Unlike Austin, I cannot say I’m a very big list guy. So when I was asked to come up with a list of my top ten films, I knew right off the bat this was going to be extremely difficult. I’ve probably seen hundreds of movies at this point, from every year and genre imaginable. Still, I have a strong preference for more fantasy-oriented material, as you’ll see in the list below.
This list isn’t an approximation of what I consider the most
artistically challenging or technically groundbreaking movies of all time, but
instead my own personal favorites. I got into movies when I was very young – I
first watched Jurassic Park when I was four years old, and that’s what really
opened my imagination to what movies were capable of: escapism. Removing you
from the troubles of reality and transporting you to these fantastic, engaging
worlds.
The list below is organized by year of release, since it’d
be impossible for me to rank them by which ones I liked the most (although Jurassic Park will always be my number
one). But hey, this list could be different in a week or so. There’s
always new movies coming out, and always an older classic to discover for the
first time. So, without further ado:
Graeme's Top 10 Favorite Movies
A classic monster movie that still holds up, even by today’s standards. The stop-motion animation in this film is the basis for a lot of today’s CGI.
The kind of spirited adventure you’d daydream of having as a kid. It’s a complete nostalgia trip for me.
The movie that got me into movies. 22 years later and the dinosaurs are still completely convincing. Plus, that soundtrack.
Probably the single most inspirational movie I’ve ever seen. And it helped launch 100 Morgan Freeman voiceovers.
Because this list needed a shot of pure testosterone. John McClane is the quintessential badass, and Die Hard is for my money the greatest American action series ever. The original is technically the best installment but I prefer how this movie unleashes John McClane on greater New York instead of confining him to a single building. Jeremy Irons and Samuel L. Jackson are great in supporting roles.
This is kind of cheating, but I consider LOTR a single story. Middle-Earth is still the most believable, beautiful fantasy world I’ve ever seen portrayed on film, and I’m a sucker for the archetypal good vs. evil stories. I’d rather visit Gondor than Westeros.
The
Departed (2006)
Such an awesome cast. My favorite of Scorsese’s crime pics, and this is the film that introduced me to his work to begin with.
Such an awesome cast. My favorite of Scorsese’s crime pics, and this is the film that introduced me to his work to begin with.
There’s no working American director like Tarantino, and this is my favorite Tarantino movie. It’s a clever sendup of history and unleashed Christoph Waltz on the world.
Fincher’s one of my favorite working directors, and I’d argue this is his best film, or at least his most topical: it captures everything wrong about today’s over-reliance on social media.
The funniest movie I’ve seen in a long time, and I loved its message about creativity. The fact it wasn’t nominated for Best Animated Feature is one of the Academy’s worst snubs. Also, hands down the best cinematic interpretation of Batman.
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