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The New York Times Guide to the Best 1,000 Movies Ever Made, Updated & Revised (Film Critics of the New York Times)
by THE NEW YORK TIMES
Lowest Price: $13.90Buy Now!Everyone knows that a good canon debate doesn't get interesting until you reach the realm of the top 100. But by listing the top 1,000 movies, as the editors of
The New York Times have done with this fat, readable collection of reviews, you get to skip all that huffing and puffing about quality and head straight for the fun. With a little elbow room, there's space for ineffable stuff like
Mr. Hulot's Holiday and
The Match Factory Girl. Room, too, for the nuance-free
Mrs. Doubtfire and the free-falling
Die Hard (which makes it, yep, right next to
Diner).
Pillow Talk squeezes in just one down from
The Piano. What's really new about this book, though, is that the reviews have been culled from the
Times's archive--reaching back to 1931. So you can read Vincent Canby reacting to
Taxi Driver in 1976, just days after first seeing it: "The steam billowing up around the manhole cover in the street is a dead giveaway. Manhattan is a thin cement lid over the entrance to hell, and the lid is full of cracks." Not bad for a guy on deadline. Bosley Crowther, who preceded Canby, fares less well, waving off
Rear Window as Hitchcock's "new melodrama, " and
Psycho with, "It does seem slowly paced." By contrast, Janet Maslin's more recent reviews hum and gush, unraveling the merits of
Pulp Fiction and
Lone Star. At collected-Shakespeare size (999 pages), the title is probably too vast for schlepping around, but go ahead, try reading just one. With plenty of international selections, including usual suspects from France (Truffaut), Italy (Fellini), and Japan (Itami), as well as some unusual ones from Brazil, Mexico, India, and Czechoslovakia, there's enough canon fodder here for at least five "Top 100" books.
--Lyall BushRelated Categories:
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