Personally, I would have picked Amadeus over Mulholland Drive and The Seventh Seal instead of Persona (still both by Bergman), but all together it is quite a strong list. European cinema is a bit underrepresented - you could add some French, Italian or German movies - but of course if you have only 10 slots then there is quite some fierce competition because there are so many excellent movies.
@@johnjim6793 I would prefer Wild Strawberries by Bergman because it has the same level of deep study of the human condition but Persona, for me, though it's a great movie, lacks emotion and sensitivity.
Good list. Thanks. Esp. glad to see Persona included. Several years ago I set out to watch every Ingmar Bergman film, having seen none before. Persona certainly ranks up there, as do a number of other Bergman films. Thanks again.
Interesting selection. Narrative feature films were being made decades before Citizen Kane. Many great films in these years. So much yet to explore, kids.
Keeping in mind that it is impossible to squeeze all the great movies into a top 10 list, I'd probably nominate more early films. Certainly Charlie Chaplin would be a worthy contender - the ending of City Lights is still the best ending in film history -, and the same goes for "Battleship Potemkin" or "M". Some movies have been so fundamental and influential, and the things they have done first have become so integral to film making that a modern audience can hardly appreciate this contribution. It is like when you look at a renaissance painting and say to yourself, "Hey, they teach central perspective in 9th grade, so what's all this rumpus about this Leonardo guy?"
No Chaplin? No Metropolis? No Abel Gance's Napoleon? No Brazil? No Third Man? No Fellini or Antonioni or Kurosawa? (except for Seven Samurai, and he did better) No De Sica? No Mizoguchi or Miyazaki or Ozu? Victor Fleming? John Ford? Elia Kazan?
10 Greatest Movies : A Streetcar Named Desire (1951) 8½ (1963) The Good, the Bad & the Ugly (1966) Rocky (1976) Apocalypse Now (1979) The Empire Strikes Back (1980) Blade Runner (1982) RAN (1985) Predator (1987) GoodFellas (1990)
Generally speaking, a load of bunk. 2001 is great but The Shining is Kubrick’s finest film. How come no silent movies? Apart from Persona, nothing non-US. Where’s The Exorcist? Once Upon a Time in the West. Rio Bravo. Pointless list.
Schindler's List has the finest cast of any film I have seen. Leeson, Fiennes and Kingsley in top form. My fave Kurosawa is Ran. I think 2001 very good, but prefer Tarkovsky's Stalker and Solaris for their humanity. Can't argue about any here but personal preference plays a part. I would put Casablanca ahead of Pulp Fiction. Godfather II loses a tad for me because of occasional lapses into melodrama, but a very fine film. Vertigo and Citizen Kane deserve their high status. I would also consider Le Regle du Jeu, Breathless and Paris, Texas for their influence on cinema
There are some good films here, but the best films ever made? No. And some are pretty bad, for example Mulholland Drive, which is an example of style over substance on a grand scale. Vertigo isn't Hitchcock's best either. AI narrator as well I think.
I don't get the love for Godfather ll. The first was good, minus the punch Sunny throws that misses by a mile. But the second, I felt there really wasn't much there with the young Don. Overrated imo. Aside from that, awesome list. I'd put The Shawshank Redemption on there, along with The Wizard Of Oz.
Are you agree with the list?
YES!
I´d add Fritz Lang´s Metropolis and leave out Sunset Bouleevard, but that´s arguable, of course.
Personally, I would have picked Amadeus over Mulholland Drive and The Seventh Seal instead of Persona (still both by Bergman), but all together it is quite a strong list. European cinema is a bit underrepresented - you could add some French, Italian or German movies - but of course if you have only 10 slots then there is quite some fierce competition because there are so many excellent movies.
No sorry! Chacun a son gout!
@@johnjim6793 I would prefer Wild Strawberries by Bergman because it has the same level of deep study of the human condition but Persona, for me, though it's a great movie, lacks emotion and sensitivity.
Good list. Thanks. Esp. glad to see Persona included. Several years ago I set out to watch every Ingmar Bergman film, having seen none before. Persona certainly ranks up there, as do a number of other Bergman films. Thanks again.
Interesting selection. Narrative feature films were being made decades before Citizen Kane. Many great films in these years. So much yet to explore, kids.
All in all i agree to your list. Very well done and for sure you deserve much more attention for your channel.
Thanks!!!
Lets go CinePrime English!!!!!!!!
The list was spot on 👌
😃🫶
How do you know?
@@jesseatwater393 How do I know what?
The godfather 1 and 2 are the best movie of history after EPIC MOVIE
hahahaha!
Good narrator voice.
Citizen Kane may seem somewhat slow today??? You can’t truly believe then that it deserves to be on this list, which it absolutely does of course.
Not even a mention of "Metropolis" ?
To this very instant it is incredible in ALL respects.
Its absence entirely invalidates this compilation.
😂
Keeping in mind that it is impossible to squeeze all the great movies into a top 10 list, I'd probably nominate more early films. Certainly Charlie Chaplin would be a worthy contender - the ending of City Lights is still the best ending in film history -, and the same goes for "Battleship Potemkin" or "M". Some movies have been so fundamental and influential, and the things they have done first have become so integral to film making that a modern audience can hardly appreciate this contribution. It is like when you look at a renaissance painting and say to yourself, "Hey, they teach central perspective in 9th grade, so what's all this rumpus about this Leonardo guy?"
Any list must include. The Human Condition: The Burmese Harp. Requiem For An American Dream. The Dekalogs..
No Chaplin? No Metropolis? No Abel Gance's Napoleon? No Brazil? No Third Man? No Fellini or Antonioni or Kurosawa? (except for Seven Samurai, and he did better) No De Sica? No Mizoguchi or Miyazaki or Ozu? Victor Fleming? John Ford? Elia Kazan?
10 Greatest Movies :
A Streetcar Named Desire (1951)
8½ (1963)
The Good, the Bad & the Ugly (1966)
Rocky (1976)
Apocalypse Now (1979)
The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
Blade Runner (1982)
RAN (1985)
Predator (1987)
GoodFellas (1990)
BEST LIST EVER AND BEST VIDEO EVER
Thanks!!!
The Train=1964, B/W, TRES Heavy Gritty Set in France, 1944
Greatest film ever made is "La Strada' by Fellini.
I'll take 8 1/2, but La Strada is very fine.
flush this list if Sunrise is not on it.
What no Shawshak?
😃
😃
Missing - Shawshank Redemption, Ben Hur, Gandhi, Matrix 1, Prestige, Cast away. Tough to agree to this list when you miss these many
Tough to agree when you only seem to have seen films from the widescreen Technicolor era.
Generally speaking, a load of bunk. 2001 is great but The Shining is Kubrick’s finest film. How come no silent movies? Apart from Persona, nothing non-US.
Where’s The Exorcist? Once Upon a Time in the West. Rio Bravo. Pointless list.
Schindler's List has the finest cast of any film I have seen. Leeson, Fiennes and Kingsley in top form. My fave Kurosawa is Ran. I think 2001 very good, but prefer Tarkovsky's Stalker and Solaris for their humanity. Can't argue about any here but personal preference plays a part. I would put Casablanca ahead of Pulp Fiction. Godfather II loses a tad for me because of occasional lapses into melodrama, but a very fine film. Vertigo and Citizen Kane deserve their high status. I would also consider Le Regle du Jeu, Breathless and Paris, Texas for their influence on cinema
Nice!
There are some good films here, but the best films ever made? No. And some are pretty bad, for example Mulholland Drive, which is an example of style over substance on a grand scale. Vertigo isn't Hitchcock's best either. AI narrator as well I think.
3/10 at most.
I don't get the love for Godfather ll. The first was good, minus the punch Sunny throws that misses by a mile. But the second, I felt there really wasn't much there with the young Don. Overrated imo. Aside from that, awesome list. I'd put The Shawshank Redemption on there, along with The Wizard Of Oz.