The Life of the Pumpkin is directed by Céline Sciamma, who won best adapted screenplay at the 2017 César Awards for Ma vie de Courgette; Set on an isolated island in 1760, it tells the story of Marianne, who was commissioned to paint a wedding portrait of Héloïse, who had just left the monastery. Marianne must paint a portrait of Héloïse, who is about to be resentlessly, without her knowledge. Marianne finds the remedy by watching the young woman during the day and painting her in the evenings. As Héloïse spends her final days as a free woman, an unexpected intimacy and attraction arises between the two women.
10.Portrait de la jeune fille en feu (2019) The Life of the Pumpkin is directed by Céline Sciamma, who won best adapted screenplay at the...
Top 10 Films of the Last 20 Years- Part 5
10.Portrait de la jeune fille en feu (2019)
The Life of the Pumpkin is directed by Céline Sciamma, who won best adapted screenplay at the 2017 César Awards for Ma vie de Courgette; Set on an isolated island in 1760, it tells the story of Marianne, who was commissioned to paint a wedding portrait of Héloïse, who had just left the monastery. Marianne must paint a portrait of Héloïse, who is about to be resentlessly, without her knowledge. Marianne finds the remedy by watching the young woman during the day and painting her in the evenings. As Héloïse spends her final days as a free woman, an unexpected intimacy and attraction arises between the two women.
The Life of the Pumpkin is directed by Céline Sciamma, who won best adapted screenplay at the 2017 César Awards for Ma vie de Courgette; Set on an isolated island in 1760, it tells the story of Marianne, who was commissioned to paint a wedding portrait of Héloïse, who had just left the monastery. Marianne must paint a portrait of Héloïse, who is about to be resentlessly, without her knowledge. Marianne finds the remedy by watching the young woman during the day and painting her in the evenings. As Héloïse spends her final days as a free woman, an unexpected intimacy and attraction arises between the two women.
9.Zodiac (2007)
Bearing the signature of director David Fincher, who likes to leave the audience in a pile of riddles, the Zodiac deals with the story of a serial killer who kills randomly selected victims in places where no algorithm is holding them. Fincher invites the audience to join journalist Robert Greysmith, Paul Avery and detective David Toschi, who, like his other films, are chasing a serial killer in a dark atmosphere. The film, which begins in the '60s and tells the story of many years of murders, cryptic letters to journalists, and the experiences of three men trying to solve these murders around this incident, is a true story based on the novel of the same name by Robert Greysmith. .
8.Mad Max: Fury Road (2015)
The 2015 film Mad Max: Fury Road, in which George Miller has added a new film to his trilogy after many years, is undoubtedly one of the most perfect films of recent years, both technically and storytelling. Set in a post-apocalyptic world, the film follows the abduction by Imperator Furiosa, a.k.a. Mad Max, of the four women used by immortan Joe as a 'stud'. He tells the story of running away from those who are after them in an action plane that never stops.
7.Jodaeiye Nader az Simin (2011)
Asghar Farhadi's award-winning film A Separation contains inherently valuable findings about being human, with its astonistacting, management and masterful dialogue. It is based on a wide range of themes, such as leaving the country, leaving the mother and father, and leaving the right known, even if it is based on the separation of a husband and wife. A Separation, which has a layered story, refers to the intricate nature of man when exploring the conditions and even consequences of telling "truth" in a plot that moves towards insolubility with what everyone has hidden from each other. This time, the film discusses the absoluteness of truth by intertwining moral dilemmas with religion as well as a system, as justice sits at the center of the story.
6.There Will Be Blood (2007)
Based on Upton Sinclair's 1927 book "Oil!", veteran director Paul Thomas Anderson's 2007 film Bloodshed, which won the Academy Awards for Best Cinematography and Best Actor, is a film by capitalism. one of the most important films of all time regarding its rise is undoubtedly... Daniel Day Lewis' tremendous performance, the atmosphere of the combination of Paul Thomas Anderson and Robert Elswit, will shed blood, money, religion and ancestry, all in common, a film soaked in blood.
5.Toni Erdmann (2016)
Maren Ade's feature film Toni Erdmann, the three of them, is a fun journey for a man who has played the ultimate role in life to overcome unhappiness. A film showing the woman lost in corporate anxiety the insignificance of where to take the next step. That's what makes Toni Erdmann valuable! Roasted in the sun, as undefined as a footprint on a windy beach, as unique as the temperature felt standing.
4.Bir Zamanlar Anadolu’da (2011)
Nuri Bilge Ceylan returns to the troubled world of the countryside again with his sixth feature film, Once Upon a Time in Anatolia, which won the Grand Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival in 2011, but this time with the tension of a murder story. The film, directed by Nuri Bilge Ceylan and transformed into a magnificent two-and-a-half-hour journey, woven with nuanced details, directed by Nuri Bilge Ceylan, by the hand of Ercan Kesal, Ebru Ceylan and Nuri Bilge Ceylan. While focusing on the murder investigation in a remote Anatolian town, he also produces a nuanced panoroma of Turkey.
3.Caché (2005)
The veteran director Michael Haneke, who ensured that he embroidered the violence into the audience's soul without projecting it to the stage and always managed to disturb us in the audience seat, both directed and written the screenplay. One of the successful examples of Haneke cinema, which combines a true story with a tremendous fiction. Confronting past sins, conscience, compassion, anger, doubt, such as the concepts of open expression, in fact, appears on the axis of moral values. Georges and Anne have a son, Pierrot, and an intellectual life. Georges and Anne, who one day found an anonymous package on their doorstep, said: They get very restless from a videotape wrapped in a picture of a face with blood coming out of a child's hand. The tape shows a stationary camera recording the front of their house all day long, and as the tapes diversify, we realize that Georges was hiding a childhood memory.
2.Mulholland Dr. (2001)
David Lynch, one of the directors who has made his mark on the history of cinema, tells hollywood in his own way, by isolating Hollywood from the narrative, fiction, reality, which Hollywood has adopted and forced to accept. The luxury car driving on Mulholland Drive stops on the road; The driver and the man next to him pull a gun on the woman in the back seat and try to get him out of the vehicle, but one of the two vehicles racing on the road smashes into a limousine. The woman who survived the vehicle descends into Los Angeles. He takes refuge in the home of an elderly woman on vacation and meets the elderly woman's niece Betty, who is in town to become an actress. The story of the film is based on Betty's acting career and the mystery of the woman who identifies herself as Rita and suffers from memory loss from the accident. As Betty and Rita's relationship becomes increasingly strange and irrevocable, this vortex created by Lynch builds a nightmare about what a darkness Hollywood is going through.
1.Faa yeung nin wa (2000)
Love Time is one of the most pathetic, true love stories ever passed on to the screen, the most special one for us. How romance coincides with the institution of marriage that we have established to sustain our lives, how it can't be filled with the idea of 'what the neighbors say' and the internalized norms, again in Wong's unique cinema, poetic and very realistic. we'll have a chance to live again with representation. It reminds us that the greatness of love is not from the obstacles overcome as in fantasy stories, but by the infinite effect it has left on the oppressed beneath it. Maybe they will have loneliness that makes them feel that they should be held on as they will live in the future, or that unites these two people left behind by their wives with just a fling, and whether they are dealt with in the context of fate or need, they touch, and the effect is infinite.
10.Lost in Translation (2003) Written and directed by Sofia Coppola, She can speak, bringing together unforgettable performances by Scar...
Top 10 Films of the Last 20 Years- Part 4
10.Lost in Translation (2003)
Written and directed by Sofia Coppola, She can speak, bringing together unforgettable performances by Scarlett Johansson and Bill Murray. Bob, played by Murray, is a middle-aged American actor. He comes to Japan to shoot a commercial and begins to disappear into this different culture in which he enters because the language and perceptions surrounding him are too foreign to him, while struggling with loneliness in the crowd will eat him up from the inside out. But he meets Charlotte at the same hotel. The person who can share these two cultures starts spending a weekend together in different cultures. As time begins, silence begins to speak out, and now the melancholy of the two people is knotted together in such a way that they cannot be separated, creating a great area of chaos and peace at the same time. If one speaks, it is an epic poem about being both a stranger and being a whole.
9.Inglourious Basterds (2009)
Offering an alternative narrative of history, the Gang of Degenerates is an ascension film that came to the next, symbolizing a relative decline in the Tarantino filmography we're talking about. Originally titled Quel maledetto treno blindato, it is inspired by the 1978 film by Italian director Enzo G. Castellari, but tells a very different story. With a familiar theme of revenge in his cinema at the center of the film, the film embarks on a different showdown with the Second World War and the Nazis through this theme. On the one hand, while parodying the Nazis, on the other hand, he brings a cynical approach to Holocaust-Holocaust cinema. Tarantino, who we know is a good cinephile and respects his art, makes films in the film and refers to the history of cinema and various films. The film's impressive final scene makes the concept of history problematic and gives it an alternative approach by saying, "If it were that, but it was like this." He doesn't hide his anger at the Nazis and the destruction they've created, which is expressed in a "Tarantino-like" style.
Written and directed by Sofia Coppola, She can speak, bringing together unforgettable performances by Scarlett Johansson and Bill Murray. Bob, played by Murray, is a middle-aged American actor. He comes to Japan to shoot a commercial and begins to disappear into this different culture in which he enters because the language and perceptions surrounding him are too foreign to him, while struggling with loneliness in the crowd will eat him up from the inside out. But he meets Charlotte at the same hotel. The person who can share these two cultures starts spending a weekend together in different cultures. As time begins, silence begins to speak out, and now the melancholy of the two people is knotted together in such a way that they cannot be separated, creating a great area of chaos and peace at the same time. If one speaks, it is an epic poem about being both a stranger and being a whole.
9.Inglourious Basterds (2009)
Offering an alternative narrative of history, the Gang of Degenerates is an ascension film that came to the next, symbolizing a relative decline in the Tarantino filmography we're talking about. Originally titled Quel maledetto treno blindato, it is inspired by the 1978 film by Italian director Enzo G. Castellari, but tells a very different story. With a familiar theme of revenge in his cinema at the center of the film, the film embarks on a different showdown with the Second World War and the Nazis through this theme. On the one hand, while parodying the Nazis, on the other hand, he brings a cynical approach to Holocaust-Holocaust cinema. Tarantino, who we know is a good cinephile and respects his art, makes films in the film and refers to the history of cinema and various films. The film's impressive final scene makes the concept of history problematic and gives it an alternative approach by saying, "If it were that, but it was like this." He doesn't hide his anger at the Nazis and the destruction they've created, which is expressed in a "Tarantino-like" style.
8.Salinui chueok (2003)
Bong Joon-ho's memorable films this year with the Palme d'Or Parasite, bong Joon-ho's memorable films, is one of the director's most famous films, as in many of them. Based on a true story, the 2003 murder diary reflected the story of two detectives trying to capture South Korea's first serial killer, and the question of who was responsible for these murders remained unanswered in the film, as in reality.
7.Oldeuboi (2003)
The old lad, directed by Chan-wook Park in 2003, is one of the masterpieces that have cost popular culture with action scenes and, of course, the surprise end of the epic saga, which Dae-su Oh, in search of revenge. Oldboy, the second film in the director's famous revenge trilogy, has a special place not only in the trilogy, but also in all revenge films. But this film is not just about its story; from cinematographic narrative that supports his story to his ingenious fiction, including plan sequences, from great acting to the film's revenge-themed script, to repeated plan compositions and symbolic depictions to add emotional depth. ; it is a finely crafted work of art.
6.The Act of Killing (2012)
One of the most disturbing documentaries in the history of cinema, The Act of Killing is transformed into a very unique experience thanks to Joshua Oppenheimer's understanding of surreal cinema melted on a ball with investigative documentarymaking. Best definition, he's making a movie in a movie. He prefers to build such a brutal series of murders in a way we're not used to. He chooses the film's heroes from the executioners and paramilitary group leaders who carried out the massacre. With his connections and knowledge over his years in Indonesia, he prefers to reenact events in a didactic way with an analytical documentary analysis. So how can a massacre of up to a million deaths be revived? The answer is given by gang and paramilitary leaders, who identify themselves as free people and have become heroes over the years with state policies.
5.The Children of Men (2006)
In The Last Hope, signed by mexican master director Alfonso Cuarón, humanity is in danger of extinction. As of 2027, the world is the scene of events that cannot be understood in any way. There is no such thing as reproduction anymore. While this situation has shaken all the balance swings from a political point of view, one group of people has surrendered their existence to this course, and another group has rebelled to change the current situation. In this process, Great Britain is the country that managed to prevent the turmoil and maintain its peace because of the military imperialist system it used as a form of governance. Theo is kidnapped one day while he is a bureaucrat standing behind in these events. In addition to the balance between the social and the individual, The Last Hope easily makes its name among the best science fiction in the 2000s, especially with Cuarón and cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezki doing technical wonders.
4.Holy Motors (2012)
One of the most "bizarre" films by French director Leos Carax, who has developed his own unique cinematic language, Holy Motors is in many ways the director's toughest and most critical film. The film is originally made in Tokyo with Michel Gondry and Bong Joon-Ho! It was created with the logic of variations on the merde character he used in his film, but there is a very interesting work as a story, so that there is a systemic philosophical critique, such as those who consider the film to be a stoning on the business world. There are those who think that the film is very difficult to read because it is not intended to expand the rhetoric it produces, but that does not mean that the Sacred Motors have lost anything of their value; On the contrary, what the film says turns out to be a saying about everything and everyone at some point. The film's surreal narrative of dozens of metaphors causes reality and illusion to intertwine.
3.American Honey (2016)
Andrea Arnold, one of the characteristics of her fourth feature film American Honey, is that the film we watch edit edited on the scale of 1:37:1, which is reversed and in fact not so bright. He continues to explore this dream with the route he has drawn along the way. American Honey is a journey that can reach wider and more communal inferences from individual outlets. American Honey, which describes the young Star's escape from home as she tries not to get away from the house as she wanders between passion, love, ambition and belonging, is one of her productions that can clearly reflect her youthful feeling to the silver screen.
2.Beoning (2018)
Lee Chang-dong, one of the most important directors of South Korean cinema, is a short story adapted from the short story Barn Burning by veteran writer Haruki Murakami, shot eight years after his previous film Poetry. However, the film enriches the structure of this story as much as it can, making the original text much more complex. The story contains only a limited amount of events that we see in the film. From there, lee Chang-dong and Jung-mi Oh, who co-wrote the screenplay for the film, were inspired by the original text, and they went through the doors he opened and turned his films into an original narrative.
1.Sen to Chihiro no kamikakushi (2001)
We can describe Japanese anime as a culture in itself. Due to their own rules and their own understanding of anime, their awareness is increasing, their fan base is increasing day by day. Although some of them are in series form, we have watched and continue to watch extremely successful examples of anime in feature film form. Hayao Miyazaki is regarded as the greatest master of these films. Master Miyazaki has revealed many films at the level of masterpieces that center on man's relationship with himself and nature. We can say that the director's best-known film and his masterpiece, which melts the themes of his entire career into a single crucible, is The Escape of the Spirits.
10.Moulin Rouge! (2001) Directed by one of the masters of dance films, Baz Luhrmann, The Red Mill is about the unattainable love between ...
Top 10 Films of the Last 20 Years- Part 3
10.Moulin Rouge! (2001)
Directed by one of the masters of dance films, Baz Luhrmann, The Red Mill is about the unattainable love between Christian, a writer who came to the city to get involved in the bohemian life of Paris, and Satine, a cabaret actor who performed at the Moulin Rouge. he's getting it. Testing love full of obstacles that are hard to overcome due to Satine's terminal illness and the jealous attitude of the cabaret owner, the film returned from the Academy, where she was nominated in eight disciplines, with Oscars for Best Art Direction and Best Costume Design. The Tango de Roxanne scene, in which Christian and Satine's love of cabaret, Jim, is portrayed as a psychological and physical pressure on the couple, was one of the most remarkable dance scenes in the Moulin Rouge.
Directed by one of the masters of dance films, Baz Luhrmann, The Red Mill is about the unattainable love between Christian, a writer who came to the city to get involved in the bohemian life of Paris, and Satine, a cabaret actor who performed at the Moulin Rouge. he's getting it. Testing love full of obstacles that are hard to overcome due to Satine's terminal illness and the jealous attitude of the cabaret owner, the film returned from the Academy, where she was nominated in eight disciplines, with Oscars for Best Art Direction and Best Costume Design. The Tango de Roxanne scene, in which Christian and Satine's love of cabaret, Jim, is portrayed as a psychological and physical pressure on the couple, was one of the most remarkable dance scenes in the Moulin Rouge.
9.Call Me by Your Name (2017)
Call Me by Luca Guadagnino, the story of two lovers and pure passions who aim to make each other a part of not only their bodies but also their souls and to remain schizophrenic. All these beauties of the film, which perfectly matchs its narrative and visual style, tell us something special: the more we change and change, the closer we get to who we are, and sometimes we don't want change, even if we try to resist it, love is all our walls. Washes.
8.Inside Llewyn Davis (2013)
Sing The Songs Of You, written and directed by Ethan Coen and Joel Coen, is a film that has the ability to bring the purest form of melancholy to the audience. The two structures on which the film is based are drama and music. The fact that melancholy even appears in the colors of the film has made the film a distinct point in the Coen Brothers' cinema. Llewyn Davis, who lived in New York in the '60s, built her life on her music and her dream was to become a great musician. However, while struggling to cope with the harsh conditions and create his art, he spends his life sleeping on a couch in his ex-girlfriend's house and listening to his sister's problems. In this misplaced homeland, llewyn Davis' melancholy begins to surround him.
7.Carol (2015)
Carol, who sits in the director's chair of Todd Haynes; Adapted from Patricia Highsmith's passionate novel, it took its place in the vision after eleven years of production and was memorable for winning nominations at the Golden Globes and Oscar Scoring Awards. Bringing the conservative America of the 1950s to the audience, the film follows the events that unfolded when Carol met Therese, who worked as a clerk in a store and dreamed of a better life, and Carol, who was overwhelmed by her undying marriage. The film stars Cate Blanchett and Rooney Mara. He managed to conquer our hearts, especially with the music of Carter Burwell, the cinematographer of Oscar-nominated Ed Lachman, and his story that reflected love to us in its most realistic form.
6.No Country for Old Men (2007)
The Coen Brothers, one of his most successful films, no room for old people, is remembered by many with Javier Bardem's outstanding performance, but because it is such a distorting and distorting the classical narrative structure and western stereotypes. The fact that it reached for the Oscar statuette was recorded as one of the anomalies in the history of the Academy. It's about the cowboy character's relationship, played by the psychopathic killer Anton Chigurh and Josh Brolin, who turned his victims' right to life into a simple coin toss game, which turned into a cat-and-mouse game because of a bag of money. stunning and hard film; the structure of reversing the classic western patterns, the extraordinary atmosphere in which the fate of the people is determined not by the result of the coin-toss game, rather than to who will be the first to shoot, is a bit gothic, but in essence the whole fixed kind of raks somewhere far outside of their definitions.
5.La ciénaga (2001)
Lucrecia Martel's debut feature film, 2001, was filmed in The Swamp. The film describes the experiences of an Argentinian bourgeois family. The family, who spend the summer summer in their summer homes with their children, have a structure in which bourgeois morality is questioned harshly. Sexually insensitive family members who are insensitive to events, men who have lost power and racist approaches to the local people are the main points of the film. The film won the Alfred Bauer Award at the Berlin Film Festival and was nominated for a Golden Bear award at the same festival.
4.You Were Never Really Here (2017)
You Were Never Here, a character review that invited the viewer into Joe's shattered mind. Joe is a former soldier who fought in the Gulf War and a contract killer who makes his living saving little girls from child prostitution. He suppresses past traumas by violently practicing the high amount of violence that his work requires. The story begins with Joe hired to find his daughter Nina, who was kidnapped by a senator. Director Lynne Ramsay's innovative style of projecting a phenomenon hidden in the depths of one's mind, such as trauma, is one of the most important features of Never Been Here.
3.Kill Bill Vol.1 & Vol. 2 (2003 – 2004)
Quentin Tarantino's release six months apart, Kill Bill: Vol.1 and Kill Bill: Vol.2; On the day of her wedding, she is surrounded by a vow of vengeance taken by Bride, who was attacked by Bill and her team with her child on her wedding day, and survived this deadly oppression and came back to life after four years of coma. The film, in which Bride erases everyone on the death list in line with her vow of revenge, makes the complex-looking storystructure more fluid with successful flashback-flashforward narratives. It also enriches its narrative with its extreme fight choreography and the character's combined infrastructure.
2.Das weiße Band (2009)
Written and directed by Michael Haneke, the 2009 White Tape takes the audience back to before World War I. The film, which won the Palme d'Or at the 62nd Cannes Film Festival, shows terrorism in a town during that time period. From the director's point of view, the terrorism shown in the film represents the terrorism imposed on human beings every day, and paints a picture of political and religious pressures. In drawing this picture, the director shows that this terrorism has begun and been imposed by the education given at the school.
1.Gisaengchung (2019)
One of today's most important directors, South Korea's Bong Joon-ho's latest film Parasite, is undoubtedly one of the most talked about films of 2019 since the Cannes Film Festival, where it had its world premiere and reached the Palme d'Or. It is not exaggerated to say that the production, which has also made a name for itself at festivals such as Telluride, Toronto, Locarno and New York, which he visited after Cannes, is one of the last masterpieces of the past two decades. In Parasitic, where Bong Joon-ho has managed to combine different genres, as in his previous films, to achieve an original cinematic language and a high viewing pleasure, the class in his country is based on the story of two families whose lives intertwined. their differences are shed in the light.
10.Werckmeister harmóniák (2000) In a city that lives in its own state and dynamics, the usual struggle for authority continues. A circus...
Top 10 Films of the Last 20 Years- Part 2
10.Werckmeister harmóniák (2000)
In a city that lives in its own state and dynamics, the usual struggle for authority continues. A circus comes to the city from the eve of this wind of change, which is planned from the bottom to the bottom. There's finally going to be a big mess all over the city. Everyone wants to know what's going on in this wave of anarchy, but in the meantime, it's unwittingly becoming part of this change. In the midst of all this anarchy, Janus, who has a scientific personality, tries to understand only what is going on, but eventually suffers a great loss. The film painfully describes Janus' absolute loss to all his innocence. The film, co-directed by Béla Tarr and Ágnes Hranitzky, features six different cinematographers.
In a city that lives in its own state and dynamics, the usual struggle for authority continues. A circus comes to the city from the eve of this wind of change, which is planned from the bottom to the bottom. There's finally going to be a big mess all over the city. Everyone wants to know what's going on in this wave of anarchy, but in the meantime, it's unwittingly becoming part of this change. In the midst of all this anarchy, Janus, who has a scientific personality, tries to understand only what is going on, but eventually suffers a great loss. The film painfully describes Janus' absolute loss to all his innocence. The film, co-directed by Béla Tarr and Ágnes Hranitzky, features six different cinematographers.
9.Kynodontas (2009)
Giorgos Lanthimos's 2009 dog tooth, which introduces the wide spread of the dog, is a 2009 film of the world's most widespread audiences. It is about the lives of three siblings who live in a villa with their parents in a large garden and have no contact with the outside world. Lanthimos is creating an artificial world through the core family. The process of children in this world starting to wonder about life and discovering is explained through a number of absurd situations and elements of humor. Created with humor and absurdity, the new world places big question marks around the judgments accepted without question.
8.Stellet Licht (2007)
Director Barry Jenkins said, "The purest form of cinema. Now, when I think about it, I get the feeling that I felt ten years ago when I first saw the movie." After falling in love with a new woman, the production, which centered on a father whose faith began to question, returned with the Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival, where he competed for the Palme d'Or.
7.La mujer sin cabeza (2008)
Lucrecia Martel's third film, The Headless Woman, deals with the memory problem experienced by Vero, a member of the bourgeois class who crashes into something with her tool but continues on its way. Vero, who didn't look at what he was hitting, feared the situation, while the people around him were trying to make him forget about it and gradually deny it. In this respect, the film brought a heavy criticism of bourgeois morality, which did not pay the price for the problems it created. Acclaimed by critics, the production competed for the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival and won awards for Best Film, Best Director and Best Original Screenplay at the Argentine Academy Awards.
6.Vozvrashchenie (2003)
The film, which tells the story of Ivan and Andrey, who live alone with their mother and grandmother, changes all the way after a game on the beach when the brothers, who come running home after a game on the beach, learn that their father, who has not heard from him for 12 years, has returned. In this first feature film, Andrey Zvyagintsev portrays this world as the depression experienced by the Russian countryside, reflecting reality in its purest form while creating a dark dystopian atmosphere with both color tone and relationships between characters. .
5.Shaun of the Dead (2004)
Shaun's life isn't going his way. He hates his job, no one cares about him, and his girlfriend Liz doesn't look at their relationship very seriously. When Shaun decides to regain control of his life, an unexpected zombie invasion will complicate things. Simon Pegg and Nick Frost became one of the most memorable duos with the production, which absorbed the clichés of zombie movies and presented them as a comedy element.
4.A Serious Man (2009)
It's one of those "nev'i exclusive" masterpieces in the Coen Brothers filmography. In this film, where they take a look at their Jewish past and the culture of their childhood through professor Larry Gopnik and his family, santana and Jefferson Airplane music, rabbis, cancer, death, separation, which appears like a storm rising in the distance, but Still, there's a non-black comedy. This very personal, but once entered, the film that takes you away from the opening scene deserves to be one of the most successful films of filmography.
3.Les glaneurs et la glaneuse (2000)
Agnès Varda, one of the pioneers of the French New Wave and a master of documentary cinema, made her first digital attempt in 2000, directing her camera to "collectors". Agnès Varda is in this documentary; he focused on young people who were in court for collecting food from garbage, those who lived by eating out-of-date products, and those who collect waste materials for their art. It was enough for him to "collect". This documentary, which is in historical integrity and contemporary diversity, is the formation of a innovation that Varda brings us with its digital camera, which varda has gifted to him with the introduction of the millennium.
2.Uzak (2002)
Nuri Bilge Ceylan's third feature, Uzak, tells the intersecting story of Yusuf, who came to Istanbul to realize his dreams with Mahmut, who is thinking of going away from existential difficulties after leaving his wife. The film has a very pessimistic and dark tone, and while presenting the distance between Yusuf and Mahmoud, he leaves the audience alone with him. Muzaffer Özdemir, Emin Toprak and Zuhal Gencer are on the cast of the film, where we had the opportunity to see istanbul's old look with great image management. Let's add a sad note that Emin Toprak died in a car accident after filming the film, which won the Best Actor award shared by Muzaffer Özdemir and Emin Toprak at the Cannes Film Festival in 2003.
1.Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004)
From The Beginning, starring Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet, by Michel Gondry; he made a name for himself, especially with the theme of deleting his memory, and when he appeared in front of the audience, he was greeted with positive comments. The film, which also won the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay, delves into the events that unfolded as the relationship between joel, an introvert, and Clementine, who likes to act on her feelings. events that unfold when the two sides prefer to forget everything about the relationship in order to overcome the pain of separation; it reveals the declining passion in a relationship with emotional intensity and the devastating effect of the sadness that follows.
10.The Wolf of Wall Street (2013) Martin Scorsese, who recently started with A true story with The Irishman, took the sensational life of...
Top 10 Films of the Last 20 Years- Part 1
10.The Wolf of Wall Street (2013)
Martin Scorsese, who recently started with A true story with The Irishman, took the sensational life of Jordan Belfort, a broker on the American stock exchange in Money Hunter and then CEO of Stratton Oakmont, known for his greed and debauchery. it's under scrutiny. The production, which transformed its three-hour period into an advantage with its dynamism and rhythm, was nominated for five Oscars, including Best Film and Best Director.
Martin Scorsese, who recently started with A true story with The Irishman, took the sensational life of Jordan Belfort, a broker on the American stock exchange in Money Hunter and then CEO of Stratton Oakmont, known for his greed and debauchery. it's under scrutiny. The production, which transformed its three-hour period into an advantage with its dynamism and rhythm, was nominated for five Oscars, including Best Film and Best Director.
9.Michael Clayton (2007)
Centered on the character of Michael Clayton, who worked as a "problem solver" at one of New York's major law firms, the film was an impressive character work while presenting a highly tense narrative. Directed by Tony Gilroy, the production was nominated for seven Oscars in total, while Tilda Swinton reached the statuette in the Best Supporting Actress category.
8.We Need to Talk About Kevin (2011)
Directed by Lynne Ramsay and based on the novel by Lionel Shriver, The Cast of Kevin features Tilda Swinton, John C. Reilly, Ezra Miller and Jasper Newell. When a woman finds out she's pregnant, she gives up all her future plans and changes the course of her life for her child. But is he doing it willingly, or does society feel like they're doing it under pressure? The mother-son relationship in the film legitimizes itself in a brutal way, as this dilemma is driven by the unwanted ness of the child.
7.The Man Who Wasn’t There (2001)
The Man Who Isn't There, not the Coen Brothers filmography, is one of the most unique, original and flawless films in the history of the 2000s or even in the history of cinema. The Coens skillfully ate the small detail that reflected the atmosphere of the '50s, which reflected the atmosphere of the '50s, from existentialism themes to UFOs in a magnificent noir structure, and the Coens are unforgettable with Roger Deakins' distinctive sepia colors. they combine visuals and story.
6.The Master (2012)
The Master, signed by Paul Thomas Anderson, was the first of his many world stonings. It is about the events that took place after Freddie, a World War II veteran, sex addict, alcoholic and misfit, met the leader of a philosophical organization called Lancaster Dodd by chance. Dodd applies his own techniques to Freddie, whom he sees as a case, by keeping him close. It gives him a new way and a way to resolve his traumas and become a part of society. The Master is engraved in our memories as a successful work that examines human nature and also touches on the psychological depression of post-war America.
5.Revolutionary Road (2008)
The Pursuit of Dreams set in the 1950s; It tells the story of frank and April Wheeler, a couple of two children, who are struggling for a peaceful life in the newly moved suburb in a residual lifestyle after the war. Based on the novel of the same name by Richard Yates, the film has an impressive story about relationships and marriage without skipping the concept of "American dream". Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio, who met for the first time since Titanic, and the production, which is noted for its tremendous performances and the directing of Sam Mendes, are also very successful in reflecting how different a man and a woman's worlds are. An example.
4.Phantom Thread (2017)
Paul Thomas Anderson's latest film Phantom Thread, released in 2017, deals with a love that stretches the boundaries between Reynolds Woodcock, a prominent fashion designer from the '50s in London, and Alma, a waitress in a small town. Reynolds' view of women who are only models in his life, revealing how his gaze suddenly changed with Alma, who also attracted attention with his simple but striking language.
3.Twin Peaks: The Return (2017)
The 1990 film Twin Peaks , created by veteran director David Lynch with Mark Frost, is the second-best film to be created. Although he said goodbye to the screens after the season, he eventually gained a solid fan base and took his place among the cult series. The series, which tells the story of a small American town rocked by an mysterious murder through the eyes of an FBI agent tasked with investigating the murder, returned to screens in 2017 after a long break. This new season, twin peaks: The Return, was met with interest by viewers and was even more popular than the original series, being ranked one of the greatest series of all time. Last summer, the production was described by Jim Jarmusch as "the best work of American cinema in the last 10 years", and was voted the best film of 2017 by the Cahiers du Cinéma.
2.The Royal Tenenbaums (2001)
The film, signed by Wes Anderson, captures the viewer at the point where all plans and dreams become meaningless at some point, and the story of the Tenenbaums family by combining comedy and drama in a world where irony and absurdity are intertwined. reflects on the screen. The story of the film begins with the social norm-appropriate history of a family of three children. In this past, all three children have found themselves in different fields and exhibit their talents. One day, however, the Tenenbaums family will experience a rupture; at a time when children are in full growth and moments of seeing life, their father leaves home. With this abandonment, frustrations and struggles begin to unravel in the family. Wes Anderson takes a glimpse into the family institution, which, in its original style, goes beyond the molds at The Royal Tenenbaums.
1.El laberinto del fauno (2006)
Pan's Labyrinth; In 1944, five years after the civil war, the people of Spain, who still have not recovered, are taking the subject away with the human being of a child who grew up in war, freezing the blood of man with a fearful world lying in his subconscious. Little Ofelia burys herself in fairy tales every day so she doesn't see all the people her stepfather has killed in front of her. Unlike the fantastic world he imagines in his mind, the dusty pink world in which cute fairy girls play games with princesses, filled with colorful flowers that we dream of; It's a dark and fearful place. Pan's Labyrinth, a modern masterpiece that examines the horrors of war through the subconscious effects of an 11-year-old girl.
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