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Description: Film directors.  The general public loves actors, but film buffs worship directors most of all.  How important is the director?  What are their methods?  Who are your favorites?
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Total Film's Greatest Directors Ever List 
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pippin06
pippin06
Posts 446

Total Film's Greatest Directors Ever List



A new list by some random publication has been published...imagine that?!?

http://www.totalfilm.com/features/the_greatest_directors_ever_-_part_1

I thought it was simply tailor-made for this group.  While you may or may not agree with the order, I liked how they described each director with interesting nicknames and an interesting list, too.  Thoughts?



     

            
schulen
schulen
Posts 10

Re: Total Film's Greatest Directors Ever List



I don't see the point of such an expansive list.

 Trying to word this properly... the 100 greatest directors is, essentially, name every director you can think of with more than one great film under his belt and then order them, right?

 Obviously that's not strictly, across the books true, but if you're allowing for 100 directors, you're not making any tough cuts. It's really just, think of directors.

 As for the top 10, the important part, I don't see anything very risky there. PJ and Fincher haven't earned their way on there yet, but other than that, it's the list you usually hear.

 Generally, at least. 



     

            
sonofkinski
sonofkinski
Posts 34

Re: Total Film's Greatest Directors Ever List



The "important" part of the list comes directly from its expansiveness, I think.  I read about a number of directors that I now want to check out way outside of the Top Ten.  The Top Ten, if anything, is the part that interests me the least.  It's like any rock magazine trotting out an "...of All Time" list featuring, yet again, The Beatles, Nirvana, and Radiohead.  Yay.

Anyway, the nicknames are novel and the "If you must see just one..." example for each is both helpful and interesting given some of the choices made (James Cameron's original 'The Terminator' is picked -- which I like -- as is Sam Peckinpah's 'Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid' -- which I don't (over 'The Wild Bunch' and 'Straw Dogs'?)).

Random thoughts as I scroll:

95. George Lucas: It's good to see The Bearded One's directorial work not get overrated.  The original 'Star Wars' is what it is, 'American Graffiti' has its charms, and 'THX 1138' is a bore.  Much more important as a producer and idea "mash-up" man.

82. James Whale: A little low on the list, as usual.  Whale's consistently passed  over when you think about just how influential -- and still fantastic -- 'Frankenstein' and 'Bride of Frankenstein' are.  Probably needs a fuller catalogue to get too high, but he's always in the shadows of the monsters.

74. Tony Scott: Ugh.

67. Federico Fellini: '8 1/2', 'Satyricon', 'La Dolce Vita', 'Juliet of the Spirits', 'La Strada', and an awesome segment in the anthology film 'Spirits of the Dead' based on a Poe story called "Never Bet the Devil Your Head".  Fellini needs a bump up the list.  

52. Michael Haneke: Instant credibility.  'Cache' and 'The Piano Teacher' are great.  

32. Christopher Nolan: #32?  Really?  Above Fritz Lang, Werner Herzog, and Roman Polanski?  Are you sure?  For just three movies?  Hmm.

13. Billy Wilder: I can't believe it took me until last night to see 'Sunset Boulevard'.  Amazing film.  

12. Quentin Tarantino: Trade spots with Fellini and I've got no beef.

1. Alfred Hitchcock: Word.


The list made me want to pick at it (obviously), so it does its job.  

Notable exclusions:

Terry Gilliam (did I just miss him on the list?  WTF?)
Park Chanwook (I'll take 'Lady Vengeance' and 'Oldboy' over 'Memento' and 'Batman Begins', at least.)
Andrei Tarkovsky ('Solaris', 'Stalker', 'The Mirror')
Dario Argento (slightly overrated in general, but can't deny his 'eye'.)
Takashi Miike (greatness that crosses and melts together genres. 'Ichi the Killer', 'Audition', etc.)


 


     

            
Risselada
Risselada
Posts 1362

Re: Total Film's Greatest Directors Ever List



schulen:
I don't see the point of such an expansive list.
 Trying to word this properly... the 100 greatest directors is, essentially, name every director you can think of with more than one great film under his belt and then order them, right?
 Obviously that's not strictly, across the books true, but if you're allowing for 100 directors, you're not making any tough cuts. It's really just, think of directors.
 As for the top 10, the important part, I don't see anything very risky there. PJ and Fincher haven't earned their way on there yet, but other than that, it's the list you usually hear.
 Generally, at least.


I would say there are a lot of tough cuts to make.  In some ways I think it would be almost easier to make a list of the top 10 directors.  Yeah there are some tough cuts, but you know who the top tier directors are so you know what you have to pick from.  When you start getting past 50, you have a pretty gigantic pool of directors to choose from and I think the decision gets very tough.


There is another list of greatest directors from the website.  They Shoot Pictures Don't They?
http://www.theyshootpictures.com/gf1000_top100directors.htm

There are 45 differeces between that list and this one from Total Film.  Some of them rather surprising.  The Total Film list obviously favors more recent directors.

Here is a list of all of the directors who appear on both lists.

Alfred Hitchcock
Martin Scorsese
Steven Spielberg
Howard Hawks
Francis Ford Coppola
Orson Welles
Ingmar Bergman
Stanley Kubrick
Akira Kurosawa
Quentin Tarantino
Billy Wilder
John Ford
Michael Powell (& Emeric Pressburger)
David Cronenberg
Joel and Ethan Coen
Woody Allen
David Lynch
Jean Renoir
Robert Altman
Sam Peckinpah
Luis Buñuel
Terrence Malick
Yasujiro Ozu
Carol Reed
Roman Polanski
Sergio Leone
James Cameron
Ridley Scott
David Lean
Frank Capra
Preston Sturges
François Truffaut
Werner Herzog
Krzysztof Kieslowski
Fritz Lang
Brian De Palma
John Huston
Nicholas Ray
Jean-Luc Godard
John Cassavetes
Robert Bresson
Federico Fellini
Michael Curtiz
Sergei Eisenstein
Nicolas Roeg
Milos Forman
Kenji Mizoguchi
George Romero
Satyajit Ray
James Whale
Carl Theodor Dreyer
Buster Keaton
DW Griffith
Wong Kar-Wai
George Lucas


Here is a list of all of the directors listed on the They Shoot Pictures list, but not on the Total Film list:

Charles Chaplin
F. W. Murnau
Andrei Tarkovsky
Michelangelo Antonioni
Vittorio De Sica
Roberto Rossellini
Max Ophüls
Jean Vigo
Stanley Donen & Gene Kelly
Luchino Visconti 
Alain Resnais
Ernst Lubitsch
Bernardo Bertolucci
Marcel Carné
Victor Fleming
Abbas Kiarostami
George Cukor
R. W. Fassbinder
Pier Paolo Pasolini
Jaques Tati
Douglas Sirk
Leo McCarey
Vincente Minnelli
Elia Kazan
Joseph von Sternberg
Erich von Stroheim
Joseph L. Mankiewicz
Jacques Rivette
Jacques Tourneur
William Wyler
Wim Wenders
Chris Marker
Hou Hsiao-Hsien
Alexander Dovzhenko
King Vidor
Stan Brakhage
Jacques Demy
Eric Rohmer
Jean Cocteau
Sidney Lumet
Robert Flaherty
Otto Preminger
Theo Angelopoulos
George Stevens
Glauber Rocha


Here is a list of all of the directors listed on the Total Film list, but not on the They Shoot Pictures list:

Peter Jackson
David Fincher
Steven Soderbergh
Paul Thomas Anderson
Clint Eastwood
Tim Burton
Hayao Miyazaki
Michael Mann
Jean-Pierre Melville
Christopher Nolan
Rob Reiner
Ang Lee
Alexander Payne
Mike Leigh
Sam Fuller
Robert Wise
Michael Haneke
Don Siegel
Spike Lee
Hal Ashby
Sam Raimi
John Carpenter
Richard Linklater
Bryan Singer
Ken Loach
Pedro Almodóvar
Alexander Mackendrick
John Sayles
Tony Scott
William Friedkin
Cameron Crowe
John Woo
Lars Von Trier
Gus Van Sant
Peter Weir
Curtis Hanson
Paul Verhoeven
Alan J Pakula
M Night Shyamalan
Baz Luhrmann
John Sturges
Sofia Coppola
Abel Ferrara


I will admit that it does suck that Terry Gilliam isn’t on either of these!



     

            
sonofkinski
sonofkinski
Posts 34

Re: Total Film's Greatest Directors Ever List



"I will admit that it does suck that Terry Gilliam isn’t on either of these!"

Seriously -- what's going on?

I was going to add Jacques Tourner as an exclusion, and saw that They Shoot Pictures did it for me.  Then I see names like Fassbinder, Pasolini, and Antonioni.  If anything, the notion of "no tough cuts" seems a bit....wrong.

I was reading an essay collection ('A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again') by this author named David Foster Wallace, and in one he spends time on the circuit with a young American tennis player who's ranked #79 in the world.  A quote:

"You are invited to try to imagine what it would be like to be among the hundred best in the world at something.  At anything.  I have tried to imagine; it's hard."


     

            
indieabby88
indieabby88
Posts 267

Re: Total Film's Greatest Directors Ever List



There are some on that list I agree with, and others I don't. I can see that some of the directors on the list are there simply because they "have" to be, like George Lucas, whose latest examples of directing, namely one "Star Wars" prequel trilogy, showed narrowness of vision and too much dependency on special effects over acting, even though he had a pretty damn good cast. He wouldn't make my list of greatest directors, that's for sure.

Neither, for that matter, would Baz Luhrmann. I've never understood people's attraction to his movies, which I find ridiculously over-the-top. "Moulin Rouge" has become increasingly bearable with repeated viewings, but mostly because of the beautiful production values. "Romeo + Juliet" I thought, was far from impressive, just one more nail in Shakespeare's coffin.

M. Night Shyamalan's place on this list is also a mystery to me. The more I look at this list I think it's a mixture of actual great directors with directors who have a place in modern pop culture, whether or not that place is positive.


     

            
Risselada
Risselada
Posts 1362

Re: Total Film's Greatest Directors Ever List



indieabby88:
M. Night Shyamalan's place on this list is also a mystery to me. The more I look at this list I think it's a mixture of actual great directors with directors who have a place in modern pop culture, whether or not that place is positive.

Yeah, and I think this is evidenced by the fact that Peter Jackson and David Fincher are in the top 10!!!!!!!!!!  They don't even make the They Shoot Pictures list at all!



     

            
sonofkinski
sonofkinski
Posts 34

Re: Total Film's Greatest Directors Ever List



It's probably obvious to say, but each (and every) list has to be aware of its audience.  One appearing in a popcorn (?) mag like Total Film is better off serving its readership by championing the director of 'Fight Club' over, say, the short film experimentation  of Stan Brakhage.  A niche 'net list like They Shoot Pictures is more likely to draw fire based on the exclusion of the latter from people that...well, post and blog on Spout.

     

            
indieabby88
indieabby88
Posts 267

Re: Total Film's Greatest Directors Ever List



That's true. Still, I think most people would agree that M. Night Shyamalan doesn't belong on any list of great directors, no matter the audience.

And Murnau really ought to be on the Total Film list.



     

            
JimBell
JimBell
Posts 94

Re: Total Film's Greatest Directors Ever List



Having read the major review on cordless drills, I told the guy at House of Tools that I wanted a DeWalt drill, and he burst into laughter, saying, "If I sold a hundred of each drill, I would get 3 Makita's back, 3 Bosch's back, and maybe 40 DeWalts within the year."

Why the difference? ?The offical drill testing review forcused on torque and battery longevity (what they could test); the HOuse of Tools guy focused on repair record (what he could know about).

The same goes for lists of directors: If you don't list your evaluation criteria, there will be a lot of spinning wheels and wasted words.

Peace,

JIMBELL



     

            
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