Top 100 Tuesday: 100 Best Movies of the Decade
EmailEmail Since we first published our 100 Best Movies of the Decade in 2009, films have continued to get bigger and better. Here’s an update to the original list.
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Part of complete coverage on By Michael Saba, Special to CNN September 22, 2011 9:43 a.m. EDT
The greatest films of all time: download the data, as a spreadsheet
Greatest films of all time: Psycho Photograph: Allstar/Cinetext/ The Guardian/Observer greatest films of all time are being revealed and you can follow the whole lot here. Each day, our top 25 movies will be released, and each day here on the Datablog we will add them to our and the sortable table below. Today is the horror 25. We're led by Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho.
Five Best Movie Recommendation Services
@twDarkflame: Hire a designer and improve the quality of the screenshots on your home page. @mishra: I'm going to vectorize that image probably. Was trying to do something like vark.com has, only not quite so big.
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Tech Support: "May I ask what operating system you are running today?"Customer: "A computer." A girl walked into the computer center where I work. She said she was having problems with her Mac. I asked what kind of Mac she had.
Top Ten Films 1930-2011
2019 1. LEAVING NEVERLAND (Dan Reed) 2. APOLLO 11 (Todd Douglas Miller) 3. THE BEACH BUM (Harmony Korine) 4.
47 sites chaque musicien d'enregistrement devrait visiter
In a recent “Open Mic” we asked you, “Which music-related sites do you visit regularly?” This article is a summary of the great suggestions given in the comments to that article. You can make the list even longer by commenting on this article.
The 50 Best Movies of the Decade (2000-2009)
10. The Royal Tenenbaums (2001)Writer/Director: Wes AndersonWriter: Owen WilsonStars: Gene Hackman, Anjelica Huston, Gwyneth Paltrow, Ben Stiller, Andrew Wilson, Luke Wilson, Owen Wilson, Danny Glover, Bill MurrayStudio: Buena Vista Pictures With his third movie, Wes Anderson let all his quirks run rampant: a storybook setting that is and is not New York, a uniform for each character and an obsession with childhood detritus. Rather than deflect the family’s conflicts (as Anderson’s critics claim), these elements only enhance its spiritual conundrums, making The Royal Tenenbaums Anderson’s most directorially confident and emotionally cathartic film—a bittersweet ode to regret, forgiveness and hard-won contentment.—Stephen Deusner 9.
Spotlight: Batman
In The Spotlight is a weekly showcase of art created with a particular iconic character in mind. These characters, fictional or real, are from famous literature, film, or various other forms media. What they all have in common is that they have an impact on artists and provide them with inspiration.