They Shoot Pictures, Don't They - 2013

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Greetings, this past fall we got Sight & Sound's once-in-a-decade list of the greatest films ever as compiled by professional critics. Now, TSPDT presents us with an even larger selection of films in its newly published 1000 Greatest Films Of All Time.

TSPDT’s Top 10 Greatest Films
1. Citizen Kane (1)
2. Vertigo (2)
3. 2001: A Space Odyssey (4)
4. The Rules of the Game (3)
5. Tokyo Story (11)
6. 8½ (6)
7. Sunrise (12)
8. The Godfather (5)
9. The Searchers (8)
10. The Seven Samurai (7)

Interesting to see that 2001 has now overtaken The Rules of the Game for the 3rd spot.

The Winners – Top Climbers within the 1,000
Touki Bouki (1973) 921 to 201 (up 720 spots)
Werckmeister Harmonies (2000) 879 to 260 (up 619)
Tropical Malady (2004) 981 to 417 (up 564)
Histoire(s) du cinema (1998) 675 to 115 (up 560)
Opening Night (1977) 907 to 351 (up 556)

The Winners – Highest Entrants into the 1,000
The Tree of Life (2011), ranked 355
À nos amours (1983), ranked 375
The Devil, Probably (1977), ranked 396
Tale of Tales (1979), ranked 404*
Blissfully Yours (2002), ranked 406
*This film re-entered the 1,000.

The Losers – Biggest Fallers within the 1,000
The Last Detail (1973) 462 to 918 (down 456)
Ride the High Country (1962) 548 to 963 (down (415)
The Thief of Bagdad (1940) 309 to 720 (down 411)
A Streetcar Named Desire (1951) 382 to 762 (down 380)
The Man Who Would Be King (1975) 436 to 811 (down 375)

The Losers – Biggest Fallers from the 1,000
The Man Who Fell to Earth (1976), formerly ranked 514
Gregory’s Girl (1980), formerly ranked 613
Swing Time (1936), formerly ranked 620
Diner (1982), formerly ranked 641
The Verdict (1982), formerly ranked 667

The full list: http://www.theyshootpictures.com/gf1...l1000films.htm



I think it's quite good top 10.The Rules Of The Game seems interesting,never heard of it before.



Greetings, this past fall we got Sight & Sound's once-in-a-decade list of the greatest films ever as compiled by professional critics. Now, TSPDT presents us with an even larger selection of films in its newly published 1000 Greatest Films Of All Time.
Cheers for posting this up, a great list that I'll hopefully complete viewing over the course of my life

Been having a look through it and it has got most films you would expect on there. Noticed that The Sting is missing though, watched that recently, loved it and it won 7 Oscars. Noticed that the same website do a film noir list as well which might come in handy, can't believe I've never heard/seen this before
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I'm finding it really helpful too as i'm searching for some region free blu ray's that I can't find here. Where do you store them?
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awesome sharing man. this is really i like it. top 10 is the best.
thanks for sharing this.



Gangster Rap is Shakespeare for the Future
While the top 10 is fairly safe as usual, they have interesting statistics compiled on the overall list by showing each film's placement through the years. It's very interesting to see how critical consensus changes through the years, I think it makes complete sense that films like Streetcar are losing support and interest from critics. It's great to see that Apichatpong Weerasethakul is clearly getting more exposure, he's one of the best directors to come out of the 21st century.
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Finished here. It's been fun.
Great top 10 they have, although there's a few films on there I still need to see.How i'd rate the ones I have seen:
Citizen Kane

Vertigo

2001:A Space Odyssey

The Godfather

The Searchers

Seven Samurai



While the top 10 is fairly safe as usual, they have interesting statistics compiled on the overall list by showing each film's placement through the years. It's very interesting to see how critical consensus changes through the years, I think it makes complete sense that films like Streetcar are losing support and interest from critics. It's great to see that Apichatpong Weerasethakul is clearly getting more exposure, he's one of the best directors to come out of the 21st century.
There is a lot of noise in there. They even included Scorcese's favorite films there.



Wonderful list.

"904. (new) STARDUST MEMORIES (Woody Allen / 1980 / USA / 91m / BW)"

"976. (918) ED WOOD (Tim Burton / 1994 / USA / 124m / BW)"
NICE!


It's a shame Altman's The Player and Scorsese's After Hours didn't make it, though.
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Gangster Rap is Shakespeare for the Future
There is a lot of noise in there. They even included Scorcese's favorite films there.
Of course there is, it's inherent in the act of compilation. Lists are interesting for two things: consensus and opinion, depending on the quantity of voters. For something like this, we can make it interesting by looking at broad trends in critical consensus, which requires a lot of filtering no matter what list we examine.



They finally updated this list for 2023. I finally have a few to watch for the Top 100.



Cool, there are only 90 movies I haven't seen from the first 1000.

https://letterboxd.com/thisisdrew/li...00-greatest-4/
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Wow, 361/1000 *hides*

Sorted the ones I haven't seen by popularity, and these are the Top 10...

1. My Neighbor Totoro (1988)
2. Chungking Express (1994)
3. Punch-Drunk Love (2002)
4. La Haine (1995)
5. Paris, Texas (1984)
6. Possession (1981)
7. Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961)
8. Videodrome (1983)
9. The King of Comedy (1982)
10. The Sound of Music (1965)
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Latest edition: https://letterboxd.com/thisisdrew/li...00-greatest-5/

Generally, not too much shake-up in the rankings. Gosh, time flies... (why am i still lurking this forum after 10+ years?) I'm still pleasantly surprised Jeanne Dielman managed to top the latest Sight & Sound.