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Jan 2021

You can't go wrong with a good satirical comedy. Dr. Strangelove, Brazil, and Monty Python's Life of Brian are brilliant films that are just as relevant today as they were when they were made.

I love Jim Jarmusch movies and "Night on earth" is my favourite because that´s the first one I saw by JJ but they
are all good. Coffee & Cigarettes, Down by law etc
I saw Night on earth when I was 16 in 1991 and it changed my movie life because I finally found a movie
genre that I love.
The Wanderers is the movie I watched the most beside Star Wars IV-VI
Beside that I´m really interested in movies from the 20s - 50s, I love the connection between rock´n´roll
and movies in movies like "the girl can´t help it"
When I was 14 I was a big James Dean fan, Rebel without a cause is his best one.
I love movies that surprise the viewer like old boy but that´s not really old (2003)

Oh man, where to start...

I mostly watch horror, so there I have to recommend
-Freaks (1932)
-Whatever Happened to Baby Jane (1962)
-Man Bites Dog (1992) this is one of the most disturbing films I've ever seen, watch with caution
-Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer (1986)
-Ginger Snaps (2001)
-Dead Alive (1993)
-Haxan (1922)
-Anything made by Dario Argentines, and the 2019 Suspiria remakes very good as well

I'm sure as soon as I hit post I'll remember 20 more, lol

The Court Jester (1955) — Danny Kaye, Angela Lansbury, and Basil Rathbone.
It’s Danny Kaye. Need I say more? It’s hysterical :joy:

The Court Jester

Operation Petticoat (1959) — Cary Grant, Tony Curtis.
One of the most hilarious naval films ever made :joy:

Operation Petticoat

I’m so happy @DavidPerry mentioned Arsenic and Old Lace! I feel like it gets forgotten more often than not!

God, to think something from the 90's is old now. -sweats- I'm showing my age.

Anyway, for movies I've enjoyed that came out before I was born and that haven't been mentioned yet:

A Boy and His Dog (1975): weird post-apocalyptic story with some neat twists. And the dog talks~
the Man with No Name Trilogy (1964–1966): you know, A Fistful of Dollars, For a Few Dollars More, and The Good The Bad and The Ugly. Classics.
Roman Holiday (1953): another classic. All around charming. I enjoyed it more than I thought I would!
Fiddler on the Roof (1971): one of my favorite musicals and one of the best movie adaptations of a musical imo.
The Bad News Bears (1976): I'm a sucker for kid fights. Also enjoyed the comedy, like the kids are brats but not in the modern annoying way.
Road House (1989): heck of a good time, it's got silly moments and serious moments, but I was invested the whole while.
Glory (1989): one of my most favorite movies, if not the favorite. Love that period of history and I always get a swell of emotion for the characters.
Maurice (1987): another of my most favorite movies. Based on the book by E.M. Forster. Don't see many gay films from that time.

I may come up with more later, but these are the ones off the top of my head!

There is a generation of people out now who don't know what VHS tapes, dial-up, cassette tapes and landlines are.

My dad showed me the show "Police Squad" that I think came before the Naked Gun movies. The show was pretty good. Too bad it was cut short

Santa claus vs the Matians
Santa vs satan
Manos the hands of fate
Merlins mystical shop of wonders
Hobgoblins
King of the jungle 1936
Lazerblast
Future wars

Have watched the MST3K versions? I recommend watching those if you haven't.

Kevin Bacon screaming F--- you! is quoted in my house near daily.
I've only seen the first one, but it was great!

Some Like it Hot
We're No Angels
anything Mel Brookes: Young Frankenstein, Space Balls, Robin Hood: Men in Tights
Rear Window
North by Northwest
Casablanca
Kungfu Hustle
Enter the Dragon
Legend of the Drunken Master

Spellbound -- Gregory Peck in a psychological horror Hitchcock film with dream sequences designed by Salvador Dali
Repo Man -- bizarre punk rock sci fi with lots of quotable moments
Harold and Maude -- dark humor with a weirdly cheerful Cat Stevens soundtrack
The Innocents -- an old school horror adaptation of The Turn of the Screw (same novel the Haunting of Bly kind of adapted before going completely off the rails into ghost romance land)
Blazing Saddles -- an irreverent Mel Brooks film with Gene Wilder (OG Willy Wonka) that explores racism in the old west while parodying every cowboy movie trope
Notorious -- another less popular Hitchcock film with Carry Grant, and who doesn't like a slow poisoning
Shaolin and Wu Tang - a cult classic kung fu film that's been referenced in many hiphop albums

And yeah, glad to see I'm not the only elder in here...

AH I saw an episode of that! I really need to finish the series, thank you for reminding me of it. Yeah, it was made by the people who made Airplane, and before Naked Gun. It really was sad that it ended so soon.


FFF just remembered another movie I liked!

Dragnet (1987)