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#61 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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#64 |
Special Member
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As others have mentioned Barry Lyndon, Days of Heaven, and Tree of Life are all phenomenal. Another one of my favorites that no one else has brought up yet is the Swedish movie Everlasting Moments. That movie features some of the most amazing use of light ever captured on film in a sublimely subtle style.
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#66 |
Blu-ray Baron
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Cleopatra
South Pacific The Egyptian The Robe How the West Was Won No Country for Old Men Casablanca Ben Hur Psycho Doctor Zhivago The Sound of Music The Sand Pebbles Days of Heaven Gandhi The Killing Fields Passage to India Out of Africa Dances with Wolves A River Runs Through It Schindler's List Braveheart The English Patient Titanic Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World Pan's Labyrinth |
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#67 | |
Member
![]() Sep 2009
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I agree that taste plays a major role in this, and I agree about The Red Shoes and Black Narcissus. A few of the other films that I view as having great cinematography are: Citizen Kane Vertigo La grande illusion The Searchers She Wore a Yellow Ribbon Fort Apache They Were Expendable How Green Was My Valley The Grapes of Wrath Lawrence of Arabia Doctor Zhivago Paris, Texas The Four Feathers (1939) Diabolique Battleship Potemkin The Bicycle Thief Metropolis The Last Laugh Gone With the Wind A Canterbury Tale (1944) The Third Man Zulu Here's a list I created at imdb.com of my favorite cinematographers and their works: http://www.imdb.com/list/PSf182mVeZU/ Last edited by oldtexan; 06-19-2012 at 04:31 PM. |
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#72 |
Blu-ray Ninja
Jun 2011
London
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There's far too many great looking films to just pick one, but I can't think of many films from the past twenty something years that stand out. When I think of great cinematography, I think of films from the 50's, 60's & some 70's. Far too many movies these days have the colour wound down (the two Sherlock Holmes films) or have that cyan look so beloved be film makers these days. The most recient film I saw that looked great was Tarantino's Inglorious Basterds.
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#73 |
Special Member
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Most of the people in this thread seem confused on what cinematography actually is. cinematography mostly relates to the movement and framing of the camera but most people in this thread are simply listing the most colorful or scenic films they can think of.
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#77 |
Power Member
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For me, it's The Passion of the Christ. I know the graphic content of it might make it an odd choice, but Caleb Deschanel manages to film it in a way that's hauntingly beautiful and poetic. They set out to make a moving Caravaggio painting, and I believe they succeeded.
[Show spoiler]
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