Thank you Kino for putting this together. I haven't seen it yet but the fact that you went and did this means something to me. I lost my father last year and there were so many films and art in general that I wanted to show him after reuniting with him after spending nearly two decades apart. We never managed to since death came to him. He was only 52 years old. To all of you out there that still have a father next to you, love him with all your strength and might, appreciate him and make him proud and show him how proud you are of having him as a father. Everyone, have a Happy Father's Day. I'm sending love to you all. Have a nice Sunday.
My dad warships TCM. He once came back home and turned on the channel which was showing Ace In the Hole and kept saying how great the film and channel is.
Master and Commander is one of the greatest movies I've ever seen. When I finally watched it, even though I had seen it recommended for years, I genuinely regret not having seen it earlier.
I remember the first time I realised that there were "Dad movies". I dragged my Dad to see Scott Pilgrim, I told him it had "rock music" and was based on a comic. I'll never forget his disappointment as we left the cinema and I was so excited and enthused about it. To this day whenever we watch a film he always asks "was that better than Scott Pilgrim for you?", the kind of shit-talking Dads can only get away with. FWIW his favourite film is The Great Escape and I really like that one too so it always goes down well at Christmas when I visit.
My dad showed me "Master and Commander" when I was 13 and it's been one of my favorites ever since. I would've liked it regardless, but seeing it with him will always be a good memory
I’d also recommend 3:10 to Yuma (2007), not only did I recommend it to my dad and we both loved it, but he recommended it to his dad and he loved if, so it’s like a multi generational “dad” movie
I was the cameraman on the opening scene. Hearing Kino switch from his normal/dad voice into the Kino voice we all know and love right before my eyes... wicked
That is the movie I most strongly associate with my dad. Watched it so many times with him and my brother through the years. He mentioned that we should all see it again not long ago.
Master and Commander is one of the best films of the last 23 years imo. And a damn shame we didn't get sequels cause it didn't do that great in the Box Office. Excellent performances from Russell Crowe and especially Paul Bettany. The war scenes on sea are amazing and it doesn't hold back when it comes to violence especially on young kids who actually were crewman during this time. Brawl In Cell Block 99, is another gem from S. Craig Zahler (also Bone Tomahawk is another great one). It starts out so slow and you only get a glimpse of Vince Vaughan (a career best performance) character violence when he finds out his wife has cheated on him. When he beats down on his car. First 50 minutes is a slow crime drama. It's only once he hits prison and is threatened by Udo Kier when Vaughan turns into one man killing machine. A ton of gruesome bone breaking action. It was my favourite film of 2017. But it's definitely not for everyone.
Yes, Master and Commander is my favourite «historical» film. I’m reading book 12 in the Aubrey/Maturin series now, and even this far into the series there are certain little things that were used for the film adaptation.
Brawl was one of the greatest crime thrillers I’ve ever seen . The sound the shock belt made put me into hysterics , and it was simply the best Vince Vaughn ever
My dad hates movies and TV. I remember when we watched a movie in a cinema (It was Fellowship of the Ring) and he was like: how many hours of a movie do you need to present a simple metaphor, well I watched this movie one time too many. This was his first cinema experience in probably 10 years and he didn't watch a movie since. I love movies, so watching something with my dad is out of a question. Thanks for the suggestions anyway, your content is allways great.
The movies that we both really liked watching together were space odyssey 2001, The Shawshank Redemption and the shining. There are many more action movies that he likes but maybe they are not my cup of tea. And yea the list is pretty basic but I am happy that he showed me these before I became a film fan. Literally watched space odyssey at like 5 years old and damn that small red eye computer scared me so much..
Yep that's my Dad's favourite, in fact for a lot of British Dad's it's the WW2 classics that hold true. Where Eagles Dare (as mentioned), The Great Escape, Battle of Britain, 633 Squadron, The Dambusters and A Bridge Too Far are all on constant repeat every Christmas.
My dad showed me so many great movies growing up. Some of them are on this list. When mom was away, he used to put on some bootleg VHS tapes that he over-recorded over our kids movies- which occasionally led to some wild cuts. Rugrats to straight Raising Arizona climax, Terminator, and I remember watching Aliens when I was 4 with him and my uncle. Watched only the Bullitt chase scene with him... twice in a row. Only the bloodbath from Kill Bill Vol. 1 when I was like 12. Blade Runner. Blade Runner 2049 when I was an adult and we were the only two in the theatre. So many good movie memories and he ingrained the love of cinema in me. Love you pops.
My dad doesn’t really like to talk about stuff he watched or listened to as a kid but I know he watched stuff like Towering Inferno, 2001’s a Space Odyssey, Planet of the Apes and some others and he listened to bands like Led Zeppelin, Earth, Wind and Fire among others but I wish he’d watch those movies or listen to that kind of music again.
Excellent list! I've seen a few of these, Frailty being my favorite. If I may add one, Desperado. It was the last film my dad requested to watch a few days before he died. So, it holds a special place with me.
Favorite movies of my Dad's (off the top of my head): the Back to the Future trilogy, Top Gun, A Nightmare on Elm Street, the Pirates of the Caribbean movies, the John Wick movies, and Rad.
Amazing list, honestly. I was expecting a lot of early 2000's Denzel Washington movies or 90's Mel Gibson movies but every movie here is just awesome. Also, I would add an spaghetti Western to this list, probably "Duck, you sucker", just because all other Sergio Leone's movies your dad already watched them.
Big ups for having Brawl, really fucking good movie, didn’t know Vince Vaughan had it in him to be a great dramatic actor The movie really felt like a 70s grindhouse flick
I love this video. I'm taking a year out of uni, which means a lot of time at home with my dad: walking the dog, drinking local beer and watching films. In my opinion, English dad films look slightly different... Blade Runner is number one. It's the first film I remember him showing us as kids, aside from David Lean's Great Expectations (I'd add Lawrence of Arabia too). A Matter of Life and Death is another one, and The Third Man, and High Noon. It's nice to hear him reminisce about all the films on tv when he was a kid and there were only 3 channels. I'd say anything with Alec Guinness is a must: Kind Hearts and Coronets and The Ladykillers chief among them. My dad is also the one to introduce me to Cary Grant in a round about way via Some Like It Hot, and Fred Astaire with Top Hat, which we recently saw in the cinema (he 'tap dad danced' in the lobby afterwards). Lastly, any Monty Python is like bread and butter to an English dad. My dad has shaped my film watching in a really important way, and it's been so nice spending this year sitting watching whatever the tv throws at us of an afternoon. There's no sound I like more than my dad hollering that a particular film I've never heard of is playing and telling me to put it on immediately. He inevitably picks out some now-obscure character actor in the cast, giving anecdotes about their other films and old pop culture tidbits. There's many many more films we haven't got to yet, and it's almost making me not want to move back out. Thanks for the recommendations - I'll pose them to my dad next time we have a free few hours! :)
Thank you so much for this list- it’s so hard to find films my dad will enjoy but he loves Robert Redford and Steve McQueen- I’m adding all this films to my list
This is a pretty cool concept. When I heard he was going to be doing this video, I thought it was going to be movies about fathers, like father son movies. The fact that it's actually movies to watch WITH your dads is even cooler. It's good to hear some masculine, meat and potatoes films being recommended. My dad wasn't in my life for a long time, so movies raised me. Belmondo taught me to smoke, Bickle taught me how to exercise, Nicholson taught me how to smile in the face of adversity. etc. I hope a lot of other zoomers take the time to watch some of these movies and learn from them about life.
From my own personal experience, any movie starring Terence Hill and Bud Spencer is a perfect father-son film. From their westerns to their screwball comedies, they are like the ultimate dad movies.
My friend told me that he and his dad once almost watched Irreversible together. He didn't know what it was about at the time. Luckily they picked something else.
Hi Mr. Kino, I was hoping to get some help regarding Bullitt. I went to watch it at a theater with my girlfriend and we sat with a bunch of old people. They were having a blast, laughing and cheering along with a lot of scenes, but my gf and I were mostly bored and confused? I don't fault the movie, but it feels as if we were out of the loop, and didn't really understand why everyone enjoyed it so much. What did I miss?
God damn it, where were you yesterday? I was gonna watch The Northman with my dad, then found out he’d watched that with my brother and we were forced to fall back on The Pilgrimage (2017), which wasn’t bad, but any of these would have been better.
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Thank you Kino for putting this together. I haven't seen it yet but the fact that you went and did this means something to me. I lost my father last year and there were so many films and art in general that I wanted to show him after reuniting with him after spending nearly two decades apart. We never managed to since death came to him. He was only 52 years old. To all of you out there that still have a father next to you, love him with all your strength and might, appreciate him and make him proud and show him how proud you are of having him as a father. Everyone, have a Happy Father's Day. I'm sending love to you all. Have a nice Sunday.
I’m sorry for your loss
My dad died a year ago too he was also 52 it’s a shitty boat to be in isn’t it
My dad warships TCM. He once came back home and turned on the channel which was showing Ace In the Hole and kept saying how great the film and channel is.
Master and Commander is one of the greatest movies I've ever seen. When I finally watched it, even though I had seen it recommended for years, I genuinely regret not having seen it earlier.
Im sad we wont get a sequel, the movie is based off of books and there's at least 20 books in the series
I LOVE that movie!
I remember the first time I realised that there were "Dad movies". I dragged my Dad to see Scott Pilgrim, I told him it had "rock music" and was based on a comic. I'll never forget his disappointment as we left the cinema and I was so excited and enthused about it. To this day whenever we watch a film he always asks "was that better than Scott Pilgrim for you?", the kind of shit-talking Dads can only get away with.
FWIW his favourite film is The Great Escape and I really like that one too so it always goes down well at Christmas when I visit.
My dad showed me "Master and Commander" when I was 13 and it's been one of my favorites ever since. I would've liked it regardless, but seeing it with him will always be a good memory
M&C 2 would’ve been EPIC’ 😔
5:16 "I've got to tell ya son, this Frank Bullitt guy. He's literally me"
I’d also recommend 3:10 to Yuma (2007), not only did I recommend it to my dad and we both loved it, but he recommended it to his dad and he loved if, so it’s like a multi generational “dad” movie
I was the cameraman on the opening scene. Hearing Kino switch from his normal/dad voice into the Kino voice we all know and love right before my eyes... wicked
I can't believe you didn't include Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. That's every 50 y/o dad's favorite movie. 😂
If your dad is 50 that movie was before his time. 50 is GenX. That movie was made in 69.
@@Luigisalibi It was, my dad likes it because he watched with his dad a lot.
That is the movie I most strongly associate with my dad. Watched it so many times with him and my brother through the years. He mentioned that we should all see it again not long ago.
You could definitely do a part 2 on this, I was a little surprised Ford vs Ferrari wasn’t included
Wait.. you guys have dads?
Alternatively this can be a list for when you become a dad
I can be your daddy
I feel you, us dad less fellas got it rough today
They're not all milk-fetchers😂
@jokehu is the chosen one
Master and Commander is one of the best films of the last 23 years imo. And a damn shame we didn't get sequels cause it didn't do that great in the Box Office. Excellent performances from Russell Crowe and especially Paul Bettany. The war scenes on sea are amazing and it doesn't hold back when it comes to violence especially on young kids who actually were crewman during this time.
Brawl In Cell Block 99, is another gem from S. Craig Zahler (also Bone Tomahawk is another great one). It starts out so slow and you only get a glimpse of Vince Vaughan (a career best performance) character violence when he finds out his wife has cheated on him. When he beats down on his car. First 50 minutes is a slow crime drama. It's only once he hits prison and is threatened by Udo Kier when Vaughan turns into one man killing machine. A ton of gruesome bone breaking action. It was my favourite film of 2017. But it's definitely not for everyone.
It was such bullshit too. I remember seeing this with my dad in theaters when I was around 11 or 12 and I've loved Patrick O'Brien's books ever since.
Yes, Master and Commander is my favourite «historical» film. I’m reading book 12 in the Aubrey/Maturin series now, and even this far into the series there are certain little things that were used for the film adaptation.
Brawl was one of the greatest crime thrillers I’ve ever seen . The sound the shock belt made put me into hysterics , and it was simply the best Vince Vaughn ever
My dad hates movies and TV. I remember when we watched a movie in a cinema (It was Fellowship of the Ring) and he was like: how many hours of a movie do you need to present a simple metaphor, well I watched this movie one time too many. This was his first cinema experience in probably 10 years and he didn't watch a movie since. I love movies, so watching something with my dad is out of a question. Thanks for the suggestions anyway, your content is allways great.
I feel like 'Cool Hand Luke' and 'The Wages Of Fear' are top tier, essential dad films.
Yes, or the remake of The Wages of Fear
@@shiven513Sorcerer, To Live and Die in LA is also kind of a dad movie
@@IJohnSmith Drawing on L.A, The Long Goodbye by Altman is a classic. Lots of smoking.
I love streaming so much and watching movies legally
The movies that we both really liked watching together were space odyssey 2001, The Shawshank Redemption and the shining. There are many more action movies that he likes but maybe they are not my cup of tea. And yea the list is pretty basic but I am happy that he showed me these before I became a film fan. Literally watched space odyssey at like 5 years old and damn that small red eye computer scared me so much..
You know he's getting the milk after re-watching Salo.
The Great Escape is a classic dad movie. Especially in Britain.
Yep that's my Dad's favourite, in fact for a lot of British Dad's it's the WW2 classics that hold true. Where Eagles Dare (as mentioned), The Great Escape, Battle of Britain, 633 Squadron, The Dambusters and A Bridge Too Far are all on constant repeat every Christmas.
Hell yeah, my American Dad showed me that over a decade ago.
I have never been able to watch Master and Commander for more than ten minutes without falling asleep. That movie is my cure for insomnia.
😐
Thanks Mr. Kino! All great recs! My dad's favorite movie has always been Bullitt! 🤣 He showed it to me when I was 8. You got it spot on
My dad showed me so many great movies growing up. Some of them are on this list. When mom was away, he used to put on some bootleg VHS tapes that he over-recorded over our kids movies- which occasionally led to some wild cuts. Rugrats to straight Raising Arizona climax, Terminator, and I remember watching Aliens when I was 4 with him and my uncle. Watched only the Bullitt chase scene with him... twice in a row. Only the bloodbath from Kill Bill Vol. 1 when I was like 12. Blade Runner. Blade Runner 2049 when I was an adult and we were the only two in the theatre. So many good movie memories and he ingrained the love of cinema in me. Love you pops.
Thanks for this. I always make mental notes of such lists and I am glad to see someone else actually made a video on it.
My dad doesn’t really like to talk about stuff he watched or listened to as a kid but I know he watched stuff like Towering Inferno, 2001’s a Space Odyssey, Planet of the Apes and some others and he listened to bands like Led Zeppelin, Earth, Wind and Fire among others but I wish he’d watch those movies or listen to that kind of music again.
Master and commander fun fact is that they were the first film production allowed to shoot on the actual Galapagos island
Love Master and commander, first time I saw it was on a new year's eve, then rewatched every single day for almost a month
Excellent list! I've seen a few of these, Frailty being my favorite.
If I may add one, Desperado. It was the last film my dad requested to watch a few days before he died. So, it holds a special place with me.
Favorite movies of my Dad's (off the top of my head): the Back to the Future trilogy, Top Gun, A Nightmare on Elm Street, the Pirates of the Caribbean movies, the John Wick movies, and Rad.
Amazing list, honestly.
I was expecting a lot of early 2000's Denzel Washington movies or 90's Mel Gibson movies but every movie here is just awesome.
Also, I would add an spaghetti Western to this list, probably "Duck, you sucker", just because all other Sergio Leone's movies your dad already watched them.
I added 3 movies to my watch list just from this video. You're a great source for recommendations.
My dad's favorite movie is Das Boot for sure. His second favorite is the first Mad Max movie.
OMG TY FOR THIS LIST! AWESOME
Big ups for having Brawl, really fucking good movie, didn’t know Vince Vaughan had it in him to be a great dramatic actor
The movie really felt like a 70s grindhouse flick
Where Eagles Dare was shockingly accurate lol. My dad made us all watch it on his birthday one year
I love this video. I'm taking a year out of uni, which means a lot of time at home with my dad: walking the dog, drinking local beer and watching films. In my opinion, English dad films look slightly different...
Blade Runner is number one. It's the first film I remember him showing us as kids, aside from David Lean's Great Expectations (I'd add Lawrence of Arabia too). A Matter of Life and Death is another one, and The Third Man, and High Noon. It's nice to hear him reminisce about all the films on tv when he was a kid and there were only 3 channels.
I'd say anything with Alec Guinness is a must: Kind Hearts and Coronets and The Ladykillers chief among them. My dad is also the one to introduce me to Cary Grant in a round about way via Some Like It Hot, and Fred Astaire with Top Hat, which we recently saw in the cinema (he 'tap dad danced' in the lobby afterwards). Lastly, any Monty Python is like bread and butter to an English dad.
My dad has shaped my film watching in a really important way, and it's been so nice spending this year sitting watching whatever the tv throws at us of an afternoon. There's no sound I like more than my dad hollering that a particular film I've never heard of is playing and telling me to put it on immediately. He inevitably picks out some now-obscure character actor in the cast, giving anecdotes about their other films and old pop culture tidbits. There's many many more films we haven't got to yet, and it's almost making me not want to move back out.
Thanks for the recommendations - I'll pose them to my dad next time we have a free few hours! :)
My daughter is only 7 months old, but we'll be watching all of these movies. Thank you Kino!
Great video Mr Kino but I'll just stick to watching Batman 66 on Blue Ray for the 18th year in a row
excellently done my brother!!!!!
A dad movie I can wholeheartedly endorse is Tombstone with Kurt Russell, absolutely kino
Awesome list and lots I haven’t seen. Definitely gonna check out a bunch of these.
The lesser of two weevils
Thank you so much for this list- it’s so hard to find films my dad will enjoy but he loves Robert Redford and Steve McQueen- I’m adding all this films to my list
great stuff kino
Most robert redford films are great viewings with any dad.
The last detail is fantastic, really glad to see it on here. Nothing quite like it.
That mustache made you go from looking like a guy who hangs out at vintage video stores to a guy who hangs outside of playgrounds.
Haven’t seen Brawl in Cell Block 99 yet, looking forward to it. Does the scene at 22:22 show a soaking wet Vaughn emerge onto a dock completely dry?
Kino Jr. is cute, hope he makes a regular appearance on the channel.
Great video, would love to hear your opinion on cool hand luke
I love Cool Hand Luke. Would watch it with my dad all the time, though the egg scene kind of makes me nauseous.
@@TheKinoCorner yeah it's my dad's favourite film, first thing I thought of when I saw the title of the vid
I recently had the idea of showing Bullit to my dad wow what a coincidence
This is a pretty cool concept. When I heard he was going to be doing this video, I thought it was going to be movies about fathers, like father son movies. The fact that it's actually movies to watch WITH your dads is even cooler. It's good to hear some masculine, meat and potatoes films being recommended. My dad wasn't in my life for a long time, so movies raised me. Belmondo taught me to smoke, Bickle taught me how to exercise, Nicholson taught me how to smile in the face of adversity. etc. I hope a lot of other zoomers take the time to watch some of these movies and learn from them about life.
I literally cheered when Harakiri came up!
Thanks for the list man, now I know what to watch with my dad when he comes back with the milk
Two of the most memorable times with my Dad was seeing 'Apocalypse Now' and 'Full Metal Jacket' at the theater with him.😊
One of my dad's favorite movies he recently saw was The Death of Stalin. He's recommended it to me i think 50 times since he watched it.
Thanks for the recommendations. next time im with my dad we'll definitely watch one of these, probably Bullitt.
Blood Simple has great cinematography
Your dad sounds like a good one, Kino.
The Sting, The Great Escape, The Maltese Falcon, Rocky.
Kelly’s hero’s, Patton, Rambo, cool hand Luke, the great escape, a man escapes, bicycle thief’s, the French connection, slap shot
As a dadless, I collect father-figure-esque relationships like pokemon cards. I will force this upon one of my dad harem
Great list. There are a few I haven't seen. I'll ask my dad if he has seen all of these too. I one day wish to have Kino's dad stash lol.
Great picks
You should've had an epilogue for the greatest father/daughter movie. Oldboy.
I appreciate this so much I been struggling with what to watch with my dad 😅
Put Tarantino and Richie films and dad will be happy with them.
Jeremiah Johnson is one me and my dad think of often.
My definition of “dad movies” is Fast & Furious 1 through 10.
Your dad is about 14 years old?
Funnily enough master and comander is one of my father’s favourite movies
When he comes back from the shop im on it
From my own personal experience, any movie starring Terence Hill and Bud Spencer is a perfect father-son film. From their westerns to their screwball comedies, they are like the ultimate dad movies.
Don't forget Robert Redford in any film.
"I'll give you one good reason to watch it. Jack Nicholson in his prime." You coulda stopped at Jack Nicholson and I'd still be sold.
My friend told me that he and his dad once almost watched Irreversible together. He didn't know what it was about at the time. Luckily they picked something else.
It's probably cliche, but Tombstone is an essential dad movie.
My dad and I used to watch old slap stick comedy like airplane naked gun top secret and hot shots, those are certifiably komedy kino
My ultimate dad movie was The Last Samurai. We only ever watch it together
The Great Santini!.....was on TCM last night.
The Great Santini and my grandfather were the same person basically
@@TheKinoCorner He was my father, uncles, grandfather, and all my friends fathers too....lol!
0:12 This is getting out of hand. Now there are two of them!
thanks, now all I need is a dad
I know you merely just showed it, but The Sword of Doom is an awesome film.
Last time I was home my dad put on bullet and called me in from the other room just to watch the car chase 😂
Thanks!
I think my Dad's favorite movie is Scent of a Woman. You got Al Pacino, you got a Dad movie
Hoo-ah!
what a strange movie and title.
Hi Mr. Kino, I was hoping to get some help regarding Bullitt. I went to watch it at a theater with my girlfriend and we sat with a bunch of old people. They were having a blast, laughing and cheering along with a lot of scenes, but my gf and I were mostly bored and confused? I don't fault the movie, but it feels as if we were out of the loop, and didn't really understand why everyone enjoyed it so much. What did I miss?
Good dad list, just missing Tombstone and Gladiator lol.
Holly smokes, Kino Corner took a play out of 'The Irishman' and deaged himself!
God damn it, where were you yesterday? I was gonna watch The Northman with my dad, then found out he’d watched that with my brother and we were forced to fall back on The Pilgrimage (2017), which wasn’t bad, but any of these would have been better.
I highly recommend Lino Brocka's Ang Tatay Kong Nanay (My Father, My Mother). A filipino comedy-drama film that tackles parenting and homosexuality
Bro Judge Roy Bean was the first Tier 3 simp
If harakiri is in it it's a great list
I really do like these videos but I really liked the first one that didn't have a theme, it felt across the board.
What is that Hungarian art house movie?
I watched Antichrist with my dad, at the end he just got up walked away and didn’t say anything.
Vince Vaughn is insane in Brawl
0 dislikes, very kino
Any Maclean film adaptation is worthy of this genre.
26:10 You forgot to mention the immaculate uniforms.
WHERE EAGLES DARE! Yes!
Best movie to watch with your dad? The strange things about the Johnsons.
That awkward sexual scene in sneakers is enough for me to wanna crawl under the carpet if I’m watching it with my dad