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The one movie I feel should have definitely made the list (of top 3 movies, let alone 100), is Seven Samurai. Maybe this was an oversight because you didn't want more than two Kurosawa films on the list? If this was the case, I feel Seven Samurai is a better movie than Yojimbo.
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The Singing Detective (1986)

Directed By: Jon Amiel
Screenplay: Dennis Potter
Cast: Michael Gambon, Patrick Malahide, Joanne Whalley

Previous Next: Smiles of a Summer Night
EVERETT COLLECTION
 
on Amiel was the director of this magnificent six-part BBC series, and a suave job he made of it. But the true guiding and compelling force was the author, Dennis Potter. He poured much of his own biography into the script—a childhood in the Forest of Dean, a lifelong siege of crippling eczema—then extended it into the interior epic of a hospitalized pulp-fiction writer (named Philip Marlow!) whose agonized misery drives him into dark fantasy and bitter memory. It's Potter's voice that rages in every superb, suppurating monologue, that soars with each vintage tune running through the hero's addled mind. A fable of degeneration (shown with brutal precision) and regeneration (not entirely persuasive), the piece alternates ferocious confessional elements with bursts of musical comedy. The anger is cathartic for Marlow, the music transporting; its lilt almost allows him to cruise down a river toward sanity. In what is essentially a one-man show, Michael Gambon gives one the fiercest, most acute performances in modern film. Yes, Virginia, it is a film, a 6hr. 48min. one, made with unflinching brilliance. —R.C.

From the TIME Archive:
Potter's works have provoked disgust in the more easily shockable segments of the British public
TIME Magazine, Dec. 19, 1988 >>

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READER'S TOP FLICKS
1:  Goodfellas
2:  Farewell My Concubine
3:  Taxi Driver
4:  Bande à part
5:  City of God

    See the full list >>






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