Search found 13 matches: Jean-Luc Godard

Searched query: jean-luc godard

by lisa-
Wed Dec 18, 2013 1:28 am
Forum: Filmmakers
Topic: Top 5 Favorite Directors
Replies: 134
Views: 176488

Re: Top 5 Favorite Directors

lisagirl wrote:probably

stanley kubrick
lars von trier
federico fellini
david lynch
roman polanski

but i'm pretty low on the movie count


okay...4 months later

1. lars von trier (10 films seen)
2. stanley kubrick (10)
3. david lynch (6)
4. ingmar bergman (11)
5. werner herzog (10)

a very solid top 5. below them, and with more uncertainty with less films seen...

6. akira kurosawa (4)
7. abbas kiarostami (3)
8. ethan & joel coen (8)
9. roman polanski (4)
10. jean-luc godard (13)

i keep a sort of running list here:

http://www.imdb.com/list/gvUw6xKrWLU/
by Ciel
Fri Aug 26, 2011 3:38 pm
Forum: Filmmakers
Topic: Top 5 Favorite Directors
Replies: 134
Views: 176488

Re: Top 5 Favorite Directors

There are some really interesting and great mentions throughout this thread.

1. Stanley Kubrick
2. Louis Malle
3. Federico Fellini
4. Wes Anderson
5. Jean-Luc Godard

Honorable mentions: Michelangelo Antonioni, Ingmar Bergman, Akira Kurosawa, Martin Scorsese, Charlie Chaplin, Jean-Pierre Melville, Clint Eastwood
by k0ta
Mon Jul 26, 2010 11:13 pm
Forum: Filmmakers
Topic: Top 5 Favorite Directors
Replies: 134
Views: 176488

Re: Top 5 Favorite Directors

1. Wim Wenders
2. Guiseppe Tornatore
3. Kim Ki-duk
4. Jean Luc Godard
5. Bernardo Bertolucci
by WatchThis
Thu Jul 08, 2010 5:23 pm
Forum: Filmmakers
Topic: Top 5 Favorite Directors
Replies: 134
Views: 176488

Re: Top 5 Favorite Directors

1. Jean-Luc Godard
2. Francois Truffaut
3. Woody Allen
4. Wes Anderson
5. Billy Wilder
by CarsonWid
Tue Jun 22, 2010 11:57 pm
Forum: Filmmakers
Topic: Top 5 Favorite Directors
Replies: 134
Views: 176488

Re: Top 5 Favorite Directors

All Time:

Stanley Kubrick
Martin Scorsese
Akira Kurosawa
Christopher Nolan
Wes Anderson

Right Now:

Christopher Nolan
Martin Scorsese
Wes Anderson
Nicolas Winding Refn
Peter Jackson

Up-and-Comers:

Duncan Jones
Neil Blompkamp
Zach Snyder
Jason Reitman
Edgar Wright

Honourable Mentions:

Jim Jarmusch, Sergio Leone, Jean Luc Godard, Coen brothers, PTA, Darren Aronofsky, Tarantino, Guy Ritchie, Soderbergh, Tarkovsky, Sofia Coppola, Wong Kar Wai, Spike Jonze, Polanski, Lars von Trier, Adam Curtis, Danny Boyle, Gilliam, Herzog, Fritz Lang, Sion Sono, Haneke, Bergman.

Directors I haven't seen enough of:

Kieslowski (only Three Colours)
Truffaut (none)
Melville (none)
Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Emir Kusturica (only time of the gypsies)

That's a long list, but I didn't think there was anyone not worth mentioning. There's also some big names left off, namely Spielberg and Hitchcock, that are intentionally left off.
by oskarhu
Sun Jan 17, 2010 11:18 pm
Forum: Filmmakers
Topic: Top 5 Favorite Directors
Replies: 134
Views: 176488

Re: Top 5 Favorite Directors

1.Luis Buñuel
2.Stanley Kubrick
3.Alfred Hitchcock
4.Jim Jarmusch
5.David Lynch

The rest of top 10:
6.Martin Scorsese
7.Ethan/Joel Coen
8.Ingmar Bergman
9.Federico Fellini
10.Billy Wilder


next 10: Woody Allen, Jean-Luc Godard , Akira Kurosawa, Roman Polanski, Orson Welles, Werner Herzog, Quentin Tarantino, Charles Chaplin, Buster Keaton, Aki Kaurismäki (no order)
by MaxS
Fri Jan 15, 2010 1:54 pm
Forum: Filmmakers
Topic: Top 5 Favorite Directors
Replies: 134
Views: 176488

Re: Top 5 Favorite Directors

1. Béla Tarr
2. Ingmar Bergman
2. Jean-Luc Godard
2. Andrei Tarkovski
2. Federico Fellini
Picking my 5 all-time favorites is rather easy, even though it hurts to leave some people out who have done many great movies those 5 have done more great movies than my other favorites. Putting them in order is impossible, though, so they're even.
by b4con
Wed Aug 12, 2009 4:37 pm
Forum: Filmmakers
Topic: Top 5 Favorite Directors
Replies: 134
Views: 176488

Re: Top 5 Favorite Directors

1. Stanley Kubrick
2. David Lynch
3. Akira Kurosawa

Personally I can't put any others on those 3's level right now. These other directors I can foresee having an even more favorable opinion about than I do now, in the future: Terrence Malick, Jim Jarmusch, Darren Aronofsky, Paul Thomas Anderson, Jean-Pierre Melville, Jean-Luc Godard, Wong Kar Wai, Andrei Tarkovsky. Well, those are just the ones that are right on the cusp, there's even more behind them.
by Guest
Sun Aug 09, 2009 11:44 am
Forum: Filmmakers
Topic: Top 5 Favorite Directors
Replies: 134
Views: 176488

Re: Top 5 Favorite Directors

Vertiggo wrote:1- François Truffaut ;)
2- Luis Buñuel :twisted:
3- Charles Chaplin :lol:
4- Kryzstof Kieslowski :cry:
5- Stanley Kubrick :o


Haha, that's a great way to describe them

It's going to change, that's a fact, but currently right now the five directors I have assigned

Jim Jarmusch

His films tie into a lot of my musical tastes. John Lurie of Lounge Lizards and Tom Waits frequently appear in his works, Iggy Pop is the frontman of my first ever "favorite band" and now among my "absolute favorite bands the Stooges. Neil Young does the soundtrack for Dead Man and is also the subject of a documentary by him. Ghost Dog: Way of the Samurai's music is done by RZA and Coffe & Cigarettes has GZA, both of Wu-Tang Clan, a rap good as equally good as they are popular. Beyond the music, his stories are very post-modern, and his direction matches.

David Cronenberg
Although these directors are listed in the order they appear on my profile in no particular order, David Cronenberg is by far my favorite. In each of his decades working he made films that reflect the era, cinematiclly and socially. I'm not a big fan of excessive horror but The Brood and Shivers are two of the best in the genre and their time that I have seen. Although those were unique in their own right he really went crazy in the 80's, many consider that then he was at the top of his game. After the transition of Scanners, which is a ridiculous sci-fi horror story he belted out Videodrome, which is still my favorite film and even though I change "favorites" all the time, I don't see this and Cronenberg moving from their spots anytime soon. Then he gave us The Fly, a remake that surpasses the original in every way possible and the chilling Dead Ringers. The 90's brought the surrealistic Naked Lunch, a great example of how to film an "unfilmable novel" by my favorite author William S. Burroughs. Admittedly Crash and eXiztenZ are love or hate 'em, but I love them. The 00's he made Spider, Eastern Promises, two great films to be remembered from the decade and A History of Violence, easily a contender for "Best Of" and my personal Top 10 of the decade. I cannot wait to see what the future holds. Long live the new flesh!

Jean-Pierre Melville

I forgot where I read this so I'm paraphrasing here, but it was along the lines of "Jean-Pierre Melville's Le Samourai defines cool," and I couldn't agree more. While writing some of the greatest Crime films ever made, especially in the Gangster subgenre, there's just something about the way he shoots it. Influenced by American Cinema, again Crime and Film Noir, and me being American, there's a lot to like as a lot of it feels very familiar, but at the same time presents something very new. Very European. Occasionally he stepped outside of Gangsters but most often still remained in Crime and always in Drama. He had changed his last name from *whatever* to Melville, in honor of Herman Melville, his favorite Author, and he picked a great one at that.

Jean-Luc Godard
It was a really hard choice for me to chose between Godard and Truffaut, both considered leading men for the French New Wave film movement. Godard's many subtexts appear and reappear through just about all of his films, sometimes more obvious than other times. His stories are just so damned charming and likeable, I find it hard to believe that someone could dislike them.

Kihacki Okamoto
Akira Kurosawa, Shohei Imamura, Yasujiro Ozu, Kon Ichikawa.... I'm not going to say the on a technical point that Kihachi Okamoto is a better director than any of those listed or others unlisted Japanese film makers, I would place any of them above Kihachi Okamoto, but god damn I find him so entertaining. He toys with classic Samurai conventions that makes him stand out in a sub-genre of films with so many to choose from. Sword of Doom makes the hero ambiguous and implies that he may have mental problems to make him so violent as expressed in the glorious ending scene. Kill! acknowledges that many of the great Spaghetti Westerns were heavily inspired by Samurai film, and with Kill! Kihachi Okamoto returns the favor. Samurai Assassin is a bit more standard but still extremely well made, Red Lion is more or less a Historical Comedy set with Samurai. You know what? I would place Okamoto with the listed directors actually.

Other directors that I think are true auteurs that if I had more than just five spaces here I would have listed up there with them. Don't be surprised in a week or two if or any other time that one of these names is swapped with one of the five above

Paul Thomas Anderson, François Truffaut, Akira Kurosawa, Martin Scorsese, Terrence Malick, Wes Anderson, Stanley Kubrick, Kar Wai Wong, Ridley Scott, Fritz Lang, Chan-Wook Park, Hayao Miyazaki, John Cassavetes, Richard Linklater.... and loads more that would just take up all of my space here. Five is such a small number!
by Thoughtgraff
Thu Apr 02, 2009 9:01 am
Forum: Filmmakers
Topic: Top 5 Favorite Directors
Replies: 134
Views: 176488

Re: Top 5 Favorite Directors

1) Ingmar Bergman

2) Chris Marker

3) Michael Hanecke

4) Rainer Werner Fassbinder

5) David Lynch

Gawd, I had to edit this twice. I usually don't rank directors in this way. Like others have said there were many more I could have named, some of which are: Jean Luc Godard, John Cassavetes, Jean Pierre Melville, the Coens, Michel Ocelot, Hiyao Miyazaki, Akira Kurosawa, Fritz Lang, Alfred Hitchcock, PT Anderson, and others.