The mafo's MoFo 100 List

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One of my fondest memories about Jaws doesn't concern the movie, but rather, a puzzle. The only major jigsaw puzzle I ever worked on in my life - and completed - was a 500 piece picture of the poster for Jaws. This:



I don't recall how old I was when I put it together -- 7 or 8. It's been a long time ago. But... yeah. I felt like mentioning how a Jaws movie poster jigsaw puzzle consumed my life for awhile. I was quite happy once I finally finished it and I didn't break it apart until a long time later.



AWESOME list. Repped for:

-Jaws
-Star Wars
-Dr. Strangelove
-The Godfather
-Back To The Future
-Pulp Fiction
-American Graffiti
-One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest
-Chinatown
-A Clockwork Orange
-Forrest Gump
-Rear Window
-2001: A Space Odyssey
-The Godfather Part II
-GoodFellas
-E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial
-Psycho
-The Empire Strikes Back
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"Puns are the highest form of literature." -Alfred Hitchcock



Whoops! More rep for Sunset Boulevard, soooo many movies I want to see:

-Seven Samurai
-Poltergeist
-Full Metal Jacket
-Planet of the Apes
-Lawrence of Arabia
-L.A. Confidential
-Casablanca
-Close Encounters of the Third Kind
-Paths of Glory
-Schindler's List
-Lord of the Rings
-Raiders of the Lost Ark
-Amadeus
-Bonnie and Clyde
-Easy Rider
-Spartacus

But, I must ask... no VERTIGO??



Bright light. Bright light. Uh oh.
I could easily do Vertigo and many other Hitch's but I've still got plenty of time. I'm also picking out personal faves over and above the more obvious choices which someone else will list and write about. I have written quite a bit about Vertigo at the site though, especially concerning the ending.



Bright light. Bright light. Uh oh.
#158 - French Connection II

French Connection II (John Frankenheimer, 1975)


WARNING: Some Spoilers follow, although I really try not to make it anything that important!

1. Popeye Doyle (Gene Hackman) is a terrific true-life character, and although this film is completely fictional, I feel I understand him much better in this film compared to the first.

2. Marseille is a major "character" in the film. The fact that the entire film takes place in France makes it far more unique than normal, especially for a sequel to an Oscar-winning Best Picture.

3. The Shithouse Scene: Popeye is "interviewed" by his French counterpart (Bernard Fresson) inside the bathroom. He reads him a file detailing all the people he's killed, including a few cops. Popeye responds, "I know the dope that comes out of this city has killed a lot more than I have."

4. The Bar Scene: Popeye can't speak French, but he makes friends with a bartender (André Penvern) who doesn't speak English. They get along really well and share drinks. Popeye may be an "Ugly American", but some Frenchmen don't know it.

5. Frog One (Fernando Rey) turns Popeye into a junkie. When the French drug dealer realizes that Popeye is sniffing around for him, he captures him, shoots him full of heroin for weeks, and then tosses him on the street in front of the police station.

6. The Cold Turkey Scene: When Popeye is miraculously brought back from the dead, he has to go through withdrawl from heroin. Gene Hackman's performance during the Cold Turkey scene is miles beyond his Oscar-winning turn in the first film. Remember, "Mickey Mantle sucks!"

7. "Rats!" The scene where Popeye finds where Frog One shot him full of dope is one of the more-satisfying revenge scenes ever, and of course, it's remarkably realistic.



8. The Dry Dock Scene: This is easily one of the most unique action scenes ever filmed. Popeye and the French police find out that the dope is going to go out on a ship which is in dry dock, but when they make their move, the dock gets flooded, machine guns blazing, and it looks like the end for some key characters, especially since Popeye doesn't have his gun.

9. Invasion of the Canning Factory: The last part of this film crams action scenes up the wazoo. Philippe Léotard shines as the maniacal machine gun-wielding bad guy in these last two scenes, and you really have to see what he does at the end of this one.

10. French Connection II contains one of the greatest endings in film history. It is perfectly acted, directed and edited.




Bright light. Bright light. Uh oh.
#159 - The Exorcist

The Exorcist (William Friedkin, 1973)

*
*I'm not a big fan of the "version you've never seen".

1. Opening scenes in Iraq are a mini-movie introducing Father Merrin and his confrontation with Evil, represented by the demon Pazuzu. The pacing is slow, but the visuals and meaning are spectacular. Merrin fades away for about an hour then...

2. Transition from Iraq to Georgetown, Washington, D.C., is masterful. The "rats" in the attic are scary as hell, but meanwhile, the film is still pretty much presented as a documentary. We're introduced to actress Chris MacNeil (the incredible Ellen Burstyn, who was robbed of a Best Actress Oscar only to be "repaid" the next year). We also meet her daughter Regan (Linda Blair), her director (Jack MacGowran) and a pseudo-stalker who turns out to be a Jesuit psychologist priest, Father Karras (the wonderful Jason Miller).



3. The Exorcist has many creepy, disturbing scenes near the beginning: the bed thumping, the "hypnosis" scene, the medical tests, etc. They are very realistic, powerful and all add to a sense of dread which cannot seem to be resolved.

4. You don't have to believe in God, a "spirit world", or a Battle Between Good and Evil to know that The Exorcist is one of the most powerful films ever made about the fight to recover a girl from a world of darkness and try to return her to the land of the light. Whether you have strong religious or spiritual beliefs or not, a character such as Father Karras is a true heroic figure because he is torn by his own self-doubt and lack of faith yet still feels that he needs to help Regan return to some semblance of normal life.



5. Father Karras, himself, is one of he most-complex characters in film history. Karras is concerned with the weakening health of his mother, and the "Devil" or Karras's own inner demons realize that that's the easiest way to get through to him and try to get him to let his guard down in spiritual matters, which he has pretty much given up on when he becomes familiar with Regan MacNeil's case.

6. The "crucifix" scene still ranks to me as one of the most shocking scenes ever depicted in film. Much stronger than an R-rating, it pushes the envelope of what's allowed in an X-rated (non-porn, barely... ) scene, but wow! What a piece of cinema!



7. Lee J. Cobb is really excellent in his scenes with both Jason Miller and Ellen Burstyn. These scenes are very low-key and well-directed and both play out as the "calm before the storm". I especially enjoy Cobb's dialogue involving John Garfield and Sal Mineo, and then he goes into his "I could have you deported... " schtick. Terrific character and performance.

8. Max von Sydow's return in the taxi cab is one of the greatest scenes ever (again... ) Besides having one of the most believable makeup jobs in film history, von Sydow (who was 44 when he made the film) brings a level of an incomparable dignity and depth to his performance as Merrin. When he walks into the MacNeil's home, and the demon shouts out, "MERRIN!!!!", it always brings chills. Yet, this is where you actually realize how spectacular the acting is in The Exorcist, especially from Burstyn, Miller and von Sydow.



9. The Exorcism itself is one Hell of a scene. It's intense, profane, disturbing, funny, scary, surprising, and open to multiple interpretations.

10. Sacrifice, Love, and Faith are not the themes of most films, and when they are, they're often embarrassing. Now, I realize that some people will have problems with The Exorcist because they believe that it's phony, a violation of the laws of physics and biology and a dangerous way for allegedly rational people to look at the world around them. But let me ask you this then. Director William Friedkin just got done making a "realistic" cop flick (The French Connection) and won a Best Director Oscar to boot, and what did he do? He took on this film and made it as honest and realistic as he possibly could. I wouldn't sweat the 360 degree head swivelling too much since The Exorcist, at least to me, is one of the most honest films ever made.




Bright light. Bright light. Uh oh.
#160 - Macbeth




Roman Polanski's (The Tragedy of) Macbeth





1. The Beginning: On a deserted beach, the Three Weird Sisters ("Witches") dig a hole in the sand and place a human arm with a dagger in its hand and some blood into it. They cover it up and talk about meeting Macbeth later. As they walk away, fog enshrouds the screen and the titles come on. Over the titles we hear what sounds like an enormous battle raging. We also see the credit "Executive Producer Hugh M. Hefner". The credits end, the fog lifts, and armored soldiers appear on the bloody beach as we watch a victor bash to a bloody pulp the back of a combatant from the losing side.

2. The Cinematography of Gilbert Taylor: Taylor was the DP of such films as Dr. Strangelove, Star Wars, A Hard Day's Night, The Omen, Frenzy and Repulsion. Here he paints a world separated from our own by over a millenium's distance - mid-11th century Scotland. It is a brutal, primitive world, yet somehow it's occasionally bathed in warm sunlight or the beautiful green of the unscathed countryside. But mostly, even (or especially so) in its characters' dreams, their flawed humanity outshines whatever goodness may be buried within.

3. The Shakespeare Dialogue: This is a somewhat faithful version of the play but it's an incredibly cinematic one. Even so, many of the film's highlights include some of the best dialogue ever written. Some of my faves are: "Nothing in this life became him like the leaving of it"; "Double, double, toil and trouble, fire burn and cauldron bubble"; "Out, damned spot! Out I say."; "By the pricking of my thumbs, something wicked this way comes!"; and my favorite, "Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow creeps in this petty pace from day to day to the last syllable of recorded time; and all our yesterdays have lighted fools the way to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle! Life's but a walking shadow, a poor player who struts and frets his hour upon the stage and is heard no more. It is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing."


4. The Music by the Third Ear Band: The sounds heard in Macbeth are just as eerie as the visuals. The score sounds like something Roxy Music might have recorded if asked to go even more medieval and lose Bryan Ferry's vocals. The strings and oboe-sounding instrument, in particular, are often enough to drive one up a wall, so it's a perfect accompaniment to the guilty and hateful inner lives of Lord and Lady Macbeth.

5. Polanski's Direction, especially in response to the Murder of his wife and unborn child: The film has many blatant references to the murder of Sharon Tate by the Manson Family, but that is why Polanski choose this subject to film next after that terrible incident. There are numerous penetrating knives, including one into a woman's abdomen, and children are killed on screen. There are decapitations, hangings and loads of blood. I would call this film suspense/horror, so it definitely fits into Polanski's films thematically, but often the personal nature of what this film shows adds an extra dimension of true terror to the watching of it. The staging of the Mirror Scene, the Future shown in the Witches' Bubbling Cauldron, and all the other Fantasy/Dream scenes are extremely well done and make this film perhaps the most "modern" Shakespearean film which still keeps it setting intact.

6. The Acting: All the acting seems to be at least good, but much of it, especially Jon Finch's Macbeth, is extraordinary. The play is written and staged so that Macbeth and Lady Macbeth have to be the standouts and get most of the best lines and scenes, but here, Martin Shaw's Banquo, Nicholas Selby's Duncan and Terence Bayler's Macduff almost match him. This is a realistic depiction shot in castles and forests so the acting is not overly theatrical, yet it is certainly Shakespearean, if you believe there can be a difference. Finch is great whether he's doing a mental soliloquy, a physical one or interacting with other actors.


7. The Verisimilitude: This appears to be one of the most-realistic depictions of the Middle Ages ever. Unlike Excalibur, another of my fave films, this one has totally believable armor, costumes and sets. They look so great, you can almost feel them. The land itself is seen as clean and capable of beauty, but the skies above it are often very dark and the humans scheming beneath them are even darker. Technically, this film takes place after the Dark Ages, but it's difficult to conceive of a darker, yet more-realistic, world set in the Middle Ages.

8. The Climax: When birnam wood does come to Dunsinane, Macbeth still shows no fear, as he does battle and makes child's play out of all attackers. It's a violent and well-staged action set-piece. It's only after an announcement that there may actually be someone who is "not of woman born" that Macbeth starts to go psycho and the tables are turned on him.

9. The Ending: The film's ending, back at the home of the Three Weird Sisters, implies that the themes of the play and the film are a never-ending cycle where whoever is not in power will do whatever is necessary to try to gain it. It really does paint humanity in a dark light, but I'm sure that many will accept it just as readily as I do.


10. Eternal (?) Themes: While telling a semi-historically-based Shakespearean tragedy, this film shows Mankind at its most barbaric and greedy. Human life is shown as perhaps the cheapest commodity on earth. I realize that these themes date back to the Bible and other cultural tomes, but Polanski is able to bring it up to date by using his own personal tragedy while also tying the actions in this film into something resembling a gangster saga. All the different sides here seem to have their own ethics up to a point but those who feel undervalued or shunned will sell themselves to the highest bidder. At least "The Family" in a film such as The Godfather (released the year after Macbeth) will tend to stick together, but that only goes so far, and often water is thicker than blood. The "gangs" in this film don't resemble the ones in Romeo + Juliet, except that they are willing to kill, but in that case it's for pointless, stubborn family pride. Here, Macbeth and his wife seem more akin to the Manson Family, willing to kill to fulfill some prophetic dream ("Helter Skelter") which makes no sense to anyone at all, except themselves. As time goes on in the real world, heartless greed seems to extend beyond obvious murders, pointless wars and bureaucratic power struggles. It now seems to involve the collapse of peoples' modest savings and homes so some amoral punk can grab millions of dollars and actually be proud of it. Today, there seems to be no guilt, which was the bane of Macbeth. Is this the new Dark Ages?



Bright light. Bright light. Uh oh.
#161 - Lies My Father Told Me (Jan Kadar, 1975)
"Rags, Clothes, Bottles!"


Wonderful, life-affirming tale about a boy growing up in a Jewish household in Ottawa, Canada, circa 1930. Jan Kadar, who made the hauntingly-beautiful Czech film The Shop on Main Street, feels right at home translating Author Ted Allan's tale to the screen. The "no-name" cast is tremendous led by dignified Grandpa Zaida (Yossi Yadin) and the lead character, his inquisitive grandson David (Jeffrey Lynas in his first film). The simple story revolves around these two's trips throughout the area on Sundays with their ancient, but magic horse, collecting junk to raise money to support the family. David's father (Len Birman) is a struggling inventor and his mother (Marilyn Lightstone) is pregnant, and the entire family lives in town (next to their stable) in the midst of several other colorful characters.



The terrific thing about this film is that it's never really nostalgic. It all seems to take place in the here and now, and young David really begins to mistrust the older generation because he says they tell lies. For example, his dad tells him that his Grandpa is a crazy old man and makes up stories about how the Earth, Nature and Man interact. Grandpa's stories are wonderful, and although he's only read One Book in his life, he's not what you would call an Orthodox Jew. David says that is all a lie, but then when his younger brother is born, and David watches him breastfeed, he tells his mom, "I want that!", pointing at her breast. She says that babies do it and that David did it when he was young, but that he's too old now. Then he asks Zaida and he agrees, saying it's only done with babies and their mothers. However, as David sees through a neighbor's window along with other local children, grown-up men and women do it too, even if they're not married (at least to each other!) David now thinks his mom and granpa are liars. The film is always surprising and especially frank about sex, which is one of its great charms. There's this cute girl who talks to David about where babies come from since her dog is pregnant. David doesn't understand how they can come out of a Doggie or Human mother. The little girl explains to him calmly that they come from the vagina, and when he says he doesn't know where that is, she shows him by pointing it out on the pregnant dog.

It goes without saying that Kadar uses terrific visuals and is a master at nightmare imagery when the film calls for it, but he's also great at mise-en-scene. I just wish that I could see more of his films. I still haven't even seen The Angel Levine in its entirety. I am so happy that TCM showed it on Groundhog Day as a sorta birthday present to me because I hadn't seen it for 25-30 years. It's definitely worthy of my Top 100.

#162 - The Big Country (William Wyler, 1958)


Glorious Movie-Movie is one of the best westerns ever made, with a ton of memorable characters, albeit centered around a rather strange central character for a western. That character is former ship captain Jim McKay (Gregory Peck) who has gotten fianced into a Texas ranching family by way of Pat Terrell (Carroll Baker), who eventually shows herself to misunderstand him and be extremely superficial. Pat's father, The Major (Charles Bickford), tries to rule his neck of the prairie with the help of his practically-adopted son Steve Leach (Charlton Heston) who has a yearning for Pat himself. What McKay doesn't know is that he's walked into the middle of a feud between The Major and rival Rufus Hannassey (Burl Ives) who has his own cross to bear in the person of his oldest son Buck (Chuck Connors). The person who seems to hold the key to this war is schoolteacher Julie (Jean Simmons) who owns the Big Muddy, the river where both families need to water their cattle.



Aside from just being tremendous cinematic storytelling on every level, The Big Country shows a love of the land even when the humans roaming over that land are incredibly corrupt and violent. Nobody seems to respect McKay, except for perhaps the Major's Mexican jack-of-all-trades Ramón (the awesome Alfonso Bedoya). They constantly think that he's a coward, a dude, or just plain stupid, but they have no concept of what it takes to navigate a ship through two oceans and command the men onboard at the same time. All the acting is beautiful, almost all of them playing iconic characters. William Wyler likes to emphasize how "big" the "country" is, and he's aided by DP Franz Planer and especially composer Jerome Moross, whose score seems to have later been interpolated into both Elmer Bernstein's The Magnificent Seven and the Marlboro commercials. I suppose if The Big Country were to remind me of another movie it would be George Stevens' Giant which I also need to add to my mafo 100.



Great Thread and Great list!
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When a naked man is chasing a woman through an alley with a butcher's knife and a hard-on, I figure he isn't out collecting for the Red Cross!



By the way Mark, just got a copy of Paths of Glory the other day. Really looking forward to it, thanks to this thread.
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We are both the source of the problem and the solution, yet we do not see ourselves in this light...



Some of my favorites that I never heard of before this list:

Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion
The Innocents
The Assignment
Jesus of Montreal
Allegro non troppo



I have gone through this list briefly (I mean like, looking at the title of the films you include) quite a few times now, and find myself constantly checking back to this thread to see if a film that I have just seen is one that you like and have included, you know that I find your ratings/taste very informative/interesting, I feel I ought to comment more on particular entries and your opinions on them, but I understand most of your inclusions and favourites pretty well I now feel. There also seems to be a lot of different things I notice about your tastes when I go through your list again, and then there's a few films I have seen because I know that you (and sometimes others) like, I have had Elmer Gantry recorded for a while too, once I have watched it I will definitely say something to you about it, I am yet to see another person comment on it on this site, so have no idea what it will be like.

Continuing my point of not noticing things before - The French Connection II. I saw The French Connection earlier in the week and loved it, but was unsure about a potential sequel to it, but you have me interested more now, out of interest how would you rate the original film?

Also I am going to have to go through this thread one more time, maybe tomorrow, and give you rep for most of the sets - and give some comments on inclusions too, I feel kind of bad viewing this thread a few times and complimenting you without giving you any!
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