Le Chant du loup. A very decent submarine action movie.
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Tampopo is up there for sure...
Memories of Murder is probably my favorite Korean language film.
Tokyo Story is amazing. Ozu doesn't get as much credit as Kurosawa, but pop over to his rotten tomatoes page and look at how many films he made, and what the ratings of them are.
I don't think I've ever seen a filmography that stacked. Dude made like 50 films, and the lowest rating is like 80-something
Babette's Feast
The platform, aka El Hoyo
It is about a futuristic prison, where food is distributed to inmates in a vertical prison. They have elected to be there, on promise of reward on release. They are fed on a vertical table, the descends, level by level.
IMO, it is really about humanity and the choice between self service and a greater good.
It is a great movie. The sequel... Eh.
Brotherhood of the Wolf
Confessions. The soundtrack is odd, but the rest makes up for it. One of the very few movies that I think is better than the book.
Persona by Ingmar Bergman
- 2046 by Wong Kar Wai
- Swallowtail Butterly by Shinji Iwai
- Ne Le Dis à Personne by Guillaume Canet
Oh. Uh. Hanzo the Razor: Sword of Justice (1972) Hanzo the Razor: The Snare (1973) Hanzo the Razor: Who's Got the Gold? (1974)
They're, uh, something. I think that they're probably part of the reason that I really got into shibari. The films are graphically, cartoonishly violent, misogynistic, as close to pornographic as you can get in 'mainstream' Japanese cinema, and there's just something about them. My partner HATES them, so use your best judgement before attempting to watch them.
Train to Busan
A girl walks home alone at night, 2014, Farsi
A Serbian Film