100 Greatest Films of All Time Part 3 of 4 parts by FilmFour |
100 Greatest Films of All Time (Part 3, Ranked) |
51. THE ITALIAN JOB (1969) Much-loved British crime caper starring Michael Caine, Noel Coward and, er, Benny Hill. Plus a whole fleet of Minis. |
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52. SUNSET
BOULEVARD (1950) |
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53. THE JUNGLE BOOK (1967) |
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54. TITANIC (1998) Spectacular movie from James Cameron in which the central romance between Leonardo DiCaprio's poor artist and Kate Winslet's society girl is overwhelmed by the monumental recreation of the historical disaster. |
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55. JEAN DE FLORETTE (1986),
MANON DES SOURCES (1986) |
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56. DR
STRANGELOVE, OR: (1963) High cynical satire from Stanley Kubrick, with Peter Sellers, playing three key protagonists in the end of the world, George C. Scott and Sterling Hayden. |
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57. REBEL
WITHOUT A CAUSE (1955) The film that established and immortalised James Dean as the ultimate icon for anguished youth. Charged, good looking and only slightly silly, this is a genuine teen classic. |
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58. THE SEVEN SAMURAI (1954) A simple story of seven mercenaries hired to protect a village from marauding bandits becomes a unique and mesmerising action-packed epic of sustained tension and stoic humanity in Kurosawa's hands: an enduring classic. |
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59. A MATTER OF LIFE AND
DEATH (1946) |
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60. BUTCH
CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID (1969) |
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61. SECRETS & LIES (1995) |
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62. BLUE
VELVET (1986) One of Lynch's best and most controversial films, it gained particular notoriety for its depiction of Rossellini's dangerously dependent relationship with psychopathic kidnapper Hopper and their masochistic, oxygen-fuelled sex scenes. |
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63. LA DOLCE VITA (1960) |
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64. SPARTACUS (1960) The essential historical epic, and a forebear of Gladiator, this tale of a slave rebellion from Kubrick and producer/star Kirk Douglas is a true classic, despite its length. |
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65. METROPOLIS
(1927) Original version of Fritz Lang's spectacular, highly-influential vision of a teeming, politically dubious urban future. |
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66. BONNIE
AND CLYDE (1967) Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway pepper the American Midwest with bullets in this intelligent, amoral, genre-busting gangster movie. |
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67. KING
KONG (1933) |
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68. GET CARTER (1971) British gangster classic starring Michael Caine as the eminently quotable, ultimately tough Jack Carter. |
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69. THE
SEARCHERS (1956) |
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70. THE SEVENTH SEAL (1957) |
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71. DON'T LOOK NOW (1973) Chilling but moving classic of British cinema. Julie Christie and Donald Sutherland star as a couple who move to Venice after the death of their daughter, only to encounter forebodings of death amid its dank off-season canals. |
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72. BRIEF
ENCOUNTER (1945) David Lean breaks out the stiff upper lips for his restrained, yet emotionally charged, examination of forbidden passions in 1940s England. |
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73. M*A*S*H (1970) Anti-establishment comedy from Robert Altman set during the Korean War but satirising the US Vietnam war effort. Stars Donald Sutherland, Elliot Gould and Robert Duvall. |
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74. THE FRENCH
CONNECTION (1971) The cop thriller that has been much copied but rarely matched, featuring one of the best car chases ever committed to film. And Gene Hackman isn't bad, either. |
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75. TOP
HAT (1935) Arguably the classiest and funniest of the RKO Astaire-Rogers musicals. Top Hat offers something close to perfect cinematic escapism. |