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favorite director of all time?

Blackthorn

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Looking at the history of film, there are so many wonderful directors. I love John Huston, Clint Eastwood, Speilberg, Scorcese and hundreds of others. But as I look back over the many decades, my very favorite director is John Ford. Among his masterpieces:

Man Who Shot Liberty Valance

She Wore a Yellow Ribbon

Fort Apache

The Searchers

Rio Grande

The Grapes of Wrath

The Informer

The Quiet Man



So...other opinions?
 

Stearmen

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Another director that used vast panoramic shots to tell a story was, Sergio Leone! [video=youtube;b__itYJkcsE]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b__itYJkcsE[/video]
 
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Hitchock for me, as without looking them up, I can name ten or more of his films that I love and even the not-great ones are always interesting and I can watch them again and again.

North by Northwest

The Man Who Knew Too Much (both versions)

To Catch a Thief

Strangers on a Train

Dial M for Murder

Rope

Rear Window

Suspicion

Psycho

Mr and Mrs Smith

Saboteur

Lifeboat

Vertigo

Spellbound

Marnie

Rebecca

The Birds

The Lady Vanishes
 

LizzieMaine

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Preston Sturges. He burned briefly but brightly as the finest comedy director of his generation.

The Great McGinty

Christmas In July

The Lady Eve

Sullivan's Travels

The Palm Beach Story

The Miracle of Morgan's Creek

Hall The Conquering Hero

The Sin of Harold Diddlebock

Unfaithfully Yours


There was no place in the postwar era for someone so completely non-conformist in his comic sensibility, and he didn't do anything worth looking at after 1948. But in his prime, he was the Orson Welles of comedy.
 

Doctor Strange

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I love movies too much to pick a single director, but it's pretty hard to argue with either Hitchcock or Ford. Some others that come to mind:

Stanley Kubrick - This would have been my immediate answer as a youth, though most of his films are so cold and clinical, with barely a trace of human warmth. Still, as a technician and visionary, he's right up there. Paths of Glory, Spartacus, Dr. Strangelove, 2001, A Clockwork Orange, The Shining...

Billy Wilder - Master of dramatic comedy and comedic drama. Such a cynic! Sunset Blvd., The Apartment, Some Like It Hot, Ace In The Hole, Double Indemnity, Sabrina, A Foreign Affair...

William Wyler - Probably the best director of actors ever. The Best Years of Our Lives, Dodsworth, Dead End, The Little Foxes, These Three & The Children's Hour, Roman Holiday, Ben Hur...

Michael Powell & Emeric Pressburger - For sheer, unbridled creativity and gonzo Englishness. Black Narcissus, The Red Shoes, A Matter of Life and Death, The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp, Thirty-Ninth Parallel, I Know Where I'm Going!, Tales of Hoffmann...

Orson Welles - Obviously.

Cecil B. DeMille - Much of his work is broad and overdone and has aged poorly, but he set the template for the Hollywood director. Films for de millions! The Ten Commandments (both versions), Cleopatra, Sign of the Cross, The Crusades, Samson and Delilah, The Greatest Show On Earth...

Frank Capra - The great American populist made some wonderful films. It Happened One Night, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, It's A Wonderful Life...

Preston Sturges - The first well-known screenwriter to turn director (ahead of Wilder, Huston, etc.), his hilarious comedies are loaded with truth. The Great McGinty, The Palm Beach Story, The Lady Eve, Sullivan's Travels...

John Huston - Another great writer turned director. The Maltese Falcon, The African Queen, Treasure of the Sierra Madre, The Asphalt Jungle...

David Lean - Master of literary adaptations and colorful epics. Great Expectations, Bridge on the River Kwai, Lawrence of Arabia, Dr. Zhivago, A Passage to India...

Studio system stalwarts who did a wide range of styles well: Michael Curtiz, George Cukor, John Sturges, Howard Hawks, Robert Wise, Fred Zinnemann...

The comic genius writer/director/stars: Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, Mel Brooks, Woody Allen...

The younger generations: Robert Altman, Sidney Lumet, Stanley Kramer, Franklin Schaffner, Francis Coppola, Arthur Penn, John Frankenheimer, Steven Spielberg, John Milius, Marty Scorsese, Terrence Malick, Guilermo del Toro, the Coen Bros., Peter Jackson, Neil Jordan, David Lynch, Lee (Spike and Ang), Darrin Aronofsky, Clint Eastwood, Pedro Almodovar, Alfonso Cuaron, David Cronenberg, Christopher Nolan, David Fincher, etc.

And the classic foreign greats - Akira Kurosawa, Ingmar Bergman, Federico Fellini...

(Yeah, I've been a serious film buff for a REALLY LONG time!)
 

Worf

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I'd have to go with Ford myself. No director has given me so much to look at and love so consistently.... The others in the top five, Wyler, Wellman, Hitch, Capra. Oh and I must give Hawks some love as well.

Worf
 
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I fully expect to be excoriated for this, but in the modern world, I have been very impressed with many of Tarantino's movies. "Pulp Fiction" is an incredibly complex movie that delves deeply in the psyche and motivation of various elements in the underworld and one whose violence is plot driven and not, as many movies are today, driving the plot. Much of dialogue in the movie are different character's life philosophy masquerading as conversation that, IMHO, makes the movie watchable multiple times. Plus Uma and Travolta's Jack Rabbit Slim scene is better by itself than most movies are in full.

Reservoir Dogs - the dialogue is complex, overlapping (the way people really talk) and - for the time - outrageous

Inglorious Bastards - Played fast and lose with WWII facts, but the story and characters were so engaging it didn't matter.

Django Untamed - honestly, I think Tarantino just dumped some of the excess craziness in his head onto the screen for this one and made it work by dint of will - for the most part

Kill Bill Vol. 1 & 2 - While Uma Thurman's movies, it took Tarantino to pull of an off-beat martial arts movie
 

Benzadmiral

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Billy Wilder for sure. The flavor in my mind after first viewing "The Apartment," "Sunset Boulevard," or "Spirit of St. Louis" is hard to match. Of course he also penned those films with his writing partners. "Double Indemnity" is different, an adaptation of James M. Cain's novel -- but he gave that one his own spin too, and a better ending than the novel.

Not all of his stuff is dynamite; I've never cared for "The Fortune Cookie." But any time you see Wilder's name on a film, it's always worth watching at least once.
 
Last edited:

Feraud

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This is a great thread! It is hard to pick just one director...


I fully expect to be excoriated for this, but in the modern world, I have been very impressed with many of Tarantino's movies. "Pulp Fiction" is an incredibly complex movie that delves deeply in the psyche and motivation of various elements in the underworld and one whose violence is plot driven and not, as many movies are today, driving the plot. Much of dialogue in the movie are different character's life philosophy masquerading as conversation that, IMHO, makes the movie watchable multiple times. Plus Uma and Travolta's Jack Rabbit Slim scene is better by itself than most movies are in full.

Reservoir Dogs - the dialogue is complex, overlapping (the way people really talk) and - for the time - outrageous

Inglorious Bastards - Played fast and lose with WWII facts, but the story and characters were so engaging it didn't matter.

Django Untamed - honestly, I think Tarantino just dumped some of the excess craziness in his head onto the screen for this one and made it work by dint of will - for the most part

Kill Bill Vol. 1 & 2 - While Uma Thurman's movies, it took Tarantino to pull of an off-beat martial arts movie

No excoriation here! Folks tend to love or hate Tarantino. I am in the former group.

Let's not forget Jackie Brown. This is probably my favorite Tarantino film to date. It has all of the characters, story elements, music, and overall directing we've come to love in a Tarantino flick. This was before he codified those auteur-like qualities which directors can easily overuse. Wes Anderson is THE case in point.
 

Bushman

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I used to be indifferent towards Tarantino, but I really started liking him after Inglorious Bastards and Django Unchained.
 

AmateisGal

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Oooh, good stuff here!

I adore Hitchcock - a true master of suspense.

I also love Joseph Mankiewicz's work.

And yes, John Ford. Though I hear he was quite a cuss sometimes, he was brilliant at what he did.
 

Worf

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(Crickets chirpin' in the da background)

.... No love for Woody Allen I see.... or my personal fave... Mel "Springtime for Hitler and Germany" Brooks.....

Not throwin' stones.... Jes sayin'.....

Worfster
 
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(Crickets chirpin' in the da background)

.... No love for Woody Allen I see....

Funny, I just watched "Hannah and Her Sisters" on TCM the other week. He has some good ones - "Manhattan," and "Match Point" are two I really enjoy, but, IMHO, what hurts him - or keeps him from being in the pantheon - is that so many of his movies seem like wash-rinse-repeats of each other. And many of the early ones felt like thinly veiled autobiographies where they all blend together in your mind as one movie.
 

Doctor Strange

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Hey Worf, both Woody and Mel were on my list!

I've loved Woody's films since I was a kid and have seen virtually all of them. Because he's made nearly a film a year since the sixties, he does tend to repeat himself, but his best films are genius. The weak ones - and he's made some real stinkers in recent years - are unfortunate, but with so many movies (who else has made a film every year for so long?!?), they can't all be gems.

Count me in the mystified-why-Tarantino-is-considered-so-brilliant camp. I think he's obviously talented, and he writes and directs absolutely terrific dialog scenes. But basing your entire career on replicating tropes from genre films that were junk to begin with just doesn't work for me as an artistic approach. I find scattered moments in his films impressive, but they mostly leave me cold.

Re Wes Anderson, I loved his early films, but as they've become more and more just precious little jewelboxes of unrealistic production design, he's lost me. The last time I found his characters to be even vaguely relatable to real humans were - oddly enough - the stop-motion animals in Fantastic Mr. Fox.

And AmateisGal, how could I forget Joseph Mankiewicz?!? Another awesome golden age writer/director.
 

Bushman

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(Crickets chirpin' in the da background)

.... No love for Woody Allen I see.... or my personal fave... Mel "Springtime for Hitler and Germany" Brooks.....

Not throwin' stones.... Jes sayin'.....

Worfster

I personally cannot stand Woody Allen. He's pretentious and I don't think he's funny. He also can't act at all, and stumbles all over his lines. In fact, one of his greatest blunders in Annie Hall is attributed as one of his greatest moments.
 

Hemingway Jones

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I think Woody Allen is brilliant. I agree with others that he has his weak films, but "Stardust Memories." ( which is a lot of fun to watch right after "8-1/2") and "Manhattan." Excellent films.

So, favorite director, the one that has delighted me most, would have to be Woody Allen because of the sheer volume and quality of work.

Tarantino has lost me since after "Jackie Brown," which showed tremendous maturity. The genre films can be fun; "Kill Bill" for instance, but that doesn't make them great films.

Honorable mention to Carol Reed. I love "The Third Man."
 

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