Top 5 Current Directors

Tools    





Taking inspiration from another thread (Top 10 Directors of All Time), I thought I'd try and start a discusssion of folks' top 5 directors currently working today. These can be those you consider "the best," "most important," or just your own favorites. I'd like everyone to say something about each director, or at least give examples of what you consider to be their best work, or why they're on your list.

For me, narrowing this down to just 5 is a problem, just like narrowing the all-time list to just 10 was difficult.
Let's start with the most obvious:

Steven Spielberg: Okay, I know he's considered a lightweight by many, and given the nature of some of his films, there may be some validity to that charge. But the man knows how to craft an excellent action movie (Raiders of the Lost Ark, Jurassic Park), and can put some very serious **** on celluloid when he wants to (Schindler's List, Saving Private Ryan). I also don't think there's anyone more tappeed into the psyche of the American moviegoer than Spielberg. He knows what people want, what buttons to push and how to push them. Is that always a good thing? Perhaps not. (After all, it's one of the reasons I hate E.T.: The Extraterrestrial).

Why he belongs on my list: Jaws, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Schindler's List



Martin Scorsese: Although I’m not as big a fan of Scorsese’s as some hereabouts, I do recognize his genius, and that he is a master of the craft of filmmaking.

Why he belongs here: Taxi Driver, The Last Waltz, The Aviator.


Clint Eastwood Eastwood has evolved from an actor in “spaghetti westerns” to a director and star of pretty standard fare, to the director of some of the best movies being made today.

Why he belongs here: High Plains Drifter, Million Dollar Baby, Letters from Iwo Jima, Gran Torino

I’ll round out my list with two personal favorites:

Steven Soderbergh: What can I say? From the first time I watched sex, lies, and videotape, I knew this was someone to keep an eye on. Viewings of his subsequent films hav only confirmed what I sensed then. Like the others already listed, he’s a master craftsman, and has a keen sense of fun.

Why he belongs here: Out of Sight, Traffic, Ocean’s 11, The Good German.

Joel and Ethan Coen: Since they came on the scene seemingly from nowhere with their gritty neo-noir thriller Blood Simple, the Coens have produced a string of great movies (minus a couple of minor clunkers; I really didn’t get Barton Fink, and The Ladykillers and Intolerable Cruelty just weren’t all that good). Adept at both comedy and drama, this team is among the best filmmakers working today.

Why they’re here: Blood Simple, O Brother, Where Art Though?, No Country for Old Men.


Also-rans: Ridley Scott, David Fincher, and Bryan Singer.



1. Martin Scorsese - Raging Bull
2. Wong Kar-wai - In the Mood for Love
3. Nicolas Roeg - Walkabout
4. Werner Herzog - Aguirre, The Wrath of God
5. Terrence Malick - Days of Heaven

Though they are not all completely contemporary, (though I suppose Wong Kar-wai is), they still submit films today which I enjoy.
__________________
Imagine an eye unruled by man-made laws of perspective, an eye unprejudiced by compositional logic, an eye which does not respond to the name of everything but which must know each object encountered in life through an adventure of perception. How many colors are there in a field of grass to the crawling baby unaware of 'Green'?

-Stan Brakhage



In no particular order:

Steven Spielberg
M. Night Shyamalan
P.T. Anderson
Wes Anderson
Alfred Hitchcock



My top 5 would be - in no particular order:

Spielberg
Scorcese
Shyamalan
Eastwood
Artigo (indie films)



Of course, if I had not posted this at two-thirty in the f*cking morning, I would have saved room to include Ang Lee:

Eat, Drink, Man, Woman


Sense and Sensibility


The Ice Storm


Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon


Brokeback Mountain


Lust, Caution





John Carpenter is one of my favorite Directors. I suppose there will be someone on this website that has a problem with that.



Welcome to the human race...
Me too, although to be honest it's a little hard to classify him as a great "current director" when he hasn't made a proper film since 2001 (although I've heard he's working on something new lately).
__________________
I really just want you all angry and confused the whole time.
Iro's Top 100 Movies v3.0



Me too, although to be honest it's a little hard to classify him as a great "current director" when he hasn't made a proper film since 2001 (although I've heard he's working on something new lately).
I don't know if you'd call them "proper films," but Carpenter has directed two entries in the Masters of Horror series of short films. I really liked Cigarette Burns, but haven't seen the other film, Pro-Life.

Unfortunately, I disliked his last two feature films; Ghosts of Mars and Vampires, but I love enough of his earlier work to set that aside.



Welcome to the human race...
Yeah, I didn't really take them into consideration as I thought of them as TV episodes and not short films. I've seen both (in Pro-Life's case, I missed the opening credits and didn't realise it was by Carpenter). In both cases, I liked them well enough, even though, as with virtually everything Carpenter's made since In the Mouth of Madness, they've just been recycling material from a lot of his older films and adding extra gore.

As for Pro-Life - it's an inferior piece of work compared to Cigarette Burns. Cigarette Burns manages to achieve some degree of fear through the general insanity of all the events going on (without skimping on some fairly disturbing violence). Pro-Life ends up being a little focused on action to be a truly effective horror (it's very much like Assault on Precinct 13 in being focused around a siege), although some of the special effects work towards the end is as shocking as anything Carpenter gave us in The Thing.



The best working directors - or rather, as a producer here is a list of people I would love to hire.

Joel & Ethan Cohen
Ridley Scott
Quentin Tarantino
Darren Aronofsky
Steven Spielberg
Andrew Dominik
Kevin Costner
David Lynch
Duncan Jones
Nicolas Winding Refn
Wes Anderson
Guillermo del Toro
Zack Snyder
M. Night Shyamalan
Werner Herzog
Alan Parker (near retirement)
John Boorman (near retirement)
__________________
R.I.P.



  1. Quentin Tarantino
  2. Martin Scorsese
  3. Joel and Ethan Coen
  4. Jordan Peele
  5. Steven Speilberg


Rounding up my Top 10:

6. Clint Eastwood
7. Alejandro González Iñárritu
8. Ryan Coogler
9. Alexander Payne
10. David Fincher
__________________
“Let me tell you something you already know. The world ain't all sunshine and rainbows. It's a very mean and nasty place and I don't care how tough you are, it will beat you to your knees and keep you there permanently if you let it. You, me, or nobody is gonna hit as hard as life. But it ain't about how hard ya hit. It's about how hard you can get hit and keep moving forward. How much you can take and keep moving forward. That's how winning is done!” ~ Rocky Balboa



This might just do nobody any good.
At this point I think it’d be more interesting talking or just listing “current” directors, as in contemporary, rather than just stating how great Scorsese’s late period is (though it is.)



Martin Scorsese
Wes Anderson
Paul Thomas Anderson
Christopher Nolan
Quentin Tarantino

While plenty of directors work interests me those are the big five where I'm ready and fascinated in seeing what projects they are taking on.

Now the little giants for me, the bright young things

Alex Garland
Luca Gaudagnino
Yorgos Lathimos
Jordan Peele
The Russo Brothers



My currently working fav top 5 would probably be:

Nicolas Winding Refn
Michael Haneke
Denis Villeneuve
Lars von Trier


The 5th I'll have to leave open and think about it.
__________________
You're an enigma, cat_sidhe.



Paul Thomas Anderson I was a huge fan. Boogie Nights, Magnolia, and Punch Drunk Love were all awesome. And then he made There Will Be Blood and he lost me. The Master and Inherent Vice didn't fair well with me neither. I just couldn't enjoy them even though it seemed that everybody else loved them.

I'd have to also mention David O' Russell. He had a good run between The Fighter and Joy, the list included one of my favorite movies of the last 10 years: Silver Linings Playbook, and the amusing American Hustle. Strangely, he hasn't done anything since 2015's Joy. He would be somewhere in my Top 20.

Aronofsky is another director I admire and would be in my Top 20 also.

Nolan is great and he would definitely rank in my Top 20.


James Cameron makes a movie once every decade it seems, and his projects for the next few years will all be Avatar. I like Cameron a lot, but he needs to make movies more often and more original movies. He's still in my Top 20, though.


Robert Zemeckis deserves a mention, even though he hasn't been consistent lately with great films (Beowulf and Welcome to Marwen are not my cup of tea, and Flight was just a tad bit overrated). He's still in my Top 20, though.

Wes Anderson I just couldn't really get into. I've seen many of his films, but I'm not crazy about him or his movies the way so many people are. I'd have to say my favorite by him is Rushmore.



A system of cells interlinked
Current top 5 I am really enjoying lately:

Denis Villeneuve
Alex Garland
Alejandro Iñárritu
Alfonso Cuaron
David Fincher


One to Watch: Debra Granik

Hoping to see Caruth put something out soon, too. Rumor has it, he will.
__________________
“Film can't just be a long line of bliss. There's something we all like about the human struggle.” ― David Lynch



This might just do nobody any good.
@mojofilter you should check out Phantom Thread if you haven't already. It's Anderson's most classical film, maybe ever. It's lots more fun and mischievous than it was made out to be in its marketing.
__________________
This post was not worth it.



This might just do nobody any good.
Looking back on that list draft, I should probably place Park Chan-wook somewhere. Don't know that Cuaron cracks my top 5 but he's close. Ditto Spike Jonze.

Two other names I kept going back and forth with were Damien Chazelle and Ryan Coogler, not in the top 5 but as honorable mentions. They might be the best in the "burgeoning directors of pure entertainment" list.