
1968 was a monumental year, but I don't necessarily mean that in terms of the amount of quality. I was actually a bit surprised when drafting this list, as I found myself coming up with 8 films and then debated what to put for my #9-10 slots.
I opted to go for 2 films that I felt were a bit more transgressive for the time and the chances they took, even though I only give them each 4/5 stars.
What I am beginning to discover is that I have been talking up the growth that occurs in the late 60s, but it does seem to be in smaller doses. I find myself actually not feeling as much passion for the output, and by a bizarre twist of fate, I actually think the early 60s were much better. Then again, that is thanks to international cinema rather than the US.
Oh, and since I mentioned "monumental year", I do feel that despite the lower number of masterpieces and films I passionately love, I do think the top 3-4 films here in particular do show where cinema would be heading, perhaps not always to the potential it would eventually reach but the results were still exciting nevertheless.
However, my #1 selection is what is truly monumental. Film people reading this likely already know which film that is going to be. Oh, I mustn't forget! 1968 is the year that MPAA began giving films ratings based on content, but this system would not go into effect until November...so a certain film that likely would've benefitted from a warning come out a month BEFORE the system went into place. Oops!!!! More on that later...
Starting off at #10, we have a film that perhaps didn't always stick the landing, but I do greatly admire what it was trying to do and the timing of its release.
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#10 - UPTIGHT
Written & Directed by Jules Dassin
Co-written by Ruby Dee & Julian Mayfield

This was written to be a revamping of a Pulitzer Prize winning play called The Informer, which had a film adaptation netting 4 Oscars back at the 1936 ceremony.
The new setting is then-present-day Cleveland. The community is mourning the assassination of MLK Jr. and are understandably upset to the point of wanting to revolt. One of the men leading the charge, Johnny Wells (Max Julien) takes a group, and they start quest to obtain as many weapons they can steal from a local warehouse as they prepare for what they feel will be a true race war.
However, one older member of the group in Tank (Julian Mayfield). He had been in prison, but also was someone who supported the non-violent form of protest that MLK had favored while the rest are going for the more rebellious vibe of Malcolm X...but Tank ends up meeting a gay black man known as "Daisy" (Roscoe Lee Browne) who has made quite a living working as a police informant. Tank may see the appeal in this...and a Judas arc emerges.
Uptight is not a perfect film. A lot of it is a bit ham-fisted and despite being made by a group of black filmmakers/performers, the style does seem to fall in line with what would eventually be dubbed "blaxploitation". Nevertheless, the film also doesn't try to sugarcoat either. I will say perhaps the content of The Informant doesn't translate well to the context of this story, but in the end, the final results are quite captivating in their rawness.
Considering MLK had been assassinated in April 1968, the fact that they got this film released by that December is very impressive...and I can only imagine how effective it must have been at that time.
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#9 - SYMBIOPSYCHOTAXIPLASM: TAKE ONE
Written & Directed by William Greaves

If you were to look up the release date of Symbiopschotaxiplasm online, you would find that the general public wouldn't see the film until 1971 even though the film was made in 1968.
I decided that I would follow that rule, plus Letterboxd also lists it as 1968, and just place the film here as it is certainly a very unique film compared to the others.
Symbiopschotaxiplasm was something of an avant-garde experiment for actor turned filmmaker William Greaves. He was rather frustrated with the lack of roles for black performers and took an interest in becoming a documentarian. His goal here was to try to capture life in what would hopefully be the realest way possible and hopefully remove the stigma of feeling the need to perform for a camera. Instead, it unravels into something truly meta as the documentary is essentially another documentary inside of a documentary.
The film is low budget, as most documentaries often are, but it is clear that the limitations Greaves had to work with leave a lot of the film feeling a bit rough and even hard to hear at times as if it the sound quality would rival that of the early talkies of the late 20s.
This was a documentary that felt very ahead of its time, and something of its own being. It does feel like something that perhaps Godard would try to tackle in the later years of his career.
Greaves passed away at the age of 87 back in 2014. I had only been living in NYC for roughly a year at that point, but I do remember seeing the reports through local news. I think he was a bit of an unsung hero for black filmmakers and in the world of teaching as for nearly 15 years, he taught acting the famed school of Lee Strasberg.
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#8 - THE LION IN WINTER
Directed by Anthony Harvey
Written by James Goldman
The Lion in Winter is the only film on this top 10 that received a Best Picture nomination that year, and a lot of its power comes from its ensemble led by two great actors at the top of their game: Katharine Hepburn and Peter O'Toole. Oh, and on top of that, we have a young Anthony Hopkins as their eldest son Richard in what was a breakout role for him.
King Henry II (O'Toole) is trying to establish his line of succession during the holiday season of Christmas 1183. In the process, he causes series of political and familial turmoil which affects the relationship with his already estranged wife Eleanor of Aquitaine (Hepburn) and their sons...while also taking up with Alais, the half-sister of French King Philip II.
Much like The Favourite would do with Queen Anne 50 years later, The Lion in Winter was mainly fictional and only takes scant writing from history and embellishes the lore behind them.
As I stated before, if I would recommend this film for anything, it would be the acting. O'Toole never won a competitive Oscar, and this should have been the easiest way for him to not only win an overdue award, but it also would've been for one of his absolute best performances. The Academy infamously opted for Cliff Robertson who gave a truly erratic performance in the rather mawkish Charly, based on the iconic story Flowers for Algernon.
Hepburn's win for this was her third, and this was part of the tie with Barbra Streisand for Funny Girl. I have often brought up the famous Hepburn quote where she said the right actors win Oscars but for the wrong roles. I certainly don't agree with that as canon because a lot of amazing actors never won or weren't even nominated, but there is also truth to her statement.
Of her record 4 Oscar wins, The Lion in Winter is the only one I felt she actually deserved...and even though Hepburn was not British, her stature makes her fit into this role while not even adopting a semblance of a British accent.
While a historical drama at heart, I do like the slight edge of wit and even camp that The Lion in Winter has. It does give it a bit of a jolt from being way too stuffy.
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#7 - HOUR OF THE WOLF
Written & Directed by Ingmar Bergman

In what would be the only true horror film he would make in his career, Ingmar Bergman certainly had an energy and aesthetic that would've made him quite susceptible to dark surreal horror had he wanted to sustain it. I think of something like The Lighthouse as where Bergman would've gone had he been young enough to keep making films in the present day.
Hour of the Wolf is also not one of his films that gets talked about as extensively as some others, but that's also just because the amount of excellent work he did was so vast. It may not be absolute peak, but this is truly a fascinating film from him.
Considering the era of Bergman that we are in, not surprisingly Liv Ullman and Max von Sydow are here and just as splendid per usual. He plays a painter named Johan Borg, who suddenly disappears and it causes his wife Alma (Ullman of course) to go a bit mad, suffering from insomnia and frequently having nightmarish visions and hallucinations.
The two of them lived on an island...because Bergman was positively obsessed with the island of Faro...and to add to the drama, Alma is pregnant at the time of his disappearance.
With the element of horror being very prominent, a lot of critics at the time viewed Hour of the Wolf as being a step back for Bergman...and like I said, maybe it isn't exactly him at his peak but it has a lot of aspects to admire about it...namely the amazing performances plus it has to be him and his main cinematographer Sven Nykvist creating some of their most alluring visuals.
Much like Through a Glass Darkly, The Silence, and Winter Light in the early 60s, Hour of the Wolf is considered part of another defacto trilogy. Spoiler alert: we will see the rest coming up...but that likely wouldn't shock you to hear.
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#6 - THEOREM
Written & Directed by Pier Paolo Pasolini
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#5 - FACES
Written & Directed by John Cassavetes
Written & Directed by Ingmar Bergman

Being the second film released in Bergman's trilogy about violence and moral decline, Shame was also the best of the 3. We will be seeing the 3rd installment on my 1969 post because, as I shock to no one, I think rather highly of it, too.
As evidenced by the photo above, Von Sydow and Ullman are once again back and ready to go through yet another bleak and tragic story that only Bergman can provide.
As a married couple named Eva and Jan, they are former concert violinists who live a rather apolitical life. Their home and safety are threatened when a small civil war breaks out, and they are considered by one side to be sympathetic toward the enemy. They end up having to flee and, in the process, their marriage begins to crumble.
Shame was seen as a comment on the Vietnam War, which was still raging despite much opposition, however Bergman had stated this wasn't his actual intention. He mainly just wanted to tell a story about how even a relatively small war can still lead to the "disintegration of humanity". I also love how we are sort of left to pick up the pieces as Bergman doesn't try to veer into propaganda but rather leave the causes ambiguous so we don't truly know which side is "the right one". In the end, war is hell regardless of the side you are on.
As the war rages on, Eva and Jan struggle with each other and as is to be expected, Ullman and Von Sydow turn in stellar work. It is great anti-war film while also being an amazing character study on how it can affect two people. In a way, it is the relationship that becomes the focus and not so much the war. It stays in the background in many ways, and for me, it is remarkable at how much more captivating it is to watch those two legends act opposite one another.
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#3 - NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD
Written & Directed by George Romero
Co-written by John Russo

Another low-budget game changer...to put it mildly.
As someone who grew up an hour outside of Pittsburgh, I do very much love the legend these Romero films that still persist in the area.
Night of the Living Dead was made on a shoestring budget and was a passion project for George Romero, who wanted to tackle a horror film after having gained directorial experience working on local commercials and for another local Pittsburgh institution: Mister Rogers' Neighborhood.
It was made on a budget of roughly $125k (around $1 million in 2026) and would wind up grossing $12 million domestically (a whopping $112 million and change in 2026) and an additional $18 million internationally (nearly $170 million today). That means the film essentially grossed the equivalent of about $300 million by today's money. Making back more than 250 times its budget, it still remains one of the most profitable films of all time.
Night of the Living Dead would help unearth one of the most popular horror subgenres in history: the zombie film. In my intro, I referenced a film that would not receive a rating since it came out a month before the MPAA came into existence. THIS was that film.
Imagine a group of kids and teenagers entering a theatre for a Saturday matinee, which often would show horror films, and the film they sit down for is Night of the Living Dead in which we watch every character that we had been following die by the end. The low budget atmosphere only adds to the eerie dreary vibe, especially when we watch the zombies in the midst of a feast...and then at the very end, when our leading man seems to be about to be rescued, he is shot to death when the group gathered assume he was one of them.
Romero had intended on casting the role with someone white, but when black actor Duane Jones came in, Romero decided to something unique for the time: using a black actor in a lead role where being black had nothing to do with the role. While Sidney Poitier was a black leading man, and had even won an Oscar by this point, a lot of his roles dealt with the fact he was black. It was very rare, BUT it does give the role a certain tragic weight even beyond the simple fate of the character. Many praised Romero for that, even though he acknowledged a lot of it was coincidental. Years later, Romero was asked if he was inspired by the assassination of MLK with creating the ending, but he said that was not the case as the film was already finished at that time.
Night of the Living Dead was meant to be a B-movie, but instead, Romero changed the face of the genre and gave us something distinctive and downright creepy. I have never been a big fan of zombie films, but this one is a classic for a reason.
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#2 - ROSEMARY'S BABY
Written & Directed by Roman Polanski

For those of you who don't know, I was raised in an evangelical religion known as Apostolic. It was certainly not a very...umm...liberal minded surrounding to be a part of. I was very much one of those kids who was not allowed to read Harry Potter because it contained "witchcraft" nor did my mother want me to see anything that dealt with Satan or any kind of demonic entity.
Strangely enough, she wasn't as offended by The Omen, but obviously she forbid me to watch The Exorcist, which I ended up not seeing until I was in college.
When it came to Rosemary's Baby however, she was on the fence. She recalled my Nan sending her to bed in the early 70s and then heard her watching the film when it aired on TV for the first time. My sister rather randomly watched the film when she was pregnant with her first child and I do remember her being VERY upset about it.
I watched it and then had a conversation with a friend about it on the phone and was quoting how at the end, they are all saying "Hail Satan!" which prompted my mom to come check what was happening in my room.
Organized religion...what a world that is...
Moving past that, Rosemary's Baby tells the story of a young newlywed couple of Rosemary (Mia Farrow) and Guy Woodhouse (John Cassavetes) who move into an apartment in a gothic building known as The Bramford (though the exterior shots are of the famous Dakota building located on Central Park West). A friend of theirs warns them that the building has a history of murder and witchcraft, which they basically ignore.
Shortly thereafter, they meet their elderly neighbors Minnie and Roman Castevet (Ruth Gordon & Sidney Blackmer), who also happen to be caring for a recovering drug addict named Terry (Angela Dorian). One night while returning from a night on the town, Rosemary and Guy come across a commotion outside their building; it appears Terry jumped from the window to her death...or so it seems. After this dies down, the newlyweds get closer to Minnie and Roman, but it is Guy who takes a strong liking to them while Rosemary finds them to be rather nosey and void of boundaries.
Rosemary & Guy are trying for a baby and not having much luck, but one night, after what having appears to be laced chocolate mousse, she has a "dream" where a demonic entity rapes her while Guy and the Castevets and other neighbors watch...all nude by the way.
So yeah...Rosemary is now pregnant with the antichrist. Fun times.
It is a shame that Mia Farrow got snubbed as she does truly fantastic work here, but it does thrill me that Ruth Gordon won for her work. It feels like an early forerunner to the recent Oscar win of Amy Madigan.
While the film may have some pacing issues at times, not to mention the Polanski of it all, I can't help but think this was a stellar achievement and another step up in content for Hollywood.
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#1 -2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY
Written & Directed by Stanley Kubrick
Co-written by Arthur C. Clarke

I don't think I had another choice. This simply just has to be 2001.
Yes, maybe some of the space images might look a little bit outdated to say the least, but I still can't believe what Stanley Kubrick was able to accomplish in the mid-late 60s making this. The thought of seeing this on the big screen in 1968 not having seen anything like it before...and still being a year removed from us landing on the Moon...it must've been an otherworldly experience.
Kubrick, the madman genius that he was, worked with Sc-Fi writer Sir Arthur C. Clarke on adapting a couple of his short stories such as The Sentinel and Encounter in the Dawn into a longer script. The film begins with the Dawn of Man, and we watch a tribe of hominins discover an alien monolith. Shortly thereafter, they discover that they can make weapons to use against a rival tribe with the bones of dead animals.
But in the middle of the iconic scene (which Greta Gerwig used for the opening of Barbie, showing this film's staying power), we see one of the bones fly into the air and we get that famous cut transition to the satellite in space millions of years later.
The bulk of the film now takes place in space, where we follow a voyage of multiple astronauts, scientists, and a sentient computer called the HAL 9000 as they prepare to visit Jupiter to investigate an alien monolith.
I am not here to say that 2001 is necessarily an easy watch. It does require a little bit of patience, and it isn't a film you can say has a great script in terms of dialogue. Sure, it has its very memorable moments and manages to leave us guessing and analyzing...but this is the perfect example of a film that truly thrives on it being a visual spectacle as its main selling point.
The use of various classical music pieces also adds something special to this, and I cannot hear "The Blue Danube" without imaging a pen floating in mid-air. It looks so seamless too!
Kubrick only ever won a single Oscar in his career, and it just so happened to be for this film's Visual Effects. He was nominated for Best Director, but the film was not nominated for Best Picture. That year, the top two awards went to the film adaptation of the West End musical Oliver! which is fine and all, but it just goes to show how back and forth the voting body was at the time...especially considering what will win Best Picture for 1969!
When it comes to the genre, it is very evident that so many films owe a debt to what Kubrick was able to achieve here. I would even go as far to say that it is one of the most important films to have ever been made for the absolutely meticulous care that Kubrick and Clarke put into this to advance the visual medium.
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FINAL THOUGHTS:
While not a vast list, I do really love how eclectic this lineup actually is. You really see shifts that are rather groundbreaking from not just the epic visual effects of 2001 but the content in the stories and the form of others. You have the abstract meta documentary that is Symbiopschotaxiplasm and the sexually explicit "eat the rich" story of Theorem.
We also have Bergman being Bergman while also having him tackle horror for the first time while seeing that low-budget films such as Night of the Living Dead and Faces could give us marvelous dividends.
I don't recall 1969 being that strong either, but I have been surprised with other lists recently; maybe it will make me change my mind upon writing it. We are bringing the 60s to a close, and I am excited that I was able to tackle such a fascinating decade for film such as this one.