Mine is Lost Highway. It’s one of the most amazing pieces of media I’ve ever experienced. It’s dark, surreal, and I still don’t know what it’s about for sure. I have my own interpretation, as do many others. Who’s right? We’ll never know. The film is a fucking trip. I highly recommend.

  • Rieux@lemmy.zip
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    6 days ago

    I think arrival was very good. i dont know why but i love this movie without a very rational reason. i think this movies narrative “touch”, i cant find the right word, i mean the “vibe” of the movie, is very appeals to me. and thats the main thing what i love about movie. yes i love the cinematography of this movie(denis villeneuve is always a good sign), yes the music are extraordinarily good, yes the story timeline is very well constructed. but none of them can be a reason why it is the best movie ive ever watched. i just love it. and i couldnt find this movies tone in any other movie unfortunately. i cant find a similar one to this. very unique for me.

    and im ashamed because of that baby badge. dont do that lemmy.

  • ∟⊔⊤∦∣≶@lemmy.nz
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    11 days ago

    Sunshine. It’s one of the only non fiction cosmic horror films I know of. That experience of awe and insignificance at the sovereignty of the sun moved me. And recently I got to experience it first hand just like in the film, and for the half second I comprehended the size of sun it was… terrifying.

    The movie has it’s faults, but it’s one of only a few films that put us in our place.

  • CerebralHawks@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    11 days ago

    君の名は。 (your name.). There’s so much to it. The one that comes to mind now is how humbled the writer (Shinkai) was by the west’s reception of his previous film that he insisted upon the soundtrack being done by a band with a bilingual singer, so if you watch the English dub, the music is also in English. I don’t, but I love that detail. (I prefer the Japanese dub with no subtitles, followed closely by the Japanese dub with some really excellent fan subs.) I’ve seen it enough that I no longer need the dialogue translated to fully appreciate it. I know what they’re talking about.

    I also love how the trailer doesn’t tell you shit about what it’s about. The trailer is happy letting you think it’s a romantic comedy about teens body swapping. There’s a hard right turn about halfway through that changes the whole thing. And while the whole thing is beautiful and there are some great scenes before that point, that’s where the movie really begins. There’s a line in one of the songs that says “everything before now is prologue.” And that’s true. There’s the story and there’s a bunch of stuff that just sets it up, and the trailer only covers the latter.

    Then there’s the multiple timelines…

    • RecursiveParadox@piefed.social
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      11 days ago

      My son asked me to watch this with him and it was indeed amazing. I teared up a bit at the end (and had a feeling of existential dread for days after),

  • IWW4@lemmy.zip
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    11 days ago

    I have never had a single favorite film. I don’t think I could list my top five favorite films of many different genres.

    • tacosanonymous@mander.xyz
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      11 days ago

      Is it because you have different films that fit different moods, no discernible way to objectively rate them, or some combination of the two?

      • IWW4@lemmy.zip
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        11 days ago

        Oh yeah mood is a huge part of it. It is also because the playing field is not level.

        When Harry Met Sally is hilarious, silly and excellent and relies on the charisma of all the actors involved to make it great. There is no way I can level that with The Thing.

        Then there is stuff like All The Presidents Men compared to The Man Who Would be King. Hoffman and Redford v Connery and Caine… good luck with that…

        Then there is production values and funding.

        46 years ago the answer was easy. Star Wars followed very closely by Jaws.

  • stoicEuropean@lemmy.ml
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    11 days ago

    “Rubber” - It’s a (french?) movie about a car wheel that suddenly becomes aware of its own existence. It then starts rolling around, and somehow it has the ability to KILL telepathically. It starts small with squirrles or rats exploding, but at some point even the military needs to intervene.

    I like trash :)

  • mumblerfish@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    Pride (2014), maybe? So hard to pick one. But I do love this one. Two very different communities comming together and supporting each other in the worst of times. Filled with love and laughs.

    Lesbians and Gays Support the Miners!

  • MidnightMarauder@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    11 days ago

    Alien and Blade Runner, both by Ridley Scott. Arguably set in the same universe.

    Absolute stunning set and costume designs and genre defining in there own way.

    • OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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      10 days ago

      I watched Alien for the first time last week, and I was blown away. The aesthetics, the camera-work showing massive scales, the way it reveals information (or doesn’t!). Obviously it’s impossible to go into it completely blind, I knew Ripley would be the last survivor, I knew about the chestburster, I knew about the evil corporation, but the twist with the science officer caught me off guard and was amazingly executed.

      Somehow it still felt very distinctive and unique, even being so old and influential.

  • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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    11 days ago

    Damn. I have a hard time pinning that down. Way easier by genre, but even there I wouldn’t come to a permanent conclusion since the process is highly dependent on what I remember.

    Most of the time, I end up on Fight Club. It’s my most rewatched movie for sure. It hits the right buttons between tight acting, phenomenal camera work, a structure that works, and a concept that can be challenging when first encountered. I hate that it got turned into a symbol for morons that only look at the surface of it, but that’s people for ya; they’ll take the exact opposite message from something and run with it like a pair of scissors.

    That being said, I’ve watched spaceballs damn near as many times, along with young Frankenstein. Most of the Brookes ouvre rank pretty damn high for me, and dominate my comedy folders.

    But there’s also Princess Bride that’s such a simple and comfortable movie, and Rocky Horror that thrills, chills, and fulfills me. All of those, I’ve seen so many times I’ve lost count, but reach triple digits (and probably exceed that considering I’ve been known to put any of those on to help me sleep when insomnia is kicking my ass, and some nights I’ll go through multiple via playlist now that digital exists).

  • DagwoodIII@piefed.social
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    11 days ago

    Gut reaction?

    “Big Trouble In Little China.”

    I know there are better movies, but this is my favorite. Magic and gangsters, a dimwit hero, cheesy dialog, really good fight scenes, and a really hot actress.

    Every time I watch it I feel like I’m 14 again.

  • bobbysixkiller@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    My favorite film is Strange Days. When I was about 11 or 12 years old I saw the trailer on TV. The imagery and music in the trailer hooked me. I was too young to watch an R-rated film at that time, but about a year later I watched it on the cable box at home. I loved the film. The opening scene set the grittiness of the rest of the film. It was also the first time I watched scenes from a film shot in first person, and they did all that before small cameras like GoPros existed.

    The soundtrack is terrific. I think I bought the CD at Tower Records, I still have that in storage somewhere. Since the DVD release back in the early 2000s I’ve made it a thing to watch the film every December.

  • illi@piefed.social
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    11 days ago

    Lord of the Rings. It has all my heart desires. Great shots of nature, camaraderie, action, feels, swords, a message, charge of the Rohirrim… I could go on. It’s a masterpiece.

    You may say it’s cheating, that’s three movies - well to that I say the books are also actually one book split into three. They shot all the movies together as well. Besides, I only evet watch them all or not at all so… one big movie as far as I’m concerned.

  • Freakazoid@lemmy.ml
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    11 days ago

    That’s a tough one to answer. I don’t have a specific favorite movie; however, The Dollar Trilogy is high up on my list. For action, I like older movies like Enter the Dragon, and for comedy, take a look at The Big Lebowski.