Simtek wrote:Simtek's top ten favourite film directors (in no order because that would be too difficult)
Here I go; My personal Top 10-there're some awkward choices, I don't pretend to choose all time classics all along, although there're a few- No particular order;
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Alfred Hitchcock; Favourite film:
Notorious! (1946) -- Not his most popular but it was the first time I saw him during my media studies (which included loads of cinema related stuff), and it really stroked me how he learnt to play with the mind of the spectator before anybody else. A true gem.
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Martin Scorsese; Favourite film:
Taxi Driver (1976) -- Not a controversial choice! I also love some of his modern stuff but Taxi Driver is the perfect example of New Hollywood.
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Clint Eastwood; Favourite film:
Gran Torino (2008) -- I think it has everything what an Eastwood film has to have. It's Eastwood at his peak.
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Hayao Miyazaki; Favourite film:
Spirited Away (2001) -- A truly personal choice. To me the best animation director slightly over John Lasseter (another director I really like). All his films are special, the aesthetics are gorgeus and Spirited Away is Miyazaki at the top of his game in all aspects.
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Woody Allen; Favourite film:
Midnight in Paris (2011) -- Why Midnight in Paris and not Annie Hall or any other of his classics? Well, for starters, it strikes me that Allen is still back with great films from time to time, and second, it surprised that another, low-rated actor like Owen Wilson, could play Allen as good or even better than Allen himself.
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Quentin Tarantino; Favourite film:
Pulp Fiction (1994) -- Another modern classic, easy choice here, although I love most of his movies.
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Christopher Nolan; Favourite film:
Inception (2010) -- A great director, the best of the current era of Blockbuster seakers. Inception is deep, interesting, has great acting and crazy ideas all put into the same film. I love how he's been able to put himself into the big production panorama with an apparent lack of effort.
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Lars von Trier; Favourite film:
Melancholia (2011) -- The most interesting director in the world. Yes, he's pretentious and super ambitious but I don't think that does von Trier be any worse. Melancholia is probably his most complete movie yet.
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Sofia Coppola; Favourite film:
Lost in Translation (2003) -- Does one great film make a good director? I think so, and Lost in Translation is my personal all-time favourite. I love the inspiring settings, the photography in this film is absolutely gorgeous; it also brought to light Scarlett Johansson and it brought back Bill Murray (my fave 80s actor) to form the most unlikely couple ever. Awesome.
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Steven Spielberg; Favourite film:
Munich (2005) -- Spielberg is, to me, the biggest director out there in terms of success with his movies and that's why I chose it. Not only he's done all these blockbusters but many of them are genuinely good. Munich is one of his most brutal films, and that's why's my favourite of his.
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