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100 Greatest Movie Stars

100 Greatest Musicals

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Here's your chance to take a look at our comprehensive guide to the 100 greatest movies of all-time. To find out more about each movie, simply click on the movie title to be taken to a definitive movie review.


  A HARD DAY'S NIGHT (1964)
The Beatles' first movie, documenting a fictional day in the life of John, Paul, George and Ringo. Madcap adventures and classic songs abound.


  WAY OUT WEST (1937)
The finest comic duo in cinema venture to the Wild West, with hilarious results. A parade of perfect gags are given a human dimension by Ollie and Stan's inimically immature antics.


  HENRY V (1944)
Definitive screen version of the Bard's most patriotic work, featuring an amazing man-of-the-match performance from Laurence Olivier who somehow fitted directing and producing duties around his sensational leading turn.


  EASY RIDER (1969)
Drug-runners (Fonda, Hopper and Nicholson) take to their choppers and discover an intolerant America on the proceeds of a coke deal. The film that became an anthem for the 60s cultural dialogue on freedom, individualism and patriotism.


  MY BEAUTIFUL LAUNDRETTE (1985)
One of only a handful of homegrown 80s hits, this touching film, scripted by Hanif Kureshi, introduced Daniel Day-Lewis and broke barriers with its central gay romance.


  BELLE DE JOUR (1967)
A stunning psychological drama about a bored housewife's bizarre sexual fantasies from director Luis Buñuel, featuring a career-best performance from Catherine Deneuve.


  THE BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN (1935)
A tour-de-force of gothic expressionism from an early master of horror. Although the film is already parodying the genre, there's plenty of pathos and intelligence in this beautifully crafted and moving story.


  THE TERMINATOR (1984)
The sci-fi thriller that launched the careers of James Cameron and Arnold Schwarzenegger into the stratosphere is still endlessly entertaining.


  SATURDAY NIGHT AND SUNDAY MORNING (1960)
A very young Albert Finney makes his debut as a prototypically Angry Young Man in this ground-breaking piece of social realism - experimental for its times, and still a fascinating study of youthful post-war disaffection

 

 



 

DO THE RIGHT THING (1989)

Tempers finally boil over in Brooklyn, NY, after a long, stiflingly hot summer day of racial and familial tension in Lee's deft mix of comedy and acute social observation.