Topic: GW Top 5 Directors II (Read 1979 times)

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Let's try this again. Not because there was anything wrong with the previous list, but a newer list (the previous one was taken from a very old source) with more people taking part (the previous had under 20 people taking part, which lead to the 25-50 section being very blurry. Usually down to a single member putting their director at the top of their list).

Now to make this list tighter than the last:
  • Make sure you put your Top 5 in order. I know most people just think of a few and don't consider which one is better than the other, but give it a go. It'll make the a second list so much easier/better.
  • Uncomplete lists will be ignored, it's just how it goes.

Anyway, here's my list. It's the same from the last topic (since I updated my own Top 5 before posting the list), but I'll do some explaining too.

5. John Woo


4. Shunji Iwai


3. Park Chan-Wook


2. Akira Kurosawa


1. Wong Kar-Wai

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do they have to be asian
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i am still trying to find something witty to say back to this but i have nothing
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do they have to be asian

haha i'm sorry esh but this was the best reply possible

anyway um i'll come up with a list in a minute hold on
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Jesus christ, why do I find this so hard! Fuck it, I'm doing 10.

10. David Cronenberg
9. Richard Linklater
8. Darren Aronofsky
7. Alejandro González Iñárritu
6. Terry Gilliam
5. David Lynch
4. Steven Soderbergh
3. Jean-Pierre Jeunet
2. David Fincher
1. Orson Welles
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1: Park Chan-Wook
2: Darren Aronofsky
3: M. Night
4: David Fincher
5: Hayao Miyazaki ( animes , dunno if it counts )
so you've come here for pointless ego boosting and happy sunshine glee? this aint deviantart man.
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1. Akira Kurosawa
2. Woody Allen
3. The Coen Brothers
4. Christopher Nolan
5. Kevin Smith
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5. David Cronenberg
4. Roman Polanski
3. The Coen Brothers
2. Stanley Kubrick
1. David Lynch

I'm not too sure if that's the exact order but oh well.

edit: also this is just our favorite directors and not necessarily who we think is the most talented right because that would be a different list
Last Edit: June 29, 2008, 05:36:52 pm by Roman
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5) Martin Scorsese
4) Alfred Hitchcock
3) Stanley Kubrick
2) Steven Speilburg
1) Tim Burton

These are my personal favorites based on creativeness and all around vision for the films they make.
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Christopher Nolan missed the no.11 slot on my list because I thought WAIT HE IS NOT ACTUALLY THAT GOOD :( But man I can't wait for the new batman.
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Christopher Nolan missed the no.11 slot on my list because I thought WAIT HE IS NOT ACTUALLY THAT GOOD :( But man I can't wait for the new batman.
i thought memento was pretty brilliantly shot, which is basically the sole reason he's on my list.

edit: also can't wait for the new batman :(
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5.Gordon Parks

4.Hughes Brothers

3. John Singleton

2. Spike Lee

1. Melvin van Peebles

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stop it psyburn.


still deciding on #5 it is very difficult !!PLEASE DO NOT DISQUALIFY MY VOTES!!

1. david lynch
2. coen brothers
3. kubrick
4. Guillermo Del Toro (37 braff 36)
5. albred hitchock because not enough people mentioned him so far!! other contenders included fcoppola, polanski, um
0. wes anderson - I think I kept myself from mentioning him. to idk trendy/untrendy, idk, the wrong kind of person often likes his movies now
Last Edit: August 28, 2008, 04:12:23 am by earl chip
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5. Sam Raimi
4. Cohen Brothers
3. Francis Ford Coppola
2. Martin Scorcese
1. David Lynch
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My list has actually changed a bit!

1. Steven Spielberg (Schindler's List, Saving Private Ryan, Indiana Jones)

2. Darren Aronofsky (Requiem for a Dream, The Fountain, Pi)

3. Martin Scorsese (Goodfellas, Casino, Raging Bull)

4. Coen Brothers (Fargo, No Country for Old Men, The Big Lebowski)

5. Sam Mendes (American Beauty, Road to Perdition)


Honorable Mentions: Frank Darabont, Takashi Miike, Francis Ford Coppola, Michael Gondry, Kevin Smith

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Righto, let's see here.

1. Steven Spielberg
2. Frank Darabont
3. Peter Jackson
4. James Cameron
5. Rob Reiner
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Schindler's List

This is probably the main reason why Spielberg is so high up on my list. Schindler's List is by far one of the most intriquing and greatest movies of all time. Not often does a film come along that produces such "emotion" I should say.

Sure, I love mostly all of Spielberg's films, but this is the main reason I placed him at number two.
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1. Steven Spielberg
Things I loved as a kid: sharks, aliens, dinosaurs, whip-cracking adventure and above all, movies. From the age of 6, Spielberg was my childhood hero, and I'm not sure that many children tend to idolise filmmakers. Of course, his films continued to resonate as a teenager and an adult most of all, among others, Schindler's List, a truly remarkable picture and the high water mark of his artistry, and Saving Private Ryan, which equally demonstrates his unique talents. One of his earlier films that has only grown in power as I've gotten older is Close Encounters, an alien film that taps into feelings of awe and wonderment instead of the usual fear. Though his oeuvre isn't without its flaws - notably Hook and 1941, it is also one which masterfully touches upon a number of genres and styles and constantly straddles huge commercial appeal with artistic integrity. Basically, the Beatles of cinema.

2. Stanley Kubrick
Stanley. Fucking. Kubrick. If not for my huge personal affinity for my number 1 choice, surely he would sit atop this list. He divided opinion like no other, neither a critical darling nor a huge commercial success, he is more the filmmakers director and certainly one of the greatest of all time.

3. Martin Scorsese
Watch Mean Streets. Then watch Taxi Driver. Then watch Raging Bull. Of course then there are his bigger more recent films, Goodfellas, Casino, Gangs of New York and The Departed, which finally won him an Oscar. But then there is a wealth of brilliance in his lesser-known pictures as well, The King of Comedy, The Last Temptation of Christ, Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore and Bringing Out the Dead. That's not forgetting his music documentaries...

4. John Cassavetes
The godfather of American independent cinema. Funded his independent pictures (Shadows, Faces, Opening Night, The Killing of a Chinese Bookie, Woman Under the Influence)  through his acting day-job and it is these, aided by a cast of regulars that include his wife Gena Rowlands, Ben Gazzarra, Seymour Cassel, and Peter Falk, that  stand out today as his absolute best. Always pushing the limits of cinema (see the shaky, often sped-up Shadows and the unfalteringly uncomfortable closeups in Faces) , he moved against the grain of Hollywood, choosing to shoot scenes in order as opposed to whichever was cheapest, using a skeleton crew, writing all his films and editing them in his house. Check out his appearance with Gazzara and Falk on the Dick Cavett show on youtube, it's hiiiiiiilarious.

5.Paul Thomas Anderson
With only 5 films under his belt, Paul Thomas Anderson is a newcomer to cinema compared to the veterans listed above. However, he has had what can only be described as an astonishing career so far. He is a master with actors, often surrounding himself with a cast of regulars including Julianne Moore, John. C Reilly, Luis Guzman, Philip Baker Hall, and of course the always brilliant Philip Seymour Hoffman. In Magnolia he used Tom Cruise's fame and screen presence to great effect as a pitiful sex guru, whilst in Punch-Drunk Love he played with the Adam Sandler screen-persona. He would not be on this list however, if not for his latest picture There Will Be Blood, which I consider to be a career-best and one of the greatest films I have seen in a very long time. I can't wait to see what he is going to next.

Honourable mentions go to Alfred Hitchcock, Francois Truffaut, Francis Ford Coppola, Orson Welles, David Lean, Terrence Mallick, Woody Allen and Joel and Ethan Coen. 

Last Edit: July 06, 2008, 07:44:59 pm by GaZZwa
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did anyone call esh an asiafag?

anyway:

1. John Carpenter
2. Terry Gilliam
3. David Lynch

maybe ill remember some more...
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1. Wes Anderson
2. Hitchcock
3. Coen Brothers

I can only do three. :\

I will nominate Kevin Smith as one of my least favorite directors of all time, though.
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