The MoFo Top 100 Musicals Countdown

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I think I prefer to be surprised, so I didn't look at your list. Obviously the biggies will make it but I'm hoping for some more surprises.
No problem, I would love to see which ones that I didn't get on the list, It'll be interesting as I keep taking movies off and suddenly they make it
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Yeah that list should be a Top 100, why didn't do that? But what the hell The Umbrellas of Cherbourg isn't even on the list.
The AFI typically doesn't include non-American films in their lists (it's no Sight & Sound/BFI in that regard).
I don't have an answer for why only 25 instead of 100, other than not all lists of films are 100 films long.



I thought An American in Paris was fine, but I was slightly underwhelmed with it relative to its reputation. C'est la vie.
I know An American in Paris often gets listed as one of the great American films (by AFI types), but whenever I hear critics talk about it now, it always sounds... "only fine" (and I get the vibe that it's not my type of musical).

It did not cross my mind The Wall was a musical (which it sounds like it's not). I haven't seen it.



Trouble with a capital "T"
The AFI typically doesn't include non-American films in their lists (it's no Sight & Sound/BFI in that regard).
I don't have an answer for why only 25 instead of 100, other than not all lists of films are 100 films long.
Thanks I was wondering if that was an American only list.



Also I’m no musicals expert, but I do see one pretty glaring omission from that list of predictions.
I'm no musicals expert as well, I just went on a site for popular musicals and those were among the popular ones, I'm sure I got some misses just like today when I got one wrong.



Not a big deal. I think there's also a few mofo surprises in store.
Oh, I'm sure there is



There was another movie that I was gonna add to list but not sure if it was eligable, Bohemian Rhapsody?



Why are we putting Pocahontas in the predictions?? Did I miss the memo where they notified us that film stopped being crap?
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Why are we putting Pocahontas in the predictions?? Did I miss the memo where they notified us that film stopped being crap?
It's not that deep, I just read it off a site that had a list of popular musicals



It's not that deep, I just read it off a site that had a list of popular musicals
Geez, what is that site?






More like multiple sites, I must have got Pocahontas when I was looking at Disney musicals, I was looking at those too.

https://editorial.rottentomatoes.com...s-of-all-time/
https://parade.com/1219550/samuelmur...s-of-all-time/
https://www.imdb.com/list/ls074356392/ - Disney Musicals
I'm just yanking your chain


...although I do think Pocahontas is pretty bad and not memorable at all



I'm just yanking your chain


...although I do think Pocahontas is pretty bad and not memorable at all
Imagine what most mofos would be like if that made top 10,




I forgot the opening line.
42. An American in Paris (1951) - I reached a certain stage a few years ago where I decided that I'd go through all the old musicals, and An American in Paris is one I've got to. I liked it - enough to score it 7/10 at any rate. On Letterboxd I wrote : "There wasn't much in this MGM musical to dislike, aside from some of the awkward monkeying around Gene Kelly gets up to with Oscar Levant and Georges Guétary. Even the fact that Gene Kelly, nearing 40 in '51, gets himself a teenage love interest - I mean, it's a little icky, but that love interest is the wonderful Leslie Caron. Caron is still alive today, 91-years-old and her last theatrical appearance was in 2020. This film has a real bravura ending segment which is all interpretive dance with costumes and wild sets to match - beautiful colours, and a great note to end on. The songs are great too, with "'S Wonderful" and "I Got Rhythm" getting things moving. It was a little old fashioned for me though, and it won Best Picture at the Oscars, beating A Streetcar Named Desire and A Place in the Sun - two of my all-time favourite films. In the meantime, The African Queen wasn't even nominated. 1951 was a great year for film - and this was one of the attractions.

Also - a quick note - I was really pleased that an American film would embrace France and French talent so readily. MGM didn't have to cast Guétary, Caron or the French-born Eugene Borden. A shame they didn't film in Paris though, instead choosing the MGM lot, with it's multitude of "Parisian" sets." Leslie Caron is still alive by the way - she's now 93 years of age. This didn't make my ballot.

41. Pink Floyd - The Wall (1982) - Pretty dark for the visual representation of a concept album, but The Wall is a pretty dark album. A terrifying depiction of mental breakdown, misanthropy, depression, anxiety and suicide - I'd expect that would send any record executive or Hollywood producer running for the hills, but I seem to recall the album being pretty successful! One of the best-selling albums of all time, and the record holder for being the best-selling double album of all time. The movie gets wonderfully freaky, with Gerald Scarfe's animation particularly incredible and unforgettable. Bob Geldof was a bizarre casting choice for the central character, "Pink", but everything about Pink Floyd - The Wall is bizarre. A sensational film as far as I'm concerned - I had it at #6 on my ballot.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Seen : 39/60
I'd never even heard of : 10/60
Movies that had been on my radar, but I haven't seen yet : 11/60
Films from my list : 8

#41 - My #6 - Pink Floyd - The Wall (1982)
#44 - My #13 - Oliver! (1968)
#47 - My #14 - Hair (1979)
#59 - My #5 - Jesus Christ Superstar (1973)
#60 - My #23 - Annie (1982)
#72 - My #22 - Yellow Submarine (1968)
#92 - My #8 - Tommy (1975)
One-pointer - My #25 - Shock Treatment (1981)
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I forgot the opening line.

Pink Floyd - The Wall (1982)

"A confined but troubled rock star descends into madness in the midst of his physical and social isolation from everyone."

This took me back...straight back to the early 1980s and the album release of Pink Floyd's opus, The Wall. It was odd how the movie immobilized me, I scarcely moved a muscle for the duration...But why? Was it the movie? Was it the images? No...it was the music. It was the songs that I've heard a hundred times before that made me remember what was...and what isn't, anymore.

The Wall, I know what this story is about, it's about all the hurt we feel from the day we first enter into this world and it's about the injustices we suffer. Each one of those painful instances is a brick that we must carry. And when we have a cart load of bricks, we build a wall to layer ourselves away.

Most of us have our own personal walls and I can see them too in others. I can see them in averted glances. I can see them in the defensiveness and deflections that people put up as barriers. I can even see walls through the blocks of text that appear on discussion boards where a pseudo world of connection without any real connection exist. We all have our walls.

Maybe that's why Pink Floyd's album The Wall has remained my favorite work of music.

I remember the first time I heard the The Wall. I was in high school and I had a car, a cool one too, I had drove over to my friends house to pick him up for school. Just as we were about to leave, a neighborhood kid came over, who for all the world looked like a young Pete Townsend...He was like this rocker kid who was really into music. He pulls this cassette out of his pocket like it was a switch blade and says, 'man, you guys got to check this out.' ...We had like 20 minutes to get to school but the house was empty as the parents were gone. So we kicked back and said screw school and listened to The Wall twice through on the big stereo with the volume cranked on high. I don't know why but I can remember that morning like it was yesterday and yet it was decades ago.

So flash back to now, and I watched The Wall for the first time in like 35 years. I had went to the theater when the movie first came out and had seen it a couple more times in my youth during the 1980s. I always thought it was special. After all these years the music still resonated with me and I did enjoy watching it, but my youthful viewpoint had changed about the film. I set and watched all the credits role by on the screen at the end of the film and I never usually do that...it was like years slipping through my hands.

Wow! I really enjoyed reading that - a really neat piece of reminiscence.