Showing posts with label film. Show all posts
Showing posts with label film. Show all posts

Ten Classic Movies I've Never Seen

Sunday, 14 November 2010


I've recently become addicted to a brilliant American podcast called Filmspotting. What I particularly enjoy is that its presenters Adam Kempenaar and Matty Robinson aren't afraid to admit when they've never seen a so-called classic.

One of the show's regular features is its 'marathons' wherein Adam and Matty spend five weeks watching films on a particular theme. When I started listening they here half-way through their Powell-Pressburger marathon. I don't think the pair had seen any of these classics. I''m slightly embarrassed to admit that neither have I. That got me thinking about other apparently great films I really should have seen by now.

Here's my top ten unseen classics.

Brief Encounter (1945)
One of the most loved and most parodied British films of all time. I really should find out what all the fuss is about.

Night of the Living Dead (1968)
Th only Romero film I have seen is Knightriders!

Solaris (1972)
I struggled with the 90 minute remake so I'm not convinced I can hack Tarkovsky's three-hour original.

Kind Hearts and Coronets (1949)
I don't think I've seen any classic Ealing comedies.

Duck Soup (1933)
Ditto Marx Brothers films

Tokyo Story (1953)
I meant to see this at the BFI when it was recently re-released and it is in my LOVEFiLM queue so that's a start.

The Magnificent Ambersons (1942)
I've seen Citizen Kane a lot but never Orson Welles' other early classic. I think I've been put off knowing that the definitive version does not exist though it still appears in critics list so I should take a look.

Bicycle Thieves (1938)
A film that is always on greatest films lists and one I've been meaning to watch for at least 18 years.

In the Heat of the Night (1967)
Rich Hall's recent BBC Four documentary about the portrayal of the South in the movies reminded me that I've never seen Sidney Poitier's first outing as Detective Virgil Tibbs.

Paths of Glory (1957)
Some claim it's greatest war film ever made. I wouldn't know.

Saturday Night Fever (1977)
This final pick is inspired by a conversation I heard on Filmspotting that argued that Saturday Night Fever should be regarded as a serious film rather than a piece of kitsch. I'd like to have an opinion on the matter.

That's my list, what's yours? Which films have you heard are brilliant, have never seen, but feel you should have?

Related links
Filmspotting - if you love movies subscribe to this podcast

A Martin Parr Double Bill

Saturday, 30 January 2010



I love Martin Parr's photographs. They are accessible, funny but always leave you thinking. Just before Christmas I went to the massive Parrworld exhibition at the Baltic in Gateshead which combined Parr's new portfolio Luxury with artifacts from his eccentric collection of postcards, photography books, prints and ephemera.



As well Nazi Christmas decorations and Skegness At Night postcards, Martin Parr's films Think of England and It's Nice Up North were also on show. There's never time at a gallery to sit through full-length videos so I bought both films on DVD and got round to watching them last night.

It's Nice Up North is a vehicle for Graham Fellows' alter-ego John Shuttleworth and charts the versatile Sheffield singer-songwriter's trip to the Shetland Islands to test his theory that people are nicer the further north you go in the UK. This clip is from early on and sets the tone for what follows.



None of Think of England is on YouTube but Martin Parr's website has three excellent clips. It's a state of the nation essay made in 1999 for the BBC's lamented Modern Times strand. Parr turns his camera on village fete cake contests, seaside resort boozers and people picnicking at service stations creating imagery that's often like David Lynch on a English coach trip. It's a brilliant and entertaining combination of the satirical edge that's in a lot of Parr's photos and a more sober look at attitudes about Englishness.

In It's Nice Up North Shuttleworth occasionally complains about Martin's "arty" shots. I'd say both films are works of art - but the kind that also makes perfect Friday night viewing.

Buy the DVDs
Thing of England & Martin Parr Short films - Mosaic Films
It's Nice Up North - Amazon

Related Links
Martin Parr - official site
John Shuttleworth - official site
Think of England - short essay on the BFI website

 
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