OK, since we have a post about the worst - what is the BEST movie you have ever seen!

Elzee

Member
Location
Austin, TX
I appreciate inspiring, meaningful and uplifting movies. Movies such as 'Pay it Forward' or 'The Pursuit of Happiness' and now, that is Christmas is coming soon, 'It's a Wonderful Life".

Here is a link to the Top Inspirational Movies: http://www.couplescompany.com/Features/CT/Movies/Inspiration.htm

When I think of my favorite or best movie, I think of a movie I saw decades ago that its message (and song) has had a lasting, positive and profound effect on me.

It is: To Sir, With Love.
 

Don't know the best either, but a funny one in my memory was Trains, Boats and Airplanes with John Candy and Steve Martin.
 

Here are four titles that I like and I think most will agree all are classics. The Godfather, with Brando and a stellar cast; The Hustler with Paul Newman and Apocalypse Now, again a Brando movie.
And a personal favorite is Alien with Sigourney Weaver. A bit of variety here.
Ryder13
 
Here are four titles that I like and I think most will agree all are classics. The Godfather, with Brando and a stellar cast; The Hustler with Paul Newman and Apocalypse Now, again a Brando movie.
...
There are a half dozen pictures that have deeply influenced me. The Hustler is one of them:

The Hustler (1961) [long]

The Hustler was a life changing film for me. As an impressionable 17-year-old who fancied himself a budding pool hustler, I first saw the film upon its release in 1961. The effect that the experience had on me was monumental, and it's still possible to recall a shadow feel of it's emotional impact.

It's subject matter was unusual for its day, and was a seminal film in many ways. There had been movies about golfers, baseball players, tennis players, etc.; but never a film about a seedy pool hustler. The public was not even aware that this type of activity existed. It was based on the 1959 book of the same name by Walter Tevis, himself a pool devotee. The excellent screenplay by Sidney Carroll was fairly faithful to the novel, with a major exception regarding the denouement of Fast Eddie's girlfriend, Sarah. There was fine direction by Robert Rosen who was also a frequent customer of the New York pool rooms, and was aware of Gleason's above average abilities with the pool cue. Rosen was able to guide the production into a sense of authenticity.

The acting couldn't have been any better. It's as if everyone was born to play their respective parts. George C. Scott carried on his cut-throat, abrasive, dominant character acting that was introduced two years earlier in Anatomy of a Murder. Piper Laurie was perfect as the crippled alcoholic intellectual who was trying to find herself. Jackie Gleason fit his role perfectly with class and style. Paul Newman stated that he had over-acted his part, and in hindsight would have liked to tone it down a little. But that type of performance is always appreciated and remembered by the public.

Newman established himself as an expert at playing handsome, devilish rogues, which he was to hone in many more pictures, most notably Hud, Harper, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, and The Sting.

The film score by Kenyon Hopkins written in the jazz idiom was tasteful, but exciting. Few scores --another similarity to Anatomy of a Murder-- had used jazz exclusively up to that time, and here it was a perfect match. I can still hear the strummed major 9th chord underlying the ending of the film.

The movie seemed so real and so familiar. I fell in love with Sarah, and to this day am a fan of Piper Laurie's. I spent several years looking for a girl like Sarah, but to be honest, when I finally found one, it didn't play out too well. I even traveled to Ames' Pool Room in NYC on 46th St. west of Broadway. I got into a game of rotation with the off duty cook for $2 a pop, and he almost busted me. Had enough jack left for one more trip to Geenwich Village, then onto a Trailways outta town.

A word about the subject matter. Its pool/hustling portions were very authentic because several involved in the production had real life experience with gambling and pool. However the character "Minnesota Fats", along with all the other characters, was pure fiction, as attested by Walter Tevis. Shortly after the movie came out, Rudolph Wanderone, aka New York Fats, was given a suggestion by Paulie Jansco (of the Johnston City World's Pocket Billiards tournaments) to go down to the local theater, set up a card table, and represent yourself as the "real" Minnesota Fats. Wanderone was a tremendous self promoter, excellent pool player, story teller, and B.S. artist. He parlayed the hoax into a fortune.

The Hustler was one of a small group of films from the late '50s and early '60s that ushered in a new type of realism-- both in action and in personal relationships. The love interest was complicated but alluring. Eddie didn't realize what he had in him, both emotionally and in his pool playing fortitude. In the end he found out just what those facets were, and became a better man because of it. The book develops those characteristics very well, but Carroll's screenplay pushed the story further, and arguably made a better tale because of it.
 
For me, there is a difference between a best movie and a favorite movie. I understand why Citizen Kane is regarded as one of the best movies ever made. I recognize the brilliant shots and all of that but it never connected with me emotionally. There are a few movies I have watched that hit me in the same way. I understand how well made it is but it doesn't hit me in an emotional way.

My favorite movie is Casablanca. It has been a favorite of mine since I first watched it over 50 years ago so I doubt any movie will come along to replace it. Yes, the plot can be over the top at times but that's one of the things I do enjoy about it. And I do think the cinematography still holds up. I think it has aged very well but I do understand why it might not be as highly regarded as it used to be.

Casablanca-airport.jpg
 
Last edited:
The Lord of the Rings Trilogy
Ben Hur
I also felt LOTR was an amazing work of cinematic art. IMO it has not been surpassed even though I also loved Avatar, another film that made the most of cgi technology but the messages and themes of LOTR are deeper and richer, exploring virtues and moral failures that both children and adults can ponder. I think this could be one of the reasons why the movie trilogy and the Tolkien books are still so popular today.
 
Best for me, in its day, maybe. The most taken I have been with a movie was the first Blade Runner. I own the DVD, and still watch it. For years, it was my best movie ever, but nothing is forever.
 
Decades ago, my favorite movies were Raging Bull, Taxi Driver, Altered States, Jacob's Ladder, and maybe Dirty Harry. I seem to have outgrown those movies, though, and now am left with no favorites. Most of the main characters in movies are young, which makes them hard for me to relate to.
 

Back
Top