Tuesday, August 4, 2015

My Top 20 Favorite Films


All my life I've been known as "the movie guy". The walking, talking IMDb. Among the questions I get most often -- "Why are you so into movies?" They make sense to me; they always have, they always will. "Are you, like, gonna make movies when you grow up?" I have made short films, yes, but as I get *older* I'd like to make features. -- is "What's your favorite movie?" For the longest time, I fought the question reasoning that to be a good student of film, one had to be open to all genres and all types of stories. Singling out one film more than others can be easy for some, but not for me. Still, I think I've finally sat down and realized what movies mean the most to me. The ones I know by heart because they know me by heart. My all-time favorites in a top 20 list. Now I've laid out a few ground rules for myself:

1. No Star Wars or Star Trek. Way too easy and I enjoy them all (except on the "Trek" side - Insurrection, Nemesis and Into Darkness).

2. For the purposes of this list, I'm staying with films that I currently own on Blu-Ray. That means nothing currently in theaters (believe me, that ain't saying much).

3. Because of the exclusions of Star Wars and Star Trek, trilogies ARE allowed. 

4. I will not be beholden to this list for the rest of my life. Change is inevitably bound to happen (though for the top 5, it is very unlikely).

So here goes. My Top 20 Favorite Films. I'm going in reverse order to preserve surprises. There may be a few films on this list I talk more about than others (some on this list are classics everyone knows).


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20. Cloud Atlas (2012)
Directors: Lana Wachowski, Tom Tykwer and Andy Wachowski

"While my extensive experience as an editor has led me to a disdain for flashbacks and flash forwards and all such tricksy gimmicks I believe that if you, dear Reader, can extend your patience for just a moment, you will find that there is a Method to this tale of Madness."

I'm quite aware there is not a lot of love for this movie. If you saw it and didn't like it, I can't tell you that you're wrong. However, if you believe the hearsay of this film without seeing it, I highly encourage you to set apart three hours for yourself and actually sit down and watch it. The directors themselves have acknowledged that this ambitious movie was hard to market because it was hard to condense to sell in a 30-second TV spot.  All I know is that as soon as I saw that first extended trailer, I couldn't miss this movie. And to this day, I'm still incredibly taken by this movie. The way it was made (three directors - a brother and a sister and a unrelated Frenchman), the way it was cast (each of the main actors plays multiple parts; the two main leads play six roles each), the way it's edited (the film ranges from scenes set in 1849 to the far-flung future) and its legitimately epic storytelling (how does a man go from a villain to a hero?). The cast is fantastic and is some of their finest work. This movie is unique in that it's telling six different stories that happen to intersect in intriguing ways. One's a sea-faring voyage, another is a '70s noir and one is a modern-day "prison break" comedy caper; it's juggling genres like no other film I've ever seen. I'm told that the Wachowskis' new Netflix series "Sense8" takes a lot of cues from Cloud Atlas. I'm definitely intrigued and will have to catch up with it at some point. 

19. Forrest Gump (1994)
Director: Robert Zemeckis

"If there's anything you need, I won't be far away."

There's a lot of talk of "oh, this movie's overrated", "oh, if you really look hard enough this movie is nothing but tripe", blah, blah, blah. I only know that this movie works. It's a tour through 20th Century American History like no other. It's funny, it's poignant, it's sad, it's joyous; isn't that what movies do best? It's telling to this day that although Tom Hanks is probably most recognized for this character that he never got typecast. That's how good he is. Even so, this is a character that has a good heart, instinctively does the right thing and that's why I like him. The supporting cast is good - Robin Wright plays Jenny as someone trying to figure out what she wants in life and constantly going down the wrong roads; Sally Field as Forrest's mother is his conscience, telling him what is right and what is wrong; and Gary Sinise has the biggest character arc as Lt. Dan, a guy who was so sold on dying on the battlefield that he had to rediscover how to live. Should this movie be looked at as "Life: The Manual", as many of the '90s wannabe philosophers took it as? Not at all, that's a ridiculous assumption. This is just a simple American fable in a time and place where fables are not always appreciated. 


18. Goodfellas (1990)
Director: Martin Scorsese

"We ran everything. We paid off cops. We paid off lawyers. We paid off judges. Everybody had their hands out. Everything was for the taking. And now it's all over."

This is unquestionably Scorsese's masterpiece. Since the beginning of cinema, there has been more fascination with depicting bad men doing bad deeds than heroes saving people and doing the right thing. Ray Liotta narrates, as Henry Hill, his life of being a gangster; from meeting his life-long friends and wife in the '50s to getting busted for narcotics in the '80s. The movie never attempts to show how evil the things these people are doing; it's a family thing. Scorsese orchestrates a brilliant one-take shot of Henry and his wife entering into a club from the outside in; a lot of movies today have long one-take shots but Scorsese does it with such unchallenged style and class. One thing that surprised me was how funny the movie is - most of said humor coming from the Oscar-winning performance of Joe Pesci ("I'm funny to you? Like a clown? How am I funny?"). Naturally the consequences of Henry catch up to him, but even at the end, the audience never feels that Henry is remorseful for what he did, but that he got caught. It's a crime story that thrills, chills and kills.

17. Fletch (1985)
Director: Michael Ritchie

"I had to keep digging... without a shovel."

There's a lot of roles that Chevy Chase has been identified with over the years but for me, as much as I love him as Clark Griswold, he'll always be Irwin M. "Fletch" Fletcher. It's a testament to not only his performance but also the tightly-constructed mystery story scripted by Andrew Bergman (Blazing Saddles, The Freshman). So no matter where in the story Fletch is, as many one-liners and wisecracks he drops, there is still a serious mystery to be solved. One of the antagonists of the film is played by Joe Don Baker, who to me will always be the sloppy cop "Mitchell" and might as well be playing the same character in this film, just with a promotion to police chief. There is a sequel to the film, Fletch Lives, that is not nearly as good as this film; mostly due to the film's construction being the opposite of this one (Fletch goes into disguises and then solves a mystery as opposed to solving a mystery requiring Fletch to go into disguises). One thing I should not neglect to mention is the stellar score by Harold Faltermeyer who is also famous for his scores for Beverly Hills Cop and Top Gun. It perfectly acknowledges the thriller aspect of the film, while staying true to the comedy.

16. The Incredibles (2004)
Director: Brad Bird

"No matter how many times you save the world, it always manages to get back in jeopardy again."

It's not easy to create a hit movie with completely new superheroes that no one's heard of. Luckily Pixar seems to have that magical calculation that can take whatever you throw at it and make it awesome and endearing (except for Cars 2 for some reason). Bird always said that this film is about "the mundane and the fantastic" and how they clash at the opportune times. But it's also a great story about how we have no idea how the way we interact with people can come back to haunt us. Other movies try and tell similar stories but this movie does it the best. The cast - although none of them are marquee movie star names; aside from Samuel L. Jackson - is impeccable, tailor-suited for their roles. Jason Lee, in particular, is at once hilarious and devious. If one owns the Blu-Ray, there is a fantastic 10-minute alternate opening (in animatics) to the movie that is almost as compelling as the opening in the film. It's different, not as action-packed, but it feels more personal. You get into Bob and Helen's lives as people first and then gradually reveal they used to be superheroes. It's been long in development, but an official Incredibles 2 with Bird at the helm (at least in writing, no word on directing) is finally on the way and I'll definitely be there opening day.

15. Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964)
Director: Stanley Kubrick 


"You're talking about mass murder, General, not war."
My first Kubrick film. It constantly popped up in AFI's 100 Years... TV specials and I was intrigued. I watched it and... I didn't get it. At first. It took me a few more watches and it finally dawned on me: this was absolutely hysterical. Peter Sellers playing three different roles with three different accents and, in some scenes, he actually talks to himself. But let's not take away from the hilarity that George C. Scott brings. He's so committed to the role that in mid-take, he trips over himself, somersaults and brings himself back up into frame without blowing his line. That's amazing. The three stories that the film tells - a British officer is trapped in an office with a crazed American general who single-handedly has started World War III, the War Room of generals, a Russian ambassador, a Nazi mad scientist and a President who are desperately trying to prevent said war and a plane full of patriotic soldiers willing to die for their country - could have (and was initially planned as) played for drama, but goes for laughs in as tasteful a way as possible (a line that Slim Pickens uses was changed from referencing Dallas to Vegas in the aftermath of the JFK assassination). It's madness from beginning to end.


14. The Dark Knight Trilogy (2005, 2008, 2012)
Director: Christopher Nolan



"You won't kill me out of some misplaced sense of self-righteousness and I won't kill you because you're just too much fun. I think you and I are destined to do this forever."

In the years following Batman & Robin, comic book movies were generally frowned upon as know-nothing tripe for the masses. Even successes like X-Men and Spider-Man were not received as game-changers in cinema. That was until Christopher Nolan, director of Insomnia, was brought on-board to reboot the Batman series for modern audiences. His first film, Batman Begins, was a brilliant reinvention that took the Batman origins and made them realistic. You see how someone with the billions Bruce Wayne has can fabricate a suit, build the gadgets, upgrade his vehicle and be Batman. It was a success (though not as much as was anticipated as some fans were still burned after Batman & Robin) and naturally a sequel followed. And the answer to the question everybody asked themselves, "How is Heath Ledger gonna play the Joker," was the talk of the year. After his untimely death, Ledger gave an expectations-defying performance that rightly won him a posthumous Academy Award. However, his performance outshone Aaron Eckhart's as Harvey Dent/Two-Face. The film itself, The Dark Knight, was an evolution of what had been set up in the previous film. It was deeper, darker and even more thrilling. Momentum was high when The Dark Knight Rises was released three years later. While Tom Hardy could not reach the atmospheric levels of Ledger's Joker, his portrayal of Bane also permeated the culture. Anne Hathaway also took up the mantle of Selina Kyle, while Nolan did away with all the supernatural cat-themed brouhaha that plagued the character in the past. Kyle, in this film, is simply a cat burglar balanced between Bane's reign of terror and Batman's war on crime. Through these three films, Christopher Nolan redefined Batman for a new generation of moviegoers as a symbol that was incorruptible. Though DC/Warners has moved on with a new Batman, we'll always have this one to go back to.

13. Superman: The Movie (1978)
Director: Richard Donner


"They can be a great people, Kal-El, they wish to be. They only lack the light to show the way. For this reason among others, their capacity for good, I have sent them you, my only son."

The character of Superman had conquered the realms of radio, theatrical cartoons, weekly serials and a popular television series. Still, he didn't get his first theatrical feature-length film until the rights were purchased by two Italian film producers from Mexico. The Salkinds, who had perfected franchise building by filming one long movie and releasing it as The Three Musketeers and The Four Musketeers, decided they would do the same with Superman. Hiring Richard Donner, hot off the hit thriller The Omen, was the best decision they made. Somebody who believed in bringing verisimilitude ("the appearance of being true or real") to the character. The film plays out in three acts - the icy world of Krypton featuring acting legend Marlon Brando playing Superman's father Jor-El, the Norman Rockwell-ish Smallville where Clark Kent grows up and then the city of Metropolis that plays like a '30s screwball comedy, especially when Gene Hackman shows up as "the greatest criminal mastermind of our time" Lex Luthor. Christopher Reeve brings an earnestness that shines through in his Superman. In contrast, Hackman is genuinely hilarious as Luthor. The flying effects, that won a Special Achievement Academy Award, still hold up today. This is my favorite DC Comics movie.

12. Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1978)
Director: Steven Spielberg

"I know this. I know what this is! This means something. This is important."

Though this wasn't Spielberg's first take on aliens (see his short film "Firelight") and certainly wouldn't be his last, but between E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial and War of the Worlds, it has a great position being in between a cutsy kidsy alien tale (no disrespect) and a dark and chilling cautionary tale (don't get invaded by aliens, Earth; you oughta know better by now). Even with its out-of-this-world (pun intended) premise, the movie is grounded in humanity thanks to the performances of Richard Dreyfuss as an Indiana lineman who finds himself in the middle of this massive UFO conspiracy and François Truffaut as the head scientist chasing the titular "Third Kind". The climax of the film is less action-packed than you'd expect but more wondrous and thought-provoking. Even Steven Spielberg has said that he wouldn't make the movie the same way today. It's cinematic catharsis at its finest. 

11. Ghostbusters (1984)
Director: Ivan Reitman


"We're ready to believe you!"

If "Ghostbusters" the franchise was just limited to one movie, no sequels (holding off judgment of the new all-female reboot; but you don't mess with the Ecto-1, that car's a classic), no animated series, no video games and no Ecto-Cooler, Ghostbusters the movie would still be awesome. They're better than superheroes because they are basically everymen who have dangerous equipment and are running around trying to protect us. Though he essentially did the film as a favor after Columbia bankrolled his pet project The Razor's Edge, Bill Murray leads a perfect ensemble cast who are all invested in not only their characters, but the concept itself. Dan Aykroyd's initial drafts of the film were very esoteric and futuristic, so Harold Ramis took time to pull the script back into something more palpable. This is the best movie Ivan Reitman has ever directed and it shows in the rest of his career. To say the special effects no longer hold up isn't exactly fair considering it was 1984 and they still had the best of Industrial Light and Magic working on the film. "Ghostbusters" the song is still as catchy and awesome today as it was then and both times it appears in the film -- the "Ghostbusters at work" montage and the joyous end credits scene -- really brightens the mood. If you can't quote-a-long with this movie, watch it again until you can.

10. Jaws (1975)
Director: Steven Spielberg

"You yell barracuda, everybody says, 'Huh? What?' You yell shark, we've got a panic on our hands on the Fourth of July."
I had to do a lot of shifting around to get Jaws in the Top 10. Not that I don't like the movie; it's amazing, I love it. But the real die-hard fans of this movie would clean my clock if I put it anywhere under 10. And it's not hard to see why: this movie literally invented the blockbuster. For years, I didn't want to see it because I'm not much of a horror guy (I was a kid too, come on). But I didn't realize that the movie is much more of an action-thriller and the horror of the movie actually came in the making of it. The fact that Steven Spielberg didn't lose his mind or snap is a testament to why he's still a legend to this day; he's always thinking through his films to make them. The cast, of course, are unforgettable - Roy Scheider playing the reluctant Brody, Richard Dreyfuss as the brainy Hooper and the performance everybody loves, Robert Shaw as Quint, the 20th century's answer to Captain Ahab. It's incredible how the team that built the shark ("Bruce") got so much personality out of the character with almost no expression. And the size of it really gives this animal more monstrous qualities. The movie itself is pretty split in half: the first being on Amity Island with all the townspeople and the second out at sea with Brody, Hooper and Quint. Personally, I prefer the first half because you get a whole lot of characters to deal with and not just the main stars. Still, it's a testament to 20th century cinema and it's a tale that will "swallow you whole".

9. Toy Story Trilogy (1995, 1999, 2010)
Directors: John Lasseter (Toy Story), John Lasseter/Lee Unkrich/Ash Brannon (Toy Story 2), Lee Unkrich (Toy Story 3)

"Look, over in that house is a kid who thinks you are the greatest, and it’s not because you’re a Space Ranger, pal, it’s because you’re a toy! You are his toy!”

These movies have a special place in my heart because they grew up with me. I mean, OK, I'm sure they grew up with a lot of people reading this, but they mean a lot to me specifically. I wouldn't say I was Andy, but I certainly could identify with him. Like him, I had (and still have) a Woody and Buzz Lightyear. But you don't see movies today being made with the care that Pixar does. As Genri says in Toy Story 2, "Ya can't rush art!" I remember the day they announced Toy Story 2 with that picture of the toys going across the street with the towering monster truck ahead. You couldn't find a happier camper that day. I saw it and was thrilled! And so years went by and Pixar just got better and better, making different movies that all followed the same idea: fish, superheroes, cars, rats, robots and old people; they're all more than they seem. Then, Toy Story 3 was announced. The one plotline that was given was that "Andy grows up and leaves for college". That's a very depressing thing for a kid who's loved these movies all his life. Each trailer reminded you of the good times but hinted of things to come. I saw the film and was blown away. The infamous trash fire pit scene? I wasn't ready to buy it because the trailers had spoiled Andy's last words about Woody so I knew there had to be more. But when the claw came down, I was laughing my head off. I think the audience I saw it with was annoyed because I caught it first: the long-awaited payoff to "THE CLAW!!!" gag that the Little Green Men from Toy Story 1 couldn't shut up about. I had a huge smile on my face as Mr. Potato Head hugged them and the LGM all say, "DADDY!!!" It still cracks me up. These are perfect movies that I will always carry with me, in my memories and in my heart.

8. Guardians of the Galaxy (2014)
Director: James Gunn

"And you think life takes more than it gives, but not today. Today it's giving us something. It is giving us a chance."

Maybe a movie this new (at this writing, exactly a year old) shouldn't be in the top 10, but it's my top 10, so there! It's not just cause it's a Marvel superhero movie; it's a hysterically sci-fi comedy action/adventure. It's the movie of my dreams, as weird as that sounds. I had an idea JUST like that, even down to the retro soundtrack but it just didn't have the Marvel comic book edge. So if that movie never gets made, at least there's this one. This is the movie that made Chris Pratt a household name and deservedly so. He's one of those few movie stars that seems just as nice and cool as the characters he plays if not more so. Zoe Saldana gets to add another great performance to her sci-fi repertoire, rivaling that of her Avatar co-star Sigourney Weaver. Dave Bautista does a great job playing a character who seems like a massive warrior but is hiding his true heartbreak underneath and that's really hard to do. Which is why they hired Vin Diesel to play another Iron Giant-esque character Groot, who even with "I am Groot" to say, conveys so much. Bradley Cooper takes his cue from Joe Pesci in playing a funny tough guy with Rocket Raccoon. The movie took off as audiences all over the world fell in love with the characters. It was something new from a Cinematic Universe we thought we knew. It's already been confirmed that James Gunn and the cast are back for another installment. I know I can't wait for the next ride through the galaxy with these wonderful characters.

7. Marvel's The Avengers (2012)
Director: Joss Whedon

"The Avengers. That's what we call ourselves; we're sort of like a team. 'Earth's Mightiest Heroes' type thing."

Say what you will about the sequel to this, this is cinematic history whether you like it or not. The first cinematic crossover of comic book movie heroes. 10 years ago-- heck 20 years ago, this never would've been possible. Not just because of special effects, but studios just did not care enough to put the right people on these projects. Marvel made the somewhat questionable choice to announce Joss Whedon as director on April Fools' Day, but it ended up working for them. Whedon has history in the industry as a writer (including an Academy Award nomination for co-writing Toy Story) and he is the only Marvel Studios director to have previously written for Marvel Comics. The cast is impeccable as expected, improving on their characters from their previous films. Especially Tom Hiddleston as Loki, in a star-making performance; which is why Thor: The Dark World may as well be called Loki: The Movie. Just that one shot circling around the characters is worth the price of admission. To me, this is the ultimate comic book movie.

6. Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
Director: Steven Spielberg

"Oh, Marcus. What are you trying to do, scare me? You sound like my mother. We've known each other for a long time. I don't believe in magic, a lot of superstitious hocus pocus. I'm going after a find of incredible historical significance, you're talking about the boogeyman."

Raiders is an amazing film; perhaps the greatest action film ever made. It launched its lead character into the pop culture lexicon forever. That's not to outweigh the efforts of the rest of the cast, who all fit their characters as well as that fedora fits Harrison Ford. Seriously, they're gonna bury him in that hat. Even people who hate Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull have admitted getting chills in seeing that shot of Indy putting on the hat in silhouette; it's that iconic. Spielberg's direction has been imitated since the film's release, with many challengers to the action/adventure throne. None of them however can make you feel the sweat and blood that permeates through the celluloid. Naturally, sequels followed and although they each have pros and cons to them, none of them feel as real as Raiders. All followers, not innovators. What more can be said about a movie that is truly legendary?

5. Groundhog Day (1993)
Director: Harold Ramis

"Well, what if there is no tomorrow? There wasn't one today!"

Here we are at the top 5, with what I will argue to my dying days as the best Bill Murray movie ever. The movie operates briskly and brilliantly with each day that Phil Connors re-experiences audiences are able to see something new that they hadn't before. Characters that come into play later on in the film are set up early in the story; for instance, Buster the Groundhog Day head honcho (played by Bill's brother, Brian Doyle-Murray, one of the best character actors around today), the drunks (one of whom played by the late Rick Ducommon) and Nancy, Phil's one day love tryst. There's the frequently mentioned "deleted opening" to the film that features Phil's ex-girlfriend having a gypsy place him under a curse, which results in him repeating Groundhog Day; naturally, that's a dumb move. Phil is repeating Groundhog Day because he needs to learn how to become a better person. If it takes him months, years, decades... so be it. This is one of the few comedies I've seen that really emphasizes the drama properly; Murray knocks his scenes with Andie MacDowell out of the park. Unarguably, it's Ramis' masterpiece.

4. Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988)
Director: Robert Zemeckis

"So tell me, Eddie. Is that a rabbit in your pocket or are you just happy to see me?"

How Zemeckis, master animator Richard Williams, or anybody in the cast and crew did not lose their minds doing this movie is beyond me (though Bob Hoskins has admitted, perhaps jokingly, to seeing cartoon rabbits long after the movie had ended). This film is a work of art; a modern miracle. It works on so many levels: as a flat-out funny comedy, a hard-boiled detective story, a buddy picture, a '40s romance and an action-packed thriller. The British Hoskins delivers his greatest role as American private eye, Eddie Valient. You see all the backstory necessary for his character in that great panning shot across his desk that shows you his relationship with his late brother ("Toon dropped a piano on his head") and Dolores, the hardened lady running the bar across the street that ostensibly has a train running next to it. Though the shining character is Roger himself, voiced by certified genius Charles Fleischer (seriously, look him up, he's written about gamma-rays making him a real life Dr. Bruce Banner). It'd be easy to make Roger really obnoxious and annoying, but Fleischer wisely balances both wackiness and sympathy for his character making him endearing to the audience. And who can forget the evil Judge Doom, played by Christopher Lloyd, in an absolutely chilling performance. The blend of 2D hand-drawn animation and live-action is still a marvel to this day; even more so is the blend of world-famous Disney characters and Looney Tunes characters. Legally, you will never see Mickey and Bugs and Daffy and Donald together in a movie ever again. That's how special this movie is. Zemeckis triumphs, balancing story and spectacle, and this is just one of the films that proves it.

3. Mary Poppins (1964)
Director: Robert Stevenson

"I'd know that silhouette anywhere! Mary Poppins!"
Yeah, you laugh, but this movie means a lot to me. Disney has always been a huge part in my life but unlike a lot of people in my generation, I was raised more on the live-action side of Disney than the animation side. Of course, a movie bridging both of these sides had to be "practically perfect in every way". It's also my all-time favorite musical: all the songs by the Sherman Brothers are sensational. Everyone in the main cast gets a song to sing; if "Feed the Birds" doesn't make you teary-eyed to outright bawling, you have no soul. Can you believe this was Julie Andrews' first film? Not only is she the title character, she also won an Academy Award and became a part of childhood consciousness. A few years ago, a wild rumor went around saying that Steven Spielberg had mused about remaking Mary Poppins. Naturally the world went into an uproar, while actors like Will Ferrell and Jim Carrey were trying to get in on the part of Bert. Spielberg eventually had to release a press statement saying, "I have no intention of remaking a classic, let alone a Disney classic." That's how powerful this film is. Quite frankly, it's supercalifragilisticexpialidocious!

2. It's a Wonderful Life (1946)
Director: Frank Capra

"You see, George, you really had a wonderful life. Don't you see what a mistake it would be to throw it away?"

I am constantly frustrated at the number of people my age I meet who have never seen this film. And how is that possible? It's on practically every Thanksgiving on NBC; don't they know a holiday perennial when they see one?! Steven Spielberg (yes, him again) has said that this movie necessitates about "five hankys" to get through it. I don't necessarily cry at this film, but it's certainly moving. Though he achieved a lot through his Westerns and Hitchcock films, this is without a doubt James Stewart's signature role. Through the eyes of his guardian angel Clarence, we see all of George Bailey's life in Bedford Falls, NY: as a boy saving the life of his kid brother and losing half of his hearing in the process, as a young man courting the love of his life, and as an adult trying to get out of the town that he's been tied to his whole life and see the world. But at his lowest moment, when he's lost a large amount of money for the banking and loan for the town that needs him, he considers throwing away God's greatest gift ("Oh, dear, his life!"). Clarence comes down to tell George that he shouldn't think of killing himself. George cynically says he should've never been born which gives Clarence an idea: he shows George the town of Bedford Falls as though he's never been born. Although George regains the hearing he lost as a boy, he loses all the friends and family he's ever known (the plot of this film is often used as fodder for Christmas-themed episodes of sitcoms past and present). At first he believes it's nothing but a trick, but as George explores this terrifying train of thought, he fears for all that he's lost and wants his life back. What follows is probably the happiest ending ever seen in American cinema short of "...and they lived happily ever after," (though it comes awfully close). A year or so ago, a low-budget production company proudly announced they were attempting a sequel to the beloved film. Never have I been more thankful for brutal studio mentality as the rights holders of the film quickly issued a cease-and-desist order towards these fools. This is the ultimate Christmas movie, but its shining quality is that it can be seen at any time of the year and still reach your heart.

1. Back to the Future Trilogy (1985, 1989, 1990)
Director: Robert Zemeckis

"It means your future hasn't been written yet! No one's has! Your future is whatever you make it! So make it a good one, both of you!"

Come on, guys. You knew this was coming. These series of films combines so much of what I love: science-fiction, comedy, rock 'n roll, time travel and just the definition of cool in the performance of Michael J. Fox as Marty McFly; somebody who's kind, funny, smart and talented. Who wouldn't want Doc Brown as their friend? Who wouldn't want Jennifer Parker as their girlfriend? Who wouldn't want to drive around in a time-traveling DeLorean? Michael J. Fox apparently, but that's beside the point! Zemeckis and Bob Gale's script is flawless; it's often used in screenwriting classes today to explain the concepts of "setups-and-payoffs". A lot of talk has been made recently of Eric Stoltz, who was originally hired to play the role of Marty, disliking the ending of Part I as it seemed to celebrate '80s excess. As with everybody else on the planet, I disagree. The ending of Part I is all about good choices in life versus bad ones. With Marty's help, George changes the course of his life. The second film is my favorite of the three. A lot of people don't like it because it's darker than the other two films. To me, the dark moments of the film only make the funnier stuff stand out that much more. It's really cool to see two Martys, two Docs, two Jennifers and two Biffs running around. My favorite moment in the entire film, if I had to sum up my sense of humor, is Part II Marty getting knocked out by Part I Marty running out the door. Makes me laugh every time. Part III really belongs to Christopher Lloyd and Mary Steenburgen. Their relationship is so sweet and really makes you look at Doc in a completely different way. The train climax is so awesome, simultaneously achieved with a full-size train and a smaller scaled model; something you wouldn't see in today's CG extravaganzas. Ultimately, I feel like these movies were made for me. I know there are legions of fans for these movies, and deservedly so, but... I don't know. It just seems like whenever I watch these movies, they might as well be speaking to me. They're truly timeless.


And so we've come to the end of my top 20 favorite movies! I hope you've enjoyed reading and I certainly hope it's inspired you to revisit these films or even see them for the first time. Cinema is something very important to me and I like to share it with everyone. I'll leave you with a little jam that's sweeping the Interwebs that's very fitting for the occasion.


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