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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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 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 ………..
[...] Read the Full Article @Big Hollywood [...]
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.
I can't believe that Oliver Stone did not make the list. Talk about overrated directors. Stone never heard a conspriacy theory he didn't like.
You know, if you'd just written "I'm a pretentious young twit who's playing at being an iconoclast" it would have said the same thing as this list did and taken fewer words to do it.
You care enough to post. I love the irony.
Yeah, I thought "huh, there's a version of GJ Jane with Orlando Bloom in it?" It would have been hilarious if he played the Demi Moore part.
I also agree little Ben is looking for page hits. What a twerp.
(I'm 26 and a film school grad.)
Where's Robert Altman?
I've only seen one Lynch film and it was The Elephant Man which I thought was excellent. I don't have much interest in seeing the rest of his work. Weirdness for weirdness' sake… not for me.
Woody's best days are definitely behind him. I enjoy many of his comedies and comedy-dramas, I don't enjoy his Bergman-style melodramas, and I thought Whatever Works was one of the most hateful, cynical films ever made and I almost gave up on it. (Oddly, I enjoy Deconstructing Harry which is also one of the most hateful, cynical films ever made.) Match Point was good… definitely lightning in a bottle.
The rest are hit or miss. I enjoy Ridley's movies. Calling Alien "slow" is entirely subjective.
Hitchcock? Really?
North by Northwest might rely on the helpful coincidence but that doesn't make it any less enjoyable. And the Bernard Herrmann score – they don't score movies like that anymore!
I agree with having ScottRidley in this list – still, I like his first film, the long forgotten pice "The Duelists" – but as we all agree, writing is paramount in film and Ridley faithfully used a fine small novell by Conrad to achieve that neat pic.
As far as the other 9 guys, I wouldn't bother to rank them – is Woody Allen sillier than Aronovsky, or does Nichols deserve more than a shrug than Tarantino? Nope – they just the same, some huge egoes further hugiefied by a sycophantic entertainment media –
It is not that hard to execute an acceptable movie (autheur theory and Kenneth Turan's bouts of ecstatic admiration notwithstanding) – yet very good movies are rare, and none of the guys honored by Shapiro here made one. Boy, and this in a collective effort of +100 movies over a 500 years long careeer – hehehe – hardly something that deserves breathless paeans of some silly critics who can better feel the edge that commoners can't -
Take about hitting it on the head.
I thought Scott's imagery was great, but that's about it. He struck me as a guy who should have stayed as an art director. (I have heard he is no fun to work for.)
Lead I can say the same thing, he is all imagery, but at least LOA had a story, albeit a long long… story. But the desert looked cool(sadly that doesn't make a movie).
I almost make it a point to avoid what the critics like, because that's code for what will put me to sleep the fastest.
For all of these guys thank goddess DVD/BR have chapter searches(and a fast forward).
Haha! I have to admit, upon really reflecting on some these films and directors, my "appreciation" is perhaps more influenced by Hollywood's groupthink than by the fact that I actually enjoyed sitting through the film. (If you have to study why a film is great, if it's not inherent merely in observing it, is it really that great?) It's not a list of "bad" directors after-all, but over-rated directors. For example, I don't have a problem with Cameron's ommision, but only because I think he's generally recognized as a director of style over substance, and money-making blockbusters. I don't think he's overrated, but seen more honestly for what he actually is. Love the comparison to Stephen King, a writer who's work a quickly grew tired of–tried to enjoy such Hitchcock movies, but I always end up bailing.
Haha! I have to admit, upon really reflecting on some these films and directors, my "appreciation" is perhaps more influenced by Hollywood's groupthink than by the fact that I actually enjoyed sitting through the film. (If you have to study why a film is great, if it's not inherent merely in observing it, is it really that great?) It's not a list of "bad" directors after-all, but over-rated directors. For example, I don't have a problem with Cameron's ommision, but only because I think he's generally recognized as a director of style over substance, and money-making blockbusters. I don't think he's overrated, but seen more honestly for what he actually is. Love the comparison to Stephen King, a writer who's work I quickly grew tired of–have tried to enjoy Hitchcock's movies, but I always end up bailing on them, too.
"Alien is slow" ? Come on. I think your thesis is unsound. How about "10 directors who made some good and some bad movies."
I know this list will draw you a lot of ire but I'm just glad to finally find someone that agrees with me about Scorsese!
I'd like to get the list of Ben's most underrated. I must say that there are a ton of others that should of made the list. It's all subjective isn't it?
What happened to George Lucas? Yeah, he made Star Wars and helped make Raiders of the Lost Ark. Other than that? And I think he kind of proved with the SW prequels that his writing and directing skills haven't aged well.
There's so much to disagree with here, but your greatest error is one of omission. Stanley Kubrick should've occupied the top three slots, at least.
Yes, T2 does suck.
The movie can be summed in in the the following phrase: "Little savior man, teach my mighty robo-heart to laugh."
Amen.
C'mon, Benny, trot out your list of right wing directors. It's a shame Glen Beck doesn't direct films so you could nominate him.
Ben Shapiro's piece is surely thought provoking. Some critiques I agree with, others…not so much. There are some Hitchcock movies I never tire of seeing, like : 'Rebecca.,'To Catch A Thief', 'Notorious', 'Rear Window', 'North By Northwest','Vertigo', and 'Shadow Of A Doubt'. And thinking about them….it's not only the story, but it's the casting that makes me want to see them again and again.
The players in those films, for me, were truly worth watching. 'Frenzy', in my opinion, was horrible. In the Scorcese movies 'Goodfellas', and 'Casino'…sure the characters are dispicable..BUT, for me it was a chance to check out criminal types, through Scorcese's lens, at a safe distance.
I always thought Ben Shapiro was a spoiled kid who thought too highly of his own opinions. Now I know.
PART 2:
The Tarantino criticism is warranted. I've never understood the adulation this guy receives. I won't be watching his films over and over again for sheer enjoyment. The same applies to Woody Allen for the reasons given. I'm still thinking about David Lean's films…I liked them and didn't mind the length. I haven't seen all of Ridley Scotts films…but I did like 'Gladiator' and 'White Squall', and I enjoy 'The Good Wife' TV program of which he's a part.
One thing Ben's piece has done..it's made me think a little harder about why I like what I like. And that's a good thing.
You're right about Lynch. I think you have to go to a Lynch movie expecting a highly personal, eccentric, Lynchified production. When he tries to make an un-Lynchian movie it's just not quite the same. And you're right – Eraserhead is pure essence of Lynch. From his brain straight to the silver screen. And like any personal, style-heavy picture, it's not going to be to everyone's taste. I just know it's viscerally disturbing, more like a REAL nightmare than anything I've seen on screen.
Wow, this is the worst article ever at Big Hollywood. If someone posted this list in the comments, I'd just figure it was from some ignorant troll who wasn't even worth bothering replying to.
Lynch is the only one who belongs on that list.
Some of the others have a few weak spots that got more credit than they were due, but they certainly haven't made a career out of it.
Just which directors DO you enjoy?
Them is fightin' words, Wonder_all
This site is becoming increasingly annoying…
First, those insipidly amateurish "NewsBusted" videos that do as much for the furtherance of conservatism as Air America does for liberalism, now a 26 year-old lawyer has the unmitigated gall to post this ill-informed, snide, petulant exercise in snobbery. I've read this abomination twice, and truth be told, I can't for the life of me understand how this young man contributes anything to this site.
I am 44 years old, hold an BFA in Film & TV from USC, and an MFA in Directing from the American Film Institute, and have worked in the film industry as a closeted conservative my entire adult life. As such, while young Mr. Shapiro, Esq. has every right to post what he wants, I have every right to state it is perhaps one of the most offensively ignorant essays on the film industry ever proffered.
Ben Shapiro.
Big Hollywood.
Top 10 Most Overrated Directors of All Time.
Worst.
Article.
Ever.
I refuse to accept that a 26 year-old lawyer has ANY conceivable notion of what a "good" director is.
Why Andrew has given this petulant young man the opportunity to contribute to BIG HOLLYWOOD is beyond me.
Indeed it is. It is also an opinion that this list indicates the author to be an idiot.
More like the best Spider-Man film is on my favorites list.
Dear Mr. Shapiro: We must have been separated at birth. I have never before run into anyone who shares my general disdain for these over-hyped directors. I liked some of their work ("Hannah and Her Sisters," "Broadway Danny Rose," "North x Northwest" and a few, very few others), but, considering the slew of movies these ten guys churned out, that's damning with very faint praise. I would have added John Ford to the list, but I am hardly of a mind to nitpick.
Best wishes, Burt Prelutsky
I likled Goodfellas. Most memorable line (written by a guy who was actually there) "What the Feds and everyone don't realize is that the Mafia was simply a police force for people who couldn't go to the police". The movie showed you what life inside the Mafia was really like. Joe Pesci's performance was amazing.
Agreed on Lean's films being too long. Beautiful cinematography but too friggen' long.
But Hitchcock? Oh well, as my late English friend would say, "It don't make you bad".
Bragging about being to stupid to understand something and too lazy to try does not make you seem cool. Ther'es no obligation to like Lynch or any other artist, but to claim that this somehow makes you superior is the sign of a moron.
Oh, well, if you don't think Altman is incredible, I guess I'll have to change my mind.
Or maybe the fact that you don't like his films doesn't mean he's a rotten director. It just means you don't like his films.
I'm with you. Hitchcock at #1!? Definitely lost all credibility for films at the very least.
My thoughts exactly. I could watch Rear Window over and over again!
I’ll concede that it might be fair to call Hitchcock overrated, but only because a man of his extraordinary talent is bound to be hyped beyond his merit. Your explanation of why you consider him overrated doesn’t make sense and your placement of him at the top of the list is indefensible. The man was a brilliant storyteller, and they don’t just hand out the title “Master of Suspense” like they do Oscars.
But y’know what your real sin here was? Two words: Sam. Mendes.
"Notorious is the same movie as Rebecca."
I'm guessing you have seen neither.
I don't know whether to even bring up who is really overrated. As with politics, which now overlaps any writing on film, praise and condemnation are screamed in deafening tones. Like our President, Cameron is not God therefor he is overrated. Spielberg is a syrupy technician with a sadistic streak a mile wide; PG 13 had to be introduced so he could do onscreen torture unto death in a children's movie. He makes me think of a line from Brian Aldiss's story "Poor Little Warrior": "Like all cruel people he was sentimental; like all sentimental people he was squeamish." He wanted to tell us what war was all about, so he restaged sections of Peckinpah's "Cross of Iron" with actors who didn't even have enough dedication to acting their parts to carry real M-1 Garand rifles; they carried plastic fakes they could have lifted with their pinkies. Lucas seems to have reacted to the violence and death he saw from onstage at Altamont by reverting to his childhood.
[...] no sooner do I praise lists than Ben Shapiro writes the single stupidest list I’ve ever seen that fully validates all of the criticisms levied against the practice by Mark [...]
I never said I didn't like his films. He's made some good ones. I just don't think he's as brilliant as people say he is.
My selection of A Passage To India as a teenage in the video store got me banned from selecting videos for the family for a month it was that bad.
I'm getting pretty tired of these pieces about everything Bret doesn't like…
Ok considering your icon is a sword and your username is Hanzo I'm pretty sure you secretly hate this list for the same reason I do.
Maybe we can chalk it up to the arrogance of youth and some puerile attempt to garner outraged comments.
I'll give you 10 through 2 on this list with the subtraction of Woody Allen and the inclusion in his spot of James Cameron.
Then I will scold you immensely for Alfred Hitchcock. And then I'll scold you some more.
Then I'll put Oliver Stone in at number one. As someone who had to watch Platoon in a film studies class I take exception that Olly "Hitler is misunderstood" Stone is not number one on this list.
Apparently someone that doesn't like a good film. Rear Window was a great film.
Yeah, psycho is messed up. I've never been able to get through that one either. However he's got so many other interesting films….
If he's 26 I'm technically younger than he is and I think this list is nuts.
Alfred Hitchcock presents is mostly half hours. Arfonsky, Allen, Nichols are playwrights placed on film so they aren't great film. So you only got 7 wrong.
I would like to nominate your dumb ass.
Shapiro,
Ridley Scott
I have
Michael Mann
Last of the Mohicans is an amazing film about the Colonial America.
HEAT is a crime masterpiece. (Watch the gunfight and the ending again)
David Lean
Dr. Zhivago may be light on character and story (Ebert has a point here) but more than makes up for it with visuals that make Avatar look silly. LAWRENCE OF ARABIA as well as the Col. Bogey March scene in BRIDGE feature some of the greatest footage on Screen. He also makes T.E. Lawrence one of the most amazing characters on screen.
Hitchcock
You are an idiot.
WORST. LIST. EVER.
This morons Best Directors List would probably be topped by McG.
Michael Mann – The Insider is one the best films of the last 20 years
Quentin Tarantino – Pulp Fiction is the most influential film of the last 20 years
Ridley Scott – While Hannibal was God awful, Blade Runner and Alien are beyond stunning
Woody Allen is by far the best writer/director of all time.
Ugh.
think he ment viggo mortensen,he played one of the sympathetic drill instructors
You either didn't understand the films you criticized or are just trying to be anti-Hollywood and coming off as ridiculously stupid.
Next week, Ben's list of Basketball Players that Just Weren't That Good – 1) Michael Jordan 2) Magic Johnson 3) Kareem Abdul Jabbar 4) Larry Bird 5) Wilt Chamberlain…
Never has there been better proof that even the most ridiculous opinion is given equal voice via the internet.
I just watched Rope last night for the 100th time.
In Ben's defense, movies aren't his forte.
LOLOL This is the worst list that has ever been conceived of. I think that art is pretty subjective and speaking subjectively you are INSANE to think that Hitchcock, Scott, SCORCESE (the greatest filmmaker living) are overrated. If anything most of these people are underrated. Overrated equals Michael Bay, Paul Thomas Anderson and others. You are crazy CRAZY CRAZY CRAZY lol
I enjoyed reading this, but man, don't knock Hitch. Though, admittedly, he didn't seem to have very good taste in lead actors, so OK, knock Hitch. Still, he's not the MOST overrated. *squinty-eyed stare*
I might mention Spielberg. He's kind of a hit-or-miss. I mean, what the heck was A.I.? And Kingdom of the Crystal effing Skull!
And where the crap is James Cameron?
I completely agreed with you until you said "Woody Allen is by far the best writer/director of all time." wtf? Maybe if we're only considering comedies. Even then it's a bit of a stretch.
Well, Ben, you really went out on a limb. Most of what you write I agree with. knew you would really piss a lot of people with this list.
But you do mention some extremely overrated directors that automatically make my “don’t watch cuz it’s probably gunna suck” list. Those include Nichols, Tarantino (although Inglorious Bastards is on my to do list), Scorsese, and the worst “director”, “comedian”, ugly little man, child abductor, and “actor” of all time, Woody Allen.
In Ben's defense, movies are not his strong point.
He should stick to political theory.
I nominate Roland Emmerich. I don't understand how is even allowed to make movies.
One exception: Robocop.
"this is the site where we should be able to punch back"
What do you think I was doing? That was my "punch back". That makes me spineless? Wow! Maybe you took my response to his movie critique too seriously…but, anyway- Kudos to you for "punching back"
I was with you until you listed Hitchcock and your inane reasons why… If you can't properly appreciate Hitchcock, you should probably find a new line of work. I hear Taco Bell is hiring.
Ok, so my favorite actor is Bruce Lee, my second fave is Toshiro Mifune, third is Tomisaburo Wakayama, you get the picture. Nothin' wrong with a good chop-sockey in my mind, yuk
…………Hanzo
Paul Verhoeven directed Robocop, not Roland Emmerich.
Right on. If I made the short list of these movies I've watched entirely in one sitting and thoroughly enjoyed, the disdain from the "Graduate" loving types would be brutal. But then again when in heaven I expect to see Sigourney Weaver AND Bruce Willis battle with an Alien.
Okay, I never agreed with Shapiro's writing before, but this just seals it: He knows NOTHING about film. This is the worst list I have ever seen – all of these men are unbelievably talented, some more than others. But this could be a list of some of the greatest directors of all time. Ben needs to find a new profession because cinematic analysis is clearly not his strong suit.
You do forfeit the right to be taken seriously by a lot of serious people when you nominate Hitchcock. You are certainly entitled to your opinion, but the remark about wanting to fast forward through Hitchcock may be a matter of your age. I don't know many young people who like Hitchcock. Hitchcock was a generation of filmmakers raised on literature and plays, unlike contemporary filmmakers who are raised on television and new media – the sense of timing in each reflects that, and perhaps the audience they draw is reflective of it. It may be a generational thing.
Geez, and where did you learn about film? Who are your most underrated directors? Brett Ratner? Uwe Boll? You're wacko man. Going against conventional wisdom doesn't automatically make you correct (although it does in many circumstances). The only one I could possibly agree with is Martin Scorcese, but not because he's a bad director, only because he's overrated.
Alien is slow? That's your criticism? It's one of the great examinations of the female mystique. Scott's films aren't as artful as they used to be, but he's still one of the smartest filmmakers out there. His great directing just seems effortless.
Growing up- Rebecca was my absolute favorite movie… You felt so bad for her and at the same time, so angry that she could be so blind and naive. When she wore that dress….poor thing!
Ah, when opinions collide!
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Nope, not generational. My son and daughter grew up asking to watch Rear Window and North by Northwest again and again. Both are now teens and Hitchcock's best movies are still their favorites. They even see Hitchcock ripoffs (or tributes) in other movies and point out how they succeed or fail. And they're not even film buffs, they just know how to analyze entertainment. Shapiro would probably call Jaws tedious.
That was less a "punch back" than a wildly flailing tantrum.
But I agree that this list displays his lack of depth in the field. It's an amateurish high school essay at best.
"Who is this kid?"
Kid is the operative word here. This essay is not particularly deep.
With all due respect, Ben is not a moron. He's a very bright young man, who has written some fine articles at Big Hollywood over the past year.
However, with this piece, he's clearly touched a nerve.
Alfred Hitchcock was the BEST.
Worst. List. Ever.
"Not one of his films has been a major commercial success. Yet somehow, someone keeps giving him money."
I agree to a point but with movies, very often money isn't the barometer of success. The true barometer is time. So many movies that we love weren't huge successes when they were released (a great example being It's a Wonderful Life). Requiem for a Dream is an extremely difficult movie to watch and I have no intention of seeing it again (I'm not that sadistic) but someone once said it should be shown in high schools across the country – if that movie doesn't convince kids to say no to drugs, nothing will. And the film does have its fans.
On the other hand, how good can a movie be if I have no intention of watching it again? If nothing else, this thread has raised some valid questions.
Okay Ben, so give us your top ten AND your who, what, where, when, why, and how they rate their positions! C'mon…balance is good for ya.
Oh. Good. Now I feel better about loving Robocop.
Hosting an article this ill-informed seriously damages Big Hollywood's credibility.
There are a lot of silly things written on this website. There is a lot of endless whining about any movie that contains any line that is in any way liberal or critical of conservatism. (I say this as a conservative, just one who chooses not to be offended by everything I disagree with.)
This is the dumbest thing that has ever appeared on this website, though. Simply listing movies and declaring them mediocre or bad is not an essay. Unsupported opinions are not objective truths. You need to break this into 10 piece and explain your positions, otherwise you just come off as a complete snob. (I am also dying to know how Thelma and Louise is "liberal". It is obviously silly and I don't much like the movie, but unless one thinks violence against women is a hotly contested left-right issue, I am not sure how it can be called liberal. Would you call movies where men kill women "conservative"? haha)
The fact that you claim "Notorious" and "Rebecca" are the same film just goes to show what an idiot you are! The are both "Great" films, not perfect, but, great. Hitch might have made a few stinkers here and there, but they all had flashes of brilliance in them, so, uneven: yes. Overrated: no! If you are looking for an overrated Director, look for someone who can't direct himself out of a paper bag (and doesn't try) yet recieves nothing but plaudits from the intelligensia, someone like Robert Altman.
Where is George Lucas on this list?
I know what you mean. I love it too. Someone even edited the film together and wrote a rap song about it.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wUnMF7dV86k
Top 3 movies this site got wrong for those exact reasons:
3. Away We Go
2. District 9
1. Precious
HAHAHAHA NO. While some of your complaints are fair (I, too, get annoyed with directors who substitute sexual depravity for solid, emotional storytelling.), this just seems like an article meant to provoke, in which case it's obviously quite successful. Seriously, though, Ridley Scott? Quentin Tarantino? I don't have to love everything they've ever made to admire their skill.
Bingo on Martin Scorsese, however. I always love movies that have completely superfluous characters, don't you?
I find it hard to believe George Lucas is not on the list, but Alfred Hitchcock is. Benji, you're losing a lot of credibility with me, bro.
"Alien" is slow…?
Of course it is — if you are a member of Ben Shapiro's generation raised on IPODs and video games, and nututred in an instant-gratification culture. They have to have everything "now". Look at the new Star Trek that came out this past year; it's all dazzling, shocking effects and continuous action, but little in the way of a good story. And it wasn't the least bit entertaining. I don't know how this country will fare when these guys come to positions of leadership, without a long view of history or the virtue of patience. I doubt they could read a book, much less write a good piece of fiction or a screen masterpiece.
Who is this little weasel, Ben Shapiro? The new Harry Medved of the internet?
Who is this little weasel, Ben Shapiro? The new Harry Medved of the internet?
OK Ben, how about a list of your favorites?
Titanic has to be the most overrated movie of all time. No one can even remember the plot, only that the boat sank, which we all knew was going to happen anyway. Cameron is the perfect example of style over substance. Show a naked Kate Winslet and everyone will forget you didn't have a single character that people related to.
I guess you thought 2001 was too fast paced?
So your saying that a director who makes ONE masterpiece shouldn't be classified as 'overrated?" That makes George Lucas underrated, doesn't it?
wait… waitwaitwait… how can you say 'the most accurate portrayal of battle ever filmed and then in the same paragraph say 'having never been in battle?"
Michael Bay perhaps?
Ha ha, you're right. Except that we have been forced to watch this crap in lieu of the stuff that was unavailable due to slow technology. You couldn't find Preston Sturges or Capra whenever you wanted to until 15 years ago.
And you cheated by using the academy awards nominees list.
back to janus
Ooh, Ben, it must be nice to be so young, confident, and clueless. Once again we have a list that demonstrates the problems with looking at art through a political prism. I'll agree with Darren Aronofsky, Quentin Tarantino, Woody Allen (after he became a "serious" filmmaker; his early, funny stuff is excellent), and Scorcese (who is very good, just not as good as the press would have you believe). Other than that, the list is bollocks. You could add Clint Eastwood and Steven Spielbergto the list (both very good but overrated directors) and generate better discussion. And for goodness' sakes, get Hitchcock off the list. The most overrated director of all time is probably Opie Cunningham.
I don't think you know how movies work. Yes, it's true that a film needs a good screenplay to work, but it also needs a good director to put it onto the screen. A good script is merely a movie's skeleton. As for the picks themselves, it seems as though you just picked directors who were popular to annoy everyone, which you've succeeded in doing. And best of all: You provide no real analysis as to why they're bad or overrated directors. I'm all for differing opinions — Roger Ebert is a critic whom I respect enormously even if I often don't agree with him — but you, sir, shouldn't be talking about a subject you know nothing of.
And by the way I do think Hitchcock is overrated but he's far from the most overrated of all-time and he's a FAR better filmmaker than your pea-brain can understand. You're only right about Quentin Tarantino.
I think we've all been fooled. Ben is too smart for this. I think he's using the Saul Alinsky tactic of planned chaos to get us Conservatives riled up and active.
Touche, Mr. Shapiro.
To cite the over-rated Woody Allen in the overrated "Manhattan": "I'm waiting for him to slag Mozart as overrated." This whole column is just Diane Keatonisms.
That's got to be it. Putting Hitchcock at the top spot is otherwise just wonky.
"Blade Runner" is the best science fiction film of all time, "Lawrence of Arabia" is my favorite film of all time, Hitchcock was a master…. This is the stupidest article I've ever seen at Big Hollywood.
Hitchcock was a master at building suspense. As with all things, you must take him in the context of his times. Things that seem silly now just weren't then. He did things so well that everybody imitated him and the things got trite. That's the risk you run. I watch all his movies over and over. Knowing the ending doesn't hurt them any more than having heard a good piece of music before makes hearing it again less pleasurable.
I have to agree about the rest of the list, though, except for David Lean. I've really enjoyed his movies while understanding that they were flawed. They used to have intermissions when they played first run and you always were grateful.
Although I agree with you on Michael Mann, as well as the overpraising of "Mulholland Drive," I almost uniformly disagree with you on everything else, especially HItchcock and Ridley Scott's earlier work.
You're so negative. Why not write a top ten list of underrated directors, screenwriters and/or screenplays?
I nominate you for one of the worst bloggers of all time. And that's not a compliment.
I was reacting to Shapiro's specific comment:
"Rear Window makes one reach for the fast-forward button."
I disagree with his other remarks regarding Hitchcock, too, but this one specifically made me think "WTF?"
With all due respect, I think you pretty much whiffed on everything.
I do think Tarantino is overrated. He has pop and some skill, but his films are completely soulless.
All of these directors have been hit or miss. But come on, if your going to list these guys as "Overated", then please, do tell…who is worthy of the praise they have received? You listed some great movies….were the millions of people who flocked to them all wrong?
Lighten Up.
BTW…I do not mind you listing Martin Scorsese. He has made some great movies, but he is such a irritating holier than thou jerk, that he deserves to be knocked in the chops at any opportunity.
Hitchcock – you can't be serious!!! You turned me from a lurker to a contributor. I just had to sign in and comment to express my outrage.
Overrated? I'll give you overrated:
Lars Van Trier – just say "no". Seriously he had a moment but it's gone.
Michel Gondry – Loved "Sunshine" but Michel, please, develop…mature…stretch yourself. I'll give you another chance such is my love for "Sunshine."
Pedro Almodóvar – Lord knows I have tried to like his "Hollywood" films. I really have. More acclaimed than Brunel? Maybe, but still over rated.
M. Night Shyamalan – What happened to you after "The Sixth Sense"? What?
Im taking this list with a grain of salt – as in "these guys are overrated because everyone goes nuts over them just because of one hit" One astounding film apparently equals ALL their stuff being of equal level. I was a bit shocked to see Mr. Shapiro head off with Ridley Scott – yeah, he made a politically correct film to appease the CAIR people (Kingdom of Heaven) and drivel like Thelma and Louise (Im sorry, as a woman I will be the first to say that women can suck just as hard as men can when it comes to brass tacks…I'll punch the "sister" who says I should support women just because we share the same type reproductive organs. I gotcher sisterhood rie-cheer…go ahead and drive off the cliff…two less bimbos out of the way)…and Im still trying to forgive him for getting me all worked up about seeing Russell Crowe in "A Good Year" (yawn – please – why didnt y'all just do it for your circle of family and friends and let the rest of us anticipate something bigger than that?)…but to call him overrated because of Blade Runner? Gladiator? American Gangster? Black Hawk Down? No, Mr. Shapiro. Those films are loved for variety of reasons, and not because Scott became A Name To Remember.
Ben Shapiro sure is pretty negative towards other people. I think I will write a hit piece about him this afternoon. I'll send you the link when I'm done, Ben!
Ah, Ben, making friends wherever you go. Seems you miscalculated a bit here. You moron.
Good lord, you couldn't be more wrong if you tried.
Hmm, I generally find the "overrated" tag…uhhh…overrated, but I will say that if Ben Shapiro qualifies as a "film critic", then he may well be the most overrated of those – ever.
Exceedingly poorly written piece of toilet paper, even if I might agree to some extent with a couple of the choices.
I'm only a year older than him and it's still obvious to me that he's full of shit.
Ben, have you thought about what you would do when your career as a blogger was over?
[...] commotion is about Ben Shapiro’s post today which claims to name the 10 most overrated Hollywood [...]
Alfred Hitchcock??? Have you ever watched film? The genius of Hitchcock is his craftsmanship — the way he frames shots, and edits scenes squeezes out every bit of tension available in the film.
Ridley Scott committed one unforgivable foul: Kingdom Of Heaven — a Muslim-appeasing piece of propaganda and revisionist steaming pile. Other than than, his previous chops can't be ignored: Blade Runner, Alien, and Black Hawk Down are as good as a lot of directors' three best flicks.
David Lean??? What are you thinking? I don't even know where to begin with that. Just the man's vision alone, his leadership abilities, his instinct make him a master.
Michael Mann continues to be one of my favorite directors of all time. There's a lot of style, yes — but he can get to the depth of his characters unlike most storytellers. Again … as a director, he knows how to use all of the tools of the trade. Maybe the scripts fail him, but that doesn't take away from his ability to set up a shot.
Not no time in this list do you look at one of the directors' contributions behind the camera. It seems like you have more problems with some of their films' screenplays.
I completely agree with the rest, although I've enjoyed Tarantino and Aranovsky in spots. As for Scorcese, I don't think he's ever equaled Mean Streets, and he's more interested in showing off his encyclopedic knowledge of films rather than tell a great story.
About Eraserhead: the scene with Henry staring towards the camera with eyes full or horror, against a background of eraser crumbs floating in the air…that has to be one of the most strikingly macabre images in the history of film. It's a perfect distillation of Dostoyevsky's Notes From Underground, caught in one brief, unforgettable moment.
Spot on. Add Oliver Stone.
I see Mr. Breitbart's tweeted his disapproval at the vitriol shown his young aspiring film critic, stating that Big Hollywood is no place for conformity. Well, I would certainly hope not.
In response, however, I would also hope that it isn't a place for vulgar displays of youthful ignorance and snide, petulant potshots at filmmakers whose work a contributor hasn't a clue as to how to critique.
Young Mr. Shapiro would have more credibility if he had chosen instead to post, say, "GOP Girls I'd Like to Bone."
I would have added John Ford to the list, but I am hardly of a mind to nitpick.
And I thought I was angry after reading the article.
I nominate Jim Jarmusch. Safe, college-boy crap.
Any list with spider man on it is a bad list.
*runs from the spidey fans*
This is the stupidest fucking thing I have ever read on this website — if not the stupidest fucking thing I have read at all in the last nine months. I may have actually lost a few points off my IQ for getting through this poorly informed, poorly thought out, arrogant turd of an essay.
What this post needs is a great editor to steer its director back to reality.
I got caught up in the Hitchcock being on the top of the list. Really, looking over the others….
Woody Allen? Big time EEEWW!
Scorsese… well I actually met him once and he was rather charming but I have to agree about his films. Waaay too dark and ugly for my tastes.
Ridley Scott? I hated Alien. I didn't think it was slow though, what a wonky comment! His other films were actually pretty darned stupid.
Tarantino's stuff… well I've only seen part of one at it was deprived. So clearly not my sort of movies there either.
Hitchcock though!!! Sheesh, he's probably my favorite director. I mean, Notorious, North by Northwest, Rear Window, Suspicion, The Trouble With Harry, Shadow of a Doubt….. I might as well list most of his films (except psycho). He did some of the best films I've ever seen.
You are an idiot. This list makes me want to punch a baby in the face. You are probably a closet homosexual who does a lot of cocaine.
Some Alfred Hitchcock movies may seem tedious NOW, but not when they were made. He was a master. This is so far off-base it is beyond my ability to express.
>implying he ever had credibility as a cultural critic
:3
Thomas Talionas – totally Agree on Stone and Lee…
Not being able to spell isn't exactly the sign of a genius either, huh?
People who get their self-worth from pretending to divine deeper concepts from shallow people are pretty much how I define moron, so I guess we'll have to agree to disagree.
I wonder who he actually likes, Stan
Ironic that Breitbart thinks hollywood is no place for conformity. Almost all his contributors conform to the stereotype of Conservatism.
Example: If it's not overtly Christian then it must be nihilism and therefore Liberal. Or if a character believes in his own ability it must be nihilism and therefore Liberal. Or if a movie opposes racism, it must be Liberal. etc.
Or maybe i'm just a Libertarian.
*Shakes fist angrily at Mago's back*
Yea Spidey hater – you better run!
Or perhaps we've just seen Shortcuts and realized the man believes random dialogue is a legitimate substitute for a plot.
I disagree about Scorcese and Hitchcock.
I liked Rear Window. Vertigo I can't remember what happened in it except that it seemed implausible so much as I question what I know what is actually in it. A chick faked her death to get revenge for some guy on some other guy….
right?
Quentin Tarintino was a guy who made that film that every early 20s guy thought was something because Zed said 'bring out the gimp' and the other guys said 'you gotta see this gimp thing.'
Even as a callow youth, I could never understand why Hitchcock's films like "Psycho" got raves. "Abbot and Costello Meet Frankenstein" scared me far more. "The Birds" was worth watching just to drool over Tipi Hendren but fearsome seagulls, for some reason, didn't quite get the adrenalin flowing.
My all-time favorite scare the livin' 5#1+ out of you film moment is Terrence Young's "Wait Until Dark" 'wounded villain comes out of nowhere scene.' The added bonus was being able to stare at Audrey Hepburn for an hour and a half.
Tarantino's twisted thugs are all overwrought; Lean at least had the foresight to cast Julie Christy in "Dr. Zhivago" but his love of the commies was almost too much to take, especially at the end.
Perhaps directors might be judged better if the credits explained how much the original script morphed into platforms for headline actors' talents in contract negotiations and how much each director agreed.
I would also like to see in the credits notices of what particular psychiatric pathologies afflict the directors and key actors so I can understand better why they think spilling disgusting, perverted stuff out into my consciousness should merit the appellation "entertainment."
So many films these days seem written and directed by disillusioned, smelly left bank cafe dwellers in grungy sweaters condemning Anglo-Saxon/Judeo-Christian culture as they suck Gauloises through stained teeth.
I often leave the theater wishing I had stayed home and watched "SOB" for the umpteenth time.
As I departed the theater after watching "The Graduate" for the first time, and anticipated my pending departure for boot camp, I thought I might have missed something for all the excited chatter among the college students around me. Having been raised by two parents whose standards for my behavior and academic results were quite high, I thought Hoffman's character was a miserable, spoiled, dishonest, betraying, self-absorbed little 5#1+ who deserved to get his butt kicked by the frat boys in the wedding party.
I would totally disagree. Aliens had better dialogue, better acting (which reflects on the directing), and a better job of making you care about the characters. Alien was far superior in terms of overall writing, but that's because it was based on one of the greatest Sci-fi books of all time. Even the choice in actors to play the characters was abysmal if you read the book first.
I haven't watched Alien in 15 years because it's just so mediocre in comparison.
+1 for knocking The Graduate.
I'm in the minority—and with you Dawn.
I think that Ben is noting that someone strikes lightning once, and then they are genius—it's not unlike politics. Reviewers who praised the one prasie worthy effort feel they must praise subsequent efforts, lest they be seen as questioning their own judgement.
Perhaps this piece would have been better if it had been titles "Most inconsistent directors" not overrated.
I think that's the problem with this list. It's from a 'kid.'
What he finds disagreeable with so many of these directors is the message of the films, and reacting with a simple visceral response. Ahhh, the silly emotionalism of youth…
Find nihilism objectionable? Shocking.
By design many of these films are meant to disturb or provoke thought. That doesn't mean that by necessity those thoughts and ideas will mesh with the viewers, but it that doesn't mean the movie is 'bad.' What typifies the truly overrated directors are those that attempt to present weighty issues without the requisite gravitas or thoughtfulness that the material requires. Hello Sam Mendes, Oliver Stone, and Jim Cameron.
And is it all shocking that someone so young has a problem with movies with long running times or that are hilariously described as 'boring'? Not every movie is supposed to have an action pace. (Hint: during this plodding boredom, reflection on what's happening on screen is supposed to occur). So step away from twitter, empty your bladder and open your mind.
Finally a sop to Ben Shapiro;
Granted most of the criticism sounds like denigration of youth, but I would ask in ten or twenty years to reflect upon this list and see if you agree with any of it.*
I for one, doubt you will.
*Okay maybe Pi. That was horrifically painful to watch.
Doug is a very good movie critic, and about as passionate about them as you'll find (also a big Hitchcock fan), so I understand the reaction. However, I'd disagree that Shapiro's column would lead you to believe he's an idiot (after all, Nolte once said that Frank Sinatra was the 20th century's Beethoven, which is so ludicrous I haven't been able to read his reviews without chuckling ever since).
Welcome to the fray.
"Inconsistent" I can agree with. Hitchcock was an inconsistent director, but that does NOT necessarily imply that he sucked.
Ditto – Lucas should be flayed, drawn, quartered, burnt, and forced to listen to audio tapes of "Listen to the Warm" for eternity for allowing otherwise masterpieces of FX to be polluted with gaggous dialogue, herky-jerky seques, unrealistic plots, and improbable behavior.
When writing a script, isn't it kind of natural for writers and editors to consider why, for just one of many examples, a Jedi Knight with supernatural powers can't just take Luke Skywalker's Mom aboard the spacecraft with him rather than leave her on a crap hole of a planet as a slave? James T. Kirk would never have sat still for such a craven outcome.
Stanley Kubrick.
Dude…Hitchcock? Really?
You forgot to mention the most overrated director in movie history…
Tim Burton.
I wonder sometimes if we aren't overrun with Manchurian Directors. Stone would fit that mold perfectly.
Maybe McCarthy was actually onto something.
And what's with that ugly lipstick Princess whatshername wears? How's that attractive? It looks like a giant cold sore.
Pi was made on $60,000–got to give the man credit at least. I don't know, I just like Aronofsky's take on "disturbing" and Pi was disturbing.
Ben, I hate to tell you, but you may have just become the first man to unite the Hollywood Left and Right in outrage. What were you thinking? Hitchcock? The Birds? Vertigo? Frenzy? Ridley Scott's Alien is SLOW? And I most definitely beg to differ with your assessment of North By Northwest. I dunno. Funny. Each of those directors listed has produced a number of classics, any of which most directors would have been happy producing just one.
What really amazes me if that you left Polanski of the list. Wasn't Tess a celluloid jerkoff session for Kinski?
I like Altman, too. Shhh…
The first 30 minutes of The Player is film gold.
It appears we disagree.
"Blade Runner is a bizarre and massively overpraised mess." … and then I stopped reading and turned to the comments to see if my reaction was justified.
David Lynch's movies are senseless – but he'll always be the creator of the greatest TV series of all time…Twin Peaks. The Twin Peaks movie was pretty amazing also.
Ridley Scott's Blade Runner was light years ahead of its time.
Tarantino deserves to be arrested and charged with grand theft cinema.
David Lean's Bridge on the River Kwai and Dr. Zhivago are timeless.
Mike Nichols? Check out Working Girl with Melanie Griffith and Harrison Ford. Excellent.
Aronovsky made the most powerful anti-drug movie ever made, Requiem For a Dream.
Shapiro grew up WAY after these movies came out and changed the world. He just doesn't have the same connection we had because we saw these movies in the theaters when they first came out.
I've seen Citizen Kane a few times. I don't get the connection the top movie directors of the world have for that film.
Poor Ben his taste and judgement have been shaped in part by the pop culture he grew up with,lots of animated feature films ,actually a virtual flood of them,some good ,some dubious. Also movies based on comic -book characters,super-heroes,a character based on an amusement park ride,and the sequels /prequels.Then there are the video games ,lots of CGI and fantasy.So movies based on real historical events like Lawrence of Arabia ,or Black Hawk Down must seem too slow for Ben and the action is not formatted like a video game,so everything about these directors films is out of reach for our critic. Ben is limited.
I'm sorry, but who died & made you a critic? You are a gifted writer when it comes to politics, but rather cynical when it comes to the best, the worst of anything in Hollywood. I agree with you on Lynch, Allen, Tarantino & Mann. But Hitchcock? Are you crazy? Did you ever see "Rope?" No, I didn't think so. And you left James Cameron off the list? He should probably be number 1 or at least 2. I would hate going to a movie with you!
Wow. It's hard to add to the comments so far, but that is one of the dumbest ,most misguided and just plain wrong articles I have ever read. Blade Runner is one of the most influential and classic films of the past few decades, as is Goodfellas. Raging Bull and Mean Streets you just dismiss as "gross". THis is not criticism , this is a conversation with a 14 year old. Of course I think most of the writing on here is crazy, so thanks for proving me right.
You look like you get beat up a lot at your high school. I'm so sorry for you, Ben Shap.
ha, nice one. But didn't you know, all slowly paced movies are terrible? That's filmmaking 101, duh.
Hitchcock never made a great movie? Blackhawk Down confused you? Alien was slow? Goodfellas isn't worth 10 minutes– do you even KNOW it's a true story? Bridge on the River Kwai isn't a great film?
You have a featured column with your picture and everything and got this published? Talk about over rated.
I think you've summed up most sentiments here. What is it with this guy? Let's get one of Antonin Scalia's clerks to inform us who the most overrated authors of all time are. Then we'll know.
Oh, and a new flash about "Lawerence of Arabia", Ben. Someone already took more than a half hour out of "Lawrence of Arabia" and that didn't turn out so well. http://in70mm.com/news/2008/lawrence/
Wow. these posts rarely get this many vehement responses. I'm thinking Mr. Shapiro is feeling a bit like a pariah now. Remember when he posted that article about hip hop not being music. He got slammed for that too. Why is he even posting on this site? He should have his posting privileges suspended–not because he doesn't have a right to an opinion, of course he does, but because he's so ill-informed.
Ben, you could save yourself, you know. Just tell everyone that your column was meant as a parody of the mindless Top 10 lists found all over the Internet, including this site. Otherwise, the angry villagers will light their torches and chase you back into Frankenstein's castle (and with good reason). So save yourself!
This list is why I hate lists. It's some person's opinion and I usually disagree with them. This time I think you are way off base, especially on Hitchcock. He understood storytelling morethan most film makers. And he knew how to make a tight film. Psycho was done for very little money and is one of the most influential films ever made.
I studied film a bit as a graduate student, and I think you're right that if you're born so long after a movie made its initial impact it's hard to appreciate its greatness, which is probably why (and I don't mean this in a critical way) you don't get Citizen Kane. I didn't exactly get it either when I first saw it, but my studies really put it into context. It's truly remarkable in terms of film making technique if you consider the environment Welles was directing in and what the state of film making was before it came out.
My thoughts exactly.
Does Big Hollywood have to occasionally fill its pages with stuff it gets for free and thus are unable to edit and fact check? Because I sure hope they didn't pay a dime for this piece. (The Orlando Bloom in G.I. Jane gaffe is proof it wasn't gone over even cursorily–c'mon, Nolte, were you waterproofing your house in advance of next week's L.A. storms?) I've had some issues with Shapiro's past pieces that show woeful ignorance of film, but this piece would be rejected by a high school newspaper. What's next at BH? "Why I love Twilight?"
The thing about George Lucas is that everyone (except fanboys) knows he's a bad director, so he can't be overrated. It has kind of become part of his "charm" I guess you would say. It's common knowledge that he has no director's touch with actors. People were talking about that back during the original Star Wars trilogy.
Apparently all of your good taste is in your mouth, Ben Shapiro. This list really SUCKS.
If I could give a list of my own, it would be (in no particular order)
Spike Lee
Robert Altman
Brian De Palma
Rob Reiner
John Sayles
Oliver Stone
Ron Howard
James Cameron
Not quite ten directors, but good enough.
Wow, I can't believe that someone had the guts to say what I long thought.
I don't agree with you completely. I'm a big Tarantino fan, who btw knows a bit about writing scripts, and I've liked most Hitchcock movies I've seen and who I don't believed every considered himself an auteur — making movies like The Birds and Psycho and then going to TV when it was not cool is not the sign of snob.
But thank you for calling out Ridley Scott, Martin Scorsese, who would be more than qualified for the list by the remake of Cape Fear, and Woody Allen, albeit What's Up Tiger Lilly was funny.
And thank you for describing The Graduate for what it was.
The author of the post is obviously intelligent, and I have been reading his columns, in various forums, for a few years now, when I come across them. However, in my humble opinion, he's overreached a little in this column. David Lean produced some of the greatest movies ever made – "Lawrence of Arabia" is pure genius. Hitchcock did have some less than stellar films, but he is still amazing. Lynch? If you look at his films simply, I think you get more out of them. Trying to "figure them out" is a waste of time. That said, I might agree on the "overrated" label, but only if someone really thinks he's the greatest ever.
But that could be said for all of these directors, I think. There are always those who go overboard in their praise for any director. Kubrick being the prime example.
That said: I'd have to say that, even for being universally reviled, Ewe Boll is STILL the most overrated.
the sinner,
Patrick
That's an absolutely perfect list, Michael.
My God, you left off Roman Polanski???????? The Pianist was so much nothing. The only ones on your list I agree with are Tarantino, Nichols and Scorsese.
Did this overly opinionated little boy stay up past curfew composing this?
David Lean? Say it ani't so?
Who's the most overrated contributor at Big Hollywood?
Good choice.
Alfred Hitchcock causes you to channel Mark Twain and Fenimore Cooper? Your review is either profound or overrated.
You are perfectly correct there Mr. Usher. We could probably make a list, well, I'm sure it's already been made – but a list of films made in the first twenty or thirty years of film production that really stand the test of a "good movie" today would be very short.
There's a wide range of opinions in the pieces written for BH. This wasn't one of the better essays, but it's just part of the mix. With nearly 300 comments (as of this moment), it's definitely provoked some discussion.
I agree that a series of articles dissecting the movies Mr. Shapiro doesn't like might be a bit more useful, though.
Forgive me if someone already posted this:
"Alfred Hitchcock Presents": was a 30 minute show with commercials.
The plots to Notorious and Rebecca have nothing in common. My guess is the poster has limited knowledge of Alfred Hitchcock and just wanted to shock his readers with his choice of #1.
Sorry Ben, you are becoming more and more annoying in your old age… haha
Orson Wells started directing around 19 years old, he was a genius. Even if you don't agree with that in the film sense, just listen to his old radio shows.
Wow … I wonder where this comment is going to end up in the final list of all comments on this post.
I really can't argue with any of Mr. Shapiro's choices, because the premise of his post is:
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.
To wade into the morass that this comment section has become, Citizen Kane is one of the most important films ever made for several reasons, yet I agree that Welles is completely deserving of his place on this list. Because other Welles films just sucked.
And the same can be applied to the other directors on Ben's list. And to every other director listed in the comments section. I'll bet if you put together all those names you would just end up with a "top 100" list of DGA members. That's it.
Because we all know that no one is perfect. And when that "perfect" status gets applied to a director, it's hard to convince the general populace of little else.
Anyone who likens Hitchcock to Stephen King has very limited knowledge of his work.
I would agree other than Paths of Glory.
Blade Runner is one of my favorite films, and I think one of the best films ever made.
Now there is a list!! Take notes Ben…
If Rob Reiner didn't direct Princess Bride I would put him on my list too.
I think the reason for that is when a director writes his own material he can't be objective. And nobody wants to point out plot holes to the great George Lucas.
"Rear Window makes one reach for the fast-forward button."
And your post makes one wonder if you are Attention Deficit.
I am curious: what has Ridley Scott done to prove himself to be a "dufus politically"?
In regards to Ben, if he wasn't an official contributor here, I would think he is trolling us.
Me too. Although, I think it was meant to break a BH record on user comments of the bewildered, frustrated, and flabbergasted variety. I'm sure it's close to succeeding…
I doubt it has much to do with age but rather taste and proper appreciation. I'm in my early-20s and Hitch is easily my favorite director, a preference which is shared by several of my friends. The film studies department at my university, for example, has a class specifically on Hitchcock that fills up within minutes every semester. It's my peers who've never sat down and watched a Hitchcock film who dump all over him. That leads me to believe that Mr. Shapiro has never actually seen a Hitchcock film and is just spouting an opinion made by a buddy. The fact he saw "Notorious" and "Rebecca" as the "same film" only solidifies this belief. That is one of the most inaccurate and off-base assessments I've EVER HEARD.
This column reminded me of a puppy that feeling it's been ignored long enough, will look right at you and piss on the floor. It then looks at you with a "Whatcha gonna do about THAT?' expression. At 9+ pages of comments, you're no doub giggling like a Japanese schoolgirl.
Your taste is in your mouth. Stop seeing movies.
You are a either simply trying to raise a ruckus or a fool, Sir;
That was supposed to be sarcasm.
So far this thread is epic. In a funny ha ha way.
No James Cameron, yet you put Tarantino on here? I cannot take this even remotely seriously.
Raging Bull is gross.
That's brilliant and insightful criticism there.
I might agree with some of your perspective above, but I would really like to know what your definition of "overrated" is and who you think is a standout director. Seriously, kid, when you start turning up your nose at the likes of David Lean, you totally delegitimize yourself and relegate your opinions to nothing better than the average blogger. This sounds like nothing more than an attempt to generate attention for yourself. You may have the pedigree of a prodigy, but it doesn't mean you can be an expert on everything.
I think you really are trying to piss [most everyone] off. I won't spend my time defending some choices and agreeing with overs. I would simply like to suggest that you write a companion piece in which you list you top 10 underrated directors. In fact I think it would also be interesting if you included your top 10 favorite films of all time (that way we know what types of unstated criteria you might be using).
So since it seems that anyone who knows nothing about film is allowed to write for BH I would like a job as well. Please let me know where to apply.
You're right about most, especially Tarantino and Scorsese, but you're way off on Aronofsky. I was glad to see that John Huston was not on your list, and shocked that John Hughes was not!
Uh, Pulp Fiction? Classic! Loved that film. There are Tarantino films that I didn't care much for, but to judge him on those alone is simply WRONG.
You want an overrated director? Cameron. He makes Lucas look like a freakin' genius.
Hey Ben, I hear Walmart is hiring.
You are over 18, right?
Who is this moron? Why is his uneducated insight allowed here?
This piece was poorly conceived, terribly written, but strangely – well directed.
Wow, you're a complete moron. You made a list of some of the best directors who've ever lived and written utter nonsense about how their artistic abilities are somehow overrated, contradicting yourself in the meantime by including directors like Quentin Tarantino whose films are EXCLUSIVELY their own material. If you don't understand why 90% of the time a director has more artistic integrity than a writer then you just don't understand the filmmaking process. Read the original Natural Born Killers script and compare it to Oliver Stone's piece of garbage by the same name. Sorry, you're just wrong about everything you wrote here. Your politics might make sense but you don't belong anywhere near a website devoted to film criticism.
Sorry, Ben, like most posters it seems that I disagree with you as well. Especially your overlong diatribe for 10 and 1. Everything I've seen of Ridley's I've enjoyed. Same for Hitchcock. Maybe April Fools has come earlier this year. Maybe it's just we disagree.
Look, kid, why don't you come out of your bubble and live a little more life before you start criticizing the accomplishments of people who are clearly your betters. What makes you so insufferable is that you rail against porn, yet you can drop Vivid's name like you are intimately acquainted with their work. On your secret hard drive , of course.
If these are your 10 Most Over Rated Directors. I'd hate to see your 10 Worst.
Well, at least Russ Meyer came off unscathed.
"Alien is slow."
Hey, luv ya Ben, but you should be shot.
HITCHCOCK!!!!!!! OVERRATED??????? What are you smoking? Nuff said.
I nominate Ben Shapiro as the most overrated movie critic.
For underrated directors I nominate Clint Eastwood and Ron Howard. The Unforgiven and Million Dollar Baby are masterpieces. Apollo 13 and Backdraft are both excellent.
Shapiro is too young to appreciate Hitchcock and the style of suspense that he pioneered. Hitchcock could make your heart pound, today's directors settle for making your flesh crawl.
Scorcese is a one-trick pony, he does gang violence and only gang violence. He's obsessed with the thugs he grew up with. However, that one trick he does pretty well.
Cameron and Welles are both pretentious and ultimately boring. Cameron has the world view of a tribal witch doctor pretending that magic is more profound than science. Welles was just a fraud.
Woody Allen isn't overrated. Sentient beings agree that Allen is a talentless neurotic jerk who thinks that it is valuable to expose his deformed soul to the public.
Scott is a hit and miss director. Some of his stuff is quite good (Bladerunner, Gladiator, Kingdom of Heaven). Other stuff like GI Jane was a waste of film. If you see Kingdom of Heaven only watch the director's cut. It's one of the few times that the director's cut is actually far better than the released version.
Wolfgang Peterson won me over with Troy, the most underrated film of the last decade. The depth of the characters, especially Helen and Hector, made this much more than the usual swords and sandals epic. Brad Pitt's Achilles was by far the best portrayal of the Greek hero that I've ever seen.
Who is this Shapiro idiot, and where did he study film? The guy is totally clueless.
My son (19) and my daughters (17 & 15) love a lot of Hitch's film, but Ben doesn't seem to have the taste that they have devoloped through watching great films.
There are three reasons why I wouldn't put Rob Reiner on this list:
Stand By Me
The Princess Bride
This Is Spinal Tap
I can't decide if this list is made in jest or in earnest.
If you really mean all that you said, you should think about never writing anything about movies ever again.
Agreed.
__That's just another version of auteur theory – you've simply transferred 'authorship' from the director to the writer.____The problem with applying any type of auteur theory to film is that it is a collaborative art form, which makes discerning a single 'author' silly. Even if you simply reduce it to a claim that the director is always the person who has the most influence on how a movie turns out, there are a great many movies where that simply isn't true. Even auteurists will recognise this when they need to explain why the 'signature' of the director they are talking about isn't discernable in a particular film, or they are simply trying to explain away the fact that their hero made a crappy film ('studio interference', etc.). If there are too many exceptions, than there isn't really a rule in the first place.
True but it does Big Hollywood no favors to put such opinions on their front page. And presumably pay for them.
I hope to God BH didn't pay for this…I wrote better stuff as a breathless freshman 20 years ago. Even given the fact that Sunday is a slow news day, there had to be better stuff in the slush pile than this.
Even so, a gaffe like that means the site needs a better editor/fact checker/intern.
Absolutely. I just watched Rear Window again on TCM, and it holds up beautifully. So does Notorious, which also recently aired on TCM. Of course Hitch had his duds, but North By Northwest, Shadow of a Doubt, Strangers on a Train, Rebecca, Psycho, and so many others are stone-cold masterpieces. (I do think Vertigo is overrated, though it's by no means a bad film.) Even late in his career Hitchcock was capable of turning out Fernzy, which is one helluva fun movie.
The whole post was just silly. I'm not even sure it was meant to be taken seriously.
Oh, and Black Hawk Down, though sometimes hard to follow, is a remarkable recreation of the chaos of battle.
Now, if you had put Tony Scott (Ridley's brother) on the list, I would agree …
Ben, Aren't you up a little late? Don't you have school tomorrow?
I have a feeling Ben knows more about what he hates than what he loves. Which is unfortunate for a movie site.
Um no, I disagree with many people on this list as many of them have made brilliant pieces of work. There are a number of other directors who deserve to be on this list. The suckfest that is Oliver Stone is one of them.
The battle in "We Were Soldiers" was pretty awesome.
And I actually sank into my seat–repeatedly–to keep my head down watching the D-Day scene in Saving Private Ryan.
I totally agree about Tarantino!!!
Somebody didn't get invited to the party tonight.
You lost any credibility you ever had.
You shouldn't post articles about stuff you know absolutely nothing about, with wrong facts in there too btw. Why is Ben talking about directors? All directors have overrated works, but please…a terrible article. Who made Ben a critic on directors?
I realize this has broken down into an argument over directors but Shapiro's most cogent observation is, "It is one of the great travesties of artistic justice that no one remembers the writers of great movies…."
A bad director is one that lets the actors "write" the script by letting them ad lib. Allen and Altman are loved by actors because of this. It's also why their movies suck. Who needs to see actors do bad improv?
Jim Carrey ruined Lemony Snicket with his foolish ad libs. "Wax on, wax off"? "Osh Kosh, m'gosh"? How could those silly lines be allowed into a film's final cut?
Hitchcock rightly considered actors meat puppets.
Anthony Hopkins is great because he reads his lines professionally well.
Shapiro is correct: the biggest problem with film today is bad writing.
"Then there’s Kingdom of Heaven, which is an homage to the “religion of peace” and a slap at Christianity through and through. "
Who told you that Ben? You obviously didn't see the movie.
What got slapped wasn't Christianity, it was the mindless religiosity of both Christians and Muslims. The war was fought because of fanatics on both sides which was symbolized by the fact that they attacked with the same battle cry of "God Wills It!" Saladin and the King of Jerusalem wanted to avoid a bloody conflict, it was the Knights Templar and the mullahs who wanted wars of extermination.
It is fair to say that the movie was anti religion but not fair to say that it attacked only Christianity. The theme of the film was that redemption cannot be obtained by prayers and supplications, it can only be attained by good and just deeds on earth.
Scott's biggest problem is that he sacrifices story and characterization to mood. He loves to create an atmosphere and sees characters and plot as subordinate elements. He's the opposite of Eastwood. Eastwood creates a mood to match the story, Scott creates a story to match the mood.
What business does philistine have commenting on the artistic circuit.Am i wrong in thinking that Mr. Shapiro is some failed lawyer and conservative pundit that has about as much artistic authority as an arthritc poodle.What next Rush Limbaughs biggest let downs in performance art in 2009. He strangely, for a man whos conservative values lead him to anti abortion and a general anti sex world view lends his only celebration of David Lynch's work to gratutious sex scenes. I guess sexual expression isnt bad when its your right hand,eh?His obvious sexual hang-ups aside, whats truly sad but not completely pathetic about Shapiro is his failed attempt to enter artistic of circle,trying to cultivate a career as being the Christgau of the movie world.
No,whats truly pathetic is that he'll never even gain the notoriety of lowest common denominators like Limbaugh.He truly is insignificant! His diatribe of (great)directors on this site should be seen as the attempt to gain employment with a significant publication.He does this by trying to feed of the anger of fans of said directors,in a way, suckling at the teeth of those he criticizes.Gutter press trys but it will always be gutter press.
What makes him so angry,though?Oh, could it be the very apathy with which he is thought of turned his gaze(vitriol) onto those who have gained(legitimately) the praise and adulation from others that he craves.In summarizing Mr. Shapiro,he clearly should stay off the critics circle and stay at home with that Ann Coulter picture which keeps him warm(in all the right organs)at night.
Not only was Cameron's "Titanic" no "A Night to Remember" it wasn't even up to "Titanic" with Babs, R.J., and Clifton Webb…
Mr. Shapiro, I appreciate your legal acumen but I think "Cobbler, stick to your last" applies here…
More like:
1. Oliver Stone
2. Tyler Perry
3. McG
4. M. Knight Shamalamadingdong
5. Tony (not Ridley) Scott
6. The guy who directed Avatard
7. George Lucas
8. Spike Lee
9. Tim Burton
10. John Waters
This is the most ridiculous list I've ever seen. Save yourself the embarassment and never review anything related to movies again. You have basically murdered any credibility you may have had as a movie or film critic.
What's next? A top ten list of most overrated painters? 1. Michelangelo 2. Dali 3. Picasso
That is basically what you have done.
BigHollywood needs to keep an eye on this guy. Does he mean this or is he just being provocative?
Writing today seems to be something to fill in the spaces between explosions.
But even great writing isn't enough. If you've seen Jose Ferrer's Cyrano de Bergerac and almost anyone else's you know that some writing requires a great actor to make it real. I saw Richard Chamberlain do Cyrano on the stage and, quite frankly, Cyrano seemed clownish, not heroic.
In the movie Troy, the dialogue is good but Priam's speech to Achilles could not be done by just any actor. Peter O'Toole read those lines with such power that you actually believed that those words could reach into Achilles' soul and bring out the best within him. If you doubt this, then try reading those lines yourself.
Occasionally a writer does get credit from the audience. The night that I saw The Sting the audience gave David S. Ward a standing ovation when his name appeared in the credits. On the other hand, I saw the film in Hollywood so that might not have been a very typical crowd. The Sting was a remarkable film, you can't cut a frame out of it without ruining the story. Absolutely everything is necessary for the plot.
On the whole though, I agree that writers don't get the credit that they deserve.
This guy's an immature snarkeler, just being perverse and squirting Mountain Dew out his nose. Overpraised as a child.
Is this a joke? Are you trying to punk someone? There are a few on your list with which I would agree, but Ridley Scott? He's one of the reasons I got into film work. Blade Runner is a masterpiece and is STILL copied today in films and commercials. Alien is still knocked off as well. Really, is this a joke?
Alien is better than Aliens.
picasso is the MOST overrated painter
I would prefer to hear trailer drivel "Authored by the same team that brought you…" than the spotty and meaningless "From the director who brought you…".
How did awards season get to shameless studio or ham actor lobbying but director glad standing is fine?
Thought provoking. Well done. I can think of several overrated producers. Care to tackle that sacred cow next?
How did this buffon get a job in journalism? Some clowns will write any nonsense just to get it published on the internet. Sir Ridley Scott is the finest director of his generation. Gladiator is the ultimate epic! I'm quite certain Scott's version of Robin Hood will set the new standard for that theme!
Everybody's saying that he lost them when he dissed Hitchcock. He lost me way back when he called Blade Runner a "mess".
For the most part I agree with him. Only two on the list I disagree with, and those are Lean and Hitchcock. The rest of them are pretty much wastes of time as far as I'm concerned. Okay, Ridley Scott is salvageable. The rest I have no use for.
Note to Ben – you're supposed to troll in comments, not in your actual post. You may get over 9000 comments, but you shredded whatever credibility you had left as a cultural critic with this, um, post. Having read most of your published work here at BH as well as having bought and read two of your books, I don't often agree with you, but I've never had cause to say the following in any comment section of any site about any writer – I happily break that streak today: You sir are an idiot.
This must be a brilliant rouse. How else could it be that
Brian De Palma
Spike Lee
Oliver Stone
M. Knight
George Lucas
were all left off the list?
<gasp> Hitchcock on the list and then at Number 1? I just looked at Ben's photo…what is he…like 12? Gee…Ben…have you ever seen Rope? And why isn't James Cameron on this list? Or Judd Apatow?
Ben Shapiro's favorite ,"underrated" director is Ed Wood. Wood is the director of that avant garde film,Plan Nine From Outer Space and also Glen or Glenda. Really cutting edge stuff,excellent use of a fog machine and it was the last performances of Bela Lugosi.
[...] which will take you to the invaluable Andrew Breitbart site, and to an essay by Ben Shapiro that I can only call the most puerile piece of neener-neener adolescent contrarianism I have ever [...]
Wondering, did anyone else notice in Pulp Fiction that whenever Vincent went to the bathroom, something bad happened??
Ah but the question here is "Is he overated" perhaps the author feels that Camerons reputation is as low as his abilities place him. Hmmm……………
Anything by woody allen is just crap. He is my worst favorite by far. Hitchcock on the other hand should of received more credit. His movies were always poorly written but ingenious in his cinema-photography. I always enjoy his reruns although some of his movies are truly junk, especially North by Northwest.
This is as embarrassing an article on directors as it gets. First, the author shows a complete lack of understanding of the medium of film. It's not simply a verbal medium, where the writing carries the story. Yes, writers are important (as Welles acknowledged, for example) but directors take the words in a script and build a vision, a real honest to goodness motion picture out of it. What's on screen, and on the soundtrack (and by this I mean beyond the dialogue) is mostly a product of the director's vision, where the director has control, it should be added. If you're going to criticize the autuer theory, you might want to actually know a little about where and how it's actually worked and what the creators of the theory meant by a director as an "author" of a film. Film is a collaborative medium where the director, optimally, makes the key decisions about the work. How is a writer, removed from the shooting, with no input into the actual filming and editing, the mise en scene or montage, etc. supposed to be the primary creator of the work?
con.
I can actually agree with a few of the suggestions on the list, as far as overrated go, but only because their work as directors and their cinematic product is truly overrated. Nichols and Scott fit this category. Tarantino is a very talented pulp author, but that's more or less how he's presents himself and how critics regard him (hoping his promising talent is applied to more serious work.) Mann is hardly overrated. Most critics recognize that he is a director who focuses on style, but he's still made some highly regarded films, Manhunter for example.
con.
Just one question: Why did you include a picture of every director, except Woody Allen???
But there's plenty more where that came from. Vertigo, Rear Window, Strangers on a Train (despite Farley Granger's milquetoast lead), Shadow of a Doubt, Rebecca, and North by Northwest are all brilliantly directed, fully cinematic, fantastic movies that only an addled mind could dismiss with as much vapidity and as little reasoning as Shapiro does. The stories in these films are told with the camera and all of the audio, not just with the dialogue and screenwriter's setting.
I should also add that Hitchcock pointed out to Truffaut that "plausibility" in a story is overrated as far as he is concerned. (Has Shapiro never read Kafka or Swift?)
con.
I would be curious to know what John Nolte has to say about this list. I generally don't see a movie because of who directed, except for Peter Weir but he makes so few. I would agree with the list, especially Lynch. A good movie should make you think, not give you a hangover. As for Hitchcock being #1, you must be kidding! There are directors today who STILL try to emulate him, and the films he made, however poorly. I think of one movie in particular that was just plain STUPID and was called Hitchcockian when it came out – What Lies Beneath (had to look up the director on IMDB but it was Zemeckis). Then there are all the remakes which I will never see, ESPECIALLY the Psycho. Gus Van Sant was a colossal IDIOT for ever doing what he did. It would be akin to remaking The Wizard of Oz (although the no talent hacks in Hollywood are probably already working on it).
Shapiro's complaint about Lean is a familiar one to anyone who's perused the Leonard Maltin school of movie criticism. Anything that doesn't cut to the chase is "overlong." I suppose War and Peace, and Crime and Punishment are too long, then. Lean's films (like Kurosawa's) don't feel long. They catch you up in the characterizations, for one. Moreso, they allow the viewer the time to fully experience the setting and situation. They have the feel of great novels. Shorter, and the life would drain from them, leaving you with the shell of the stories.
I'm not a Scorcese fan myself, but can recognize that while he's had a few stumbles, he is a talented filmmaker who uses the medium to it's full extent.
con.
One other question that should be asked of Shapiro is why aren't some truly deserving directors on the list. James Cameron comes to mind. His visually impressive but shallow films are the very definition of overrated.
In the end, this is just one of those articles that certain pretentious young authors write from time to time, slap fighting the reputations of the accomplished and (usually) deservedly renowned in order to get some decidedly bad attention. He embarrasses himself here profoundly, offering little serious criticism, and demonstrating that he is not a serious student or lover of films.
con.
Everyone is entitled to his or her own opinion, and mine is that Ben's post is incredibly misguided. Who do you love, Chris Weitz? None of the directors on your list need me to defend them or their work, but to say these are the ten most overrated directors of all time gives a free pass to quite a few folks.
Let's see…off the top of my head, how about Nancy Meyers? Kevin Costner (Dances with Wolves deserves an Oscar? The Postman?), Spike Lee (I have no issue with him per se, but not more overrated than Hitchcock??), Cameron Crowe? Amy Heckerling? Warren Beatty? How about Michael Moore for goodness sake?!
I think you are taking all of the directors you listed out of their historical and artistic context. Film today exists to some degree because of their work and influence (Although I love BLADE RUNNER and GLADIATOR, I wouldn't put Ridley Scott in the same league as the rest). Or, maybe you just don't get their stuff.
Anyway, nobody has the right to tell you you're wrong when it comes to opinions, but my two cents is the list smacks of rabble-rousing and self-aggrandizing.
Suffice to say, this list fails to persuade on its own either the premise that writers are somehow the key authors of films or that the author is well placed to make the hasty and sweeping judgements that he makes.
Problem with this list isw that the question is not "Who are the worst directors". It is who are the most over rated Directors. I don't really think all the Directors on your list would be considered to be good directors by the public at large. I find no one that likes Oliver Stones recreation of History movies. Even liberals are slightly embarrased by JFK. Thus a lausy director is not overarrated if his rating is "Lousy".
I would definitely put Woody Allen in the list. His movies are bizarre and quite frankly I feel the only people that "get" them are on drugs while they watch it. I don't know that I agree with the rest of Shapiros list but I will realize that one can be a good director and still be overrated.
Lynch has certainly been up and down. However, that's well known by most critics and moviegoers. Shapiro's premise is overrated, and adding Lynch to the list is a criticism of his best films, not the weaker ones. Quite frankly, as disturbing as Blue Velvet is, it's also a brilliantly conceived and executed film on its own terms. Wild at Heart and Mulholland Drive go askew but The Straight Story ("Walt Disney Pictures presents A David Lynch Film" – priceless) is an outstanding film, as is The Elephant Man. Shapiro writes as though Lynch's entire output consisted of variations on Twin Peaks.
I think Ben's piece was the tantrum.
If you think about it. It is really hard for Ed Wood not to be under rated. I amean after all if he was able to check the camera to make sure the lens cap was off he would be better than what I have heard some describe his directing ability.
The key problem with the "overrating" directors meme is that often directors aren't given full control of the film. If anything, Ben's piece completely overrates writers (the comparison he offers is telling – Goodrich and Hackett's pieces were decent enough works. Capra? Mr. Smith, Arsenic and Old Lace, Mr. Deeds, etc. etc. I think Capra wins hands down). The other problem is that there are some truly overrated directors who are as good as they're made out to be. However, one of the last people we can count on to suss the situation out is a guy who puts one of the greatest directors (and full disclosure – my favorite) at the top of his list.
Yes, Eli. Some of us DO take movies that seriously.
Now, does this mean we've deluded ourselves into thinking that filmmaking occupies the same moral plane as, say, curing cancer, or feeding the hungry? Of course not.
But some of us, yes, are deeply passionate about film.
I should add that in the case of Scott or Mann, who remembers the writing in many of their best films? I'm struggling to think of it. Some directors are overrated because their work is overpraised, period.
Wow! if you think THEM not so hot, who the heck DO you think is terrific. I would be interested in seeing your TOP ten BEST directors.
The real sign of the times is the lack of patience viewers have. The opening of Alien is designed not only to give the viewer a sense of the nature of space travel, but to present the mundaneness of it all. This serves to deglamorize the situation and create a real contrast that heightens the sense of terror that will come.
2001 is an experience. A Beethoven adagio is slow, too, but who cares. Just sit back and enjoy it. That's the problem with moviegoing these days. Everyone wants the "rush" and ignores the "wash."
Can't sit through Rear Window, Psycho, Notorious, or Vertigo? I find it difficult to switch the channel when they're on. My 14 year old gets Rear Window (and Hitchcock – she loved the parts of Psycho we let her sit through.)
(Bangs head against wall) I'm flabbergasted. I guess Hollywood of today has poisoned the well. How long before people start saying Casablanca is dull?
[...] this colossally stupid/supra-misguided /depressingly silly new article, The 10 Most Overrated Directors of All Time by Ben Shapiro, calls all of that into question. It’s not enough for Shapiro to piss on the [...]
The movie audience is alienated, stagnated, bored, impotent, cynical, and angry. It has no universal values, and nothing spiritual in it's life, and movies offer no mitigation.
The audience believes more in UFO's and ghosts than it does in Spirituality or the inner core of itself.
This inner core of people is a part of creation, whatever actually powers the universe, and people's little lives. The audience senses this part of itself, but can't find it. Nevertheless, the audience instinctively desires to express it's own creative potentialities, its inborn courage, it's humanity, and to connect with the unseen forces which shape its Life. In the past, movies helped or aimed people along these lines.
The audience's desire is instinctively strong for instruction in a method that will enable them to sense or experience that indefinable power or principle that informs the universe and enables their lives. They are aware that they crave a vocabulary of actions, not words from some unreality. They don't want sterile symbols or blind ritual, but it stops there, because they don't know what to do next. Movies formerly attempted to provide guidance through this wilderness.
But no longer.
Today's audience can only spectate the hero on the screen, rather than engage in self-actualizing acts by emulation. They can't find the way, the courage, or even an inner reflection of that energy of creation, and so they are not inspired to let loose on a personal quest. This debilitates them.
Today's mostly specious screenplays substitute exhibitionism for import, dishonesty for integrity, and preaching for fun. Movies become more spectacle than symbolic, more annoying than inspiring. American acting is so full of silly, stock mannerisms and slogans that is is completely inauthentic, without any spiritual resonance, no truly universal cues to prompt the unconscious in beneficial directions.
PART TWO CONTINUED BELOW:
PART TWO, CONTD. FROM ABOVE:
How many times can we listen to a vacuous, "Hey. Are you OK?" How many times can we watch an actor roll a cold glass across his (apparently) feverish brow? How many more times can we watch an actor fill their own dead air with "The Sniffing Snort Of Snot," that somehow happens, or watch them scratch, or do bizarre finger/hand "acting," hold the gun sideways, or with just two fingers, while the rest of the hand "acts."
If I see one more actor pretend to be chewing food, instead of just biting the fucking sandwich, I may myself vomit.
Scenes become more and more just plain stupid or vulgar. Who wants to watch two people trying to eat each other's lips off? It's wacky. Who cares? Get a room.
Without the brilliance of a sincere, positive, and grand, iconic mythology, culture perverts itself and collapses.
Movies offer possibilities: a clear-cut morality with spiritual values, via the actions of the hero; a vocabulary of action, which the audience can grasp, and lessons they can take with them, steps onto the path toward self-realization of their own relationship to the universe and the power that informs it. This is what consciousness intuitively craves.
Movies can be modern prophecy. This, as opposed to offering a mere spectation of sterile ritual or petrified symbols.
We consciously or unconsciously seek a way of reconciling being alive in time and space. However, in this era, there is no black and white morality myth to guide us, as in past epochs, only a gray blanket smothering the way. Science replaces religion for some.
In the 1950's, we saw what we feared: Earth VS The Flying Saucers.
Next, George Lucas showed us what we thought probably was: Star Wars, and Stephen Spielberg, what we hoped for: E.T.
Then, Mel Gibson showed us his hero's way: The Passion.
These movies were smash hits because the audience sensed the mythic universality of their messages.
The next step is to show a way of action, a path relative to our complex era. This is what Star Wars came close to doing, why people still talk about The Force, and The Dark Side.
These are quasi-religious effects, pondering the nature of the universe, the eternal, where does the energy of space and eternity originate? What was There before here daddy?
Where is our Guide through this sea of darkness and Unknown? Where is our blueprint, our priest, our Way into the experience itself, not the talking shadow of it.
Words are sterile symbols of what is, but cannot express it. Poetry traverses the gap. The artist speaking with immediacy, or painting on a cave wall beneath the earth, or in light on the silver screen cuts past passive words, to action.
Movie making can tap the brain-wired pathways of myth, dreams, and fairy tales buried deep in the whale-black contours of the unconscious. It is here where we reconcile the prods and demands of flesh, where we are maybe when we are asleep, or dead, or not born yet.
Art, poetry, picture-making–they are the tools of the Shaman. He uses them to experience his eternity, and to pass on to his people, pitching them out physically into the experience itself.
The Shaman is a way of action. His job is to give people the experience itself, not to just talk about it. This is the destiny of the movie-maker.
Thhis is the destiny of the writer—telling the ancient tale…
…again.
Always.
Shaman…
haha… You did not make friends with this one. However, I totally agree on #2!! He is sooooo overrated! I can see your point on Hitchcock… but I still like him.
I love "You, sir,…." posts!
You sir are an idiot. Please stop writing articles.
Everyone is allowed to have a few stupid opinions, but this kid had too many stupid opinions. Why bother?
You make a list of the most overrated directors of all time, and you leave off George Lucas and James Cameron, but put Alfred Hitchcock as number one? Alfred Hitchcock?! Seriously?
Shapiro loses what little credibility he had at the beginning of this list with his inclusion of Hitchcock, one of the greatest directors ever. Anyone who watches a modern "thriller" and then a Hitchcock movie immediately sees the talent of the man.
One can have honest arguments about the merits of people like Scorcese and Allen whose later work pales in comparison to their inspired early efforts, but to discount them entirely is a sign of a non-serious person.
He also clearly has issues with, shall we say, adult themes. If you want clean likable characters and happy endings (whoops, there's an adult theme), stick to Disney. Leave film commentary for the grown-ups.
Sarah Nicole- You make a good point. Lucas is not quite a one-hit wonder but he's awfully close. I recently saw a 70 minute review of the Phantom Menace, and the critic made a very good point. Lucas, like Roddenberry works(ed) best when he has to fight the system. When they get everything they want, we get crap out of them.
Calm down. Overrated is not the same as BAD. They are interesting filmmakers (or they wouldn´t be overrated to begin with) but they arguably deserve to be taken down a notch. Especially given the god-like veneration in which they are held. And I own movies by seven of these ten.
I especially agree on Mann, Nichols, Allen and Lynch. I would include Aronovsky but he hasn´t made that many movies. Scott is mostly concerned with casting and surface gloss – sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn´t. Is there still anyone out there who gets truly excited at the prospect of a new Scorsese movie? Not me, not for the last 15 years.
Who can quibble with the description of Tarantino? Yes, he is entertaining and has even created a genre of his own. But making movies about movies which were derivative of other movies can only take you so far. Even the Nazis in Inglorious Basterds talk incessantly about movies. Come on.
On the other hand, be careful what you wish for. If guys like Lynch, Tarantino or Scott started to make heavy message movies, we wouldn´t like it one bit.
Either is far, far better than Avatar!
If this is the most overrated list, I can only imagine who he has on the most underrated list. Good grief. Hitchcock?
You my friend are showing your age. In the world you grew up on of TV and infomercials, you wouldn't know real art. Tell us oh wise master who is your favorite? Why the guy on the Soup!
I would like to start an official petition to get Ben Shapiro off of this site. He needs to stick to townhall.com. He has yet to write a piece here that was anything but ridiculous. From his lame "Rap is Crap" posts to this, he has shown that he has the cultural taste of an 80 year old man with a hearing problem. It seems like he hates stuff just to say he hates it and uses that as an excuse to post nonsense little quips like this; "Watching it made me want to rip out my own retinas, then replace them through surgery, then rip them out again." Congratulations, you have all the wit and intelligence of a high schooler when talking about film. I would ask for a list of your top 10 directors but I doubt I would find anything redeeming there.
Please, for the sake of all of us, please go away.
I could not support that. I may disagree with him, but as a conservative libertarian, I want to hear his voice. If you disagree with him, don't read his articles. Having someone banned or kicked off a site because you disagree with him is neither a conservative nor a liberal ideal. He hasn't said anything that disagrees with conservative or libertarian ideas. He merely disagrees with you on a matter of taste.
Yep, one post is definitely not going to be enough.
I knew this post was going to be bad when he cited Ridley Scott's most overrated film as his only entertaining one. Alien is slow? Yikes. There is no such thing as a bad opinion. An opinion is what it is, and we are free to disagree. There is, however, such a thing as bad taste, and Ben Shapiro has proven that with this post.
Like you said, an opinion is what it is. To me Alien was an okay movie. It wasn't great, and it wasn't bad. The story telling was suspenseful, and the visuals very good. But I can't say it would be very high on my personal lists of great movies. It's just not my cup of tea for sci-fi. I found the story and the acting behind Outland to be far superior to both 2001 and Alien. But like I said, that's persona tastes. I tend to prefer either space opera or hard sci-fi. (funny those are pretty much on the opposite ends of the spectrum) But then again, I also admit to having atrocious taste in movies.
I would hate to see anyone be removed from a site because they didn't like the same kind of movies as I did. That would eliminate most of the people on this site.
Allen's cinematic masturbation wears thin. Annie Hall and Manhattan are neither about annie hall or manhattan, but a dyspeptic ant-man in a hive too vast to grasp–they're interesting only to a point and I'm glad they were cheap to produce (at least, it is my understanding that they were cheap), what Allen never understood is that he isn't an everyman, who identifies with Allen? I find it very difficult.
I rate Hitch much higher than does Mr. Shapiro, he was a total bastard of suspense, you're right, but the development of his premises cliff-drops in about half of the outings, making me angry.
I want to sock Scott in the face, remove the sliver of brain responsible for his interesting visual style so I can bio-graft it into the grey matter of a less pretensious director, then leave his corpse for the beasts.
He clearly just picked 10 directors he thought would spark the most discussion, although this thread is less discussion and more ridicule, which is fine with me. Shapiro's problem is that he just doesn't have good taste and can't seem to understand why people like stuff that he hates. It seems to me from his posts on this site that he hates anything enjoyable, which is just more fuel for my theory that he is mentally an 80 year old man.
I agree. What is the obsession with having likable characters in every film. I don't need to like a character to enjoy a film. Sometimes I like just sitting back and watching unlikable people get what they deserve. It is why I'm such a big Coen Bros. fan.
Again, its not about opinion. But if this is supposed to be a cultural site we need to have people who actually have an opinion about culture other than "It all sucks" which is what every Shapiro post boils down to.
You seem to have contradicted yourself. To me Shapiro laid out his opinion and said why he had that opinion. You and I may disagree with his reasoning, but IS valid as it is an opinion on culture. It's my opinion that Trauma, and Full Moon Productions have put out some of the most entertaining and best films to come down the pike since the original The Day The Earth Stood Still. I like them because they aren't so much as trying to tell a deep philosophical story, but because they are telling a fun tale and aren't trying to be pretentious while doing it. I much preferred Transmorphers over Transformers- for slightly different reasons. (They portrayed a gay/lesbian romance as simply "there" and didn't sink to the gratuitous girl on girl scene. It simply built tension between one character's former boyfriend/lover and her present wife)
See I just gave you an opinion and backed it up with my reasons. You may, and probably DO disagree with it, but that's cool.
Reading is an active engagement, it's not passive. You MUST make an active effort to read as opposed to hear or see. If you don't like Shapiro's point of view, then don't read him. Don't invest your energy into reading him. But don't try to remove a source that other people may find enjoyable just because you disagree with him. I disagree with Alan Colmes, so I choose not to read him. I don't try and get Fox to kick him out of his occasional Fox Contributor role.
WEll I didn't contradict myself and I think this site should have standards. And whatever those standards are they should boil down to "You need to know more about movies than Shapiro."
Agreed. #2 had me and my sister in tears from laughter. So true. And there are some Hitchcock movies I struggled through simply to get to the end… but I still like him, too.
Alien wasn't based on a book.
Alien, without S, is Ridley Scott's and it's a masterpiece.
AlienS, with Si, was Cameron's and it's notthat bad either.
Partly agree with #9, #7 and #6. Scott has gone downhill from thelma and Louise on, but Blade Runner and Alien are pure genius…. and Lawrence of Arabia? Hitchcock?… sheesh… all in all, I agree with teh majority, either it was meant to be an official trolling post, or Shapiro (mostly) doesn' tknow what he's talking about.
Is there really such a thing as an overrated producer? If anything, the idea that a producer can have a strong positive impact on the outcome of a movie tends to be ignored in our auteurist film world. When a movie is great, it's all the director. When a movie is bad, a clueless producer ruined it.
Or are you talking about the pre-1960s film world, where producers were kings?
Anybody who claims to support the BNP has no right to call anybody else a buffoon (nor, for that matter, does anybody who can't spell buffoon).
Without a shadow of a doubt the Absolutely Worst Director of All Time award for lifetime achievement has to go to Federico Fellini.
However, like a toddler in the deep end of the pool, Shapiro shows just how out of his depth he is when he adds Scorcese, Lean, and especially Hitchcock to the list. Hitchcock's never made a great film? Absolute ignorance. Psycho is brilliant *cinema.* The psychoanalysis is fairly tame as far as some real life cases go – simplified is more like it. Of course, if Shapiro recognized that Psycho is a black comedy, he might have at least tried to go along with it. As an aside, my favorite shot in the film is the penultimate one. Look for "Mother's" face in Anthony Perkins smile. Also, how can Shapiro brazenly ignore the brilliant editing in the film (set up completely by the direction it must be added), which influenced a generation of directors including much of the MTV music video pap I'm sure he was weaned on? Unfathomable.
con.
That's the most fucking retarded list I've ever seen.
You are a buffoon, good sir.
Love how you've made it look like Orlando Bloom was in GI Jane (maybe he'd have made a better GI Jane, who knows)" GI Jane is hysterically terrible. Plus, it’s got Orlando Bloom"
properly made me chuckle..
Aside from that thought provoking list – nice one
Ooo, notice me, I'm all controversial and everything!
Wow this list is stupid. If you're offended by every movie, maybe you should just watch Kirk Cameron movies. I can't even tell if you've actually seen any of the movies you're trying to shit-can.
The nonsense ramblings of a talentless hack. Time to grow up, nipper.
Troll
So you've just made a list of the most famous directors in the world that don't make Summer blockbusters and bitched about them? Well done, you sound like an 18 year old.
Not particularly surprising that this comes from a guy who's made his living pissing people off since age 17.
I'm shocked Michael Moore isn't on this list, Benny.
NO!!!! *tear*
It looks like the guy who wrote this hates all life… or at least his.
Ben Shapiro, what a twit!
This dude is the definition of an internet troll, someone who makes idiotic remarks with the sole intention of pissing everyone off and getting attention, while it's negative attention, it's certainly better than their usual state of anonymity. What's sad is that it actually works, look at the enormous amount of comments..
Agree. I especially like your comments about NBNW. I never tire of watching it.
OMFG !! Were you drunk when you wrote this article ?
Or is it just to create a polemic ?
Don't get baited by the ignorant troll
Ok, I'll admit that Hitchcock doesn't belong on this list and adding him, especially at #1 has tarnished Ben's point. I've seen almost all of Hitchcocks' movies and appreciate them, BUT I was just saying there are few , that if on, I would sit down and rewatch. That's different than saying or agreeing that Hitchcock is overrated. There is and was, no equal in suspense and humorous suspense at that.
I guess this Shapiro must be a James Cameron fan?
Why don't you just go wack off to "Avatar' again, junior….
Ben Shapiro – He's just a guy who has nothing to say, but said it anyway.
Agreed Rear Window is one of my favorite films of all time and Hitchcock is a brilliant director. The Trouble With Harry is still hilarious! I'm 28, only 4 years older than the author of this post, so it's not that the films haven't aged well, although I agree some haven't, it's simply the fact that this guys a complete moron with no sense of what makes a good director.
I'd like to see his list of his Top Ten Favorite Directors, he'd probably have Uwe Boll and Paul W.S. Anderson duking it out for 1st place.
Hey, Ben! You can always re-apply for film school next year. Don't let the rejection make you bitter. And maybe one day someone will read your spec script. It could happen.
Just not because of this fatuous little diatribe.
You have got to be kidding me!!
This entire piece just sounds like a whining teen.
I cringe at the though of what you class as a good film if you think Scorsese 's work is boring! OR many of the directors mentioned. As mentioned in the comments any director or artist as a matter of fact can be torn apart, yet to dismiss their wonderful canon of work.
The only thing I could possibly agree on is that writers don't get enough credit.
I'm sorry, who are you?? The vast majority of Film critics in academia (i.e people who know what they are talking about) wholly disagree with you. Perhaps you should stick with The Muppets and leave the decent films to people who can appreciate them
That is not the point. Did you read the post? He wasn't criticizing the fact that the directors were getting the credit, he was criticizing the directors and their films. Feel free to agree with Shapiro all you want but you are the one missing the point.
would love to know which directors, or films for that matter, which you would rate in your top 10!
Hitchcock holds up because he knows how to tell a story, and his grasp of camerawork and cinematography was second to none. I am shocked that anyone could think Hitchcock is the number one most overrated director. Well, anyone with any taste…hmmm, maybe I'm not shocked anymore. Shapiro has been posting here for a while and every single one of his posts boils down to "I hate this because blah blah blah" or "This is overrated because whatever." He is seriously useless, time to dump him from this site.
You're an idiot. You do not know what you're talking about, your arguments are weak, ill-informed and inaccurate and how you managed to get to a position where anyone will publish such ridiculously fatuous content on your behalf is entirely beyond me.
~I assume that you are american? Please use this link for reference to the use of 'Whom'. It also may be helpful to you to go further and look up the use of 'One' as well.
Inappropriate useage indicates not only your lack of academic achievement but also your pomposity
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/whom
You had me at Quentin Tarantino. You lost me with…well, everyone else….
Yeah directors are often overrated. And you probably feel like you've got an eclectic list. But the fact that nearly all of these movies came out before you were old enough to watch them makes me think they just couldn't hold up to your ADD.
"I almost make it a point to avoid what the critics like, because that's code for what will put me to sleep the fastest."
Contrarianism will almost always cause people to miss out on some pretty great stuff. Lean is all imagery? Obviously, this person has never seen Bridge on the River Kwai.
Deserve to be taken down a notch? By whom? By what criteria? And to what end? To validate your own opinion?
And why are you employed by a film magazine again? Sacked…
Everything the ten guys have ever directed alltogether is less important than five minutes of "The Discrret Charm of the Bourgeoisie" by Luis Bunuel…
I know the feeling. John Ford?
Perhaps Andrew could devote some of this site to audio-visual literacy and cinematic history and theory? The current Hollywood product, along with the Internet, seems to have seriously damaged some viewers' patience and sensibility. One of the most common lines in the comments from supporters of the article is along the lines of "I couldn't sit through this," implying in most cases boredom (notwithstanding the references to Lynch's weirdness. The one positive is that this view is a small minority of the responses.
Hitchcock? Are you actually kidding me?
Vertigo – No, their was a real death and the "chick" was part of a scheme to make the death look like a suicide. Except her emotions and the emotions of the poor sap of a detective (brilliantly played by America's best screen actor Jimmy Stewart – and yes, Humphrey Bogart is a close second) get in the way and lead to an obsessive, twisted ending that is amazingly intense.
That's the standard point on Kane – it was revolutionary, or more accurately combined a number of new techniques together in a revolutionary way. However, it's also simply a damn good film, combining mystery, with politics, journalism, scandal, and a bit of humor in the right places. It's narrative strategies are still a bit much for some audiences, even today.
"Look at me, Mom! I pissed off every loser on the internets!"
If this is what you wanted you really should have made Kubrick #1.
Idiot.
This is the dumbest post ever on Big Hollywood. Seriously, it is an embarrassment. Do you have any idea what you are talking about?
And I am not trying to be a jerk, but Breitbart: you should take this guy's set of blog-keys away from him. His posts are almost always some kind of stupid. Admittedly, this is one of the worst, but this guy is an embarrassment to what is otherwise a very witty and eclectic site.
Yes, a naked Kate Winslet… what were we talking about?
Then who is? woody wrote and directed at the least ten GREAT films.
anniehall
stardust memories
hannah and her sisters
manhattan
september
zelig
crimes and misdemeanors
everyone says i love you
match point
purple rose of cairo
'If you see Kingdom of Heaven only watch the director's cut. It's one of the few times that the director's cut is actually far better than the released version"
This.
And, somewhat sadly, the director's cut was actually a more accurate representation of the events of that time period (based on history books and translated primary source docs) than any documentary I could find on the subject when I was doing my history capstone for undergrad.
you're a moron.
I enjoyed it, as I enjoy all snark, but this post can easily be used by any liberal to show why conservatives are uneducated morons. Yes, good cases can be made that Ridley Scott, Darren Arronofsky and Michael Mann are overrated. But the rest of your list is nonsense. If you don't think Hitchcock, Lynch, Allen, Scorsese and Tarantino are some of the best practitioners of film art… then you simply don't know what you're talking about.
"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."
Most of the people I know, including myself, were able to keep track of most of the major players in BHD easily enough. And that was before we read the book (well, all but one of us). The exceptions are the random other guys in the unit. They suffer from a case of spear carrier, sometimes Red Shirt strain.
Eyes and ears, dude…Eyes and ears.
I don't care for you or what you think. Your an idiot.
Here's my 10 overrated list :
Wim Wenders
Mel Gibson
Peter Greenaway
Francis Ford Coppola
Steven Speilberg
John Sayles
Arthur Penn
Henry Jaglom
Todd Solondz
Michael Mann
It's a wind-up isn't it?
Nice one Shapiro. May I compliment you on how a top 10-style feature would look if it was written by a complete and utter moron who wouldn't know what a good film was if it came up behind him and anally raped him. Very clever.
Then again, you haven't included Welles in your iconoclastic dismantling of the canon. So perhaps you really are a moron, after all.
mmm… I'm thinking this article was written by a talkbacker from AICN
Also Hitchcock generally had nothing to do with the TV show, he only directed a couple of them.
This list is spot on, for exactly the right reasons. David Lean made great movies, but when was the last time you watched one. They are toooo long. Alfred Hitchcock is way over rated. His films are UNWATCHABLE! Lynch, Tarantino, Scott all make lousy movies. Peter Weir is a much better director.
Scorcese's films are unpleasant. I would have added the Coen Brothers to this list. There is simply no point in watching one of their films.
Well, those of us familiar with Mr. Shapiro's record know for certain that it's not worth taking him seriously at all. Ever.
Ah to be young. All the directors on this list have one thing in common. They made some great films and also some less great films. That's pretty much the nature of creative work. You do everything the best you can and sometime is just doesn't work. You get a little success and think you've arrived at a magic formula just to realize that it can't be repeated.
As you get older, you too will learn this personally, Mr. Shapiro. Today, this kind of post generates a flurry of responses. Tomorrow, a similar one may go completely unnoticed. That's the way it works. You think you're in control of the response the audience gives you, by you aren't. In fact, you never were.
John Ford needs to be on this list. He was a fantastic director.
Or anything else by Bunuel, for that matter. Bunuel, along with Powell and Pressburger, is one of the most consistently underrated directors since the inception of moving film.
Political theory isn't his strong point either.
I'm not sure what he should stick to, other than something that doesn't require people to suffer his misguided nonsense.
I have NEVER seen Mark Twain's cheerful ripping up of JF Cooper noted! Excellent, Ben! There's hope for the world yet!
Errrr, I have to respectfully disagree. Dr. Zhivago, despite its unprecedented cinematography, feels long and overly drawn out. Yes, Russia is a big freakin' country. The shots might be superb, but I'll be thankful to never see another panorama shot of Siberia in cinemascope.
To compare Lean to Kurosawa is pure bollocks. Kurosawa's films don't feel long because they are crammed to the gills with genius instead of pretentious, artsy cinematography. Seven Samurai and Rashumon, for example, postively seethe with intrigue and all the tension of taut bow-strings. Lean, for all his skills, did not deliver anything remotely similar. The styles are utterly disparate.
That is sad.
I didn't know that the film used actual events. I always assume that any "historically" based film has no factual basis. It's good to know that Scott tried to stick to the facts. In Gladiator the only facts were the names of the characters.
Ridley Scott overrated? You are out of your for ever loving mind. He's a living legend.
1. Alien
2. Blade Runner
3. Black Hawk Down
4. Gladiator.
These four alone put him in the circle of greatness. This is real diversity!!!
Russ "Boob Master" Meyer was no relation, but I did get a kick out a few of his films. Who else could name a movie "Beneath the Valley of the Ultra-Vixens"? I wonder whatever happened to Kitten Natividad?
Hideously misguided. I actually think this was a lesson in sarcasm. He actually means infinitely talented directors. I mean come on, Gladiator is a phenomenal film.
You misunderstand the purpose of Big Hollywood, which is to bash Hollywood, so offering positive suggestions is useless.
Stone's preference for conspiracies doesn't really mean he is a bad director.
Same with Cameron – his worst instincts are in script-writing. His direction tends to be good. I wouldn't call it great, but he has a decent eye for detail and an ability to keep the large scale and small scale in sync, thematically.
Oh, poor Ben. You're just a stupid kid so I guess we can cut you some slack on your immature ignorance. What I'd really like to see, though, is a list of your 10 FAVORITE directors. That list would be similarly cringe inducing, I suspect.
I raise a glass in a toast to you (though you're probably not old enough to drink) in hopes your brain will fill up with a little more knowledge before you make a public fool of yourself again.
Careful. I know a few people (though I'm not one of them) who would put the Coen brothers on the 'overrated' list.
Hitchcock? you are crazy. Tarantino you are a genius. I said almost the same thing about Inglorious Bastards to my friend. Here is how it goes.People sit around babbling for a REAL LONG TIME. The everybody kills each other or some kill some others or the whole damn building is shot up. Then we get back to people sitting around talking to each other forever, Repeat. And what the hell was the plot it was all over the place. The man SUCKS his movies SUCK. If he is an example of the New talent in Hollyweird I will just keep renting old movies. You know the ones with a story, Great acting and entertain without some slut calling herself an Actor shoving objects up her and her friends ass. Gee mom don't get upset I am having sex with that donkey. It is JUST acting and it was Directed brilliantly Geeez..
Hey, leave the Muppets out of this.
No — if it were Kubrick he might actually have a point.
Honestly, I don't find that much to disagree with in this post. Look, I love Alien and Blade Runner, but there's no getting around the fact that Alien is slow and plodding until over halfway through, and that Blade Runner is a narrative mess, even in its final "director's cut" version. Both have great ideas, but they're not masterpieces.
Tarantino is much the same. He's pretentious, to be sure, but his stories are … thin. The visuals are artful, and no one does sheer, crazy, bloody violence like he does. But substantively, the movies are lacking.
As for Hitchcock, I find nearly everything he does to be boring and dry. Perhaps it's because movie tastes and expectations have changed (probably the reason I find Alien slow), but that's not the case with all movies from that era, so it's hard not to blame the man himself.
I assume you included some of these just to stir it up, but there are a few who are obviously missing from such a list Cameron as has been mentioned several times, and how about Oliver Stone (Salvador was great, most of the rest was terrible) and my personal controversial choice Kubrick
Yeah, I know a lot of movie fans who have no love for the Coens. And not all of them for bad reasons. I am a Coen Bros. fan but not an unreasonable one. I recognize their failures (Intolerable Cruelty, The Ladykillers, Burn After Reading) and their supremely average (Oh Brother, Where Art Thou?, The Hudsucker Proxy) but their brilliant films, Miller's Crossing, Barton Fink, Blood Simple, The Big Lebowski, No Country for Old Men, are beyond brilliant.
Worst article ever on BigHollywood. Sorry, Ben you couldn't be more wrong or more unqualified.
Lean??? His inclusion on this list is beyond absurd.
10) Scott??? Alien was supposed to be slow, it was essentially a horror film. Bladerunner is one of the best films ever. Gladiator didn't deserve the Oscar, but kicked a$$.
9) Mann – Mohicans, Insider and Heat were all style? Please. He's guilty as charged for most of his work, but he's made some great, great movies like the above plus Manhunter.
7) Aronofsy – The king of pretentiousness, but Pi, Requiem and Wrestler were great movies and he's not exactly a household name, so how is he overrated?
6 & 5) Nichols and Lynch – Couldn't care less, but never saw anything of theirs that was at all interesting.
4) Tarantino??? Please, dude is weird, but dude is a genius.
3) Woody – This list was made for him.
2) Scorcese – He could make 40 Uwe Boll movies and Goodfellas is still enough to keep him off this list.
1) Hitch – NXNW, Dial M, Rear Window, Vertigo, Notorious are all 5star movies. Impossible to
This list would have much more credibility if this guy acknowledged the fact that more than a few of these "Overrated" directors actually changed films and they way they are made.
Hitcock, Lean, Tarantino.
These guys created their own genres. This guy is being a jerk just to be a jerk.
Aranofsky is definitely overrated though.
Ah hahahaha, what a twat. Can't wait to see your Top 10 Awesome Movie Directors Who Don't Highlight My Own Creative Impotence list. This column is a great summary of the entirely of Big Hollywood; player-hating people who succeed both creatively and commercially using inane political claptrap instead of a shred of legitimate criticism.
On the other hand, you've succeeded in getting me over to this crusty sock of a website, so I can't begrudge you the scant pennies you've scammed from whoever is dumb enough to run ads here. Kudos to you, good sir.
Say what you like about his choices, just by posting this list Shapiro shows he has a pair! And, IMHO, he's more right than wrong. I disagree about a couple, particularly Tarantino, who admittedly can be excruciatingly self-indulgent, but his movies are both highly ambitious and joyous, and he hits the mark far more often than anyone could reasonably expect. Still, I am DELIGHTED to see Lynch and Nichols on this list, and agree that Hitchcock receives far more adulation than he deserves. In place of Woody Allen, who I don't believe anyone really cares about enough to matter, I'd substitute Ang Lee or Sidney Lumet. I would also argue that Spielberg's incredible talent is matched only by his stupendous lack of self-control; most of his films are exercises in opportunities gone hopelessly wrong.
The list is really easy :
Paul Haggis – Garbage is too nice when talking about his movies.
1) Spike Lee – Ever see a Spike Lee film? Probably not, why? They suck and he's a racist.
2) Kevin Smith – Clerks was great, but it's been downhill from there.
3) M. Night Shayamalan – Kind of like Smith. Too much success too soon got him too cocky.
4) Tim Burton – Has he even made one really good film? Beetleguese had it's moments as did Mars Attacks, everything else has been pretty bad.
5) Ron Howard – Beautiful Mind was his only good movie and I give the credit to Russell Crowe who is a jerk, but a phenomenal actor.
6) Oliver Stone – You are wrong Ben, Oliver Stone is responsible for the shaky cam…and quick cuts…and over exposed lighting…and…etc.
7) George Lucas – Visionary in many respects but a pretty bad director.
9) Richard Linklater – No he's not a household name, but Slacker, Waking Life, School of Rock and everything he's ever done has been horrible or horribly misused. Please stop him before he films again.
10) Woody Allen
Mine:
Terrence Malick
Jim Jarmusch
Roman Polanski
Robert Altman
Paul Thomas Anderson
In terms of sheer creative volume, guys like Coppola fall way short. I wouldn't put him on a list like this though because no one will ever take The Godfather movies away from him. If that's all he ever did, I'd consider him great….do people consider Harper Lee less of a novelist because she only wrote one book?
Hey, I'm Ben!
0. Hawks
Fast dialogue forces me to turn on subtitles, which is annoying.
I agree with Kronos. I'll watch and enjoy a Tarantino or Scott movie, but more for the moments of brilliace in performance or writing than for the directing. I've never sat all the way through a Hitchcock or Allen movie, and I've never found Allen funny.
Here's why I would support that, Ben's own "analysis" of why Hitchcock is on the list:
"He never made a great film."
Anything else he writes cannot be taken seriously.
Your critical abilities have a very immature basis for quality. You must "like" the main character. That's not necessarily a bad thing some of the time, but its a childish basis for an aesthetic. Art should make demands on us & show us things that we don't normally see as well as teach us about ALL parts of ourselves, not just the nice stuff. BUT it is good that you've seen all those movies, you just have some growing up to do.
Where is Oliver Stone on this list? Or is he simply not good enough to even be called a director? Stone is simply a ranting far-left liberal who directs overactors (Charlie Sheen) with simplistic and propagandized dialogue. Natural Born Killers was the worst directing I've ever seen. The story was probably good, but Stone ruined it. Oh, and let's not forget his revisionist history. He always seems to blame republicans and conservatives for all that has ever gone wrong in America (including the JFK asassination). Bad director, worse human being.
BTW, How can you put Tarantino on this list? Pulp Fiction and Reservior Dogs would be awful movies with any other director.
If I fast-forward "Rear Window", it's only to the parts with Grace Kelly. "Dial M for Murder" and "Rope" are excellent. Still, since many of his other films could fairly be described as weak, I can see why you'd put Hitchcock on the list. In spite of the absence of James Cameron, I like your list. Do overrated actors and films next!
I still love Rebecca and rank it as a top movie favorite.
Oh the dress scene still gets me!
You have great taste
Watch Rope and we'll chat youngster
Ooooh look at me! I'm edgy and contrarian!
Nonsense.
Next week Ben will post his top 10 list of overrated supermodels.
What the heck… look back on his previous posts. Even when he praises good movies, it's usually for the wrong reasons. Amazing.
You get the feeling Shapiro is messing with us and tomorrow he's going to say "Of course I was kidding! These are the 10 *best* directors of all time!"
You're nuts! Hitchcock?? Scorcese?? Tarantino???
most of these comments miss the point. its a discussion about how much weight and emphasis is placed on the directors of movies, and our fascination that how one man gets the majority of the credit for a success, when its a team effort. its an extreme. its designed to provoke a reaction
This article is ridiculous. Please try to have people that actually know about cinema writing on your website. This is obviously just someone who spews hyperbole to try to get a rise out of people. This is the first and last time I'll ever go on this website.
How can something be overrated? That's like someone saying that some one is wrong for linking something.
I have promised myself that I will go to heaven never having seen "Titanic". The hype over that one turned my stomach. I don't plan to see any movies generally (Die Hollyweird!) but that one tops the list of never, never, never.
I used to love movies… Hollywood has driven me out of theatres.
I'll second that!
So this is your emo list of trying to be cool rather than accept the best directors? What an idiot.
Surely he's gotta do a 10 Most Underrated Directors now? He could start with … i dunno … McG?
Oddly enough the naked Kate Winslet was what a friend of mine (a guy) said was his biggest turn off in the film.
Personally I thought the acting was terrible, the plot worse, and I didn't like any of the characters enough to give a rip about them in the end.
3/10 trolling, must try harder OP
You chose Black Hawk Down as an example of a movie that doesn't look like a video game?
Is he really? I haven't actually heard much about him (as frankly, I hate his films to death). But I did meet him briefly and he was quite nice I thought. Perhaps it was a good day.
"If you want to see good Hitchcock, rent Alfred Hitchcock Presents. Restricted to the one hour medium, he’s at his best.
You mean The Alfred Hitchcock Hour.
Alfred Hitchcock Presents was a half-hour show.
-Safe to say you're not getting paid for this..
Apparently TCM is getting bad. I don't watch TV anymore but my friends are avid TCM fans. They say things are getting worse with the younger host.
YES.
I am going to have to say I disagree with you about these directors, I mean Alfred Hitchcock? He should be nowhere near this list
Yeah, this is an incredibly stupid article. If I didn't like some of Shapiro's other writings, I would label him a Troll and never read him again.
Alfred Hitchcock is the greatest director of all time. Martin Scorsese is Top 5. David Lean is Top 15. (Incidentally, he doesn't mention Brief Encounter in his Lean bashing. There's hardly a flaw in that film anywhere.)
Mr. Shapiro should learn to give actual analysis and thought to his movie-watching and -writing rather than just ranting stupidly. Most of these filmmakers are extremely highly regarded by other directors and a few have been instrumental in creating the language of film. If you asked other great directors who their favorites and influences were, 8/10 would probably reference a name from this list.
Oh, and while the auteur theory has its problems and has been criticized for decades, dismissing it by saying its idiotic is idiotic. Many if not most great auteurs have a strong hand in writing their films as well as directing and shooting them, and it is possible to find strong thematic and stylistic similarities between nearly every one of these directors' films. Screenwriters probably do deserve more credit than they get, but while you can't make a good movie out of an awful script, it is perfectly possible to make a great movie out of a decent script and a poor movie out of a brilliant script; the ultimate quality depends mostly on the directing.
Not a bad list. But who the hell is Henry Jaglom? I mean, I actually looked him up, and I still don't know who the hell he is…
I don't necessarily think the directors I mentioned should be on a MOST overrated list either…I guess I was trying to make the point that the list that Ben generated seemed to be more about stirring the pot than being the most overrated. Arguments can be made for practically any and every director that's ever sat on one of those high folding chairs. The ones that Ben picked though, whether someone agrees or not, have considerable fans and have made a substantial impact (for good or not, again, is in the eyes of the beholder) on the film industry, which makes their inclusion (to me at least) on such a list much more suspect.
Maybe just substitute "pretentious" for "overrated" (though many on your list are both!) and you've got them dialed in!
How in the world can you leave out the two most worthless directors who are dramatically more overrated than all the directors on your list: Stanley Kubrick and Terrance Malick. Arguably, Terrence Malick is the worst director to ever be allowed to helm a motion picture. Awful. Not a skill in the world. A baby pool of talent. The Thin Red Line is so bad, prisoners should be forced to watch it as punishment.
Hitchcock never made a great film???? Who are you and why do you have a forum?
David Lean? At least have a tiny shred of respect and spell the title of one of the greatest movies of all time correctly…"Lawrence of Arabia". And choose another subject to comment on. You clearly have no proper sense of what great filmmaking is.
Hey! I found his list of his favorite directors!
-Michael Bay
-Stephen Sommers
-Rob Cohen
and the guy who directed "Failure To Launch"
awesome
you must say now who your favorite directors are and why.
Your list might be interesting if your writing wasn't so horrible.
Damn. Really Breitbart? I know we're supposed to love the Down's kids, but janitor is a much better choice than film critic.
Oh Yea! Tim Burton should be on there as well.
This writer is a fool. He knows nothing about the movies. Seriously: 'Rear Window makes one reach for the fast-forward button.' ? Really? Just one inane statement in an article filled with inane statements. Shapiro- you should write about something else, because your comments on movies and directors show you to be a snot-nosed know-nothing when it comes to film.
Regarding Ridley Scott; the DUELISTS wasn't bad.
Please tell me no one pays you to write this crap
Wow. Thank god I don't read movie reviews from Ben Shapiro (if he even writes them). This list is an embarrassing statement from someone who, based on the illogical reasoning of this post, has no respect for great work and talent.
I'm waiting for Ben Shapiro that he just punk'd everyone.
Amen, except for Kevin Smith and Tim Burton
It's great every time I see David Lynch called out for the vapid, delirious nut job he is. How his mix of horrible film noir style mixed with San Francisco amateur club poet depth ever made it into anything resembling a respectable career is beyond me. Kinda like any film he's ever made. He's got the Minus Touch like Howard Hughes did.
Also must agree with Woody Allen; I can't stand pretty much any of his films.
Poor Ridley Scott should be nowhere near this list. Alien is up there with my favorite films of all time along with the true classic Blade Runner. How can an insane Rutger Hauer facing down Harrison Ford be anywhere near overpraised?
Can't agree with some of the sentiment for putting James Cameron on this list for the simple reason Aliens is by far without exception my favorite film of all time. A near perfect mix of action punctuated by great dialogue. Just because he directed Dances With Smurfs and has dropped a few bricks short of a full load shouldn't erase T2.
I see no reason why Oliver Stone can't make the list. Wall Street and Platoon are personal favorites, but he's dropped some real megaton bombs too, and he's built up quite a population in the old belfry. Or what about the Wachowski Bros? Speed Racer? V for Vendetta? Matrix Anything?
Nancy Meyers movies may be popular, bet she herself is not very well-known. The same applies to Amy Heckerling. Kevin Costner and Warren Beatty may both have won Oscars, but the rest of their directing careers never really attracted much acclaim. The stocks or Spike Lee, Cameron Crowe, and Michael Moore have been falling for years (even lefties don't like Michael Moore any more). I would agree that all of these people are overrated, but none of them belong on a list of the most overrated directors.
Anybody who does not support the BNP is exactly that! Buffoon!
I was eager to read the article until I saw Ben Shapiros picture. Ahh, young man out to make a name for himself. Think Adam Lambert! His article merely supported the premise.
Why don't you share with us your favorite directors?
Or, maybe he simply thinks those directors are overrated, and has no ulterior motive?
I don't necessarily agree with his choices or his reasoning, but arguably most of those directors are overrated simply because no mortal could reach the level of perfection in their work that their reputations imply. In fact, note that many of the commenters are treating him like he blasphemed.
Well, I see some of you are making the acquaintance of Ben Shapiro. Those of us on the political blogs call him "The Virgin," and now I think you see why — he has never so much as HELD HANDS in a movie theater.
And that's what I get for drive by posting. Breitbart = Shapiro and Andrew = Ben. As a totally overrated cartoon character once exclaimed: Doh!
First to last: Yes. By anyone who cares. By comparison to their own best work and the best work of others. To inspire them to try harder, and to direct attention to more deserving filmmakers. Yes, exactly.
So what are you worried about? They´ll live.
Idiot.
He's like a food critic who doesn't know anything about food.
Does Onion have a new blog? Because surely, this can't be from a serious human being .
I hope the next thread holds up this to the kind of hysterical lack of knowledge of the subject.
TEN MOST OVERRATED PRESIDENTS:
Going down to:
"1. George Washington – weird looking dude, man. Those teeth suck."
Apparently this kid is too young to know even the best directors (like most of the above) make some bad or boring movies. DeMille, Houston, Ford. That's John Ford, lest he thinks it's Harrison Ford.
Anyone who can't watch a classic like "Rear Window" without reaching for the fast forward needs to stick to video games or comics, maybe. A difference in opinion is fine. A childish dismissal of rich, well-made films of the kind Scorsese and Hitchcock made is just hilarious. Announcing such a lack of taste is not the best idea I ever heard.
Prepare to be mocked by adults.
BTW..Left OUT James Cameron? LOL.. That's probably the kind of movie he likes. Those "LW" classics like "Terminator2 3D".
I'm still laughing that a kid would be so full of himself he wouldn't know how embarrassing this list is and weak rationale is. But it seems in line with all his "work".
Michael Bay – anyone that considers throwing a lot of left over pieces of a model kit and a handy cam in a dryer, then setting it to "fluff dry", then adding in CGI explosions and overlaying trite overworked cliches on top of the result as Directing needs to have much examined. Starting with their heads.
ANY director that thinks the shakey cam is a tool that needs to be used on anything beyond rap music videos deserves to be on this list.
The Graduate is contemptible and snort-worthy spoiled 1960s-child angst.
—————————————-
And, here I thought I was the only person under-whelmed by The Graduate. I remember seeing it for the first time and when it ended thinking to myself "okay, where was the part that was supposed to be such a landmark?".
Sure – it is certainly possible that he has no ulterior motive and that he really feels those directors are truly the most overrated which is why I started my original reply by saying that everyone is entitled to his or her own opinions and ended it by saying that nobody has the right to tell another that someone's opinion is "wrong".
It just seemed to me that there was more to it than that, and just as Ben felt, for example, that Woody Allen is unbearable and pretentious (and, certainly entitled to feel that way), I feel that Ben was being intentionally provocative. It wasn't just who he put on the list, it was how he described why he feels that way – using inflammatory language. I can't believe that he didn't know he was going to create a firestorm.
Diane Keaton could kick your ass.
Word. I was going, What? Orlando was in GI Jane? What was he, her kid brother? Her son? Junior GI Joe?
Um…James O'Keefe and Hannah Giles?
I am second to no one in my disdain for KILL BILL and DEATH PROOF and feel that INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS, while good, is evidence we're never going to get another truly great film out of Tarantino. However, you can't overrate the talent of the guy who made RESERVOIR DOGS, PULP FICTION and JACKIE BROWN.
Mike
My husband has searched for years for a DVD of Rebecca…no luck. I have it on VHS but, alas- I have no VHS player. Oh, the torture!
From: notifications@intensedebatemail.com
To: sarahtimthompson@live.com
Subject: Frances_Genau replied to your comment on Top 10 Most Overrated Directors of All Time
"Hitcock, Lean, Tarantino.
These guys created their own genres"
What genre did Tarantino invent? The Crazy Mixed-up Genres genre? Gangster films made him famous. He certainly didn't invent that one. Ever since then he's been making monstrous hybrids. Nothing original there, either, as genres have been mixed before.
He has been influential, though, especially with the whole fast-talking about trivialities with pop-culture references and hipster terminology thing.
"Tim Burton – Has he even made one really good film?"
Batman, though that was Nicholson's responsibility.
"Screenwriters probably do deserve more credit than they get, but while you can't make a good movie out of an awful script, it is perfectly possible to make a great movie out of a decent script and a poor movie out of a brilliant script; the ultimate quality depends mostly on the directing."
One can make a bad version of Hamlet, as well. When you get deep into aesthetics, with all those eggheads and their mountains of books on nothing, you reserve the name of "High Art" for what cannot be corrupted by people other than their authors. As in, the play is not in the performance but in the text. Also, the score is the art, not what you hear in the concert hall.
(continued…)
This is why, in my opinion, movies cannot be High Art. High Art, for reasons I have no time to explain, has to be the product of some individual genius. The screenwriter is the only one in a position to fulfill that role. The director is a great supervisor. At best, he's the guy who staged the most memorable performance of Hamlet.
We can argue all day about who's more or less responsible (I vote for screenwriters, assuming the great directors are just really good at picking and honing good scripts). But that disussion is seperate from the debate over the auteur theory. The director can easily be more important than the screenwriter yet not an auteur at all.
"What's next? A top ten list of most overrated painters? 1. Michelangelo 2. Dali 3. Picasso
That is basically what you have done."
Well, i'm with you on Dali and Picasso. Surrealism and Cubism are direct frontal assaults on what makes art great. I can see people saying Michelangelo has gotten more credit than he deserves, so long as they bear in mind he's great. Just perhaps not that great.
All you need to know about the plot of Vertigo is that it's irrelevant. The whole point of the movie is to watch Stewart go crazy.
"Lean at least had the foresight to cast Julie Christy in 'Dr. Zhivago' but his love of the commies was almost too much to take, especially at the end."
I really don't know what you're talking about. The villain was a commie, for pete's sake.
What about a list of top 10 underrated directors?
A Passage to India was horrible, and that's coming from a guy who actually enjoyed Ryan's Daughter.
As for the Big 3 (Kwai, Lawrence, and the Dr.), I could watch them more than once a day. Not too long for me. Then again, that's coming from a guy who's seen The Deer Hunter multiple times. People throw around the "too long" charge too lightly. I like long movies, when they are deserved. And Lean movies deserve it. As many have said, they are like cinematic novels. Short stories, in my opinion, are the aesthetically superior format. Novels invariably cannot sustain the sort of unity that usually makes for great art. And if they do, they are really short novels or they repeat themselves a lot. But I can't remember a single great short story or novella that I didn't wish was longer. In addition to wanting to earn an ending, I simply enjoy spending more time with characters I enjoy.
Don't quit your day job, Ben. You suck as a movie critic.
Probably the very last thing I need in life, next to a a lobotomy, is for some kid to give me his ideas on being overrated.
Shapiro can go stab himself in the shower.
Blade Runner a mess???
Wow , Just wow!
Well, at first I took this seriously, then less so, and you lost me at David Lean. Your inability to sit through anything over an hour long may speak volumes about you rather than these directors (except for Woody Allen where we are in complete agreement, especially about Diane Keaton).
Ben Shapiro is the most overrated high school kid around. To quote the boy himself: "That about sums up his career."
Please tell me this is a joke….have you even SEEN any of the movies by these directors?
If you're going to criticize anyone, go for the best. Compiling the most overrated religious figure could start with Mother Theresa, Allah, the Buddha, Krishna, Moses, Jesus, and so forth before finishing off with G*d.
This is an unbelievably stupid post by an extremely unsophisticated person who knows absolutely nothing about films or directors. The ignorance and implicit admission that you don't understand or can't be bothered to try to understand even slightly difficult or challenging material is what makes it amusing. I don't even know why I am bothering to leave this comment, honestly, but just had to make that point clear. While not everyone on this list is a personal favorite, I can only wonder who you think are worthy film directors.
[...] is just to thank all the people in my comboxes at my post fisking Ben Shapiro’s unspeakably bad piece at Big Hollywood (the sane stuff there can be found all [...]
You're a jackass. David Lean? Alfred Hitchcock? This was an epic fail at trying to be edgy, and makes you look ignorant.
HAHAHAHAHA.
Talk about troll bait…..
Hey Film Genius, who would you put on the "good" director list?
Ron Howard?????
Sadly, this child did not get enough attention as a cutter, so he wrote this instead.
Fittingly, Big Hollywood chose to publish it.
Hahahaha! Breitbart is the new kid on the block with wit and wisdom beyond his years. He critiques cinema with fresh eyes! He is the kind of guy who views Monet's work as tired and trite, I can hear him crying out, "but paint is an outmoded medium, MAAAAAAAAN."
Poor Andrew. What a poseur.
It's "grok," actually. Ever read the book?
Who is this ignorant pipsqueak and why is Big Hollywood allowing him to write articles about anything?
Proof of why liberals/lefties control the arts — because right wing douchebags have no taste
I've read ridiculous things about films over the years, but this is quite simply the silliest column I've ever come across. I honestly don't care that this whelp is a conservative, but his lack of knowledge and/or understanding of film and the role directors play in it is appalling. This is the kind of claptrap I might expect to see in a high school newspaper, not a site ostensibly devoted to film. This young man is shallow beyond words. He's more to be pitied than mocked, though anyone who believes this tripe ought to be mocked.
He fast forwards through "Rear Window?" What.a.dunce.
I've read this twit's work before. If he was half as talented as he thinks he is, he'd be twice as talented as he really is. Look at him. I'll bet this puppy doesn't even shave yet. His lack of film knowledge is absolutely appalling. And what does it say about this speck of nothingness that he must fast-forward through "Rear Window?" Poor Virgin Ben. I guess a lioness like Grace Kelly reduces him to a pants piddler.
Conservatives have made a hash out of everything else in this country. I guess the arts are next on their list.
Opinions are like noses. Everyone has one. If this schoolboy wants to trash Alfred Hitchcock, let him. It only shows how little the boy knows about film.
I respect your comments far more, sir, because you are clearly a fan of movies and you know the players, though your ambivalence to Ang Lee is odd. Aside from his dumb "Hulk" movie, he has directed a considerable number of thought-provoking films. I am waaaaaaay more liberal than Barack Obama, but I love "Dirty Harry," "Die Hard," even "Red Dawn." This punk is the kind of writer who will see nothing of value in "Up in the Air" because his rage at the liberal star George Clooney will blind him to the film's power.
This teenager should be required to learn a little more about our common culture before he embarrasses himself with another spurt of diarrhea like this. This isn't a column meant to provoke thought or discussion. It is an essay on ignorance by a youngster who knows plenty about the subject.
Paul Thomas Anderson? Are you kidding? Altman? Are you bereft of thought? It looks from your list like you prefer movies that are unchallenging. So be it, but man, you are demonstrating a serious lack of intellectual chops.
[...] laughing, and for good reason, since he has published what could possibly be the most dunder-headed piece of writing ever published at the prodigiously dunder-headed right-wing movie blog, Big Hollywood. Young Ben, [...]
A few years ago Roger Ebert re-reviewed The Graduate, which he hadn't seen since its 1967 release. His opinion: What on earth were we THINKING back then??? Ben is a dullard, "plastics!" was actually pretty good advice, and the only person in the movie you'd want to have a conversation with is Mrs. Robinson.
In Ben's defense, he's apparently an idiot with absolutely no critical faculties at all. I hope this isn't his day job.
Amen. I wonder if they actually paid him to write this.
I find your ridiculous self-important response to be maladroit, turgid, and tedious, and certainly not mythic. I also find you to be really, really impressed with yourself. I feel sad that you don't realize how totally cinematically out of your depth you really are.
Do you even know what all those words mean? I'm thinking not. sheesh.
It's tough to tell from what you actually wrote, but I'm gathering that you feel that Hitchcock should be on such a list. Clear evidence that you're a clueless hack. Stick to your day job.
Altman made several good films, granted, Anderson made Boogie Nights, imo. His other films are completely pedantic. Punch Drunk Love, There Will Be Blood and Magnolia are not without their assets, but make litte sense. My opinion on that does not mean I like to be "spoonfed" or whatever other anti-intellectual accusation you want to throw my way.
Altman refused to work with a script, had completely radical ideas about plot, and the vast majority of his films suffered because of it. Sorry, but it ain't my cup of tea.
And Jarmusch? I work in education and asked every single "smart" person I know to explain "Broken Flowers" to me. It's not that I didn't want to understand it; the film defied explanation.
And thus, we come to my ultimate issue with many of these "artistes": many of their films fall into pretention because they're more interested in their style/technique, and to a large part motivated by going AGAINST convention, that their films wind up being an exercise in the abstract with very little to actually say.
Continued (my reply was cut off)….
The balance is ocassionally reached, I would argue. Kubrick, I felt, did it a number of times. But like many of these directors, his latter career drifted towards the "style over substance" dynamic that I'm talking about.
So, you may still not agree, and argue in favor of those movies I deride, but hopefully my explanation helps make our differences more clear.
Same difference.
Obviously, Alien didn't have enough car chases to suit Mr. whateverthehellhisnameis. More car chases!!
[...] about cinema for know-nothing blogger blowhard Andrew Breitbart’s Big Hollywood site, and his virgin effort there suggests that he has never so much as held hands in a movie theater, either. (Tintin has better [...]
I've rarely ever agreed with a conservative, closeted or otherwise. But I find your analysis to be spot on. Mr. Shapiro has not only defamed some of the greatest directors of our time, but specifically some of the most wonderful achievements of cinema. "Rear Window" is a slog?! Good God. Such are the formulations of an unformed, immature mind. How sad.
But then again, Moriarity thinks "Casablanca" is a tribute to Communism, so what do I know….
Excellent list.
Not sure if my original post got through, but let's try again. sorry if there's a duplication
I've rarely ever agreed with a conservative, closeted or otherwise. But I find your analysis to be spot on. Not only has Mr. Shapiro defamed some of the greatest directors of our time, but some of the most wonderful achievements of cinema. "Rear Window" is a slog?! How sad. Such are the formulations of an unformed, immature mind.
[...] been a good many tempests directed at Ben Shapiro’s Big Hollywood post “Top 10 Most Overrated Directors of All Time.” Personal favorite response is from Victor Morton of Rightwing Film Geek—a rebuttal entitled [...]
THIS. IS. A. JOKE.
You´re a stupid brat who knows NOTHING.
"(If you have to study why a film is great, if it's not inherent merely in observing it, is it really that great?)"
So, what, if something takes effort on your part to be fully appreciated, it can't be great? Don't get me wrong, I love popcorn movies that you can just passively enjoy, but saying that anything that requires a more active engagement isn't that great…that just sounds crazy to me.
What, no love for "Love and Death"?
So? What DO you like? Birth of a Nation?
And I'd like to start a list of overrated cinema critics. Ben Shapiro not only tops the list, but causes all other such lists to spontaneously combust. Well done, Ben. Your ignorance is an inspiration to thousands.
i know you already been told that, but it doesn't cost remember: sir, you are an complete idiot
I completely disagree. Shapiro's intellect is more of an 8 year old child. Zero intellect, unable to follow the complexities of a plot, a raging need for more car crashes. That is the stuff he's made of. Look at the list! He loves "Gladiator" but disses "Alien"? "Rear Window" is a long slog? How much more evidence do you need that he's a childish hack?
I also recently made the effort to view to the 70 minute review of "The Phantom Menace". It was nothing short of brilliant. True, at times childish and with some bad jokes, yes, but on the whole it was right on the mark. When he got to the part about where he believed they were going to start blaming each other for the shitty end result–recriminations, yes!–I about fell over. George says words to the effect, "I may have gone too far in some places." No kidding, George. That idiot Rick McCallum is as much to blame as Lucas. Couldn't anyone speak up? McCallum's look after the screening was priceless. You could see it in the extras on the DVD, everyone was scared shitless to contradict the "Master".
And how smart was asking viewers to describe the main characters without telling what they looked like, or what they did. Han Solo: "swashbuckling". Qui Gon Gin: "Ummmmmmm". Beautiful. Lucas ruined those three movies, and there's no excuse for his offenses.
Ben Shapiro é mais burro que o professor linguiça! E com essa carinha de mané, com certeza não entende porra nenhuma de cinema.
Some valid points. Mulholland Drive and Requiem for a Dream are pathetic. But you forget Eraserhead (if you''ve even seen the film), The Wrestler and the very moving The Fountain. I agree Woody Allen belongs on here. He's made three good films in his entire life. Hitchcock is overrated, but to say Vertigo makes you want to reach for the cyanide is absurd. Where the hell is James Cameron on this list? Spielberg? Antonioni? This article is simplistic and full of holes. How can you not understand the ending of The Graduate? And Mulholland Drive doesn't suck because it doesn't make sense, it sucks because it's transparent. Any idiot can understand Mulholland Drive.
Wow, like four pages and this is the first real insight. I just hope they didn't pay the twerp for this crap.
what about tim burton, kevin smith, steven spielberg fer chrissakes!!? this guy is just trying to get attention. He is what one would call a contrarian.
Hilarious writing and fairly accurate…goodfellas is great, but other than that, I think u nailed it…
I never saw so much crap in my hole entire life.
You know nothing about cinema.
I feel sorry for you.
Correction: I never read such rubbish in all my life.
You made me so angry…. I changed the words. Hmmph.
"Errr"…I'm not sure what this is supposed to represent…your speech impediment, perhaps? In any case, it seems that you believe that Lean is a bad director prone to long drawn out panoramas. And yet, for some reason you enjoy Kurosawa. Curious. Somehow "Zhivago" contains "unprecedented cinematography", yet apparently you find it to be an awful film. All this nonsense strikes me as criticism for criticism's sake. Not unlike the idiot Shapiro. Well done.
as usual , you have no vision, and are full of crap on any subject
Congratulations! YOU were overrated!
Mr. Shapiro, you have proven to be less of a writer than you have imagined. You dismiss these film directors without getting into specifics. If you can't outside of saying some like "Lynch's films make no sense", then you are no different than any average moviegoer who simply says, "it sucks." Sorry, nobody should make comments without substance, especially on a website. You have a lot of work to do in terms of understanding the value of criticism with substance and specifics. You are entitled to an opinion but reducing these people to superfluous bores without getting into why they are superfluous is unacceptable.
Wow, traffic to this site must suck if you have to post ridiculous essays like this. I regret visiting.
I think you don't really like movies, ultimately. Your list made me want to smash something, which I think was the intended effect, but none of your arguments were actually engaged with the movies in any way, just kneejerk reactions to stuff. Calling something "pretentious" without saying anything else about it is basically meaningless.
I think maybe you and I just care about completely different stuff. That's cool, but it's not really even worth engaging you in so far as it's just distracting from other, actually interesting discussions.
"That rock and roll isn't even music, son!" "Ok, grampa, I'm going out now."
Writers are horribly underrated, by the way, and should get more acknowledgment, but the idea that the story is the most important thing in a movie, that characters need to be likable, that events need to be plausible, etc. are all completely absurd and suggest to me that you're a really superficial thinker.
Who knew they still performed lobotomies in America? This guy is either functioning solely off his brain stem or is having a fun laugh getting hits for his site by posting contrarian bullshit he doesn't believe. Either way the arguments put forth are laughably constructed. Do the world a favor and finish that lobotomy off and render yourself forever silent.
This is the first I've heard of Mr Shapiro, and in my book, he's an idiot.
Reading this, I'm reminded of a famous Clint Eastwood/Dirty Harry quote: Opinions are like a**holes — everyone has one.
i guess you don't have to finish year ten to get a critics gig,
ANTONINO
VISCONTI
VON TRIER
OZU
i think we can all agree there's are some overrated directors, beacuse so many people hate em, like em, only capable of one or two good-great films, like The Damned, Antichrist, Tokyo Story. posting this comment is useless, nof'writin'
Its this list a badly written joke?
[...] … do not read Before Big Hollywood gave Sonny the space to rebut Ben Shapiro’s execrable post about the Top 10 Most Overrated Directors of All Time — the site’s editor-in-chief [...]
This is coming from a kid who is probably still in college, and has never experienced the filmmaking process nor has read anything exensive about film and is pretty much acting like the rush limbaugh of film critics, but calling him a critic is giving him too much credit. He sounds like the kid who watches Space Odyssey and says, "This sucks because " I DON'T GET IT"' I would sure like to see his list of greatest directors.
As for the screen writers who he mentions in the beginning and then completely forgets to defend them in his list. The director takes the script and turns it into a movie, he is usually there in the writing process w/ the screenwriter. A script is not an end in itself, it is not the movie, it is a blueprint of the film to be made. If you were to read a script of the greatest film ever made (whatever you think that may be) you would see that there is more in the film than there is in the script…"why?" you may ask – because the script is just action and dialogue. no more, no less. The director now takes that script and goes into production with the rest of the crew and maximizes everyone's talent in order to put the best possible picture on film.
That's like saying oh the writer never get's credit, well what about the cinematographer? or the actors? or the set designers? or the sounds crew? the editors?
Some of the directors you claim are overrated – are overrated, but i would like to see the source that claimed they are "greatest" They're not necessarily great but they have made some great films.
You are obviously just playing the part of the antagonist but your argument holds no water, it is laughable.
I respect someone willing to go so against the grain… however I have to ask, wtf?
Blade Runner in its Final Cut version is possibly the best existentialist film out there, period. It is certainly the best looking film ever made. Alien is one of the best thriller/soft horror films of all time, and one of the best sci fi movies… it nails to genres well and its art style and characters go far beyond what one would suspect. It has aged remarkably well.
I actually think Gladiator is the most overrated of his movies, it had the least plausible story and failed as a historical fiction piece. The characters and acting were good though, so it deserves some credit.
Matchstick Men is my second favorite RS film after Blade Runner, one of the few Nicholas Cage films I can stand watching.
Hitchcock was a genius of understatement, Rear Window exemplifies this. It works because the characters are interesting and we want them to succeed, and because we all have thought ill of a neighbor and this story is a case were the suspicion was confirmed. Notorious is also well done imho. He also pushed movie making into the modern era in all the right ways.
Quentin Tarentino is not supposed to push traditional story telling. It is all about the characters journey ina confusing world; like life, it does not always tie together in a way we want it. His characters sometimes fulfill their destiny or are conquered by chance and fate. It all ends up as an absurd joke in many cases, reveals us as being pretentious in our righteous indignation and self importance.
Martin Scorcese shows the seedy underbelly of the human condition like few can, while still making us care for very flawed characters. The world surrounding hisc haracters however often end up being more interesting.
David Lynch and Darren Aronofsky I can forgive you for. But Requiem for a Dream did have characters we cared about, and was brilliantly edited.
ok, and you are?
Just quit watching movies dude, really, just stop, you will never, ever, know anything about films.
oh yeah man, I also think they all suck. Uwe Boll is the way to go
fucking idiot.
I believe that master Ben needs to take a Film Appreciation 101 class. All directors have good and bad films. No one is perfect. Young Ben believes that Michael Bay and others of his ilk are the epitome of great filmmaking. Go back to school and be re-educated.
[...] Big Hollywood names the Top 10 Most Overrated Directors of All Time. [...]
[...] Big Hollywood names the Top 10 Most Overrated Directors of All Time. [...]
While I disagree with most of the points in Ben's column… I might want to remind people that the title is 10 most "Overrated" and not 10 "Worst."
That is all.
Oh, and Ben makes an extremely god point early on. Writers get shafted regularly an rarely get credit were it is due.
However, most of the guys on this list consistently are directors for successful movies, so consistently that it is fair to call them good. I could respect your column so much more if you recognized that Quentin Tarentino either writes his own screenplays, or has a huge role in the writing of them. Also I could respect the column more if Ben recognized the brilliance of man of the movies mentioned while emphasizing the writers, actors, composers, cinematographers, and set designers… but that does not happen. He bashes the art as well as the people who get maybe too much credit for the quality of the art.
However, in Blade Runner. Some of the most beautiful moments were brought about by actors prerogative, like the "Tears in rain" line but Rutger Hauer's character Roy Batty and that same free lancing with the line that can be interpreted as both "father" and "fucker."
This list was only made to cause irritation they don't really believe the things they write you guys are playing right into their hands.
[...] be found here – read at your own risk. It’s a whole bunch of complaining about famous film [...]
James Cameron directed the sequel to Alien. RS did not reprise his role as director.
Wow, groundbreaking criticism. Trying to get attention, ain't you? Well, I gotta admit, this success is achieved.
you havent seen any of the movies you have quoted… have you? Not even one…
Holy fucking shit.
First, my wife would kill you because no one speak ill of the Hitch. Ever. But seriously, Scorsese? Raging Bull is one of the GOATs. I'm no Hollywood junkie, but Scorsese justifies the invention of cinematography. Total genius.
Wow…….you are probaly the first person that agrees with me about The Graduate! To hear people like Roger Ebert, youd think it was the best movie outside of Citizen Kane, but I thought it was a pretentious piece of crap and you hit it on the head about the ending. And Ridley Scott too, Blade Runner might the most overrated sci-fi film ever. And you make good points about some of the others, like Woody Allen, who hasnt made a decent film in about 20 years and even Mann and Tarantino can be overrated sometimes. But I have to disagree about Scorsese. I think he is our greatest living director and movies arent supposed to be about cuddly characters, unless you are Disney.
It is sad that even our brightest young people have been affected by growing up in the TV/Video Game/Internet age. I have read Mr. Shapiro political commentary. He is very knowledgeable and does his research when writing about current events. However, in this article he demonstrates that he has the same short attention span and lack of discernment that so many less educated people of his generation display.
I am not that much older than Shapiro, but it seems that those 20 years have made a huge difference in how people think. The dumbing down of students in the 90s was very successful in making young people almost unable to discriminate between opinion and fact, between reason and emotionalism. It has also made a generation that is always in a hurry and too impatient to sit through a story told in any manner other than an obvious, hit-you-ever-the-head manner.
I could write my own article going through the many problems with this analysis, but I will just point out the obvious. Hitchcock’s Rear Window makes him want to “reach for the fast-forward button,” but he likes the TV show, which is short and broken up to allow for commercial breaks. Need I say more.
I watched "Brief Encounter", one of the greatest films of all time, just over a week ago. And it was my fourth viewing. And if you really think 86 minutes is "toooo long", well, I don't know what to tell you (or perhaps you don't actually know much of anything about David Lean and don't know that some of his most acclaimed films are the relatively short "Great Expectations" and "Brief Encounter" and "Hobson's Choice".)
And well, I've watched more than 40 of Hitchcock's 50-something films, and several of them more than once (I've watched "Rear Window", "The 39 Steps", "Vertigo", and "North By Northwest" at least five times each.) So, uhh, you're kind of massively wrong about the "unwatchable" part – but I guess being massively wrong is a prerequisite for anyone who thinks that Shapiro's list is "spot on, for exactly the right reasons."
Except that Alfred Hitchcock is one of the least pretentious of directors. Remember, after all, that the critical adoration for his films started late in his career with the Cahiers du Cinema crowd (Truffaut, Godard, et al) and the works of the recently deceased Robin Wood – and prior to that his films were considered merely "genre pictures" and therefore "un-serious" and unworthy of serious analysis. Of course, there is still a shocking amount of bold artistry in his films – but he never tries to be more important than he is, and I imagine you're just another in the long line of people who mistake any form of artistry and intelligence for "pretentiousness."
"Sweeney Todd". And "Edward Scissorhands". And "Ed Wood". And "Big Fish" was pretty good. I'm no Tim Burton fanboy (I find about half of his films nigh unto unwatchable after the first viewing) but it's hard to deny that he's made at least a few really good films.
"Not a skill in the world"? Sounds like someone hasn't watched :"Badlands". Or "Days of Heaven". Or "The Thin Red Line". Or "The New World". There's nothing wrong with not liking his films, but to deny that he has at least some skill and quite a lot of talent is to deny that there are sometimes clouds in the sky and that the sun is quite hot.
In other words, you watched two other films by Scorsese ("The Age of Innocence" and "Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore", which have few swear words and little bloodshed) and nothing by any of the other directors on the list and are now determined that Shapiro "nailed it". Very good.
Umm… While Ebert's initial review for "The Graduate" (written in 1967 or '68) was quite positive, he revisited it a few years ago and wrote another, mostly lukewarm review. He's certainly never suggested that it was anything close to the "best movie outside of 'Citizen Kane'". In fact, the film isn't even included on his continually updated "Great Movies" list, which currently has some 300 entries.
But thanks for playing.
I'm not sure exactly what you're getting at here… But if you're really suggesting that Ozu has only made one or two "good-great" films (it's closer to several dozen) or that "The Damned" is among Visconti's best films or that (the very good) "Antichrist" is better than the great "Dogville" or "Europa" or "Breaking the Waves" or "The Boss of It All", well… You're wrong.
Or you're making some other kind of point that I didn't understand, in which case you should just ignore this post.
It took Howard Hughes a really long time to live.
Why are bloggers such attention seeking douches? lol
Depressing, boring, unlikable, etc. are about as valid as "overrated" as the terms or subjects for any reasonable or intelligent work on cinema….
Well, if he hadn't picked the real big ones, and hadn't been hilariously unfair most of the time the whole thing wouldn't be fun to read (or write). I take it as a joke and as a nice try to come across as witty and provocative. Though there is a grain of truth in some of these.
The only one that really deserves to be on this list is Aronofsky, and Shapiro didn't even mention his worst: The Fountain.
I appreciate your thoughtful reply. Taste is of course subjective. If I feel a director's work is consistently involving, then I am a fan. But that's obviously personal. Does he suck me into the story? Or does he just suck? I saw "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" in the theater after reading countless rapturous reviews but was remarkably unmoved, in spite of Lee's technical proficiency. Hitchcock made some great films ("Vertigo," "North by Northwest") but considering the breadth of his output I think he lands far from greatness. All the skill in the world doesn't count for much if the viewer is left cold.
As a libertarian/conservative, I understand boycotting filmmakers or actors who publicly go to great lengths to denigrate those who don't share their views. People like Sean Penn cease to be entertainers when they visit and praise thugs like Chavez, and Penn will never get a dime from me. Wagner may have been a great composer, but a Jewish opera buff would be justified in avoiding the works of that known anti-Semite. Although I have occasionally wished Clooney would shut his mouth, I do not deny his ability or charisma and still think "Oh Brother, Where Art Thou?" is a great film.
[...] a good sign for the Right’s relationship to cinema that this nonsense received a swift smackdown from film-geek [...]
[...] a good sign for the Right’s relationship to cinema that this nonsense received a swift smackdown from film-geek [...]
"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."
Maybe that's the friggin' point! He was putting you, the viewer, into the action. You were feeling what it was like to be on the ground in a very confusing and fast firefight! A director's job is to put you there, make you feel EXACTLY that! Your complaint is WHY THE FILM WAS GREAT.
"Goodfellas is similarly disgusting – you feel the need to take a shower after watching. "
DITTO
And complaining because a shaky cam isn't "biologically accurate" – WTF? You know, zoom lenses aren't biologically accurate either. Maybe those should be snubbed too.
"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)."
If people cheered, they probably cared. They weren't rooting for him to win, they were rooting for him to lose, which is exactly what Scorsese intended. How is it that you continually fault directors for making you feel and experience exactly what they intended. Isn't that, alone, evidence of the mastery of their craft?
You, sir, are a complete hack.
[...] 1. Ben’s original Overrated Directors Article Here at Big Hollywood [...]
try ebay – that's where I got my copy of Rebecca — good luck on finding a copy!
(I even have copies of the Masterpiece Theatre productions but nothing holds a candle to Hitchcock's adaptation.
Cameron – a one trick pony. If it were not for special effects (of which he is a master), his films would be NOTHING!
I love this top 10 list, I will have to read more articles form this writer Ben Shapiro.
But Goodfellas is not a bad movie. Okay, there are no likable characters in it, but that does not make it bad.
[...] with people over things in general. But I haven’t been able to get Ben Shapiro’s “Top 10 Most Overrated Directors of All Time” out of my head due to the sheer magnitude of its inanity. It’s at least an 8.3 on the [...]
Wow. Least subtle troll I've seen in a long time.
I'll give you David Lynch. But that's it. What kind of movies do you like? "Must Love Dogs?" "Sleepless in Seattle?" Seriously, you're ripping on lots of my favorite movies, and favorite directors!! And you write with such authority, as if the world agrees with you. Hint, hint – they don't. No offfense, dude, but you don't know much about movies. Hey, you can have your favorites – no accounting for taste and all. But your list isn't even controversial, it's just inane.
If you want "overrated directors", well here they are:
Steven Spielberg
George Lucas
M Night Shyamalan
James Cameron
Robert Zemeckis
Zach Snyder
Any other suggestions?
[...] seems that the only thing more controversial in the discussion of film lately than Ben Shapiro’s list of most overrated directors is Quentin Tarantino’s Inlgourious Basterds. After receiving some Critic’s Choice awards, the [...]
[...] seems that the only thing more controversial in the discussion of film lately than Ben Shapiro’s list of most overrated directors is Quentin Tarantino’s Inlgourious Basterds. After receiving some Critic’s Choice awards, the [...]
[...] Encounter (David Lean, 1945): So I decided to watch this after reading this lame, hateful list of “overrated directors”. One of the directors he lists is David Lean, whose movies are supposedly overlong, and apparently [...]
You are guilty of holding the standards of the present to the art of the past. Goring sacred cows is fun for a barbecue, and I can't quite decide if you are not just a long winded troll.
To take but one example: Lawrence of Arabia. How did you first watch this film? A VHS on a 30" tube? A DVD on a 40" flatscreen? This film was SHOT on 70mm. The length is to establish ATMOSPHERE. It was meant to be seen in a Theater with a 40 foot screen. A film like My Dinner with Andre doesn't lose much in the transition from public to private viewing, but Lean's films certainly do. It is a bit like looking at a photograph of the Sistine Chapel and concluding that Michelangelo was over rated.
Not one of Aronofsky's movies has been a commercial success?
Pi was made for $68,000 and made $4.7+ million.
Requiem for a Dream was made for $4.5 million and brought in $7.4+ million.
The Wrestler cost $6 million and made $55 million.
You're taste can be debated but at least get your facts right.
[...] President Obama’s State of the Union address, Ben Shapiro (who has some strange ideas about overrated directors) penned an article for Human Events that looks at the speech as something squarely in the tradition [...]
I think many commenters are missing that this is a list of OVERRATED not necessarily WORST directors. I take some exception with including Scott (I think Alien, Blade Runner, and Gladiator show genius – many of his other films – ehh), but most other picks are right on -but I would put Tarentino at #1.
Ok, this might be sacrilegious, but I would nominate Spielberg -not that he hasn't made some great films (Jaws, Duel, Pvt. Ryan) but he's also made a lot of dumbed-down schlock pandering to the lowest common denominator, and often bludgeons the audience as if they were idiots.
Other nominees: Wes Anderson, Paul Thomas Anderson, M. Night ("One-Trick-Pony") Shyamalan , Sophia Coppala.
this list is dumb these are some of the best directors ever aparently whoever made this has no real taste in directing or any sense of a good movie
Try making a movie, yourself.
wow this list is just inept.. how did you get this job?
[...] Today’s youth. First they argue that Alfred Hitchcock is overrated, then the say that Sofia Coppola is better than Martin Scorsese, then they have the lack of [...]
David Lynch earns his place on this list for the truly AWFUL Dune and Wild at Heart. What terrible movies. I need to brush my teeth now just writing them.
David Lean is like Gwyneth Paltrow. Great to look at, just leave the sound down so you don't have to listen to the dialog go on and on and on…
Aronofsky? Yes. Thank you. Pi is so pretentious I refused to rent a film for 6 months afterward.
Mike Nichols? Agreed. My God I hate The Graduate. That film is so far up its own ass it sees daylight through its own mouth.
Now, for the others…
Michael Mann? One word. Heat. Take him off the list. I mean, c'mon.
Woody Allen hasn't made a 'great' film since Stardust Memories, but Crimes and Misdemeanors was certainly a very good film. He did make many great films up to that point and before. Seems a bit hyperbolic, yes?
Now, as for Hitchcock, Scorsese, Quentin Tarantino, and Ridley Scott, you may be in need of serious psychological evaluation. I suggest you step away from the typewriter and seek years and years of therapy. I mean, how can you put those guys on this list and leave off Ron Howard, Joel Schumacher, and Brian De Palma,? Are you on Ron Howard's payroll or something?
Mr. Shapiro, you may be the most intellectually inapt person I have ever come across. You know nothing about film. the fact that you even wrote this article is proof that you're too dumb to understand what true art is. You should not be allowed to write another article ever again. Putting Martin Scorcese in this list is a complete travisty. You obviously have no understanding of creative filmmaking and imaginative thought.
All these morons that make these lists that people only look at while bored at work all try to provoke and spark conversation with their inclusion of several of the best directors around. Scorsese? Hitchcock? I hope this isn't your job and you actually make a living playing sour grapes with some great directors just because that screenplay you wrote years ago still hasn't been read by anyone. I'm sure your list of overrated actors would include DeNiro and Brando and Hoffman, because that's the kind of douchebag you are. I can't believe I wasted 5 minutes of my time reading and responding to this stupid little website. And when you look 16, Benny, don't try to give anybody history lessons. Your opening paragraph is almost more pretentious than any of these directors, and you have Woody Allen on there.
Aren't films supposed to be viewed as work of arts?? This entire list seems to be the work of a critic that has to go against the grain as much as possible, more of a shock artist then anything really. I am from the generation that has lost sense of violence with gore filled movies such as the Saw series, and the first time I saw some of Hitchcocks movies I freaked out. He is still to this day that realized that what a person can come up with in their mind is more terrifying then what you can put on a film. The brilliance of cinema is that people will see what they want to see in a movie, as most great art pieces do. You seem to be more of an attention addict then anything, how can I get famous, lets go after some of the most beloved directors and films of all times. It's 2010 buddy, everything is just a repeat or copy of something that has been done, way to go Don Imus.
To the man or woman that posted this: get a life, a pair of glasses, some help for your ears, some kind of cinema learning experience and then make a blogg…
It seems to me that someone wants a little attention…
[...] is the most overrated film director? I just read Big Hollywood Blog Archive Top 10 Most Overrated Directors of All Time and, while it’s a bit (a lot) OTT I can sort of see where he’s coming from with some of [...]
did you just say…did you just say "Alien is slow"?…jesus man…
wow you're a fuckin moron
I think Ben Shapiro is a pretty cool guy. Eh provided opinions without making reasonable arguments and doesn't afraid of anything.
I think Ben Shapiro is a pretty cool guy. Eh provided opinions without making reasonable arguments and doesn't afraid of anything.
you sir are a liar and a jew
I may agree with some of the names you have placed on the list. But overall your descriptions of why you think so is so vague, its almost like your searching frantically for reasons.
So overall i think your overrated cause ehh….your "gross"
Anyone else notice that all of his suggested directors have anti-christian tones to a lot of their films. Is it that they are over rated or their films are rated over PG13?
Inane. I'd be shocked if this was written by a high school graduate. Tearing things down with simple insults is not criticism, it's mindless slander meant for shock value. I bet the author doesn't like the Beatles, either! So edgy and dangerous! Like a 15 year old!
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