Top 10 Films:
1- GoodFellas (1990) – My all-time favourite director is Martin Scorsese and this movie is his crowning achievement. It’s not for everyone, as the 300+ f-bombs and graphic violence can be off-putting for some…but it is a magnificent film that I’ve watched on at least 10 occasions. Robert De Niro, Joe “you think I’m funny” Pesci, at least half-a-dozen guys who would eventually feature on the Sopranos series, plus even Samuel L. Jackson as a lowlife named ‘Stacks’. Ray Liotta is the lead but the whole cast, the music and the entire experience is phenomenal.
2- The Godfather (1972) – Another gangster picture, directed by Francis Ford Coppola and a legacy of the fictional Corleone family. I’d probably have Marlon Brando, Al Pacino and Robert Duvall all in my list of Top 10 actors ever and they are each brilliant in this epic.
3- Apocalypse Now (1979) – One of my favourite actors (Harvey Keitel) was originally cast in the lead of this infamous movie, only to be quickly replaced after filming had begun by none other than Martin Sheen. There is top-billed Marlon Brando pocketing a pay-cheque for less than 15 minutes of work, Robert Duvall wanting to go surfing, Dennis Hopper, Laurence Fishburne, Harrison Ford and Vietnam sweating in the background. Epic.
4- Raging Bull (1980) – Arguably Robert De Niro’s most famous role. Martin Scorsese’s boxing masterpiece should have won Best Picture at the Oscars. Who remembers Robert Redford’s Ordinary People?
5- Do the Right Thing (1989) – I've watched every Spike Lee fan and I’ve seen many of his greatest films (Malcolm X, Jungle Fever, Inside Man, Clockers) on lots of occasions. Do the Right Thing is Lee’s best ‘joint’ and it depicts a single day in a Brooklyn neighbourhood from several points of view. A melting pot of tension on a hot NYC day.
6- Heat (1995) – I’ve watched almost every Michael Mann film and his three best all came out in the 1990s. The Last of the Mohicans (1992) has the world’s greatest living actor (Daniel Day-Lewis) running around in the woods, while The Insider (1999) has Al Pacino and Russell Crowe fighting a pro-smoking conglomerate. Heat is the famous movie that pairs Pacino with De Niro…a 3-hour cops n’ robbers epic that I’ve probably seen on 10 occasions.
7- JFK (1991) – I’ve watched every Oliver Stone film and this choice, while mildly controversial, represents a favourite of mine. I recognize close to 25 actors in the outstanding cast and this movie is yet another very lengthy film as a trend of 3-hour movies is emerging on this list.
8- Pulp Fiction (1994) – Quentin Tarantino’s three best films are his first three, in my opinion. Reservoir Dogs is a low-budget classic, Jackie Brown is a simmering crime drama, but the ‘middle-child’ is regarded as Tarantino’s greatest achievement. Profane, full of unexpected twists, hilarious…I saw it 6 times just in the theatre.
9- Dances with Wolves (1990) – Another long-winded film from the 1990s, and a movie that is perhaps not as gripping in its realism as Black Robe (1992), but nevertheless I’ve had a soft spot for Dances with Wolves ever since I saw it in a movie theater shortly after I turned 15 years of age. The vast open plains of the American Midwest, the Sioux language, the bison hunt, the epic canvas…what an amazing film.
10- Jaws (1975) – Hailed as the first summer blockbuster, this Steven Spielberg film still holds up well 44 years down the road. The best thing to ever happen during production was the breakdowns with ‘Bruce’, the mechanical shark, as it forced Spielberg to use the beast only sparingly and this aided in creating tension within the film.
There are my top 10 movies of all-time.
BUT...I obviously couldn’t find space for Scorsese’s Taxi Driver or Casino…both favourites of mine. David Fincher’s creepy Se7en with Morgan Freeman and Brad Pitt…or Morgan Freeman in The Shawshank Redemption. Daniel Day-Lewis in There Will Be Blood or My Left Foot, both hugely enjoyable. Jeff Bridges in just about anything…including his iconic The Big Lebowski role; I’ve watched 58 films featuring Jeff Bridges. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Chinatown, On the Waterfront, Fort Apache, Patton, Dog Day Afternoon…all classics.