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The one movie I feel should have definitely made the list (of top 3 movies, let alone 100), is Seven Samurai. Maybe this was an oversight because you didn't want more than two Kurosawa films on the list? If this was the case, I feel Seven Samurai is a better movie than Yojimbo.
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Here are three of my top ten list that didn't make it: Lacombe, Lucien, Hard Times and Samurai Trilogy.
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City of God (2002)

Directed By: Fernando Meirelles, Kátia Lund
Screenplay: Paulo Lins (novel); Bráulio Mantovani (screenplay)
Cast: Alexandre Rodrigues, Leandro Firmino

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MIRAMAX / EVERETT COLLECTION
 
he Rio de Janeiro slum known as Cidade de Deus might be a Martian landscape, so remote in spirit is it from the smooth beaches where the rich work on their tans and lines of seduction. In the inner city the activity is life-and-death, mostly death, and the ruthless men who run the place are boys, some not yet adolescents. Boys their age elsewhere play with plastic guns; these kids shoot real bullets, kill people, for the love or the hell of it. Bang, you're dead. Ha ha. Luis Bunuel's Los Olvidados portrayed similar young toughs in Mexico City a half-century earlier, using a mixture of realism and surrealism. Meirelles and Lund used a pinwheeling, hypertrophic style; no static camera could keep up with the hurtling pace at which these kids rushed to their doom. As sociology, it's tragic; as cinema, a stupendous, joyous jolt. —R.C.

From the TIME Archive:
The film is seductive, disturbing, enthralling—a trip to hell that gives the passengers a great ride
TIME Magazine, Jan. 20, 2003 >>

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READER'S TOP FLICKS
1:  Goodfellas
2:  Farewell My Concubine
3:  Taxi Driver
4:  Bande à part
5:  City of God

    See the full list >>






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