After weeks of work, the first part of my Ultimate Greatest Movies of All Time list is ready. I used several lists to calculate the best movies ever and over the next few days I'll be publishing the results. This first part includes the films ranked 77th-115th. The films placed above these will be published in the coming days. To see how I completed the list, click here. You can click on a film's title to read my review of it.
Sunday, 5 May 2013
Six of the Best... Marvel Films
Marvel Studios have been
responsible for creating some of the biggest box office draws in recent years
with their variety of super hero movies taking over from the action movies that
preceded them as some of the highest earning films in the world. Beginning as
Marvel Films in the early 1990s, the studio originally turned their comic book
properties into animated cartoons and with the likes of Spider-Man and the
X-Men they created popular and long running animated series. The studio began
venturing into movies in the late 1990s with co-productions alongside large studios
and began going it alone in 2008. Here are Six of the Best…
6. Spider-Man 2 (2004). The best
of the Sam Raimi trilogy, Spider-Man 2 contained some decent CGI and great
stunt work as well as a deeper, more emotional story than the first movie. It’s
funny and the ‘spidey cam’ looks great. It’s just a shame that Raimi went on to
ruin all the good work in his third movie.
Labels:
Blade,
Iron Man 3,
Marvel,
Six of the Best,
Spider-Man 2,
The Avengers,
Thor,
X-Men:First Class
The Greatest Films of All Time #1-33
For the last couple of months I've been combining top movie lists to find out once and for all what the best movies ever made are. You can read about the process here and a full list of 742 films in contention will be released later but here is the top 33 in ascending order.
All the President's Men

The movie manages to capture the
sense of urgency, frustration and fear that must be present inside a major
newspaper office as its staff are working on a sensitive story such as the one
depicted here. It portrays journalistic workings in what appears to be an
accurate way and follows the story from beginning to, not quite the end, but a satisfactorily
conclusion. The central partnership is strong and ebbs and flows from distrust
to jealousy to solid teamwork and mutual admiration and respect. The film also
gets to the heart of the Watergate Scandal, introducing a lot of characters who
would otherwise have been lost in history.
Saturday, 4 May 2013
Citizen Kane
If you were to talk about the
best video game ever made, you might describe it as ‘The Citizen Kane of video games’. You might describe New York City as ‘The Citizen Kane of cities’. Personally I mentioned in my review of The Room that it’s known as ‘The Citizen Kane of bad movies’ Citizen Kane has come to be used as a
bench mark for all that is great. The best of the best. The top ‘thing’ in any
particular field. This of course arose due to the 1941 films’ long held
standing of being the greatest motion picture ever made. For fifty years it
topped Sight and Sound’s poll of the
ten best movies of all time, it is listed as the AFI’s top movie and is
currently battling for top spot with one other on my Ultimate Greatest Films of All Time list which is under construction at time of writing.
To my great shame I’d never seen
the movie until today. I’m twenty-seven, have been interested in film for
nearly a decade and have been writing about the medium for over a year yet I’d
never seen the ‘greatest of them all’. If I’m honest I can’t put my finger on
why. The movie wasn’t difficult to track down; I have no issue with the black
and white, the time period or the subject matter. I think I’ve narrowed down my
reasons to two things. The first is the title. Citizen Kane doesn’t do anything for me and as titles go I don’t
think it’s particularly strong but I think the main reason was that I was
afraid of disappointment. So many times since I began to write my thoughts on
film I have been let down and then let down my readers when I didn’t get or
didn’t like classic, highly rated films. I think The Lion King is poor, I gave North by Northwest 6/10 and much of 8 ½ was lost on me. It was with great trepidation then that I
recently took the plunge and bought Citizen
Kane on Blu-ray. And was I disappointed? The short answer to that question
is, no. A slightly longer answer is No, I wasn’t and for a longer answer still,
you can read the next 1,110 words.
Bullitt
When a defecting Chicago Mobster
arrives in San Fransisco ahead of a Senate Sub Committee hearing on Organised
Crime, the SFPD are tasked with providing around the clock protection in his
cheap boarding house. When hitmen burst in, shooting and seriously wounding a
police officer and the mobster turned witness, Lieutenant Frank Bullitt (Steve
McQueen) and Sergeant Dalgetti (Don Gordon) pick up the trail to hunt down the
murders while uncovering a deeper plot. Their progress is hindered by the ambitious
politician Walter Chalmers (Robert Vaughn) who wants the witness back on the
stand and blames Bullitt for the attack.
Bullitt is one of those classic, cool 60s movies which I’ve always
wanted to see but never got around to doing so until now. I was aware of the
famous car chase and that Steve McQueen was meant to have given one of his
trademark edgy, cooler than ice performances but I knew little else. As well as
the above, the film has a lot to offer the viewer from a fantastic score to
impressive cinematography but I was never engaged in the storyline.
Labels:
1968,
7/10,
Bullitt,
Don Gordon,
Drama,
Jacqueline Bisset,
Peter Yates,
Robert Duvall,
Robert Vaughn,
Simon Oakland,
Steve McQueen,
Thriller
Friday, 3 May 2013
Young Frankenstein

The film came about after an idea
Gene Wilder had while filming Blazing
Saddles with Mel Brooks. Wilder thought that it would be funny to create a
distant relative of the Frankenstein family who wanted nothing to do with the rest
of the family and their infamous experiments. The film was put into production shortly
after Saddles wrapped and the plot
took from the early Frankenstein movies of the 1930s as well as borrowed affectionately
from the horror genre and classic comedy. Dr. Fredrick Frankenstein (Wilder) is
a brilliant American physician/lecturer who discovers that he has inherited the
family’s old world estate. He travels to Transylvania
where his grandfather’s experiments get the better of his curious mind.
Thursday, 2 May 2013
Frankenstein
1931’s Frankenstein remains after more than eighty years, one of the most
recognisable, influential and respected horror movies of all time. While it may
do little for the gore hungry Saw
generation, to those of us who appreciate the art of film, it stands up against
the test of time and despite numerous subsequent attempts at the iconic story,
this version will undoubtedly be the one you have in your head. From the
imposing gothic architecture and magnificent use of shadow to the distinctive and
now ‘go to’ flat head, Frankenstein
is a movie which many of us will know before even seeing it in full.
The plot is taken from Mary
Shelley’s 1818 novel of the same name and should be known by anyone with at
least one functioning sense. The story and its characters are some of the most
iconic and recognisable not only in horror history but also literary history
and the tale has been repeated and twisted in everything from Mel Brook’s spoof
Young Frankenstein to TV classic The Munsters to the recent animated film
Frankenweenie and has influenced
countless books, TV shows and movies. This adaptation is relatively faithful
version of the timeless original text.
Labels:
1931,
8/10,
Boris Karloff,
Colin Clive,
Dwight Frye,
Edward Van Sloan,
Frankenstein,
Horror,
James Whale,
Mae Clark,
Marilyn Harris
Wednesday, 1 May 2013
Notorious
Set and made in the months
following the end of the Second World War, Alfred Hitchcock’s Notorious is an espionage thriller set
mainly in Brazil.
The film features a more romantic plot than many of the director’s previous
films and includes a couple of great performances from its leads Carey Grant
and Ingrid Bergman. Alicia Huberman (Bergman) is the daughter of a convicted
Nazi spy and is enlisted by her adopted United
States to counter spy on Nazi activities in South America. Her handler and government agent T. R.
Devlin (Grant) falls for his charge and jealousy ensues when Huberman goes to
romantic lengths to infiltrate the Nazi group.
At its best, Notorious matches the tension and drama of any Hitchcock movie but
there are large swathes which I found uninteresting. Unlike some of Hitchcock’s
best which are tense and exciting from start to finish, Notorious ebbs and flows from extreme brilliance to mere average
but overall is a very well made and intriguing film.
Labels:
1946,
7/10,
Alfred Hitchcock,
Carey Grant,
Claude Rains,
Ingrid Bergman,
Notorious,
Thriller
Monday, 29 April 2013
Evil Dead II
Released six years after The Evil Dead, the cult hit sequel Evil Dead II sees the hero of the first
movie, Ash Williams (Bruce Campbell) back at the cabin in the woods with his
girlfriend Linda. When a tape recording unleashes evil spirits and his
girlfriend is first possessed and then dismembered, Ash is left alone to fight
the evil and at times his own body until the daughter of the cabin’s
Archaeologist previous inhabitant joins him in the battle against malevolence.
I saw the original Evil Dead for the first time a few weeks
ago and loved it. It was intense, gruesome and funny and last week I was also
impressed with the remake which while not so funny, was just as intense, much
scarier and more gruesome than I could manage. Evil Dead II is different again from its predecessor in that it
forgoes a lot of the traditional horror and indeed most of the scares, in
favour of creating a hilarious and downright bonkers movie which is
entertaining from start to finish.
Labels:
1987,
7/10,
Bruce Campbell,
Comedy,
Dan Hicks,
Evil Dead II,
Horror,
Sam Raimi,
Ted Raimi
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