Hustle & Flow
Pulp Fiction
The Usual Suspects
Ray
Top Gun
2006-07-05 09:17:51
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answer #1
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answered by sunnydayzd 4
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Top Gun, Dr. Zhivago, Gone with the Wind, Lillies of the Field, Braveheart, Forrest Gump, While You Were Sleeping, Rudy, Charlie The Lonesome Cougar, Terminator, Mother Goose [no not the kiddie stories], The Cheyenne Supper Club,To Catch a Thief. Was that five? LOL. American Graffiti, Erin Brockovich, The Man in the Iron Mask, Shenandoah.
2006-07-05 20:18:41
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answer #2
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answered by riversconfluence 7
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The Sure Thing- 80's romantic comedy
The Terminator- 80's sci fi classis
The Great Gatsby- 70's classic
Willy Wonka and The Chocolate Factory- a philosophic masterpiece
Army of Darkness- 80's funny horror
in no particular order.
2006-07-05 11:48:48
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answer #3
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answered by LORD Z 7
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I've got 2 many Top Fives! Depends on the genre! My most favorite genre is horror films, so:
1. The Omen (the remake)
2. The Amytiville Horror
3. Hannibal
4. The Exorcist I
5. The Exorcist: The Beginning
2006-06-30 05:47:23
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answer #4
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answered by Olga F1 1
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1. Gone With the Wind
2. The Color Purple
3. Parenthood
4. Any Walt Disney film from the 30's to the 90's
5. Titanic
2006-07-05 02:09:09
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answer #5
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answered by tinker143 5
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1. Vertigo (1958): Alfred Hitchcock's profound and deeply personal suspense masterpiece.
2. Seven Samurai (1954): Akira Kurosawa's intense and poetic samurai epic.
3. Citizen Kane (1941): Orson Welles' first feature-film is the most innovative and influential film ever made, and is widely regarded as the greatest film of all-time.
4. 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968): Stanley Kubrick's deeply thought-provoking science-fiction symphony.
5. The Rules of the Game (1939): Jean Renoir's comedy of manners and intelligent study of social classes.
Runners up: The Godfather (1972): Francis Ford Coppola's beautiful and romanticized crime saga, 8 1/2 (1963): Fredrico Fellini's surreal and hallucinatory showbiz satire, Rashomon (1950): Akira Kurosawa's examination of the nature of truth and the first Japanese film to gain major notoriety in the states, Dr. Strangelove (1964): Stanley Kubrick's hilarious and paranoid cold war satire, Rear Window (1954): Alfred Hitchcock's interrogation of voyeurism and movie-viewing, and The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928): Carl Theodore Dreyer's intimate silent masterpiece, which dabbles beautifully in both realism and expressionism.
2006-06-22 08:33:30
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Lord of the Rings Trilogy
Breakfast at Tiffany's
Christmas Vacation
Dead Poets Society
Phantom of the Opera
2006-06-22 08:07:41
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Black Hawk Down, Lord of the Rings, Love Actually, Saving Private Ryan and Italian Job ( Michael Caine )
2006-06-22 10:29:17
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answer #8
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answered by Siren_junkie 1
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Top Five Films
1. Godfather
2. Star Wars
3. Lord of the Rings
4. Mission Impossible
5. Die Hard
2006-06-22 07:59:56
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answer #9
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answered by Raj B 2
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1. The Passion of Christ. 2. Overboard. 3. A walk to Remember. 4.Labryth. Lord of the Rings.
2006-07-05 19:13:26
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answer #10
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answered by eva k 1
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1. The Godfather
2. Star Wars
3. Scarface (with Al Pacino)
4. Sin City
5. Gladiator
but I have to add Scent of a Woman, because I love the bit at the end.
2006-06-22 08:00:20
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answer #11
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answered by Anonymous
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