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DVD PIX - The best 5 movies for every year since 1970 - An RHcomix compilation Our main criteria for assembling a best picture list on a yearly basis boils down to: if there were only 5 movies you could watch out of a list of eligible movies for one particular year which films would they be?...In other words, if you were stuck on an island and there are only 5 movies from 1977 you could bring with you what movies would they be? There are some years where that can be a tough pick. You might notice that there are times when our 5 best movie picks don’t match the Academy of Motion Pictures and Sciences’ choices at all: the Oscar’s picks. When that happens, it usually means that the Academy’s picks really didn’t do anything for us. In our list below it happened for the following years: 1983, 1987, 1995, 2001, 2002 and 2006. Terms of Endearment won the Best Picture Oscar for 1983 but we felt Scarface was a stronger and much more memorable flick. The Last Emperor took the Best Picture Oscar in 1987 but Wings of Desire inspired us a whole lot more. Braveheart won in 1995 but, Martin Scorsese’s Casino really did hit the jackpot. A Beautiful Mind won the Oscar in 2001 but we felt Black Hawk Down had a little more torque. In 2002, we felt About Schmidt was a lot stronger and much more powerful than Chicago’s song and dance shtick. Finally, in 2006, the re-invention of agent 007 in Casino Royale was a much more fun crackerjack suspenser than the remake of the Hong Kong thriller Internal Affairs: The Departed. Below is our comparative list of the Academy’s Best Picture picks and our own RHcomix list of winners, runner-ups and those movies that did deserve the Best Picture honor. Top ten lists or top five lists in the entertainment field aren’t meant to be all that scientific. Those lists are subjective and can make interesting and fun conversations that do inspire debate! For what it is worth, here is our Best Picture list. Enjoy!
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Year |
Best Picture Oscar Winner |
RHcomix Best Picture Pick |
Why |
| 1970
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Patton
Oscar nominees
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Five Easy Pieces
RHcomix runner-ups
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Jack Nicholson in a
flawless performance as a musician who can’t find his groove; the tale of an
‘uneasy rider’ in search of himself. This pic contains the oft-quoted
and hilarious chicken salad sandwich scene. Five Easy Pieces
bridged the gap between the
cinema of the sixties and the seventies’ ‘new auteur’ cinema. Hot on the
heels of Easy Rider, Jack gives us a rich, deep and touching
portrayal of an eternal drifter unable to cope with life and its demands:
hard labor conditions on an oil rig and being smothered by his ditzy
girlfriend played by Karen Black. Great dialogue and bristling with poignant
themes, the narrative is driven by a steady flow of memorable character
vignettes. Sharp script by Adrien Joyce and candid direction by Bob
Rafelson. Clint Eastwood, Telly Savalas, Donald Sutherland, Don Rickles et al (Kelly’s Heroes) plan and execute a gold robbery from a German bank during WW2. The action segments save the day and Sutherland steals the show as an anachronistic hippie private. 'Woof! Woof!' George C. Scott commands the screen as a dynamic and flamboyant General George Patton during WW2. Sharp script co-written by Francis Ford Coppola and directed in a gung-ho grandiose style by Franklin Schaffner. Black comedy focusing on an American medical unit surviving and fighting the absurdities of life during the Korean War. Donald Sutherland and Elliott Gould play two cynical and witty surgeons exchanging biting dialogue from a stinging screenplay by Ring Lardner Jr. Robert Altman's first major hit showcasing his style of episodic storytelling featuring over a dozen characters. Spawned a hit TV series M*A*S*H. Michael Caine is a cold and purpose-filled hitman who investigates the brutal death of his brother in a British blue collar town. Caine is stern and solid as the avenger and there's plenty of violence and action for fans of the genre. Get Carter charges like a fiery locomotive. |
| 1971
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The French
Oscar nominees
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Dirty Harry
RHcomix runner-ups
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Inspired by tales of the
serial killer named Zodiac who haunted the San Francisco area between the
late sixties and mid-seventies comes a classic detective story scripted by R.M. and Julian Fink and directed by Hollywood veteran Don Siegel. The title
role was originally offered to Frank Sinatra who eventually dropped out due
to the violence quotient in the story; Steve McQueen and Paul Newman also
passed and Clint Eastwood took the part he will always be remembered by.
Detective Harry Calahan is more concerned with the plight of the innocent
victims than the bureaucratic red tape of justice. Set in a time when
criminals seemingly had more rights than their victims,
Dirty Harry was the
perfect blunt instrument and symbol of a vengeful justice. In retrospect,
Dirty Harry is as timely now as it was in 1971. Here, detective
Dirty Harry
chases a serial killer named Scorpio who is holding the city of San Francisco
hostage. Cynical, violent, ingenious and thrilling, director Don Siegel has
crafted a true action film classic. Tight and crafty editing, a great score
by Lalo Schiffrin and Clint using intensity and economy in a role that has
become an action movie standard. We love you Harry. 'Do you feel lucky,
punk?' Sean Connery returns as James Bond after a one-picture hiatus in 1969. Diamonds Are Forever is crafty, fast-paced and contains all the obligatory action scenes, babes, gadgets, one-liners and exotic locales that are a staple in the 007 series. Arch-villain Blofeld who murdered 007’s wife in the previous film On Her Majesty’s Secret Service returns with a scheme to hold the world ransom with satellite-based laser guns. Bond chases down Blofeld however, for more obvious personal reasons. A fun adventure yarn with Jill St. John onboard as the luscious Bond babe. The French Connection is an original and suspenseful crime drama about NYC detective Popeye Doyle tracking down heroine smugglers. Gene Hackman exudes loads of grit as detective Doyle and his performance alone nearly steals the picture. Director William Friedkin captures the tough street atmosphere of NYC which in itself is its own living, breathing character. Roy Scheider who does a fine job as Doyle's partner appeared two years later in an unofficial follow-up titled: The Seven-Ups. Mild-mannered math professor (Dustin Hoffman) and his seductive wife (Susan George) are bullied by a bunch of psychotic hoodlums while trying to live an idyllic existence in an isolated English village. Straw Dogs is a tense yarn about peaceful citizens pushed beyond their boiling point. A thought-provoking psychological thriller directed by Sam Peckinpah. Stanley Kubrick’s controversial satire about the violent escapades of a handful of hooligans in a near-future society. Malcolm McDowell plays the incorrigible alpha hoodlum who, by slight miracle, just might be reformed. A Clockwork Orange was deemed too shocking for some but it is certainly original, quirky, artistic and pointedly cynical in its depiction of a civilization skidding out of control. |
| 1972
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The Godfather
Oscar nominees
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The Godfather
RHcomix runner-ups
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The Godfather
is one of the best American movies of all
time. This romanticized drama about the lives of an Italian-American
gangster family crackles with brilliant dialogue, masterful
characterizations, stunning cinematography and a memorable original score by
Nino Rota. Marlon Brando gives us a powerful, insightful and truly unforgettable
performance as Don Vito Corleone the Mafioso patriarch who only wants the
best for his family while leading a lucrative criminal empire. Al Pacino plays
Michael, the reluctant Don who becomes a central figure in the
family business and James
Caan commands the screen in his scenes as Sonny; the eldest of the
Corleone siblings who's a hot-headed enforcer. A
cinematic gem. Four Atlanta businessmen go on a weekend canoeing trip and wind up running for their lives after encountering two brutish mountain men in the virgin hills of Georgia. Jon Voight, Burt Reynolds, Ned Beatty and Ronny Cox play the nervy protoganists with natural ease. Deliverance is flawlessly directed by John Boorman; it unfolds like an unrehearsed docudrama; realistic, terrifying and definitely unforgettable. It also contains the endearing yet haunting duelling banjos segment. Sharp political satire featuring Robert Redford as a well-meaning candidate running for Senate who realizes he might just win the campaign. If so, what does one do next? The Candidate is directed with conviction by Michael Ritchie; the proceedings look and feel very real. A candid observation on the election process and all of its players. Jack Nicholson plays a night-time radio host who tries to re-connect and maybe score big financially with his kooky brother played by Bruce Dern. The King of Marvin Gardens is a psychological drama that boils slowly and steadily to a haunting finale. Strong performances by all and splendid cinematography by Laszlo Kovacs. Must be viewed in digitally re-mastered widescreen version. Directed by Bob Rafelson from Five Easy Pieces fame. Career criminal (Steve McQueen) and wife (Ali McGraw) flee across the south-western States after a bank robbery goes sour. The Getaway is a suspenseful chase flick featuring some exciting action segments from director Sam Peckinpah. Much of the narrative rides on the strength of McQueen's cool charisma. Episode with our protagonists trapped in a dumpster is nearly chilling. |
| 1973
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The Sting
Oscar nominees
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American Graffitti
RHcomix runner-ups
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American Graffiti
follows the lives of a dozen teenagers
during a high school graduation weekend and the choices they must face all
told within a 24 hour framework, while rock and roll hits from the late
fifties-early sixties plaster the audio score. It is a memorable and truly
original movie experience from writer-director George Lucas as it covers American car culture, the birth of
rock and roll, crusing teens, radio phenomena Wolfman Jack, illegal drag
racing, leather jacket clans, roller blade diners and teenage fantasies. It
spawned the hit TV series Happy Days which created the iconic character
The Fonz. American Graffiti
contains funny dialogue, original
characters and great observations on a more ‘innocent’ time in America.
Richard Dreyfuss, Ron Howard, Cindy Williams, Charlie Martin Smith, Candy
Clark and Harrison Ford play the major roles. Director George Roy Hill re-teams his famous Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid duo Paul Newman and Robert Redford as small-time con artists who set-up a lucrative ‘sting’ against gangster Robert Shaw during the 1930s. Great Scott Joplin ragtime score, sharp dialogue and fun characterizations from the entire cast. The Sting contains plenty of memorable moments. 'The name’s Lonnigan! You’re gonna remember that name!' Two career sailors must transport a rookie sailor to the brig for scooping $40 out of an illicit cookie jar. Jack Nicholson shines as Buddowsky one of the escort sailors and Randy Quaid as the innocent prisoner also hits all the right notes. The Last Detail is a very funny and touching comedy-drama from director Hal Ashby. A classic character pic. 'There’s more where that came from!' Director Martin Scorsese’s affectionate tribute to gangsterdom in NYC’s Little Italy as seen thru the lives of a half a dozen characters. A stylish and energetic tale, Mean Streets features Harvey Keitel and Robert DeNiro in principal roles as small-time hoods surviving in the Big Apple. A definite pre-cursor to Scorsese’s other gangster classic Goodfellas. Amy Robinson as Keitel’s epileptic girlfriend also shines. The billiard club fight scene is a standout! Quirky road tale of two drifters (Gene Hackman and Al Pacino) who grudgingly streak across Americana searching for a better life. Hackman is a tough ex-con who wishes to start his own car wash business and Pacino an ex-sailor who hopes to reunite with the wife he has abandoned during her pregnancy. Scarecrow is a psychological drama that contains some memorable and powerful vignettes with commanding performances from both leading actors. |
| 1974
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The Godfather Part 2
Oscar nominees
|
The Godfather Part 2
RHcomix runner-ups
|
Director Francis Ford
Coppola and novelist Mario Puzo give us a brilliant continuation of the
Corleone gangster family saga. The first Godfather movie is still the best
of the three in the series but who would’ve known that a sequel to such a
great film could be almost just as good. This one cuts back and forth
through time as we see the rise to power of the young Vito Corleone played
by Robert DeNiro and the struggles of Michael Corleone played by Al Pacino
to legitimize the family business. John Cazale returns as Fredo, so
does Talia Shire as Connie, Robert DuVall as the family lawyer
Hagen and Diane Keaton as Micheal's wife Kate. Top notch.
The Godfather Part 2 is an
American movie classic. Private Eye Jake Gittes (Jack Nicholson) investigates a complex mystery in 1930s Los Angeles that involves a femme fatale (Faye Dunaway), water distribution, orange groves and incest. Jack’s Gittes is in the style of Sam Spade-Phillip Marlowe detectives and the tone set by director John Huston is truly reminiscent of the 1940s cinema of yore, only now its themes are definitely more contemporary. Suspenseful, dynamic, smartly written and original. Followed by a sequel in 1990 directed by Jack Nicholson called The Two Jakes. 'Forget it, Jake. It’s Chinatown!' NFL star quarterback (Burt Reynolds) does jail time for dumping his girlfriend’s sports car in a river and several other misdemeanors. Prison warden (Eddie Albert) organizes annual football game between jail guards and inmates and our star quarterback is forced to put together a competing team. Reynolds’ easy, laidback, Southern country boy charm allows him to coast and float thru the narrative with unequalled appeal as the star quarterback Paul Crew. Eddie Albert is also perfectly cold and cunning as a manipulative prison warden. The Longest Yard is fun, funny, brutal at times and one of the all-time great sports movies. Bio of controversial standup comic Lenny Bruce (Dustin Hoffman) is harsh, stunning and powerful. Sharp direction by Bob Fosse and black and white cinematography by Bruce Surtees is top notch. Likely not for all tastes due to some of the offensive content but definitely original. Hoffman is brilliant in the title role. Clint Eastwood plays a thief who teams up with a drifter (Jeff Bridges) and searches for hidden loot from a previous robbery. Eastwood’s former partners (George Kennedy and Geoffrey Lewis) also want their share of the bounty after serving time in the can. Simple crime tale benefits from powerful characterizations and dynamic direction from Michael Cimino. Thunderbolt and Lightfoot is an under-rated Clint Eastwood action vehicle with Jeff Bridges nearly stealing the show as the goofy sidekick. |
| 1975
|
One Flew Over The
Oscar nominees
|
One Flew Over The
RHcomix runner-ups
|
The casting and direction
are perfect in this telling of a buoyant misfit who simply can’t abide by
the strict rules of an insane asylum; or, for that matter, the strict
conditions of life. The movie is replete with symbolism, metaphors and tales
of hope for the human spirit. A great part and Oscar-winning role for Jack
Nicholson as Randall P. MacMurphy. Louise Fletcher as the cold and dauntless
nurse Ratched is also excellent. The movie brims with pathos, humor and
drama. A triumphant interpretation of Ken Kesey’s novel
One Flew Over The
Cuckoo’s Nest. 'You fooled ‘em, Chief!...' Once the world’s biggest box-office hit, Jaws is still a whole lot of fun as a trio of desperate men, sheriff (Roy Scheider), ochtylmologist (Richard Dreyfuss) and grizzled sea captain (Robert Shaw) hunt down a monster shark off the coast of Martha’s Vineyards. Based on Peter Benchley’s best-selling novel, directed by wunderkind Steven Spielberg and brilliantly scored by John Williams, Jaws is a truly memorable horror movie classic. ‘We need a bigger boat…’ A CIA decoder’s office colleagues are slaughtered by assassins and he must now run for his life and find out why he was also a target. Three Days Of The Condor is a suspenseful spy tale directed by Sidney Pollack with Robert Redford as the intellectual on the run and Faye Dunaway as his reluctant, improvised partner. Cliff Robertson is also effectively creepy as a CIA director with shady motives. A Brooklyn bank robbery inadvertently goes sour and ends up involving all of New York City. Al Pacino and John Cazale play the inexperienced bank robbers and Charles Durning plays the cop who tries to diffuse the crisis now involving hostages. Dog Day Afternoon has top performances by all involved and sharp direction by Sidney Lumet. 'Attica! Attica! Attica!' Innovative presentation of life in Music City seen thru the interactions of over two dozen characters during a political convention centered on the celebration of America’s bicentennial anniversary. Robert Altman’s unique directing style is original and maybe too outlandish for some. Best described as a collection of random character vignettes, Nashville must be absorbed rather than watched. Symbolical, spontaneous and sometimes searing, Nashville is likely the zenith of Altman’s impressive career. |
| 1976
|
Rocky
Oscar nominees
|
Network
RHcomix runner-ups
|
Director Sydney Lumet’s
interpretation of writer Paddy Chayefski’s no-holds-barred satire about a
newscaster who decides to tell it like it is in the era of pre-reality TV.
It simply couldn’t be more timely. In fact, watching the movie now makes it
look all the more prophetic. Great performance by Peter Finch as the
newscaster Howard Beale who would like to blow his brains out on live
television. He is turned into a star by a ruthless TV producer (Faye
Dunaway) and ends up inciting the home crowd into opening their windows and
yelling: ‘I’m mad as hell and I’m not gonna take it anymore!’
Network is a
biting and truthful examination on the state of modern media. Philly palooka Rocky Balboa is given the chance of a lifetime as a two-bit boxer with a whole lotta heart to fight the World Heavyweight champ in a U.S. bicentennial exhibition match. Simple but very effective character picture with an engaging performance by Sylvester Stallone as the title character. The score by Bill Conti is powerful and truly memorable and the climactic bout and its buildup really do pack a strong punch. Stallone created a classic iconic American movie character. 'Cut me Mick! Cut me Mick!' Peaceful farmer Josey Wales (Clint Eastwood) hunts down the Union soldiers who have murdered his family near the end of the Civil war. Call it: Dirty Harry on horseback. The Outlaw Josey Wales has plenty of action segments and beautiful scenery plus several classic one-liners; ‘Dyin’ ain’t much of a livin’, boy!’ For western fans and Clint fans it does get better with repeated viewings. Actor Chief Dan George as a tag-along Indian Chief is absolutely priceless. The Pink Panther Strikes Again is the best of the Pink Panther series. Lieutenant Dreyfuss (Herbert Lom) is released from a sanitarium and tailors a personal mission to kill Inspector Jacques Clouseau (Peter Sellers) with the help of international assassins. Some great sight gags, over the top destruction skits, mangled French one-liners, engaging opening animation, Lesley Anne Down as a Russian female assassin and Lom and Sellers at the top of their game in the main roles. A must for fans of the Pink Panther series. 'Does your dug bite?' and of course: 'What kind of bomb was it?...The exploding kind.' Thematical character pic with Robert DeNiro as a Vietnam vet who drives a taxi thru the hell-scapes of New York City. DeNiro’s portrayal of a loner who might be losing his marbles is brilliant as is Bernard Hermann’s score and Martin Scorsese’s direction. Dark, violent and cynical, Taxi Driver is a psychological thriller definitely not for all tastes. However, it is original and captivating and it contains the famous improvised segment; ‘Are you talking to me?’ |
| 1977
|
Annie Hall
Oscar nominees
|
Annie Hall
RHcomix runner-ups
|
Woody Allen’s take on
love and relationships, living in New York versus L.A., fame, comedians,
spiders the size of Buicks, and much more.
Annie Hall flows with a steady
stream of quotable dialogue, zany interpretations on countless and amusing
subjects and also, it manages to be bittersweet and touching. Diane Keaton
nearly steals the show in the title role. ‘La-dee-da, la-dee-da, la-dee-da.’
And of course, Woody quoting Groucho Marx: ‘I would never want to be in a
club that would have me as a member’. Paul Newman is the coach of an American bush-league hockey team that starts to get notoriety when it turns its focus to violence on the rink. Satirical and oftenly hilarious, Slap Shot is replete with colorful dialogue and memorable characters. The humor sparkles both on and off the rink. Director George Roy Hill 'The Sting' and 'Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid' loves his characters and Nancy Dowd's script is so bitingly truthful. 'Who owns the team?' John Travolta in a perfect role as Tony Manero a paint shop salesman whose sole objective is to dance it off at a NYC disco on Saturday nights. Saturday Night Fever has a catchy Bee Gees score, fabulous dance choreography and a timeless portrait of what the seventies all boiled down to. Dynamic direction by John Badham. 'Don’t touch my hair!' Spaceship dogfights, laser-sword duels, speaking robots, alien creatures, a fortress-like planet, a black-cloaked villain, a princess in distress, a cocky pilot and a disillusioned orphaned farm boy who might be an eventual Jedi Knight. Woo!...The first in a popular billion-dollar grossing series of sci-fi adventure movies, Star Wars, directed and created by George Lucas is all a 13-year-old boy could want from a movie experience. It must be viewed in widescreen with the best audio system available. A whole lot of fun for kids at heart! A city worker (Richard Dreyfuss) thinks he maybe going nuts after encountering an alien spacecraft on a lonely highway stretch at night. It evolves into an all-encompassing enigma that leads to the ultimate revelatory climax. Dazzling special effects, memorable score by John Williams and captivating storytelling by director Steven Spielberg. Close Encounters Of The Third Kind was re-edited several times and is available in 4 versions: the original release version running at 135 minutes; the Special Edition at 132 minutes, the Collector’s Edition at 137 minutes and a newly released and remastered Director's Cut. Choose your version. They all work fine. |
| 1978
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The Deer Hunter
Oscar nominees
|
Invasion of the
RHcomix runner-ups
|
A terrific remake of the
1956 sci-fi classic Invasion of the Body
Snatchers now directed by Philip Kaufman.
Great cast, taut direction and a creepy score. Its gloomy atmosphere holds
up to its terrifying finale. The pacing is perfect and it still packs a
wallop. For those who aren’t familiar, it is the story of an alien race that
has insinuated itself into a terrestrial plant life and its purpose is to
use the human race as hosts for its populace. The 1956 version was initially
a metaphor for Senator McCarthy’s ‘Red Scare’. This 1978 version
maybe had something to do with the isolationism of the seventies’ ME
generation, Watergate and the Vietnam war fallout. Metaphors and
symbolism aside, it’s a chilling ride. ‘They can be fooled: show no
emotion’. Includes a cameo from actor Kevin McCarthy who was in the 1956
original; this time he appears as a crazed, disillusioned citizen. Also,
director of the original, Don Siegel appears as a taxi driver in the last
act. Powerful and shocking tale of several Pennsylvania steel town buddies who serve in the Vietnam war and those who do live to tell about it. The Deer Hunter focuses on its characters’ social lives before, during and after their years of service. Robert DeNiro, Christopher Walken and Meryl Streep make up some of the great cast. Director Michael Cimino’s 3-hour running time however can make the film a somewhat taxing experience. The Russian roulette scene in a Viet Kong POW camp is the movie’s strongest and most unforgettable segment. Energetic and fun musical based on the long-running Broadway hit play Grease. John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John sing and dance in this high school tale of summer romance during the 50s. Lively and engaging rock and roll score, delightful performances, sharp choreography and generally a pic that gets better with repeated viewings. Hardcore fans know this movie by heart! Ex-con (Dustin Hoffman) tries to go straight but his condescending parole officer (M. Emmet Walsh) somewhat forces him to get back into a life of crime. Straight Time is a fairly straight-forward crime tale but the performances from the entire cast are top-notch. Hoffman began directing the pic but later handed the job over to Ulu Grosbard. Concert pianist wannabe (Harvey Keitel) has to pay the rent by collecting debts owed to his gangster father (Michael V. Gazzo). Fingers is a somewhat roughshod low-budget crude character pic that is elevated by the quality of its actors’ performances. A fine showcase for fans of Keitel. |
| 1979
|
Kramer Vs. Kramer
Oscar nominees
|
Apocalypse Now
RHcomix runner-ups
|
Apocalypse Now
is simply in a league of its own; the
cinematography of Vittorio Storaro is stunning (similar to a Salvador Dali
mind trip) and how can you beat this classic line: “I love the smell of
napalm in the morning. It smells like victory.” Francis Ford Coppola’s
take of Joseph Conrad’s novel Heart of Darkness is set during the Vietnam
war. Special agent Willard (Martin Sheen) travels upriver in Cambodia to
find and arrest a renegade Colonel Kurtz played by Marlon Brando. As a
spectacle, imagine The African Queen on steroids. It is stark and
harrowing at times but it is always mesmerizing. You can also check out the
3 ½ hour REDUX version which contains an extra 50 minutes of footage.
Both versions are compelling from beginning to end. Clint Eastwood plays a convict who may or not have escaped the ultimate prison fortress of Alcatraz Island. Escape From Alcatraz is a suspenseful yarn directed by Don Siegel and features a perfect part for Clint. Patrick McGoohan is also top form as a cold-hearted and cruel prison warden. Jaws in space it is as an intergalactic crew fights off a grotesque killer-monster running amok within their spaceship. Modern variation of The Thing is scary, suspenseful, populated with believable characters and is technically well-crafted. A classic in the sci-fi horror genre. Directed by Ridley Scott, Alien features Sigourney Weaver’s breakthrough role as a resourceful, struggling heroine. A simple-minded gardener accidentally becomes a media sensation in director Hal Ashby’s clever multiple-themed satire. Peter Sellers’ interpretation of the childlike Chance the gardener is another performance that has re-defined his acting career. Being There is deliberately paced and Sellers has created another original and memorable character. Roy Scheider sparkles as a Bob Fosse-like dance choreographer who juggles the demands of his career, family and flexible love life. Many of the dance numbers in All That Jazz are lively and dynamic and Scheider likely gives the best performance of his career as an artist heading for burn-out city. The George Benson opening On Broadway number is a standout. |
| 1980
|
Ordinary People
Oscar nominees
|
Raging Bull
RHcomix runner-ups
|
Robert DeNiro put on more
than 60 pounds for his role as middleweight boxer Jake Lamotta. In the fight
scenes he weighs around 150 and when Jake does his stint as a standup comic
in the post-boxing years he weighed around 220. DeNiro truly changes his
physique in this movie and no other actor ever went thru that kind of
transformation before. Raging Bull
is very impressive. Not just a great boxing
picture but a fascinating portrait of an unappealing louse. Director Martin
Scorsese truly masters the medium here. Great black and white photography,
wonderful period detail and remarkable performances by the entire cast. Must
be viewed in remastered widescreen edition. Evil Lord Darth Vader informs us that Jedi Knight wannabe Luke Skywalker is his son! Awesome special effects and great action montages amidst a space age soap opera. The Empire Strikes Back is still the best flick in the Star Wars franchise. Yoda is now on board! The Shining is the ultimate ‘cabin fever’ flick. Yes, the book was better but Stanley Kubrick’s interpretation of Stephen King’s horror novel is still one of the top psychological thrillers on film. Jack Nicholson plays Jack Torrance, a recovering alcoholic who minds the well-being of the Overlook Hotel with his family and slowly but surely goes nuts! The build-up is tense, the photography is handsome and 25 years later this tale of isolation and madness is still terrifying. For maximum effect, watch the widescreen DVD without commercial interruption. 'Redrum, redrum, redrum...' Country singer Loretta Lynn’s (Sissy Spacek) rise from a Coal Miner’s Daughter to a country music superstar. Spacek is truly wonderful in this role as she morphs from a 13-year-old Loretta to her latter Diva years and Tommy Lee Jones also shines as Lynn’s faltering yet earnest husband. Beautifully directed by Michael Apted. Gritty, gutsy British gangster drama sees Bob Hoskins as the head of a criminal clan and Helen Mirren as a scheming mistress in The Long Good Friday. Brimming with sharp characterizations and concrete crunching action segments. |
| 1981
|
Chariots Of Fire
Oscar nominees
|
Raiders Of The Lost Ark
RHcomix runner-ups
|
Amusement park entertainment at its best. Brimming with
inventive and fun action sequences, an infectious score by John Williams, a
dry, wry archeologist cowboy hero (Harrison Ford), insurmountable
stunts, and also populated with likeable and fun secondary characters; no other
film stirred the imagination as much as
Raiders of the Lost Ark did in 1981.
Produced by George Lucas and directed by Steven Spielberg, Raiders is a
grandiose tribute to the action serials of the 30s and 40s. It re-invented
the action-adventure movie genre. A very fun ride as archaeologist
Indiana Jones tries to find the Ark of the Covenant (a religious
artifact) that wields mysterious powers before the Nazis can claim it.
Buckle your seatbelt and press Play. A sheriff (Sean Connery) on a Jupiter moon mining colony must confront a corrupted corporate chief (Peter Boyle) who doesn’t mind some innocent bloodshed if performance drugs help his miners accomplish more work. Outland is a western tale set in space with Connery’s charisma solidly carrying the picture with the help of a sharp production design. A good sci-fi action flick for Connery fans. Thief is a stylish crime drama with James Caan as a career criminal who wishes to bow out after one last lucrative gig. Simple and effective crime tale written and directed by Michael Mann featuring a strong gritty role for Caan as a tired, weather-beaten tough guy. Also contains a powerful score by Tangerine Dream. A detective (Robert Duvall) investigates a brutal murder and along the way has to deal with a powerful Catholic monsignor (Robert DeNiro) who happens to be his brother and who might have some insight on who is the murderer(s). True Confessions is a multi-layered mystery drama and character pic. It is deliberately paced and does contain 2 very fine performances from its lead actors. Escape From New York is a sci-fi actionner with Kurt Russell as tough guy Snake Plissken who has to infiltrate Manhattan which is now a top security prison and rescue the U.S. President whose plane has crashed on the island. Dark, cynical adventure is stylish and Russell as a futuristic Dirty Harry is just plain fun and cool. An imaginative tale from director John Carpenter. |
| 1982
|
Gandhi
Oscar nominees
|
The Verdict
RHcomix runner-ups
|
Paul Newman plays a
down-and-out alcoholic lawyer who has one last chance at redeeming himself
in defense of a client in a medical negligence suit.
The Verdict
is a brilliant character study and a great courtroom tale. Newman gives one of the best performances of his
career as lawyer Frank Galvin and director Sydney Lumet hits all the
right notes in this powerful drama which is paced with subtle nuances and
punctuated by many emotionally moving moments. James Mason, Jack Warden and
Charlotte Rampling co-star. Innovative sci-fi actionner has a former cop (Harrison Ford) chase down renegade servant humanoid robots in 21st century Los Angeles. The production design steals the show as does Rutger Hauer’s interpretation of one of the smarter rebel robots. Considered by many fans as a sci-fi classic, Blade Runner directed by Ridley Scott, is now available in several versions. Hardcore fans lean towards the director’s cut as the definitive version of the film (chief reason being the removal of Ford’s deadpan narration). The must have version is the recently released remastered Final Cut. Blade Runner can definitely be regarded as the first existentialist-sci-fi thriller. Contains many memorable action segments but the atmosphere and flashy rain-soaked ambience of a futuristic Los Angeles do reign supreme. Scientists at an Antarctic research centre stumble across an alien life-form that can mutate into any type of living organism. Director John Carpenter’s update of the 50s sci-fi horror classic The Thing benefits from the use of innovative special effects that bring out the gross-out factor by several notches. Consistently suspenseful, The Thing also contains top performances from its all-male cast including Kurt Russell and Wilford Brimley. Sequel to Mad Max, The Road Warrior finds the title character (Mel Gibson) searching for petroleum and food in a post-Apocalyptic Australian outback which is populated by the odd pocket of gangs, hoodlums and other desperate survivors. Sci-fi actionner has some far-out car chase sequences and an engaging and imaginative production design from director George Miller’s team. Definitely the best of the Mad Max trilogy. Out of work actor (Dustin Hoffman) pretends to be a woman in order to get a prime role in a daily television soap opera. He later sees how demanding it is to be not only a woman but a female actor as well. Hilarious at times, director Sydney Pollack’s socio-comedy is also very touching. Great performances from the entire cast and the Tootsie script is laced with razor sharp dialogue. |
| 1983
|
Terms Of Endearment
Oscar nominees
|
Scarface
RHcomix runner-ups
|
Al Pacino’s brilliant
interpretation of a Cuban cocaine dealer who climbs to the top of his trade
in Miami and then must desperately crawl out of a personal and professional
downward spiral. No other cinematic character was more memorable than Tony
Montana that year and in retrospect, nearly 25 years later; it still remains
an impressive, commanding, and over-the-top performance from Pacino. The
language is foul and the violence is brutal but
Scarface is a fascinating
portrait of a charming and crude criminal punk. How many other movies that year
contained the classic line: “Say hello to my little friend…” and many other
classic one-liners courtesy of writer Oliver Stone. Go ahead, make my day…Dirty Harry goes into film noir territory as he tracks down a serial killer who might be settling an old score. Sudden Impact is the fourth entry in the Dirty Harry series and the first directed by Clint Eastwood. It is a tightly edited cop thriller that just doesn’t waste time and goes straight for the good parts. Enough action to satisfy fans of the genre and Clint doing the part he was born to play! Koyanisquatsi is a thought-provoking, visually stunning documentary on the state of our planet. The imagery is awesome and the Philip Glass score is original and haunting. You can’t walk away with indifference after viewing this film. It is somewhat ahead of its time in regards to its ecological message. Think green. A very welcome return for Sean Connery as James Bond in Never Say Never Again.. It is actually a remake of Thunderball done outside of the consent from producer Ian Broccoli and not based on a novel by Ian Fleming. But, Connery’s dry charisma does carry the picture. Plenty of fun action segments and pre-retirement age humor in regards to Bond who’s now in his fifties and does indeed manage to do his duty and save the world! A two-bit wannabe standup comedian (Robert DeNiro) kidnaps a night show host (Jerry Lewis) in order to be able to do his skit live on national television. The King Of Comedy is an interesting, off-beat and thought-provoking black comedy from director Martin Scorsese that comments on the obsession of fame in America. Funny and somewhat ahead of its time in the pre-reality-tv era. Excellent performances from DeNiro, Lewis and the supporting cast. An overlooked gem. |
| 1984
|
Amadeus
Oscar nominees
|
Beverly Hills Cop
RHcomix runner-ups
|
Axel Foley (Eddie
Murphy), a wisecracking Detroit detective goes to Beverly Hills to
investigate the brutal death of a buddy. Sharp, fast-paced action comedy
crackles with colorful, humorous dialogue and a great song score. Eddie Murphy is in
top form in the role he was born to play! The bananas in the car muffler
scene is a standout. This one is the best in the
Beverly Hills Cop trilogy. Sergio Leone’s Once Upon a Time in America is the compelling saga of Jewish childhood pals who grow into gangsterdom in New York City throughout several decades. Robert DeNiro, James Woods and Joe Pesci make up some of the cast. The cinematography is downright stunning. Of note: only watch the 229-minute director’s cut. There exists several truncated versions of this movie which end up throwing the logic and continuity out the window. Long (maybe overlong by 15 minutes) but engrossing and compelling nonetheless. A killer cyborg (Arnold Schwarzenegger) from the future stalks a young woman (Linda Hamilton) who will give birth to a leader of humans against a deadly robot force. Low budget sci-fi actionner The Terminator from writer-director James Cameron delivers the goods (loads of action) but the best is yet to come in the following sequel! Small-time showbiz manager (Woody Allen) tries to bring two-bit Italian singer (Nick Apollo Forte) to the big time. Plenty of neurotic gags from the Allen camp in Broadway Danny Rose stitched with a continuity of original comical episodes and a few outrageous plot twists making it a funny and memorable ride. Danny Rose in his office painfully listening to several wannabe acts is a killer! Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford) now searches for a gem prior to the Raiders of the Lost Ark adventure and stumbles upon a devilish cult in East India that sacrifices kids…or so, it seems. Nevertheless, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom is an amusement park pic that focuses mainly on the scary rides and that’s just fine with us. Lots of action, thrills and other stuff and it delivers on what is expected in the Indy series. Somewhat darker than its predecessor but the action level is upped a notch! |
| 1985
|
Out Of Africa
Oscar nominees
|
Witness
RHcomix runner-ups
|
Harrison Ford plays a big
city cop who investigates a murder and unwittingly ends up on the lam; hiding
out in an Amish village. Part detective story/part love tale,
Witness is
a good character picture for Ford and an original suspenser directed by Peter Weir.
Kelly McGillis as the Amish girl who falls for Ford is just darn stunning.
Smart, suspenseful and touching. Clint Eastwood is a gun-slinging preacher who rides into a gold mining town on a pale horse and takes it upon himself to save the little folk from being ruled by a gang of greedy shysters. Western morality tale with shades of Shane and High Plains Drifter, Pale Rider gives us splendid Rockies scenery and the obligatory multiple shooter gunfights. A mystical western for fans of Clint. Jack Nicholson plays a none-too-bright hitman in a gangster family and Kathleen Turner is the hitwoman he ends up falling in love with. Directed by John Huston, Prizzi’s Honor is a witty black comedy. Nicholson as the dim-witted goombah is a joy to watch. A perfect role for Chevy Chase as Fletch a wise-cracking investigative reporter who stumbles upon a far-reaching drug smuggling ring in the Los Angeles area. Funny, often hilarious at times and directed by Micheal Ritchie in a vein similar to Beverly Hills Cop, Fletch does get better with repeated viewings. Based on the popular novel series by Gregory McDonald, Fletch has a complex and well constructed mystery plot and as a comedy it contains many memorable, laugh-out-loud quotes: ‘It’s all ball-bearings now!’ and; ‘Send the bill to the Underhills!’ Rocky now has to fight a Russian-killer-robot-style-boxer in Rocky 4. It’s over-the-top and no-holds-barred but what else can you expects from the third sequel in the Rocky series. It’s loud, it’s fun and it’s a powerful upper cut! |
| 1986
|
Platoon
Oscar nominees
|
The Color Of Money
RHcomix runner-ups
|
25 years after The
Hustler (1961), which was a lot grittier and darker, now comes
The Color of
Money a sequel directed by Martin Scorsese. Tom Cruise plays a young and
cocky billiard whiz who re-ignites former pool shark Fast Eddie Felson’s
(Paul Newman) passion for 9-ball. Newman is the coach and Cruise is the
protégé as they hustle their way to the top billiard tournament in Atlantic
City. Newman won the Best Actor Oscar for his second turn as Fast Eddie Felson and although rightly earned, it WAS a well-deserved career award.
Cruise is also in top form as Vince, the gifted billiard player and the
supporting cast is also top-notch. Fun characters and flashy camerawork.
"Money won is twice as sweet as money earned". Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) is urged to investigate a distress signal on a mining colony planet and lo and behold, not one but multiple alien monsters have feasted on the colony’s residents. Director James Cameron continues the Alien series by quantifying the action segments, gore and special effects and it delivers triple-fold. Imaginitive production design truly creating a world of its own. Exciting, scary and actionful. This first sequel is as good and maybe even better than the original. Aliens rocks! Powerful tale of a teacher (William Hurt) at a school for the deaf who takes interest in a deaf janitor (Marlee Matlin) who lives in a bubble of her own. Sensitive direction from Randa Haines and strong performances from the lead actors. A simple and effective tale, Children of a Lesser God is based on a play by Mark Medoff. A fine showcase for Clint Eastwood as a gravel-spitting marine Sergeant who has to whip a bunch of army recruits into a respectable fighter platoon. Clint is great as the sandpaper-voiced military lifer and although predictable, Heartbreak Ridge is a sure pleaser for the Sergeant Bilko testosterone crowd and fans of Clint. Director Oliver Stone’s personal tale about his adventure during the Vietnam war with Charlie Sheen playing Stone as a bushy-tailed wide-eyed private who witnesses the horrors of war first-hand. Harsh and seemingly factual at times, Platoon works on multiple levels as a strong anti-war film. In certain scenes it becomes obvious this is Stone’s ode to Apocalypse Now but it does pack a punch as its own tale. Powerful at times and always involving. |
| 1987
|
The Last Emperor
Oscar nominees
|
Wings Of Desire
RHcomix runner-ups
|
German director Wim
Wenders’ Wings of Desire
is a meditative fantasy about two angels who walk amongst the Berlin
populace and one angel’s desire for the love of a beautiful trapeze artist
who’s battling solitude while performing in a two-bit traveling circus.
Mystical, poetical and dreamlike black and white cinematography create a
wondrous atmosphere. Bruno Ganz as the angel who longs for love and
mortality is excellent. Deliberately paced and contemplative, there’s no
other movie like it. A true original. Lethal Weapon is the kick in the pants that cop movies or the buddy movie had a desperate need for. Mel Gibson IS the lethal weapon; a rogue cop who is likely inspired by the legendary Harry Callahan. Danny Glover is the career cop who is counting the minutes to retirement and who now has to endure a pairing with Gibson's Riggs' who undergoes sudden psychotic mood swings while cracking down on a tough and cruel drug smuggling ring. For an action film it has perfect pacing, a healthy dose of action footage, obligatory buddy bickering and bonding and also suspense and tension to spare. The sequel was just as good and may be even better! Director Brian DePalma’s The Untouchables is an outstanding gangster drama. Based on the hit TV series of the 50s it features Kevin Costner as federal agent Elliott Ness who is desperately trying to bust crime kingpin Al Capone (Robert DeNiro) on any possible charge. Sean Connery, in an Oscar-winning role plays the Irish cop Malone who does his bit in nabbing the Chicago gangster. Sharp script by David Mamet and a powerful score by Ennio Morricone. Great pacing from beginning to end. As Malone would say: ‘That’s the Chicago way!’ Perfect Oscar-winning role for Michael Douglas as a Wall Street power broker who doesn’t play by the rules and Charlie Sheen as the newbie broker who wants to climb the corporate ladder very quickly. Wall Street by director Oliver Stone plays as a contemporary morality tale and it is told with plenty of zest and contains strong characterizations by the leading cast. It hasn’t aged one bit. Douglas won the Oscar for his portrayal of Gordon Gecko. A creature from outer space stalks innocent victims in the jungles of South America and Arnold Schwarzenegger and his team of Marines inadvertently must face it. Predator is a fun sci-fi thriller that contains lots of action, great cinematography and only Ah-nold can face that evil alien from space. A good actionner for Mr. Universe! |
| 1988
|
Rain Man
Oscar nominees
|
Rain Man
RHcomix runner-ups
|
'K-Mart sucks' and,
'this
is not my underwear'. Dustin Hoffman’s portrayal of the autistic
Rain Man
Raymond Babbitt is truly remarkable. A touching, moving and
thought-provoking character study picture with Tom Cruise as a cocky
self-centered expensive auto dealer who learns he has a brother (Hoffman)
who has inherited his father’s fortune. An original and remarkable
performance from Hoffman as the autistic brother. 'Yah. That's 247
toothpicks!' NYC hard-as-nails cop John McLane (Bruce Willis) visits his wife while on Yuletide holiday and intercepts a terrorist plot led by Alan Rickman (in a wonderfully creepy performance) as the evil-doers hold a Los Angeles skyscraper and its Christmas convention party for ransom. Die Hard is a rock-em-sock-em, violent, yet fun action suspenser with a perfect part for Willis as the intrepid cop. 'Yippee kay-yay motherf*cker!...' A man struggles to discover what happened to his girlfriend who disappeared at a vacation rest stop in Europe. Dutch-French film The Vanishing from director Georges Sluzier is engrossing and suspenseful all the way through. Subtle and clever storytelling builds up to an ending that is quite a shocker. An original thriller with a smooth and creepy performance from Bernard-Pierre Donnadieu. Absolutely avoid the 1993 remake and stick with this version. Bounty hunter and ex-cop (Robert DeNiro) has to bring bail-jumper (Charles Grodin) an embezzling accountant from NY to LA in record time while the Mob is on a mission to terminate the reluctant tag-along. Fun action-comedy flick with sharp dialogue and wonderful byplay from DeNiro and Grodin. Midnight Run is in the same league as Beverly Hills Cop from director Martin Brest. A revealing look at the life of bebop jazz pioneer pianist Thelonious Monk from film footage assembled from the late sixties. Thelonious Monk: Straight No Chaser presents a stirring portrait of the legendary musician. Music has simply never been the same. A fascinating portrait of a modern musical genius. Produced by Clint Eastwood and directed by Charlotte Zwerin. |
| 1989
|
Driving Miss Daisy
Oscar nominees
|
Crimes And Misdemeanors
RHcomix runner-ups
|
Crimes and Misdemeanors
is arguably Woody Allen’s best work. Martin Laudau is outstanding as a physician
who desperately wishes to put an end to an adulterous relationship and has
to deal with the horrible mess it leads him to. A quirky mix of tragedy and
comedy, it is bitingly funny at times and painfully harsh in other moments.
Angelica Huston, Alan Alda and Mia Farrow are also on board. Sharp dialogue and great direction by Woody Allen. Lethal Weapon cop Martin Riggs (Mel Gibson) is back with partner Roger Murtaugh (Danny Glover), this time knocking heads with a South African diplomat and his goons whom are running a lucrative drug-smuggling ring. Fast-paced and action filled, the first sequel in this series is as good, and at times even better than the original. Lethal Weapon 2 is a fun ride! Two brothers’ twin-piano nightclub act changes direction when a sexy singer (Michelle Pfeiffer) integrates their show. Real-life brothers Jeff and Beau Bridges play The Fabulous Baker Boys with conviction and Pfeiffer can really steam up the top of a piano with her sensual vocal renditions of various jazz standards. Do The Right Thing is a potent account of tense events revolving around a white-owned pizza parlor in a Brooklyn black community. Spike Lee directs the proceedings with a relaxed, leisurely style and the cast, including: Danny Aiello, Ossie Davis, Rosie Perez all give their best. The relative calm swells up to a stormy finale. Daniel Day Lewis is remarkable as a feisty Irish artist-writer born with cerebral palsy who struggles despite himself to get thru life on a daily basis. Energetically directed by Jim Sheridan, My Left Foot is a powerful slice of life! |
| 1990
|
Dances With Wolves
Oscar nominees
|
Goodfellas
RHcomix runner-ups
|
Goodfellas is simply one
of the best movies of all time! Director Martin Scorsese hits all the right
notes in this tale of Henry Hill, a kid who grew up to be a gangster and
ended up in the Witness Protection program. Remarkable characterizations,
great editing, marvelous selection of music, sharp dialogue and it rings so
true it almost feels like an A & E docudrama. Joe Pesci is scary and
commanding as a hot-headed gangster. Ray Liotta and Robert DeNiro and the
entire cast are in top form. A true gangster movie classic. “You think I’m
funny?” Gangster Micheal Corleone now wants to go legit and bury the past criminal activities of his family, but, there are several competitors who wish to fill the void. Worthy sequel to the successful Godfather series, Al Pacino shines as an introspective Don, struggling to make peace with himself and his family. Writer Mario Puzo and director Francis Ford Coppola once again bring us that mix of family saga and scenes of violent retribution. The Godfather, Part 3 bookends the trilogy well. Robert DeNiro is a patient in the chronic ward of a Bronx Hospital who wakes out of a 30-year coma and Robin Williams is the doctor who discovers that certain pills might offer a cure. Awakenings by director Penny Marshall is taken from a novel based on the true life experiences of doctor Oliver Sacks. A moving and powerful tale. Successful paperback writer (James Caan) wipes out on a snow-laden mountaintop road in Colorado and unwittingly ends up in the care of a psychopathic fan (Kathy Bates) who lives in an isolated cabin. Misery is a suspenseful tale based on a Stephen King novel and directed by Rob Reiner. Strong performances from Caan and Bates and beautiful cinematography by Barry Sonnenfeld. Peaceful Civil war soldier (Kevin Costner) stumbles into Indian Sioux tribe territory and is eventually adopted as one of their |