MovieSorter

loading Title loading Tws summary loading Trust loading Year ▲ Viewable
Desk Set
Great 66 Points 1957

Spencer Tracy & Katharine Hepburn weren’t hardly done being the greatest couple in Hollywood history when they made Desk Set in 1957. Ten years later, they’d star as parents whose daughter brings home the very black Sydney Poitier as her fiancé in Guess Who’s Coming To Dinner

Full Review »
WikChip Video The Greatest Demo of All Time
BUtterfield 8
Very Good 66 Points 1960

Liz Taylor’s sultry star power makes BUtterfield 8 an enduring curiosity, now more legendary than ever in the wake of her death. A sophisticated story about sexual motives makes it a quality film.

La Liz plays a sometime model who cavorts with wealthy married men until falling for one in pa…

Full Review »
WikChip Image Iconic Liz: Just ask Camille Paglia
Breakfast at Ti...
Great 68 Points 1961

Breakfast at Tiffany’s is the apotheosis of Kennedy-era Mad Men America. Was it ever on the show? Don’t recall. Coulda, shoulda.

Blake Edwards opens his movie of Truman Capote’s novella on an empty Fifth Avenue, with Audrey Hepburn in a little black dress emerging at the only Tiffany’s in…

Full Review »
WikChip Image Audrey in The Little Black Dress
3 Replies
  • Zimmerview – Regarding "Wick's Review":http://www.viewguide.com/m...
  • Wick – Regarding "Wick's Review":http://www.viewguide.com/m...
  • Zimmerview – Regarding "Wick's Review":http://www.viewguide.com/m...
Midnight Cowboy
None Yet 0 Points 1969
The French Conn...
Great 7 Points 1971

For its time, The French Connection is a ground-breaking movie, and with a gripping narrative alongside brutal action and strong performances from Hackman and Schneider, it deserves recognition.

Full Review »
Serpico
Great 79 Points 1973

This early Al Pacino classic holds up well, especially as a prototype for the bevy of counterculture hero and realistic cop movies that followed.

Highly recommended for cop movie fans, Pacino fans and those interested in 60s counterculture.

Full Review »
WikChip Image The real Frank Serpico testifying
Harry and Tonto
Great 66 Points 1974

Art Carney reached late career nirvana as Harry the cat lover in Harry and Tonto. Tonto? His ginger tabby. I prefer gray tabbies, so kinda understand his ardor. Carney won his sole Oscar as a gray-haired Best Actor.

Paul Mazursky’s second big directorial hit after “Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice”…

Full Review »
WikChip Video Art Carney peaks as Harry the cat lover.
Annie Hall
Great 66 Points 1977

It hasn’t aged well, this Seventies icon. Maybe because Woody Allen self-parodied himself in real life, or Left Wing Manhattan neurotics are no longer exotic characters, or topical gags don’t have much shelf life. “La-dee-da, la-dee-da.” Sure it’s still a benchmark movie. The Academy doesn’t …

Full Review »
WikChip Video Trailer for a Best Picture winner
Raging Bull
Really Great 75 Points 1980

Brutally brilliant, Raging Bull grew legendary after fading from the silver screen. It remains one of the greatest movies ever made, flawed only by Cathy Moriarty’s disappointing portrayal of Vickie La Motta. Everything else – notably Scorsese’s up-close and personal filmmaking, coupled with …

Full Review »
WikChip Image Jake was crazy for Vicki. Really.
3 Replies
  • Wick – Regarding "MetalJunky5000's Review":/movie_reviews/2...
  • Wick – Regarding "Wick's Review":/movie_reviews/1753-raging...
  • Wick – Nice work AMC, ringing in the first review of Raging...
The Secret of N...
Great 66 Points 1980

Tesla stands alone: the most mystical, the most gifted, the most freaky of the great industrial magnates, e.g., Edison, Westinghouse & J.P. Morgan, who also appear in this biopic of the Serbian-American inventor. From Zagreb, it presents as a bizarre movie where people’s mouths don’t match what’…

Full Review »
WikChip Video Tesla meets J.P. Morgan. Edison fumes.