100 Greatest Films of All Time Part 1 of 4 parts by FilmFour |
UK's Channel 4 has compiled a number of 100 Greatest Lists, including this one on the 100 Greatest Films of All Time at Filmfour.com. Descriptions are from their site. Full reviews of each film may be found there. Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 Facts and Commentary About The List:
that "The Greatest Films" site has selected as the "100 Greatest Films". |
100 Greatest Films of All Time (Part 1, Ranked) |
1. STAR
WARS (1977), STAR WARS EPISODE V: THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK (1980) Unable to procure the rights to Flash Gordon, George Lucas serves up his own homage to the Saturday-morning adventure serials he loved as a kid; somehow managing to create possibly the most revered and successful film series ever in the process. |
|
2. THE
GODFATHER (1972), THE
GODFATHER PART II (1974) Coppola's epic, operatic, bullet-ridden saga of a Mafia family at war with itself and its rivals. Murder, betrayal, ambition: it's all here, and utterly compelling, with Brando at his scene-stealing best. |
|
3. THE
SHAWSHANK REDEMPTION (1994) |
|
4. PULP
FICTION (1994) |
|
5. SOME
LIKE IT HOT (1959) |
|
6. GLADIATOR (2000) |
|
7. IT'S
A WONDERFUL LIFE (1946) |
|
8. BLADE
RUNNER (1982) |
|
9. SCHINDLER'S
LIST (1993) |
|
10. GOODFELLAS
(1990) "As far back as I can remember, I've always wanted to be a gangster," Henry Hill opens his true story of 30 years in the mob in Scorsese's epic. |
|
11. PSYCHO
(1960) The music, the setting, the shower scene, the mother in the cellar... everything about this iconic film has passed into cinema history. A genuine virtuoso classic and the grandaddy of all slashers. |
|
12. JAWS
(1975) It left a generation of schoolkids afraid to go into a swimming pool, let alone back into the water. Wunderkind Spielberg's story is all the scarier for hardly ever showing the Great White that is most of the characters' nemesis. |
|
13. APOCALYPSE
NOW (1979) |
|
14. ONE
FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST (1975) |
|
15. THE MATRIX (1999) The Wachowski brothers' ground breaking, morphing and shattering sci-fi spectacular. Featuring Keanu Reeves and kung fu like you've never seen it before. |
|
16. CASABLANCA
(1942) With nearly every line of its script engraved on the collective subconscious, and its central performances of Bogart and Bergman defining iconic cool, Casablanca is an exultant classic. "Here's looking at you, kid". |
|
17. THE USUAL SUSPECTS (1995) One of the outstanding thrillers of the 90s boasts a screenplay that is both bewildering and utterly, brilliantly logical. A film that immediately makes you question what you have just seen and whether it can really have been as good as you think. |
|
18. CROUCHING TIGER, HIDDEN
DRAGON (2000) |
|
19. CITIZEN
KANE (1941) The world's most acclaimed film, too often on the top ten lists with critics flexing their reflexes rather than their minds. Even so, it is mesmerising and the young Welles threw down a challenge to Hollywood from which neither fully recovered. A masterpiece. |
|
20. RAGING
BULL (1980) |
|
21. ET:
THE EXTRA-TERRESTRIAL (1982) Before the likes of Independence Day and Evolution, there was a time when movie aliens were cute and nice and only wanted to be our friends. Essential Spielberg. |
|
22. TAXI
DRIVER (1976) Stone-cold classic. Robert De Niro is electrifying as the Vietnam-scarred taxi driver with a frightening take on the justice system. |
|
23. LIFE OF BRIAN (1979) |
|
24. SINGIN'
IN THE RAIN (1952) Gloriously exuberant and abidingly popular musical from the 1950s heyday. Stanley Donen's film sets the Gene Kelly/Debbie Reynolds romance against the fascinating backdrop of the coming of sound in movies. |
|
25. LA CONFIDENTIAL (1997) Brilliant adaptation of James Ellroy's detective novel about three cops facing corrupt businessmen, sleazy journalists and assorted trash in 50s LA. |