delivery Service
    Grave of the Fireflies
    Only Yesterday
    Pom Poko
    Probably the rest of the animated films of Studio Ghibli

    Key Largo, which has one of my favorite lines in film. What does Johnny Rocco want? “Rocco wants more”. I’ve referred to that line many times seeing the rampant greed of so many in the political and business world. Will they ever get enough? Never have, no I guess they never will.

    ReplyDelete
  66. I'm seeing most of mine already listed.

    Others (likely listed before)...

    The Haunting (Robert Wise)
    The Bells of St. Mary
    Imitation of Life (Lana Tuner)
    Black Narcissus
    The River (1951)
    Mildred Pierce
    Grey Gardens
    Umbrellas of Cherbourg
    Dressed to Kill (De Palma)
    The Apartment
    The Gay Deceivers
    The Sterile Cuckoo
    Executive Suite
    Mirage
    The Bad Seed
    Blair Witch Project
    No Down Payment

    ReplyDelete
  67. Rock and Roll High School
    Valley of the Dolls
    Beyond The Valley of the Dolls
    Eating Raoul
    Diary of a Mad Housewife
    Harper
    Network
    Animal House
    Casino Royale (1967)
    Night of Dark Shadows
    Whatever Happened To Baby Jane

    Tom from Massachusetts

    ReplyDelete
  68. Rock and Roll High School
    Valley of the Dolls
    Beyond the Valley of the Dolls
    Eating Raoul
    Diary of a Mad Housewife
    Harper
    All About Eve
    Legend of Lyla Clare
    The Love Machine
    Doctors Wives
    The Carpetbaggers
    Lonely Lady
    Once is Not Enough
    Animal House
    House of Dark Shadows
    Whatever Happened to Baby Jane

    ReplyDelete
  69. I've seen most of the movies listed by others at least once or twice. Since nobody listed the following, I'll put them in and add that I've seen all of them at least a half-dozen times:

    City Lights
    Laurel & Hardy silent and sound two-reelers
    Buster Keaton (shorts and silent features)
    Charlie Chase silent one and two-reelers
    Harold Lloyd features and two-reelers
    In a Lonely Place
    Lonely Are the Brave
    The Bandwagon
    1938 Robin Hood

    ReplyDelete

  70. Recognition is generally more reliable than retrieval - so it really helped to review the comments to enlarge my list.

    For instance - The Wizard of Oz - shown annually from 1965 (?) well into the 70s.

    Or "A Star is Born" - but which one??

    As a teen, Carrie Fisher in Star Wars was close to my personal Natalie Wood - SHE is the ONLY reason I have watched Star Wars so many times.

    I go right along with Scarbrough about AVATAR, which was entertaining in "normal-D". Others said to see it in "abnormal" (3D) - but I thought it unremarkable - predictable the first time - not worthy of the time.

    COCONUTS
    DUCK SOUP
    A NIGHT AT THE OPERA

    THE WIZARD OF OZ
    Gone with the Wind

    HIS GIRL FRIDAY
    THE PHILADELPHIA STORY
    CASABLANCA

    SOME LIKE IT HOT

    LOLITA
    DR. STRANGELOVE
    2001: A SPACE ODYESSY

    MY FAIR LADY
    THE SOUND OF MUSIC
    FUNNY GIRL
    FIDDLER ON THE ROOF
    THE BLUES BROTHERS

    THE GRADUATE

    YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN

    THE GODFATHER
    THE GODFATHER Part 2

    ANIMAL HOUSE

    LOVE AND DEATH
    ANNIE HALL
    MANHATTAN
    HANNA AND HER SISTERS
    CRIMES AND MISDEMEANORS

    AMERICAN GRAFFITI
    STAR WARS

    BLADE RUNNER

    This Is Spinal Tap
    Ferris Bueller's Day Off

    BULL DURHAM

    Star Trek II - The Wrath of Khan

    TAMPOPO (an outlier here)

    TERMINATOR 2

    RESERVOIR DOGS
    PULP FICTION
    JACKIE BROWN
    KILL BILL #1
    KILL BILL #2
    INGLORIOUS BASTERDS
    THE HATEFUL EIGHT
    ONCE UPON A TIME IN HOLLYWOOD

    American Beauty

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Tampopo is a very funny film. I only saw it twice, though.

      Delete


  71. PS - all THAT NOISE about STATUTORY RAPE. In this case the writer says that a "rose by any other name" is....

    RAPE!

    How interesting that a young lady in 1979 could see what rape really isn't and a much older man in 2022 still does not.

    ReplyDelete
  72. Many movies on your list and the comments list. One I didn't see on any list (but might have missed) and just watched this morning...Murphy's Romance.

    ReplyDelete
  73. In no particular order:
    Brain Donors
    The Naked Gun
    A Few Good Men
    Star Treks 2,3,4,6 (Original cast)
    Die Hard
    Star Wars 4,5,6
    Coming to America
    City Slickers
    Mississippi Burning
    I reserve the right to revise and extend my list.

    ReplyDelete
  74. What's Up, Doc? Every time I watch it I see something new.

    ReplyDelete
  75. That list has lots of favorites I've seen a million times and never get tired of watching. Plus these:

    A Star is Born
    All of Me
    Auntie Mame
    Baby Boom
    Coal Miner’s Daughter
    Dave
    Fail Safe
    Funny Girl
    Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner?
    Gypsy
    Heaven Can Wait
    Lost Horizon (1937)
    MASH
    Mommie Dearest
    Moonstruck
    My Favorite Year
    Norma Rae
    Rear Window
    Roman Holiday
    Rosemary’s Baby
    Saboteur
    Spartacus
    The Bad Seed
    The Birds
    The Exorcist
    The Man Who Knew Too Much
    The Time Machine
    The Verdict
    West Side Story
    What’s Up Doc?
    Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?
    Working Girl

    ReplyDelete
  76. I neglected to include The Cider House Rules and Lilies of the Field on my list.

    ReplyDelete
  77. Joyce Melton7/02/2022 7:55 PM

    I have a huge list of movies have seen twice but three times is much smaller.

    Little Big Man
    The Good the Bad and the Ugly
    Who Framed Roger Rabbit
    Groundhog Day
    Heaven Can Wait
    Star Wars, A New Hope
    Star Wars, The Empire Strikes Back
    Star Trek the Motion Picture
    The Wrath of Khan
    The Search for Spock
    The Producers
    Young Frankenstein
    Blazing Saddles
    Sleeper
    Paleface
    The Wizard of Oz
    It's a Wonderful Life
    The Egg and I
    Terminator 2
    Blade Runner
    The Magnificent Seven
    The Blues Brothers
    Some Like it Hot
    Kiki's Delivery Service
    Il Porco Rosso
    Back to the Future
    Toy Story
    Wall-E
    Iron Man
    Guardians of the Galaxy
    Halloween
    Guardians of the Galaxy 2
    Beetlejuice
    2001, A Space Odyessy
    King Kong (original)
    Frankenstein (with Karloff)
    Ghostbusters
    Miracle on 34th Street
    The Great Race
    Rio Bravo
    Jaws
    Die Hard
    Friday the Thirteenth
    Peter Pan
    Alice in Wonderland
    Cinderella
    The Sword in the Stone
    Fantasia
    Dumbo
    Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
    Die Hard
    Monty Python and the Holy Grail
    Ghostbusters
    The Princess Bride
    The Maltese Falcon
    Raiders of the Lost Ark
    The Big Sleep
    Singing in the Rain
    Camelot
    My Fair Lady
    The King and I
    South Pacific
    Tea House of the August Moon
    Rocky Horror Picture Show
    Superman the Movie
    Batman
    Rear Window
    On Her Majesty's Secret Service
    Mad Max
    La Cage aux Folles
    American Grafitti
    Bad Bascomb
    The Glass Bottom Boat
    The Pajama Game
    Follow That Dream
    No Time for Sergeants

    I'm surprised the list is this long and I know I am forgetting a dozen or so.

    ReplyDelete
  78. Some other movies I saw at least three times: For Your Eyes Only (theatre, HBO, DVD), Poltergeist (theatre, HBO, VHS from recording HBO), Fast Times at Ridgemont High (HBO, VHS from recording HBO, DVD with commentary by Amy Heckerling and Cameron Crowe. No, I didn't do slo-mo on Phoebe Cates when she undid her bikini top!), Sixteen Candles (theatre, MCA VHS which had altered music score, HBO), and Meatballs (edited NBC airing, HBO, DVD).

    ReplyDelete
  79. One more: Ghost

    ReplyDelete
  80. VHS Village (Formerly The Beta Barn)7/03/2022 12:39 AM

    Since I can see there are fellow horror/action fans in the comments, these are more of my pleasures that I won't feel guilty about, dammit!

    CHILD'S PLAY 3
    A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 1, 3, 4, 5
    All ten FRIDAY THE 13THS
    HALLOWEEN II, III, IV, H20
    THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE (Both the 1974 original and 2003 remake)
    THE OMEN TRILOGY
    THE EXORCIST
    SCREAM 1, 2
    TIMECOP
    YOU'RE NEXT
    I KNOW WHAT YOU DID LAST SUMMER
    URBAN LEGEND
    HOSTEL PART II
    SUDDEN DEATH
    TOTAL RECALL
    TRUE LIES
    END OF DAYS
    RAMBO 2, 4
    MARKED FOR DEATH
    OUT FOR JUSTICE
    UNDER SIEGE
    HELLRAISER I, II, III
    PSYCHO II
    THE KARATE KID I, II, III

    ReplyDelete
  81. Shop Around the Corner
    Singing in the Rain
    Godfather II
    Kubrick: Dr Strangelove, Paths of Glory, Barry Lyndon, The Shining
    Ozu: An Inn in Tokyo, Tokyo Story
    Sansho the Bailiff
    Pennies from Heaven
    Children of Paradise
    Night on the Galactic Railroad
    Fantasia
    Keaton: The Navigator, Seven Chances, Steamboat Bill Jr
    Chaplin: The Gold Rush, City Lights, Modern Times
    Glory
    Swingtime
    Andre Rubelov
    Satantango
    Three Days, Two Nights
    Toy Story II
    Lady and the Tramp
    Draftee Daffy
    Days of Heaven
    Various Astaire/Rogers movies
    Satyajit Ray: Apu Trilogy, Charulata Two Daughters
    Cabaret
    Three/Four Musketeers (Richard Lester's version)


    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. VHS Village (Formerly The Beta Barn)7/03/2022 7:56 AM

      bee, you've seriously watched Satantango more than three times?? I loved Bela Tarr's Werckmeister Harmonies, but the prospect of watching his 8 hour Satantango is intimidating. Obviously no one watches it in one go, but it's still daunting.

      Delete
  82. Too many to list so I'll go with this: every Feb. I watch Groundhog Day. (But only once!)

    ReplyDelete
  83. Woody Allen's "Crimes and Misdemeanors" and "Radio Days" would probably make my 10 favorite films of all time list, and "Love and Death" and "Sleeper" would be among my top comedies. But I agree with Doug McEwan about "Manhattan." I never understood why critics kept claiming it was his greatest film. I love the Gershwin and the cinematography, but I found all the characters to be shallow, obnoxious and repellant.

    Someone suggested the topic of movies everyone loved but you hated. I can't think of any beloved movies offhand that I despised (I thought "The Deer Hunter" was wildly overpraised, but I don't think it's beloved), but there have been movies other people built their lives around that I just don't get. I'm pretty certain that when I die, it will be without having ever sat through the entire "Lord of the Rings" trilogy. I also remember seeing the original "Star Wars" as a teenager, coming out of the theater and saying, "That was really cool!," then never giving it another thought. Well, except for when I watched "Hardware Wars." Now, that I've seen numerous times!

    ReplyDelete
  84. Oh, the actual title of the film is "What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?" It is "correct" to say "what ever," as well as "whatever," grammatically. The two-word “what ever,” isolates and underscores the “ever” part of the compound, further accentuating the note of surprise, bewilderment, or disbelief. As in, "What EVER happened...."

    ReplyDelete
  85. Spike de Beauvoir7/03/2022 9:41 AM

    My misspent life? This is embarrassing and there are many more. Well, I did technical editing for many years and played DVDs to keep my energy up as I worked. And many thanks to the TCM cinematheque that introduced me to so many forgotten classics.

    *

    Jean Arthur:
    History Is Made at Night
    Easy Living
    More Than a Secretary
    Mr. Deeds Goes to Town
    The Talk of the Town
    The Whole Town's Talking
    If Only You Could. Cook
    The Public Menace
    Too Many Husbands

    Irene Dunne:
    Theodora Goes Wild
    The Awful Truth

    Marie Dressler and Polly Moran (story/script by Zelda Sears):
    Politics
    Prosperity
    Reducing
    Emma

    Mae West:
    I'm No Angel
    Belle of the Nineties

    WC Fields:
    It's a Gift
    The Bank Dick

    Eddie Cantor:
    The Kid from Spain
    Forty Little Mothers

    Norma Shearer:
    The Divorcee
    Her Cardboard Lover
    Idiot's Delight
    The Women

    Powell and Loy:
    Double Wedding
    Love Crazy
    I Love You Again
    The Thin Man movies

    Kay Francis movies:
    Trouble in Paradise
    Jewel Robbery
    Man Wanted
    Comet Over Broadway
    In Name Only
    I Found Stella Parish

    Carole Lombard movies:
    True Confessions
    The Princess Comes Across
    Hands Across the Table
    Lady by Choice

    Warren William:
    The Dark Horse
    Skyscraper Souls
    Lady for a Day
    Gold Diggers of 1933

    Loretta Young:
    Employee's Entrance
    The Doctor Takes a Wife

    Edward G. Robinson gangster comedies:
    A Slight Case of Murder
    Larceny Inc.
    Brother Orchid
    The Little Giant

    Claudette Colbert:
    Midnight
    Without Reservations
    It's a Wonderful World
    The Gilded Lily

    Fred and Ginger:
    The Gay Divorcee
    Top Hat
    Shall We Dance
    Carefree

    Preston Sturges:
    Christmas in July
    Miracle of Morgan's Creek
    The Great McGinty
    Remember the Night

    All the Miss Marple movies with Margaret Rutherford

    The Dinner Game (Veber)
    Odette Toulemonde (Catherine Frot)
    Autumn Tale (Rohmer)
    Summer (Rohmer)
    Celine and Julie Go Boating
    Big Deal on Madonna Street
    Daisies (Czech)

    A Majority of One (Alec Guinness and Rosalind Russell)
    Auntie Mame

    Dean Martin, Jerry Lewis:
    Artists and Models
    Hollywood or Bust
    The Errand Boy
    Bells Are Ringing

    Doris Day:
    Pillow Talk
    Lover Come Back
    Send Me No Flowers
    Romance on the High Seas

    The Apartment
    Avanti!
    A New Leaf
    The Fortune Cookie
    The Sunshine Boys
    Continental Divide
    Lost in America
    The Muse
    French Kiss
    In & Out
    Baby Boom
    Something's Gotta Give
    First Wives Club

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  86. Well, last night I happened upon watching The Mask of Zorro (1940) and was reminded of its great cast and score... which they redid as a TV movie in 1974 with Frank Langella, Gilbert Roland, Ricardo Montalban and Yvonne DeCarlo, so I watched some of that... all of whom Langella drops some naughty, naught shade in his memoirs, which I then turned to reading.

    ReplyDelete
  87. One for each decade since the Talkies started:
    Captain Blood
    It's A Wonderfull Life
    Singing In The Rain
    Bullitt
    The Outlaw Josey Wales
    The Big Chill
    Jerry Maguire
    Road Trip (low-brow, I know)
    Sully


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  88. I know I'm late to the party but I wanted to mention a couple of favorites that certainly made no one else's list:

    The Adventures of Don Juan: arguably Flynn's last good movie Definitely his last pairing with Alan Hale.

    Donovan's Reef: The last pairing of John Ford and John Wayne. Mark me up as insensitive but I like the humor.

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  89. I have cultivated a video library for the precise reason of re-re-rewatching great movies. I'm afraid three times is chump change. I'd have to list my entire collection.

    Now, if we want up the ante to, let's say, watching a movie ten times...

    ReplyDelete
  90. Frankenstein
    Ghostbusters
    The Naked Gun
    Alien
    Psycho
    It's A Wonderful Life

    ReplyDelete
  91. While we are on the subject of movies - my Friday question - what is a movie where the sequel was better than the original? I thought Superman 2 was better than Superman. That's the only one that comes to mind.

    ReplyDelete
  92. THE MASK OF ZORRO
    THE ADVENTURES OF ROBIN HOOD
    TARZAN THE MAGNIFICENT
    WEST SIDE STORY (original)
    SINGIN' IN THE RAIN
    42ND STREET
    THE THIN MAN
    MALTESE FALCON
    THE BIG SLEEP (still can't follow it)
    BULLITT (still can't follow it)
    IT'S A MAD, MAD, MAD, MAD WORLD
    BLAZING SADDLES
    THE PRODUCERS
    THE GODFATHER
    GOODFELLAS
    CITIZEN KANE
    IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT
    RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK
    BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES
    SUNSET BLVD
    ACE IN THE HOLE
    MAGNUM FORCE
    CHINATOWN
    GUNGA DIN
    THE SEARCHERS
    THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN
    FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE
    THE D.I.
    PATTON
    THE FRENCH CONNECTION
    TREASURE OF THE SIERRA MADRE
    HIGH NOON
    ANIMAL HOUSE
    ROAD TO UTOPIA


    -30-

    ReplyDelete
  93. Spike de Beauvoir7/03/2022 6:39 PM

    A few more to add:

    Peter Sellers:
    I'm All Right Jack
    The Smallest Show on Earth
    Heavens Above
    The World of Henry Orient

    Bob Hope:
    Ghost Breakers
    My Favorite Blonde
    Nothing But the Truth
    The Facts of Life (with Lucille Ball)

    Jean Harlow:
    Bombshell
    Libeled Lady
    Personal Property
    Wife vs Secretary
    Dinner at Eight
    Hold Your Man

    Joan Blondell:
    Union Depot
    Footlight Parade
    Traveling Saleslady
    Desk Set

    Torchy Blane series with Glenda Farrell

    Janet Gaynor:
    A Star Is Born
    Three Loves Has Nancy
    The Young in Heart
    Small Town Girl

    Leo McCarey:
    Duck Soup
    Love Affair
    Make Way for Tomorrow
    Ruggles of Red Gap
    Big Business (Laurel and Hardy)

    ReplyDelete
  94. spike de Beauvoir included two movies that had completely slipped my mind. I have seen every Billy Wilder movie at least three times, with the exception of The Emperor Waltz and Fedora. Avanti! is one of my favorites.. Continental Divide is my favorite John Belushi movie. I have the poster from the movie, signed by Blair Brown, framed and hanging in my living room.

    ReplyDelete
  95. "Matt said...
    I was surprised you mentioned Young Frankenstein but not Blazing Saddles."


    Well, Young Frankenstein is a considerably better movie than Blazing Saddles.. I've seen BS a few times. I've watched YF countless times. I have YF on both DVD and on Blu-Ray. I may have an old VHS BS around here somewhere, unwatched for 30 years.

    Maybe we need to find a way to shave the category down, since we have so many, many movies we watch and rewatch. How about movies you've seen three times or more in the same week?

    I would claim it on behalf of my late mother. In 1935, MGM's musical horror movie Naughty Marietta starring the hideous Jeanette MacDonald and the sexless stiff Nelson Eddy, played for a week at the one and only theater in Hinsdale, Illinois, where my then-14 years old mother saw every screening. In a small town like Hinsdale, there is one showing a night, and on weekends, one matinee and one evening show. So for one week that would be 9 screenings and my mother saw every one of them, falling madly in love with Nelson Eddy. They stopped charging her after the third screening. Meanwhile, I imagine the poor projectionist, who also had to see it 9 times that week. That he managed not to shoot himself before the end of the week shows a remarkable stoicism.

    ReplyDelete
  96. " JS said...
    While we are on the subject of movies - my Friday question - what is a movie where the sequel was better than the original? I thought Superman 2 was better than Superman. That's the only one that comes to mind."


    THAT is the only one that comes to mind? So you've never seen Bride of Frankenstein?

    ReplyDelete
  97. Michael Lively7/03/2022 9:23 PM

    Citizen Kane
    Star wars 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, & 6
    The marathon man
    THE 1138
    American Graffiti
    Visions of 8
    Last Temptation of Christ
    Taxi driver
    Apocalypse now
    The conversation
    Godfather 1, 2 & 3'
    Raging bull
    Alice Doesn't live here anymore
    Universal monster movies
    Magnificent Albertsons
    F is for fake
    2001 space odyssey
    Barry Lyndon
    A. I.
    Jaws
    1941
    Duck soup
    Night at the opera
    French connection
    High plains drifter
    Richard lester 3 & 4 marketeers
    Hard day'insight.
    Taking of Pelham 123


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  98. The Archetypal Republican7/04/2022 12:16 AM

    Yeeehaw! I love me them movies with wholesome heterosexual stars and patriotic stories with none of that liberal stuff about women getting a job or helping poor people!

    These done be them movies that I watched lots of times.

    The Passion of the Christ. I like the cut of that Mr Gibson's jib. He and me have the same thinkings about women, the Jews and the gays. He a good man.

    Smokey and the Bandit

    Smokey and the Bandit number 2

    Smokey and the Bandit. I don't remember what the third movie was called.

    The Birth of a Nation. I showed that to my kids when they was 5. One of my boys wants to be a cop when he grows up.

    Every Chuck Norris movie. He a good man. I like the cut of his jib about the libs and the gays.

    The Green Berets. This done told the truth. We won the Vietnam War and it was great.

    We Were Soldiers. This done told the truth. We won the Vietnam War and it was great. And I like the cut of that Mr Gibson's jib. He and me have the same thinkings about women, the Jews and the gays. He a good man. Except when he done made those Lethal Weapon movies with that other guy. I don't like that other guy. That's why my son gonna be a cop.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Bob Zirunkel7/04/2022 8:19 AM

      Let's leave the comedy to Ken.

      Delete
  99. Gods help me, LIFEFORCE...

    "She's not going to tell us! She wants us to hurt her! Do you want to stay? Otherwise, wait outside!"
    "Not at all, I am a *natural* voyeur."

    What a stinker. Why does my entire friend group keep recommending it to one another.

    ReplyDelete
  100. D. McEwan, your account of your mother sounds like the plot of THE PURPLE ROSE OF CAIRO. Luckily McDonald and Eddy -- a/k/a the Iron Butterfly and the Singing Capon -- didn't come down off the screen.



    ReplyDelete
  101. More than half of your 66 choices were on my list. I'll skip them for variety's sake.

    What is The Strawberry Blonde? (James Cagney. My favorite movie)
    What is Diplomaniacs?
    What is M?
    What is Animal Crackers?
    What is Hair?
    What is Dark and Stormy Night?
    What is Frankenstein?
    What is Monty Python and the Holy Grail?
    What is Monty Python’s Life of Brian?
    What is Who’s Minding the Mint?
    What is The Ruling Class?
    What is The Abominable Dr. Phibes?
    What is He Who Gets Slapped?
    What is Start the Revolution Without Me?
    What is Roxie Hart?
    What is The Princess Bride?
    What is The Freshman? (Brando, not Lloyd)
    What is The Tall Guy? (Emma Thompson & Jeff Goldblum - most hilarious sex scene ever)
    What is The Music Man?
    What is The Producers?
    What is Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein?
    What is The President’s Analyst?
    What is Bedazzled?
    What is Head?
    What is The Mark of Zorro?
    What is Li’l Abner?
    What is Reefer Madness? (The 2004 musical)
    What is Monkey Business?
    What is Duck Soup?
    What is My Favorite Year?
    What is The Wolf Man?
    What is The Public Enemy?
    What is Sherlock, Jr.?
    What is Sons of the Desert?
    What is Way Out West?
    What is S.O.B.?
    What is Angels with Dirty Faces?
    What is Waiting for Guffman?
    What is The Bride of Frankenstein?
    What is Evil Roy Slade? (TV movie, but it belongs here)
    What is The Great Race?
    What is International House?
    What is Skidoo?
    What is 20th Century?
    What is Road to Utopia?
    What is Man on the Flying Trapeze?
    What is Prizzi’s Honor?
    What is The Time of Their Lives?
    What is Yankee Doodle Dandy?
    What is Miracle on 34th Street?
    What is Horse Feathers?
    What is A Mighty Wind?
    What is Chimes at Midnight?
    What is Cinderella? (1977 X-rated musical. Some good tunes)
    What is Freaks?
    What is Airplane!?
    What is Son of Paleface?
    What is A Fish Called Wanda?
    What is Road to Rio?
    What is The Party?
    What is What’s Up, Doc?
    What is Beach Blanket Bingo?
    What is Million Dollar Legs?
    What is I Married a Witch?
    What is The Lost Skeleton of Cadavra?
    What is Pandemonium? (Carol Kane, Tom Smothers, Paul Reubens)
    What is Robin and the 7 Hoods?
    What is The Cat’s Paw? (Harold Lloyd talkie)
    What is The Adventures of Robin Hood?
    What is Death Takes a Holiday?
    What is The Old Dark House?
    What is All Through the Night? (Bogart in a Runyonesque New York comedy-action picture, dismally marketed as a straight Gangsters vs. Nazis film. With Phil Silvers and Jackie Gleason. And Peter Lorre.)
    What is Darby O’Gill and the Little People?
    What is Cold Turkey?
    What is Bombshell?

    ReplyDelete
  102. Nice lists from you people (and for Ken and those who cited "Fast Times at Ridgemont High," my Facebook friend Kelli Maroney thanks you). Now, my list(semi-chronologically):

    * Girl Shy (Harold Lloyd's best, capped by a frantic race through 1924 Los Angeles on all sorts of vehicles)
    * Show People (Marion Davies was no Susan Alexander Kane, and this King Vidor-directed silent proves it)
    * The Smiling Lieutenant (Ernst Lubitsch! Maurice Chevalier! Claudette Colbert! Miriam Hopkins! Jazz up your lingerie!)
    * One Way Passage (Bill Powell, Kay Francis and paradise cocktails to all)
    * Twentieth Century (Carole Lombard proves the equal of John Barrymore in this early screwball)
    * Top Hat (Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers; "Isn't This A Lovely Day" is pure bliss)
    * Libeled Lady (a literal four-star newspaper comedy -- Powell, Myrna Loy, Jean Harlow, Spencer Tracy)
    * My Man Godfrey (my all-time favorite actor and actress -- Powell, also from his career year of '36, and ex-wife Lombard -- in the greatest screwball on them all)
    * Nothing Sacred (this comedy made me a Lombard fan; make sure you watch a print showing Carole's beautiful genius in restored Technicolor)
    * Stagecoach (an incredible John Ford ensemble headed by John Wayne in his breakthrough role)
    * The Shop Around the Corner (Lubitsch subtlety guides James Stewart in my favorite role of his, and Frank Morgan's finest hour)
    * Mr. & Mrs. Smith, 1941 (an Alfred Hitchcock marital comedy? Lombard, alongside Robert Montgomery, makes it work, and she was never more lovingly photographed)
    * Citizen Kane (ever heard Stravinsky's "The Rite of Spring"? This is its cinematic equivalent, breaking all the rules)
    * To Be Or Not To Be, 1942 (Jack Benny's best, Lombard's last and a Lubitsch dark comedy now fully appreciated)
    * Casablanca (romance, then sacrifice, change a cynical Humphrey Bogart)
    * The Miracle of Morgan's Creek (incredibly subversive Preston Sturges wartime comedy with Eddie Bracken and Betty Hutton)
    * Double Indemnity (Fred MacMurray leaves behind his light leading-man persona, lured by Barbara Stanwyck and director Billy Wilder in the greatest of film noirs)
    * Singin' in the Rain (among the best musicals ever made, with a wonderful feel for the silent-to-sound transition; Gene Kelly and Debbie Reynolds shine)
    * Marty (Ernest Borgnine emphasizes the title character's humanity, and shows there's hope for us all)
    * The Incredible Shrinking Man (thoughtful sci-fi film; any remake should literally adapt from Richard Matheson's book, which plays up Scott Carey' sexual frustration as continues to diminish)
    * The Apartment (MacMurray's a Wilder baddie again -- shut up and deal!)
    * A Hard Day's Night (captures the spirit of the '60s better than any film I know)







    0

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  103. North by Northwest
    Good Fellas
    It's a Wonderful Life
    The Best Years of Our Lives
    Casablanca
    Kingpin
    Charade
    The Ringer
    Love With the Proper Stranger
    Hard Day's Night
    Goldfinger
    From Russia With Love
    Arsenic and Old Lace
    The Graduate


    ReplyDelete
  104. Spike de Beauvoir7/04/2022 8:40 PM

    @Scottmc

    Have you seen Only You (1994)? Gianfranco Barra (Bruno in Avanti!) plays a desk clerk at a hotel in Rome, and he's delightful in scenes with Marisa Tomei and Bonnie Hunt. It's one of my favorite romcoms, enhanced by the wonderful cinematography of Sven Nykvist.

    ReplyDelete
  105. I agree with (most of) the previously named movies.
    Not mentioned yet:
    What is "We're No Angels" (1954)?

    But, back in the day when you had to pay admission to see a movie again (and again), mine would be:
    What is "Diva" (French film)?
    What is "Cabaret"?

    ReplyDelete
  106. Most of the above plus: What is Jaws? Dog Day Afternoon? Scarface (both versions)? After Hours? The Road Warrior? Die Hard? The Apartment? Bull Durham? Rosemary's Baby? The Untouchables? Something Wild?

    ReplyDelete
  107. "Buttermilk Sky said...
    D. McEwan, your account of your mother sounds like the plot of THE PURPLE ROSE OF CAIRO."


    In The Purple Rose of Cairo, Mia Farrow's character was at the movies seeking escape and respite from a hellish home life and a brutal husband.

    My mother was a fairly-typical high school freshman living happily in a beautiful upper-middle-class neighborhood (Except in Winter, when all of Illinois is the First Circle of Hell) with an unfathomable crush on Nelson Eddy. She wasn't "escaping." She was swooning. She was her version of those teenage girls we saw screaming for The Beatles on The Ed Sullivan Show. (While Mother sat on the sofa complaining that the Beatles were "just noise," like the tastes and opinions of someone who got moist at the sight and sound of Nelson Eddy are worth anything.)

    Not the same thing at all. And Nelson never came off the screen. It would not be for another 24 years before Mother came face to face with Nelson Eddy in the flesh. By then she was like his last, living fan. I suppose that is the reason that in 1959 he took the time to write her a one-page, entirely hand-written letter after they met backstage at a concert of his. (Yes, Dad was there also. So was Edgar Bergen.) The hand-written letter, and the very large photo of Nelson inscribed "To Iris," are in a frame in my hallway. I couldn't stand Nelson, but these were her most-prized possessions.

    ReplyDelete
  108. @VHS Village
    "bee, you've seriously watched Satantango more than three times?"

    I think i have seen 5-6 times. The first time I saw it I didn't know what was going on half the time but still loved it - I kept going because the more I saw it, the more I put the pieces together and the more I got from it.

    And I always saw it in a movie theater, so saw the whole thing through (it has 2 intermissions built in) - can't imagine seeing it on a TV because you sort of have to be forced to really sit there and concentrate (no putting it on pause to talk to someone on the phone). For some people I'm sure its torture because its so sloooooow - but for some people like me, its almost like entering a 4th dimension and a sense of time changes and you just flow with this filmmaker's different sense of time.

    Last time I saw it though, a little of the magic was gone. There is a sense of diminishing returns if I over-expose myself to something so I am not intending to see it again any time soon, if ever.

    But I'm glad someone asked me a question because there were some serious omissions on my previous list:

    Citizen Kane / Magnificent Ambersons/Touch of Evil

    Psycho / Strangers on a Train

    Sunset Boulevard/ The Apartment

    Make Way for Tomorrow

    Lawrence of Arabia

    Dryer: Passion of Joan of Arc, Vampyr, Day of Wrath

    Solaris (Tarkovsky)

    The Strawberry Blonde

    A Tree Grows in Brooklyn

    Monty Python and the Holy Grail

    A Night at the Opera/ Monkey Business

    Mary Poppins

    The Bicycle Thief

    Peeping Tom

    Mutiny on the Bounty (Galble/Laugton/Tone version)

    ReplyDelete
  109. Spike de Beauvoir7/06/2022 2:26 AM

    Thought to add two crackling Lee Tracy movies:

    Blessed Event
    The Half-Naked Truth (with Lupe Velez!)

    ReplyDelete
  110. "Jahn Ghalt said...
    PS - all THAT NOISE about STATUTORY RAPE. In this case the writer says that a "rose by any other name" is....
    RAPE!
    How interesting that a young lady in 1979 could see what rape really isn't and a much older man in 2022 still does not.:


    So you're OK with Statutory Rape? In 1979 and in 2022, sex between men in their forties and highs school girls is still statutory rape. That a young girl will fall for flattery from a famous man doesn't make it any less statutory rape. Remind me never to hire you to babysit, not that I'd let someone whose fake name is taken from one of the most repellent and disgusting novels ever written near any kids.

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  111. I'll confine to "In A Movie Theater".

    Star Wars
    The Empire Strikes Back
    Return of the Jedi
    Batman (1989)
    Back To The Future
    Back To The Future Part II
    And (nobody else is going to bring up this one): They All Laughed

    ReplyDelete
  112. Spike de Beauvoir7/11/2022 12:17 PM

    Ken, you mentioned The Heartbreak Kid on your list, I assume you meant the 1972 film directed by Elaine May and starring Charles Grodin and Jeannie Berlin. A recent article in Vanity Fair discusses how it's a "Missing Movie": https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2022/07/film-preservation-missing-movies

    Fortunately A New Leaf pops up often on PlutoTV on demand. Elaine May also was featured with Marlo Thomas in a rare film In the Spirit, which is a fun watch if you can find it.

    ReplyDelete
  113. The Godfather and Apocalypse Now and Taxi Driver and The Conversation and the original King Kong and Dracula and Frankenstein!

    ReplyDelete
  114. What is Who's Minding The Mint??
    What is Raiders Of The Lost Ark?
    What is Lord Of The Rings (Extended cuts)?

    ReplyDelete

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