Every self-respecting magazine, film critic and cinema aficionado makes a list of the 10 best films of all time. Here I am attempting my own list based on movies that I have loved and adored over the years. Here's presenting ten of my favourites in no particular order:
1. Sound of Music (1965)

The credit for these evergreen songs lies with Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II. But the soul of this film was Julie Andrews and her impish charm.
2. Gone with the Wind (1939)
The poster says 'The most magnificent picture ever!'. I wholeheartedly agree. The movie was poetry in motion with some of the most beautiful camerawork I have ever seen. The fierce sunsets, the long shots and the tight close-ups held everyone spellbound despite its long running time of 3 hours and 44 minutes. The movie stands for resilience and facing adversity and also the realisation of what love means. Vivien Leigh's portrayal of Scarlett O'Hara is her most remembered role till date. Clark Gable as Rhett Butler created the concept of a heart throb. Women still swoon at the sight of the majestic Rhett with his cocky manner and the twinkle in his eyes. What makes this movie stand apart is the slight friction between the lead characters and Scarlett's late realisation of love lost. It was one of the first major films to be shot in Technicolor and deservedly won the Oscar for 'Best Cinematography'.
Some say that Orson Welles' 'Citizen Kane' is the best movie ever. My answer to that, "Frankly my dear, I don't give a damn".

Move over Psycho, this one has got to be Hitchcock's best. A broken leg forces a photographer to spend the entire day in his stuffy apartment. To pass his time, he sits by the window which faces the opposite building where most people leave their windows open too. This affords him a voyeuristic insight into their daily lives and he soon becomes convinced that one of them is a murderer. In the genre of suspense, nobody can hold a candle to Hitchcock. Like most of his films, Rear Window was complemented with impeccable cinematography, a gripping screenplay and extremely effective ambient sound.James Stewart and Grace Kelly played their parts to perfection helping us, the audience, identify with the distraught photographer who can't be sure what to make of what he saw and his wife who is forever questioning his morbid curiosity The movie makes the viewer as much a voyeur as Stewart's character.
4. The Pianist (2002)

5. The Ghost and the Darkness (1996)

Africa is painted in broad and beautiful brushstrokes by cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond. My favourite scene has to be when Patterson faces one of the lions and presses the trigger of his rifle only to realise that it is not loaded. The skin of the two real maneaters is now on display at the Museum of Natural History in Chicago. The film ends by telling you where the skins are displayed and that even today "if you lock eyes with them, you will be afraid".
6. Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961)
When you think of iconic style, the chances are that you are visualizing the pearls clad slender neck of Audrey Hepburn in Breakfast at Tiffany's. This is the original romcom, to which no amount of Ashton Kutcher or Katherine Heigl movies can be compared. Hepburn as the ravishing beauty Holly Golightly won many hearts and epitomised beauty and grace. The transformation of the small town girl into a Manhattan socialite and that too one with not the most honourable of intentions carved a special place in our hearts. But more than that, what has lent the film iconic status over the years have been the Little Black Dress (A Givenchy original mind you), the ubiquitous strings of pearls and the oversized cigarette holder.
7. Titanic (1997)
James Cameron's Titanic was the highest grossing film of all time until the title was usurped by another one of James Cameron's movies - Avatar. However, I still consider Titanic his best work. I clearly remember the copious amount of tears all the women in the theatre shed as the near frozen Leonardo Dicaprio as Jack Dawson held on to the love of his life in the aftermath of the sinking of the behemoth. Over the years as I read more about the unfrotunate fate of the Titanic, I began appreciating the attention to detail that Cameron had given while making his movie. From replicating the interiors to establishing the era through clothes and mannerisms, it was beautifully presented. Cameron showed the calamity through the eyes of the star-crossed lovers Jack and Rose and left an impression on the audiences of the personal tragedy of disasters.
8. Schindler's List (1993)

The movie deals with German businessman Oskar Schindler who saved 1000 Jewish workers of his factory from being sent to concentration camp. He actually spent most of his fortune in bribing Nazi officials to keep his workers alive and formed the Schindler family. Liam Neeson and Ralph Fiennes gave stellar performances and effortlessly brought out the good and evil during the holocaust respectively. For me the scene that stood out was during the end, when leaving the factory after the war as he has been a Nazi party member and a profiteer of slave labour, he wistfully says that he wished he could have done more to save more lives.
9. The Shining (1980)
Stephen King has that uncanny ability to spin tales that can be adapted into brilliant cinematic masterprieces. Misery, Green Mile and The Shining are few of the examples of this fact. This particular movie is perhaps the greatest horror films of all time. The story of a writer played by Jack Nicholson who along with his family moves into the Overlook Hotel as a winter caretaker. His son Danny who has ESP prophesizes a grim picture if they continue living in the hotel. Jack begins encountering ghosts and slowly but surely begins losing his sanity which reaches a climax as he tries to kill his own wife and son in the eerie deserted hotel. One of cinema's most horrifying scenes comes from this movie when Jack chops through th bathroom door using an axe where his wife is hiding, sticks his head in and menacingly announces, "Here's Johnny".
I consider this movie as one of the enduring reminders of Stanley Kubrick's genius. A true spine chiller, this one.
10. K-19: The widowmaker (2002)
Produced by National Geographic, this movie was directed by Kathryn Bigelow who went on to win the Oscar for Best Director for Hurt Locker. She is also the ex-wife of award winning director James Cameron.
While having a plethora of war movies to choose from, I would choose this one as it affected me the most even though it isn't really a war movie. The plight of men exposed to radiation hundreds of feet under water with an unrelenting captain played by Harrison Ford is as heart-wrenching a drama as it can get.
Although the movie didn't do too well at the box office, I consider it an exemplary product of storytelling and film making.
http://www.movieposter.com/poster/b70-11237/Sound_Of_Music.html
http://www.moviegoods.com/movie_poster/gone_with_the_wind_1939.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Rearwindowposter.jpg
http://shaved-cat.tumblr.com
http://www.impawards.com/1996/ghost_and_the_darkness_ver2.html
http://www.movieposter.com/poster/MPW-13067/Breakfast_At_Tiffany_s.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Titanic_poster.jpg
http://www.mposter.com/schindlers-list-movie-poster.html
http://exha-le.blogspot.in/2012_01_01_archive.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:K_nineteen_the_widowmaker_ver2.jpg
PS: Not surprisingly a majority of the movies draw inspiration from real-life events. Afterall, truth is stranger than fiction!
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