Hlynur Pálmason’s Top 10

Hlynur Pálmason’s Top10

Hlynur Pálmason is an artist and filmmaker who was born in 1984 in Iceland. He began his career as a visual artist and went on to pursue an education at the National Film School of Denmark. His debut feature, Winter Brothers, premiered in the main competition at the 2017 Locarno Film Festival. His second feature, A White, White Day, premiered at the 2019 Cannes Critic’s Week, and his latest feature, Godland, premiered in Un Certain Regard at the 2022 Cannes Film Festival. Pálmason lives and works in Iceland and Denmark with his wife and three children.

Dec 1, 2023
  • 1 (tie)

    Robert Bresson

    L’argent

  • Robert Bresson

    Pickpocket

    L’argent was the first Bresson film I ever saw, and it scared me with its beauty and craft. I saw Pickpocket quickly after that and was deeply moved by it. It’s mysterious how a filmmaker like Bresson can project so much emotion with just technical, formal elements. There’s so much space for the viewer in his films; there isn’t any one meaning being imposed on you. I think that’s why he is so singular and impossible to imitate.

  • 2 (tie)

    Andrei Tarkovsky

    Stalker

  • Andrei Tarkovsky

    Mirror

    When I think about Tarkovsky’s films, they blend together in my mind. There are certain scenes that seem like they could be from any one of his works. That’s partly why I think of these two films as siblings. They both had a profound effect on me when I was a young person, and they were probably the first two of his that I saw. His imagery is so distinctive that it transcends narrative.

  • 3 (tie)

    Stanley Kubrick

    Barry Lyndon

  • Stanley Kubrick

    Dr. Strangelove, or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb

    I didn’t always know if I liked Kubrick’s films; they have such an uncomfortable atmosphere. But there’s something about them that makes them worth returning to; you never get tired of them. He doesn’t compromise; he’s so audacious, and you always feel like he’s showing you the way. You never have to doubt that he’s going to take you to an interesting place.

  • 4 (tie)

    Carlos Saura

    Cría cuervos . . .

  • Víctor Erice

    The Spirit of the Beehive

    This is my fourth and last tie—sorry . . . I saw these films on the same weekend and fell in love with the lead actress, Ana Torrent. It’s a tricky thing to direct children. You might be writing a film for a young actor in mind, but the years pass by so quickly, and if you happen to get the funding to make the project, that actor has already grown up. It’s hard to capture the moment in a child’s life when they are seeing the world and absorbing it in that special way that kids do. So I think it’s magical that these two brilliant Spanish filmmakers worked with her at this time in her childhood. And I love the other films they’ve made.

  • 5

    Mike Leigh

    Naked

    This is my favorite Mike Leigh film. It almost feels like a debut, even though it’s not. It’s so wild, almost to the point of feeling uncontrolled, but its craziness is very human. It sucks the energy out of you, but it’s also very funny. Sometimes the scenes seem like they wouldn’t work on the page, but they’re fearless. Like a first-time filmmaker, Leigh doesn’t second-guess himself.

  • 6

    John Cassavetes

    A Woman Under the Influence

    This is such a sad and beautiful film. I love the world that John Cassavetes and Gena Rowlands created, so it’s hard to pick a favorite among their movies. This one is so devastating, and I remember really needing the joyful music that plays at the end. Rowlands and Falk are my favorite on-screen couple in all of cinema.

  • 7

    Michael Haneke

    The Piano Teacher

    This is one of my favorite Haneke films. The rhythm of the editing and the sound and the way he tells the story—it works like music. He reminds me of Bresson in that way; his formal choices feel effortless, but every one of them has a lot of rhythmic impact. Haneke has a deep understanding of how image and sound can go together in surprising ways.

  • 8

    Michelangelo Antonioni

    Blow-Up

    I saw this quite early in my film education; at the time I hadn’t seen a lot of art-house cinema, so it felt strange and unconventional. I doubted whether it was any good; I just didn’t know what to think. But when you feel a movie is honest and personal, you get drawn into it. I’ve since seen it three times, and it gets better and better. Antonioni is a master craftsman, and this is a film you can revisit and learn new things each time.

  • 9

    David Lynch

    Lost Highway

    This movie has probably my favorite first thirty minutes in any film. It starts with this beautiful title sequence, with the image of headlights, and a David Bowie track playing over it. You get drawn into the atmosphere. It’s told in a very personal and beautiful way. Lynch gets a lot of credit for his visual sensibility, but I think his sound design is inspiring too. It’s so brilliant and playful.

  • 10

    Robert Altman

    Nashville

    I don’t know how Altman made this film. I have a hard enough time focusing on two characters, but he can cram so many into a scene; I don’t know how his brain can handle that. From the energy that comes off the screen, you get a sense of how vibrant and alive the atmosphere must have been on set.