Yasujiro Ozu
1949 • 108 minutes • 1.33:1 • Japan
Spine: #331 Editions: DVD, Blu-ray
One of the most powerful of Yasujiro Ozu’s family portraits, Late Spring (Banshun) tells the story of a widowed father who feels compelled to marry off his beloved only daughter.
Roy Ward Baker
1958 • 123 minutes • 1.66:1 • United Kingdom
Spine: #7 Editions: DVD, Blu-ray
On April 14, 1912, just before midnight, the “unsinkable” Titanic struck an iceberg. In less than three hours, it had plunged to the bottom of the sea. This is cinema’s subtlest and best dramatization of this monumental twentieth-century catastrophe.
Mikhail Kalatozov
1959 • 96 minutes • 1.33:1 • Soviet Union
Spine: #601 Editions: DVD, Blu-ray
The great Soviet director Mikhail Kalatozov, known for his virtuosic, emotionally gripping films, perhaps never made a more visually astonishing one than Letter Never Sent.
Mario Monicelli
1963 • 130 minutes • 1.85:1 • Italy
Spine: #610 Editions: DVD, Blu-ray
This historical drama by Mario Monicelli, brimming with humor and honesty, is a beautiful and moving ode to the power of the people.
Robert M. Young
1977 • 96 minutes • 1.66:1 • United States
Spine: #609 Editions: DVD, Blu-ray
Vivid and spare where other films about illegal immigration might sentimentalize, Young’s take is equal parts intimate character study and gripping road movie, a political work that never loses sight of the complex man at its center.
Martin Scorsese
1988 • 163 minutes • 1.85:1 • United States
Spine: #70 Editions: DVD, Blu-ray
The Last Temptation of Christ, by Martin Scorsese, is a towering achievement. Though it initially engendered enormous controversy, the film can now be viewed as the remarkable, profoundly personal work of faith that it is.
Chris Hegedus and D. A. Pennebaker
1993 • 96 minutes • 1.33:1 • United States
Spine: #602 Editions: DVD, Blu-ray
The 1992 presidential election was a triumph not only for Bill Clinton but also for the new breed of strategists who guided him to the White House—and changed the face of politics in the process.
Louis Malle
1994 • 119 minutes • 1.66:1 • United States
Spine: #599 Editions: DVD, Blu-ray
Vanya on 42nd Street is as memorable and emotional a screen version of Chekhov’s masterpiece as one could ever hope to see. This film, which turned out to be Malle’s last, is a tribute to the playwright’s devastating work as well as to the creative process itself.
Mathieu Kassovitz
1995 • 97 minutes • 1.85:1 • France
Spine: #381 Editions: DVD, Blu-ray
Mathieu Kassovitz took the film world by storm with La haine, a gritty, unsettling, and visually explosive look at the racial and cultural volatility in modern-day France, specifically the low-income banlieue districts on Paris’s outskirts.
Spike Jonze
1999 • 113 minutes • 1.85:1 • United States
Spine: #611 Editions: DVD, Blu-ray
Have you ever wanted to be someone else? Or, more specifically, have you ever wanted to crawl through a portal hidden in an anonymous office building and thereby enter the cerebral cortex of John Malkovich for fifteen minutes, before being spat out on the side of the New Jersey Turnpike?
Abbas Kiarostami
2010 • 106 minutes • 1.85:1 • Italy
Spine: #612 Editions: DVD, Blu-ray
What seems at first to be a straightforward tale of two people—played by Oscar-winning actress Juliette Binoche and opera singer William Shimell—getting to know each other over the course of an afternoon gradually reveals itself as something richer, stranger, and trickier.
In the 1940s, the wit of playwright Noël Coward and the craft of filmmaker David Lean melded harmoniously in one of cinema’s greatest writer-director collaborations.
Of all the cinematic New Waves that broke over the world in the 1960s, the one in Czechoslovakia was among the most fruitful, fascinating, and radical.
Hollis Frampton
266 minutes • 1.33:1 • United States
Spine: #607 Editions: DVD, Blu-ray
An icon of the American avant-garde, Hollis Frampton made rigorous, audacious, brainy, and downright thrilling films, leaving behind a body of work that remains unparalleled.