@@AK-tw7uq that's correct yet applying the same metric why there is films like Once upon a time in the west, and The Good The bad and the ugly on the same list. Taxi Driver is missing, its at least in top 50
Taxi Driver is all time favourite of mine I expected it in the list and atleast one animation movie Shrek/The Road to ElDorado Also, Brokeback Mountain, Heat, Pursuit of Happyness were surely worth in this list too
I’m sorry there is something fundamentally wrong with this list. There is NO ANIMATION. This is nothing new in the industry where animation is not respected on the same level as live action film. I know this is your personal list and you probably didn’t mean anything bad by it, but next time I would consider animation. Animation has definitely pushed the medium of film to new heights.
Agreed. But this is for him and filmmakers because he dosent make animations. Although there is definitely animation films out there which could help any filmmaker
Hate to say but The Exorcist ('73), Rosemary's Baby ('68) and Chainsaw Massacre ('74) are way better, scarier and more ground breaking films than Scream and Friday the 13th.
Scream LMAOOOO. Hate to say but Scary Movie is better than Scream. This list is so dumb, they didn't include any work of Buñuel, Iñarritu, Bresson, von Trier, or Bertolucci. That's the problem with this kind of "The Best of" or "Watch before you die" lists, they always miss important works and add irrelevant/crappy stuff.
I LOVED HOW YOU STOPPED THE BACKGROUND MUSIC...JUST TO PLAY THE THEME SONG FOR "IN THE MOOD FOR LOVE" BY ITSELF! I'm glad someone knows what's going on 😎
I am from Kerala, India. Happy to see two Indian films in the list. I have a lot of watching to do. I have to see Sunrise, Stagecoach and Underground. I have watched almost most of these movies. I have also to rewatch some of them.
I really like this list, even though I wouln't include films like "Scream", "Munich" and "Halloween". Still need to watch many films you mentioned. I would also add: - Vertigo - Once Upon A Time In America - The Gold Rush - The Third Man - Heat - Babel - The Lion King - Blue Velvet - Terminator 2 - The Deer Hunter
love your list ❤ but i would like to add: -The Seventh Seal (1957) -Lawrence of Arabia (1962) -War and Peace (1966-1967) -A Clockwork Orange (1971) -The Mirror (1975) -Taxi Driver (1976) -The Shining (1980) -The Empire Strikes Back (1980) -Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981) -Back to the Future (1985) -Come and See (1985) -Silence of the Lambs (1991) -The Shawshank Redemption (1994) -Saving Private Ryan (1998) -The Pianist (2002) -Pan Labyrinth (2006)
Lawrence of Arabia was awesome, The Empire Strikes back was the best of the Star Wars series in my opinion. Raiders of the Lost Ark was great for action and effects but Harrison Ford is not a good actor, not by a long shot. That all being said I think Wolfcrow's list is more about conceptual films, not necessarily blockbusters.
Very good list. Have watched 85 / 100 from your list. My list will definitely include Seventh Seal 2001 A Space Odyssey Three Colors : Red Memento Dark Knight Ran The Apartment Rear Window The General The Circus Chinatown Saving Private Ryan Star Wars : A New Hope & Empire Strikes Back Taxi Driver
I would add (of course imo, and I'm definitely missing a bunch, so I'll do my best): - The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie by Luis Buñuel - Amores Perros by Alejandro Gonzalez Iñarritu - Ran by Akira Kurosawa - Cinema Paradiso by Giuseppe Tornatore - Come and See by Elem Klimov - Au Hasard Balthazar by Robert Bresson - Taxi Driver by Martin Scorsese - Play Time by Jacques Tati - Whiplash by Damien Chazelle - Wild Strawberries by Ingman Bergman - Memento by Christopher Nolan - Songs from The Second Floor by Roy Andersson - Incendies by Denis Villeneuve - The Seventh Seal by Ingman Bergman - Oldboy by Park Chaan-Wook - Last Tango in Paris - Bernando Bertolucci - Children of Men by Alfonso Cuaron - Social Network by David Fincher - Pan's Labyrinth by Guillermo del Toro - No Country for Old Men by The Coen Brothers - The Tree of Life by Terrence Malick - Do The Right Thing by Spike Lee - I Saw The Devil by Kim Jee-Woon - Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance by Park Chaan-Wook - Fallen Angels by Wong Kar-Wai - Spirited Away by Hayao Miyazaki - Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back by George Lucas - Inglorious Bastards by Quentin Tarantino - Lady Bird by Greta Gerwick - Transformers by Michael Bay lol of course transformers is a joke, Transformers 2 is the real deal. And I personally wouldn't have in a MUST see these ones (please don't kill me): - Scream - Halloween - The Thin Red Line - Amadeus - The Grand Budapest Hotel - Amelie - Sunset Blvd
@TheMoon Yeah, you're totally right on that, they were pretty defining and challenged the genre at the time. I would also add Texas Chainsaw Massacre and The Exorcist, and maybe Babadook, Possession and Hereditary to my list now that I think about it.
Fun Fact : Sholay is Inspired by this classic 'The Magnificent Seven' directed by John Sturges which was originally inspired by the Japanese film 'Seven Samurai'. (some people refer Inspired as Copy)
Sholay is not at all a masterpiece. It's good but I can't accept it as a masterpiece. I would rather go with Lagaan or Lunchbox or many other Hindi films
@@kiranp5611 sholay is infact a commercial film but it is a masterpiece.... Introduced new genre like spaghetti.... Every character is created which hell lot of attention that's why even dhanno is iconic.... The actions are way better than you expect from the 70s.....every single dialogue is iconic....
These are the ones I didn't know: Sunrise It happend one night The color of pomegranates Les Diaboliques El topo Iruvar 94/100 not a bad score if i say so myself
2 masterpieces everybody ought to see are The Saragossa Manuscript and The Hourglass Sanatorium, both directed by a Polish director - Wojciech Has. The Saragossa Manuscript is actually Francis Coppola's favourite film of all time. Has was a truly a genius on par with greats like Kubrick or Lynch and it's a shame he didn't manage to make more films during his lifetime.
@mc love me It's a shame really that not that many people know about those films. If it weren't for Scorcese's and Coppola's efforts to preserve Has' films perhaps they would be lost almost completely to the majority of the world. You might also want to check other Polish filmmakers like Zulawski or Wajda. Both of them also were absolute masters.
@@swann357 Although I strongly recommend watching great films at a cinema whenever possible, I believe you can find them on sites such as easterneuropeanmovies.com and BFI Player. If you search "(title of the film) watch online" in google you should find even more results. I was lucky enough to see them both on a big screen at one of the local art house cinemas.
Seriously everyone that is interested in filmmaking should watch all those movies before getting spoiled all the time through random Tutorials all over TH-cam
So many amazing films for ethernity: The Third Men (Carol Reed ), The Great Beauty( Paolo Sorrentino), The Duelists (R. Scott), Amour(Michael Hanecke), Black Swan (Darren Aronofsky), The Deer Hunter ( M Cimino), Derzu Urzalla (Kurosawa), Down by Law (Jim Jarmush), Lawrence of Arabia ( David Lean), Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (R Brooks) The Great Dictator (Chaplin), Raise the Red Lantern (Z Yimou ) , Paths of Glory ( Kubrick), ........and the list goes on and on. So many jewels.......
Since you're talking Hitchcock, I would add The Trouble With Harry, it never gets enough respect, likely because it's kinda a light comedy, but it's superb, and beautiful, the color is amazing.
I didn't count, but I'm estimating I've seen at least 90 of the films you've listed (I haven't heard of two or three, so I'll add them to my list). And what a surprise to see BLACK CHRISTMAS here, although I might have tossed in OPERA or SUSPIRIA (the original version). Great list!
Critics are important and their opinion matters even when they have never made a film themselves. I would even say that critics shouldn't make makes, the would make mistakes and it would take away their credibility
I agree! The best critics are the real experts. They often have the greatest historical overview. Filmmakers are the artists/creators - but they don't necessarily know much about the history of the artform. That said, the artists are of course the most important ones. Without art there would not be any experts to criticize it.
I love all these films, but this list is the same as every other, no different directors or movies from different places. There is more to cinema than this. I´m only saying this because you said that it was a"different list by filmmakers" but there are great names, a lot in fact, that are missing.
Great list, but missing amazing Films like: cinema paradiso the lord of the rings il postino gladiator the red violin the exorcist children of men Interstellar Memento Pi Eyes wide shut And many more classics
I respect your choices, and even though I saw most of these films, I also discovered some films I didn’t know yet. So thank you. I do want to say I’m really distracted by the stupid guitar/rock music, please don’t use music or use something less intrusive
✨🤩✨ THESE ARE ALLLLL MY FAVORITE FILMS!!! WOW!!!! It’s nice to have them in a neat little video collection like that. Thank you!!!!!!! ✨🤩✨ P.S. Hitchcock at the end-a cherry on top! 👌
@@UniqornGleek29 You'll find the answer if you google it. Besides, If I named someone, one can vehemently disagree on the "good" part in spite or good faith; it's more about the conceptual thing.
True! Theoretical knowledge and practical skills are not always the same. Some players dont know anything about the game or the history of the game but are just born skilled. Others dont have the practical skills but are reading the game better. The same for films or anything else.
@@UniqornGleek29 Gregg Popovich never played in the NBA, yet is arguably the greatest basketball coach of all time. Yes, he did play at college but that's not comparable to playing the game professionally.
@@jv8studios Mulholland Dr. - I'm a huge David Lynch fan. Although Kubrick IMO is the greatest of them all. Also love Coen Bros., Kurosawa, Scorsese, Coppola.
I get that you’re not crazy about critics but this exactly the list that 90% of critics would put together - just saying. (That’s not necessarily a bad thing)
I would only add some: HOWARD HAWKS for being the first to violate the old theatre rules of "speak - move" ect and cranking up storytelling, influencing almost ALL modern day action film! Terminator is always highly regarded for his "on the move" story exposition but it was Howard Hawks how started it. KINJI FUKASAKU for his "Yakuza Papers" movies. Not only introduced Fukasaku the "documentary style" film like "City of God", pushing Godards work to new grounds but also broke with genre expectations continously. The "Yakuza Papers" movies are also unique because they cover a long time in the life of the main character making the film series a continous saga - 5 movies - which has never been done before that to my knowledge -> 1973. KING HU for elevating a pure entertainment genre, while still being entertaining, to a more sophisticated level much like Akira Kurosawa ... wich brings me to ... SADAO YAMANAKA of whom sadly only three films survived WW2. Yamanaka did what Kurosawa would become famous for just before Kurosawa started to make movies. :)
A List I’ve been waiting for, very good. Some surprise omissions I thought you would have listed. But I like this list as I’ve seen a majority of them. More than once. And the ones I’ve not seen, I have never heard of (except M)
Seven Samurai Citizen Kane 2001: A Space Odyssey Rashomon Mulholland Drive Amelie Barry Lyndon The Godfather: II City lights M The Grand Budapest Hotel Raging Bull The Matrix The Godfather In The Mood of Love City of God Psycho Network Se7en The Grapes of Wrath 12 Angry Men Forrest Gump Lost in Translation Life is Beautiful Pather Panchali Blade Runner There Will Be Blood Goodfellas Once Upon a Time In The West Underground Birdman Or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) Metropolis The Rules of The Game Pulp Fiction The Passion of Joan Of Arc Chinatown Man With a Movie Camera Kagemusha Apocalypse Now The General Sunrise The Birth of A Nation Touch of Evil Before Sunrise Breathless The Bridge On The River Kwai Annie Hall Tokyo Story Battleship Potemkin Chungking Express 8 1/2 Inception Alien Stagecoach Gone With The Wind The Cabinet of Dr Caligari Schindler's List Amadeus Jurassic Park Requiem for a Dream La Dolce Vita The Big Lebowski Modern Times Aguirre, Wrath of God Eternal Sunshine of The Spotless Mind Bicycle Thieves Paris, Texas The Good, The Bad and The Ugly Rocky Contempt (Le Mèpris) Funny and Alexander Groundhog Day Munich Stalker It Happened One Night The Double Life of Veronique The 400 Blows Persona The Thin Red Line The Night of The Hunter All About My Mother Fight Club Dog Day Afternoon The Color of Pomegranates Rear Window Halloween (John Carpenter) Nosferatu Three Colors: Blue Diabolique El Topo Fargo Sunset Blvd. Memories Of Murder L'Avventura Iruvar Scream Dr. Strangelove Or: How I Learned To Stop Worrying and Love The Bomb Black Christmas Blow Up It's a Wonderful Life I watched only 59 of it
I would add PTA's The master, Lanthimo's Dogtooth, Nolan's Dunkirk,La Haine, Whiplash,The lighthouse,Thank you for smoking,The discreet charm of bourgeoisie, Kaufman's Synecdoche New York,Lars and the real girl.happy to see the works of Fritz Lang in this list.
I agree with your point that financial perspective shouldn't be ignored and we also need to look at the "entertainment value".. but my problem with this is.... what exactly is considered to be "entertaining"? It really depends. There isn't any definitive list of items(fast pace, comedy, etc). It is because.... What is considered to be "entertaining" is actually a social and cultural construct. Once you try to look at the inherent purpose behind the need of 'entertainment', you will notice the human need of appeasement and satisfaction from experiencing something is actually more profound than superficially ticking boxes of "entertaining things". I may find watching a Bela Tarr movie is fucking entertaining. But you may say.. "well, many wouldn't." yes exactly. So you what you are talking about here is not entertainment, it is about appealing to larger sect of people.
I was surprised to see the original Black Christmas on the list. Very under appreciated horror movie. Almost no one talks about it yet its just as good as all the other big horror films of the 70s.
I haven't seen 14 of these movies, and I've never even heard of Underground, so thank you for that recommendation. I'm watching this in 2024 and was wondering if there are any films from the past three years that you would add to the list?
the fact that I’m Gen Z and not only recognized almost every movie on this list but have seen a considerable number of them. I feel pretty confident that I’m on the right path!
@@redefinedliving5974 I still had to seek out the films, and information. Most ppl in general don’t care enough about film to research any of this. I know boomers who wouldn’t know or care about these films, and they were alive when they were released. while we’re on the topic I am lucky, because only about half the world has access to internet, and it’s not free. Anyone who has access to information others don’t is lucky, so you’re also in that camp.
@@UniqornGleek29 well, this is exactly how it works. the most recent generation will never understand the full extent of their own privilege. this isn't new, this is how it's always been.
Rear Window, the best film ever IMO, I am glad you included it in your video. Great Director and the most beautiful woman to have ever been in a movie, Grace Kelly.
You chose Wes Craven’s Scream instead of his vastly superior Nightmare on Elm Street? And Halloween instead of Texas Chainsaw Massacre? Shocking, and not in the scary, horror movie kind of way.
@@cfbilly70 It’s pointless to defend that movie when it’s all ready included in the video, and the fact that it exist a superior movie in the same gender doesn’t make it bad, plus Fight club’s on the list and they’re kinda at the same level.
Yes, yes, yes! Awesome list. Still need to watch about 10 of these. Some unexpected entries, but great choices. I have some personal preferences, but as soon as I ask myself why (for example why Rear Window instead of Vertigo), I can see why. If I still have doubts (for example Dog Day Afternoon, which is a fantastic movie, but I found the muddy colors of the film stock used always ugly to look at) I will rewatch knowing that you always know what you are talking about. And yes : Se7en and Fight Club are awesome. Pre-flashing and silver retention resulting in that china ink black: fantastic. Will write down the missing movies and watch these ASAP.
My pick for the films you Should watch before you die: 1. The Birth of a Nation (1915). 2. Battleship Potemkin (1925). 3. Metropolis (1927). 4. Gone with the Wind (1939). 5. The Wizard of Oz (1939). 6. The Great Dictator (1940). 7. Citizen Kane (1941). 8. Casablanca (1942). 9. It’s a Wonderful life (1946). 10. Rashomon (1950). 11. Seven Samurai (1954). 12. 12 Angry Men (1957). 13. Ben-Hur (1959). 14. Lawrence of Arabia (1962). 15. Goldfinger (1964). 16. Mary Poppins (1964). 17. The Sound of Music (1965). 18. The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966). 19. 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968). 20. Planet of the Apes (1968). 21. The Godfather (1972). 22. Chinatown (1974). 23. All the President’s Men (1976). 24. Taxi Driver (1976). 25. Star Wars (1977). 26. Superman: The Movie (1978). 27. Apocalypse Now (1979). 28. Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981). 29. Blade Runner (1982). 30. Back to the Future (1985). 31. Top Gun (1986). 32. Dance with Wolves (1990). 33. Beauty and the Beast (1991). 34. Jurassic Park (1993). 35. Schindler’s List (1993). 36. Forrest Gump (1994). 37. The Lion King (1994). 38. Pulp Fiction (1994). 39. Toy Story (1995). 40. Titanic (1997). 41. Saving Private Ryan (1998). 42. Fight Club (1999). 43. The Matrix (1999). 44. The Sixth Sense (1999). 45. Gladiator (2000). 46. The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001). 47. No Country for Old Men (2007). 48. The Dark Knight (2008). 49. Iron Man (2008). 50. Inception (2010).
A Masterful Choices Despite Not Including Some Other V. Important Masterpieces In Both Era The Silent Years And After The Sound Invented And Made Cinema Talks .. Maybe You Need To Make Another Video For The Best 500 Films In History Of Cinema.. Or 1000 ..!! Thank You For Cinema 100 Best List .. And Remember We're Long Time Fiends In Many Social Media You Tube, Twitter " Now X " , Facebook, And I Don't Know In Instagram Cause I Can't Remember Seeing You There !!!!!
Wow, yes to Black Christmas! So rarely seen, but it is a dark jewel by Bob Clark (The Christmas Story). I was also happy to see The Passion of Joan of Arc (mesmerizing), City of God (chilling) and, of course, Barry Lyndon (gorgeous). I hope you will dip your toe into more comedies...
I'm happy Shawshank Redemption isn't on his list. Last time i knew, it's listed by IMDB (lay people) as no. 1. I consider it "very good," not great and Certainly not THE best film ever. Btw: as of today, i couldn't find IMDB's top 250. It seems to be eliminated.
🔥 Watch this next: *20 Iconic Musical Motifs in Film* th-cam.com/video/vB15TH2p3F4/w-d-xo.html
Shhh! (1993) kannada language
You watch and judge after
It's private...
SILENCE OF THE LAMBS. I AM SHOCKED THIS IS NOT HERE- What Jonnathan Ddemme did for that film was revolutionary as far as direction and cinematography.
why would filmmakers need a movie list curated by you?😂
its your list and yours alone all that filmmaker talk is pant pissingly absurd and pathetic😊
Bro No Taxi Driver ☹️, that’s Scorsese greatest flick I was moved by the movie
Raging Bull is technically better
@@AK-tw7uq that's correct yet applying the same metric why there is films like Once upon a time in the west, and The Good The bad and the ugly on the same list. Taxi Driver is missing, its at least in top 50
@@AK-tw7uq taxi driver is undoubtedly peak Scorsese.
Taxi Driver is all time favourite of mine
I expected it in the list and atleast one animation movie Shrek/The Road to ElDorado
Also,
Brokeback Mountain, Heat, Pursuit of Happyness were surely worth in this list too
From Scorsese I prefer Casino, is my favorite film, but Taxi Driver is one of the cinema's greatest gems
The most "film school" list ever
US film school
That so true🤣
A film school list that doesn´t contain "La Haine"?
My God, YES! It's so cliché. And as usual, some genres are completely snubbed, like comedies, action films, musicals, etc.
Whoever puts "Man With A Movie Camera" by Dziga Vertov is guilty of this. No disrespect but anyway a symptom.
I’m sorry there is something fundamentally wrong with this list. There is NO ANIMATION. This is nothing new in the industry where animation is not respected on the same level as live action film. I know this is your personal list and you probably didn’t mean anything bad by it, but next time I would consider animation. Animation has definitely pushed the medium of film to new heights.
I like cartoon films, but digital animation films are crap in my opinion.
Frankly,.....
Lets hope he has a list of animated films to share at a later date : )
Go home boi
Agreed. But this is for him and filmmakers because he dosent make animations. Although there is definitely animation films out there which could help any filmmaker
Great video, but please reupload without the soft core pornography music in the background.
Hate to say but The Exorcist ('73), Rosemary's Baby ('68) and Chainsaw Massacre ('74) are way better, scarier and more ground breaking films than Scream and Friday the 13th.
Rosemary's Baby, yes- great American film.
Scream LMAOOOO. Hate to say but Scary Movie is better than Scream. This list is so dumb, they didn't include any work of Buñuel, Iñarritu, Bresson, von Trier, or Bertolucci. That's the problem with this kind of "The Best of" or "Watch before you die" lists, they always miss important works and add irrelevant/crappy stuff.
agree. It should have replaced Scream and Haloween. Friday the 13th wasn't included
@@alexcolin2066 Birdman was there
@@alexcolin2066 Also no Gaspar Noe or Refn
I LOVED HOW YOU STOPPED THE BACKGROUND MUSIC...JUST TO PLAY THE THEME SONG FOR "IN THE MOOD FOR LOVE" BY ITSELF! I'm glad someone knows what's going on 😎
Such a great film.
Very interesting. But I find the underlying music very distracting. Sound of the films is also a big part imo
I completely agree with this man, sound is a part of emotion, so i felt onlt half of the emotion.
One word explanation for that: Copyrighting
@@BoWSkittlez i guessed that, but thats still a half baked video then
@@SimonStreuffViolinEducation Boo hiss
@@BoWSkittlez means?
Being from the UK I can't thank you enough for this upload - going into lockdown with a fantastic list to work with!
You're welcome! Stay safe.
Exactly well said !!
Being from Spain I also thank him this suggestions. In a few days day will force us into lockdown, again.
95: iruvar by manirathinam 😍
Innah thala 😂
Proud
@@vishnuchandran6866 truly bro goosebumps came when I see mohanlal and Prakash raj among these legendary films. Proud to be a tamilan
chills
@@chandrasekar03 proud to be a maniratnam fan, i am from kerala i love mohanalal n prakashraj
This list missed Edward Yang's A Brighter Summer Day and Yi Yi
yes! even better than his top5 sorry
I am from Kerala, India. Happy to see two Indian films in the list. I have a lot of watching to do. I have to see Sunrise, Stagecoach and Underground. I have watched almost most of these movies. I have also to rewatch some of them.
As an African student of the art.. I'll also recommend " Heritage Africa, Love Brewed in an African Pot" all by Kwaw Ansah.
Kofi Ansah is a master
Do you have other african films you would recommend? Dont hold back on the amount, i'll manage
@@hvassios
I'll prepare a comprehensive list. In the mean time watch " The Burial of Kojo" on Netflix. It's visual poetry.
@@blackboyblues6727 Thank you. You're awesome
@@blackboyblues6727 It's a Ghanian Movie Right....Will See Soon😊Any Other African Movie Suggestions?
I will not watch so that there is no reason to die.
Big Brain
You've achieved immortality
Pather panchali..❤️
Searching for this comment
I really like this list, even though I wouln't include films like "Scream", "Munich" and "Halloween".
Still need to watch many films you mentioned.
I would also add:
- Vertigo
- Once Upon A Time In America
- The Gold Rush
- The Third Man
- Heat
- Babel
- The Lion King
- Blue Velvet
- Terminator 2
- The Deer Hunter
@wolfcrow you need to update your trivia section. There are 5 directors with 3 films on the list; Kurosawa, Coppola, Kubrick, Spielberg and Lumet.
love your list ❤ but i would like to add:
-The Seventh Seal (1957)
-Lawrence of Arabia (1962)
-War and Peace (1966-1967)
-A Clockwork Orange (1971)
-The Mirror (1975)
-Taxi Driver (1976)
-The Shining (1980)
-The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
-Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
-Back to the Future (1985)
-Come and See (1985)
-Silence of the Lambs (1991)
-The Shawshank Redemption (1994)
-Saving Private Ryan (1998)
-The Pianist (2002)
-Pan Labyrinth (2006)
Agreed.
Exactly!!!
Plus, something by De Palma..say... Body Double.
Lawrence of Arabia was awesome, The Empire Strikes back was the best of the Star Wars series in my opinion. Raiders of the Lost Ark was great for action and effects but Harrison Ford is not a good actor, not by a long shot. That all being said I think Wolfcrow's list is more about conceptual films, not necessarily blockbusters.
@@travisdaki
I'd say "Sisters", "Carrie" or "Blow Out".
Surprised to see Iruvar on the list. It’s the best work of maniratnam till date
You may not give a damn but no Bresson, Buñuel, Erice, is quite lacking...specially when some of those you put take lots from them.
True
I was thinking the same
Yeah, Bresson’s Au Hasard Balthazar is a top 5 for me. Also Ray’s Pather Panchali, Bergman’s Wild Strawberries, and Huston’s The Maltese Falcon.
Very good list. Have watched 85 / 100 from your list. My list will definitely include
Seventh Seal
2001 A Space Odyssey
Three Colors : Red
Memento
Dark Knight
Ran
The Apartment
Rear Window
The General
The Circus
Chinatown
Saving Private Ryan
Star Wars : A New Hope & Empire Strikes Back
Taxi Driver
He had the Colors trilogy, 2001, The General, as nd Rear Window. Pay attention. Which are great films.
Chinatown is included
Your list is one of the few I would watch all the movies from it, and I consider you opinion and influence to be one of the most important for me
Thank you!
I would add (of course imo, and I'm definitely missing a bunch, so I'll do my best):
- The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie by Luis Buñuel
- Amores Perros by Alejandro Gonzalez Iñarritu
- Ran by Akira Kurosawa
- Cinema Paradiso by Giuseppe Tornatore
- Come and See by Elem Klimov
- Au Hasard Balthazar by Robert Bresson
- Taxi Driver by Martin Scorsese
- Play Time by Jacques Tati
- Whiplash by Damien Chazelle
- Wild Strawberries by Ingman Bergman
- Memento by Christopher Nolan
- Songs from The Second Floor by Roy Andersson
- Incendies by Denis Villeneuve
- The Seventh Seal by Ingman Bergman
- Oldboy by Park Chaan-Wook
- Last Tango in Paris - Bernando Bertolucci
- Children of Men by Alfonso Cuaron
- Social Network by David Fincher
- Pan's Labyrinth by Guillermo del Toro
- No Country for Old Men by The Coen Brothers
- The Tree of Life by Terrence Malick
- Do The Right Thing by Spike Lee
- I Saw The Devil by Kim Jee-Woon
- Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance by Park Chaan-Wook
- Fallen Angels by Wong Kar-Wai
- Spirited Away by Hayao Miyazaki
- Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back by George Lucas
- Inglorious Bastards by Quentin Tarantino
- Lady Bird by Greta Gerwick
- Transformers by Michael Bay
lol of course transformers is a joke, Transformers 2 is the real deal.
And I personally wouldn't have in a MUST see these ones (please don't kill me):
- Scream
- Halloween
- The Thin Red Line
- Amadeus
- The Grand Budapest Hotel
- Amelie
- Sunset Blvd
Amelie is a must see for me.
@@miriammoriarty8588 I respect everyone's opinion, I think is an amazing film actually!
@TheMoon Yeah, you're totally right on that, they were pretty defining and challenged the genre at the time. I would also add Texas Chainsaw Massacre and The Exorcist, and maybe Babadook, Possession and Hereditary to my list now that I think about it.
From Kar-Wai I highly recommend “Happy together”. It’s as perfect as “In the mood for love”
Also The Unbearable Lightness of Being.
I would add ''Dancer in the dark'' by Trier. And not only, but generally there is a good variety of directors. Loved that you put Jodorowsky.
bit needlessly fucking depressing
I've seen 27 of these already, guess I'm a quarter of the way to being a film student
I have your numbers and I'm not a film student.
85 out of 100, all of them are worth it. :)
59 of 100
89 out of 100
Some people's sarcasm isn't as funny as they think it is.
Fun Fact : Sholay is Inspired by this classic 'The Magnificent Seven' directed by John Sturges which was originally inspired by the Japanese film 'Seven Samurai'.
(some people refer Inspired as Copy)
Sholay is not at all a masterpiece. It's good but I can't accept it as a masterpiece. I would rather go with Lagaan or Lunchbox or many other Hindi films
@@kiranp5611 When did i said its masterpiece ? But its in top 100 list of Indian Films...
@@aa_gg that's because the quality of our films are low and Sholay was quite revolutionary at that Time
@@kiranp5611 yes, Sholay increased the upper limit and the standards of Film and people's expectations with films...
@@kiranp5611 sholay is infact a commercial film but it is a masterpiece.... Introduced new genre like spaghetti.... Every character is created which hell lot of attention that's why even dhanno is iconic.... The actions are way better than you expect from the 70s.....every single dialogue is iconic....
I can’t believe Shawshank Redemption is not on this list but Scream is? Anyways you don’t give a damn. Love that you included Groundhog Day though
"Scream" sucks & "...Shawshank..."'s
just a bad imitation of "Escape From Alcatraz".
You reminded me that I need to watch more of these films. Thanks.
Which film will you watch first?
Watched 87 of them. With the impending UK lockdown I guess I’ve got some watching to do
13 more and your ready to die hahahha
The Dark Knight, The Shawshank Redemption, Casablanca, A Clockwork Orange, Memento, Interstellar, Paths of Glory, Heat should have been on this list.
Say hello to Hollywood
These are the ones I didn't know:
Sunrise
It happend one night
The color of pomegranates
Les Diaboliques
El topo
Iruvar
94/100 not a bad score if i say so myself
Do give Iruvar a try. You won't be disappointed
Remember the Hungarian filmmaker Bela Tarr. Lack of distribution means his work has been overlooked.
A couple of British films which should have been on this list; ‘A matter of life and death’ & ‘The Devils’
Great list. Seen:61 Unseen:39 I'll definitely be checking those out.
2 masterpieces everybody ought to see are The Saragossa Manuscript and The Hourglass Sanatorium, both directed by a Polish director - Wojciech Has. The Saragossa Manuscript is actually Francis Coppola's favourite film of all time. Has was a truly a genius on par with greats like Kubrick or Lynch and it's a shame he didn't manage to make more films during his lifetime.
@mc love me It's a shame really that not that many people know about those films. If it weren't for Scorcese's and Coppola's efforts to preserve Has' films perhaps they would be lost almost completely to the majority of the world. You might also want to check other Polish filmmakers like Zulawski or Wajda. Both of them also were absolute masters.
@@UmbrellaGent Do you know how I can watch those ? There doesn't seem to be any DVD's or any record of them in my country
I'll definitely check them out
@@swann357 Although I strongly recommend watching great films at a cinema whenever possible, I believe you can find them on sites such as
easterneuropeanmovies.com and BFI Player.
If you search "(title of the film) watch online" in google you should find even more results.
I was lucky enough to see them both on a big screen at one of the local art house cinemas.
It’s well known that Coppola also really loves Bertolucci’s The Conformist to the point where he had to have Storaro film Apocalype Now.
Seriously everyone that is interested in filmmaking should watch all those movies before getting spoiled all the time through random Tutorials all over TH-cam
So many amazing films for ethernity: The Third Men (Carol Reed ), The Great Beauty( Paolo Sorrentino), The Duelists (R. Scott), Amour(Michael Hanecke), Black Swan (Darren Aronofsky), The Deer Hunter ( M Cimino), Derzu Urzalla (Kurosawa), Down by Law (Jim Jarmush), Lawrence of Arabia ( David Lean), Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (R Brooks) The Great Dictator (Chaplin), Raise the Red Lantern (Z Yimou ) , Paths of Glory ( Kubrick), ........and the list goes on and on. So many jewels.......
Raise the Red Lantern.... a real great. Did you know all the copies of film were either lost or destroyed.
Rear Window has a deep meaning of McCathesim, voyeurism and mystery. You should watch it
I watched Rear Window,it is a great movie
North by Northwest equally entertaining.
Since you're talking Hitchcock, I would add The Trouble With Harry, it never gets enough respect, likely because it's kinda a light comedy, but it's superb, and beautiful, the color is amazing.
Whoever hasn't watched Iruvar, watch it. It is one of the greatest of all time.
No One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, the Silence of the Lambs, or Shawshank Redemption. This list is a little messed up.
Your list is very close to mine, I'd throw in a Cronenberg, a Fassbinder and a Jarmush.
Jarmusch is garbage.. overrated, pretentious film making at at its shittiest
@@jduder boring
@@kostajovanovic3711 yo you are the guy from Taste Of Cinema
Pather Panchali and iruvar 😍
I didn't count, but I'm estimating I've seen at least 90 of the films you've listed (I haven't heard of two or three, so I'll add them to my list). And what a surprise to see BLACK CHRISTMAS here, although I might have tossed in OPERA or SUSPIRIA (the original version). Great list!
Critics are important and their opinion matters even when they have never made a film themselves. I would even say that critics shouldn't make makes, the would make mistakes and it would take away their credibility
Still he didn't give a damn. But i do appreciate the critics
I agree! The best critics are the real experts. They often have the greatest historical overview. Filmmakers are the artists/creators - but they don't necessarily know much about the history of the artform. That said, the artists are of course the most important ones. Without art there would not be any experts to criticize it.
Great list brother, but no Michael Heneke films? Have you seen Caché
( Hidden)
Take your like mister.
Wow! Iruvar in the list...❤️
I love all these films, but this list is the same as every other, no different directors or movies from different places. There is more to cinema than this. I´m only saying this because you said that it was a"different list by filmmakers" but there are great names, a lot in fact, that are missing.
the pure fact that there is not a single movie by Buñuel says a lot
I’ve watched all of these 100 films you recommended before I die. Now, I’m ready to die. Sayonara, twerk!
Great list, but missing amazing Films like:
cinema paradiso
the lord of the rings
il postino
gladiator
the red violin
the exorcist
children of men
Interstellar
Memento
Pi
Eyes wide shut
And many more classics
Great list and video, thanks. I'd personally dump Forrest Gump, Birdman, and Life is Beautiful and add Rosemary's Baby, Yi Yi and Tree of Life.
I respect your choices, and even though I saw most of these films, I also discovered some films I didn’t know yet. So thank you.
I do want to say I’m really distracted by the stupid guitar/rock music, please don’t use music or use something less intrusive
✨🤩✨ THESE ARE ALLLLL MY FAVORITE FILMS!!! WOW!!!! It’s nice to have them in a neat little video collection like that. Thank you!!!!!!! ✨🤩✨ P.S. Hitchcock at the end-a cherry on top! 👌
Thank you for this. I've added 17 new films to my "Movies to Watch" list.
A critic can be like a good coach--he may never have played the game, but he can have deeper knowledge on the topic than the player.
what good coaches do you know that have never played the games they coach for??
@@UniqornGleek29 You'll find the answer if you google it. Besides, If I named someone, one can vehemently disagree on the "good" part in spite or good faith; it's more about the conceptual thing.
True!
Theoretical knowledge and practical skills are not always the same. Some players dont know anything about the game or the history of the game but are just born skilled. Others dont have the practical skills but are reading the game better. The same for films or anything else.
@@UniqornGleek29 Gregg Popovich never played in the NBA, yet is arguably the greatest basketball coach of all time. Yes, he did play at college but that's not comparable to playing the game professionally.
@@UniqornGleek29 Andreas Vilas Boas, Julien Negelsman football coaches didn't play professional but pretty successful as coaches.
Wow, I've seen 74 of these. Not bad. And what's more, if I counted correctly, I own 33 of them.
No Eraserhead, though? Inexcusable omission.
Nice you watch a lot ! What was your favourite film ?
@@jv8studios Mulholland Dr. - I'm a huge David Lynch fan. Although Kubrick IMO is the greatest of them all. Also love Coen Bros., Kurosawa, Scorsese, Coppola.
What about psycho, the shining, the sixth sense? I would remove Scream for one of those!
He had Psycho
I get that you’re not crazy about critics but this exactly the list that 90% of critics would put together - just saying.
(That’s not necessarily a bad thing)
What a priceless list! The only two that def surprised me was Groundhog Day ?! and Halloween ?? as two of the Greatest 100 Movies of All Time
Yeah, over Wild Strawberries and Au Hasard Balthazar?
14:10 mohan lal 🔥
You put Eternal sunshine of the spotless mind. That way you gain honor of became one of my subscription channel. Congratulation. Stay humble
As an art its brilliant film. Totally underrated best performance by both the leads.
Great film. But I had to watch it twice to get it. Carrey's finest film by far.
Great to see Sergei Parajanov in the list on of the greats sadly forgotten.
Excellent listing. It's helpful, thank you Wolfcrow.
I would only add some:
HOWARD HAWKS for being the first to violate the old theatre rules of "speak - move" ect and cranking up storytelling, influencing almost ALL modern day action film! Terminator is always highly regarded for his "on the move" story exposition but it was Howard Hawks how started it.
KINJI FUKASAKU for his "Yakuza Papers" movies. Not only introduced Fukasaku the "documentary style" film like "City of God", pushing Godards work to new grounds but also broke with genre expectations continously. The "Yakuza Papers" movies are also unique because they cover a long time in the life of the main character making the film series a continous saga - 5 movies - which has never been done before that to my knowledge -> 1973.
KING HU for elevating a pure entertainment genre, while still being entertaining, to a more sophisticated level much like Akira Kurosawa ... wich brings me to ...
SADAO YAMANAKA of whom sadly only three films survived WW2. Yamanaka did what Kurosawa would become famous for just before Kurosawa started to make movies. :)
Amazing content as usual
Bro it's been 6 mins & the video is 15 mins long LMFAO
Thank you!
@@khwabyda has he ever produced anything bad?. Also helped me so much in film school. Best education here.
8 1/2
Magnolia
Le Mépris
Sans Soleil
The Conversation
In the Mood for Love
Yes, Magnolia. Stunning film. Anderson's best.
Well then. Looks like I’ve got a few films to watch!
Ahaha yes same here! Where will you start ?
@@jv8studios at the beginning lol!
Awesome video! Creativity doesn’t have boarders! Only the stories and camera angles!
This list is obviously a must! Congratulations!
.......thank u .....those are pure gold
You’re welcome!
What's the song playing in the intro? I looked in the description but that's not the same song.
I have watched 27 out of 100 😌Thanks for the list. Will watch the rest now.
MUNICH is a underrated movie, I am glad that you like to.
A List I’ve been waiting for, very good. Some surprise omissions I thought you would have listed. But I like this list as I’ve seen a majority of them. More than once. And the ones I’ve not seen, I have never heard of (except M)
make a letterboxd list of the films
Seven Samurai
Citizen Kane
2001: A Space Odyssey
Rashomon
Mulholland Drive
Amelie
Barry Lyndon
The Godfather: II
City lights
M
The Grand Budapest Hotel
Raging Bull
The Matrix
The Godfather
In The Mood of Love
City of God
Psycho
Network
Se7en
The Grapes of Wrath
12 Angry Men
Forrest Gump
Lost in Translation
Life is Beautiful
Pather Panchali
Blade Runner
There Will Be Blood
Goodfellas
Once Upon a Time In The West
Underground
Birdman Or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
Metropolis
The Rules of The Game
Pulp Fiction
The Passion of Joan Of Arc
Chinatown
Man With a Movie Camera
Kagemusha
Apocalypse Now
The General
Sunrise
The Birth of A Nation
Touch of Evil
Before Sunrise
Breathless
The Bridge On The River Kwai
Annie Hall
Tokyo Story
Battleship Potemkin
Chungking Express
8 1/2
Inception
Alien
Stagecoach
Gone With The Wind
The Cabinet of Dr Caligari
Schindler's List
Amadeus
Jurassic Park
Requiem for a Dream
La Dolce Vita
The Big Lebowski
Modern Times
Aguirre, Wrath of God
Eternal Sunshine of The Spotless Mind
Bicycle Thieves
Paris, Texas
The Good, The Bad and The Ugly
Rocky
Contempt (Le Mèpris)
Funny and Alexander
Groundhog Day
Munich
Stalker
It Happened One Night
The Double Life of Veronique
The 400 Blows
Persona
The Thin Red Line
The Night of The Hunter
All About My Mother
Fight Club
Dog Day Afternoon
The Color of Pomegranates
Rear Window
Halloween (John Carpenter)
Nosferatu
Three Colors: Blue
Diabolique
El Topo
Fargo
Sunset Blvd.
Memories Of Murder
L'Avventura
Iruvar
Scream
Dr. Strangelove Or: How I Learned To Stop Worrying and Love The Bomb
Black Christmas
Blow Up
It's a Wonderful Life
I watched only 59 of it
I would add PTA's The master, Lanthimo's Dogtooth, Nolan's Dunkirk,La Haine, Whiplash,The lighthouse,Thank you for smoking,The discreet charm of bourgeoisie, Kaufman's Synecdoche New York,Lars and the real girl.happy to see the works of Fritz Lang in this list.
Amazing list! A lot of films I need to check out still!
I agree with your point that financial perspective shouldn't be ignored and we also need to look at the "entertainment value".. but my problem with this is.... what exactly is considered to be "entertaining"? It really depends. There isn't any definitive list of items(fast pace, comedy, etc). It is because.... What is considered to be "entertaining" is actually a social and cultural construct. Once you try to look at the inherent purpose behind the need of 'entertainment', you will notice the human need of appeasement and satisfaction from experiencing something is actually more profound than superficially ticking boxes of "entertaining things". I may find watching a Bela Tarr movie is fucking entertaining. But you may say.. "well, many wouldn't." yes exactly. So you what you are talking about here is not entertainment, it is about appealing to larger sect of people.
Well said 👍
A very credible list - I would though add Third Man and lady killers.
Thank you.
where can i watch this films, specially those old ones
I was surprised to see the original Black Christmas on the list. Very under appreciated horror movie. Almost no one talks about it yet its just as good as all the other big horror films of the 70s.
I haven't seen 14 of these movies, and I've never even heard of Underground, so thank you for that recommendation. I'm watching this in 2024 and was wondering if there are any films from the past three years that you would add to the list?
Where the hell is Vertigo?
the fact that I’m Gen Z and not only recognized almost every movie on this list but have seen a considerable number of them. I feel pretty confident that I’m on the right path!
Please shut the fuck up omg 😭
Gen z's have access on the internet and streaming services--- you are lucky if anything
@@redefinedliving5974 I still had to seek out the films, and information. Most ppl in general don’t care enough about film to research any of this. I know boomers who wouldn’t know or care about these films, and they were alive when they were released.
while we’re on the topic I am lucky, because only about half the world has access to internet, and it’s not free. Anyone who has access to information others don’t is lucky, so you’re also in that camp.
@@UniqornGleek29 well, this is exactly how it works. the most recent generation will never understand the full extent of their own privilege. this isn't new, this is how it's always been.
Privileged or not thats irrelevant, still on the right path
A lot of masterpieces here...Thanks for sharing
wow, i have watched 31 of them,
Thnak you for sharing this list with us!
Rear Window, the best film ever IMO, I am glad you included it in your video. Great Director and the most beautiful woman to have ever been in a movie, Grace Kelly.
Thanks. Great Teaching.
You chose Wes Craven’s Scream instead of his vastly superior Nightmare on Elm Street? And Halloween instead of Texas Chainsaw Massacre? Shocking, and not in the scary, horror movie kind of way.
I would like to know why do you think Scream should make it to this list? Would love to hear from you. Thanks.
Yeah! Of all movies... I would like to know too.
Dismissed:
1-Leon (the professional)
2-Interstellar
3-The exorcist
Interstellar, really? Maybe give 2001: A Space Odyssey a watch first.
@@cfbilly70 It’s pointless to defend that movie when it’s all ready included in the video, and the fact that it exist a superior movie in the same gender doesn’t make it bad, plus Fight club’s on the list and they’re kinda at the same level.
Yes, yes, yes! Awesome list. Still need to watch about 10 of these. Some unexpected entries, but great choices. I have some personal preferences, but as soon as I ask myself why (for example why Rear Window instead of Vertigo), I can see why. If I still have doubts (for example Dog Day Afternoon, which is a fantastic movie, but I found the muddy colors of the film stock used always ugly to look at) I will rewatch knowing that you always know what you are talking about. And yes : Se7en and Fight Club are awesome. Pre-flashing and silver retention resulting in that china ink black: fantastic. Will write down the missing movies and watch these ASAP.
No Wizard of Oz, No Casablanca, Barry Lyndon but not Clockwork Orange, no Lawrence of Arabia
Where can l find the written list?
My pick for the films you Should watch before you die:
1. The Birth of a Nation (1915).
2. Battleship Potemkin (1925).
3. Metropolis (1927).
4. Gone with the Wind (1939).
5. The Wizard of Oz (1939).
6. The Great Dictator (1940).
7. Citizen Kane (1941).
8. Casablanca (1942).
9. It’s a Wonderful life (1946).
10. Rashomon (1950).
11. Seven Samurai (1954).
12. 12 Angry Men (1957).
13. Ben-Hur (1959).
14. Lawrence of Arabia (1962).
15. Goldfinger (1964).
16. Mary Poppins (1964).
17. The Sound of Music (1965).
18. The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966).
19. 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968).
20. Planet of the Apes (1968).
21. The Godfather (1972).
22. Chinatown (1974).
23. All the President’s Men (1976).
24. Taxi Driver (1976).
25. Star Wars (1977).
26. Superman: The Movie (1978).
27. Apocalypse Now (1979).
28. Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981).
29. Blade Runner (1982).
30. Back to the Future (1985).
31. Top Gun (1986).
32. Dance with Wolves (1990).
33. Beauty and the Beast (1991).
34. Jurassic Park (1993).
35. Schindler’s List (1993).
36. Forrest Gump (1994).
37. The Lion King (1994).
38. Pulp Fiction (1994).
39. Toy Story (1995).
40. Titanic (1997).
41. Saving Private Ryan (1998).
42. Fight Club (1999).
43. The Matrix (1999).
44. The Sixth Sense (1999).
45. Gladiator (2000).
46. The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001).
47. No Country for Old Men (2007).
48. The Dark Knight (2008).
49. Iron Man (2008).
50. Inception (2010).
Just superb videos, thank you taking the time.
A Masterful Choices Despite Not Including Some Other V. Important Masterpieces In Both Era The Silent Years And After The Sound Invented And Made Cinema Talks .. Maybe You Need To Make Another Video For
The Best 500 Films In History Of Cinema.. Or 1000 ..!!
Thank You For Cinema 100 Best List .. And Remember We're Long Time Fiends In Many Social Media
You Tube, Twitter " Now X " , Facebook, And I Don't Know In Instagram Cause I Can't Remember Seeing You There !!!!!
Wow, yes to Black Christmas! So rarely seen, but it is a dark jewel by Bob Clark (The Christmas Story). I was also happy to see The Passion of Joan of Arc (mesmerizing), City of God (chilling) and, of course, Barry Lyndon (gorgeous). I hope you will dip your toe into more comedies...
I'm happy Shawshank Redemption isn't on his list. Last time i knew, it's listed by IMDB (lay people) as no. 1. I consider it "very good," not great and Certainly not THE best film ever. Btw: as of today, i couldn't find IMDB's top 250. It seems to be eliminated.