
Top 10 Re-watchable Movies
May 11, 2008I present to you a list of the 10 most re-watchable movies. To be clear, I do not pretend that these are the best movies (“Saving Private Ryan” is a great movie that I will never be able to rewatch because of one scene), nor are they even my favorite movies necessarily (though some are). Simply these are the movies I watch whenever they are on TV even though I’ve seen them some 20 times before.
10. “Boys and Girls”/”When Harry Met Sally”
I’m hoping most of you have seen “When Harry Met Sally” and know of its standard romantic comedy plot. It’s one of the first movies I watched with Maren, and it takes me back to those first exciting puppy-love days with her. “I came here tonight because when you realize you want to spend the rest of your life with somebody, you want the rest of your life to start as soon as possible.” However, I’m willing to bet most of you haven’t seen “Boys and Girls” because it’s not really a good movie, and it stars Freddie Prinze, Jr. opposite Claire Forlani (who makes an appearance later on this list). I’m pretty turned off by most Freddie Prinze, Jr. movies, but I adore Forlani’s character. The best way to condense the plot is this: (SPOILER) It’s identical to “When Harry Met Sally” except the role of the boy and the girl are switched.
9. “Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory”
Not to be confused with Johnny Depp’s “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory”, I delight in every scene (except “Cheer Up, Charlie”…gag) of Gene Wilder’s interpretation. Who doesn’t feel like a kid in the candy store during “The Candy Man Can” song? Whose mouth doesn’t water up every time someone unwraps a Wonka Bar? I somewhere find inner peace during “Pure Imagination”. But, above all, I rewatch for the climax of the film. When Charlie returns his Everlasting Gobstopper after being rejected by Wonka, Wonka delivers the line “So shines a good deed in a weary world.” that makes me believe I’ve just watched the tale of something more than a kid who just inherited a candy empire.
8. “Kill Bill Vol. 1 and 2″
There’s a certain color (you might say timbre, if you’re into music) to Quentin Tarantino’s storytelling that I find interesting. The Kill Bill’s are so over the top, I don’t think I can call them Great Movies, unlike “Pulp Fiction” which, honestly, belongs on this list but I’ve selectively left off.
7. “Best in Show”/”A Mighty Wind”/etc.
If you don’t appreciate a good mockumentary now and then, you are a philistine.
6. “10 Things I Hate About You”
I have to admit, on the whole, it’s a pretty bad movie even if it’s a retelling of Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew. But it’s the time machine that takes me back to my first years of college and going out to my sister’s house to do laundry and get away from Harding. I miss my sister often, but this movie fills the hole just a little.
5. “True Lies”
Action. Comedy. A genre that makes fun of itself. Arnold Schwarzenegger shows he doesn’t take himself too seriously, and it’s Tom Arnold’s finest moment (in case you were looking for it). If you haven’t seen it yet, your only two options are Watch It or Suicide. You must pick one.
4. “Meet Joe Black”
I can understand how some think it is long and slow. However, I love how the themes of Love and Death are juxtaposed and that each character presents a different idealized take on Love, and the movie would be incomplete without all of them. Anthony Hopkins, Brad Pitt, Claire Forlani, Marcia Gay Harden, Jeffrey Tambor, and Jake Weber are all immaculate in there performances. Additionally, there’s something that wholly captivates me in a quick speech given by Hopkins at the end of the film. “65 years…don’t they go by in a blink.” I don’t know what it is, but it’s made me an instant fan of Anthony Hopkins. I even half-tried watching “Instinct” a few weeks ago, the movie he made with Cuba Gooding, Jr. years ago. (Needless to say, it didn’t capture my attention.) “Meet Joe Black” is one of just a handful of movies that makes me wish I was super-rich, though I can imagine living a satisfied life as Hopkins in the film does without all the dough. It’s probably a Top 10 favorite film.
3. “Bull Durham”/”Field of Dreams”
Let’s not pretend these are the same movie because they are both baseball movies. The truth is they are the last movies I came up with, but they both deserve this high placement, and I don’t want to knock off any of the other movies. So, “Bull Durham” is great for laughs and capturing the spirit of baseball characters. “Field of Dreams” is kind of cheesy, but I cry like a baby at the end when he plays catch with his dad. I’m crying right now thinking about. It is the silliest thing, but even if I only catch the last 3 minutes, the waterworks turn on.
2. “The Thomas Crown Affair”
It doesn’t get much TV play, but we owned it on VHS back in the day, and it was my go-to when nothing else sounded good. It’s very playful, and it’s another movie that makes me wish I was super-rich. I’ve seen the original starring Steve McQueen and Faye Dunaway, but it doesn’t hold a candle to the Pierce Brosnan/Rene Russo remake.
1. “High Fidelity”
I love this movie for two reasons. i) I love lists (hence the format of this post), and a running motif of the movie is top five lists. In fact, it’s the main vehicle for driving the plot along. ii) It’s take on Love resonates with me in the most realistic way I can remember, though it certainly does not have the market cornered in that respect. It’s probably a Top 10 favorite movie, as well.
Re-watchable Movies Emeritus:
This section is dedicated to a few movies who historically belong on this list, but are perhaps now past their prime due to my over-watching.
“A Christmas Story”
A classic with a very high watch count, but I’ve gone the past 2 Christmases(?) without seeing them despite high play on TBS.
“Monty Python and the Holy Grail”
I wish I could watch with fresh eyes and relive all things I found funny when I was 16 years old. Alas, this movie and the next suffer a terrible, terrible fate. I fall asleep when I watch them. Perhaps, it’s so I can dream of them.
Which brings us to the Grandfather of this list. The Archetype. The O-G.
“Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves”
I’ve never left a movie theater so enthralled and so inspired by a movie like this one when I was 11. You have to know that I watched this movie (I have to check myself here because my family is prone to exaggeration) over 75 times. Some people quote Hamlet, I quote “Robin Hood”. Start to finish. Subtitles. Accents. All of it. At least, I used to be able to. But it has been 10 years since I could stay awake through a sitting, despite repeated efforts. Perhaps, this movie cannot be rewatched by me because it has joined the Pantheon of the Gods of Movies. It sits up on Mt. Olympus and may only visit from time to time. But perhaps this is the loftiest goal for any movie, and so I salute it.
whatever happened to is it me, Freddie Prinze Jr., anyway?