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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)
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 Your Name
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)
Inside Llewyn Davis
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
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)
No Country for Old Men
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)
La ciénaga
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 Really Here
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)
Kill Bill Vol.1 & Vol. 2
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)
Das weiße Band
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)
Gisaengchung
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.

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