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.
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