• Not a replicant
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    15 minutes ago

    Get Crazy (1983). Just a fun piece of silliness with a cameo from Lou Reed.

    And Electric Larry

  • @[email protected]
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    55 hours ago

    Lucky Number Slevin

    Man On Fire

    Syriana

    Equilibrium

    And for some solid Australian cinema: Mystery Road

  • idunnololz
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    107 hours ago

    Spirited Away. In my opinion the most Miyazaki movie. It’s also just amazing. I’ve probably seen it a dozen times now.

  • @[email protected]
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    56 hours ago

    They Live. I stumbled across it on TV while exhausted at 2 am one night and it had me locked in the whole time.

    • @iknowitwheniseeit
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      25 hours ago

      I used this movie as the basis for at least three school assignments in high school. Brilliant.

    • @[email protected]
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      12 hours ago

      One of my all time favorites. I usually recommend it along with I Origins. They hit differently, but scratch the same itch for me.

  • @[email protected]
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    610 hours ago

    Cloud Atlas

    The Lord of the Rings Trilogy

    Tora Tora Tora!

    Oh Brother Where Art Thou

    Gone with the Wind

  • @[email protected]
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    1012 hours ago

    I get that most people are just listing their favourite movies, and that’s fair, but I feel like a lot of them are already well watched.

    My suggestion is The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford.

    Everything about it is a stunning piece of cinema that got massively overlooked at the time, and I don’t really know why. It stars Brad Pitt and Casey Affleck, has a score by Nick Cave (who has a cameo) and Warren Ellis, and has cinematography by the mighty Roger Deakins.

    On the cinematography; you could pause it at almost any point, take a screengrab, and print it out for display. It’s a stunningly well shot movie.

    Nothing about the movie is fast. Everything takes place as it needs to, in its own time, all creeping glacially towards what you know is going to happen.

    I adore this movie. I showed it to my kid a couple of years ago, fearful that he would hate it. Turned out he loved it as much as I do. It’s the best western I’ve ever seen, but to call it a western does it a disservice.

  • @[email protected]
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    14 hours ago

    For the few people who didn’t already watch it, and the best movie of all time :

    Mad Max: Fury road (2015 ) by Miller .

    This is what film story telling is about: having an entire weird universe told through visual medium. The 1st half hour has mad max gagged and incapable of talking, and it is amazing. Preferably on big screen.

    A gem from the past:

    Taboo(1999), by Nagisa Ôshima,

    a samurai movie with hint of homosexuality. and an ending that can only be understood by paying close attention to the sound off screen.

    A classic:

    Seven samurai(1954), Kurosawa.

    Just enjoy the black and white shot , and immerse in old Japanese culture

  • @[email protected]
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    16 hours ago

    Many good ones were already mentioned

    But from memory:

    • The snatch
    • The big Lebowsky
    • Clerks
    • American Psycho
    • 2001 a space odissey
    • Blade Runner (possibly the directors cut)
    • Apocalypse now (possibly the redux version)
    • Full metal jacket
    • The godfather (first 2 movies, the rest is not as good)
    • Fight club
    • Alien
    • The Truman show
    • In the mouth of madness
    • They live
    • The terminator (first 2)
    • Animal house
    • the dollar trilogy from Sergio Leone
    • Once upon a time in America
    • pulp fiction
    • reservoir dogs
  • kubok
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    3322 hours ago

    I find it inconceivable that no one has mentioned ‘The Princess Bride’ yet.