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So, what's your favorite romantic movie? (re: American Film Institute (AFI) )
American Blue ^
| November 16, 2001
Posted on 11/16/2001 1:23:51 PM PST by Stand Watch Listen
Will it be Rhett Butler and Scarlett O'Hara? The dying young woman who claims love "means never having to say you're sorry'? Or the star-crossed Italian lovers from Verona?
The search for America's 100 greatest love movies was launched on Wednesday by the American Film Institute (AFI) as part of series celebrating 100 years of cinema.
The AFI sent out ballots to 1,800 actors, screenwriters, critics and historians for its "100 Years...100 passions" feature, linked to a CBS television special to be aired in June 2002.
The event follows searches over the last four years by the AFI for the top movies of the past century, the most beloved stars, the best comedies, and the scariest thrillers.
AFI director Jean Picker Firstenberg said the theme of romance was chosen for the cinema centennial series before the Sept. 11 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
But she added "As we move forward we are now -- more than ever-- reminded that the movies tell stories that move us and bring us together; and though the lovers on screen may end up apart when the lights come up, we, the movie lovers, remain bound by their emotional journey."
Jurors are asked to choose their top 100 romantic movies from a list of 400 provided by the AFI and return their ballots by December 14.
TOPICS: Announcements; Culture/Society
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To: Stand Watch Listen
Animal House. Hey, Belushi did get the girl at the end.
To: Tuscaloosa Goldfinch
Recent ones:
While you were Sleeping
A Walk in the Clouds
Return to me
Roxanne
Pretty Woman
An Officer and a Gentleman
To: GretchenEE
I am so happy to find a Jane Austen fan on this thread! She is my favorite author of all time on any subject. Now that I have read all of her books, the juvenilia, and incomplete work, I circle around and start reading them again. That woman packed more worthwhile meaning into any sentence than any prose writer I can think of. I have read ALMOST everything Jane Austen. Our local library has a good collection of unabridged JA books on tape, which helps me pass the time on the road. I wish she had lived longer.
To: StoneColdGOP
"Of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world, she walks into mine..." Obviously GMTA...Bogie is my favorite....Thats a Great movie...
144
posted on
11/17/2001 11:14:27 AM PST
by
hobbes1
To: Stand Watch Listen
Love with a Perfect Stranger
The Ghost and Mrs. Muire (b/w version)
To: Stand Watch Listen
Somewhere in Time has to be one of my favorites, along with The Ghost and Mrs. Muir, starring Gene Tierney and Rex Harrison.
To: BibChr
Bad Ronald
(And I being the only other FReeper who (A) knows that movie, because (B) I saw it ? what does that say about ME??)
I'm ashamed to admit it, but I know that movie, too!
IMDB on "Bad Ronald."
Maven
147
posted on
11/17/2001 12:05:52 PM PST
by
Maven
To: Maven
Do you know what's vastly more terrifying than the movie "Bad Ronald" itself?
The "User comments" at IMDB!
Those people probably thought Clinton was a great President! And probably still do! (AHHHHH! I scared myself!)
Dan
148
posted on
11/17/2001 12:18:29 PM PST
by
BibChr
To: ArrogantBustard
What's a little boy like you doing with big boy smut like this???
To: Stand Watch Listen
Robin and Marion. An "older" Sean Connery and Audrey Hepburn. Need I say more?
To: Stand Watch Listen
"Against All Odds," with Jeff Bridges as the injured football player, Rachel Ward as the oppressed rich girl, and James Woods playing the most soulful bad guy ever. It's Romeo and Juliet, kept apart by politics (you have to ignore that the bad guys are the capitalist developers/team owners) but still alive...
151
posted on
11/17/2001 12:27:33 PM PST
by
Yaelle
To: Stand Watch Listen
Wuthering Heights.
Letter To An Unknown Woman.
To: Stand Watch Listen
Crazy from the Heart.
To: Yaelle
i was just about to post against all odds!!!! i can't believe someone else thought of this film. the love scene with jeff bridges and rachel ward was incredible, it was so real. i kept wishing i was the one with jeff, i've been crazy about him for such a long time.
To: thefactor
When younger I saw "Harold and Maude" only about 15 times! Loved it! I may have outgrown it. By the way, it took at least 4 or 5 times of seeing the movie before I saw the split-second scene of Maude's arm with her concentration camp tattoo on it. That one tiny flash provides great motivation into her character's fascination with death. Maybe the director should have lingered longer.
155
posted on
11/17/2001 12:33:33 PM PST
by
Yaelle
To: Stand Watch Listen
Camelot.
To: Lilly
The only problem with Richard Chamberlain is that he seems to grimace before he has to kiss a girl.
157
posted on
11/17/2001 12:36:04 PM PST
by
Yaelle
To: contessa machiaveli
have you seen "K-Pax" yet? Not the greatest film in the world but he is a pleasure to watch, as always. So is Mr. Spacey, as always, though his talent is not stretched as much in that character. The scenes with the two actors together are the most interesting.
158
posted on
11/17/2001 12:38:15 PM PST
by
Yaelle
To: Yaelle
chamberlain is the most asexual man i've ever seen. his romantic hero persona is a joke and never believable.
To: Irish Eyes
Oh, how could I forget
Green Dolphin Street. Yep, one of my many favorites to add to:
Wuthering Heights
Letter To An Unknown Woman
Sentimental Journey
Many more when I come to think of it. I notice when "romantic movies" comes to mind I find the older movies are the ones that truly portray what "Romance "is.
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