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Top 50 Movies of the 1970s

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MortSahlFan View Drop Down
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    Posted: February 21 2020 at 10:37
Harry and Tonto
Nashville
One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest
Network
A Woman Under The Influence
Harold and Maude
Fat City
McCabe and Mrs. Miller
A Clockwork Orange
Mikey and Nicky
The Godfather
The Godfather II
Next Stop, Greenwich Village
One Is A Lonely Number
An Enemy of the People
Sunflower
Five Easy Pieces
Chit-Chat On the Nile
Autumn Sonata
The Yellow Handkerchief
A Special Day
Taxi Driver
Annie Hall
Stroszek
A Brief Vacation
Dog Day Afternoon
Le Chat
Lulu the Tool
La Horse
Payday
The New Centurions
Blume In Love
Whity
Made For Each Other
Johnny Got His Gun
Serie Noire
The Conversation
Opening Night
The Fifth Seal
The Outlaw Josey Wales
The Last Detail
Mr. Klein
Nuts in May
Minnie and Moskowitz
Zandy's Bride
Lies My Father Told Me
Wise Blood
Manhattan
Last Tango In Paris
Chinatown
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote Argo2112 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 21 2020 at 12:35
Ok, Let me see if I can do this, I'll start with your list. ( Movies in no particular order)

  1. One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest
  2. Network
  3. A Clockwork Orange
  4. The Godfather
  5. The Godfather II
  6. Apocalypse Now
  7. Papillon 
  8. Taxi Driver
  9. Dog Day Afternoon
  10. And Justice for All
  11. Alien
  12. Chinatown
  13. Star Wars
  14.  Jaws
  15. The Getaway
  16. The Exorcist 
  17. The Dear Hunter
  18. Marathon Man
  19. MASH
  20. Kelly's Heroes
  21. Dirty Harry
  22. Straw Dogs
  23. Black Sunday
  24. The Taking of Pelham 123
  25. Patton
  26. Young Frankenstein
  27.  Monty Python & The Holy Grail
  28. All the President's Men
  29. Close Encounters of the Third Kind
  30. Soylent Green
  31. All That Jazz
  32. Being There
  33. Macbeth
  34. The Man Who Would be King
  35. Midnight Express
  36. The Towering Inferno
  37. Animal House
  38. Blazing Saddles
  39. Sleuth
  40. Dawn of the Dead
  41. Little Big Man
  42. The Andromeda Strain
  43. Midway
  44. Escape From Alcatraz
  45. Jesus Christ Superstar
  46. Catch 22
  47. Deliverance
  48. Halloween
  49. Silent Running
  50. Death Wish



Edited by Argo2112 - February 23 2020 at 12:56
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote Atavachron Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 21 2020 at 14:28
Great time for film, just some of my favorites -

Straight Time
Paper Moon
The Heartbreak Kid (original 1972)
Alien
All the President's Men
The Out-of-Towners (original 1970)
The Last of the Red-Hot Lovers
Willie Wonka and the Chocolate Factory
Enter the Dragon
The Taking of Pelham 123
Monty Python and the Holy Grail
Play it Again, Sam
Capricorn 1
Wizards
The Parallax View
The Summer of '42


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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote BrufordFreak Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 21 2020 at 20:05
Okay, I'll give it a shot: 50 favorite flicks from the 1970s, in no particular order:

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  1. Being There
  2. One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest
  3. Apocalypse Now
  4. Harold and Maude
  5. The Outlaw Josey Wales
  6. Sleeper
  7. Manhattan
  8. Monty Python and the Holy Grail
  9. La cage aux folles
  10. Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid
  11. Freebie and the Bean
  12. The Warriors
  13. Three Days of the Condor
  14. Rocky
  15. Little Big Man
  16. What’s up, Doc?
  17. Alien
  18. Star Wars
  19. Jaws
  20. Willie Wonka and the Chocolate Factory
  21. A Shot in the Dark
  22. Sleuth
  23. Little Big Man
  24. Deliverance
  25. The Cowboys
  26. Jabberwocky
  27. Animal House
  28. Heaven Can Wait
  29. Foul Play
  30. Pretty Baby
  31. Pink Panther
  32. Revenge of the Pink Panther
  33. 10
  34. The Jerk
  35. The Muppet Movie
  36. A Little Romance
  37. The Great Santini
  38. Hair
  39. The In-Laws
  40. Mad Max
  41. Meatballs
  42. Life of Brian
  43. The Onion Field
  44. Young Frankenstein
  45. Smokey and the Bandit
  46. Live and Let die
  47. Animal House
  48. Dog Day Afternoon
  49. Enter the Dragon
  50. Saturday Night Fever

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote The Dark Elf Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 21 2020 at 21:23
In no particular order, because recognizing each is remarkable in its own way:

1. The Devils
2. Mad Max
3. American Graffiti
4. Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory
5. Invasion of the Body Snatchers
6. The Last Detail
7. The Sting
8. Marathon Man
9. Monty Python and the Holy Grail
10. Patton
11. The Godfather I
12. The Godfather II
13. Monty Python's The Life of Brian
14. Deliverance
15. The Rocky Horror Picture Show
16. Harold and Maude
17. A Clockwork Orange
18. Young Frankenstein
19. Close Encounters of the Third Kind
20. Barry Lyndon
21. Being There
22. The Exorcist
23. The French Connection
24. Taxi Driver
25. Apocalypse Now
26. Wizards
27. Papillon
28. Midnight Express
29. Serpico
30. Five Easy Pieces
31. Carrie
32. Amarcord
33. The Poseidon Adventure
34. Mean Streets
35. The Tin Drum
36. Fritz the Cat
37. Lord of the Rings (Bakshi)
38. Chinatown
39. The Boys from Brazil
40. Kelly's Heroes
41. Network
42. The Omen
43. The Last Waltz
44. One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
45. Jaws
46. Alien
47. Blazing Saddles
48. Dog Day Afternoon
49. National Lampoon's Animal House
50. Aguirre, The Wrath of God

 


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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote dwill123 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 22 2020 at 05:59
The Godfather, Part 1
The Godfather, Part 2
Star Wars, Episode IV
Taxi Driver
Rocky
Klute
The French Connection
Smokey and the Bandit
The Taking of Pelham 123 (1974)
Enter the Dragon
Superman
Dirty Harry
M*A*S*H (1970)
Shaft
The Sting
The Outlaw Josey Wales
Carrie
Patton
Deliverance
A Clockwork Orange
Network
Manhattan
Harold and Maude
Barry Lyndon
Monty Python and the Holy Grail
Blazing Saddles
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre
Lenny
The Poseidon Adventure
Woodstock: 3 Days of Peace & Music
Midway
All That Jazz
Star Trek: The Motion Picture
A Man Called Horse
Tora! Tora! Tora!
The Last Waltz
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote BaldFriede Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 22 2020 at 10:35
In no specific order; numeration just for keeping count. As usual only one movie per director, though the choice is often tough.

1) "Harold and Maude" by Hal Ashby (1971)
2) "Don't Look Now!" by Nicolas Roeg (1973)
3) "Silent Running" by Douglas Trumbull (1972)
4) "Die Blechtrommel" ("The Tin Drum") by Volker Schloendorff (1979)
5) "Le Fantôme de la liberté" ("The Phantom of Liberty") by Luis Buñuel (1974)
6) "Welt am Draht" ("World on a Wire") by Rainer Werner Fasbinder (1973)
7) "Aguirre, der Zorn Gottes" ("Aguirre, the Wrath of God") by Werner Herzog (1972)
8) "Malpertuis" by Harry Kümel (1972)
9) "Cría Cuervos" ("Raise Ravens") by Carlos Saura (1976)
10) "La montaña sagrada" ("The Holy Mountain") by Alejandro Jodorowsky (1973)
11) "Chinatown" by Roman Polanski (1974)
12) "Phase IV" by Saul Bass (1974)
13) "Une belle fille comme moi" ("Such a Gorgeous Kid Like Me") by François Truffaut (1972)
14) "Сталкер" ("Stalker") by Andrei Tarkovsky (1979)
15) "Providence" by Alain Resnais (1977)
16) "Messer im Kopf" ("Knife in the Head") by Reinhard Hauff (1978)
17) "Frenzy" by Alfred Hitchcock (1972)
18) "Dark Star" by John Carpenter (1974)
19) "Der amerikanische Freund" ("The American Friend") by Wim Wenders (1977)
20) "Les innocents aux mains sales" ("Innocents with Dirty Hands") by Claude Chabrol (1975)
21) "Lacombe, Lucien" by Louis Malle (1974)
22) "Nashville" by Robert Altman (1975)
23) "Le Genou de Claire" ("Claire's Knee") by Éric Rohmer (1970)
24) "Le Cercle Rouge" ("The Red Circle") by Jean-Pierre Melville (1970)
25) "L'important c'est d'aimer" ("That Most Important Thing: Love") by Andrzej Żuławski (1975)
26) "Zardoz" by John Boorman (1974)
27) "Murder on the Orient Express" by Sidney Lumet (1974)
28) "A Clockwork Orange" by Stanley Kubrick (1972)
29) "Deep End" by Jerzy Skolimowski (1970)
30) "Bluebeard" by Edward Dmytryk (1972)
31) "Ludwig - Requiem für einen jungfräulichen König" by Hans-Jürgen Syberberg (1972)
32) "État de Siège" ("State of Siege") by Costa-Gravas (1972)
33) "Die Reise nach Wien" ("Trip to Vienna") by Edgar Reitz
34) "Tote Taube in der Beethovenstraße" ("Dead Pigeon on Beethoven Street") by Samuel Fuller (1974)
35) "Der Springteufel" ("Jack-in-the-Box") by Heinz Schirk (1974)
36) "Eiszeit" ("Ice Age") by Peter Zadek (1975)
37) "Notwehr" ("Self-Defense") by Hartmut Griesmayr (1977)
38) "Amarcord" by Federico Fellini (1974)
39) "Morte a Venezia" ("Death in Venice") by Luigi Visconti (1971)
40) "Salò o le 120 giornate di Sodoma" ("Salò or the 120 Days of Sodom") by Pier Palo Pasolini (1975)
41) "Turks Fruit" ("Turkish Delight") by Paul Verhoeven (1973)
42) "Trafic" ("Traffic") by Jacques Tati (1971)
43) "César et Rosalie" by Claude Sotet (1972)
44) "A Man Called Horse" by Elliot Silverstein (1970)
45) "La Planète sauvage" ("Fantastic Planet") by René Laloux (1973)
46) "La Grande Bouffe" by Marco Ferreri (1973)
47) "Themroc" by Claude Farraldo (1973)
48) "Papillon" by Franklin J. Schaffner (1973)
49) "The Three Musketeers" by Richard Lester (1973)
50) "Zabriskie Point" by Michelangelo Antonioni (1970)

A few interesting things about "L'important c'est d'aimer": It caused quite a scandal when it came out because it is an extremely brutal and violent movie. I am a very peaceful person, but after having seen this movie in the late 80s or early 90s in some off-Broadway cinema I was in the mood to beat somebody up; luckily no-one I met crossed me, else I don't know what I would have done. The movie is about an unsuccessful actress named Nadine Chevalier (Romy Schneider) who has to steep down to act in cheap soft-pornos. The photographer Servais Mont (Fabio Testi) falls in love with her and sets up a theatrical production of "Richard III" in which he gives her a part to get her out of the porn environment. The production is pulled to pieces by the critiques after the premiere though. This is one of those movies that is either loved or hated, in this regard similar to "Zardoz". Romy Schneider received the "César de la meilleure actrice" ("César Award for best actress) for her role in that movie. Klaus Kinski is in the movie too; he has one of the most violent scenes in that movie as Karl-Heinz Zimmer, the actor who plays Richard III in that theatrical production. In my opinion one of those rare movies that will change your perception of this world.

Edited by BaldFriede - February 22 2020 at 10:36


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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 22 2020 at 12:08
Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:

...
2) "Don't Look Now!" by Nicolas Roeg (1973)
4) "Die Blechtrommel" ("The Tin Drum") by Volker Schloendorff (1979)
5) "Le Fantôme de la liberté" ("The Phantom of Liberty") by Luis Buñuel (1974)
7) "Aguirre, der Zorn Gottes" ("Aguirre, the Wrath of God") by Werner Herzog (1972)
10) "La montaña sagrada" ("The Holy Mountain") by Alejandro Jodorowsky (1973)
14) "Сталкер" ("Stalker") by Andrei Tarkovsky (1979)
29) "Deep End" by Jerzy Skolimowski (1970)
39) "Morte a Venezia" ("Death in Venice") by Luigi Visconti (1971)
46) "La Grande Bouffe" by Marco Ferreri (1973)
50) "Zabriskie Point" by Michelangelo Antonioni (1970)
...

Hi,

Interesting list. I'm not sure that "Zabriskie Point" is a good fit since it was a film delayed so much and changed by the American producers to have a "story" that kinda ruined the film for me. I have a feeling that the film was, originally, just a bunch of vignettes, although the bits and pieces from Antonioni, always suggested that PF should not have been there, but the film company liked the Roger's screams and what could be filmed with it! I have to see it again, but I think PF kinda redid the visuals in the movie Live in Pompeii so now they would also have "explosions" ... 

Love many of these ... Skolimowski's film is a beauty with fantastic cinematography ... and Jane Asher! Ferreri's film was fun to watch even if it crossed some good taste lines at the time ... but it was fun! Jodorowsky, hopefully will get his credit in due time, but his films were a masterpiece in the area of experimentation and ad-lib in film, coming from open theater scenes that he had done previously and even had at least one production shut down ... but the visualization of it all was crazy and a total trip to watch. 

Of the Roeg films (too bad we can't include "Performance" ... !!!) I think "Bad Timing, A Sensual Obsession" is fantastic with a total with it twist ending! I love "Don't Look Now" and specially by the performances by both Julie Christie and Donald Sutherland ... but the film is just such a stomach turner. I also love "The Man Who Fell To Earth", which is a very good film, though it has "flashes" of weirdness that only the "alien" would be able to explain.

Bunuel's film is one of my favorites of his, a hard choice since he has so many, but the way that the paintings are integrated, which is (of course!!!!) one of his far out abilities, really shows here ... and the framing of Goya ... is scary and so true today! you might not get a bullet, but you get "you're fired!" instead ... I don't see a difference! Phantom indeed!

Herzog's film for me is the special one, and the true example of what "krautrock" (I really don't like that expression!) was really all about ... you improvise to the very end, and the musicians at the time did it perfectly, as did so many writers ... as I said before, it is called "krautrock" but it should be called "kraut-arts", to better show the other arts ... to me, there is not too much different between what Kinski does in that film, and Damo did in CAN. You just gotta let it fly and flow ... the only one "trick" with/for an improvisation.

Ken Russell deserves a better showing ... both "The Devils" and "Savage Messiah" are incredible films, even if one is the RSC getting loose!

Bruno Bazzetto's "Allegro Non Troppo" deserves to be on this list, with the exception that it is hard to find and not many have seen this wonderful take on classical music, that is a bit better than "Fantasia", or maybe just for older folks, instead of kids!

Some other films ...
"All That Jazz"
"Being There"

...
I have to look at my listing of reviews ... this is as far as I got, but I have not maintained the spreadsheet of the films with the dates and directors and such.









Edited by moshkito - February 22 2020 at 12:11
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Sean Trane Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 22 2020 at 12:31
Haven't seen everything in Friede's list, but it's by miles the most interesting so far, because it reflects world (well Occidental anyways despite Tarkovski being present - saw the new version of Stalker last year, BTW) cinema, so much that it makes the other list very short-sighted.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote BrufordFreak Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 22 2020 at 18:30
My list reflects those films that bring back the best memories, and are not meant to reflect a critical response. I am, in no way, shape or form, fit to serve as film critic. In fact, more often than not, a film's music will be what determines my initial and lasting response!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 25 2020 at 22:26
Originally posted by Sean Trane Sean Trane wrote:

Haven't seen everything in Friede's list, but it's by miles the most interesting so far, because it reflects world (well Occidental anyways despite Tarkovski being present - saw the new version of Stalker last year, BTW) cinema, so much that it makes the other list very short-sighted.

Hi,

Having written and posted over 500 "foreign film" reviews, for me, choosing is a problem ... yes there are things I like better than others, but to make a list for me, created internal battles and I don't want to leave behind something I love dearly ... essentially, I love a lot of movies, and have been at it since I was 15 and became aware of Luis Bunuel (father knew and met him - Portuguese Writer and reviewer of films and theater), and what got me to him, was mom ... who said he was such a "filthy degenerate" ... and I had to find out what this was all about ... and I think my mom's "fake/faux Catholicism" is what got her mad ... seeing JC laughing in Nazarin and then the last supper and later Goya and many other "paintings" defaced ... got her uptight and then some ... and if you think that was bad, you should hear what she said of Sartre, Camus and Genet! Dad had translated a lot of French Literature into Portuguese!

Making it all worse is I'm from Portugal and then from Brazil and then to America ... and got to see a lot of Spanish film (Portugal then had no movie industry that was legal) ... and then some Brazilian films ... and you arrive in America in 1965 to see the glory of the ACTING STUDIO and its results ... but I never "left" all the world cinema, and had already seen "The Seven Samurai" in Brazil and was well aware of Kurosawa.

But the "European" taste and flavor never died in me. In the Film Festival here in Portland, I always used to post that people needed to ignore American and English films (they would come out in video), and instead watch all the smaller stuff ... and let me tell you ... there was a killing to be made out there in Europe alone ... and EVERYONE ignored films from Mozambique (6 people in the theater!) and one from Senegal about women (8 people in the theater) ... and at least one from Sweden (75 people in the theater and it was a Sven Nykvist film!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!) ... just to give you an idea ... and Polish and Russian films ... they moved a Russian film ... no one showed up at the door!

I'm simply, not very good at "lists" ... except making comments about some of the bad things around so much of the arts ... as you can see above. While I do not dislike a lot of Hollywood stuff, for me, too much of it was just a plastic cardboard color in the background and too much of a "star" shot from the cameras, and it took the "real" life of a lot of films for me. I kinda think that the whole Arthur Miller, Tennessee Williams thing and others, was really about tearing down that "star" thing.


Edited by moshkito - February 25 2020 at 22:37
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote richardh Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 29 2020 at 01:34
I can maybe do a top ten but that's it!

1) The French Connection 2
2) Jaws
3) Alien
4) Duel*
5) Logan's Run
6) Godfather 2
7) Close Encounters Of The Third Kind
8) The Wicker Man
9) Straw Dogs ( Peckinhpah's finest!)
10) Monty Python and the Holy Grail

* Duel was that brilliant suspense movie with Dennis Weaver in case its been forgotten!


Edited by richardh - February 29 2020 at 01:38
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote LAM-SGC Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 29 2020 at 02:17
1. The Rocky Horror Picture Show
2. The Odessa File
3. The Railway Children
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Grumpyprogfan Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 29 2020 at 06:02
Can't do 50, but have to mention Pink Flamingos .
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 29 2020 at 07:45
Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

...
9) Straw Dogs ( Peckinhpah's finest!)
...

Hi,

Heaven to merggeteroids ... no way ... THE WILD BUNCH is his greatest film ever ... SD was nice, but by that time, I had already soured on the "violence" (which became pathetic in so many films!), and then Sam's use of bits and pieces of "anger" to make his point, which while it gives Dustin Hoffman, a nice "aside", in the end, I think it lowered the quality of the film ... it became a lecture for me ... and kinda hurt the quality of the film. His earlier stuff did not have this slap in the face ... it was always each individual character's take on things and how they reacted ... and I kinda thought that these bits and pieces were a sort of "justification" that was added for DH's acting style ... he has to have the "thinking" behind it! It's his history!


Edited by moshkito - February 29 2020 at 07:45
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote LAM-SGC Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 29 2020 at 07:55
Originally posted by LAM-SGC LAM-SGC wrote:

1. The Rocky Horror Picture Show
2. The Odessa File
3. The Railway Children


4. Watership Down
5 The Asphyx
6. Flight of the Doves
7 .The Omen
8. The Wicker Man
9. Ryans Daughter
10 The Amazing Mr Blunden

Edited by LAM-SGC - February 29 2020 at 07:56
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote LAM-SGC Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 29 2020 at 08:04
Originally posted by LAM-SGC LAM-SGC wrote:

Originally posted by LAM-SGC LAM-SGC wrote:

1. The Rocky Horror Picture Show
2. The Odessa File
3. The Railway Children


4. Watership Down
5 The Asphyx
6. Flight of the Doves
7 .The Omen
8. The Wicker Man
9. Ryans Daughter
10 The Amazing Mr Blunden


11. Close Encounters of the Third Kind
12. Keetje Tippel
13. Diamonds Are Forever
14. The Eagle has Landed
15. The Thirty-Nine Steps
16. The Spy Who Loved Me
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Joined: December 26 2018
Location: se
Status: Offline
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote LAM-SGC Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 29 2020 at 08:05
Originally posted by LAM-SGC LAM-SGC wrote:

Originally posted by LAM-SGC LAM-SGC wrote:

Originally posted by LAM-SGC LAM-SGC wrote:

1. The Rocky Horror Picture Show
2. The Odessa File
3. The Railway Children


4. Watership Down
5 The Asphyx
6. Flight of the Doves
7 .The Omen
8. The Wicker Man
9. Ryans Daughter
10 The Amazing Mr Blunden


11. Close Encounters of the Third Kind
12. Keetje Tippel
13. Diamonds Are Forever
14. The Eagle has Landed
15. The Thirty-Nine Steps
16. The Spy Who Loved Me


17.The Outlaw Josey Wales
18.High Plains Drifter
19.Saturday Night Fever
20.Superman
21.10 Rillington Place
22. Sleuth
23.Every Which Way but Loose
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LAM-SGC View Drop Down
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Forum Senior Member
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Joined: December 26 2018
Location: se
Status: Offline
Points: 1544
Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote LAM-SGC Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 29 2020 at 08:08
Originally posted by LAM-SGC LAM-SGC wrote:

Originally posted by LAM-SGC LAM-SGC wrote:

Originally posted by LAM-SGC LAM-SGC wrote:

Originally posted by LAM-SGC LAM-SGC wrote:

1. The Rocky Horror Picture Show
2. The Odessa File
3. The Railway Children


4. Watership Down
5 The Asphyx
6. Flight of the Doves
7 .The Omen
8. The Wicker Man
9. Ryans Daughter
10 The Amazing Mr Blunden


11. Close Encounters of the Third Kind
12. Keetje Tippel
13. Diamonds Are Forever
14. The Eagle has Landed
15. The Thirty-Nine Steps
16. The Spy Who Loved Me


17.The Outlaw Josey Wales
18.High Plains Drifter
19.Saturday Night Fever
20.Superman
21.10 Rillington Place
22. Sleuth
23.Every Which Way but Loose


24.Kelly's Heroes
25.Vanishing Point
26.Get Carter
27.The First Great Train robbery
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LAM-SGC View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: December 26 2018
Location: se
Status: Offline
Points: 1544
Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote LAM-SGC Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 29 2020 at 08:10
Originally posted by LAM-SGC LAM-SGC wrote:

Originally posted by LAM-SGC LAM-SGC wrote:

Originally posted by LAM-SGC LAM-SGC wrote:

Originally posted by LAM-SGC LAM-SGC wrote:

Originally posted by LAM-SGC LAM-SGC wrote:

1. The Rocky Horror Picture Show
2. The Odessa File
3. The Railway Children


4. Watership Down
5 The Asphyx
6. Flight of the Doves
7 .The Omen
8. The Wicker Man
9. Ryans Daughter
10 The Amazing Mr Blunden


11. Close Encounters of the Third Kind
12. Keetje Tippel
13. Diamonds Are Forever
14. The Eagle has Landed
15. The Thirty-Nine Steps
16. The Spy Who Loved Me


17.The Outlaw Josey Wales
18.High Plains Drifter
19.Saturday Night Fever
20.Superman
21.10 Rillington Place
22. Sleuth
23.Every Which Way but Loose


24.Kelly's Heroes
25.Vanishing Point
26.Get Carter
27.The First Great Train robbery


28. Cross of Iron
29.Moonraker
30.Jesus Christ Superstar
31.A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
32.Wuthering Heights
33.Countess Dracula
34.Under Milk Wood
35.Hennessy
36.Aces High
37.At the Earth's Core
38.To the Devil a Daughter
39.A Bridge Too Far
40.Force 10 from Navarone
41.The Wild Geese
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