I'm really trying to tailor this list to d,t. The stereotype of d,t is basically adurdencommatyler wrote:Argo, you know me well enough at this point. You've seen where we agree and disagree on films. Would you curate a list of films for me? I'd love for you to custom make me a list of 8 films that you think I need to see, that I will enjoy, and that could potentially end up on my all-time best/favorite list in the future.
Is that something you think you could do?
# 1 with a bullet: Ikiru (Kurosawa, 1952): Ikiru means "to live" and that's exactly what this movie will teach you how to do. It's the story of an aging, lifeless middle-management bureaucrat who finally decides to live with some purpose. The last time I watched this one, a few months ago, it took me two sittings to finish it. Not because it's a difficult watch, but because it got my mojo going so much I had to pause it halfway through to go do some writing. I started writing a play, for eff's sake. No idea why. Just that kind of movie.
#2: A Woman Under the Influence (Cassavettes, 1974): Joey is a sucker for a good female performance, and this has the best one of all time. Gena Rowlands as a housewife in the midst of a breakdown is IMO un-beatable. Peter Falk as her working-class husband puts in his best work as well, and the result is a beautiful picture of a marriage and what feels like a real world.
#3: Ghost World (Zwigoff, 2001): All the different ways to be, or not be, a freak.
#4: Castaway on the Moon (Hae-jun Lee, 2009): A movie about loneliness and love.
#5: Jackie Brown (Tarantino, 1997): d,t said about a year ago that he had not seen this one. Is this Tarantino's finest? Perhaps...
#6: Dear Zachary: A Letter to a Son About his Father (Kuenne, 2008): It's best to go into this movie knowing as little about it as possible. All I'll say is that it is a documentary and that I cry my dick off every time I watch it.
#7: Bigger Than Life (Ray, 1956): A damn fine story that gets to some pretty intense places, especially for 1956.
#8: Two Days, One Night (Dardenne, 2014): I could recommend just about anything by the Dardenne brothers, but this one has the added bonus of a phenomenal performance by Marion Cotillard (whom I think Joey is fond of).
