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INDEPENDENCE DAY

THE EXORCIST

50 FIRST DATES

RUSH HOUR

MONSTERS INC.,

2006-06-30 13:26:51 · answer #1 · answered by Rick O Connell 3 · 1 1

l. Gone with the Wind 2. Star Wars 3. The Sound of Music 4. ET the Extraterrestial 5. The Ten Commandments 6. Titanic 7.Jaws 8. Dr. Zhivago 9. The Exorcist 10. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.

2006-06-30 13:26:28 · answer #2 · answered by goodbye 7 · 0 0

Simple as this:
1. My Fellow Americans
2. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
3. Star Wars (All of them)
4. The Man with the Golden Gun
5. A Fish Called Wanda

2006-06-30 13:37:30 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The Italion Job
Tommy Boy
Grease
The Coyboy Bebop Movie
Gundam Wing:Endless Waltz

2006-06-30 13:22:18 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

1. EuroTrip...Has to be the most awesome movie ever and HILARIOUS!!!
2. Harold & Kumar: White Castle
3. Unleashed
4. National Treasure
5. The Girl Next Door

Other ones I like are: Rundown, Walking Tall, Big Momma's House 2, Titanic, Pearl Harbor, White Chicks, Ice Age 1 & 2, Man on Fire, and Raise your Voice

2006-06-30 13:39:02 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

My favorite movies are:

Old School
The Exorcist
Super Troopers
How to Lose a Guy in Ten Days
Meet the Parents/Meet the Fockers

2006-06-30 13:38:04 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The Omega Man
Sunset Boulevard
Kill Bill 1 & 2
Rosemary's Baby
Beyond The Valley of The Dolls

2006-06-30 14:01:52 · answer #7 · answered by kennethleemcdaniel 3 · 0 0

My favorite films:

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.

Also: The Godfather (1972): Francis Ford Coppola's incredible multi-generational 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, Touch of Evil (1958): Orson Welles' tongue-in-cheek, film noir vision of corruption, and The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928): Carl Theodore Dreyer's intimate silent masterpiece, which dabbles beautifully in both realism and expressionism.

2006-06-30 13:21:59 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Fight Club, Pulp Fiction, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Glaidator, Saving Private Ryan.

2006-06-30 13:22:15 · answer #9 · answered by Emily! 4 · 0 0

My obscure list:

5) Dawn of the Dead
4) Jurassic Park
3)Boondock Saints
2) Kill Bill (Vol 1 & 2)
1) What's Eating Gilbert Grape

2006-06-30 13:25:18 · answer #10 · answered by hurricanebrian 2 · 0 0

Breakfast Club
Pay it Forward
The Others
Some Like it Hot
The Rocky Horror Picture Show

2006-06-30 13:23:12 · answer #11 · answered by mad_hat 3 · 0 0

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