1. Star Wars: A New Hope - This should come as no surprise. I don't remember my age when I first saw this movie but I do remember afterwards going outside and pretending I was Luke Skywalker. I would jump across the ditches outside my childhood home as if I was swinging across the chasm in the Death Star. I would hop in one of my step-father's broken down trucks and pretend it was a X-Wing fighter. If I was playing as Han Solo then it would be more appropriately be the Millenium Falcon. Star Wars piqued my interests in fantasy, mythologies, science fiction (although Star Wars really is not true Sci-Fi), and so much more. As an adult, it really has influenced my viewing of the world, humanity, and my faith. There are life lessons contained in this one movie and the saga as a whole. However, no matter how many Star Wars movies there are or are to come, A New Hope will always be my first.
Favorite Character Exchange:
Han Solo (to Obi-Wan Kenobi): Damn fool, I knew you were going to say that.
Obi-Wan: Who's the more foolish? The fool, or the fool who follows him?
2. The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers - In my opinion, the second installment of the cinematic adaptation of J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings books was The Two Towers. It raised the stakes for each character by separating the fellowship across different areas of Middle Earth, and made the desperation felt by each character palpable not only to the characters but to the people watching from our side of the fourth wall. The Battle of Helms Deep remains one of my favorite fantasy epic battles depicted on the silver screen. The dynamics between Aragorn, Legolas, and Gimli are like watching a trio of unlikely ffriends forged from the heat of battle and forever bonded in iron. They could have just the movie center around those three and I would have enjoyed it with their banter, their bonding, and ultimately them standing side-by-side-by-side. Then enters Rohan and the music of the Horse Riders just swept me away as the wind which blew across Edoras as Eowyn steps outside filled with grief and worry. One of my favorite scenes is Gandalf the newly White Wizard exorcising the hold Saruman and Wormtongue had over the Rohan King Theoden. Another favorite character is Theoden's niece, the Shield Maiden Eowyn who would show herself as a warrior woman in The Return of the King.
Favorite Part:
Theoden: [upon being exorcised] Gandalf...
Gandalf: Breathe the free air again, my friend.
Theoden: [stands up from the throne] Dark have been my dreams of late. [looks at his hands]
Gandalf: Your fingers would remember their old strength better... if they grasped your sword.
3. Black Hawk Down - I almost selected Saving Private Ryan, but Black Hawk Down resonates with me more perhaps because it depicts the modern Army (at the time of its release) at a time when I was serving. Therefore, it seems more relateable. That's not to say I don't like World War II movies because I do, and WWII is one of my favorite wars to study. It is just for whatever reason BHD hit a lot of right chords at the right time in my life. Not to mention the story was real. Saving Private Ryan took place in a real war but the intent was not to depict a real life mission. The cast and crew making the movie did an excellent job in depicting the realism of warfare and the realism of soldiers on the ground. From small details to how a soldier should actually hold their rifle when in combat to the major details like femoral artery bleeds and the toll combat takes on our soldiers.
Favorite Quote:
"Hoot": When I go home people'll ask me, "Hey Hoot, why do you do it man? What, you some kinda war junkie?" You know what I'll say? I won't say a [omit] word. Why? They won't understand. They won't understand why we do it. They won't understand that it's about the men next to you, and that's it. That's all it is.
4. Forrest Gump - I love this movie! There is just something simplistic about watching the history of America unfold around this simple man's life. It is like getting to watch life unfold from someone's perspective who should not be around all these historical events, but for whatever reason seemlessly stumbles across our most tragic and triumphant moments. It is a tale of the shift in America from the innocence lost after World War II and the rapidly changing culture of our nation as seen by a simple person, an outsider to it all who continues living his life amongst this whole cultural revolution. It really is a story about us, and no matter what is going on around us we still have a life to live. Forrest Gump experiences love, loss, heartbreak, loss again, love again, and loss again while the Earth continues to spin, and America grows older. That is life folks, and so is this movie.
Humorous Exchange:
Forrest Gump: Lieutenant DDan, what you doing here?
Lieutenant Dan: I'm here to try out my sea legs.
Forrest Gump: But you ain't got no legs, Lieutenant Dan.
Lieutenant Dan: [mildly irritated, but understanding] Yes... yes, I know that. You wrote me a letter, you idiot!
5. Back to the Future, Part I - Sing it with me, folks:
Take me away
I don't mind
You better promise me
I'll be back in time
Gotta get back in time
Here is a movie that took a science fiction premise, crossed it with nostalgia for the good old days, and crafted a story that has stood the test of time. There should be a global initiative to ensure this movie never gets the reboot/remake treatment ever. As in punishable by castration, decapitation, and limb separation, body parts burned on a pyre, and ashes scattered across Hollywood as a reminder to leave this movie trilogy alone. The first movie was absolutely perfect. If Forrest Gump was a movie about America told through the eyes of a person living through it, Back to the Future, Part I, was a movie about you and I being able to actually travel back in time and see life for what it was. The contrast and interactions between the 1980's Reagan-era Marty McFly and his 1950's parents as teenagers was an excellent of really highlighting the differences between the youth of the 80's and the youth of the 50's, but also showing honestly how much each generation is truly alike. The only thing that truly changes is the technology and how we use it, but why we use it is relatively the same. It is a family show, and a show about true friendship as Marty tries to save Doc Brown's life, but also must save the future of his family. Not to mention the overall message that just because you were born into a certain situation does not mean you are necessarily stuck in it. You may not have a time machine to alter the past, but you do have the ability to alter your present. It just hits all the right "feel good" spots without being too serious but not too cheesy. Seriously, one of the best films no matter how you approach it. Period!
Best Exchange Highlighting Cultural Differences:
Marty McFly: Whoa. Wait a minute, Doc. Are you trying to tell me that my mother has got the hots for me?
Dr. Emmett Brown: Precisely.
Marty McFly: Whoa. This is heavy.
Dr. Emmett Brown: There's that word again. "Heavy." Why are things so heavy in the future? Is there a problem with the Earth's gravitational pull?
Those there are only five movies listed, I enjoy so many more that I will share in another post. In the meantime, what are your favorites and why? Let me know, please.
Until next time...
