Speaking of Lynch, where is he!? And, where is Robert Altman and Carol Reed. I'd take those three, for starters, over 'some', that were mentioned. Although, I concede all of their talent.
There is a difference between The Greatest movie ever made and the ones which are your favourite. Scorsese thinks Pather Panchali is one of the greatest movies but maybe he doesn't watch it as often as his favourites in the list.
There's a difference between "Great film" and "Favourite film". The shawshank redemption, the dark knight, etc are also great films; but very few director count it among their favourites .
'Pather Panchali' by Satyajit Ray is arguably one of the favourite movies of Christopher Nolan. He himself said about the movie, "one of the best movies ever made, an extraordinary piece of work."
@@lalhmudiki-1381 yes he said. www.google.com/amp/s/www.hindustantimes.com/hollywood/when-christopher-nolan-said-india-has-one-of-the-greatest-film-cultures-in-the-world-called-this-indian-film-one-of-the-best-ever-made/story-H4tcgfBIdNolD6T54FCgWK_amp.html
My favorite films if anyone’s interested: It’s A Wonderful Life (1946, Frank Capra) Planes, Trains & Automobiles (1987, John Hughes) Pulp Fiction (1994, Quentin Tarantino) Pinocchio (1940, Ben Sharpsteen/Hamilton Luske) Back To The Future (1985, Robert Zemeckis) One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest (1975, Miloš Forman) The Naked Gun: From The Files Of Police Squad! (1988, David Zucker) The Wizard Of Oz (1939, Victor Fleming) Carrie (1976, Brian De Palma) 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968, Stanley Kubrick) The Lego Movie (2014, Phil Lord/Chris Miller) Rear Window (1954, Alfred Hitchcock) The Exorcist (1973, William Friedkin) Return Of The Jedi (1983, Richard Marquand) Monty Python And The Holy Grail (1975, Terry Gilliam, Terry Jones) Wall-E (2008, Andrew Stanton) A Clockwork Orange (1971, Stanley Kubrick) Casino (1995, Martin Scorsese) Gremlins (1984, Joe Dante) The Hateful Eight (2015, Quentin Tarantino) Titanic (1997, James Cameron) Mary Poppins (1964, Robert Stevenson) Simon Birch (1998, Mark Steven Johnson) The Wolf Of Wall Street (2013, Martin Scorsese) The Godfather (1972, Francis Ford Coppola)
It's cool to see the Hateful Eight on their it's such an underrated movie because it gets drowned out by Tarantino's other amazing work. Truly a magnificent movie.
Steven loves Lawrence of Arabia...talked very so much and Christopher always admires "Heat" where he learnt the concept of Dark Knight..... Rest on everybody's wisdom
Actually, after seeing the film, Steven really wanted to give up that dream. “How can I top that!?” He thought to himself. But a stubborn whisper pushed him into the theater to watch Lean’s epic again and again. He devoured that film. Steven then knew he’d either become a film director... or die trying!
@@fritzwalter4660 Fellini is considered the Italian maestro of film directors while Morricone is considered the Italian maestro of film scores. Both hail from Rome. Apart from that no relation.
@@elijahwilliamson3623 No problem. Here in germany was Ennio Morricone once a special guest in a 80s Talk Show and the host called him all the time Enrico. This was really funny.
Manchester by the Sea, Casablanca, Good Will Hunting, The Godfather, Reservoir Dogs, The good the Bad and the Evil, A Summer story, Wuthering Heights (with Olivier), Sense and Sensibility, The Departed, Rain Man.
I think 2001: Space Odyssey was the one mentioned more times. So is this the best movie ever? Probably. Along with Citizen Kane, The Godfather, City Lights, I Vitteloni and Rashomon.
Εντάξει όμως είναι υποκειμενικό, αν και συμφωνώ για το 2001. Επίσης πρέπει να αναφερθεί ότι οι συγκεκριμένοι σκηνοθέτες είναι σχετικά μεγάλοι σε ηλικία και τείνουν να έχουν ψηλά ταινίες από την δική τους "νεαρή" ηλικία. Όχι ότι δεν είναι καλές ταινίες, προφανώς και είναι αλλά αλλιώς κοιτάς κάτι με γυαλιά νοσταλγίας και αλλιώς καθαρά με κριτικό μάτι.
@@AionShanks Δεν είμαι καθόλου νοσταλγικός τύπους, ούτε παρελθοντολάγνος, εκτός από το Σινεμά 😅 γενικά τις τέχνες, γιατί θεωρώ ότι η αξία που είχαν κάποια έργα του παρελθόντος κρίνεται σε βάθος χρόνου, πόσο μπροστά ήταν από την εποχή τους και πόσο επηρέασαν την τέχνη. Ταινίες όπως η Οδύσσεια, ο Πολίτης Κέιν, το M του Λανγκ, οι 7 Σαμουράι, είχαν τεράστια επιρροή στον κινηματογράφο. Αλλά και πιο σύγχρονες, το Halloween, Terminator 2, Seven, Matrix, Jurassic Park
yes but Hitchcock has more diverse movies on this list. Five movies (Vertigo, Birds, Psycho, Rear Window and Notorius). So, Hitchcock is director with most great movies. I mean, his filmography is better then any director in history. GOAT
@@ΔημήτρηςΚατσίκης ναι ρε συμφωνώ, αναφέρομαι στους σκηνοθέτες του βίντεο, καθώς πολλοί από αυτούς ενώ ζουν ακόμα δεν έχουν ταινίες μετά το 2000 για παράδειγμα. Κατάλαβα τι εννοείς πάντως, σίγουρα στο βάθος χρόνου φαίνονται τα διαμάντια και ίσως και μερικές ταινίες που στο παρελθόν δεν είχαν την εκτίμηση που τους άξιζε.
Maybe I'm looking too much into this but I feel like that was Fellini's little inside joke about how autobiographical 8 1/2 (its about a director who can't make up his mind during a sci-fi film shoot which is exactly what Fellini was going through at the time) and how its all about the narcissism and selfishness of the artistic temperament
Stanley Kubrick went on record saying that two of his favorite films of all time are “White Man Can’t Jump” and “The Jerk.” I’m not even joking, look it up😂
I vitelloni was his favorite. Followed up by wild strawberries and a few others. For the guy who said Annie hall that’s because on his list of 93 favorite films it was first but the list was in no order. For Eraserhead it must have been recently biased.
One of Quentin Tarantino's biggest influences is Takashi Miike. Especially his movie Ôddishon (Audition). Seems this list is inaccurate in more ways too..
I'm suprised Ridley Scott likes Muriel's Wedding and happy that two great directors appreciate Ashes and Diamonds. Leone's list is disarmingly one-genre funny.
2:17 There's a typo. Frankenstein was written by Mary Shelley but the 1931 film was directed by James Whale who also directed The Bride of Frankenstein
2:16 John Frankenheimer's Black Sunday? Cmon, it's Mario Bava's Black Sunday (1960)... *Tim Burton: "Mario Bava's Black Sunday is one of the first films that made me understand the power of cinema in the sense of images as part of the story."*
Tim Burton's listing of The Wizard of Oz, directed by Victor Fleming, was released in 1939, not 1947. Trivia: The b & w Kansas scenes in Oz were directed by King Vidor. Fleming left to direct Gone With the Wind. I agree the most with Spike Lee's list.
Martin Scorsese, quentin tarantino, david fincher and clint Eastwood these are ma favorite directors. I like very much their movies.... Especially classic movies....and more than like quentin tarantino epic violence movies, for example kill bill type🔥. Legends never give up their forever stand up at Hollywood ❤
C'mon Frankestein 1931 by Mary Shelley ? And no one reacts ? If you really think Mary Shelley is the director of Frankenstein (why not after all), the date is 1818.
My favorite movies: ET: The Extra-Terrestrial (1982,Steven Spielberg) The Maltese Falcon (1941, John Huston) Rosemary's Baby (1968, Roman Polanski) Trick R Treat (2007, Michael Dougherty) Knives-Out (2019, Rian Johnson) Zootopia (2016, Byron Howard/ Rich Moore) Barry Lynden (1975, Stanley Kubrick) Annie Hall (1977, Woody Allan) Evil Dead 2 (1987, Sam Rami) Blow-Out (1981,Brian DePalma) Dune Part.1 (2021, Denis Villeneuve) The Bad Guys (2022, Pierre perifel) Star wars (1977,George Lucas) Scarface (1983, Brian DePalma) Avatar: The Way Of Water (2022, James Cameron) The Big Sleep (1946, Howard Hawks) The Whale (2022, Darren Aaronofsky The Hateful Eight (2015, Quentin tarantino) Blue Velvet (1986, David Lynch) The Departed (2006, Martin Scorsese) There Will Be Blood (2007, Paul Thomas Anderson) Pan's Labyrinth (2006, Guillermo Del Toro) Doctor Zhivago (1965, David Lean) Earserhead (1977, David lean) The Game (1997, David Fincher) The Northman (2022, Robert Eggers) Saw (2004, James Wan) Looper (2012, Rian Johnson) The Man who knew too much (1956, Alfred Hitchcock) Strangers On The Train (1953, Alfred Hitchcock) The Lord Of The Rings: The Return Of The King (2003, Peter Jackson) The Outsiders (1983, Francis Ford Coppola) True Romance (1993, Tony Scott) Rumble Fish (1983, Francis Ford Coppola) Requiem For A Dream (2000, Darren Aaronofsky) Do The Right Thing (1989,Spike Lee) The Matrix (1999, Larry & Andy Wachowski) Metropolis (1927,Fritz Lang) The Shining (1980, Stanley Kubrick) Eyes Wide Shut (1999, Stanley Kubrick) Puss In Boots: The Last Wish (2022, Joel Crawford) Inland Empire (2006, David Lynch) A Clockwork Orange (1971, Stanley Kubrick) The Wizard Of Oz (1939, Victor Fleming) Unforgiven (1992, Clint Eastwood) Rio Bravo ( 1959, Howard Hawks) The Searchers (1956, John Ford) The Good, The Bad, & The Ugly (1967, Sergio Leone) Goodfellas (1990, Martin Scorsese) The Godfather (1972, Francis Ford Coppola) The Wild Bunch (1969, Sam Peckinpah) Chinatown (1974, Roman Polanski) The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1919, Robert Wiene) & Star Wars: The Last Jedi (2017,Rian Johnson)
If it were me i would've added Kathryn Bigelow, Lynch, Wenders and the Coens, and maybe John Carpenter. Great stuff though, Spike Lee's list was great.
My top 20 favorite movies if anyone's interested: F**** C*** (1999) by David Fincher Memento (2000) by Christopher Nolan Drive (2011) by Nicolas Winding Refn Paris, Texas (1984) by Wim Wenders Memories of Murder (2003) by Bong Joon-ho Inception (2010) by Christopher Nolan Mother (2009) by Bong Joon-ho Hot Fuzz (2007) by Edgar Wright Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (2019) by Quentin Tarantino The Grand Budapest Hotel (2014) by Wes Anderson Baby Driver (2017) by Edgar Wright The Shawshank Redemption (1994) by Frank Darabont Taxi Driver (1976) by Martin Scorsese Get Out (2017) by Jordan Peele BlackKklansman (2018) by Spike Lee Fargo (1996) by Coen brothers Punch-Drunk Love (2002) by Paul Thomas Anderson Pulp Fiction (1994) by Quentin Tarantino Casino (1995) by Martin Scorsese The Assassination of Jesse James by The Coward Robert Ford (2007) by Andrew Dominik
1 jaws 2 Deliverance 3 The Crow 4 Dracula 5 The taking of pelham 123 6 Hard times 7 The day the earth stood still 8 Ben Hur 9 Metropolis 10 The bad news bears
@@Macktube Actually, Pyscho is my favorite Hitchcock movie. However, I consider Vertigo his magnum opus. It encapsulates everything good about his work. It jsut feels like his entire career had led up to taht film and its perfect sumamry of what was so great about him, in my opinion at least.
@@Macktube I love Rear Window. It's impressive how the whole story takes place in this one apartment. You'd think that would get old pretty quick, but the cinematogaphy, the acting and above all the direction, all incredible. I haven't seen Lady Vanishes yet. Is it good?
@@matutaa3314 You got a lot wrong, I think. There is no way Truffaut wouldn't include any film by Renoir. Together with Hitchcock, he was his favorite director. Favorite movie of him is The Rules of the Game. He'd also take Citizen Kane and Touch of Evil over Ambersons. And I think you also did Spielberg wrong. It is impossible that he didn't pick any picture by John Ford, he even said that The Searchers is among the four movies he always watches as preparation before making another film (the others were Lawrence of Arabia, It's a Wonderful Life and Seven Samurai).
If I’m up there: La Dolce Vita (1960, Federico Fellini) The Grand Illusion (1937, Jean Renoir) L’Avventura (1960, Michelangelo Antonioni) Y Tu Mama También (2001, Alfonso Cuarón) Apocalypse Now (1979, Francis Ford Coppola) One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest (1975, Miloš Forman) Vivre Sa Vie (1962, Jean-Luc Godard) The Godfather (1972, Francis Ford Coppola) The Conversation (1974, Francis Ford Coppola) Heat (1995, Michael Mann)
@@boborrahood Sorry but you don't know a shit. So, Nolan is there and Tarantino but no Carpenter haha. Cmmon. Carpenter has more influence on movie then most of this directors. The Thing and Halloween are considered one of the best horror movies ever. They Live is with Evil Dead best B movie ever and so smart. And he has 5, 6 other good movies. Tarantino has only two great movies Pulp Fiction and Reservoir Dogs and he steal rom other directors and movies.
One day I want to be a great filmmaker so someone will announce that one of my favourite movies of all time was The Muppets’ Christmas Carol.
😂😂😂
I haven’t watched the video but I’m guessing that’s the movie everyone chose, because I mean it’s a pretty easy choice
All the best for the day.
And please name your rest 9 favorites
ALL THE BEST FOR YOUR DREAM🙂🙂🙂🙂
2001: a space odyssey: exists
Directors: this is my favorite movie
What can I say, it’s a great movie!
@@Mew_Master fax
You put two colons in the same sentence.
Another favorite of Kubrick is Eraserhead, supposedly his all time favorite according to David Lynch
Speaking of Lynch, where is he!? And, where is Robert Altman and Carol Reed. I'd take those three, for starters, over 'some', that were mentioned. Although, I concede all of their talent.
He also liked American werewolf in london
@TheNabOwnzz oh yeah you sure know more than kubrick about cinema mate
@TheNabOwnzz sure buddy
@TheNabOwnzz eraser head is pretentious garbage
I’m surprised Martin Scorsese didn’t have any marvel movies on his list considering he loves those films.
Yeah man those are a classic.
THEY ARE AMUSEMENT PARKS
@@maanveersingh25 movies for clowns
And the same goes for Francis Ford Coppola
@@karangupta1825 Yeah we know catch the sarcasm
2001 A Space Odyssey is unoffically top movie of all the cinema history.
Fellini loved the film 8 and a 1/2, I see. He must have amazing taste
reminds me of that Obama meme xD
Fellini even loves his own movie.
Martin Scorsese himself mentioned pather panchali as one of the films that influenced his film making
There is a difference between The Greatest movie ever made and the ones which are your favourite. Scorsese thinks Pather Panchali is one of the greatest movies but maybe he doesn't watch it as often as his favourites in the list.
Yeah, he said that, but he didn't put the film on his greatest films of all time list for Sight & Sound.
There's a difference between "Great film" and "Favourite film".
The shawshank redemption, the dark knight, etc are also great films; but very few director count it among their favourites .
@TheNabOwnzz ok
@TheNabOwnzz Pretentious
'Pather Panchali' by Satyajit Ray is arguably one of the favourite movies of Christopher Nolan.
He himself said about the movie, "one of the best movies ever made, an extraordinary piece of work."
The app trilogy is also one of Scorsese’s favourite films also.
Nope . Nolan hasnt said a word about that movie
@@lalhmudiki-1381 yes he said.
www.google.com/amp/s/www.hindustantimes.com/hollywood/when-christopher-nolan-said-india-has-one-of-the-greatest-film-cultures-in-the-world-called-this-indian-film-one-of-the-best-ever-made/story-H4tcgfBIdNolD6T54FCgWK_amp.html
Nolan perhaps never see this film. His knowledge of films before 1960 is very very limited.
@@allensnea9335 apu*
My favorite films if anyone’s interested:
It’s A Wonderful Life (1946, Frank Capra)
Planes, Trains & Automobiles (1987, John Hughes)
Pulp Fiction (1994, Quentin Tarantino)
Pinocchio (1940, Ben Sharpsteen/Hamilton Luske)
Back To The Future (1985, Robert Zemeckis)
One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest (1975, Miloš Forman)
The Naked Gun: From The Files Of Police Squad! (1988, David Zucker)
The Wizard Of Oz (1939, Victor Fleming)
Carrie (1976, Brian De Palma)
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968, Stanley Kubrick)
The Lego Movie (2014, Phil Lord/Chris Miller)
Rear Window (1954, Alfred Hitchcock)
The Exorcist (1973, William Friedkin)
Return Of The Jedi (1983, Richard Marquand)
Monty Python And The Holy Grail (1975, Terry Gilliam, Terry Jones)
Wall-E (2008, Andrew Stanton)
A Clockwork Orange (1971, Stanley Kubrick)
Casino (1995, Martin Scorsese)
Gremlins (1984, Joe Dante)
The Hateful Eight (2015, Quentin Tarantino)
Titanic (1997, James Cameron)
Mary Poppins (1964, Robert Stevenson)
Simon Birch (1998, Mark Steven Johnson)
The Wolf Of Wall Street (2013, Martin Scorsese)
The Godfather (1972, Francis Ford Coppola)
It's cool to see the Hateful Eight on their it's such an underrated movie because it gets drowned out by Tarantino's other amazing work. Truly a magnificent movie.
@@diabetus115 I too am glad to see someone else who likes it!
@@Mew_Master ayyy
Titanic isn't that good for me
@@vampiriclion1176 I have heard some people say that.
Steven loves Lawrence of Arabia...talked very so much and Christopher always admires "Heat" where he learnt the concept of Dark Knight..... Rest on everybody's wisdom
These lists in one sentence: The greatest directors love the greatest movies. :)
And Charlie Chaplin loves Birth of a Nation.
@@elder-woodsilverstein7716 Well...okay with one exception then....
@@zacharysiple629 And Christopher Nolan loves The Black Hole.
Spielberg wanted to become director after watching lawrence of arabia...so add that to his list.
Actually, after seeing the film, Steven really wanted to give up that dream. “How can I top that!?” He thought to himself. But a stubborn whisper pushed him into the theater to watch Lean’s epic again and again. He devoured that film. Steven then knew he’d either become a film director... or die trying!
He was first inspired by the Greatest Show on Earth.
I am amazed that David Lynch was not in this List!
Federico Fellini: There's something about the films of Federico Fellini that touches my soul. He's pure genius.
Is Frederico Fellini the brother of Enrico Morricone?
@@fritzwalter4660 Fellini is considered the Italian maestro of film directors while Morricone is considered the Italian maestro of film scores. Both hail from Rome. Apart from that no relation.
@@elijahwilliamson3623 Thanks for your answer, but I was only joking. The man is called Federico, not Frederico Fellini.
@@fritzwalter4660 Thanks my knowledge of Italian name spelling isn't 100%
@@elijahwilliamson3623 No problem. Here in germany was Ennio Morricone once a special guest in a 80s Talk Show and the host called him all the time Enrico. This was really funny.
Manchester by the Sea, Casablanca, Good Will Hunting, The Godfather, Reservoir Dogs, The good the Bad and the Evil, A Summer story, Wuthering Heights (with Olivier), Sense and Sensibility, The Departed, Rain Man.
I like that Fellini literally put 8 1/2 as one of his favorites.
You just got to love your own work.
Sucks that “Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius” never gets the recognition it deserves. I guess some art is never truly appreciated
Should i watch it tonight plz help
Lol
I think 2001: Space Odyssey was the one mentioned more times. So is this the best movie ever? Probably. Along with Citizen Kane, The Godfather, City Lights, I Vitteloni and Rashomon.
Εντάξει όμως είναι υποκειμενικό, αν και συμφωνώ για το 2001. Επίσης πρέπει να αναφερθεί ότι οι συγκεκριμένοι σκηνοθέτες είναι σχετικά μεγάλοι σε ηλικία και τείνουν να έχουν ψηλά ταινίες από την δική τους "νεαρή" ηλικία. Όχι ότι δεν είναι καλές ταινίες, προφανώς και είναι αλλά αλλιώς κοιτάς κάτι με γυαλιά νοσταλγίας και αλλιώς καθαρά με κριτικό μάτι.
@@AionShanks Δεν είμαι καθόλου νοσταλγικός τύπους, ούτε παρελθοντολάγνος, εκτός από το Σινεμά 😅 γενικά τις τέχνες, γιατί θεωρώ ότι η αξία που είχαν κάποια έργα του παρελθόντος κρίνεται σε βάθος χρόνου, πόσο μπροστά ήταν από την εποχή τους και πόσο επηρέασαν την τέχνη. Ταινίες όπως η Οδύσσεια, ο Πολίτης Κέιν, το M του Λανγκ, οι 7 Σαμουράι, είχαν τεράστια επιρροή στον κινηματογράφο. Αλλά και πιο σύγχρονες, το Halloween, Terminator 2, Seven, Matrix, Jurassic Park
yes but Hitchcock has more diverse movies on this list. Five movies (Vertigo, Birds, Psycho, Rear Window and Notorius). So, Hitchcock is director with most great movies. I mean, his filmography is better then any director in history. GOAT
@@ΔημήτρηςΚατσίκης ναι ρε συμφωνώ, αναφέρομαι στους σκηνοθέτες του βίντεο, καθώς πολλοί από αυτούς ενώ ζουν ακόμα δεν έχουν ταινίες μετά το 2000 για παράδειγμα. Κατάλαβα τι εννοείς πάντως, σίγουρα στο βάθος χρόνου φαίνονται τα διαμάντια και ίσως και μερικές ταινίες που στο παρελθόν δεν είχαν την εκτίμηση που τους άξιζε.
@@markozbunjol625 he pretty much created a whole genre with psycho.
Akira Kurosawa is highly respected 👏👏
100 years of indian cinema, not a single mention !
The chess players by Satyajit Ray was Scorseses favourite mentioned
Leave it to Fellini to have one of his own movies as a favorite...
Is 8 1/2 really one of Frederick Fellinis favorite films?
That’s a bit weird
😂
Came here to comment the same
Cant blame the man
Maybe I'm looking too much into this but I feel like that was Fellini's little inside joke about how autobiographical 8 1/2 (its about a director who can't make up his mind during a sci-fi film shoot which is exactly what Fellini was going through at the time) and how its all about the narcissism and selfishness of the artistic temperament
@@Aa-dy8ue Yes he said it in an italian interview
Finally someone listed duel as one of there favourite movies thank you Steven Spielberg for making this great movie
Who did?
It's amazing how they mention a lot of the same movies
I love how most of the director's one of their favourite movie is 2001 - Space Odyssey
Kubrick also liked Boogie Nights very much.
Nolan said Talladega Nights was also one of his favorites
Bong John Ho is the one who knows that Touch of Evil is better than Citizen Kane❤
Quentin Tarantino's favorite movie of all time is Battle Royale. He said it in numerous interviews.
Stanley Kubrick went on record saying that two of his favorite films of all time are “White Man Can’t Jump” and “The Jerk.” I’m not even joking, look it up😂
Well, He also said that he never learned anything watching someone else's film ahhahaha
Eraserhead was his #1
Annie Hall was his #1
I vitelloni was his favorite. Followed up by wild strawberries and a few others. For the guy who said Annie hall that’s because on his list of 93 favorite films it was first but the list was in no order. For Eraserhead it must have been recently biased.
2001 is everyones favourite
for anyone who doesnt know edgar wright has a top 1000 movies list too
Kubrick also said that Lola Montes was perhaps his favorite film of all time. He actually loved pretty much everything by Max Ophuls.
I love how all of Woody Allen’s favorite’s are in the Criterion Collection lol
Minus Citizen Kane
@@bencarlson4300 Yeah, right
@@noahlasher9724 although, I think it’s on criterion laserdisc, so I guess I’m wrong?
@@bencarlson4300 Interesting, I forgot about that. Oh well, the point is that all of the movies are really good.
@@noahlasher9724 Hard to argue with most of these choices
One of Quentin Tarantino's biggest influences is Takashi Miike. Especially his movie Ôddishon (Audition). Seems this list is inaccurate in more ways too..
Not a bad list, but I think that you should have included "Lawrence of Arabia" in Steven Spielberg, he loves that movie
I'm suprised Ridley Scott likes Muriel's Wedding and happy that two great directors appreciate Ashes and Diamonds. Leone's list is disarmingly one-genre funny.
Spike Lee giving "Raising Arizona" some love. Very underrated Coen bros. film.
Woody Allen: *c u t i e s*
2:17 There's a typo. Frankenstein was written by Mary Shelley but the 1931 film was directed by James Whale who also directed The Bride of Frankenstein
Love From India ❤️🇮🇳❤️
having to see Satyajit Ray's film The Chess Player in Martin Scorsese's favourites is a great feeling.🤗
Satyajit ray was the one who inspired him to make films. Scorsese has said that in several interviews
The Universal Studios Frankenstein in 1931 was directed by James Whale and definitely NOT by Mary Shelley
Tarkovsky was being missed
How can anyone miss Akira kurosawa? 😳
How is a movie that was released almost a decade after Orson Welles died one of his favorites?
Oh, it's an error. Orson Welles loved Nanook from 1922, not 1992
2:16 John Frankenheimer's Black Sunday? Cmon, it's Mario Bava's Black Sunday (1960)...
*Tim Burton: "Mario Bava's Black Sunday is one of the first films that made me understand the power of cinema in the sense of images as part of the story."*
One of many faults in this video.
exactly
Yes! Thank you!
Scorsese's fav is Do the right thing, not Blackkklasman
Aren't these films in alphabetical order
Tim Burton's listing of The Wizard of Oz, directed by Victor Fleming, was released in 1939, not 1947. Trivia: The b & w Kansas scenes in Oz were directed by King Vidor. Fleming left to direct Gone With the Wind. I agree the most with Spike Lee's list.
also i think they listed the wrong black Sunday. I think its the Mario Bava black Sunday
Martin Scorsese, quentin tarantino, david fincher and clint Eastwood these are ma favorite directors. I like very much their movies.... Especially classic movies....and more than like quentin tarantino epic violence movies, for example kill bill type🔥. Legends never give up their forever stand up at Hollywood ❤
C'mon Frankestein 1931 by Mary Shelley ? And no one reacts ? If you really think Mary Shelley is the director of Frankenstein (why not after all), the date is 1818.
My favorite movies:
ET: The Extra-Terrestrial (1982,Steven Spielberg)
The Maltese Falcon (1941, John Huston)
Rosemary's Baby (1968, Roman Polanski)
Trick R Treat (2007, Michael Dougherty)
Knives-Out (2019, Rian Johnson)
Zootopia (2016, Byron Howard/ Rich Moore)
Barry Lynden (1975, Stanley Kubrick)
Annie Hall (1977, Woody Allan)
Evil Dead 2 (1987, Sam Rami)
Blow-Out (1981,Brian DePalma)
Dune Part.1 (2021, Denis Villeneuve)
The Bad Guys (2022, Pierre perifel)
Star wars (1977,George Lucas)
Scarface (1983, Brian DePalma)
Avatar: The Way Of Water (2022, James Cameron)
The Big Sleep (1946, Howard Hawks)
The Whale (2022, Darren Aaronofsky
The Hateful Eight (2015, Quentin tarantino)
Blue Velvet (1986, David Lynch)
The Departed (2006, Martin Scorsese)
There Will Be Blood (2007, Paul Thomas Anderson)
Pan's Labyrinth (2006, Guillermo Del Toro)
Doctor Zhivago (1965, David Lean)
Earserhead (1977, David lean)
The Game (1997, David Fincher)
The Northman (2022, Robert Eggers)
Saw (2004, James Wan)
Looper (2012, Rian Johnson)
The Man who knew too much (1956, Alfred Hitchcock)
Strangers On The Train (1953, Alfred Hitchcock)
The Lord Of The Rings: The Return Of The King (2003, Peter Jackson)
The Outsiders (1983, Francis Ford Coppola)
True Romance (1993, Tony Scott)
Rumble Fish (1983, Francis Ford Coppola)
Requiem For A Dream (2000, Darren Aaronofsky)
Do The Right Thing (1989,Spike Lee)
The Matrix (1999, Larry & Andy Wachowski)
Metropolis (1927,Fritz Lang)
The Shining (1980, Stanley Kubrick)
Eyes Wide Shut (1999, Stanley Kubrick)
Puss In Boots: The Last Wish (2022, Joel Crawford)
Inland Empire (2006, David Lynch)
A Clockwork Orange (1971, Stanley Kubrick)
The Wizard Of Oz (1939, Victor Fleming)
Unforgiven (1992, Clint Eastwood)
Rio Bravo ( 1959, Howard Hawks)
The Searchers (1956, John Ford)
The Good, The Bad, & The Ugly (1967, Sergio Leone)
Goodfellas (1990, Martin Scorsese)
The Godfather (1972, Francis Ford Coppola)
The Wild Bunch (1969, Sam Peckinpah)
Chinatown (1974, Roman Polanski)
The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1919, Robert Wiene)
& Star Wars: The Last Jedi (2017,Rian Johnson)
Woody Allen's list♥️♥️♥️
you forgot Tokyo Drift for Christopher Nolan!
2001 a space Odyssey, favourite film of Nolan and Scott. Yes ! But out f reach for them both !
sergie eisenstein,Jean-Luc Godard,Roberto Rossellini,Vittorio De Sica,satyajit ray,andrei tarkovsky,abbas kiarostami,akira kurosawa,ozu ...................?
Tarantino's fav is Battle Royale by Kinji Fukasaku
If it were me i would've added Kathryn Bigelow, Lynch, Wenders and the Coens, and maybe John Carpenter. Great stuff though, Spike Lee's list was great.
Blackkklansman was a great film but I am really surprised its in scorsese's top 5.
Peter Jackson is missing
1:54 Fellini love his own movie " 8 1/2 "
My top 20 favorite movies if anyone's interested:
F**** C*** (1999) by David Fincher
Memento (2000) by Christopher Nolan
Drive (2011) by Nicolas Winding Refn
Paris, Texas (1984) by Wim Wenders
Memories of Murder (2003) by Bong Joon-ho
Inception (2010) by Christopher Nolan
Mother (2009) by Bong Joon-ho
Hot Fuzz (2007) by Edgar Wright
Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (2019) by Quentin Tarantino
The Grand Budapest Hotel (2014) by Wes Anderson
Baby Driver (2017) by Edgar Wright
The Shawshank Redemption (1994) by Frank Darabont
Taxi Driver (1976) by Martin Scorsese
Get Out (2017) by Jordan Peele
BlackKklansman (2018) by Spike Lee
Fargo (1996) by Coen brothers
Punch-Drunk Love (2002) by Paul Thomas Anderson
Pulp Fiction (1994) by Quentin Tarantino
Casino (1995) by Martin Scorsese
The Assassination of Jesse James by The Coward Robert Ford (2007) by Andrew Dominik
Have you ever seen cidade de deus?
Thanx brother
@@kioro4221 Nope
@@davidle4936 Seems quite aligned with your taste and it's one of my favourites. Banger from start to end. I think you would really like it
Where the hell is PAUL THOMAS ANDERSON????
1 jaws
2 Deliverance
3 The Crow
4 Dracula
5 The taking of pelham 123
6 Hard times
7 The day the earth stood still
8 Ben Hur
9 Metropolis
10 The bad news bears
I knew that the most favourite De Palma's movie by Tarantino was Blow Out... 🤔
I'm seeing Vertigo and Yojimbo appear on a lot of lists. I gotta check those out.
Vertigo is fantastic. Hitchcock’s magnum opus.
@@elder-woodsilverstein7716 I thought it was Psycho 🤔
@@Macktube Actually, Pyscho is my favorite Hitchcock movie. However, I consider Vertigo his magnum opus. It encapsulates everything good about his work. It jsut feels like his entire career had led up to taht film and its perfect sumamry of what was so great about him, in my opinion at least.
@@elder-woodsilverstein7716 Ok, you seem very knowledgeable, what about Lady Vanishes and Rear Window? I'm most interested in seeing those.
@@Macktube I love Rear Window. It's impressive how the whole story takes place in this one apartment. You'd think that would get old pretty quick, but the cinematogaphy, the acting and above all the direction, all incredible. I haven't seen Lady Vanishes yet. Is it good?
Seven samurai is a great movie
*Nanook of the North (1922)
No Steven Spielberg on the list? Are you kidding me?
When did Martin Scorsese say Black Klansman was an influence? He's only released one movie since it came out... idk.
1:11 no way Spielberg doesn't include Birdge on the River Kwai and Lawrence of Arabia.
Love how you see in the list Orson Welles, Sergio Leone, Kubrick, Hitchcock, Truffaut... And then you see Tim Burton and Robert Zemeckis 😂
There still celebrated directors. Everyone just has their own style.
Tarantino said "blowout"(by brian da Palma) is one out of three of his favorite movies,
you left that out
Funny how 2001 one was one of Chaplin’s favorites
😂😂
Um, I think for Spielberg you missed 2001: A Space Odyssey.
yes, everyone liked it actually haha
@@matutaa3314 You got a lot wrong, I think. There is no way Truffaut wouldn't include any film by Renoir. Together with Hitchcock, he was his favorite director. Favorite movie of him is The Rules of the Game. He'd also take Citizen Kane and Touch of Evil over Ambersons. And I think you also did Spielberg wrong. It is impossible that he didn't pick any picture by John Ford, he even said that The Searchers is among the four movies he always watches as preparation before making another film (the others were Lawrence of Arabia, It's a Wonderful Life and Seven Samurai).
@@positional_play that's what I found on the internet. You may be right.
@@positional_play Your last quote is said often by Steven Spielberg not Truffaut.
@@fritzwalter4660 which is what I wrote.
You didn’t mention Lawrence of Arabia for Spielberg
There's a couple missing here;
Peeping Tom for Martin Scorsese. Lawrence of Arabia for Steven Spielberg.
I clicked because I thought it said Dictator's Favourite Movies.
Ive heard Quintin say Evil Dead 2 was one of his favorites
You're missing Lawrence of Arabia for Spielberg. He's been outspoking for decades about how much he loves this film
Can you please combine all the movies listed, including a note of how many times each of them are nominated, please ?
Everyone love citizen kane
Can you blame them? 😁 Someone may like it or not but it was revolutionary in every aspect at the time.
Wherw is Satyajith?
That's odd... I'm sure I read somewhere that Spielberg's favourite film of all time was Kurosawa's Ikiru, but it's not even mentioned here.
I know my favourite movie changes. Directors are as human as the rest of us.
@@davidthom7127 No, really?
Where's David Lynch?!
Clint Eastwood listed....don't think he's in the montage...
I’m am about somewhere between Tarantino and Fincher........that says a lot about me I think 😂
Thank you for including so many female directors!!!!
Charlie Chaplin liked Birth of a nation? Is there any source for this?
2001 love!
My bad.. no Spielberg in the titles but he is covered.
Nolan's favorite is Koyaanisqatsi
Scorsese: between Wild Strawberries and 2001, there's The Black Klansman ?! GTFO.
not one of them said Shrek 2? this has to be fake
Can you do Part 2?
If I’m up there:
La Dolce Vita (1960, Federico Fellini)
The Grand Illusion (1937, Jean Renoir)
L’Avventura (1960, Michelangelo Antonioni)
Y Tu Mama También (2001, Alfonso Cuarón)
Apocalypse Now (1979, Francis Ford Coppola)
One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest (1975, Miloš Forman)
Vivre Sa Vie (1962, Jean-Luc Godard)
The Godfather (1972, Francis Ford Coppola)
The Conversation (1974, Francis Ford Coppola)
Heat (1995, Michael Mann)
How can you have likes of spike lee and robert zemeckis on this but no Ingmar Bergman / angry swede
How the hell do you leave John Carpenter off this list
Just because I'm ignorant 😁 (btw yesterday I started '"the thing")
Because it's a list of favorite films of "directors".
@@boborrahood Carpenter is director
@@markozbunjol625 He’s made some popular films, but not in this league of directors.
@@boborrahood Sorry but you don't know a shit. So, Nolan is there and Tarantino but no Carpenter haha. Cmmon. Carpenter has more influence on movie then most of this directors. The Thing and Halloween are considered one of the best horror movies ever. They Live is with Evil Dead best B movie ever and so smart. And he has 5, 6 other good movies. Tarantino has only two great movies Pulp Fiction and Reservoir Dogs and he steal rom other directors and movies.
Interesting no Gone With The Wind or Casablanca, the 2 usually on top of the list of best of all time...
Someone tell my man Fincher that there are films not in the English language😂😂😭😭😭