Slant Magazine's 100 Essential Films

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In response to the American Film Institute’s list of the 100 greatest American movies, film scholar Jonathan Rosenbaum took the AFI to task for what he saw as a product "symptomatic of an increasingly dumbed-down film culture that continues to outflank our shrinking expectations." Of course, any list of this kind (including Sight and Sound’s decennial roster and the Village Voice Film Critic’s Poll from a few years back) is not without its blind spots. Participants are often forced to pick a select group of favorites and make a number of concessions ("Well, if I want Antonioni to make it into the collective top 10, I’d better hedge my bets with L’Avventura instead of my personal favorite Zabriskie Point."). Consequently, underdogs and obscure gems have little chance of being represented on a composite list that’s typically unveiled with little-to-no "justification for any of its titles" (to borrow again from Rosenbaum). Rather than present a list that looks like everyone else’s, Slant Magazine has decided to do something a little different.

While you will find many popular classics and critical favorites on our list of 100 Essential Films, our goal was to mix things up a bit. This list should not be construed as a definitive "greatest films" package, but as an alternative compiled by a group of kinky film-lovers wanting to give serious critical thought to neglected, forgotten and misunderstood gems. We aimed for the kind of list where post-Cahiers Orson Welles could stand shoulder-to-shoulder with a pre-pastiche Brian De Palma; where it’s understood that Hitchcock, Dreyer, Ford, and Ozu created masterpieces besides film school staples like Vertigo, The Passion of Joan of Arc, The Searchers, and Tokyo Story; and where the postmodern irony of Douglas Sirk’s Imitation of Life is allowed space next to its modern-day equivalent: Paul Verhoeven’s Showgirls (gasp!). Because space was tight, documentaries, shorts and animated films were not eligible. Additionally, we limited directors to no more than one spot on the list. Check back every few days as we randomly introduce a new film.

Pages: 1

  1. 1.
    Les Vampires
    by Louis Feuillade

  2. 2.
    Broken Blossoms (Deluxe Edition)
    by D.W. Griffith

  3. 3.
    Foolish Wives

  4. 4.
    Faust
    by F.W. Murnau

  5. 5.
    Hindle Wakes (Fanny Hawthorne)
    by Maurice Elvey

  6. 6.
    The Cameraman (1928)
    by Buster Keaton & Edward Sedgwick

  7. 7.
    The Crowd (1928)
    by King Vidor

  8. 8.
    The Fall of the House of Usher
    by Jean Epstein

  9. 9.
    Spies
    by Fritz Lang

  10. 10.
    Earth
    by Aleksandr Dovzhenko

  11. 11.
    An American Tragedy - 1931
    by Josef von Sternberg

  12. 12.
    Que Viva Mexico
    by Grigori Aleksandrov

  13. 13.
    Freaks

  14. 14.
    Love Me Tonight
    by Rouben Mamoulian

  15. 15.
    The Black Cat (1934)
    by Edgar G. Ulmer

  16. 16.
    The Crime of Monsieur Lange
    by Jean Renoir

  17. 17.
    Gueule d'amour
    by Jean Grémillon

  18. 18.
    Make Way for Tomorrow (1937)
    by Leo McCarey

  19. 19.
    Stage Door
    by Gregory La Cava

  20. 20.
    Only Angels Have Wings

  21. 21.
    The Mortal Storm (1940)
    by Frank Borzage

  22. 22.
    To Be or Not to Be
    by Ernst Lubitsch

  23. 23.
    The Leopard Man
    by Jacques Tourneur

  24. 24.
    Monsieur Verdoux
    by Charles Chaplin

  25. 25.
    Portrait of Jennie
    by William Dieterle

  26. 26.
    The Flowers of St. Francis (The Criterion Collection)
    by Roberto Rossellini

  27. 27.
    In a Lonely Place
    by Nicholas Ray

  28. 28.
    Ace in the Hole (AKA The Big Carnival)
    by Billy Wilder

  29. 29.
    The Life of Oharu
    by Kenji Mizoguchi

  30. 30.
    Le Plaisir/House of Pleasure (1951)
    by Max Ophüls

  31. 31.
    I Confess
    by Alfred Hitchcock

  32. 33.
    Autumn Leaves
    by Robert Aldrich

  33. 34.
    Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?

  34. 35.
    Bonjour Tristesse
    by Otto Preminger

  35. 36.
    Imitation of Life
    by Douglas Sirk

  36. 37.
    The Ladies Man

  37. 38.
    Cleo from 5 to 7 (The Criterion Collection)
    by Agnès Varda

  38. 39.
    Confessions of an Opium Eater (1962)
    by Albert Zugsmith

  39. 40.
    Winter Light - Criterion Collection
    by Ingmar Bergman

  40. 41.
    Charulata/The Lonely Wife
    by Satyajit Ray

  41. 42.
    Gertrud - Criterion Collection
    by Carl Theodor Dreyer

  42. 43.
    Yearning (Midareru)
    by Mikio Naruse

  43. 44.
    Seven Women
    by John Ford

  44. 45.
    Kill Baby Kill
    by Mario Bava

  45. 46.
    Masculin Feminin (The Criterion Collection)
    by Jean-Luc Godard

  46. 47.
    Point Blank
    by John Boorman

  47. 48.
    The Shooting
    by Monte Hellman

  48. 49.
    Memorias del subdesarrollo (Memories of Underdevelopment)
    by Tomás Gutiérrez Alea

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Created by maggiem on Jun 07, 2006.
 

Comments

Offal — 3 years ago

Not awful, just offal.

Calling this list essential is ridiculous.

More accurate: “100 In No Way Essential But Still Decent Films.”

Even then that’s a stretch.

Most of these movies are good but not great. There are a 1,000 like them. Saying that this 100 is better than some other 100 is at its heart wrong.


Untitled — 4 years ago

Very unusual combination of films!




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