Best Movies Ever: The 80s
Movie-wise, the 1970s were a tough act to follow. Films in the '80s took fewer chances, opting for tried and true formulas designed to put moviegoers in theater seats (read: blockbusters). But of course there were standouts -- and we've got the top 40.
Which flicks made our list? Let's put it this way: It was a very good decade for Bill Murray, who appears in four of our top films, and an awesome one for Harrison Ford, who stars in three of our top five. Read on as we count down the 40 best movies of the Me Decade. -- By Tom Johnson
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40. 'Ghostbusters' (1984)
Bill Murray and Harold Ramis -- the improbable duo that hit it out of the park in the gonzo comedy 'Stripes' two years before -- team up once more in one of the biggest comedy hits of the decade. As paranormal investigators, Murray, Ramis and Dan Aykroyd keep Manhattan safe from flitting and floating spirits while Bill also carves out some time to romance Sigourney Weaver (but first he's got to exorcise a nasty ghoul that's taken up a short-term lease in her body).
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39. 'Diner' (1982)
Once upon at time, before a ravaged Mickey Rourke needed to make a career comeback, there was this coming-of-age sleeper of a group of 1950s neighborhood chums who hang out at a local Baltimore diner. The movie, part of a clutch of Baltimore-themed films directed by Barry Levinson (his debut in fact), stars Rourke, Kevin Bacon, Paul Reiser, Tim Daly, Daniel Stern and Ellen Barkin -- all young actors back then on the brink of breaking out. Time flies.
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38. 'The Thing' (1982)
As remakes go, this CGI-laden redux of the 1951 sci-fi thriller about scientists at a remote Arctic outpost terrorized by an alien they thaw from the permafrost delivers some gory shocks. And for an encore, it keeps on delivering them. What stops the movie from spiraling into 'Friday the 13th' schlockdom is the anchoring performance of Kurt Russell, who must marshal his rapidly dwindling cadre of lab coats to fight the menace.
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37. 'Room With A View' (1985)
At the turn of the century, a young Englishwoman (Helena Bonham Carter) on the grand tour in Florence, meets an eccentric (Julian Sands) who totally derails her carefully laid future life plan, including arrangements for her impending marriage. This Merchant-Ivory film adaptation of E.M. Forster's novel follows the blueprint that made the company's name synonymous with veddy British period pieces, especially starchy Edwardian-era dramas.
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36. 'Ghandi' (1982)
The winner of eight Oscars, including Best Picture and Best Actor, 'Gandhi' (like 'The English Patient and 'Chariots of Fire') has joined a tiny pantheon of movies deemed overrated in the public consciousness. Still, there is much to admire in Ben Kingsley's performance as Mahatma Gandhi, an Indian lawyer who, through nonviolent protest, eventually brought the British Raj to its knees.
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35. 'Moonstruck' (1987)
A rational woman accustomed to following a logical course rather than the dictates of her heart, Loretta Castorini (Cher) finds herself engaged to Johnny Cammareri (Danny Aiello), while falling head-over-heels for his brother Ronny (Nicolas Cage). Cher and Olympia Dukakis won Oscars in this hyper-romantic paean to finding true love in the borough of Brooklyn while Cage and Aiello as squabbling sibs provided the ideal launching pad for the ladies in their quest to reach the Oscar podium.
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34. 'Brazil' (1985)
George Orwell's '1984' meets Fritz Lang's 'Metropolis' when, in the distant future, a bureaucrat (Jonathan Pryce) with Walter Mittyish fantasies attempts to correct an administrative mistake and is then erroneously pegged as an enemy of the state for a series of terrorist bombings. Written and directed by 'Monty Python' alum Terry Gilliam, the stellar cast includes Robert De Niro, Ian Holm, Bob Hoskins and Katherine Helmond, who all step out of their usual comfort zones to gambol about in Gilliam's fevered reverie of a bizarro future world.
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33. 'Do the Right Thing' (1989)
On the hottest day of the summer in Brooklyn's Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood, a flash-fire of hate and bigotry ignites between the white owners of a pizzeria and the overwhelmingly black clientele they serve. In his most fully realized film, Spike Lee plays Mookie, a deliveryman for the pizzeria who must tread the tightrope between obeying his bosses and staying true to his "peeps." The movie's subsequent dismissal at Cannes where it finished as an also-ran against sex, lies and videotape,' was the cause of several caustic comments by Lee leveled at 'lies'' director Stephen Soderbergh.
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32. 'sex, lies and videotape' (1989)
The eponymous title says it all. When an old college friend (James Spader) on a journey to exorcise personal demons drops in on a married couple (Peter Gallagher and Andie MacDowell) who themselves are struggling with frigidity, unbridled egoism and marital infidelity, little does anyone know that the visit will transform all their lives. This first effort from director Stephen Soderbergh won the Palme d'Or at Cannes.
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Reader Comments (125)
The Chemist at 5:19PM on May 11th 2009
1. The Godfather
2. Jaws
3. Star Wars
4. Saturday Night Fever
5. Everything Else
Phill at 8:10PM on May 13th 2009
Keira Knightley's scandal here: http://tr.im/l77j
Robert Jones at 8:59PM on May 13th 2009
Terrible list
Tyler at 11:44PM on May 23rd 2009
Jaws and godfather before star wars that's a mistake
Desertdad at 10:39PM on May 13th 2009
Ah, another "slow news day" at AOL. Dumb to post this kind of list. Inane.
yo pauly at 3:10PM on May 20th 2009
EXACTLY CORRECT, If anyone even lived in the 70's, and went to the movies...you have to agree. It is almost an atrocity to not have these in the top 4.
Zack Solomon at 1:57PM on May 25th 2009
9
My Personal Favorites
1. Taxi Driver
2. A Woman Under The Influence
3. Annie Hall
4. Chinatown
5. Nashville
6. Apocalypse Now
7. Days Of Heaven
8. Last Tango In Paris
9. Aguirre, The Wrath of God,
10. McCabe & Mrs. Miller
Just Missed: Network, Day For Night, Godfather, A Clockwork Orange, Everything Luis Bunuel, Hal Ashby, and Ingmar Bergman made in the 70's, Amarcord, The Deer Hunter, Dog day Afternoon, The Conformist, Five Easy Pieces, Cuckoo's Nest, The Conversation, Eraserhead, Year with 13 Moons, and Ali: Fear eats the soul
dave at 12:22AM on Oct 8th 2009
1: The GOdfather
2: Star Wars
3: Jaws
4: Blazing Saddles
5: The Godfather II
6: One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest
7: Sleeper
8: Apocalypse Now
9: National Lampoons Animal House
10: Halloween
OK, seems some people forgot Blazing Saddles,, a movie so incredibly
funny, you cant even make it today, because of PC BS... And you didnt
even nod to Halloween ??? one of the scariest films up there with Jaws
?? I remember the whole theater jumping half a block in that flicks
debut....
J.C. at 10:50PM on May 11th 2009
No. 27, Monty Python's Life Of Brian a:) Should have been ranked up there with Holy Grail, and b:) "Every Sperm is Sacred" was from The Meaning of Life you dumbasses!
Patricia Chui at 12:16PM on May 12th 2009
Ah, appreciate the heads up -- we are mortified we didn't catch that, and have now corrected it to 'Always Look on the Bright Side of Life.' Thank you very much for pointing out our dumbassery, sir. Hail Caesar.
James Woods at 11:50PM on May 13th 2009
Oh, please - forgive us our Dumbasses!! You idiot!
Frank at 5:09AM on May 14th 2009
I'm sorry,but as funny as some of Monty Python is,most of it is just borderline. How often do we have to hear MP geeks reciting the same tired lines over and over again. Monty Python appeals to a small audience. Life of Brian and Holy Grail were great movies, but not better than Saturday Night Fever, not Star Wars and certainly not The Deer Hunter.
Joseph Magliocco at 2:40PM on May 12th 2009
I don't think you guys are capable of making a good list. Honestly. Star Wars at number 10, seriously. Alien is better than Star Wars? Dumb.
doug allen at 5:55PM on May 12th 2009
this not a good list where oh where would butch cassidy and sundancs kid be ?by not being here this list is bogus!
Patricia Chui at 7:29PM on May 12th 2009
Butch Cassidy came out in 1969.
coloradofreebird at 2:31PM on May 16th 2009
Released in 1969
Ela at 6:44PM on May 12th 2009
Not as bad as the top best picture winners of all time. But seriously..Jaws at only 18? And where the hell is the warriors?
Dr. Zoidberg at 2:32PM on May 13th 2009
1. STAR WARS
2.JAWS
3.ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOOS NEST
4.NATIONAL LAMPOONS ANIMAL HOUSE
5.AMERICAN GRAFFITI
6.THE GOD FATHER
7.INDIANA JONES AND THE RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK
8.CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND
9.DELIVERANCE
10.ROCKY
11.YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN
Dr. Zoidberg at 2:38PM on May 13th 2009
MY BAD MY DAD CONFUSED ME WITH HIS RAMBLING ON WHO SHOULD HAVE AND SHOULDN'T HAVE MADE THE LIST. INDIANA CAME OUT IN 1981....
Dr. Zoidberg at 5:38PM on May 13th 2009
INDIANA JONES THAT IS, CAME OUT IN 1981. SORRY FORE ANY CONFUSION....