Lately, Turner Classic Movies has been doing a lot of nights where they have guest programmers come in, and pick roughly five movies to show in one night, which those programmers believe cover not only their taste in films, but also what they believe are the most important bits of film history.
Hypothetical situation: Let's say that you were picked up by TCM to be a guest programmer for one night, and you got to pick five movies that summarize your taste in films and cover a wide range of film history. What five movies would you pick?
Here are the rules:
-No more than five films.
-One film per genre (as in don't pick more than one film from the same type of genre)
-Keeping with how TCM traditionally works, please try not to pick a movie made in the 80s, 90s or 2000s.
-Try to pick films that you feel summarize up your taste in films, not just your five favorite films.
Here would be my picks:
-Ikiru - A film that I feel everybody needs to see at some point in their life. It speaks to every one of us in some way, and is one of the few films out there that might actually make somebody actually change their lives.
-Sunset Boulevard - If I had to make a list of what I think are the greatest movies of all time, this would most likely be number one. It's a film that gets everything right, and is damn near perfect, capturing everything beautiful and ugly about filmmaking.
-Mothra vs. Godzilla - I couldn't resist. This is one of the films that got me interested in films from the beginning, and has had a huge influence on me.
-It's A Wonderful Life - I have to include the best performance from my favorite actor (Jimmy Stewart). Much like Ikiru, it's just the kind of film that speaks to everyone, no matter what language you speak.
-City Lights - IMO, the most important silent film ever made, as well as being Charlie Chaplin's best film. Made at a time when silent films were all but dead, Chaplin proves that they can be just as powerful as any talkie, if not more powerful, and showing the amazing strength of visual art.






