The MoFos Top 100 of the 90s Countdown - Redux

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It's Saturday somewhere, so let's get this baby diapered and ready for bed... no, wait that doesn't make sense... let's wake this baby up and get the redux started! That's better...


Poster courtesy of Holden Pike

Here it is... 80 Balloteers gave votes to 566 features, 100 of which will be spotlighted on this thread over the next month and a half.

* A few key points: Do NOT reveal the contents of your full lists until we come to the end (or near end, as I hear some of you do it) - allow the countdown to unfold naturally, allow the element of surprise.

* I ask that you leave past complaints behind - That stuff was for prelim, and we can't do anything about it now, so let's look forward and enjoy the 'what is' rather than continue to grumble about 'what isn't'

Before we begin the countdown, let's set the table by looking at what was going on in cinema in the 90s.

In the States, a group of American filmmakers with a distinct, idiosyncratic voice burst on the scene -- among them, Paul Thomas Anderson, Alexander Payne, writer Charlie Kaufman, and Wes Anderson.

The Danish film movement Dogma 95 is born

The Berlin School film movement in Germany emerges late in the decade, led by Christian Petzold, Angela Schanelec, and Thomas Arslan.


And I was impressed with what was happening in Iran with directors like Abbas Kiarostami, Jafar Panahi, Dariush Mehrjui (The Pear Tree), Majid Majidi and the Makhmalbaf Film House, led by father Mohsen (pictured above) and daughter Samira (The Apple) - (mother Marziyeh will join them in 2000 with her stunning directorial debut The Day I Became a Woman)

More?

Pierce Brosnan becomes Eon's fifth James Bond. Sadly, Q, Desmond Llewelyn would die in a car accident shortly after filming The World Is Not Enough in 1999.

And Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge is released in 1995 - it will go on to be considered the longest-running film in the history of Indian cinema, it's been shown daily to this posting.


In the 90s Parker Posey was crowned "Queen of the Indies", Jim Carrey fever broke out, Pretty Woman made Julia Roberts a worldwide star, and June Squibb made her big screen debut at the age of 61 in "Alice".

A handful of other acting film debuts - Leonardo DiCaprio (Critters 3), Gwyneth Paltrow (Shout), Reese Witherspoon (The Man in the Moon), Cate Blanchett (Paradise Road), Natalie Portman (Léon: The Professional), Kate Winslet (Heavenly Creatures), Peter Dinklage (Living in Oblivion), Mads Mikkelsen (Pusher), Viola Davis (Substance of Fire), Amy Adams (Drop Dead Gorgeous), Hugh Jackman (Paperback Hero)

And Gene Hackman (RIP) presented the award for Best Supporting Actress to 11-year-old Anna Paquin, in her debut role in The Piano


Future stars who were born in the 90s Include... Dev Patel, Margot Robbie, Daisy Ridley, Mia Goth, Saoirse Ronan, Florence Pugh, Paul Mescal, Anya Taylor-Joy, Margaret Qualley, Hailee Steinfeld - and 2025 Oscar winner Mikey Madison enters the world in March of 1999.

A few who passed on... Barbara Stanwyck, Greta Garbo, David Lean, Frank Capra, Satyajit Ray, Anthony Perkins, Audrey Hepburn, Lillian Gish, Vincent Price, Peter Cushing, Burt Lancaster, Krzysztof Kieślowski, Marcello Mastroianni, Robert Mitchum, Jimmy Stewart, Akira Kurosawa - and Brandon Lee is accidentally killed on the set of the Crow.

As to what were the biggest and brightest releases on the decade? That's what we're here to share and discuss.

But first, our 1 pointers and a list of contributors.



The List
With a graph showing, without details, the contents of that list - the total hours, countries, and directors.
100. What’s Eating Gilbert Grape (1993)
99. Sonatine (1993)
98. The Celebration (1998)
97. Gummo (1997)
96. Fallen Angels (1995)
95. Office Space (1999)
94. True Romance (1993)
93. Porco Rosso (1992)
92. Interview with the Vampire (1994)
91. Sleepless in Seattle (1993)
90. Three Colors: Red (1994)
89. The Crow (1994)
88. My Cousin Vinny (1992)
87. Total Recall (1990)
86. Gattaca (1997)
85. Dead Man (1995)
84. A Few Good Men (1992)
83. Dumb and Dumber (1994)
82. Strange Days (1995)
81. Before Sunrise (1995)
80. Lost Highway (1997)
79. Point Break (1991)
78. The Blair Witch Project (1999)
77. Beauty and the Beast (1991)
76. A Moment of Innocence (1996)
75. The Remains of the Day (1993)
74. Election (1999)
73. Close-Up (1990)
72. The Fugitive (1993)
71. The Double Life of Véronique (1991)
70. Home Alone (1990)
69. Good Will Hunting (1997)
68. Apollo 13 (1995)
67. Three Colors: Blue (1993)


and so on and so forth - posted as they are revealed.





1. Tugg - who officially sent in the first list
2. Holden Pike
3. exiler96
4. MovieFan1988
5. Nope1172
6. MovieGal
7. LeBoyWondeur
8. Burning
9. TheUsualSuspect
10. ScarletLion
11. SpelingError
12. The Rodent
13. iluv2viddyfilms
14. Torgo
15. Allaby
16. Hey Fredrick
17. Wigram
18. mrblonde
19. Deschain
20. Thief
21. Little Ash
22. seanc
23. TheManBehindTheCurtain
24. Ash TheStrangeOne
25. Thursday Next
26. WrinkledMind
27. Harry Lime
28. Death Proof
29. CharlesAoup
30. ScannerDarkly
31. beelzebubble
32. ChunkyMonkey
33. xSookieStackhouse
34. PHOENIX74
35. mojofilter
36. Rusty G
37. Fabulous
38. Diehl40
39. nyctc7
40. KeyserCorleone
41. John-Connor
42. Robert the List
43. Laverc
44. Steve Freeling
45. Frightened Inmate No. 2
46. wositelec
47. MovieBuffering
48. pahaK
49. scemo
50. dadgumblah
51. John W Constantine
52. MovieMeditation
53. rauldc14
54. LAMb EELYAK
55. urkillinmesmalls
56. Cobpyth
57. I_Wear_Pants
58. stillmellow
59. Miss Vicky
60. ueno_station54
61. Siddon
62. kgaard
63. Raven73
64. cricket
65. CosmicRunaway
66. schanier
67. Citizen Rules
68. Takoma11
69. Omnizoa
70. honeykid
71. ApexPredator
72. sawduck
73. Taz
74. gbgoodies
75. Yoda
76. Wyldesyde19
77. mattiasflgrtll6
78. Captain Quint
79. Sedai
80. Captain Spaulding - who contributed the last



It begins!

(Deschain being 19 on the list of balloteers. Ka is a wheel)



One is the loneliest number... except when paired with 32

The 1-Pointers


Pickpocket
Stop! Or My Mom Will Shoot
Cemetery Man
The Polar Bear King
Baraka
Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey
The Ox
The Long Day Closes
Mother and Son
The Basketball Diaries
Hide and Seek
The Englishman Who Went Up a Hill But Came Down a Mountain
Beautiful Dreamers
Fear
Music of the Heart
A Midwinter's Tale
Celebrity
Everyone Says I Love You
Mother Goose Rock 'n' Rhyme
DragonHeart
Dogfight
Stay Tuned
The War Zone
The Legend of Drunken Master
The World Is Not Enough
The Comfort of Strangers
Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle
Untamed Heart
Life
Stalingrad
Hurricane Streets
Kiler-ów 2-óch
Deep Crimson



I’m a little surprised The Basketball Diaries got only one point. I haven’t watched it in a long time but I remember it being good. Of the rest, I’ve seen Bill & Ted’s Bogus Journey, Hide and Seek (that’s got to be Allaby’s), The War Zone (gotta be cricket), and my own 1 pointer. I’ll wait to say which is mine in case people want to guess.



Some interesting pictures there.

The Ox was directed by cinematographer Sven Nyquist and features some top notch acting, especially from Stellan Skarsgård. https://letterboxd.com/film/the-ox/

Pickpocket was Jia Zhangke's feature debut - it was recently restored and currently showing at the Criterion Channel. https://letterboxd.com/film/pickpocket-1997/

The War Zone, directed by actor Tim Roth, good picture, well-acted, but man, that was some difficult viewing, the subject matter is painful. https://letterboxd.com/film/the-war-zone/



Top opening mate.
Also, amused at the mention of DDLJ. I should have made everyone watch it in the group watch. It's a chill romantic flick.


Lastly my one pointer is missing. Which means someone else shares my wonderful taste in movie.

Of the one pointers that made it, I have to highlight The War Zone & give a shout out to @cricket who chose it for the group watch. Brilliant but horrifying movie.



Thanks', you two, for that ray of sunshine, I appreciate the kind comments, makes it feel like it was worth the effort (And no, I'm not fishing, lol, just thanks, and thanks for the likes too.)

And I'm glad the DDLJ mention amused... yeah, we should have had a watch party for it - since we can't all make it to Inda for a showing, that would have been the next best thing.

Oh, and a round of applause for Holden's poster. Pretty cool of him to do that.



Have seen so far: 1 - Fear - It's one of my favorite thriller movies and imo, both Witherspoon and Wahlberg did well with their roles in the movie.


Have not seen so far: 0

My Ballot List So Far:
#25 - Fear
__________________
Survive the Night: My Favorite Horror Movies Thread
https://www.movieforums.com/communit...ad.php?t=71450



Have seen so far: 1 - Fear - It's one of my favorite thriller movies and imo, both Zellweger and Wahlberg did well with their roles in the movie.
You mean Reese Witherspoon, right?



Wow fast turnaround. Thanks again for hosting, Captain!
__________________
"Don't be so gloomy. After all it's not that awful. Like the fella says, in Italy for 30 years under the Borgias they had warfare, terror, murder, and bloodshed, but they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, and the Renaissance. In Switzerland they had brotherly love - they had 500 years of democracy and peace, and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock."



Also if anyone wants a quick recap of the first 90s countdown here you go:



Credit: weeman



One of those deserved 1000 points. I'll let you figure it out.



антигероиня
I knew my #25 is a 1 pointer. I think only Allaby and I have seen it. I shared it with him.
__________________
Its tougher to be vulnerable than to actually be tough.

90's Redux Seen: 18/34
My List 2/25
#12 The Crow
One Pointer: The Polar Bear King



Also if anyone wants a quick recap of the first 90s countdown here you go:
That was freakin' hilarious, I was in stitches

One of those deserved 1000 points. I'll let you figure it out.
I'm ashamed of myself for not putting it on my list (not being a smart-a--, I seriously do like the film, buuut, I just had others ahead of it)



The Legend of Drunken Master was my one-pointer…

Jackie Chan is a huge part of my childhood and I remember being impressed and entertained very early on by his unique combination of fighting skills, agility and comedy.

The 90s was sort of the huge turn for his career where he gained international stardom with of course especially Rush Hour.

And while those films especially introduced me and made me a fan, it was my constant fascination that also drew me back through his filmography all the way back to his humble beginnings as well.

And while there are many great ones and many iconic ones I feel like The Legend of Drunken Master / Drunken Master II might be close to absolute peak for Jackie.

There might be greater films of his in different aspects, but when it comes to how the fighting choreography and especially his speed, I feel like he has never been faster or more agile than he was here.

This felt like one of the last pure and raw displays of his talents before it slowly got mixed in with bigger budgets and stardom. And the whole drunken fighting stuff just adds an extra element of creative spice that is quite fun.