Favorite Movies, Least Favorite Award Show
by Burt PrelutskyWhen I first thought about writing this piece, I was only going to list my all-time favorite movies, breaking them down by decade. I was going to explain that these weren’t my idea of the greatest or most innovative films of the past 80 years or so, but merely the ones I have enjoyed the most, and in most cases have seen more than once.
Because the choices are totally subjective, a lot of movies you might expect to find — movies such as “Gone With the Wind,” “Lawrence of Arabia,” “Dr. Zhivago,” “The Godfather II,” “Easy Rider,” “All That Jazz,” “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” and “Bringing Up Baby” — aren’t included. The reason is that I didn’t enjoy them.
But before I got to it, along came the Oscars, and it would seem like a serious oversight not to comment.
For openers, I had even less interest than usual because I thought 2008 was the worst movie year in history, but I did make my annual wager with my wife, and so I had a vested interest — 25 cents and bragging rights. For the record, I won, but that’s because she tends to pick the candidates she’s pulling for, whereas I put sentiment aside and go for the gold.
Having sat through Oscar shows hosted by Whoopi Goldberg and David Letterman, I naturally assumed these things couldn’t get any worse. I was mistaken. The entire production was one big mishmash. I could never quite figure out what film clips I was looking at. Some of them seemed to be scenes from the nominated movies, some seemed to be from old classics and still others seemed to have been culled from my worst nightmares. But even harder to take was listening to all those former Oscar-winners paying fulsome praise to the nominees seated in the audience. The nominees kept clasping their hearts and mouthing “I love you” back at them. I hadn’t seen so many kisses blown since Carol Burnett went off the air.
Other loathsome moments included Bill Maher’s juvenile remarks about God and religion, and Dustin Lance Black’s acceptance speech upon receiving the Oscar for his mawkish “Milk” screenplay. It struck me as he droned on that he was simultaneously propagandizing for same-sex marriages and trolling for a date for the next Gay Pride Parade.
Once again, I was reminded that the Best Song category should have been retired decades ago when Hollywood stopped producing musicals. In the old days, Gershwin, Berlin, Rodgers, Porter and Kern, competed for Oscars. This year, two songs from “Slumdog Millionaire” duked it out with a song from “Wall-E.” If you’re curious why three songs without a discernible melody between them would be competing, it’s because the folks in the music division of the Motion Picture Academy insist on retaining the category. You would have thought that embarrassment would have trumped professional ego back in 2006 when the Oscar went to “It’s Hard Out Here for a Pimp,” but that’s only because you don’t realize how impossible it is to embarrass Hollywood.
That brings us to Sean Penn, who picked up his second Oscar in six years. His victory was viewed as a major upset. Mickey Rourke was considered a heavy favorite to win even though Penn had portrayed Harvey Milk, a heroic figure in homosexual mythology. The truth is, even I was slightly surprised by his victory. However, I had told several people that I believed Rourke had shot himself in the foot a while back when he won the Golden Globe and took the occasion to say he refused to condemn George W. Bush, urging people to consider the pressure the president was under in the wake of 9/11. Hollywood doesn’t forgive and Hollywood doesn’t forget.
Without a comedian host, the laughs were even fewer than usual. In fact, one of the few chuckles I had all evening was when Sean Penn, in collecting his Oscar, took a moment to pay homage to Barack Obama, calling him, of all things, elegant. Naturally, the audience responded with great applause. Apparently, neither Penn nor the trained seals at the Kodak Theatre considered it worth noting that the president is on record as being opposed to same-sex marriages!
And now, my 10 favorite movies for every decade, except the 1940s, 80s and 90s, when the best I could do was cull my list down to 20 favorites.
The 1930s: “It Happened One Night,” “Alice Adams,” “The Gold Rush,” “Destry Rides Again,” “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington,” “The Wizard of Oz,” “Bachelor Mother,” “Make Way for Tomorrow,” “My Man Godfrey” and any one of these four Astaire-Rogers films, “Top Hat,” “Carefree,” “Gay Divorcee” or “Swing Time”
1940s: “My Favorite Wife,” “The Shop Around the Corner,” “The Thief of Baghdad,” “Citizen Kane,” “The Maltese Falcon,” “Ball of Fire,” “The Lady Eve,” “The Major and the Minor,” “Casablanca,” “Meet Me in St. Louis,” “Hail the Conquering Hero,” “Apartment for Peggy,” “Mildred Pierce,” “The Best Years of Our Lives,” “Stairway to Heaven,” “Great Expectations,” “It’s a Wonderful Life,” “The Farmer’s Daughter,” “I Remember Mama” and “Force of Evil”
1950s: “All About Eve,” “The African Queen,” “The Ladykillers,” “People Will Talk,” “High Noon,” “7 Brides for 7 Brothers,” “Some Like It Hot,” “Singin’ in the Rain,” “On the Waterfront” and “Sweet Smell of Success”
1960s: “The Apartment,” “School for Scoundrels,” “The Hustler,” “A Cold Wind in August,” “Charade,” “Support Your Local Sheriff,” “My Fair Lady,” “The Pumpkin Eater,” “36 Hours” and “Divorce, American Style”
1970s: “The Godfather,” “The Heartbreak Kid,” “Paper Moon,” “The Friends of Eddie Coyle,” “The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz,” “Rocky,” “The Goodbye Girl,” “House Calls,” “Time After Time” and “Breaking Away”
1980s: “Atlantic City,” “Diner,” “Ordinary People,” “A Christmas Story,” “Terms of Endearment,” “The Natural,” “Broadway Danny Rose,” “Midnight Run,” “Die Hard,” “Field of Dreams,” “The Tall Guy,” “Witness,” “Murphy’s Romance,” “Lost in America,” “Hannah and Her Sisters,” “Hoosiers,” “The Princess Bride,” “Tin Men,” “Roxanne” and “The Untouchables”
1990s: “Green Card,” “Galaxy Quest,” “Cinema Paradiso,” “Silence of the Lambs,” “Mumford,” “Dead Again,” “Defending Your Life,” “My Cousin Vinny,” “Peter’s Friends,” “Housesitter,” “Swingers,” “Sliding Doors,” “Enchanted April,” “Groundhog Day,” “Falling Down,” “Remains of the Day,” “The Fugitive,” “Fargo,” “Sense and Sensibility” and “Nobody’s Fool”
2000s: “The Dish,” “About a Boy,” “Chicago,” “The Matador,” “Love Actually,” “The Upside of Anger,” “The Lives of Others,” “Thank You for Smoking,” “Gran Torino” and “Taken”
I just noticed that it adds up to a hundred movies, with roughly 40 of them being comedies or musicals. So even if you think I have lousy taste, you should at least give me points for not trying to impress you with a lot of pretentious hooey.







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My favorite movie of 2008 was “Milk.”
My favoirte movie of all time is “Those Who Love me Can Take the Train.”
Obviously I’m going to Hell. Isn’t that right Burt?
This looks like the list of someone who enjoys movies that are entertaining and engrossing. Not pretentious at all. I love it when movie gets ahold of me and won't let go for days. The ones that sent me straight for IMDB to find out more about plot points, the characters and maybe even to read the book. Oh, I also like movies that make me laugh. A lot of my favorites are on your list.
Nice to see someone else likes Time After Time. Film Score Monthly just released Miklos Rosza's score on CD. And after that film, writer/director Nicholas Meyer did Star Trek II.
The Fugitive is just an excellent movie all around. You know, it was nominated for Best Picture (!).
And I watched Swingers with an ear-to-ear grin the whole time. It's so money!
Seven Brides for Seven Brothers and Breaking Away FTW!
I love "The Best Years of Our Lives." I can't get anyone to watch it with me, because it's either "too long" or "too depressing." Both statements I disagree with. It's not depressing at all. It's about servicemen coming back to a world vastly different than the one they left, and none of the rest of us really understand why, and yet they find ways to live out the post-war lives they dreamed of. I can only imagine what the 2009 version would be.
I definitely read this poster's name as "David Edelstein" at first, which made this post much funnier.
"Miller's Crossing" is still the best Cohen bros movies, and the best-plotted American movie of the past 30 years.
"Miller's Crossing" is still the best Cohen bros movie, and the best-plotted American movie of the past 30 years.
I love your list – so many of my favorites: Paper Moon, Some Like It Hot, and Ground Hound Day, to name a few.
I haven't yet heard anyone mention this, but did anyone else think the "toned down" opening song and dance number Hugh Jackman performed – with pizza boxes used for Who Wants to Be a Millionaire set for Slumdog, etc. – was not only cringe inducing, but a little bit of a mockery of us "regular" citizens? I'm a business owner who has really felt the pain of this bailout, and all the new taxes being flung around here in LA and California. I don't find any humor – and I love humor! – in this recession… especially coming from a man in a tux dancing under a curtain of beaded crystals, before an audience of some of the most self-indulgent people in the world.
If they were serious about toning it down for the recession, they'd realize they'd already congratulated themselves enough with the Golden Globes, the SAG awards, etc. and would have passed on the ego-filled, glam-fest entirely.
"So even if you think I have lousy taste, you should at least give me points for not trying to impress you with a lot of pretentious hooey."
You had me at Mumford.
Cinema Paradiso came out in the 80's.
You are unbelievably intolerant and borderline racist. No, of course Indian music doesn't have a melody. Yes, of course thats what Dustin Lance Black was thinking about was getting a date for a pride parade.
Pathetic.
I have to give a shout out for the movie A Matter of Life and Death. David Niven was fantastic in that movie. Best WW 2 movie ever and best war movie period. The Brits deserve their mad props too.
Pretty good list, especially the 1940s list. Of course, you have some real stinkers there too, but I'm sure you'd say the same about my list.
Why wasn't Slumdog put in the best foreign film category?
Great to see Galaxy Quest on there. Definitely an underappreciated comedy.
I loved "Time after Time" too. It's one of those little films that stays with me. I also loved "A Little Romance" with a then teenaged Diane Lane. If you haven't seen it, it's worth renting if you can find it.
Whereas your response is the epitome of love and tolerance.
"My Cousin Vinny"…ya just can't beat it! And BTW Sigg, you are "unbelievably intolerant" as well. Otherwise, why comment?!
Hey, thanks for the list!
I bookmarked this so I can get some good ideas for movie rentals in the future.
I would like to see lists like this from other contributors from this site (who are in the film/stage industry).
"of course Indian music doesn't have a melody." That's nuts!
Oh great! Now I need to go to Netflix again and put more movies in my queue.
I watched Hoosiers a couple weeks ago with my kids. That movie has several great messages.
I would like to see lists like this from other contributors from this site (who are in the film/stage industry).
Actually I think it would be cool to see a list from any contributors on this site who know about good movies. I don't mean to act all snobby; knowing about good movies does not require being in the movie industry of course.
Absolutely…Miller's Crossing is a modern masterpiece and the second-best film of the 90's (I gotta put GoodFellas ahead of it, but just barely)
Defending Your Life – I love that movie! Big Albert Brooks fan. You must see "Looking for Comedy in the Muslim World". Very funny.
The Best Years of Our Lives has slowly but surely become one of my all time favorite movies. Seeing three very different families readjust to life after The War really touches my heart.
Top Five Sentimental Movies:
Best Years of Our Lives
The Shootist
Casablanca
Its a Wonderful Life
Groundhog Day
Nifty list, Burt!
Except … The 1960s without one of the most entertaining and influential films of all time: "Goldfinger"?
That's quite mad, you know!
Great list! I've watched nearly all your 30's, 40's and 50's picks. I think I watch too many oldies. But the Christmas Story, can anyone explain that to me? How on earth could he possibly shoot his own eye out? And then when he gets it, how could a little bb gun have enough recoil to knock him over? What a wimp.
Anyway, thinking of films score, I have to say I really liked the score from Magnificent Seven. Really nice. Plus, of course, it's got Steve McQueen.
Miller's crossing is basically a ripoff of Yojimbo, with a love interest/triangle thrown in. I saw that ending coming a mile away.
Another question, what movie is that picture from? That guy in the middle looks familiar, but I can't remember his name.
I wasn't aware that Yojimbo was such an interesting meditation on people's understandings of their motivations. I'll have to watch it again.
There are two films I would like to add, three counting Gone With The Wind. The two: The Man In The Iron Mask (1939) ; And Then There Were None (1945) both with unbelievably great performances all the way around, but especially from Louis Hayward.
I'm still waiting for you to provide proof of your lie against me, that I have said (or even remotely implied) that I want someone dead.
I will keep asking you for this evidence until you provide it or retract your slander.
Unforgiven!
I didn't know music was a race.
I love "And Then There Were None!" Good call!
That is "The Best Years of Our Lives" which is awesome.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0036868/
You preferred that pretentious Hannah and Her Sisters to Annie Hall? I hate all Woodie Allen movies except one, Annie Hall, as which is as funny and warm as when I saw it for the first time 30 years ago.
Enter the Dragon and the portion of Game of Death found with "A Warrior's Journey". Those are must see movies.
testing
Turner Classic Movies shows it on occasion. Record it and pass it along to a friend!
I wholeheartedly agree with your point about Best Years. Another great film along these lines is Bright Victory. It runs on TCM a couple of times a year. A comedy that has some heartrending moments that is also on there frequently is Sunday Dinner For a Soldier. So many great movies that were made back then and so much crapola today. Thankfully we can see the oldies and still find ones we haven't seen.
The guy in the middle is Dana Andrews. The guy on the right is Fredric March (who won Best Actor). The guy on the left, a real life double amputee, is Harold Russell, who won Best Supporting Actor (and then wasn't in another film until 1980's Inside Moves with John Savage).
Thank you both! Now I remember seeing him in Ball of Fire and State Fair.
I'd just HAVE to put "Stalag 17" on your '50s list, along with "Roman Holiday." I can't think of two movies I enjoy more everytime I watch them.
Ann–The guys in the photo are Harold Russell, Dana Andrews and Fredric March, the stars of "The Best Years of Our Lives."
BevfromNYC–I loved Albert Brooks' "Defending Your Life" & "Lost in America," but I gave up on "Looking for Comedy in the Muslim World" after about half an hour.
Ernie Mannix–I agree, Hugo Friedhoffer out-did himself when he scored "The Best Years of Our Lives." The material must have touched his soul. His music touched mine.
Collins: I thought "Miller's Crossing" was okay. But its source wasn't "Yojimbo," but, rather, "The Glass Key," which began as a Dashiel Hammett novel and then was turned into very good movies in both 1935 and 1942. I always thought it was odd that the Coen Brothers who deigned to give credit to Homer for "O, Brother, Where Art Thou?" pretended that "Miller's Crossing" was original.
Regards, Burt Prelutsky
Indeed. Agree 100%.
Cheesy Potatoes– I agree with you about "A Matter of Life and Death." I have it on my list, but I have it listed with its American title, "Stairway to Heaven."
Vince S–I don't want to fight about it, but just last Saturday I played tennis with an English movie producer. When we got to talking about the Oscars, he said he was pulling for Frank Langella, but that the English bookmakers had Mickey Rourke as a heavy favorite.
David Ehrenstein–I have no idea if you're going to Hell, but I guess you'd know better than I.
Best, Burt Prelutsky
Dude, please rewatch Hannah. But 'Broadway Danny Rose' is Allens' best pic.
Delighted to discover another fan of "An Apartment for Peggy" starring Jeanne Crain and the great Edmund Gwenn, Santa Claus from "Miracle on 34th Street" whose last words were "Dying is easy, comedy is hard." "Apartment" is a great drama/comedy about vets returning to college after WWII. Not sentimental at all, it clearly makes the point that life is tough and you've got to knuckle down and do the best you can without whining, but that there are things more important than the pursuit of money.
My son took a college class on Music in the Movies and they studied the score from both The Best Years of Our Lives and The Magnificent Seven. Just thought you'd like to know you're not alone.
The Best Years of Our Lives is the best picture of any year. Dana Andrews in the nose of the bomber says more about war than any scene ever.
Jaci, it is just totally WONDERFUL! I agree with you … It isn't in the least depressing.
I tried to post a comment about the director of "North by Northwest" and "Psycho" and was told by the people at BH that mentioning that director's name will result in automatic deletion because the name syllable of his name is obscene.
I meant the LAST syllable of his name.
Oldest & Wisest–I am happy to finally find someone who agrees with me about "Peggy." I only had one problem with the movie. When William Holden returns to college to take those tests, the one that gives him the most grief is the one in chemistry…and chemistry is supposed to be his major! A minor nit in a terrific movie.
Best wishes, Burt Prelutsky
First off, Mr. Prelutsky, at the risk of sounding like a nitpicker, The Gold Rush came out in the 20's, not the 30's. Anyway, I compiled a list of my own, and here it is:
30's- Way Out West, Sons Of The Desert, Intermezzo: A Love Story, Boys Town, M, Fury, Freaks, The Adventures Of Robin Hood, You Can't Cheat An Honest Man, International House
40's- The Maltese Falcon, Sergeant York, Since You Went Away, Reap The Wild Wind, Crossfire, They Died With Their Boots On, Casablanca, The Great Dictator, The Pride Of The Yankees, The Lady From Shanghai
50's- Blood Alley, Rear Window, High Noon, Sweet Smell Of Success, North By Northwest, Moby Dick, The Ten Commandments, Rio Grande, Quo Vadis, The Spirit Of St. Louis
60's- The Alamo, Sergeant Rutledge, The Agony And The Ecstasy, Khartoum, Targets, The Magnificent Seven, The Dirty Dozen, Spartacus, Where Eagles Dare, The Green Berets
70's- Blazing Saddles, Dirty Harry, A Bridge Too Far, The Wind And The Lion, High Plains Drifter, The Midnight Man, Superman: The Movie, The Towering Inferno, Frenzy, Death Wish
80's- The Untouchables, Pale Rider, Hoosiers, Star Trek III: The Search For Spock, The Delta Force, Airplane!, Without A Clue, A Christmas Story, Die Hard, My Left Foot
90's- Miller's Crossing, Braveheart, Michael Collins, Absolute Power, Tombstone, King Ralph, The Rocketeer, Life Is Beautiful, Dick Tracy, Dudley Do-Right
00's- National Treasure, 300, Zodiac, Scoop, Amazing Grace, Luther, The Dark Knight, The Prestige, The League Of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Gran Torino
Watched Princess Bride last week.
The same two guys who produced this also did Canterbury Tales, which I think is just fantastic.
One of the absolutely funniest movies I've ever seen in my life.
1) Rourke was not a heavy favorite. It was almost a toss up, and really one favored Penn when you consider he'd won the SAG.
2) At his press conference afterward Penn addressed Obama's stance on same sex marriage, basically saying that he believes it's for political expediency and that he believes he'll come around soon enough.
3) You are uninformed and very stupid.
I think you are a little paranoid bro. This post is not about you. So don't make it about you.
But thanks for coming and throwing rocks!
It was a British movie.
For James Garner fans how can you not mention "The Americanization of Emily" and then the great Michael Rennie science fiction film, "The Day the Earth Stood Still", and one of my recent favorites I can watch over and over, "Dave" with Kevin Kline and Sigorney Weaver.
Ya know what – I really appreciate your list of favorites. I noticed that you seem to like the same films I do (some odd, marv choices). It gave me confidence that I would enjoy trying a few of your faves I have not seen. I am starting with "Sliding Doors" (even though I find Paltrow insufferable). They did not have "Mildred Pierce", but 5 copies of "Fool's Gold"… sigh. I had in my mind that the '80's were a complete loss creatively speaking. Your picks for that decade are making me rethink that. I still cry watching "Terms of Endearment" and get wistful thinking about Steve Martin in "Roxanne" – back when he was funny.
I love Albert Brooks. freaking genius.
Shannan–I'm not a big fan of Paltrow, either, but I did think it was a good movie.
Jon–I'm uninformed and very stupid? Odd you would say that, seeing as you are the one who wasted your time reading my very long article, and that the only thing you could come up with to prove how uninformed I am was that I claimed Rourke was a heavy favorite. He was, and not only with the English bookmakers, but with Barbara Walters who always tries to nab the Oscar-winners for her post-Oscar specials. She had Rourke, not Penn.
Morgan–You're correct "The Gold Rush" came out in 1925. Initially, the first list was supposed to deal with movies of the 20s and 30s, but then I forgot to mention the 20s. Ah, well, just further proof that I'm uninformed and very stupid.
Oklahoma Prof–My favorite Garner movie is "Murphy's Romance," which I enjoyed even more than "Support Your Local Sheriff."
Regards, Burt Prelutsky
I'm sure for yourself and the audience you write for your article does seem very long.
The books did not heavily favor Rourke. And the general consensus of informed opinions was toss-up or close to it, something very obvious due to Penn's SAG win despite Rourke's buzz. The last time the SAG and Best Actor didn't match up was, ironically enough, Penn's Oscar win for Mystic River.
But then, you've got… Barbara Walters.
And way to ignore the Penn-Obama thing.
Hugo Friedhoffer's score for "The Best Years of Our Lives" is a great score to study for any student serious about doing music for film professionally. I feel that movie is the first "modern" postwar movie, because of it's lack of sugarcoating of the real postwar problems that were in almost every family at the time. A real war amputee won the Oscar. Wow. An Amazing film.
Jon–Am I expected to comment every time Penn says something? You repeated what he said. That's not enough? Obama was asked about same-sex marriages when Proposition 8 was on the ballot. He said he was opposed to them. Now I'm supposed to take Penn's word for it that Obama didn't mean what he said? Heck, Penn kisses up to people like Castro who put homosexuals in concentration camps. Why would you put any stock in what he has to say? It's obvious same-sex marriage is a major issue with you. It's not for most normal Americans, who are more concerned about their pensions, unemployment, the high cost of a college education, health care and Islamic terrorism. By the way, when was the last time Barbara Walters didn't have the Oscar winner on her TV special?
Burt
I thought The Prestige was great – nice to see it mentioned here. I read somewhere that showing events out of sequence was the idea of the filmmakers, in a departure from the novel. A brilliant move, if true. Good overall list, Morgan.
From the 60s, I seem to be one of the few who really enjoyed Stanley Kramer's It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World – I too loved My Cousin Vinnie…The interplay between Fred Gwynn and Joe Pesci is priceless.
Your list Burt reminds me of true wine connoisseurs who like a wine regardless of price and have the confidence to mention it.
How should I know? You're the one who thinks Barbara Walters is somehow relevant to Oscar prognostication, not me.
And really, are you at all familiar with the idea of a conversation? You know, the back and forth exchanges wherein we take turns responding to the last comment made with a relevant one of our own? There is virtually nothing in that last response of yours that pertains to what I called you out on regarding Penn. You implied in your article that he was either uninformed or hypocritical when he made his remarks about Obama and same sex marriage. I pointed out that he publicly addressed this in a way that clearly shows he isn't. Whether you agree with him or not has nothing to do with it. He's well aware that Obama's public stance is pro traditional marriage. Nonetheless he believes that's a cover, no doubt based in part on Obama's otherwise pro-gay rights track record and his urging of Californians to vote against Prop 8. There's no incongruity in his thought process.
I'm sure you were quite pleased with yourself, playing the gotcha game. Unfortunately for it to be legit you kind of have to have, well, got something.
Hubris of a high order, but I'll have post one on my blog by week's end.
<a href=”http://epicnathan.blogspot.com” target=”_blank”>http://epicnathan.blogspot.com
Edit: It's there now.
Excellent list- i would add City Lights to 1930s, War of the Worlds & Body Snatchers to 1950s, Harold an Maude, Star Wars, Last Detail to 1970s, Blade Runner, Poltergeist, Das Boot to 1980s, Grifters and Goodfellas to 1990s, Dark Knight & Gladiator to 2000s.
Ernie, I completely agree. The music has so much passion. It is probably one of the most moving pictures ever made.
Jon–You wish to have a conversation? I find it interesting that you start out by calling me stupid and now wish to have a conversation. But, fine. All I ask is that you identify yourself. As for Barbara Walters being relevant to Oscar prognostication, she is far more relevant than the SAG awards. For one thing, she has been guessing right far longer than there have been SAG awards. Furthermore, snagging Oscar winners is important to her because they mean ratings.
Bill Brandt–"My Cousin Vinny" is one of those rare comedies that has held up for me even after four or five viewings. I did think that "Mad, Mad World" was awful…much too long and not the least bit funny. But as I said in the article, there's hardly anything as subjective as one's taste in movies. There's obviously no right or wrong. If "Mad, Mad World" made you laugh, that's all that matters.
Burt
Burt — I love "The Tall Guy", recommend it to anyone who'll listen. Has there ever been a better depiction of the arrogance of stars than Rowan Atkinson's venal comedian? And the RSC's musical version of "The Elephant Man," titled (what else?) "Elephant!"
One classic comedy from the '80s that I was surprised to see you'd missed was "My Favorite Year," starring Peter O'Toole as the thinly disguised Errol Flynn, guesting on a thinly disguised version of Sid Caesar's "Your Show of Shows." From it's loving look at post-war Manhattan, to the Brooklyn apartment buildings filled with dead ringers for my Jewish aunts and uncles ("So, tell me, did you shtup her?"), "My Favorite Year" is a perfect tribute to the days of live television.
I especially love the moment when the elegantly soused O'Toole barges into the ladies room at Rockefeller Center and takes a leak, much to the dismay of Selma Diamond, who blares, "Hey, this is for ladies only!"
O'Toole replies, "So is this, madam, but occasionally I must pass water through it."
In 2009, a movie like that would not even be written, let alone made. I personally think it should be shown every Veteran's day; just like "It's a Wonderful Life" is at Christmas. It's a sin and a shame the way we marginalize and diminish those who sacrifice so much to protect us.
That's okay, since Yojimbo is basically a ripoff of Dashiell Hammett's The Glass Key and the 1942 movie of it. (and Hammett's Red Harvest)
Burt, I calls em as I sees em. Your article was full of invective and misinformation, cringe worthy beyond the norm even for this place. And the shot you took at Black was just hateful.
Identify myself? I'm just plain old Jon.
Barbara Walters is not relevant to anything and certainly not the Oscars. Again, you don't know what you're talking about. SAG members make up what is by far the single largest voting block in the Academy. *That* is relevant.
My Cousin Vinny is indeed excellent.
Jon, out of complete curiosity, and something I'm bound to regret, why in the world does it matter to you what someone else thought? It is called an opinion piece. Burt is expressing his opinion. By letting you comment, even after you called him stupid, is his way of letting you express yours. Seeing as you come across as a freaking nut, why in the world would he want to have a conversation with you, even if this type of dialog was such? I think we all got it. You love Penn, he won, you were happy, he praised gays, he castigated those who didn't like gay marriage, he called Obama elegant, you loved it, end of story. See? It really wasn't hard to figure out what you wanted to say, the first time. Now, if you don't like it here, I am sure no one will force you to read or reply to any other stupid articles, or uninformed posters. Happy now?
I enjoy calling out people when they say stupid things.
I don't love Penn. I don't love Obama. I do love that they make so many stupid people angry.
And I'm always happy
You're not one of the few who enjoyed It's A Mad Mad Mad Mad World, but rather you're one of many. I love it, too, but unfortunately, I had to narrow down the list of 60's favorites to ten.
Loved the list, However, I would have included Breaker Morant and Love and Death in the seventies, Radio Days in the eighties, and Dazed and Confused and L.A. Confidential in the nineties, but that just me talkin'.
Thanks for the list—always looking for new movies to find. But I gotta add "The Philadelphia Story" to the '40's with my disclaimer…I always wanted to be Katherine Hepburn and would give anything to have to choose between Cary Grant and Jimmy Stewart.
A. No, your favorite film was Rachel Getting Married, last I checked. Or was that David Edelstein. I'm confused.
One of my all-time favorites is The Gods Must be Crazy, which no one ever mentions.
These lists are fun! On my Cousin Vinny, so many things made it work. Much of my background is from the South and I can just see their reaction to a Brooklyn lawyer fresh out of night school….then there's the pig slaughter house by the hotel, the funny suit after Vinny falls in the mud….the grits (which play a central theme), even the lights in the prison dimming when they execute some guy (letting the boys know their impending doom?) Maybe black humor but I thought even that was funny.
If any of you listen to Hugh Hewitt (http://www.hughhewitt.com), his friend Emmett (http://movies.blogtownhall.com./default.aspx) has a "top 10 list" most Fridays with his completely subjective list – then the audience gets to call in and offer their suggestions – some of the lists can be pretty "out there" – like the top CIA movies of all time .
Emmett is on most Fridays starting at 5:00 or 5:30 PST
I think the best part of Mad Mad World for me is the stunt flying by the legendary Paul Mantz (later killed filming Flight of the Phoenix). He has that Beech 18 flying so close to a control tower at 150-200 mph – well, you have to see it. Stanley Kramer said that he put an ad in Variety to get all the best comics – and for some reason Don Rickels was left off – which Rickles would remind him for decades – But you are right – it does run slow.
Thanks for your input Burt – I enjoy your posts – and don't let a few bomb throwers get to you – I am with you on names – if one wants to voice an opinion – unless you are in the industry and want anonymity – hiding behind a pseudonym really detracts from credibility IMO. "John Smith" seems more credible than "Binky" but that is just me…
That was Edelstein
Lot s of good movies there, and I'll take the ones I haven't seen as recommendations.
Sorry to see that you didn't like Star Wars. But then you didn't like E.T. either, which has to score points in your favor.
Jon–If all it takes is stupidity to make you happy, I understand why you enjoy a state of constant bliss.
Mike Lief–I saw "My Favorite Year," but, except for a few moments, I didn't think it was funny. Although the show was obviously supposed to be Sid Caesar's, the material wasn't nearly up to that standard.
dishofred–I enjoyed the first part of "The Philadelphia Story," but I thought Jimmy Stewart was badly cast, that the movie slowed down to a crawl when it got serious and that I would go berserk if Cary Grant referred to Hepburn as "yare" one more time.
Bill Brandt–Only Stanley Kramer, a man without a sense of humor or a sense of pace, would have made a "comedy" that runs–a totally inappropriate verb–154 minutes. Obviously, I can't argue with anyone who actually sat through the movie and enjoyed it, but I have to wonder if you were stoned at the time. In any case, I want you to know that I really appreciate it when people such as you and Mike Lief use your real names when you post comments.
Burt – on my being stoned – I went to school – 1st 2 years of college – at a small college in Menlo Park, in the SF Peninsula – in 1968-1970.
Half of the school, it seemed, no, most of the Bay Area, was on grass, except for me.
And yet my natural demeanor, at least to my stoner friends, was that I was "stoned and cool". So maybe one has to have a certain genetic make up to like that movie…
I do know that to most movie aficionados, IAMMMMW is not on a favorite list – but I still like it. Rat Race, with John Cleese, was modeled on that but not as good I think (and realizing that with that last remark setting myself up as the straight man
)
I loved that movie, too. The sequel was really bad, though
And…a movie almost always overlooked in these ‘best’ lists: The Hospital (1971). It has an outstanding screenplay by Paddy Chayefsky and stars George C. Scott in maybe his best ever screen performance. A comic whodunit that is at the same time a movie of personal redemption about a man facing deep disillusionment in an environment crumbling into chaos and irrationality.
Bill Brandt–As I say, if you liked it, that's really all that matters. The only time I tend to question a person's honesty when it comes to evaluating movies is when the movie is a pretentious bore but a critic's darling, a movie such as "Blowup" or "Last Year at Marienbad." But clearly there is no cachet in claiming to be a fan of "It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World," so I believe you. For my part, I could barely stay awake through the title.
Regards, Burt
Not to nitpick, but The Gold Rush was a 20s (1925) film. As for The Best Years of Our Lives, has any film ever contained anything as touching as the scene in which Wilma (Cathy O'Donnell) buttons Homer's (Harold Russell)
pajama top for him? It never fails to choke me up. Add to that Al's (Fredric March) homecoming scene when Milly (Myrna Loy) realizes, after repeatedly asking her children who is at the door, that it's her husband – home from the war after four years. As if those two scenes weren't enough, Best Years provides at least one other damp eyes and chills scene when Fred's (Dana Andrews) father Pat (Roman Bohnen) proudly reads the details of his sons heroic actions while reading his citations, after the now jaded Fred dismissively says of them, "Those things came in the packages of K-rations."
What a great movie.
[...] first is h/t’d to Burt Prelutsky over at Big Hollywood. He did a decade-by-decade breakdown of his fave films, and his column is [...]
[...] I wrote an article in which I listed my favorite 100 movies, broken down by decade. Frankly, I was overwhelmed by the response, both positive and negative. [...]
Great list! You have my favorite movie listed! "My Favorite Wife"! Great movie. I love Cary Grant & Irene Dunne. Have you seen "The Great Race" and "Start the Revelution without Me"? I loved these as a child and still watch them as an adult. Just plain fun!
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