11 Comments

  1. Say Anything, When Harry Met Sally…, and The Princess Bride are the three movies I list when people ask me what my favorite movie is. 🙂

    And I liked Titanic, too. The ship sinking stuff is stunning. I get a lump in my throat just thinking about it. And besides, Victor Garber!

  2. Since it’s on the list too, you forgot to mention that the other half of the double feature for the Vietnam class was “Platoon”. That was a very depressing night at the movies.

    Chris

  3. While The Godfather films are arguable, The Sopranos is not about how Tony Soprano is a good man within the amoral code of the mafia, it’s about how his being in the mafia makes him a bad man, and how he can not escape that. Even in The Godfather films, the overall message is that the life of a criminal is not, in the end, one one can rise above. Doesn’t mean they’ll be your cup of tea, but neither are about making apologies for bad men.

    And the show did list The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring, not the whole trilogy. I thought the same thing at first, as they put up the title: The Lord of the Rings. But then that faded away to be replaced by The Fellowship of the Ring. I guess they just couldn’t fit the whole title on screen at once. and for what it’s worth, I do think they have to be considered as three films – after all, they were released that way.

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  5. I’m with you on a lot of these comments: Dances with Wolves and Titanic are great movies that suffered from undeserved backlashes, Gone with the Wind is majorly overrated, Annie Hall frankly baffles me on every level, and Star Wars should be higher on the list. I’ve been unable to take Saving Private Ryan seriously since William Goldman pointed out that the whole movie is a lie (we’re led to believe that old man in the flashback is Tom Hanks when ***spoiler alert*** it’s later revealed otherwise).

    I like gangster flicks, though. The Godfather deserves its place in the pantheon, IMHO.

  6. I would argue (although not with you; I have a feeling you’ll agree with this) that Say Anything contains the Iconic Romantic Moment for Generation X, much as Casablanca (or maybe From Here to Eternity) has the I.R.M. for the Greatest Generation. Therefore, it should really be on the list.

    I’m not sure what the Iconic Romantic Moment for the Baby Boomers would be. Maybe the scene at the end of The Graduate? Oh, no, wait: that’s the Ironic Romantic Moment. Sorry. 🙂 Actually, I’m pretty sure it’s one of several from Love Story.

    Iron Giant should definitely be on some list, somewhere. I think modern animation gets overlooked unless all the characters look like they’re made out of computer-generated Play-Doh.

  7. I don’t think that the Godfather makes “apologies” for bad men, but it’s still a movie with bad men as its protagonists. As such, I’m just not willing to delve into it.

  8. Love Story? Ick! “Love means never having to say you’re sorry”? Huh?!

  9. Um, I was talking about Iconic Romantic Moments, not necessarily good scenes. And as a matter of fact, that isn’t the scene I was thinking of: I was thinking of the scene where they’re walking through the autumn leaves and you can hear the crunching of the leaves over their voices. I was 4 when the movie came out, but I can pretty much guarantee you that for an awful lot of people who are about 15 years older than me, when they think of the romance of their youth they’re picturing Ali McGraw and Ryan O’Neal scuffing through the autumn leaves, caught up in college-age angst, trying to make some sense of the world together.

    But an awful lot of others probably think of “love means never having to say you’re sorry.” As nonsensical as that is, it seemed to hit a chord with a lot of young people back then. Of course, so did Jonathan Livingston Seagull.

  10. OK, thanks for the clarification. I don’t recall that scene specifically, but that’s probably due to the Herculean efforts I made to expunge that movie from my memory!

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