Well, I would have said The Wizard of Oz, but I’ll name another from the same era: The Grapes of Wrath, directed by John Ford, starring Henry Fonda, and based on John Steinbeck’s stirring novel.
I think TGOW is the Great American Novel, and while the film only captures part of the story, it’s a magnificent example of cinematic storytelling. Everything about it, from the writing to the direction to the acting to the sets, is top notch. And it’s a great history lesson too.
Everyone should get to experiance Paul Newman in his prime. The Hustler, Cool Hand Luke and Cat On a Hot Tin Roof should be required watching before you start giving out opinions on movies so that you know what actual “good” looks like.
I see your point, but times and attitudes being what they were, it would have been near impossible to have included that in the movie. With that in mind, I think Ford made the right choice (the only choice he could make) by concluding with Tom Joad’s departure, and giving Henry Fonda one powerful speech.
I’m also a big fan of The Treasure of the Sierra Madre. Good choice, though the cynicism might be too much for many people. Bogart is my all-time favorite actor.
Fans of horror movies should watch The Wrong Man. It is short on gore, action and violence, but it is tho most brutally terrifying movie I have ever seen.
We read that novel in 9th grade English class and the school applied a sticker over the text on the last page because some parented objected to the “pornographic” nature of Rose of Sharon feeding a starving man from her breast.
There are a lot of great films but if there were one I think everyone should see for the insight into human nature it is Akira Kurosawa’s Rashomon. A close second would be the Charlie Kaufman-penned Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.