-- The Double Life of Veronique (1991), d. Krzysztof
Kieslowski, Pol
Veronique/Veronika: a mesmerizing study of affinity and spiritual
disquiet.
(52) The
Maltese Falcon (1941), d. John Huston, US
The chase for Hammett's black bird, and the vanity of human wishes - greed in
particular.
(53) La Regle du Jeu (The Rules of the Game) (1939), d. Jean Renoir,
Fr
The daddy of all those 'weekend gathering in a country house' movies, and among
much else a celebration of life as living theatre.
-- The
Wizard of Oz (1939), d. Victor Fleming, US
The red shoes, the yellow brick road...
(55) Fargo (1996), d. Joel Coen,
US
Pregnant police chief Frances McDormand sees off the black hats in a marvelously
deadpan thriller about a kidnap that goes spectacularly wrong.
(56) Don't Look Now (1973), d. Nicolas Roeg, GB
Wintry Venetian chronicle of a death foretold.
(57) Touch
Of Evil (1958), d. Orson Welles, US
Proof that post-Kane Welles was not a downward spiral, this flamboyant
exercise in baroque film noir begins with the cinema's most exhilarating
and complex opening-shot ever.
(58) Annie
Hall (1977), d. Woody Allen, US
Well, la-di-dah - and Diane Keaton sets a fashion for waistcoats and baggy pants.
Plus the escaping lobsters.
-- Cinema Paradiso (1988), d. Giuseppe Tornatore, It/Fr
A childhood to die for...?
-- L.A. Confidential (1997), d. Curtis Hanson, US
A Veronica Lake lookalike trapped in a web of male desires.
-- The English Patient (1996), d. Anthony Minghella, US
A dying man in a Tuscan monastery lets his memories wander.
(62) The Apartment (1960), d. Billy
Wilder, US
The perils of ingratiation, or why not to lend your pad to a philandering
boss.
-- The
Magnificent Ambersons (1942), d. Orson Welles, US
RKO hacked it down to what Welles saw as a travesty of his original gently ironic
elegy for a lost America. A masterpiece, none the less.
-- Un Coeur en hiver (1991), d. Claude Sautet, Fr
A troubling study of a menage a trois, complex and effectively underplayed.
(65) Jules and Jim (1962), d. Francois Truffaut,
Fr
The swooningly romantic whirlwind of love and friendship. Why one adored
French movies (and Jeanne Moreau) in the '60s.
-- Reservoir Dogs (1991), d. Quentin Tarantino, US
The heist gone wrong, '90s-style. Tarantino lands a straight left - smack on
a glass jaw.
(67) High
Noon (1952), d. Fred Zinnemann, US
'Oh, don't forsake me...' Marshal Coop does his duty while his Quaker bride waits.
A classic old-school Western.
(68) Mean Streets (1973), d. Martin Scorsese, US
The first time Scorsese really showed what he had in him: Catholic turmoil, masochistic
machismo, a love of rock 'n' roll and a genius for motion pictures.
-- The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966), d. Sergio Leone, It
Splashy, excessive, cynical US Civil War yarn, with lashings of hot spaghetti
sauce.
(70) His
Girl Friday (1940), d. Howard Hawks, US
Hecht and MacArthur's Front Page given a brilliant twist by turning Hildy Johnson
into Walter Burns' ex-wife. Cary Grant vs. Rosalind Russell, the repartee was
never faster or funnier.
-- Mirror (1974), d. Andrei Tarkovsky, USSR
Archive footage and shimmering forests create an autobiographical cine-poem,
a beautiful enigma.
-- The Usual Suspects (1995), d. Bryan Singer, US
Labyrinthine ultra-modern thriller, satisfyingly clever.
-- Trainspotting (1995), d. Danny Boyle, GB
A novel Edinburgh drug story.
(74) Chungking Express (1994), d. Wong Kar-Wai, HK
Two lovelorn Hong Kong cops, two interlinked stories - speedy, wry, sympathetic
and very catchy.
-- Seven (1995), d. David Fincher, US
Impressively nasty thriller featuring a couple of mismatched cops, a cunning
serial killer and the Seven Deadly Sins.
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