Are you looking for mise-en-scene or just nice blocking? Anyways...
A true masterpiece is not just an amalgamation of its parts. It's so much more. But it's the images that create the atmosphere and elicit the feeling of awe and amazement. All my favourite movies are those that impressed me most with their visual side. Not just merely by looking pretty, but by wielding some humongous, unfathomable power. A soul. True masterpieces do not abide to world's laws. They create a world of its own. And they create this world foremostly with images. I believe it's a mistake to think film captures truth in its writing - even if 24 FPS is supposed to be 24,000 words per second.
Some of my favourites (minus the ones you already added):
(The Terrorizers)
(The Cabinet of Dr Caligari)
(L’eclisse)
(Heroic Purgatory - like literally
EVERY frame is perfect, but I tried finding one that showcases blocking best - to moderate success)
(Children of Paradise)
(Last Year at Marienbad)
(Floating Weeds - a single Ozu pillow shot is often more interesting compositionally than a dozen of American contemporary films)
(The Naked Island)
(Kuroneko)
(Noisy Requiem)
(The Bad Sleep Well - Kurosawa's masterful blocking elicits the feeling of anticipation and incoming danger)
(August in the Water)
(Woman in the Dunes)
(Branded to Kill)
(Portrait of Jennie)
(Throne of Blood)
(Fragment of an Empire)
(Horse Money)
(The Weeping Meadow - every Angelopoulos is insane tho)
(Winter Light - can't go wrong with Bergman)
(Cafe Noir)
(The Funeral Parade of Roses)
(Daisies)
(Le Révélateur)
(Satantango)
(The Burmese Harp)
(Throw Away Your Books, Rally in the Streets)