I am only going to single out one film as an Honorable Mention, but this list will contain 5 films that get the pinnacle 5-star ranking, and one more that I sort of go back and forth with. That's certainly a big boost considering 1965 only had 1, and that felt pretty sad after 1964's epic total of 9.
My Honorable Mention is a film that I would argue a lot of film fanatics would have on their top 10, but I can't say it is as easy for me to get swept up in the western genre.
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HONORABLE MENTION:
THE GOOD, THE BAD, & THE UGLY
Written & Directed by Sergio Leone
Co-written by Age & Scarpelli and Luciano Vincenzoni
If some may wonder why it is referred to as a "spaghetti western", that is simply due to the fact that there was a certain subsector of the western genre that kept getting churned out in this era led by Italian directors and producers, namely Sergio Leone.
However, one aspect of this film that I think a lot of us can agree on as being truly iconic is that of Ennio Morricone's score. This guy was an absolute legend who gave us some of the greatest film scores in history, such as one of my personal favorites: Cinema Paradiso.
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#10 - THE FACE OF ANOTHER
Directed by Hiroshi Teshigahara
Written by Kobo Abe
As their follow-up to the masterpiece that was Woman in the Dunes, I would say that it was a bit of a tall order for Teshigahara and Abe to meet that high level. Even at the time, a lot of critics outside of Japan deemed the film to be a disappointment in comparison, and while I would certainly agree it isn't on the same level, there is a lot to really like about The Face of Another.
An engineer whom we only know as Mr. Okuyama (Tatsuya Nakadai) has his face disfigured following an explosion at his job. His life feels a bit aimless: he wears bandages to cover the burns, his wife is uncomfortable around him, and it leads him to consulting a psychiatrist.
The psychiatrist suggests an idea: what if he partakes in a procedure that will get him an experimental prosthetic mask to wear?
Okuyama does go through with it, but instead of becoming a potential source of embracing life again, he seemingly develops a new kind of identity which leads to further alienation from those he loves.
Yes, I can't deny that the film is as deep or profound as Woman in the Dunes, but I do think the film does play a lot into the ideas of identity...however, there is a film coming up next that also wants to give us its own take on the concept.
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#10 - SECONDS
Directed by John Frankenheimer
Written by Lewis John Carlino
Oddly enough, we get another film that deals with the idea of altered appearances and new identities.
Director John Frankenheimer is one of those who does get brought up from time to time, but he has never been frequently listed as being among the best of all time. What I have always admired about his work...for reference, his most iconic work would likely be 1962's The Manchurian Candidate...is that he has this very interesting way of presenting his worlds often through dark and shadowy lenses and often placing his cameras at angles that can feel disorienting at times. He showed a lot of technical proficiency in a way that I don't think a lot of (Hollywood) directors attempted to achieve.
Having said that, I can't say that I have loved a lot of his filmography despite appreciating his skill as a director. If anything, his directing skills are often what help buoy a film up.
In the case of Seconds, the film was seen as a major bomb at the time. It did a bit better with critics, but its box office numbers were rather abysmal. Over time, it has developed quite the cult following mostly thanks to the resurgence it got from being selected for the Criterion Collection.
Rock Hudson, an inspired casting choice, plays banking executive who does his daily commute from Westchester to NYC and feels incredibly unfulfilled with his life. His marriage to his wife Emily is fading and his adult daughter has moved to the west coast with her own family.
He receives an anonymous letter that leads him to an agency known as "The Company", who have begun the procedure of faking someone's death and then giving them a new identity/life to pursue. As one might suspect, that isn't going to end up being all rosy for him.
Seconds does tackle this topic well from a true science fiction/almost dystopian standpoint. Elements from the storytelling almost remind of future films, such as Demi Moore getting a tip to try The Substance.
I do think this film has aged very well, but I will say when it comes to the concept of identity and psychology, we still have one more film later on this list that will give us a masterclass on the topic.
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#8 - ANDREI RUBELEV
Written & Directed by Andrei Tarkovsky
Co-written by Andrei Konchalovsky
The film is not exactly a true biography in the sense of the word, but it is loosely based on the life of 15th century Russian painter of the same name. Tarkovsky extensively tried to bring the world of 15th century Russia to life and used Rublev as a means to examine how the worlds of faith and artistry collide.
You often hear people refer to certain films as "a religious experience" in order to express how amazing it was to witness it, even when the film may not even have a thing to do with religion. In the case of Andrei Rublev, it does feel as though we are watching some kind of cosmic miracle that is almost otherworldly. Granted, this is something that Tarkovsky has always been a master at conveying, but Andrei Rublev is a film that requires multiple viewings to appreciate. I certainly liked it more upon a second viewing, so in that regard, it does make me wonder if I watched it a third time, would I end up giving it a higher ranking?
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#7 - BLOWUP
Written & Directed by Michelangelo Antonioni
Co-written by Tonino Guerra
Blowup is one of the earliest examples of a film coming out that truly challenged the idea of the archaic Hays Code, which was already dying a slow and nowhere near fast enough death. MGM didn't even get approval from the production code upon its release, and it was condemned by the National Legion of Decency...AKA The Catholics. Hey, they stopped molesting young boys for a moment to condemn a film with explicit sexual content...how brave...
Thomas (David Hemmings) is a photographer who normally works with models and more artistic projects. One day, he wanders through a park and notices two lovers, an older man and a younger woman in her 30s, whom we soon learn is named Jane (Vanessa Redgrave).
The older man departs quickly, but Jane pursues Thomas begging him for the images. He refuses and she rushes off as he continues to photograph her. Once Thomas looks at the footage, he realizes that something else is afoot. Jane appears to look a bit nervous in some of the photos as she glances towards the woods near her, which prompts Thomas to blow up the photos, and he believes he might have taken proof of a murder that occurred nearby...which explains why Jane was so concerned about there being a record of her also witnessing this crime.
Blowup is about the kind of a film one would expect from Antonioni, where the whole is better than the sum of its parts. The film has some of Antonioni's lagging sequences that bring the pacing to a halt, but in the end, the film manages to pull you back from it multiple times.
Ingmar Bergman, who normally hated Antonioni's work, referred to the film as a masterpiece. I wouldn't go that far, but I do admire it a lot.
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#6 - DAISIES
Written & Directed by Vera Chytilova
Co-written by Pavel Juracek & Ester Krumbachova
Are you ready for a bit of a chaotic and colorful and zany romp? Well, hop in because we got ourselves quite the ride ahead of us.
Daisies was the work of Czech filmmaker Vera Chytilova, a rare case of a woman directing during this time period...and she gives us something fascinating. To start us off, our two leads are only known as Marie I (the brunette) and Marie II (the blonde) and both were played by non-actors named Jitka Cherova and Ivana Karbanova. The former had worked in retail, and the latter was still in college.
The film's satirical themes are pretty clear: attacking authoritarian communism and the patriarchy while messing with the ideas of what exactly are feminine stereotypes.
Having said that though, how does one actually describe Daisies? Is there anything to properly convey what an absolutely bonkers experience this is?
The Maries are both teenagers and they are both fed up with the world around them. They acknowledge that the world is spoiled, therefore they should likely just accept it. From there, they go around playing pranks and preying upon those who come across them.
They even end up preying upon themselves as one ponders suicide, they also self-harm each other with scissors...and eventually they tire of this. They no longer wish to be spoiled and be so carefree, so they decide to clean up their act and surroundings...until life decides to crash on them anyway.
Daisies is a destructive film that feels as liberating as it does a bit unsettling at times, but it does prove to be highly successful in giving a spotlight to women in the kinds of gregarious roles that would likely be seen as more acceptable for a man to play.
Chytilova would continue to make films, although for a while she had to work under her husband's name when stronger censorship rules came about. Despite attacking the idea of communism, Chytilova was a devout socialist and it is a shame that a lot of her work and ideals got stifled because of censorship.
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#5 - A MAN & A WOMAN
Directed by Claude Lelouch
Written by Pierre Uytterhoeven (w/ uncredited work by Lelouch)
A Man & A Woman is a beacon of the romantic drama. In fact, even the idea that I am ranking the film at #5 is a testament to how strong this year is because if this had come out in 1965, it would likely be a very strong #2 nipping at the heels of The Shop on Main Street.
We have Anouk Aimee, in her Oscar-nominated performance, starring as a young widow named Anne. Working as a script supervisor, she witnessed the death of her husband on set in a stunt accident gone wrong. She now divides her time between Paris and Deauville, where her daughter Francoise is attending boarding school.
Then we have widower Jean-Louis (Jean-Louis Trintignant), whose wife Valerie committed suicide when she suspected he was going to die following a car crash during Le Mans. He also divides his time between both cities as his son Antoine is going to same boarding school as Francoise.
A Man & A Woman is an examination of how one deals with grief over the death of a spouse and how that affects the possibility of finding love again...but what I do appreciate about the film is that it doesn't diminish the grief while simultaneously still allowing the characters to work through and find bliss despite of it all.
Lelouch gives the film such vibrant life by experimenting with various styles, such as switching cinematography between color, B&W, and sepia. It only adds to the strong emotions we are witnessing in the film, which is also aided by the wonderful musical score by Francis Lai.
A Man & A Woman is one of those foreign films I would say is a solid entry point if you want to try checking something out in that manner. Its themes are relatively universal in that respect, and it also doesn't hurt that the acting is phenomenal and the film is beautiful all around.
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#4 - THE BATTLE OF ALGIERS
Directed by Gillo Pontecorvo
Written by Franco Solinas/Story by Pontecorvo
As the title suggests, the film revolves around the rebels acting out against the French government in North Africa amidst the Algerian War. In order to make the film seem as realistic as possible, Pontecorvo embraced the Italian Neorealist movement that had sort of faded by this point, utilizing a documentary/newsreel style cinematography that was reminiscent of neorealist legend Roberto Rossellini. He also utilized non-professional actors who had lived through the actual war for further authenticity...something that does usually pay off well, like using Harold Russell in The Best Years of Our Lives or Haing S. Ngor in The Killing Fields.
Not surprisingly, the French government banned the film at first and even when the ban was lifted, no distributor there seemed to want to release it...but the truth is Pontecorvo felt the film didn't necessarily demonize any side, he felt it was more "politically neutral".
In the end though, this is a true masterwork and one that I feel should be seen by everyone at some point in their lives. It would prove to be a strong influence on many iconic filmmakers, with a personal assistant of Stanley Kubrick's stating that he once told him that if he really wanted to understand what cinema could be, he needed to watch The Battle of Algiers.
I also like to think of the melding of non-fiction/fiction as a forerunner to the work of the late Iranian filmmaker Abbas Kiarostami who is certainly not a moral figure, but I can't argue he did make some fascinating films that owe a debt to what Pontecorvo accomplished here.
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#3 - WAR & PEACE
Written & Directed by Sergei Bondarchuk
Co-written by Vasily Solovyov
War & Peace is a film of epic, glorious, and opulent proportions. It is truly as if someone took the scope of Gone with the Wind, Andrei Rublev, Barry Lyndon, and The Leopard and gave them a 5-hour Energy Shot and a prescription of steroids.
As was often the case for a while, the Soviets were looking to put Hollywood (and the US) in its place, and they concocted a sweeping epic that honestly put many of ours to shame. It would've been the most expensive film ever made during the era of the USSR, totaling about $70 million in today's money.
The film also had extensive support from the Soviet Army, which allowed over TEN-THOUSAND SOLDIERS and HUNDREDS OF HORSES to be utilized for various scenes, namely anything containing a battle.
Considering War & Peace is one of the most well-known and discussed pieces of literature in existence, I am not really feeling like I need to dig that deep into the story. While I would argue that maybe little pieces could've been trimmed here and there, this is a prime example of a true successful film series and a rarer case of a strong "Quadrilogy".
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#2 - WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF?
Directed by Mike Nicohols
Written by Ernest Lehman (even though the text is primarily that of Edward Albee's)
Sure, sometimes it does pay off rather well...often leading to comments of shock. Perhaps the ultimate example of this was the casting of then acting power couple Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor as the irascible George and Martha in the film adaptation of Edward Albee's masterpiece Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? which, I must say, was a play that I said was my personal favorite for many years. I do still think very highly of it to this day.
Now, Burton isn't exactly a stretch to play George. Albee did claim that he felt he was a tad too old, but he eventually relented that he turned out to be incredible in the role. The real issue was the casting of Taylor, who did prove to be a very good actress prior to this...ironically not counting her Oscar winning performance in the schlock that was Butterfield 8. Martha is supposed to be a woman in her 50s: middle-aged, graying, frumpy. Taylor was only 33 when she was approached to play the role, and she knew the truth. She expressed that she felt playing this role would be a stretch and that she did not have the skills to properly play it, but she would be coerced.
Also, to her credit, she was adamant a strong director of actors be used because she wanted to have someone challenge her and make her get to the dramatic levels necessary. This led to highly accomplished theatre director and former comedian Mike Nichols to make his film debut, and the results were splendid to say the least.
Taylor gained weight to play the role, which is certainly in line with the idea of "de-glamming" that Oscar voters often love, but that is really just a secondary factor. She gives the goods when it comes to the dramatics and passes fairly well for someone that is supposed to be older than her age. I have even said in the past on this blog that despite my love for this material, I've never been overly fond of the final line "I am, George. I am". Having seen several actresses do this line, I actually think Taylor is the one who sold it best and didn't try to overdramatize it.
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? is revolves around two couples, the aforementioned George and Martha, he is a professor at the college that Martha's father is the president of. Late one night after a party, Martha tells George she invited a young couple to come have a nightcap with them: new professor Nick (George Segal) and his unassuming wife Honey (Sandy Dennis) ...and let's just say...they have quite the evening.
In terms of pure acting, this quartet is stellar. Segal may be the one who seems to disappear into the scenery, but that is not truly the case. Nick is a character who is supposed to be the one most connected to reality as an audience stand in and he does that very effectively, but MY GOD is Sandy Dennis fantastic in this! Her awkward laughs and outbursts and her twirling around singing "I dance like the WIND!" or yelling out "HUMP THE HOSTESS!" during what is more of a tense moment between George and Martha is a prime example of how effective a good supporting performance can be.
I love the play, and I love the film. I never tire of it.
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#1 - PERSONA
Written & Directed by Ingmar Bergman
A young nurse named Alma (Bibi Andersson) has taken on a new patient, a stage actress named Elisabet (Liv Ullman) who has suddenly become mute. In order to treat her, she takes Elisabet to a cottage located on the island of Faro (one of Bergman's favorite filming locales) ...but while there, Alma begins to develop an intense psychosis where she can't seem to distinguish here own identity from that of Elisabet's.
When I first saw Persona, I could honestly say I didn't get it. That isn't necessarily saying I fully get it now, but this is very much the kind of film that is rife for analysis and coming up with what you think is your own interpretation. There is even a famous quote from film historian Peter Cowie who said of the film: "Everything one says about Persona may be contradicted; the opposite will also be true".
Many have linked the idea of Persona to that of Jungian theory of "Persona": "a kind of mask, designed on the one hand to make a definite impression upon others, and on the other to conceal the true nature of the individual".
There is also a clear undercurrent of homosexuality here, even if perhaps the representation of lesbian homoeroticism is certainly of the toxic variety. You even have the film seemingly diving into the possibly of an Oedipus Complex with Elisabet's young son desperate for her love, but instead, that all gets overshadowed by the duality and complicated relationship between Alma and Elisbaet. That isn't even going into the concept of vampirism which leads one to believe that Elisabet is some kind of vampire and that Alma is what she seeks to consume both body and mind...which I cheekily like to compare the last part of that to Colin Robinson from What We Do in the Shadows.
I could go on and on with the analysis/topics that have come forth over the last few decades, but I did want to mention what Bergman himself had to say about the film in terms of his career: "Today I feel that in Persona - as later in Cries & Whispers - I had gone as far as I could go." He later even stated that the film saved his life and that had he not been able to finish it, he would've felt "washed up".
I have talked a lot about how Bergman is my favorite filmmaker of all-time. This isn't necessarily to say that I go back to watch his films several times, because admittedly most of his work can take a lot out of a person. I do think that in the grand scheme of things, Persona is one of those fascinating films that the older I get, the more I feel compelled to live through its spell again...I don't know what exactly that says about me but so be it.
In terms of the performances, Bergman's frequent muse of Ullman does great work here as usual, but it is Bibi Andersson who gives the performance of a lifetime. It is the kind of performance that just felt raw and brave and exposed and unnerving to witness and also felt so uniquely new to the cinema landscape of that era...especially compared to most performances that would've been in English.
Persona is a film that is as beautiful as it is unsettling, as frustrating as it is captivating...this is a singular effort and truthfully one of the greatest and most daring films ever made. It was watching Persona that truly made me want to explore Bergman's filmography more deeply even though I certainly couldn't comprehend what the hell was often happening at such a young age, but considering the types of works Bergman made at the beginning of his career, he is a prime example of not knowing what to fully expect as an artist grows within his craft.
Persona is truly...and I have used this phrase before, but I do sincerely mean it here...an absolute work of cinematic art.
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FINAL THOUGHTS:
It certainly did feel a lot better to write this list in comparison to 1965, which did delay me a tad in getting that posted. Sure, I did have work taking up a lot of that time which...ugh...but I will admit that the passion was hard to find with some of those films; especially coming off of a stellar year like 1964.
I do think 1966 is relatively compact, but I didn't even go into films I do enjoy but didn't feel like singling out here, such as Alfie. I always try to single out films that deserve a mention in some capacity and usually those are films that get either a 5 star or 4.5-star rating...so in that case, 1965 was one of the few anomalies.
Luckily, 1967 will keep roughly the same consistency so that is a major plus as I move to tackle that year next.