Posted on 11/09/2002 8:24:43 AM PST by yankeedame
Friday, 8 November, 2002, 09:07 GMT
Apocalypse Now voted best movie
Apocalypse Now, directed by Francis Ford Coppola, has been voted the greatest movie of the past 25 years by leading movie critics and film-makers in the UK. In a survey of 50 film experts conducted by Sight and Sound Magazine, Coppola's anti-Vietnam classic beat films such as Martin Scorsese's Raging Bull, at number two.
Ingar Bergman's Fanny and Alexander came third while the highest ranking British film was Terence Davies' Distant Voices, Still Lives.
British director Ridley Scott's Blade Runner was at number seven.
Films dating from January 1978 were eligible for the vote, which excluded many favourite movies, including Star Wars.
Nick James, editor of Sight and Sound, said: "As film history now spans over 100 years it's almost impossible to compile a list of top films.
Top 10 films
1. Apocalypse Now (Francie Ford Coppola, 1979)
2. Raging Bull (Martin Scorsese, 1980)
3. Fanny and Alexander (Ingmar Bergman, 1982)
4. GoodFellas (Martin Scorsese, 1990)
5. Blue Velvet (David Lynch, 1986)
6. Do the Right Thing (Spike Lee, 1989)
7. Blade Runner (Ridley Scott, 1982)
8. Chungking Express (Wong Kar-Wai, 1994)
9. Distant Voices, Still Lives (Terence Davies, 1988)
10. Once Upon A Time in America (Sergio Leone, 1983)
10. Yi yi (A One and a Two) (Edward Yang, 1999)
"In this new poll we wanted to free people up from choosing the established classics like Citizen Kane and let them concentrate on recent cinema."
Apocalypse Now, starring Martin Sheen, is loosely based on Joseph Conrad's book Heart of Darkness and has become a cult classic. It was recently re-released with previously unseen footage.
The film features many harrowing and famed scenes, such as Sheen's drunken rampage in which he trashes a room.
Elsewhere in the film, Robert Duvall declares: "I love the smell of napalm in the morning", before his gunships attack a village while Ride of the Valkyries booms out from speakers.
The film also became notorious for the toll it took on its actors, particularly Sheen who had a heart attack.
Mr James commented: "Apocalypse Now deserves its position for being a richly complex, madcap experiment in war film-making that comes off because it never falls from the tightrope it walks between extravagance and profundity."
Most of the Sight and Sound list is made up of stylised rather than mass appeal movies.
Even Raging Bull could not be described as populist, with its grim and brutal portrayal of the life of legendary boxer Jake La Motta, played by Robert De Niro.
Mr James said: "Raging Bull is a film of equal ambition and scope to Apocalypse Now, but being a Scorsese movie is a much more rigorously controlled work.
Ridley Scott's Blade Runner was one of the movies from British talent
"The texture of the black-and-white cinematography is probably as important as Robert De Niro's performance as boxer Jake La Motta."
The list also includes two Asian movies, Chungking Express from director Wong Kar-Wai at number eight.
Yi yi (A One and a Two) from Edward Yang tied for 10th place with Once Upon a Time in America from Sergio Leone.
The voting experts included broadcaster Barry Norman and critics from Time Out, Empire and Total Film.
A Sight and Sound poll to find the best film of all time in August this year was dominated by films from the first half of the century with Citizen Kane topping the list.
"Evil Dead 2" is the best movie of our times for all the reasons they would choose Apocalypse and more.
You'd think the writer could at least have gotten the sequence right. He said that at the conclusion of the battle. Well, that's Western 'journalism' for you. Getting Vietnam wrong for 35 years straight.
Personally, I liked the POW-canteen scene better.
Film critic.. maybe, but he blew right by the intended focus of that scene. It is right after the "I love the smell" line. Duvall looks Martin Sheen in the eyes and says "Someday this war's gonna end" knowing that it will spell the end of Duvall's command. Somehow the " napalm" line caught on and the "gonna end" line is missed by most. I suppose it required a bit of paying attention.
Didn't know there was a re-release, maybe they will put back in the section at the plantation... or at least the palm trees exploding and being tossed in the air at the very end of the movie.
Blade Runner is pretty good. Once Upon a Time in America is also pretty good. I personally like Blue Velvet but I wouldn't have called it top ten material- unless it was a top ten for weirdness.
"What did happen to him after losing his kingdom an Laos? He puts his face an inch away from ours and asks us if we like poetry. "You know Kipling?" "It's Tommy this, an' Tommy that, and 'Chuck him out, the brute!' But it's 'Saviour of 'is country' when the guns begin to shoot. Then it's Tommy this, an' Tommy that, and 'Tommy 'owr's yet soul?' But it's '"Thin red line of 'eroes' when the drums begin to roll." As we sit with him in his small apartment m Sunset, Poshepny is visibly weary of being loved in war and hated in peace. His army of Hmong are still raising funds to overthrow the communist government in Lao and are looking to him for leadership. But their leader is tired of his role. Apocalypse means revelation, and he seems to have understood at least one thing."
. A CHANNEL 4 DOCUMENTARY, THE SEARCH FOR KURTZ WILL BE SCREENED THIS WINTER (via Mac Thompson 9 Nov)
I've never even heard of a few of them.
D'oh--- the original setting was on the Congo River in Africa and the character going up river was to replace a rogue ivory trader.
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