Top 10 Most Overrated Directors of All Time
by Ben ShapiroEver since the advent of the modern motion picture industry, critics have praised directors as the key to great film. The auteur theory of cinema is idiotic, since writing is truly the key – no director could make a masterpiece out of “The Ugly Truth.” It is one of the great travesties of artistic justice that no one remembers the writers of great movies – nobody knows Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett, for example, but everyone remembers Frank Capra. Together, those three wrote It’s a Wonderful Life. (Together, Goodrich and Hackett also worked on The Diary of Anne Frank, The Thin Man, Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, and Father of the Bride.)
Directors get too much credit when a movie goes right, and too little blame when a movie goes wrong. There are certain directors, however, who get credit even when movies go wrong. Here, then, are my top ten overrated directors of all time…

10. Ridley Scott: Ridley Scott has, for some odd reason, received accolades that far outpace his actual accomplishments. He’s made one entertaining film, Gladiator, and a host of second rate films masquerading as masterpieces. Blade Runner is a bizarre and massively overpraised mess. Thelma and Louise is liberal tripe, although it does provide the best imagistic summary of modern feminism: two irritating “independent” women driving themselves off a cliff. White Squall is the single most depressing film ever made. Black Hawk Down is loved by conservatives because it isn’t anti-military, but that’s about the only praiseworthy element to a film that is an endless series of quick cuts between white guys who look alike in their helmets. Who’s been killed? Who’s still alive? You have no way of knowing. Then there’s Kingdom of Heaven, which is an homage to the “religion of peace” and a slap at Christianity through and through. Alien is slow. GI Jane is hysterically terrible. Plus, it’s got Orlando Bloom, who has about as much charisma and credibility as Al Gore. Scott is a key player in the rise of the infernal shaky-cam, which is not only biologically inaccurate (the human eye adjusts for bodily movements), but incredibly annoying. For that alone, he should be exiled to a land without cameras.

9. Michael Mann: All style, no substance.
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8. David Lean: Everything Lean made is too long by at least half an hour. I know it’s mortal sin to suggest that Laurence of Arabia, Dr. Zhivago, The Bridge on the River Kwai, and Ryan’s Daughter are anything less than masterpieces, but … they’re all less than masterpieces. Great Expectations was good. Everything else was downhill.
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7. Darren Aronofsky: Aronofsky is a talentless dud who has bamboozled his way into Hollywood upper echelon. Every film he’s ever made is a disaster. Pi is a jumble of nonsense that starts nowhere and goes nowhere. It may be the worst film ever made. Watching it made me want to rip out my own retinas, then replace them through surgery, then rip them out again. Of late, Aronofsky has been spicing up his chaotic, disordered crap with explicit lesbian sex scenes, a stylistic trait he apparently cribbed from David Lynch (don’t worry, we’ll get to Lynch shortly). Requiem for a Dream is noteworthy only in that Aronofsky somehow convinced Jennifer Connolly to participate in a lesbian scene involving mutual anal sex and a dildo (the scene, by the way, is meant to be depraved, but therein lies Aronofsky’s problem: he’s got to have sympathetic characters before we feel bad for them). The fanboy press is already agog over rumors that his newest ode to depravity, Black Swan, will feature a sex scene between Natalie Portman and Mila Kunis. Clearly, his target audience is pathetic losers in college dorms looking for an excuse to watch girl-on-girl action in the name of art. Not one of his films has been a major commercial success. Yet somehow, someone keeps giving him money. It’s enough to make one question the existence of a beneficent God.
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6. Mike Nichols: No. Just no. The Graduate is contemptible and snort-worthy spoiled 1960s-child angst. The ending of that movie alone makes it unworthy of human viewing. All future directors take note: having your main characters staring blankly into nothingness is not an ending. It is a cop out. Nichols’ directorial style is ordinary and he picks bland material. And he was an icon for the Baby Boomers. If that’s not a sign of their mental disturbance, I don’t know what is.
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5. David Lynch: Pure and absolute suckage, with the exception of The Elephant Man. Lynch is one of those annoyingly “deep” directors we’re all supposed to puzzle over. Forget it. There’s nothing worth puzzling. He’s as empty as they come, and he makes up for it with graphic sex scenes, just like his imitator, Aranofsky. John Nolte calls Lynch’s Mulholland Drive, “Mesmerizing, sexy, frightening … and all driven by a visionary director who created a hypnotic puzzlebox unlike anything we’ve seen before or will again.” Uh … no. This movie makes no sense, doesn’t try to make sense, and then fills the vacuum with Naomi Watts and Laura Harring feeling each other up. This ain’t great moviemaking. It’s Vivid Entertainment spliced with the worst of Raymond Chandler. Unfortunately, that just about sums up Lynch’s career.
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4. Quentin Tarantino: I recently watched Inglourious Basterds and marveled at Tarantino’s skill. But he is a gifted high school child given a camera for his birthday, and entranced with his knowledge of cinema. Which means, in simple terms, he doesn’t know how to tell a story. His films are Wagnerian: long periods of boredom and “artistic” violence punctuated by moments of utter brilliance. To paraphrase William McAdoo on Warren G. Harding, Tarantino’s films are like an army moving over a landscape in search of an idea. Sometimes Tarantino’s films actually capture a struggling thought and bear it triumphantly a prisoner … until the idea dies of servitude and overwork. Tarantino is to homages and gore what James Cameron is to spectacle. Unfortunately, he is also to plot what Cameron is.
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3. Woody Allen: He’s pretentious and unbearable. His movies are like nails screeching on a chalkboard, only with less humor. He is as nerdy as Peter Orszag, but he acts out his fantasies and illuminates his insecurities in film and expects us all to watch. It’s okay for a director to be self-centered – Orson Welles was famously self-centered. But you actually have to be an interesting person in order to spend that much time focusing on yourself. Allen isn’t. He’s a whiny narcissist with sexual inferiority issues. And no one except for him cares about the status of his penis. As a side note, he made Diane Keaton into a “legitimate actress,” which alone should qualify him for the Seventh Circle of Hell.
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2. Martin Scorsese: In the musical Damn Yankees, a group of hapless baseball players sing the following lyric: “You’ve gotta have heart / All you really need is heart!” Martin Scorsese never saw that musical. His films are entirely devoid of anything resembling likable characters. They are cold and calculating and ruthless – and boring. Nobody cares what happens to Leonardo DiCaprio in The Departed (in fact, in one screening I saw, people cheered when he got it in the head). The Aviator takes as long to tell as Howard Hughes did to live. Gangs of New York featured a brilliant performance from Daniel Day Lewis, and not much else (on a side note, there is no excuse for killing Liam Neeson in the first ten minutes of a film). Casino is nasty, brutish, and long. Goodfellas is similarly disgusting – you feel the need to take a shower after watching. Why anyone would want to spend several hours of his/her life with coke-snorting Ray Liotta and Co. is beyond me. The Last Temptation of Christ is baffling. The Color of Money is a snooze-fest (if you want to see a directorial clinic rather than Scorsese’s garbage, try Robert Rossen’s The Hustler, to which The Color of Money is a sequel). Raging Bull is gross. Mean Streets is gross and soporific. Taxi Driver is perhaps the most overrated film in Hollywood history — dreary, grungy, and subzero. Scorsese has never seen a main character he liked, a villain he hated, or a pair of editing scissors.
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1. Alfred Hitchcock: He’s not even close to the worst on the list, but he’s certainly the most overrated. He never made a great film. He was the Stephen King of the silver screen: he made films with great premises, but he never knew where to go from there. The psychoanalysis at the end of Psycho is laughable. North by Northwest relies on the tried-and-true random helpful coincidence to save our hero, time and again. It brings to mind one of Twain’s rules of writing, directed toward Fenimore Cooper: “the personages of a tale shall confine themselves to possibilities and let miracles alone; or, if they venture a miracle, the author must so plausibly set it forth as to make it look possible and reasonable.” Not so much for Hitchcock. Spellbound once again relies on amateur psychoanalysis. Notorious is the same movie as Rebecca. Rear Window makes one reach for the fast-forward button. Vertigo makes one reach for the cyanide. The Birds quickly becomes inane. If you want to see good Hitchcock, rent Alfred Hitchcock Presents. Restricted to the one hour medium, he’s at his best. Left to his own devices, he’s slightly better than mediocre.
Whom would you nominate?






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1,068 Comments
Oh for crying out loud you have just made a list of my top ten list of directors! LMBO>>>
Hitchcock? Hitchcock? You have got to be kidding me.
How about James "Avatar" Cameron? Years between projects…and, while "Titanic" looked good, it was no "A Night to Remember."
Unbelievable.
Yea I'd nominate James Cameron, if for no other reason than he soaked Avatar in anti-military propaganda.
I'm just going to pretend this post was meant to be satire.
Oh my gosh, this guy doesn't know what he is talking about. Alfred Hithcock is my absolute fav director. Ridley Scott?????????? Ditto. Shapiro isn't a director, I don't know who he is and he thinks he can judge who is and isn't a good director? I know to steer clear of his articles. He obviously is no judge of a good movie. Alien slow? He's nuts!
You, sir, are an idiot.
Well at first I thought you were crazy but then I realized that I have never truly enjoyed a movie from any of these people. I haven't even been able to sit through a Hitchcock movie, Taratino's work always seems like a big mess, and Scoresese's movies are always way too depressing for my tastes. So although I think you're a tad harsh on a few of them, I have to generally agree.
This is a ridiculously misguided.
That's the most insane list of movie bashing I've ever read.I totally grock the "overrating" directors, but mostly for what they supposed contribute to otherwise great movies that have great writing. Of the entire list, Ridley Scott is probably the best example.
But the trashing of films you do totally undermines the credibility of your judgment and eye as a film critic/lover. My God… not only do you say Lawrence of Arabia is not a masterpiece(WTF!?), but you list some of the best films ever made with trite dismissals set to a tone of rational consensus that simply doesn't exist. Dude, nobody that actually loves films are going to agree with those hamfisted assessments of some of the best movies ever made.
You're like a food critic that bashes everyone's favorite food… who the hell can take you seriously.
Hitchcock? Are you nuts? Sure, some of his movies haven't aged well, but Rear Window is a masterpiece.
You lost all credibility as a worthy movie critic when you put Hitchcock at #1. I don't know if I can ever take you seriously again…on anything!
Black Hawk Down is one of my all time favorites, not because it wasn't anti-military, but because it was the most accurate portrayal of a battle ever filmed. It was confusing, yes, but so was Mogadishu. Having never been in battle, I want to see what it would be like. What I don't want to see is a glossed over glorification of war.
Rear Window makes one reach for the fast-forward button.
Uh…no. Who is this kid?
Oh, this discussion will be interesting! Lots of people's favorite directors here…
I can't really diss any of them. They do what they do. Some of them, like David Lynch, go in and out of fashion.
I guess if I have an issue with any of them, it would be the more "stylized" directors like Lynch, Mann, and Tarantino. I have to add Tim Burton to that list. Maybe even Peter Jackson. They are, or have been, massively popular. But I find that a little of them goes a long way.
You left out James Cameron…. 50 lashes with a wet noodle.
I thought this was great. I'm still laughing. Great job.
I think he should just add Orson Wells to that list while he's at it.
I assume that you left out "Aliens" when criticizing R. Scott because it did not fit your theme.
"Goodfellas is similarly disgusting – you feel the need to take a shower after watching. "
Um, I think that was the point.
Ben, I’m sure you compiled this list to stir the puddin? No one is perfect all of the time, and any director could be torn apart in such a way. Take them as they come. If they’re human they’ll create a dog from time to time, and the converse is also true.
Ah……young Mr. Shapiro……….your acerbic tongue WILL get you noticed in the world of the critics….LOL
Hitchcock at #1? NFW. Sorry but he certainly doesn't belong in this list. The others – couldn't care less – there hasn't been a decent movie to come out of Hollywood in 20 years.
I'm one of those people who never pays much attention to the director of a movie, until I began to read Big Hollywood actually. I just watched the trailer, saw who's in it and went. Or not. But even I am amazed. Alfred Hitchcock is number 1 on your list? That's messed up, even though my parents walked out on a screening of Psycho.
Hold….hold on a second Ben. I have to….(whew!)….I have to regain my balance. I almost fainted when I read your list. That's better. Okay….
Ridley Scott? Really? No….really? Did you actually WATCH half of those movies? (Thelma and The Other Lesbian DID suck, tho. I'll give you that). But "Alien"?!? "Blackhawk Down"?!? Freakin' "BLADERUNNER"?!?!?!?
I'm open to most of the others on the list, but Hitch? I've seen "Rear Window" about two dozen times. "Rope". "The Birds". "Vertigo". "The Trouble With Harry" (hysterical film!). "North By Freakin-Northwest"!!!
Ben. Hitch made like 60-plus films and at least a third of those are considered bonafide classics even by us non-Hollyweird types.
Sigh.
Okay, now let's make a list of BH's 10 MOST OVERRATED CONTRIBUTORS.
Any suggestions for the number one slot?
Looks like you stepped on the tit of one of the culture's sacred cows. Next, you'll be telling us that Hollywood has to import all its "real men" because the home grown ones are all sissified. No wait, that's true. Keep 'em flying, Ben.
I would replace Hitchcock with Orson Wells, but otherwise his list it spot on.
Good work. Such a list was necessary.
I'd place Scorcese on top. He's a shallow, lurid and absurdly lionized sadist — and all his worst habits are growing worse. He made one decent film — The Age of Innocence — but even that was uneven.
Correct on Mann, who's now repeating himself. I think he peaked at "Mohicans" — a truly original effort with a cinematic sense of the fable.
Also agree on Hitchcock, perhaps the most emotionally maladroit or plainly uninterested of the group.
I ddn't ever even think about Lynch. Does anybody?
Until Tarantino can move beyond his inveterate flippancy he'll never make a great film.
As for Lean, while I agree that Lawrence of Arabia is turgid and tedious, "Bridge" is a great adventure film with mythic overtones which could never be made by the pipsqueaks of today.
You act like a know it all and you know nothing! Not only are those directors great, they have done great films. What and whom do you concider a great director or film? But then again why should I care what you think anyways. Your list sucks.
Now that's conviction.
I was wondering if Robert Altman would make the list. Like Altman's work. But I know that is far from common.
This list was necessary? You mean the world was incomplete until some hack frat boy decided to trash some of the film world's great artists for nothing but link-bait? Necessary because such ignorant ranting will somehow improve the world? Necessary because why?
James Cameron directed Aliens, but point taken. This list is ridiculous.
Wow. This is one of the weirdest lists I've seen here. Calling these director overrated is one thing, but dissing every movie from them is going a bit far, imo. Scott, for instance, has made some amazing movies, as well as some lame movies. David Lynch…I think being trippy is the point. Not necessarily "getting it." Simply to enjoy the bizarreness. It is for me anyway.
Yeah, I would also add Cameron and Jackson. Maybe Mann.
aliens was not ridley scott it was james cameron.
i agree with the lynch and hitchcock opinions,but scorscese and tarantino dont belong on the list.Goodfellas is the best mob movie ever made . yes I said it,its better than the godfather much better than the godfather,simply because goodfellas doesnt have that talentless hack marlon brando ruining it . brando didnt get roles because he was talented ,he got them because he was the oposite of john wayne .mr wayne was a rough tough noble competent man ,brando always played his characters as weak and flawed,which fit with the way the anti establisment big hollywood types wanted to portray men in every film they could after 1955 or so. where wayne would knock back a scotch and then knock someones head off,mr brando would have a nice glass of wine and then get it out of his system with a good cry.
I guess I must have similar tastes in movies to Mr. Shapiro. Aside from Hitchcock, I really don't have much use for the rest of them on the list. That isn't to say that there haven't been films from some of them I have enjoyed, but I do feel most of these directors fall into the overrated category. Of course, my taste in films is very different from the majority.
ROFL. Must be tough being Ben's kid.
I'd say lighten up but the points are valid. Who would have thought how style trumps substance in LA LA Land?
i agree with the lynch and hitchcock opinions,but scorscese and tarantino dont belong on the list.Goodfellas is the best mob movie ever made . yes I said it,its better than the godfather much better than the godfather,simply because goodfellas doesnt have that talentless hack marlon brando ruining it . brando didnt get roles because he was talented ,he got them because he was the oposite of john wayne .mr wayne was a rough tough noble competent man and always played his characters as such ,brando always played his characters as weak and flawed,which fit with the way the anti establisment big hollywood types wanted to portray men in every film they could after 1955 or so. where wayne would knock back a scotch and then knock someones head off,mr brando would have a nice glass of wine and then get it out of his system with a good cry.
Any list of failed directors not headed up by Cameron or Tim Burton is miserably incomplete.
Can't agree with your selection of Hitchcock at number one, old sport. The best two movies ever made are "North By Northwest" and "Rear Window".
I defy you to find any movie more ENTERTAINING than those two. And isn't that what movies are suppose to be, old sport?
Methinks thou art trolling for hits.
A note: In your screed against Ridley Scott you've organized it so that you mention Kingdom of Heaven (the notoriously bad epic) followed by Alien and GI Jane before mentioning 'it' having Orlando Bloom. Maybe you should do a quick read-through of your articles before you post them.
I'm wondering who you do respect. Peter Jackson didn't appear on this list. What makes him more wonderful than Scorsese, I wonder.
But ultimately, I think you're just trying to get pages and pages of comments. Which I have added to already. So, it's working.
You had me right up til Hitchcock. Sure, from Psycho on out he degrades terribly but maybe he had dementia. His early stuff is worth watching and would that his films were required viewing for anyone hoping to make a movie.
That said, right on about Ridley Scott. Yes, the camera thing earns him top honors as one of the worst ever.
As for mine…James Cameron, as others have pointed out, I think. Stanley Kubrick. George Lucas. ~~Anyone who can make award winning actors lousy is a worthless director. (And no one in his right mind can honestly say that the Star Wars prequels were worth the ozone burned). And, (for this I will be stoned worse than you will for the Alfred Hithcock listing), Steven Spielberg.
Psycho is my favorite movie of all time. Alien is my second favorite.
….Spider-Man 3 is my third. It's a wonky list, okay?
Oh, fer the luvva Pete. You thought Rear Window tedious? Disliked Goodfellas because its mobsters were – surprise, surprise – sleazy? Actually think GE was the best of Lean's films?
And while Ridley Scott has made some stinkers, and is certainly guilty of the shakycam, I can''t believe you diss his clear triumphs like Blade Runner, Alien and Black Hawk Down.
I think you heed an attention-span adjustment. And to add Spielberg and Peter Jackson to your list.
Btw, OT: Someone at Bighollywood should do an article/thread thingy on Red Letter Media's Phantom Menace review which has gone viral the past few weeks. This topic made me think of how that type of story(Star Wars) really needs sympathetic characters, while something like a Scorsese movie doesn't necessarily require them.
Phew! Get down Ben! Rant on brother! Disagree with a lot of what you said, but some has merit. Lynch and Aronovsky, por ejemplo. But Hitchcock, Tarantino, and Scorsese have made some greaet movies. Taxi Driver.
JAMES CAMERON.
I'm sorry. Hitchcock should be toppled and replaced by the hypocritical, hateful, hack himself.
I'm convinced now Terminator 2 was a fluke.
I haven't read the list past Ridley Scott, but if Scorcese is on it…
Oh dear. Dissing Hitchcock and Blade Runner! In one column! I thought the Blade Runner diss at the top would be the worst but Hitchcock! Come on man!
I think some repenting is in order sir!
Sorry – Hitchcock's 'Birds' and 'Rebecca' and 'North by Northeast' is as good as it gets. Especially 'Rebecca'. That film is a classic. And 'Psycho' is so awesome that I just blink at how brilliant it was. So – sorry, you lost me in dissing Hitch.
But the others? Yeah. Especially Woody Allen. Barf! Hork! Oh – and another thing. Why didn't you put Cameron that list?
Speaking of the relative importance of writer and director, I like Michael Caine's character's line in Deathtrap. He's telling his wife how good a script is:
"I'll tell you how good it is. Even a gifted director couldn't hurt it. "
I'm with you on Steven Spielberg, not so much with Kubrick – I think all the films I've seen him direct have been great.
Steven absolutely ruined A.I. after taking over from Kubrick after his death. you could pick out the elements between the two, and Spielberg, following his instinct to go treacly like nearly all of his films post Jaws.
The only reason Ben is not getting the absolute thrashing of the century here are because:
A: He's Ben Shapiro, and most of us have been reading his columns for quite a few years at Townhall, that bloated beast of an HTML nightmare. Indeed, we even tolerate the idiotic, insane mess that is that site just to read columnists like him. He gets a pass, even for dissing some of our favorites, because he's cool. Mentos or something.
B: Most of us agree with at least half of his list, bigtime, and everyone's half looks different.
A few points, in no particular order:
I have a love/hate relationship with David Lynch (although it tilts towards love, when there's no graphic sex on the screen). Mulholland Drive curls my toes, and only slightly better is Lost Highway. That said, I adore Eraserhead – it works, because, for Lynch, it's a personal story. Mulholland Drive and Lost Highway are essentially uninteresting pulp stories told in a deeply metaphorical way; an attempt on the part of David Lynch to scramble noir into something new. Conversely, Eraserhead is pure poetry – a story about David Lynch told in a thoroughly David Lynch-ian way. Some of his short films are fascinating as well.
It's a little unfair to decide that a movie's bad simply because it's "gross" (as is the case with Raging Bull in this article). Generally speaking, films that accurately describe brutality should be gross.
Yeah, Woody Allen is a bum director. He is a wildly clever guy when he's not in the director's chair, though. What's Up Tiger Lily? is one of the funniest films ever.
Thank God someone else hates The Graduate. The emperor's had no clothes for years now, but I've been too afraid to speak up.
The most obvious object of contention in this list is your placement of Alfred Hitchcock. True, many of his lesser works are relentlessly dull, but his certified gems deserve their status. The Birds, Vertigo, Psycho, Rope…all works of wonder, all worth seeing not once, but multiple times.
While I don't agree with many of your conclusions, you stated them well. A very interesting list!
# 2!!!!
I agree completely on Scott, Allen, Lynch, Mann, Nichols, and Aronofsky.
I get what you're saying about Tarantino, but I don't see the lack of story problem in "Pulp Fiction", to name one example.
I've not seen enough Hitchcock and Lane to say one wao or the other.
But Scorcese–yeah, "Goodfellas" makes you want to take a shower. It's supposed to do that. Life in the mob in the end is not clean and glamorous, and Scorcese shows us that time and again as well as anyone could.
Where is Michael Bay on this list? Where is JAMES CAMERON?????
OT:
Worst Idea or Fictional Thing Ever Invented by Any Writer or Director in the History of Film:
"midichlorians"
A record which, three hundred years hence, will still not have been broken.
I, as a conservative thinker, almost always agree with Mr. Stein. In this case, I do not. In order to put his opinion on overrated directors into context, I would like to know who he considers a Hollywood director worthy of accolaides. Mr. Stein; please submit.
Oops. May I correct myself. It is NOT Ben Stein, but Ben Shapiro. Mr. Shapiro; please submit. Hee hee
So I guess your name goes to the top of Overrated Film Critics of All-Time? Aronofsky is one of the greatest of the last decade. I was nervously scrolling down expecting Sidney Lumet, Francis Ford Coppola, Christopher Nolan or Guy Ritchie. The very fact that you didn't include M. Night Shyamalan or even a Ron Howard should immediately negate any credibility this list had. I'd be interested to find out who you feel are the greatest of all time.
I often agree with young Mr. Shapiro's contribution here, but on this I think I see whey none of these directors are going to win a Teen Choice Award. Many of them are unworthy or either top 10 or bottom 10 of anything, but this list is naive.
I second the question wr1.
I agree with the choices of David Lynch and Mike Nichols, but the other directors mentioned are all first rate even if they've had an occasional misstep.
Ugh….Tarantino is like a level of suckage all to himself. I enjoyed Kill Bill 1, despite it being so laughable (it was like watching a bad kung fu movie on Spanish TV), but everything else he's done has been overrated tripe. The best is the long dialog he has between characters that is supposed to be brilliant, but is just his narcissism without him feeling the need to restrain it. He's the only person who can analyze a better movie and while complimenting it, make it sound worse than one of his.
Alien sucked. It was my introduction to the world of, "Hollywood is always going to ruin your favorite book." If you grab some popcorn and sit down for movie night, don't watch Aliens first or you won't be able to make it halfway through Alien before you start channel surfing.
The worst Spider-Man film is on your favorites list?
How can you say Tarantino has made great films and Aronofsky hasn't? Pi, requiem For a Dream, I'll give you Fountain, but The Wrestler? Hands down better than any Tarantino movie.
What about M. Night Shyamalan?! He should be at the top of any list.
With the possible exception of Mann, I haven't seen much of his work, everyone on this list is overrated but every one has done some fine work. Hitchcock, as John Simon said, is a petit maitre, but he's still a master. Just as long as you don't overrate his masterful little jewels. Allen was a great comedy director before he got pretentious, and "Sleeper" is one of the very best Science Fiction movies ever made. As is "Blade Runner," and I can watch the last ten minutes of the director's cut a dozen times in a row. "Black Hawk Down" has flaws but is way better than we had any reason to expect. I hate hate hate hate hate "Carnal Knowledge" but I love "Wolf." And Lynch has created much garbage but "The Straight Story" is one of the greatest movies ever made. And "Mulholland Drive" scared the s— out of me. i don't understand it, I was thinking "this is silly, this is silly" as the details added up, then much sooner than i would have thought from the time listed on the case, I was staring in absolute terror at the dark projection TV screen and knowing I wouldn't sleep that night, wondering if walking out on the streets for a few hours would do any good. This is a list of men with very mixed resumes.
I am willing to give Aronofsky a pass if he can get Kunis and Portman to do a sex scene (with each other).
Seriously though, I don't totally agree with the list, but much of it is dead-on. I have never been able to sit through a Woody Allen movie. They are muddled messes done by a director who obviously can't stop himself from working out his inner demons in every film he's ever done. David Lynch has always been near the top of my worst director list. He was my introduction to the Liberal snobbery of, "You're just not deep enough to understand it." Yes I am, I'm just not narcissistic to feel the need to try.
Ditto. I was sitting here reading and thinking, no, Ben is off a bit, but I realized that I had no desire to watch any of these movies again except North by Northwest, but the criticism is spot on… too many coincidences of luck… but still a good movie of the day.. escapism.
There are a lot of overrated directors out there, but certain movies just speak to people at a certain time for whatever reason and then 20 years on, they look painfully thin. I think that is part of what is going on here. Ben is young and sharp and just can't square the circle of "classics" that those of us that are a tad older view more charitably. You've got to look at the period that the movie came out too… what was the norm. That has added impact… at the time.
Hitchcock??? "Rear Window" was (and still IS) a classic of good movie-making. I agree with your take on Woody Allen except for "Radio Days", which is wonderful storytelling. Ridley Scott's movies are always watchable, and mostly good. Mr. Shapiro, you do have a strange sensibility for what is and isn't a good movie, and/or a good director.
I'm a fan of Lynch's work (if not his personal beliefs), Blade Runner (hey, come on, by 1980's sci-fi standards…), and most of Scorsese's films that I've seen. As for Aronofsky, he succeeded in making a film that does more than any god-awful PSA or after-school special at revealing why one should stay the f#$@ away from heroine, and I say that as someone who's known a few addicts in his time.
That having been said, it's refreshing to see someone who is at least willing to skewer a few sacred cows.
ZING!!
I also agree with every point Wonder makes, except for PI.
Ben Shapiro makes interesting points but is obviously too young to understand the context and times of many of the films he references.
His criticism of Alien is that it is too slow, and I tend to agree – today. When I watch it, I just want it, especially that opening scene when everyone is waking up on the ship, to get on with the story. I don't need to dote over how it feels after sleeping for months.
However, the first few times I watched Alien right after it was released, it was the best science fiction I had seen. At the time, the whole world was moving more slowly and my nervous system screamed a lot less for more action. Shapiro grew up not living anything but the modern frenetics, nor at at time when sciFi was mostly pretty bad.
2001 is even worse. Talk about slow. Even when it came out, I was squirming in my seat.
One of the things Alien did (along with 2001) is legitimize the genre. Whehh, a monster that had morphed into something new each time it reappeared?
i suggest you put away your streisand records and rewatch some of those movies. even the best directors can make a stinker, but most on your list have kept me pretty entertained. side note: can someone explain how russell crowe won an oscar for gladiator? i enjoyed the movie very much but it's nothing more than a modern day Conan the Barbarian, and Conan was definitely better. i agree with your choices of lynch, nichols and aronofsky, when it comes to scorsese i like his earlier works much more. this gives you a total score of 65% on my scale, and thats why john nolte is only paying you $7.25 an hour! i also heard he was moving headquarters to colorado just so he could cut it to $7.24
Martin is #1…no contest. Hitch should not be on this list…he's my favorite…love his camera and his twists.
I get the desire to punk on some of these guys, because I've done it myself. Media darlings like Lynch, Aronofsky, Allen, and Nichols are certainly overrated, although Allen's earlier stuff (Bananas, Take The Money and Run, Love and Death) are absolutely hilarious. One should NEVER base the grade on box-office numbers however. "The Big Lebowski" tanked, and that movie is like heroin, except the NEXT high is better than the last. Anything Jimmy Stewart ever starred in is breathtaking to watch, most especially his Hitchcock stuff. "Blade Runner" is the finest sci-fi film I've ever watched, the new blu-ray edition is like meeting Jesus on ecstasy and hugging it out for 2 hours. Tarantino is an enigma, as he is at once overrated AND deserving. Zeitgeist is his middle name. As for James Cameron? HE IS THE ONLY TRULY OVERRATED DIRECTOR IN THIS FORUM AND YOU NEVER EVEN LISTED HIM!!!! WTF?? The first "Terminator" is a gem. "T2" sucks. I don't care what any fanboy says, I will defend my opinion to the death on that one. He turned an awesome villain into a frigging t-shirt franchise/fireworks display. And speaking of fireworks displays… Ever been to one? you pull up in your car, or lay a blanket out with friends, and you can listen to the band playing old marching tunes, OR you can crank Zeppelin on your shitty car stereo and pound Newcastle's and still go "Ooooh/Ahhhh" at the spectacle of exploding lights. THAT is what "Avatar" was like. In fact, I think listening to my iPod during the movie would have made it better. Cameron's an Audio/Video nerd with a budget. He should be stopped forthwith.
Replace Hitchcock with James Cameron and I would say 100% accurate.
I'm so happy people are finally saying it. The "masterpieces" are not., these great directors are not, these great actors are not.
I am so sick of Hollywood and I don't even go to movies. I am tired of them being shoved down my throat no matter how much I try to avoid them.
Ick.
If it were not for TCM (and about half of that is getting awful) I would not even watch films.
I agree with 99.9% of everything on Big Hollywood. This here is the 0.1% Seriously, man, are you out of your mind? Who are your 10 best directors, I ask out of morbid curiosity?
Also, I often thought of Alien as way of thinking about the illegal alien problem, a threat that moves in on your country and is constantly morphing in ways that are more dangerous than when it first began. Since Scott is English, I doubt that that is what he had in mind.
This isn't to say that in the last decade Ridley Scott hasn't proven himself to be a dufus politically.
I agree with you about David Lynch, but Scorsese? Come on! Goodfellas is incredible!
While the qualitiy of Woody Allen's films have slipped over the last several years (I really wish he would stop encouraging Scarlett Johansson to act) the movies he did in the 70's and 80's were awsome, and many of them are on my favorite films list.
One name I would add to the list is Robert Altman. Sorry, I just don't think he's as incredible as everyone says.
Everyone is entitled to an opinion, I suppose, and the internets were designed for attention-baiting bile-spewing. But tell me, Shapiro – how many films have YOU made? And how do they stack up to the ones created by these hacks?
This list is humbug! Hey readers none of those directors belong on a ,"worst ever" list. These directors have made films which have drawn millions of movie watchers over a very long period of time and said directors have inspired other young directors. The internet is a wonderful creation, but sometimes it gets misused and this is one of those times. Some jackass ,let's say me, makes up a list of the most overrated scientists and at the top of the list is Einstein followed by Newton ,now what would you think of that? Is such a list useful at all? Sensible? Naw it just fills up blog space,it is the equivalent of those styrofoam pellets used in shipping,it is filler.
This list is stupefying. How about a list of underrated directors. That way we can judge the full imbecilic aspect of this list.
How can Cameron not be on this list? Titanic was horrible, Avatar looks cool, but that's it, the Terminators, Aliens and True Lies were all fun action pics, but certainly not great films. But he is consistently hailed as some kind of visionary. He's made 3 pretty good films and a bunch of crap. What's so visionary about that?
We can never be friends. Ever.
The only ones I can grant you are Woody Allen, Mike Nichols, MAYBE Aronofsky. But Ridley Scott? David Lean? David Lycnh? Scorsese? HITCHCOCK?!?!
Seesh. If you gave me a second I could think of ten others more overrated.
Thank you for panning that piece of crap "The Graduate".
I spent about 30k on film school. I remember one prof in particular who, time and again, reached verbal orgasm telling us what a great ending that was.
I never finished "Gladiator". BOOOOOOOOORRRRRRRRRRIIIIIIIIIINNNNNNNNNNGGGGGGGG. I have no desire to see what I "missed". O-ver-ra-ted. *clap* *clap* *clapclapclap*
Ben, in an effort to be contrarian, you overreached. Swung and missed. But great effort!
Fail.
Dear Mr. Shapiro,
I only skimmed through the comments, but let me say a few things about David Lean. I hope I don't repeat what others here have already said.
1) When Ryan's Daughter first came out, it was universally panned, which is why it took him fourteen years before he made A Passage to India.
2) If the political slant of a movie is dealbreaker for you, please note that the movie version of A Passage to India is not nearly as anti-British as the original novel.
3) If you think Lean's movies are too long, perhaps you should watch a couple of his earlier ones, namely, Brief Encounter (86 minutes) and Hobson's Choice (107 minutes). Both are gems.
Ben, I agree with your list. I've never understood the praise heaped on directors like Scorsese and Tarantino. If nihilism is your thing, then these guys are for you. There is not a single Scorsese or Tarantino I like. Mann just glorifies criminals using fancy camera work – although I liked Last of the Mohicans (but that was almost twenty years ago).
I liked Gladiator and Blackdown Down, but Ridley Scott lost me with Kingdom of Heaven. I think Roman Polanski should be on this list as well.
How on earth did Steven Spielberg, George Lucas, Wes Anderson, Oliver Stone, (or, for that matter, Victor Fleming and Charlie Chaplin) miss being on the list of overrated directors while David Lean (?) and Alfred Hitchcock (@!!??!!##*!!) are on it makes me wonder about this article. Do people actually see movies as E.T. or Star Wars as, well, real movies? Perhaps I'm more out of touch than I'd thought.
Also, I'd have to say that Woody Allen has made some genuinely funny movies, and I don't find The Little Tramp or Harold Langdon to have been particularly likeable characters, either, but they were funny. That's the point of a comedian, I've heard.
How could anyone who's watched Secret Agent, or The 39 Steps, or Lifeboat, even, think of Hitchcock as overrated? And where, exactly, would you cut Lawrence of Arabia to make it more "watch-able?" Yeesh.
Grow up. It's called opinion.
I don't care what everyone else says, Ben, I'm with you all the way on this one. All of these overrated directors in one place made me want to not watch any movie for awhile. I just wish you'd never mentioned "The Graduate", not because I like that piece of crap, I sincerely hate it, but becayse now that stupid song, "Mrs.Robinson", is stuck in my head…arrrgghh! Great piece Ben ………..
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On anything? Seriously? We actually take movies that seriously? This is the site where we should be able to punch back. Some of you people are spineless. Kudos to you Ben.
Hate to use such an overused expression, but EPIC FAIL on this list. This piece unfortunately proves the prevailing wisdom that the internet is a place where anyone can throw any opinion up, regardless of their knowledge of the the subject.
It might help to have a list of the author's favorite directors – or perhaps his list of most *underrated* directors. Just for comparison. It's hard to tell where he's coming from.
And you know how it is – sometimes "great filmmaking" isn't the same as "making a good movie."
Ben,
Orlando Bloom was neither in, nor anywhere near GI Jane. Be careful using Google. You have to actually read — or watch — what it spits out before you use it.
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