Movies with the word books

There are a lot of movies based on books. There are very few good movies based on books.

That’s not a knock on Hollywood–it can be challenging to fit a novel’s worth of plot and character development into a few hours of entertainment. That’s why the best films based on books often feel more like a companion piece than a true retelling of a best-selling paperback. Some, like the 2019 movie adaptation of Little Women, play with the story or add in new scenes to appeal to a modern audience. Others benefit from the glitz and glam that Hollywood brings. Netflix’s film version of To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before, for example, comes with an engaging soundtrack that elevates the romance onscreen.

Below you’ll find some of the best movies based on books available for streaming right now. We also included the real-life novels that inspired them so you can add to your reading list. No chance of boredom here. (Need more? We’ve also got a guide to the best movies based on romance novels.)


All products featured on Glamour are independently selected by our editors. However, when you buy something through our retail links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

  • Lady Chatterley's Lover.  Jack O'Connell as Oliver Emma Corrin as Lady Constance in Lady Chatterley's Lover. Cr. Parisa...

    Parisa Taghizadeh/Netflix

    1. Lady Chatterley’s Lover (2022)

    The book: Lady Chatterley’s Lover by D.H. Lawrence

    D.H. Lawrence’s novel about an affair between a gamekeeper and an upper-class woman is notorious for its explicit descriptions of sex—so much so that the book was banned for obscenity in several countries. Onsreen, stars Emma Corrin and Jack O’Connell have a natural chemistry that only adds to the steaminess.

    Available to stream on Netflix

  • Focus Films/Everett Collection

    2. Pride and Prejudice (2005)

    The book: Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen

    Jane Austen’s classic story of love and bad first impressions has been adapted many times over. But this film version, starring Keira Knightley and Matthew Macfadyen, takes a more realistic approach than other film versions. As a result, enemies turned lovers Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy come to life onscreen.

    Available to rent on Amazon Prime Video

  • Tatum Mangus / Annapurna Pictures

    3. If Beale Street Could Talk (2018)

    The book: If Beale Street Could Talk by James Baldwin

    James Baldwin’s 1974 novel If Beale Street Could Talk, about a young woman trying to clear the name of her boyfriend after he was wrongfully accused of a crime in New York, is an incredible read. So only someone with a vision like Barry Jenkins, who wrote and directed this adaptation, could bring it to the big screen. The Oscar-nominated film received numerous awards, including a best supporting actress win for Regina King’s performance.

    Available to stream on Hulu

  • Courtesy Everett Collection

    4. The Wizard of Oz

  • Columbia Pictures/Everett Collection

    5. Little Women (2019)

    The book: Little Women by Louisa May Alcott

    There’s a reason Little Women has been adapted for film seven times. Louisa May Alcott’s semiautobiographical novel about sisters Meg, Jo, Beth, and Amy has stood the test of time, and it’s still just as relatable now as it was in 1868, when it was published. The most recent remake stars Laura Dern, Meryl Streep, and Saoirse Ronan and is arguably the best interpretation of Alcott’s story.

    Available to buy on Amazon Prime Video

  • Warner Bros/ Everett Collection 

    6. Crazy Rich Asians (2018)

    The book: Crazy Rich Asians by Kevin Kwan

    Where do we even begin with this one? The fashion! The romance! The drama! Constance Wu and Henry Golding lead the romantic comedy about a Chinese American woman who travels to Singapore to meet her boyfriend’s family. Sounds simple enough, right? Wrong. His family is one of the richest and well-known families in the country, and his mother is not exactly welcoming of her son’s new romance.

    Available to stream on HBO Max

  • 20thCentFox/Everett Collection

    7. Gone Girl (2014)

    The book: Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn

    We could write a dissertation about Gone Girl, and it still wouldn’t be long enough to dive into the complicated issues tackled in the movie. Here’s what you need to know: The David Fincher–directed mystery movie is about a husband who becomes a suspect in his wife’s disappearance. The thriller tackles parenting, manipulation, misogyny, and most of all, marriage. When it comes to movie adaptations of books, this is near the top of the list.

    Available to rent on Amazon Prime Video

  • Peter Iovino

    8. A Simple Favor (2018)

  • Columbia Pictures/ Everett Collection

    9. Sense and Sensibility (1995)

  • 20thCentFox/ Everett Collection

    10. The Devil Wears Prada (2006)

    The book: The Devil Wears Prada: A Novel by Lauren Weisberger

    Meryl Streep plays the coldest, scariest, most intimidating boss at the fictional fashion magazine Runway. Anne Hathaway’s character is clueless and unfashionable, and fancies herself a serious journalist. Their characters clash yet somehow find a way to work together. The movie is elevated by the performances, and you might find yourself surprisingly moved at the end.

    Available to stream on Amazon Prime Video

  • Everett Collection

    11. The Color Purple (1985)

    The book: The Color Purple by Alice Walker

    The story of Celie (played by Whoopi Goldberg) is one that will stay with you. The movie is based on the novel of the same name by Alice Walker and portrays the problems Black women faced during the early 20th century, including domestic violence, poverty, racism, and sexism. Celie’s journey spans a 40-year time period.

    Available to stream on Netflix

  • Paramount/ Everett Collection

    12. The First Wives Club (1996)

  • Masha Weisberg

    13. To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before (2018)

    The book: To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before by Jenny Han

    Laura Jean and Peter Kavinsky’s romance is sure to go down as one of this generation’s most popular love stories. The trilogy of teen romantic comedy books by Jenny Han turned Netflix movies are popular for a reason. Yes, there are some common tropes used in the plot. However, the film adaptations somehow still feel fresh, unique, and effortlessly heartwarming.

    Available to stream on Netflix

  • Warner Bros/Everett Collection

    14. The Harry Potter series (2001–2011)

    The book: The Harry Potter series by J.K. Rowling

    Who could have known that the boy who lived would start an international phenomenon? Readers and audiences of all ages have been obsessed with the Wizarding World for decades, and it’s easy to see why: The friendship, the magic, the excitement and the humor are as enthralling in the movies as they are in the books.

    Available to stream on Peacock

  • 20thCentFox/Everett Collection

    15. Hidden Figures (2016)

  • Orion Pictures Corp/ Everett Collection

    16. The Silence of the Lambs (1991)

  • Miramax/Everett Collection

    17. The Talented Mr. Ripley (1999)

    The book: The Talented Mr. Ripley by Patricia Highsmith

    This sexy classic is actually part of a series about the Tom Ripley, a social-climbing mimic who will lie, cheat, and even murder his way up the ranks of wealthy midcentury Manhattanites. The movie features Gwyneth Paltrow, Matt Damon, and Jude Law at their golden, glowy, youthful best, and a striking performance from the late Philip Seymour Hoffman.

    Available to rent on Amazon Prime Video

  • Brooke Palmer

    18. It (2017)

    The book: It by Stephen King

    This chilling horror classic has terrified generations. In a small New England town, a group of unlikely friends find themselves caught in the clutches of a mysterious shape-shifting killer who takes the form of whatever you fear most.

    Available to stream on HBO Max

  • Walt Disney Co./ Everett Collection

    19. The Princess Diaries (2001)

    The book: The Princess Diaries by Meg Cabot

    The ultimate glow-up! Mia Thermopolis is an awkward, nerdy high school outcast who discovers she’s actually royalty in this modern twist on the Cinderella story. Peppered with observations about friendship, love, and growing up, the books are as funny as the movie. The young adult book series, written like a diary, will make you fall even more in love with Mia than the film adaptation did. Don’t be surprised if you find yourself wanting to wear Doc Martens after reading.

    Available to stream on Disney+

  • Buena Vista Pictures/ Everett Collection

    20. The Joy Luck Club (1993)

  • 20thCentFox/ Everett Collection

    21. The Princess Bride (1987)

    The book: The Princess Bride by Willam Goldman

    This beloved classic is like five fairy tales combined into a sparkling family comedy that’s much easier to follow than the book it’s based on. Featuring a host of quirky character actors and quotable lines, this is essentially a meme factory from before there was such a thing. Don’t fight Grandpa; it’s time for a love story (you’ll get that reference once you watch the movie).

    Available to stream on Disney+

  • Paramount/Everett Collection

    22. Election (1999)

    The book: Election by Tom Perrotta

    This dark comedy about the ruthlessness of politicians features a breakout performance from a young Reese Witherspoon and taught a generation to recognize the Tracy Flicks in their lives. It’s become a catchword often hurled unfairly at women with ambition, but it also accurately describes the kind of earnest yet hollow striving we see in so many people, no matter their gender, today.

    Available to stream on Amazon Prime Video

  • Columbia Pictures/ Everett Collection

    23. The Shawshank Redemption (1994)

  • Focus Features/ Everett Collection

    24. Atonement (2007)

  • Universal/ Everett Collection

    25. Jurassic Park (1993)

  • Everett Collection

    26. The Godfather trilogy (1972–1990)

    The book: The Godfather by Mario Puzo

    The greatest achievement in the history of American cinema? This crime epic has been praised for its performances, filmmaking, quotable lines, and archetypal characters. It’s rich with symbolism and history, but actually a straightforward and pleasant watch. Never meandering or slow, the story is gripping, if devastating.

    Available to stream on Amazon Prime Video

  • Netflix/ Everett Collection

    27. The White Tiger (2021)

  • Paramount/ Everett Collection

    28. The United States vs. Billie Holiday (2021)

  • Everett Collection

    29. Room (2015)

    The book: Room by Emma Donoghue

    Both the book and the film adaptation of this intense story follow a kidnapped young woman and her son, who we learn was born in captivity. When they finally escape their abuser, the child gets to experience the outside world for the first time in his life.

    Available to stream on Hulu

  • Focus Features/Everett Collection

    30. Emma (2020)

    The book: Emma by Jane Austen

    Jane Austen’s novel, about a spoiled heiress who amuses herself by meddling in the lives of her neighbors, has been adapted to film before. But the 2020 version, starring Anya Taylor-Joy in the titular role, is one of the best thanks to its excellent casting, whimsical costume and set design, and modern approach to the source material.

    Available to stream on Amazon Prime Video

  • ©Paramount/Courtesy Everett Collection

    31. Clueless (1995)

    The book: Emma by Jane Austen

    Yes, Emma again! One of Jane Austen’s best books, it also inspired this coming-of-age teen comedy starring Alicia Silverstone, Stacey Dash, Brittany Murphy, and Paul Rudd. Says screenwriter and director Amy Heckerling, “I loved [Emma] when I read it in college—it’s the most modern story with the most perfect character, the most lovable, flawed person that you’re rooting for. Then I looked at what could make the bones for the present day high school teenagers, and if I ever thought like, wait, how would this happen, I would just go back to Emma and there were the answers.”

    Available to stream on Netflix

  • Summit Entertainment/Everett Collection

    32. The Perks of Being a Wallflower (2012)

  • Courtesy Everett Collection

    33. The Lord of the Rings series (2001–2003)

  • ©Sony Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection

    34. Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000)

  • ©Warner Bros/courtesy Everett Collection / Everett Collection

    35. The Paddington movies (2014, 2017)

Silver Screen Collection/Hulton Archive // Getty Images

It might seem like this is an age where every movie is based on a previously existing piece of work, but the truth is Hollywood has been adapting prose and other source materials for more than a century. There are only so many original screenplay ideas out there, no small percentage of which are likewise based on previous ideas and formulas. «Art is theft,» as Picasso reportedly said, but at least Hollywood dispenses credit every now and then.

Without exceptional books there would be far fewer impressive films. Just ask directors such as Alfred Hitchcock, Stanley Kubrick, and Francis Ford Coppola, all of whom based some of their finest films on novels. Each talented director delivers their own take on the work, often to the author’s chagrin. Look no further than Stephen King’s openly critical stance on Kubrick’s adaptation of «The Shining

In other cases, the directors stay impressively true to the source material. Some examples might include Luchino Visconti’s «The Leopard» or the Coen brothers’ «No Country for Old Men,» to name just a couple. It still goes to show, however, that the mere visualization of a novel can affect how the content might be perceived. What was once the stuff of personal imagination has now been made flesh and the indelible images might prove hard to shake. And who wants to shake them when they come from masters of the craft?

Putting the printed page up on the big screen is a tradition as old as cinema itself. To honor that tradition, Stacker compiled data on all top-rated movies to come up with a Stacker score, i.e., a weighted index split evenly between IMDb and Metacritic scores as of July 8. 

To qualify, the film had to be based on a book, including novellas, comic books, and short stories; have an IMDb user rating and Metascore; and have at least 5,000 votes. Ties were broken by Metascore, further ties were broken by IMDb user rating, and final ties were broken by user votes. Going from great to greater, here are the 100 best movies based on books. 

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#100. The Great Escape (1963)

— Director: John Sturges
— Stacker score: 88
— Metascore: 86
— IMDb user rating: 8.2
— Runtime: 172 minutes

In this World War II adventure film, a group of prisoners of war try to escape from a German camp. It’s based on a book by Paul Brickhill, who was once a real-life POW at the very same camp. While the author did help out during the famous escape, he didn’t flee down the tunnel due to severe claustrophobia.

#99. It Happened One Night (1934)

— Director: Frank Capra
— Stacker score: 88
— Metascore: 87
— IMDb user rating: 8.1
— Runtime: 105 minutes

This 1934 classic is based on Samuel Hopkins Adams’ short story «Night Bus,» which was published the previous year. It traces the cross-country travels of a spoiled socialite, played by Claudette Colbert, whose confusion creates a convoluted love triangle. The film won five Academy Awards, including Best Picture.

#98. The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957)

— Director: David Lean
— Stacker score: 88
— Metascore: 87
— IMDb user rating: 8.1
— Runtime: 161 minutes

The celebrated war drama is based on a French novel by author Pierre Boulle. Due to heightened Cold War tensions, the original screenwriters were accused of being communists and thereby robbed of credit. As a result, Boulle—who didn’t even speak English—not only received credit for a script he didn’t write, but went on to win an Academy Award.

#97. Strangers on a Train (1951)

— Director: Alfred Hitchcock
— Stacker score: 88
— Metascore: 88
— IMDb user rating: 8
— Runtime: 101 minutes

Alfred Hitchcock frequently used novels as the basis for his films and «Strangers on a Train» was no exception. Before debuting on the big screen, the story of two men who swap murder duties was the subject of Patricia Highsmith’s brilliant novel. Highsmith is also the mastermind behind the character that inspired the film «The Talented Mr. Ripley.»

#96. Of Mice and Men (1939)

— Director: Lewis Milestone
— Stacker score: 88
— Metascore: 89
— IMDb user rating: 7.9
— Runtime: 106 minutes

Author John Steinbeck culled from his own experiences at a labor camp when crafting his timeless novella. It follows two migrant workers of strikingly different dispositions through the Great Depression. This Oscar-nominated film version was later followed by a number of adaptations for both the stage and screen.

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#95. In Cold Blood (1967)

— Director: Richard Brooks
— Stacker score: 88
— Metascore: 89
— IMDb user rating: 7.9
— Runtime: 134 minutes

First published in 1966, Truman Capote’s account of a brutal murder remains an absolute benchmark of the true crime genre. Striving for authenticity, this film adaptation was shot in locations where the actual crimes once occurred. It was nominated for four Academy Awards.

#94. Letters From Iwo Jima (2006)

— Director: Clint Eastwood
— Stacker score: 88
— Metascore: 89
— IMDb user rating: 7.9
— Runtime: 141 minutes

Screenwriters drew upon the actual letters of Gen. Tadamichi Kuribayashi, portrayed by Ken Watanabe, for this war drama. A companion piece to «Flags of Our Fathers,» it depicts the World War II battle of Iwo Jima from the Japanese perspective. The film was a commercial disappointment but a critical darling.

#93. Great Expectations (1946)

— Director: David Lean
— Stacker score: 88
— Metascore: 90
— IMDb user rating: 7.8
— Runtime: 118 minutes

Charles Dickens’ iconic novel follows an orphan named Pip as he comes of age under the protection of a hidden benefactor. This Oscar-winning adaptation brings the story to life with visual grace and palpable emotion. Film critic Roger Ebert credits director David Lean with creating «pictures on the screen that do not clash with the images already existing in our minds.»

#92. The African Queen (1951)

— Director: John Huston
— Stacker score: 88
— Metascore: 91
— IMDb user rating: 7.7
— Runtime: 105 minutes

Screen legends Humphrey Bogart and Katharine Hepburn hop aboard a riverboat in this World War I adventure. The film’s screenwriters cleaned up some of the source material to appease censors, who still took issue with certain components. Tourists can visit the original African Queen riverboat to this day.

#91. Tristana (1970)

— Director: Luis Buñuel
— Stacker score: 88
— Metascore: 93
— IMDb user rating: 7.5
— Runtime: 99 minutes

An 1892 novel laid the groundwork for this Spanish drama, in which the title character, played by Catherine Deneuve, struggles for independence. Both the source material and the film adaptation explore the oppressive expectations of a patriarchal society. Director Luis Buñuel spent nearly 20 years getting the project made and incorporated personal details into the final product.

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#90. Inside Llewyn Davis (2013)

— Directors: Ethan Coen, Joel Coen
— Stacker score: 88
— Metascore: 93
— IMDb user rating: 7.5
— Runtime: 104 minutes

The Coen Brothers drew inspiration from folk singer Dave Van Ronk and his memoir when creating this low-key drama. It tells the story of musician Llewyn Davis, played by Oscar Isaac, who tries to make his way in New York’s burgeoning folk scene. According to legend, the real-life Van Ronk wielded far more influence and presence than the fictional Davis.

#89. Das Boot (1981)

— Director: Wolfgang Petersen
— Stacker score: 88
— Metascore: 86
— IMDb user rating: 8.3
— Runtime: 149 minutes

Wolfgang Peterson brings viewers into a World War II German U-boat to uncover equal amounts of angst and terror. The film is based on a bestselling novel of the same name by former war correspondent Lothar-Günther Buchheim. An «original uncut version» clocks in at 293 minutes, which might be the actual time it takes to read the book.

#88. The Tale of The Princess Kaguya (2013)

— Director: Isao Takahata
— Stacker score: 88
— Metascore: 89
— IMDb user rating: 8
— Runtime: 137 minutes

Studio Ghibli co-founder Isao Takahata directed this watercolor-style anime about a tiny princess who’s discovered living inside a bamboo stalk. It’s based on a 10th-century Japanese story called «The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter.» When adapting the source material, Takahata’s biggest challenge was understanding «what was in the heart of Princess Kaguya.»

#87. The Man Who Would Be King (1975)

— Director: John Huston
— Stacker score: 88
— Metascore: 91
— IMDb user rating: 7.8
— Runtime: 129 minutes

A short story from Rudyard Kipling gave way to numerous adaptations, including this Technicolor film. It chronicles the journey of two British ex-soldiers who seek power and glory in faraway Kafiristan. Actor Christopher Plummer appears as Kipling.

#86. The Right Stuff (1983)

— Director: Philip Kaufman
— Stacker score: 88
— Metascore: 91
— IMDb user rating: 7.8
— Runtime: 193 minutes

Tom Wolfe’s novel went behind the scenes of America’s aircraft and space program, and this sprawling film does the very same thing. As far-fetched as the story may seem, most of its events are ripped straight out of history. Despite critical acclaim, the movie was a commercial disappointment during its theatrical release.

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#85. Frankenstein (1931)

— Director: James Whale
— Stacker score: 88
— Metascore: 91
— IMDb user rating: 7.8
— Runtime: 70 minutes

Few horror stories are more iconic than Mary Shelley’s tale of Dr. Frankenstein and his unruly creation. James Whale’s 1931 feature adaptation is held in similarly high regard, with Boris Karloff playing the legendary monster. A number of sequels and spin-offs followed.

#84. Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956)

— Director: Don Siegel
— Stacker score: 88
— Metascore: 92
— IMDb user rating: 7.7
— Runtime: 80 minutes

Writer Jack Finney first published «The Body Snatchers» as a serialized novel for Collier’s magazine. It was quickly adapted into one of Hollywood’s most enduring sci-fi movies, which was remade over and over again. Every version deals with the same core premise of alien invasions and pod people.

#83. The 39 Steps (1935)

— Director: Alfred Hitchcock
— Stacker score: 88
— Metascore: 93
— IMDb user rating: 7.6
— Runtime: 86 minutes

This influential film noir is loosely based on a 1915 novel of the same name. While visiting London, a Canadian tourist, played by Robert Donat, gets embroiled in a deadly spy conspiracy. It’s one among a number of Hitchcock films to send an innocent man on the run from dangerous enemies.

#82. Sideways (2004)

— Director: Alexander Payne
— Stacker score: 88
— Metascore: 94
— IMDb user rating: 7.5
— Runtime: 127 minutes

Before it was a film that changed the entire wine industry, «Sideways» was a humorous 2004 novel by Rex Pickett. Both versions follow two close friends out to California wine country where they come up against the very realities they’re trying to escape. The movie won an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay.

#81. Forrest Gump (1994)

— Director: Robert Zemeckis
— Stacker score: 89
— Metascore: 82
— IMDb user rating: 8.8
— Runtime: 142 minutes

World history is seen through the eyes of a charming but dim-witted man named Forrest Gump, played by Tom Hanks, in this 1994 movie. The film is based on a Winston Groom novel, which included a sequence where Gump travels to space and meets a chimp named Sue. Whether that scene would’ve helped or hindered the film is anyone’s guess.

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#80. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1975)

— Director: Milos Forman
— Stacker score: 89
— Metascore: 83
— IMDb user rating: 8.7
— Runtime: 133 minutes

Author Ken Kesey culled from his experiences as a psychiatric ward attendant when writing «One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.» An award-winning film would soon follow, in which a patient, played by Jack Nicholson, attempts to stage a rebellion. Both the book and the film remain heralded to this day.

#79. The Pianist (2002)

— Director: Roman Polanski
— Stacker score: 89
— Metascore: 85
— IMDb user rating: 8.5
— Runtime: 150 minutes

Wladyslaw Szpilman’s experiences as a Jewish pianist struggling to survive during the Holocaust led him to write «The Death of a City,» later retitled «The Pianist.» The subsequent 2002 film version would go on to win three Academy Awards. It remains a high point in director Roman Polanski’s latter-day career.

#78. To Kill a Mockingbird (1962)

— Director: Robert Mulligan
— Stacker score: 89
— Metascore: 88
— IMDb user rating: 8.2
— Runtime: 129 minutes

One of the greatest novels of all time tells the story of Atticus Finch, a Depression-era lawyer who defends a falsely accused Black man. Gregory Peck delivers an Oscar-winning turn as Finch in this 1962 film version. Author Harper Lee was moved by how much Peck looked like her father, upon whom the character is based.

#77. Barry Lyndon (1975)

— Director: Stanley Kubrick
— Stacker score: 89
— Metascore: 89
— IMDb user rating: 8.1
— Runtime: 185 minutes

Adapted from William Makepeace Thackeray’s 1844 novel, this period drama tells the story of Irish rogue Barry Lyndon, played by Ryan O’Neal. Resorting to a variety of schemes, Lyndon finagles his way into 18th-century British aristocratic society. Kubrick famously restricted the use of artificial lighting during the shoot, relying on candlelight and sunlight instead.

#76. The Hustler (1961)

— Director: Robert Rossen
— Stacker score: 89
— Metascore: 90
— IMDb user rating: 8
— Runtime: 134 min

Before turning his attention to the lives of pool sharks, author Walter Tevis was primarily interested in science fiction. Shortly after writing «The Hustler»—upon which this classic 1961 film is based—Tevis returned to his sci-fi roots by churning out «The Man Who Fell to Earth.» In 1984, the author switched gears again and wrote «The Color of Money,» a sequel to «The Hustler» that would end up being adapted by director Martin Scorsese.

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#75. Persepolis (2007)

— Directors: Vincent Paronnaud, Marjane Satrapi
— Stacker score: 89
— Metascore: 90
— IMDb user rating: 8
— Runtime: 96 minutes

Marjane Satrapi adapted her own graphic novels when bringing this autobiographical story onto the big screen. Set during the Iranian Revolution, it follows her young and animated alter-ego to a boarding school in Vienna. The abstract animation style is unmistakable, as are the recurring themes of self-discovery.

#74. Patton (1970)

— Director: Franklin J. Schaffner
— Stacker score: 89
— Metascore: 91
— IMDb user rating: 7.9
— Runtime: 172 minutes

Screenwriters Francis Ford Coppola and Edmund H. North culled from two separate sources when scripting this epic war drama. It chronicles the near-mythic life and times of World War II Gen. George S. Patton Jr., portrayed by actor George C. Scott. The film won no less than seven Academy Awards, including Best Picture.

#73. Little Women (2019)

— Director: Greta Gerwig
— Stacker score: 89
— Metascore: 91
— IMDb user rating: 7.9
— Runtime: 135 minutes

Louisa May Alcott’s seminal novel has been adapted numerous times and across a host of media. In the eyes of critics and audiences alike, Greta Gerwig’s recent take might be the best one yet. Led by a talented cast, it takes place during and after the Civil War and tells the story of the four March sisters.

#72. McCabe & Mrs. Miller (1971)

— Director: Robert Altman
— Stacker score: 89
— Metascore: 93
— IMDb user rating: 7.7
— Runtime: 120 minutes

If the average Goodreads review is anything to go by, Robert Altman’s «anti-Western» supersedes the novel upon which it’s based. Warren Beatty plays John McCabe to Julie Christie’s Constance Miller, two opportunistic business partners in the Old West. Genre conventions are purposefully undermined within a naturalistic setting.

#71. The Magnificent Ambersons (1942)

— Directors: Orson Welles, Fred Fleck (uncredited), Robert Wise (uncredited)
— Stacker score: 89
— Metascore: 93
— IMDb user rating: 7.7
— Runtime: 88 minutes

Not only was this period drama based on a novel, but it featured that very same novel in the original trailer. Co-directed by Orson Welles, it centers on the spoiled heirs of a family fortune. Welles famously lost creative control during post-production, resulting in what François Truffaut once called a «mutilated masterpiece.»

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#70. L’Argent (1983)

— Director: Robert Bresson
— Stacker score: 89
— Metascore: 95
— IMDb user rating: 7.5
— Runtime: 85 minutes

This atypical crime drama was loosely inspired by the first part of a posthumous Leo Tolstoy novella. Employing his ascetic style, French director Robert Bresson tells the story of a counterfeit note and those who use it. The movie earned Bresson a best director prize at the 1983 Cannes Film Festival.

#69. The Silence of the Lambs (1991)

— Director: Jonathan Demme
— Stacker score: 89
— Metascore: 85
— IMDb user rating: 8.6
— Runtime: 118 minutes

Director Jonathan Demme played it fairly close to the source material when making «The Silence of the Lambs.» The film is based on Thomas Harris’ acclaimed novel, about a young FBI agent who enlists the help of a brilliant psychopath in order to catch her target. Some folks have wondered what real-life killers inspired Lecter’s creation, but Harris insists that the character was inspired only by evil itself.

#68. Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse (2018)

— Directors: Bob Persichetti, Peter Ramsey, Rodney Rothman
— Stacker score: 89
— Metascore: 87
— IMDb user rating: 8.4
— Runtime: 117 minutes

The first animated «Spider-Man» film straddles multiple dimensions as different characters take on the title role. Producers Phil Lord and Chris Miller went to great lengths to ensure that every major character came from a comic book source. An upcoming sequel is reportedly in production and slated for a 2022 release.

#67. Raging Bull (1980)

— Director: Martin Scorsese
— Stacker score: 89
— Metascore: 89
— IMDb user rating: 8.2
— Runtime: 129 minutes

Based on boxer Jake LaMotta’s own memoir, Martin Scorsese’s «Raging Bull» offers a stunning glimpse into LaMotta’s violent world. Playing the lead is Robert De Niro, who turns in a legendary performance. Upon seeing the film, LaMotta asked his wife, «Is that the way I was in real life?» She replied, «You were worse.»

#66. Solaris (1972)

— Director: Andrei Tarkovsky
— Stacker score: 89
— Metascore: 90
— IMDb user rating: 8.1
— Runtime: 167 minutes

Stanisław Lem’s 1961 novel remains a sci-fi classic for both its gripping premise and philosophical overtones. Director Andrei Tarkovsky brings both those elements to the foreground in this seminal adaptation. It was allegedly made as a humanistic counterpunch to Kubrick’s «2001: A Space Odyssey.»

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#65. Ben-Hur (1959)

— Director: William Wyler
— Stacker score: 89
— Metascore: 90
— IMDb user rating: 8.1
— Runtime: 212 minutes

Sword-and-sandal movies don’t get much more iconic than «Ben-Hur,» which tells the story of a Jewish prince who is betrayed and then sold into slavery. The 1880 source novel by Lew Wallace is widely considered the most influential Christian book of the 19th century. William Wyler’s adaptation won no less than 11 Academy Awards, setting a record at the time.

#64. All Quiet on the Western Front (1930)

— Director: Lewis Milestone
— Stacker score: 89
— Metascore: 91
— IMDb user rating: 8
— Runtime: 152 minutes

German novelist Erich Maria Remarque detailed the horrors of World War I in «All Quiet on the Western Front,» which was turned into a similarly harrowing film. Both the book and film were subsequently banned by the Nazis after they ascended to power in the 1930s. To this day, each respective work is heralded for its uncompromising perspective.

#63. Beauty and the Beast (1946)

— Directors: Jean Cocteau, René Clément (uncredited)
— Stacker score: 89
— Metascore: 92
— IMDb user rating: 7.9
— Runtime: 93 minutes

Once dubbed a tale as old as time, «Beauty and the Beast» has thematic origins going back centuries. This take from French director Jean Cocteau is hailed for its visual effects and soulful atmosphere. The original folktale has been adapted for multiple media in the time since, all the way up to a recent Disney live-action blockbuster.

#62. The French Connection (1971)

— Director: William Friedkin
— Stacker score: 89
— Metascore: 94
— IMDb user rating: 7.7
— Runtime: 104 minutes

William Friedkin’s classic crime drama is based on a nonfiction account of high stakes drug trafficking in New York City. Screenwriter Ernest Tidyman won an Oscar for his adaptation, though it’s been said that a number of the best lines were improvised. The film’s iconic—and fictionalized—car chase became a piece of history in its own right.

#61. Harakiri (1962)

— Director: Masaki Kobayashi
— Stacker score: 90
— Metascore: 85
— IMDb user rating: 8.7
— Runtime: 133 minutes

When peace breaks out across 17th-century Japan, it puts a samurai, played by Hanshiro Tsugumo, out of the job. As a final act of honor, he hopes to commit harakiri—i.e., a ritual act of taking one’s life—on a feudal lord’s property. Based on a novel by Yasuhiko Takiguchi, the film won the special jury prize at Cannes.

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#60. L.A. Confidential (1997)

— Director: Curtis Hanson
— Stacker score: 90
— Metascore: 90
— IMDb user rating: 8.2
— Runtime: 138 minutes

This award-winning movie toned down James Ellroy’s pulpy crime novel in more ways than one. Filmmaker Curtis Hanson and screenwriter Brian Helgeland tweaked the characters and put substantial twists on the book’s ending. The story follows a trio of cops as they uncover multiple levels of corruption in 1950s Los Angeles.

#59. No Country for Old Men (2007)

— Directors: Ethan Coen, Joel Coen
— Stacker score: 90
— Metascore: 91
— IMDb user rating: 8.1
— Runtime: 122 minutes

Anyone who reads Cormac McCarthy knows that his brilliant prose can be hard to decipher, let alone put up on the big screen. That didn’t stop the Coen brothers from adapting «No Country for Old Men,« about a man, played by Josh Brolin, who gets hunted by a seasoned killer, played by Javier Bardem. While minor differences abound, the award-winning film is for the most part a faithful adaptation.

#58. The Diving Bell and the Butterfly (2007)

— Director: Julian Schnabel
— Stacker score: 90
— Metascore: 92
— IMDb user rating: 8
— Runtime: 112 minutes

This Oscar-nominated French film adapts the bestselling memoir of former magazine editor Jean-Dominique Bauby. Suffering from locked-in syndrome, Bauby, played by Mathieu Amalric, wades between various states of cognition. According to Salon, the biggest difference between the book and the film is in the depiction of Bauby’s relationships with women.

#57. The Servant (1963)

— Director: Joseph Losey
— Stacker score: 90
— Metascore: 93
— IMDb user rating: 7.9
— Runtime: 116 minutes

The dynamic between an aristocrat, played by James Fox, and his servant, played by Sir Dirk Bogarde, takes an unexpected turn in this acclaimed British drama. Playwright Harold Pinter adapted the script from a novella by Robin Maugham. To locate the story’s predominant sexual themes, skip the film and go straight to the original source.

#56. Stagecoach (1939)

— Director: John Ford
— Stacker score: 90
— Metascore: 93
— IMDb user rating: 7.9
— Runtime: 96 minutes

This epoch-making Western from director John Ford turned actor John Wayne into a major star. Based on a short story by Ernest Haycox, it follows a group of American settlers through dangerous territory. Ford and Wayne would collaborate on a number of subsequent and similarly iconic films.

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#55. Call Me by Your Name (2017)

— Director: Luca Guadagnino
— Stacker score: 90
— Metascore: 93
— IMDb user rating: 7.9
— Runtime: 132 minutes

This award-winning drama centers on the budding romance between a 17-year-old student, played by Timothée Chalamet, and an older man, played by Armie Hammer, in 1980s Italy. Based on a book by André Aciman, the film would go through multiple directors and writers during development. It eventually landed in the able hands of director Luca Guadagnino and screenwriter James Ivory.

#54. Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000)

— Director: Ang Lee
— Stacker score: 90
— Metascore: 94
— IMDb user rating: 7.8
— Runtime: 120 minutes

The original «Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon» novel was part of author Wang Dulu’s Crane-Iron Pentalogy. Director Ang Lee also drew inspiration from Jane Austen, once pitching this film as «‘Sense and Sensibility’ with martial arts.» It won four Academy Awards, including Best Foreign Language Film.

#53. The Social Network (2010)

— Director: David Fincher
— Stacker score: 90
— Metascore: 95
— IMDb user rating: 7.7
— Runtime: 120 minutes

This masterful film and the book upon which it’s based have drawn their own respective share of scrutiny. While both diligently document Facebook’s rise to power, founder Mark Zuckerberg, played by Jesse Eisenberg, has disputed his depiction as a girl-and-club-obsessed misfit. Screenwriter Aaron Sorkin took the concept to extremes, tethering Facebook’s genesis to Zuckerberg’s constant social failures.

#52. The Shawshank Redemption (1994)

— Director: Frank Darabont
— Stacker score: 90
— Metascore: 80
— IMDb user rating: 9.3
— Runtime: 142 minutes

More than one of the best Stephen King adaptations ever made, this beloved drama is currently the #1 top-rated movie on IMDb. It tells the story of Andy Dufresne, played by Tim Robbins, an innocent man who changes the entire prison landscape. Differences abound between the film and novella, including the fates of certain key characters.

#51. Cool Hand Luke (1967)

— Director: Stuart Rosenberg
— Stacker score: 90
— Metascore: 92
— IMDb user rating: 8.1
— Runtime: 127 minutes

Paul Newman plays an easy-going Southern inmate in «Cool Hand Luke.» The film is based on a novel by ex-convict Donn Pearce, who co-wrote the screenplay as well. In spite of his involvement, Pearce would later express disappointment in the final product, claiming they «screwed it up 99 different ways.»

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#50. The Last Picture Show (1971)

— Director: Peter Bogdanovich
— Stacker score: 90
— Metascore: 93
— IMDb user rating: 8
— Runtime: 118 minutes

Author Larry McMurtry’s semi-autobiographical novel about life in small-town Texas inspired this award-winning masterpiece. Jeff Bridges plays Duane Jackson, who appears as Duane Moore in the original book. McMurty revisited the character in four follow-up novels, one of which, «Texasville,» was likewise adapted for the big screen.

#49. Rio Bravo (1959)

— Director: Howard Hawks
— Stacker score: 90
— Metascore: 93
— IMDb user rating: 8
— Runtime: 141 minutes

Director Howard Hawks based this iconic Western on a story from his daughter Barbara, credited as B.H. McCampbell. The film is also viewed as a macho rebuttal to the somewhat passive «High Noon.» A story about small-town justice and perseverance, it directly inspired future filmmakers like John Carpenter and Quentin Tarantino.

#48. The Manchurian Candidate (1962)

— Director: John Frankenheimer
— Stacker score: 90
— Metascore: 94
— IMDb user rating: 7.9
— Runtime: 126 minutes

A former POW is brainwashed into becoming an assassin in «The Manchurian Candidate.» Based on a thriller novel by Richard Condon published in 1959, the film stars legendary crooner Frank Sinatra, who reportedly nailed almost every scene on the first take. Other notable actors include Laurence Harvey, Janet Leigh, and Angela Lansbury.

#47. The Searchers (1956)

— Director: John Ford
— Stacker score: 90
— Metascore: 94
— IMDb user rating: 7.9
— Runtime: 119 minutes

Based on a novel by Alan Le May, «The Searchers» presents John Wayne playing a Civil War veteran on a quest to save his niece from the Comanches. During the shoot, a Navajo child fell sick and John Wayne used his own private plane to get the child to a hospital, thereby earning the name «The Man With the Big Eagle» among the Navajos.

#46. The Irishman (2019)

— Director: Martin Scorsese
— Stacker score: 90
— Metascore: 94
— IMDb user rating: 7.9
— Runtime: 209 minutes

The words «I Heard You Paint Houses» appear early on screen in this sprawling drama, paying direct homage to the source material. Both the book and film center on mob hitman Frank «The Irishman» Sheeran, played by Robert De Niro, who claimed to have murdered Jimmy Hoffa. For director Martin Scorsese, it caps off a long run of seminal gangster movies.

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#45. The Bride of Frankenstein (1935)

— Director: James Whale
— Stacker score: 90
— Metascore: 95
— IMDb user rating: 7.8
— Runtime: 75 minutes

Frankenstein’s monster, played by Boris Karloff, is back and this time around, he has himself a bride. One of cinema’s greatest sequels squeezes a full story out of a subplot from Mary Shelley’s original novel. A modern-day remake is reportedly still in the works.

#44. Pinocchio (1940)

— Directors: Norman Ferguson, T. Hee, Wilfred Jackson, Jack Kinney, Hamilton Luske, Bill Roberts, Ben Sharpsteen
— Stacker score: 90
— Metascore: 99
— IMDb user rating: 7.4
— Runtime: 88 minutes

Italian writer and humorist Carlo Collodi first published «The Adventures of Pinocchio» as a serialized novel in 1881 and 1882. Disney’s animated version retained the coming-of-age themes while cleaning up some of the darker elements. Fans of Jiminy Cricket should definitely stick with the film version unless they want their childhood ruined.

#43. The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (2002)

— Director: Peter Jackson
— Stacker score: 91
— Metascore: 87
— IMDb user rating: 8.7
— Runtime: 179 minutes

J.R.R. Tolkien’s «Lord of the Rings» trilogy remains a cornerstone of fantasy literature, and director Peter Jackson’s film adaptation is similarly iconic. In «The Two Towers,» hobbits Frodo and Sam inch closer to Mordor with the goal of destroying a powerful ring. Helping them along the way is Gollum, a shifty creature with plans of his own.

#42. Samurai Rebellion (1967)

— Director: Masaki Kobayashi
— Stacker score: 91
— Metascore: 90
— IMDb user rating: 8.4
— Runtime: 128 minutes

A noble samurai, played by Toshirô Mifune, takes his last stand as this harrowing drama barrels toward its violent finale. Based on a novel by Yasuhiko Takiguchi, the story takes place in 18th-century Japan. Critic Roger Ebert called it «as extreme a samurai film as I’ve seen in both senses (the ethics and the violence), and one of the best.»

#41. Werckmeister Harmonies (2000)

— Directors: Béla Tarr, Ágnes Hranitzky
— Stacker score: 91
— Metascore: 92
— IMDb user rating: 8.2
— Runtime: 145 minutes

Mere words cannot describe this unsettling black-and-white drama, based on a similarly mysterious novel from 1989. Unfolding over the course of just 39 shots, it welcomes viewers to an isolated provincial town on the Hungarian plain. With the arrival of the circus comes an inexplicable form of local unrest.

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#40. Elevator to the Gallows (1958)

— Director: Louis Malle
— Stacker score: 91
— Metascore: 94
— IMDb user rating: 8
— Runtime: 91 minutes

Using a pulpy potboiler as his source, French director Louis Malle churned out this seminal film noir. What begins as an illicit love affair becomes a disastrous murder scheme as the story unfolds. Jazz legend Miles Davis improvised the score, lending the movie an early French New Wave vibe.

#39. Journey to Italy (1954)

— Director: Roberto Rossellini
— Stacker score: 91
— Metascore: 100
— IMDb user rating: 7.4
— Runtime: 97 minutes

While credited to Roberto Rossellini and Vitaliano Brancati, the script for this drama also took inspiration from the 1934 French novel «Duo» by Colette. Retaining a loose structure, it puts a couple’s marriage to the test during a trip to Naples. The BFI calls it a «pioneering work of modernism that links Italian neo-realism with the French new wave.»

#38. It’s a Wonderful Life (1946)

— Director: Frank Capra
— Stacker score: 91
— Metascore: 89
— IMDb user rating: 8.6
— Runtime: 130 minutes

The short story that inspired this holiday classic was a little miracle of its own. Rejected by numerous publishers, author Philip Van Doren Stern printed the story himself and sent it out as a pamphlet-style Christmas card. One of those initial cards made its way to Hollywood and the rest is cinematic history.

#37. There Will Be Blood (2007)

— Director: Paul Thomas Anderson
— Stacker score: 91
— Metascore: 93
— IMDb user rating: 8.2
— Runtime: 158 minutes

Loosely based on a novel by Upton Sinclair, this latter-day masterwork tells the story of ruthless oil magnate Daniel Plainview, played by Daniel Day-Lewis. Bolstered by brilliant performances and a haunting soundtrack, it provides a parable about religion, greed, and desire in America. Day-Lewis won an Academy Award for Best Actor.

#36. Anatomy of a Murder (1959)

— Director: Otto Preminger
— Stacker score: 91
— Metascore: 95
— IMDb user rating: 8
— Runtime: 161 minutes

A man pleads temporary insanity while on trial for murder, but is it all just an act? So goes «Anatomy of a Murder,» based on a book by John D. Voelker writing under the name Robert Traver. The film was quite controversial in its day, primarily because it openly used crude terminology that audiences simply weren’t used to at the time.

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#35. Beauty and the Beast (1991)

— Directors: Gary Trousdale, Kirk Wise
— Stacker score: 91
— Metascore: 95
— IMDb user rating: 8
— Runtime: 84 minutes

A timeless fairy tale sprung to life once again during Disney’s animated renaissance. The result was this Oscar-winning gem, which tracks the blossoming romance between a young woman and her beastly captor. Watch it back-to-back with the 1946 French version to see which one casts the greater spell.

#34. Jules and Jim (1962)

— Director: François Truffaut
— Stacker score: 91
— Metascore: 97
— IMDb user rating: 7.8
— Runtime: 105 minutes

French author Henri-Pierre Roché drew upon his own romantic experiences when writing the original «Jules and Jim.» As youthful as the novel may be, Roché was actually 74 when it was first published. In adapting the tale, director François Truffaut turned out one of the best films of the French New Wave.

#33. Pépé le Moko (1937)

— Director: Julien Duvivier
— Stacker score: 91
— Metascore: 98
— IMDb user rating: 7.7
— Runtime: 94 minutes

This influential mix of French poetic realism and melodrama takes place in the Casbah quarter of Algiers. When potential romance enters the picture, local crime lord Pépé le Moko, played by Jean Gabin, decides to tempt his fate. It’s all based on a rare novel of the same name by Henri La Barthe.

#32. The Grapes of Wrath (1940)

— Director: John Ford
— Stacker score: 92
— Metascore: 96
— IMDb user rating: 8
— Runtime: 129 minutes

John Steinbeck’s epic novel about the misfortunes of a family during the Great Depression became the basis for an award-winning film of the same name. It would go on to reap two Oscars and tons of acclaim. The film is currently No. 21 on the American Film Institute’s list of «America’s 100 Greatest Movies.»

#31. The Maltese Falcon (1941)

— Director: John Huston
— Stacker score: 92
— Metascore: 96
— IMDb user rating: 8
— Runtime: 100 minutes

Mystery writer Dashiell Hammett’s most well-known novel makes for one of Humphrey Bogart’s most iconic films. Private investigator Sam Spade takes on a case that involves outmaneuvering criminals and tracking down a valuable statuette. Fun fact: This was actually Warner Bros.’ third big screen adaptation of the source material.

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#30. Rosemary’s Baby (1968)

— Director: Roman Polanski
— Stacker score: 92
— Metascore: 96
— IMDb user rating: 8
— Runtime: 137 minutes

Mia Farrow plays a woman who thinks she’s been impregnated by the devil in this landmark horror classic. Director Roman Polanski makes expert use of Ira Levin’s original novel, though he did tone down some of the overtly religious aspects. Levin was nevertheless happy to help out during production, providing layouts of the apartments in which most of the action takes place.

#29. The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938)

— Directors: Michael Curtiz, William Keighley
— Stacker score: 92
— Metascore: 97
— IMDb user rating: 7.9
— Runtime: 102 minutes

The story of Robin Hood dates back to the 13th and 14th centuries and was possibly based on a historical figure. Real or not, the character has given way to adaptations in virtually every medium. This 1938 film version stars Errol Flynn as the titular folk hero and remains a favorite among critics and audiences alike.

#28. My Left Foot (1989)

— Director: Jim Sheridan
— Stacker score: 92
— Metascore: 97
— IMDb user rating: 7.9
— Runtime: 103 minutes

Born with cerebral palsy, Christy Brown, played by Daniel Day-Lewis, must learn to paint using only his left foot in this heartfelt biopic. Director Jim Sheridan and screenwriter Shane Connaughton based the film on Brown’s 1954 memoir of the same name. Day-Lewis won his first Academy Award for the stunning portrayal.

#27. Goodfellas (1990)

— Director: Martin Scorsese
— Stacker score: 92
— Metascore: 90
— IMDb user rating: 8.7
— Runtime: 146 minutes

Before working on «Casino,» Martin Scorsese and writer Nicholas Pileggi teamed up for this compulsively watchable masterpiece. Adapted from Pileggi’s book «Wiseguy,» it tells the story of mobster-turned-snitch Henry Hill, played by Ray Liotta. Pileggi and the real-life Hill were in constant communication during production, lending the voiceover dialogue an authentic edge.

#26. The Battle of Algiers (1966)

— Director: Gillo Pontecorvo
— Stacker score: 92
— Metascore: 96
— IMDb user rating: 8.1
— Runtime: 121 minutes

Employing a documentary-like aesthetic, this influential film depicts the Algerian Revolution from both the French and Algerian sides. It’s based on a memoir by former National Liberation Front leader Saadi Yacef, who helped finance the movie’s production. Yacef also appears in a supporting role, playing a character based on himself.

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#25. 12 Years a Slave (2013)

— Director: Steve McQueen
— Stacker score: 92
— Metascore: 96
— IMDb user rating: 8.1
— Runtime: 134 minutes

The 19th-century Northerner Solomon Northup, played by Chiwetel Ejiofor, is sold into slavery down South, where he suffers at the mercy of his masters. The film is based on an actual memoir written by Northup and published in 1853. An active member in the abolitionist movement, he helped pave the way for widespread emancipation.

#24. Apocalypse Now (1979)

— Director: Francis Ford Coppola
— Stacker score: 93
— Metascore: 94
— IMDb user rating: 8.4
— Runtime: 147 minutes

A loose interpretation if there ever was one, this mind trip of a movie sets Joseph Conrad’s «Heart of Darkness» against the backdrop of the Vietnam War. While different in numerous ways, the book and film do share the same general structure along with core themes about fear and madness. Further unifying the two works was a turbulent documentary about the making of the film. The name of that documentary? «Hearts of Darkness.»

#23. Double Indemnity (1944)

— Director: Billy Wilder
— Stacker score: 93
— Metascore: 95
— IMDb user rating: 8.3
— Runtime: 107 minutes

Author James M. Cain wrote the novel upon which this film is based, with fellow mystery legend Raymond Chandler on co-screenwriting duties. It stars Fred MacMurray as insurance agent Walter Neff, who gets slowly seduced into a murder scheme. The premise bears a striking resemblance to «The Postman Always Rings Twice,» another Cain novel adapted by Hollywood.

#22. Ran (1985)

— Director: Akira Kurosawa
— Stacker score: 93
— Metascore: 96
— IMDb user rating: 8.2
— Runtime: 162 minutes

Filmmaking legend Akira Kurosawa transports Shakespeare’s «King Lear» to medieval Japan for one of his best outings. It tells the story of an aging warlord who bequeaths his empire to his three sons and sparks a deadly rivalry. This was the third time that Kurosawa sought inspiration from The Bard.

#21. Gone with the Wind (1939)

— Directors: Victor Fleming, George Cukor (uncredited), Sam Wood (uncredited)
— Stacker score: 93
— Metascore: 97
— IMDb user rating: 8.1
— Runtime: 238 minutes

Based on Margaret Mitchell’s bestseller, «Gone with the Wind» was a star-studded success of unprecedented proportions. Set during the Civil War and subsequent Reconstruction, it tells the harrowing story of Southern belle Scarlett O’Hara, played by Vivien Leigh. The movie won eight Academy Awards and still holds the world record for highest-grossing film, when adjusted for inflation.

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#20. Grave of the Fireflies (1988)

— Director: Isao Takahata
— Stacker score: 93
— Metascore: 94
— IMDb user rating: 8.5
— Runtime: 89 minutes

This acclaimed effort from Studio Ghibli follows two siblings as they struggle to survive during World War II. It’s based on a semi-autobiographical short story by Japanese author Akiyuki Nosaka, who experienced fire-bombings firsthand. A far cry from the standard anime fare, the film provides a sobering glimpse of war.

#19. Rififi (1955)

— Director: Jules Dassin
— Stacker score: 93
— Metascore: 97
— IMDb user rating: 8.2
— Runtime: 118 minutes

Already known for American noir, blacklisted director Jules Dassin moved to Europe and churned out this French masterpiece. While based on a novel of the same name, it also reportedly draws from an actual 1899 robbery. A number of the film’s plot points and character dynamics would become fixtures of the «perfect heist» sub-genre.

#18. The Night of the Hunter (1955)

— Director: Charles Laughton
— Stacker score: 93
— Metascore: 99
— IMDb user rating: 8
— Runtime: 92 minutes

Both this noirish thriller and its source novel cull inspiration from real-life serial killer Harry Powers. Set during the depression, it stars Robert Mitchum as murderous con man Harry Powell. The tattoos of «love» and «hate» on Powell’s knuckles have become iconic in their own right.

#17. Touch of Evil (1958)

— Director: Orson Welles
— Stacker score: 93
— Metascore: 99
— IMDb user rating: 8
— Runtime: 95 minutes

Filmmaking legend Orson Welles adapted a novel by Whit Masterson and delivered some of his finest work. Oozing with noirish overtones, it tells the story of crime and corruption in a small Mexican border town. The opening long take is widely considered one of the best sequences in cinematic history.

#16. The Godfather: Part II (1974)

— Director: Francis Ford Coppola
— Stacker score: 94
— Metascore: 90
— IMDb user rating: 9
— Runtime: 202 minutes

Filmmaker Francis Ford Coppola and author Mario Puzo expand upon the Corleone saga in both directions. Michael’s struggle to retain power is mirrored by the exploits of a young Vito Corleone, played by Robert De Niro. Aiming for pure authenticity, Coppola had to reshoot flashback scenes after discovering the trousers worn by characters weren’t historically accurate.

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#15. The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001)

— Director: Peter Jackson
— Stacker score: 94
— Metascore: 92
— IMDb user rating: 8.8
— Runtime: 178 minutes

Kicking off Peter Jackson’s adaptation of the famous Tolkien trilogy was «The Fellowship of the Ring,» in which Frodo and Sam embark on their quest. Originally, the film was supposed to include a major ambush scene toward the end. However, a huge flood destroyed that particular set and the scene never came to be.

#14. The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1948)

— Director: John Huston
— Stacker score: 94
— Metascore: 98
— IMDb user rating: 8.2
— Runtime: 126 minutes

More than a classic book and film, «The Treasure of the Sierra Madre» is the ultimate parable about honor among thieves. It tells the story of greedy and desperate men, who uncover a treasure and then turn on one another. Original author B. Traven remains something of a mystery to this day.

#13. All About Eve (1950)

— Director: Joseph L. Mankiewicz
— Stacker score: 94
— Metascore: 98
— IMDb user rating: 8.2
— Runtime: 138 minutes

Writer Mary Orr based her short story «The Wisdom of Eve» on multiple real-life actors from the theater world. It was first adapted as a radio drama and then this Oscar-winning classic. Anne Baxter plays aspiring Broadway star Eve Harrington, who will do whatever it takes to get onto the main stage.

#12. Rashomon (1950)

— Director: Akira Kurosawa
— Stacker score: 94
— Metascore: 98
— IMDb user rating: 8.2
— Runtime: 88 minutes

Akira Kurosawa’s impactful drama examines the same crime from multiple perspectives, playing upon the very concept of truth. It culls from two separate short stories by prolific writer Ryunosuke Akutagawa, who was published by the age of 17. The «Rashomon effect» has become a phenomenon unto itself and one that continues to inform storytelling.

#11. The Leopard (1963)

— Director: Luchino Visconti
— Stacker score: 94
— Metascore: 100
— IMDb user rating: 8
— Runtime: 186 minutes

Not just based on a novel of the same name, this historical drama is truly novelistic in scope. Set in 19th-century Sicily, it chronicles the last days of a dying aristocracy. Multiple cuts of the film exist, including one that runs for a whopping 205 minutes.

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#10. The Conformist (1970)

— Director: Bernardo Bertolucci
— Stacker score: 94
— Metascore: 100
— IMDb user rating: 8
— Runtime: 113 minutes

A vulnerable man, played by Jean-Louis Trintignant, gets recruited by Italy’s fascist government for a hit job in this political thriller. The story is based on a 1951 novel by Alberto Moravia, who was once forced into hiding due to his outspoken political views. Director Bernardo Bertolucci puts his own twist on the narrative by presenting it in a nonlinear fashion.

#9. The Wizard of Oz (1939)

— Directors: Victor Fleming, George Cukor (uncredited), Mervyn LeRoy (uncredited), Norman Taurog (uncredited), Richard Thorpe (uncredited), King Vidor (uncredited)
— Stacker score: 94
— Metascore: 100
— IMDb user rating: 8
— Runtime: 102 minutes

It took but one man to write «The Wizard of Oz» book series before a small army of screenwriters and directors adapted it for the big screen. A cinematic milestone, the story follows young Dorothy, played by Judy Garland, into a fantasy world of endless possibility. Lesser known is a creepy 13-minute silent film called «The Wonderful Wizard of Oz» from 1910, which ends with Dorothy deciding not to go home.

#8. Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964)

— Director: Stanley Kubrick
— Stacker score: 94
— Metascore: 97
— IMDb user rating: 8.4
— Runtime: 95 minutes

While director Stanley Kubrick based the majority of his films on books, he would frequently change the tone or content to suit his needs. That was certainly the case with «Dr. Strangelove,» which converted a dramatic novel into a pitch black comedy of errors. Both versions explore paranoia and miscommunication in the age of nuclear weaponry.

#7. Army of Shadows (1969)

— Director: Jean-Pierre Melville
— Stacker score: 94
— Metascore: 99
— IMDb user rating: 8.2
— Runtime: 145 minutes

Underground resistance fighters take on the Nazi regime in this French thriller, based on Joseph Kessel’s novel of the same name. Director Jean-Pierre Melville was a former member of the French Resistance himself, who drew upon personal experience when making the film. It currently holds a score of 99 on Metacritic, signifying universal acclaim.

#6. Psycho (1960)

— Director: Alfred Hitchcock
— Stacker score: 95
— Metascore: 97
— IMDb user rating: 8.5
— Runtime: 109 minutes

A game-changer upon its release, Alfred Hitchcock’s «Psycho» redefined the possibilities of horror and cinema alike. According to legend, novelist Robert Bloch modeled aspects of the original story after real-life murderer Ed Gein, who lived just 35 miles away from him. Bloch would later dispute the claim, saying any similarities between the real killer and Norman Bates are mostly just coincidence.

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#5. Schindler’s List (1993)

— Director: Steven Spielberg
— Stacker score: 95
— Metascore: 94
— IMDb user rating: 8.9
— Runtime: 195 minutes

Horrified by the atrocities of World War II, a German businessman, played by Liam Neeson, attempts to save more than a thousand Jews from the gas chamber. Both Spielberg’s film and the book upon which it’s based wouldn’t exist if not for Holocaust survivor Leopold «Poldek» Pfefferberg. It was Pfefferberg who convinced author Thomas Keneally to write Schindler’s story in the first place.

#4. The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003)

— Director: Peter Jackson
— Stacker score: 95
— Metascore: 94
— IMDb user rating: 8.9
— Runtime: 201 minutes

Capping off Peter Jackson’s «Lord of the Rings» trilogy was «The Return of the King,» in which forces of good and evil battle over the mighty ring. Never before had J.R.R. Tolkien’s words been given such epic visual treatment. For its efforts, the film won no less than 11 Academy Awards.

#3. Vertigo (1958)

— Director: Alfred Hitchcock
— Stacker score: 95
— Metascore: 100
— IMDb user rating: 8.3
— Runtime: 128 minutes

The novel «D’Entre les morts» by Thomas Narcejac and Pierre Boileau translates to «Among the Dead,» but Hitchcock called it by another name: «Vertigo.» It tells the story of private investigator John «Scottie» Ferguson, played by Jimmy Stewart, who gets ensnared in a vicious trap involving murder and forged identity. The film may have also been inspired by the 1956 bestseller «The Search for Bridey Murphy,» a wildly popular book about past lives.

#2. Rear Window (1954)

— Director: Alfred Hitchcock
— Stacker score: 96
— Metascore: 100
— IMDb user rating: 8.4
— Runtime: 112 minutes

Another Hitchcock classic, «Rear Window» centers on suspicious activities within a New York City apartment complex. Jimmy Stewart plays a wheelchair-bound photographer, who may or may not have witnessed a murder. It’s all based on the short story «It Had To Be Murder» by Cornell Woolrich.

#1. The Godfather (1972)

— Director: Francis Ford Coppola
— Stacker score: 100
— Metascore: 100
— IMDb user rating: 9.2
— Runtime: 175 minutes

From Mario Puzo’s pulpy novel came one of the best films ever made. It tells the story of the Corleone crime family, which struggles to retain power while facing obstacles on all sides. To think, Paramount Pictures didn’t want to cast Marlon Brando and tried to fire director Francis Ford Coppola during production. Thankfully, wiser minds prevailed.

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Top 100 TwilightWell, today is the official opening day of “Twilight“. A very highly anticipated movie… not because of the marketing campaign (which has been average at best), but because of the rabid and loyal following that the book series has. With that in mind, I thought it would be an appropriate time to put together a top 100 movies list of movies that were based on books.

Whenever I hear of a new movie coming out based on a popular book or comic book or a sequel, I instantly hear naysayers complaining about a “lack of creativity in hollywood”. “Why not write something original” some will say. But I say thank goodness gifted screenwriters adapt novels into movies! As you can see from my list, some of the greatest movies in the history of film were adapted from books… films that I can’t even imagine what the world of film would look like today if they never came to be. A world without any of these classics or Hallmark movies is a world I’d rather not experience.

So I spent a couple of weeks putting together this list with three purposes in mind:

1) To highlight the important role books have played in the movie world

2) To draw attention to some fantastic movies that some of you may have never taken the time to watch before

3) To draw attention to the fact that these movies are indeed based on books, which may encourage you to try reading them (which I confess is a little hypocritical of me since I’ve only read a fraction of the books here.)

Now let me emphasize this next point very explicitly. THIS LIST IS NOT A LIST OF THE BEST BOOKS OR WHICH MOVIES DID THE BEST JOB ADAPTING FROM THE BOOK. It is a list of the best movies which happen to be BASED on books. Also, while I did not include Graphic Novels or Comic Books in this list, I do include short stories or novellas since they are usually a part of a single issue collection.

Like all movie lists, this one is subjective and in no way authoritative. The main purpose of which is to spark discussion and maybe interest in seeing some of these fantastic films again, or for the first time. So now I present to you The Movie Blog’s Top 100 Movies Based On Books:

Top 100 Book-Joy-Luck.jpg #100 – THE JOY LUCK CLUB
Rottem Tomatoes Rating – 90%
Synopsis: Through a series of flashbacks, four young chinese women born in America and their respective mothers born in feudal China, explore their past. This search will help them understand their difficult mother/daughter relationship.
John’s Thought: Yes, I am a heterosexual male… and I loved this movie.
Book-Mambo-Kings.jpg #99 – THE MAMBO KINGS
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 78%
Synopsis: Musician brothers Cesar and Nestor leave Cuba for America in the 1950s, hoping to hit the top of the Latin music scene. Cesar is the older brother, the business manager, and the ladies’ man. Nestor is the brooding songwriter, who cannot forget the woman in Cuba who broke his heart.
John’s Thought: No Antonio! Too sexy! Too Sexy!
book-stardust.jpg #98 – STARDUST
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 76%
Synopsis: “Stardust,” based on the best-selling graphic novel by Neil Gaiman and Charles Vess, takes audiences on an adventure that begins in a village in England and ends up in places that exist in an imaginary world. A young man named Tristan (Charlie Cox) tries to win the heart of Victoria (Sienna Miller), the beautiful but cold object of his desire, by going on a quest to retrieve a fallen star. His journey takes him to a mysterious and forbidden land beyond the walls of his village. On his odyssey, Tristan finds the star, which has transformed into a striking girl named Yvaine (Claire Danes).
John’s Thought: Easily the single most underrated and under appreciated film of 2007
book-green-tomatoes.jpg #97 – FRIED GREEN TOMATOES
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 82%
Synopsis: A heartwarming tale of family, friendship and murder in rural Georgia. In a Southern nursing home, a feisty resident and old local fixture named Ninny Threadgoode (Tandy) befriends Evelyn Couch (Kathy Bates) a depressed housewife and stirs her to action with an inspirational tale. She tells the story of a transcendent friendship between two young women living in Georgia in the 1930s, Idgie Threadgoode (Mary Stuart Masterson) and Ruth (Mary Louise Parker), who forge a powerful bond after witnessing a terrible tragedy together. The two women open a cafe (where fried green tomatoes are a house specialty) together in their small Southern town of Whistle Stop and manage to survive the hardships of life, despite racism, prejudice and the pressures of trying to live their lives as individuals in a strict and close-minded Southern society.
John’s Thought: Powerful cast, powerful story. An honestly moving film.
book-shining.jpg #96 – THE SHINING
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 86%
Synopsis: A family heads to an isolated hotel for the winter where an evil and spiritual presence influences the father into violence, while his psychic son sees horrific forebodings from the past and of the future
John’s Thought: Iconic film with some of the most quoted one liners from a horror film in history.
book-patriot-games.jpg #95 – PATRIOT GAMES
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 80%
Synopsis: Jack Ryan, the hero of Tom Clancy’s techno-thriller series, returns in the sequel to _The Hunt for Red October_. Ryan is on vacation in England when he spoils an assassination attempt on an important member of the Royal Family. Ryan gets drawn back into the CIA when the same splinter faction of the IRA targets him and his family.
John’s Thought: Once again proving you CAN change actors and still make the franchise work. Ford in his prime and my introduction to the brilliance of Sean Bean.
book-wag-dog.jpg #94 – WAG THE DOG
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 84%
Synopsis: When a Firefly Girl accuses the president of sexual misconduct in the Oval Office less than two weeks before the upcoming election, White House official Winifred Ames (Anne Heche) is told to bring in Conrad Bream (Robert De Niro) to fix the situation and save the president’s chances for reelection. This mysterious “fixer” fabricates a conflict with Albania in an effort to detract attention from the sex scandal, bringing in legendary Hollywood producer Stanley Motss (Dustin Hoffman) to “produce” the war. When the CIA foils the initial plot, the creative team turns to a new story line, creating the saga of a U.S. soldier left behind enemy lines whom the president vows to find and return to American soil.
John’s Thought: Especially funny watching this movie now after the events of the last 8 years. Hard to go wrong with Hoffman and DiNero before he started sucking.
Top 100 books-Charlottes-Web.jpg #93 – CHARLOTTE’S WEB
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 74%
Synopsis: Wilbur the pig is scared of the end of the season, because he knows that come that time, he will end up on the dinner table. He hatches a plan with Charlotte, a spider that lives in his pen, to ensure that this will never happen.
John’s Thought: Loved this as a kid, still love it today and will leave it on whenever I stumble across it channel surfing. Much better than the Julia Roberts voiced one from a couple of years ago.
books-Pride-Prejudice.jpg #92 – PRIDE AND PREJUDICE (1940)
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 88%
Synopsis: From the classic novel by Jane Austen about the morals and mores of the class system in early Georgian England. The intelligent and spirited Elizabeth Bennet is one of 5 daughters — which, during that era, meant trouble: because women cannot inherit, upon her father’s death her family’s home will become the property of their nearest male relative. Only marriage, preferably to someone wealthy, can ensure her security. But the proud young lady instantly takes offense when Mr. Darcy, a promising newcomer in town, doesn’t seem quite admiring enough, and she spurns his advances. Slowly and painfully, Elizabeth realizes her error, but not before it seems she has lost him forever.
John’s Thought: Easily the best adaptation of this book ever done. Not taking away from any of the other ones… but Olivier rules.
books-Notebook.jpg #91 – THE NOTEBOOK
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 51%
Synopsis: The movie focuses on an old man reading a story to an old woman in a nursing home. The story he reads follows two young lovers named Allie Hamilton and Noah Calhoun, who meet one evening at a carnival. But they are separated by Allie’s parents who dissaprove of Noah’s unwealthy family, and move Allie away. After waiting for Noah to write her for several years, Allie meets and gets engaged to a handsome young soldier named Lon. Allie, then, with her love for Noah still alive, stops by Noah’s 200-year-old home that he restored for her, “to see if he’s okay”. It is evident that they still have feelings for each other, and Allie has to choose between her fiancé and her first love.
John’s Thought: I avoided seeing this for a couple of years because it had “chick flick” written all over it. My loss… turned out it’s an exceptional film.
books-Friday-Night-Lights.jpg #90 – FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 82%
Synopsis: A straight arrow coach leads his team to the 1988 Texas state semifinals in the west Texas city of Odessa, where high school football is king. Expectations of classmates, coaches, family, and community members exact a toll on the athletes central to the story. Economic and racial undertones pervade this adaptation of H.G. Bissinger’s book by the same name.
John’s Thought: My first thought is that we’ve seen this movie 100 times already. Wrong. This is a special film, and a reminder that despite taking a lot of junk roles, Billy Bob Thornton can act his ass off sometimes.
books-Bridget-Jones.jpg #89 – BRIDGET JONES’ DIARY
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 80%
Synopsis: Bridget Jones is an average woman struggling against her age, her weight, her job, her lack of a man, and her many imperfections. As a New Year’s Resolution, Bridget decides to take control of her life, starting by keeping a diary in which she will always tell the complete truth. The fireworks begin when her charming though disreputable boss takes an interest in the quirky Miss Jones. Thrown into the mix are Bridget’s band of slightly eccentric friends and a rather disagreeable acquaintance who Bridget cannot seem to stop running into or help finding quietly attractive.
John’s Thought: I’ve yet to meet a woman who hasn’t seen this flick… and there’s a reason for that.
books-Color-Of-Money.jpg #88 – THE COLOR OF MONEY
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 91%
Synopsis: Eddie “Fast Eddy” Felson, a former pool player forced into retirement by gangsters (as seen in “The Hustler”,) finds himself, self-respect, and finally, redemption when he enters a relationship with young pool player Tom Cruise very similar to his own early career. As they travel together, Fast Eddy realizes how much he had lost, and can see the inevitable finale of their relationship as history begins to repeat itself. In an effort to avert tragedy, Eddy severs their relationship, and returns to his first love, pool. Finally, in a big Atlantic City tournament, Cruise returns the favor, and teaches Eddy the final lesson that allows him to finish his quest of re-discovery.
John’s Thought: Hey, remember back when Tom Cruise wasn’t a raving lunatic? Yeah, those were good days.
books-Minority-Reports.jpg #87 – MINORITY REPORT
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 92%
Synopsis: Based on a Philip K. Dick short story, Minority Report is about a cop in the future working in a division of the police department that arrests killers before they commit the crimes courtesy of some future viewing technology. John Anderton has the tables turned on him when he is accused of a future crime and must find out what brought it about and stop it before it can happen.
John’s Thought: Spielberg and Curise are an unlikely couple, but man it worked well for this flick.
books-Apollo-13.jpg #86 – APOLLO 13
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 95%
Synopsis: A movie based on what was to be the third lunar-landing mission. This film shows the trials and tribulations of the Apollo 13 crew, mission control, and families after a near-fatal accident cripples the space vehicle. A mission that couldn’t get TV airtime because space flights had become routine to the American public suddenly grabbed the national spotlight. This is a tale of averted tragedy, heroism and shows a testament to the creativity of the scientists who ran the early space missions.
John’s Thought: A solid cast highlighting yet another brilliant performance by Tom Hanks.
books-Capote.jpg #85 – CAPOTE
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 91%
Synopsis: In 1959, Truman Capote, a popular writer for The New Yorker, learns about the horrific and senseless murder of a family of four in Holcomb, Kansas. Inspired by the story material, Capote and his partner, Harper Lee, travel to the town to research for an article. However, as Capote digs deeper into the story, he is inspired to expand the project into what would be his greatest work, In Cold Blood. To that end, he arranges extensive interviews with the prisoners, especially with Perry Smith, a quiet and articulate man with a troubled history. As he works on his book, Capote feels some compassion for Perry which in part prompts him to help the prisoners to some degree. However, that feeling deeply conflicts with his need for closure for his book which only an execution can provide. That conflict and the mixed motives for both interviewer and subject make for a troubling experience that would produce an literary account that would redefine modern non-fiction.
John’s Thought: Most avid film fans already knew Philip Seymour Hoffman was stupidly gifted… this film just sort of introduced him as an “A” lister to the rest of the world.
Top 100 books-Accidental-Tourist.jpg #84 – ACCIDENTAL TOURIST
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 84%
Synopsis: After the death of his son, Macon Leary, a travel writer, seems to be sleep walking through life. Macon’s wife, seems to be having trouble too, and thinks it would be best if the two would just split up. After the break up, Macon meets a strange outgoing woman, who seems to bring him back down to earth. After starting a relationship with the outgoing woman, Macon’s wife seems to think that their marriage is still worth a try. Macon is then forced to deal many decisions.
John’s Thought: Nominated for best picture and best screenplay. Geena Davis actually won best supporting actress for this one.
Top 100 books-trainspotting.jpg #83 – TRAINSPOTTING
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 88%
Synopsis: A wild, freeform, Rabelaisian trip through the darkest recesses of Edinburgh low-life, focusing on Mark Renton and his attempt to give up his heroin habit, and how the latter affects his relationship with family and friends: Sean Connery wannabe Sick Boy, dimbulb Spud, psycho Begbie, 14-year-old girlfriend Diane, and clean-cut athlete Tommy, who’s never touched drugs but can’t help being curious about them.
John’s Thought: I still think this is Danny Boyle’s best film
books-Verdict.jpg #82 – THE VERDICT
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 96%
Synopsis: Frank Galvin is a down-on-his luck lawyer, reduced to drinking and ambulance chasing. Former associate Mickey Morrissey reminds him of his obligations in a medical malpractice suit that he himself served to Galvin on a silver platter: all parties willing to settle out of court. Blundering his way through the preliminaries, he suddenly realizes that perhaps after all the case should go to court: to punish the guilty, to get a decent settlement for his clients, and to restore his standing as a lawyer.
John’s Thought: One of the best courtroom dramas I’ve ever seen.
books-Remo-Williams.jpg #81 – REMO WILLIAMS THE ADVENTURE BEGINS
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 55%
Synopsis: An NYPD cop is ‘killed’ in an accident. The death is faked, and he is inducted into the organization CURE, dedicated to preserving the constitution by working outside of it. Remo is to become the enforcement wing (assassin) of CURE, and learns an ancient Korean martial art from Chiun, the Master of Sinanju. Based on the popular pulp series “The Destroyer,” by Richard Sapir and Warren Murphy.
John’s Thought: Chiun is still one of my all time favorite supporting characters in any movie I’ve ever seen. His lines are some of the most quotable and hilarious I’ve ever heard. Probably only second to Bruce Campbell’s as Ash.
Top 100 books-drugstore-cowboy.jpg #80 – DRUGSTORE COWBOY
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 100%
Synopsis: Matt Dillon and Kelly Lynch play a heroin-driven Bonnie and Clyde, knocking over drugstores in the Pacific Northwest. Ultimately, they must dispose of the body of one of their crew, sneaking it out from a motel where a sheriffs’ convention is being held.
John’s Thought: Remember back when Matt Dillon was relevant? I still don’t think he gets enough credit for how good he can be.
books-Full-Metal.jpg #79 – FULL METAL JACKET
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 96%
Synopsis: Full Metal Jacket begins by following the trials and tribulations of a platoon of fresh Marine Corps recruits focusing on the relationship between Gunnery Sergeant Hartman and Privates Pyle and Joker. We see Pyle grow into an instrument of death as Hartman has forseen of all of his recruits. Through Pyle’s torment and Joker’s unwillingness to stand up against it the climax of part one is achieved with all three main characters deciding their fates by their action or inaction. The second chapter of Full Metal Jacket delves into Joker’s psyche and the repeated referal to the fact that he joined the Corps to become a killer. When his mostly behind the scenes job as a combat correspondant is interfered with by the Tet offensive he is thrust into real combat and ultimately must choose if he really is a killer.
John’s Thought: Not many people agree with me, but I think this was easily Stanley Kubrick’s best movie.
books-9-weeks.jpg #78 – 9 1/2 WEEKS
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 62%
Synopsis: An erotic story about a woman, the assistant of an art gallery, who gets into an impersonal affaire with a man. She barely knows about his life, only about the sex games they play, so the relationship begins to complicate.
John’s Thought: As hard as it is to believe now, there was a time when Mikey Rourke was once considered a very handsome man.
books-ragtime.jpg #77 – RAGTIME
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 90%
Synopsis: The story runs in the 1910’s New York. Coalhouse Walker Jr. is a black piano player. He has won fame and fortune playing with a jazz band. Some white men do not like this situation, and one day they assault him and spoil his brand new car. Walker tries by all means to get justice, without an answer.
John’s Thought: The strength of the film is in its characters that feel so authentic you can’t help but feel a part of this period piece that was a forerunner for the slew of social change movies that followed in.
Top 100 books-babe.jpg #76 – BABE
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 98%
Synopsis: Babe is a little pig who doesn’t quite know his place in the world. With a bunch of odd friends, like Ferdinand the duck who thinks he is a rooster and Fly the dog he calls mom, Babe realizes that he has the makings to become the greatest sheep pig of all time, and Farmer Hogget Knows it. With the help of the sheep dogs Babe learns that a pig can be anything that he wants to be.
John’s Thought: Whoopie, a movie about a talking pig. We’ve seen it before. I don’t care… this movie is frigging beautiful.
books-Forrest-Gump.jpg #75 – FORREST GUMP
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 72%
Synopsis: Forrest, Forrest Gump is a simple man with little brain activity but good intentions. He struggles through childhood with his best and only friend Jenny. His ‘mama’ teaches him the ways of life and leaves him to choose his destiny. Forrest joins the army for service in Vietnam, finding new friends called Dan and Bubba, he wins medals, starts a table tennis craze, creates a famous shrimp fishing fleet, inspires people to jog, create the smiley, write bumper stickers and songs, donating to people and meeting the president several times. However this is all irrelevant to Forrest who can only think of his childhood sweetheart Jenny. Who has messed up her life. Although in the end all he wants to prove is that anyone can love anyone
John’s Thought: A movie of a less than ordinary person who lives an extraordinary life. Great film, but no way in hell it should have beat out Shawshank Redemption for best picture that year.
books-diggstown.jpg #74 – DIGGSTOWN
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 50%
Synopsis: Gabriel Caine has just been released from prison when he sets up a bet with a business man. The business man owns most of a boxing-mad town called Diggstown. The bet is that Gabe can find a boxer that will knock out 10 Diggstown men, in a boxing ring, within 24 hours. “Honey” Roy Palmer is that man – although at 48, many say he is too old. A sub plot is thrown in about Charles Macum Diggs – the heavyweight champion that gave the town its name – and who is now confined to a wheel-chair.
John’s Thought: One of the best “I never saw that coming” endings to a movie of all time.
books-Field-of-dreams.jpg #73 – FIELD OF DREAMS
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 91%
Synopsis: Iowa farmer Ray Kinsella hears a voice in his corn field tell him, “If you build it, he will come.” He interprets this message as an instruction to build a baseball field on his farm, upon which appear the ghosts of Shoeless Joe Jackson and the other seven Chicago White Sox players banned from the game for throwing the 1919 World Series. When the voices continue, Ray seeks out a reclusive author to help him understand the meaning of the messages and the purpose for his field.
John’s Thought: Listening to James Earl Jones talk about baseball in this film reminds me of why sports are so magical better than any other sports themed monologue in a movie I’ve ever heard.
Top 100 books-Psycho.jpg #72 – PSYCHO
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 97%
Synopsis: Phoenix officeworker Marion Crane is fed up with the way life has treated her. She has to meet her lover Sam in lunch breaks and they cannot get married because Sam has to give most of his money away in alimony. One Friday Marion is trusted to bank $40,000 by her employer. Seeing the opportunity to take the money and start a new life, Marion leaves town and heads towards Sam’s California store. Tired after the long drive and caught in a storm, she gets off the main highway and pulls into The Bates Motel. The motel is managed by a quiet young man called Norman who seems to be dominated by his mother.
John’s Thought: I’ve never felt totally comfortable taking showers in hotels ever since.
books-Firm.jpg #71 – THE FIRM
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 76%
Synopsis: Mitch McDeere is a young man with a promising future in Law. About to sit his Bar exam, he is approached by ‘The Firm’ and made an offer he doesn’t refuse. Seduced by the money and gifts showered on him, he is totally oblivious to the more sinister side of his company. Then, two Associates are murdered. The FBI contact him, asking him for information and suddenly his life is ruined. He has a choice – work with the FBI, or stay with the Firm. Either way he will lose his life as he knows it. Mitch figures the only way out is to follow his own plan.
John’s Thought: Wow, there’s a lot of Tom Cruise on this list
books-Casino.jpg #70 – CASINO
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 83%
Synopsis: Sam ‘Ace’ Rothstein, a mob-connected casino operator in Las Vegas, attempts a civilized lifestyle with his money-conditional wife, Ginger. Nicky Santoro, a boyhood friend of Ace and now a Made-Man of the Mafia, arrives in town with an ambitious agenda of his own that soon disrupts Ace’s life. Before long, Ginger and her long-time leeching lover Lester, along with Nicky’s mistakes, causing problems.
John’s Thought: Sexy, violent and just plain cool
Top 100 books-blade-runner.jpg #69 – BLADE RUNNER
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 91%
Synopsis: Los Angeles, 2019: Rick Deckard of the LAPD’s Blade Runner unit prowls the steel & micro-chip jungle of the 21st century for assumed humanoids known as ‘replicants’. Replicants were declared illegal after a bloody mutiny on an Off-World Colony, and are to be terminated upon detection. Man’s obsession with creating a being equal to himself has back-fired.
John’s Thought: I don’t like this nearly as much as most people, but there is no denying its place in Sci-Fi history
books-English-Patient.jpg #68 – THE ENGLISH PATIENT
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 84%
Synopsis: A burn victim, a nurse, a thief, and a sapper find themselves in each others company in an old Italian villa close to the end of World War II. Through flashbacks, we see the life of the burn victim, whose passionate love of a woman and choices he made for her ultimately change the lives of one other person in the villa. Not only is this film a search for the identity of the English patient, but a search for the identities of all the people in the quiet old villa.
John’s Thought: A lot of people found this dry and slow, but I thought it hit every note perfectly.
books-River-Runs-Through-it.jpg #67 – A RIVER RUNS THROUGH IT
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 78%
Synopsis: A true story about two boys, Norman and Paul, growing up in Montana. One is rebellious of his father, Rev. Maclean, while the other has his feet on the ground. The one love they both have is fly fishing.
John’s Thought: Who knew a movie about a love of Fly Fishing would be so good. To me, my favorite performance by Tom Skerritt of his career.
books-Once-Upon-America.jpg #66 – ONCE UPON A TIME IN AMERICA
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 93%
Synopsis: Epic, episodic, tale of the lives of a small group of New York City Jewish gangsters spanning over 40 years. Told mostly in flashbacks and flash-forwards, the movie centers on small-time hood David ‘Noodles’ Aaronson and his lifelong partners in crime; Max, Cockeye and Patsy and their friends from growing up in the rough Jewish neighborhood of New York’s Lower East Side in the 1920s, to the last years of Prohibition in the early 1930s, and then to the late 1960s where an elderly Noodles returns to New York after many years in hiding to look into the past.
John’s Thought: If I ask you to name a gangster movie with Robert DiNero, would this one even be in the first 3 you’d name?
books-fly.jpg #65 – THE FLY
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 91%
Synopsis: Seth Brundle is a scientist working on teleportation. Just when he thinks he’s ironed out the last bug in his system, the intervention of a common house fly turns Seth into a 6 foot insect. The transformation from man to fly is gradual but horrific, and is witnessed by Veronica; a reporter documenting Seth’s story. Seth has some time to try to find a cure, but is there enough time…?
John’s Thought: Just watched this movie again recently. So honestly freaky and yet really funny at some points too.
Top 100 books-Munich.jpg #64 – MUNICH
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 77%
Synopsis: During the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich, eleven Israeli athletes are taken hostage and murdered by a Palestinian terrorist group known as Black September. In retaliation, the Israeli government recruits a group of Mossad agents to track down and execute those responsible for the attack.
John’s Thought: If there was ever any question that Eric Bana possessed the tools to be a top notch A List movie start, this project settled those questions in my opinion.
books-Natural.jpg #63 – THE NATURAL
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 83%
Synopsis: An unknown middle-aged batter named Roy Hobbs with a mysterious past appears out of nowhere to take a losing 1930s baseball team to the top of the league in this magical sports fantasy. With the aid of a bat cut from a lightning struck tree, Hobbs lives the fame he should have had earlier when, as a rising pitcher, he is inexplicably shot by a young woman.
John’s Thought: The scene near the end of the home run set to that incredible music with the sparks flying still gives me goose bumps.
books-Terms-Endearment.jpg #62 – TERMS OF ENDEARMENT
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 89%
Synopsis: Aurora and Emma are mother and daughter who march to different drummers. Beginning with Emma’s marriage, Aurora shows how difficult and loving she can be. The movie covers several years of their lives as each finds different reasons to go on living and find joy. Aurora’s interludes with Garrett Breedlove, retired astronaut and next door neighbor are quite striking. In the end, different people show their love in very different ways.
John’s Thought: A fantastic balance between funny and sad.
books-Doctor-Strangelove.jpg #61 – Dr. STRANGELOVE OR: HOW I LEARNED TO STOP WORRYING AND LOVE THE BOMB
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 100%
Synopsis: U.S. Air Force General Jack Ripper goes completely and utterly mad, and sends his bomber wing to destroy the U.S.S.R. He suspects that the communists are conspiring to pollute the “precious bodily fluids” of the American people. The U.S. president meets with his advisors, where the Soviet ambassador tells him that if the U.S.S.R. is hit by nuclear weapons, it will trigger a “Doomsday Machine” which will destroy all plant and animal life on Earth. Peter Sellers portrays the three men who might avert this tragedy: British Group Captain Lionel Mandrake, the only person with access to the demented Gen. Ripper; U.S. President Merkin Muffley, whose best attempts to divert disaster depend on placating a drunken Soviet Premier and the former Nazi genius Dr. Strangelove, who concludes that “such a device would not be a practical deterrent for reasons which at this moment must be all too obvious”. Will the bombers be stopped in time, or will General Jack Ripper succeed in destroying the world ?
John’s Thought: Hailed as one of the funniest films ever made… and yet the book didn’t really have any comedy elements in it at all.
Top 100 books-green-mile.jpg #60 – THE GREEN MILE
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 78%
Synopsis: Paul Edgecomb is a slightly cynical veteran prison guard on Death row in the 1930’s. His faith, and sanity, deteriorated by watching men live and die, Edgecomb is about to have a complete turn around in attitude. Enter John Coffey, He’s eight feet tall. He has hands the size of waffle irons. He’s been accused of the murder of two children… and he’s afraid to sleep in a cell without a night-light. And Edgecomb, as well as the other prison guards – Brutus, a sympathetic guard, and Percy, a stuck up, perverse, and violent person, are in for a strange experience that involves intelligent mice, brutal executions, and the revelation about Coffey’s innocence and his true identity.
John’s Thought: My second favorite Darabont movie behind another film on this list higher up and a performance of a lifetime for Michael Clarke Duncan that he’ll probably never equal.
books-Girl-Interupted.jpg #59 – GIRL INTERRUPTED
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 52%
Synopsis: Susanna is depressed and directionless after finishing high school in the late 1960’s. A suicide attempt lands her in Claymore, a mental institution. She befriends the band of troubled women in her ward (Georgina the pathological liar, the sexually abused Daisy, the burn victim Polly) but falls under the hypnotic sway of Lisa, the wildest and most hardened of the bunch. Will Susanna “drop anchor” at Claymore and perpetually act out like Lisa, or will she finally pull her mind together and leave institutional life behind?
John’s Thought: I still don’t rationally know why I like this movie so much… but I do.
books-Quiz-Show.jpg #58 – QUIZ SHOW
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 96
Synopsis: An idealistic young lawyer (Rob Morrow) working for a Congressional subcommittee in the late 1950s discovers that TV quiz shows are being fixed. His investigation focusses on two contestants on the show “Twenty-One”: Herbert Stempel (John Turturro), a brash working-class Jew from Queens, and Charles Van Doren (Ralph Fiennes), the patrician scion of one of America’s leading literary families. Based on a true story.
John’s Thought: Ralph Fiennes and John Turturro just rock the hell out of this movie. Far more intense and exciting than you’d think a movie about a game show would be.
Top 100 books-Romancing-Stone.jpg #57 – ROMANCING THE STONE
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 85%
Synopsis: The writer of romantic novels Joan Wilder travels to south America to look for and rescue her kidnapped sister. She finds herself stranded in the jungles and finds help in the form of the soldier of fortune Jack Colton. The two go through a number of adventures, deal with the bad villains Ralph and company, and end up falling in love.
John’s Thought: One of those great films that was just fine as it was they never should have made a sequel to.
books-color-purple.jpg #56 – THE COLOR PURPLE
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 84%
Synopsis: This film follows the life of Celie, a young black girl growing up in the early 1900’s. The first time we see Celie, she is 14 – and pregnant – by her father. We stay with her for the next 30 years of her tough life.
John’s Thought: One more reason why Steven Spielberg is simply the best director in the business in our lifetime.
books-Dead-Zone.jpg #55 – THE DEAD ZONE
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 89%
Synopsis: Johnny Smith is a young schoolteacher with his whole life ahead of him. Unfortunately, after leaving his fiancee’s home one night, he is involved in a wreck with an 18-wheel tractor-trailer and is in a coma for 5 years. When he wakes up from it, he discovers he has an ability to see into other people’s lives, past, present and future, by coming into physical contact. But the visions he has are often frightening, and even apocalyptic.
John’s Thought: This is the first movie I ever saw Christopher Walken in (hey, I was 11 years old) and to this day I still get a little freaked out when I see him on screen.
books-Fast-Times.jpg #54 – FAST TIMES AT RIDGEMONT HIGH
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 81%
Synopsis: Follows a group of high school students growing up in southern California, based on the real-life adventures chronicled by Cameron Crowe. Stacy Hamilton and Mark Ratner are looking for a love interest, and are helped along by their older classmates, Linda Barrett and Mike Damone, respectively. The center of the film is held by Jeff Spicoli, a perpetually stoned surfer dude who faces off with the resolute Mr. Hand, who is convinced that everyone is on dope.
John’s Thought: One of those movies I love now for totally different reasons then why I loved it as a kid. Back then it was just because of boobs and sex… today it’s because… oh wait… same reasons.
Top 100 books-Lion-Witch-Wardrobe.jpg #53 – THE CHRONICLES OF NARNIA: THE LION, THE WITCH AND THE WARDROBE
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 75%
Synopsis: Based on the 2nd in the series of books by ‘CS Lewis’ , “The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe,” the film tells the story of 4 children who go to live with an old professor during the war. One day, while playing hide and seek, Lucy, the youngest of the children, finds a wardrobe which leads to a magical land called Narnia. However Narnia is being ruled by the evil White Witch who has made it snow for 100 years and according to an old prophecy, Edmund, Lucy, Peter and Susan are the “chosen ones” who will defeat the Witch. They are assisted by the true ruler of Narnia, the lion, Aslan. With the good Narnians on their side all 4 children must now defeat the witch using all their strength and fulfill their destinies to become the new kings and queens of Narnia.
John’s Thought: Loved this movie! Perfectly captured the sense of magic and wonder like a master storyteller around a campfire. Too bad the sequel was such a let down.
books-Out-Sight.jpg #52 – OUT OF SIGHT
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 92%
Synopsis: A career bank robber busts out of jail (Clooney) with the help of his buddy (Rhames) and kidnaps a US Marshal (Lopez) in the process. When the two cons head for Detroit to pull off their final big scam, the Marshal is put on their case but she finds she is attracted to one of them and has second thoughts about bringing them in.
John’s Thought: Maybe it’s just because of the great cast and fantastic story surounding her… but J-Lo actually didn’t completely suck in this movie. Guess you gotta get lucky at least once right?
Top 100 First Blood #51 – FIRST BLOOD
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 85%
Synopsis: Ex-Green Beret John Rambo wanders up north in search of a friend. Rambo was awarded with the medal of honor for his service in Vietnam but has not found solace in the States thereafter. And he certainly does escape prejudice when a small town’s tough, idealistic sheriff spots him entering. The sheriff believes Rambo would be something of a light disturbance to the town and tries to keep him out. When Rambo rebels and then escapes into the cold misty forests, the force embarks on a massive manhunt to subdue him flanked by his former superior officer Colonel Trautman who knows the odds and ends of Rambo’s cunning.
John’s Thought: This film was more than just the brainless blow-em-up action movie that the rest of the franchise became. It was actually a character film, and a damn good one at that.
books-In-THe-Name-Of-The-Father.jpg #50 – IN THE NAME OF THE FATHER
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 95%
Synopsis: Based on the true story of Gerry Conlon, a Belfast youth who – along with family members and friends – was wrongly convicted of bombing two pubs outside of London. A story about the relationship between a father and his son who fought for justice to clear his father’s name.
John’s Thought: This movie was basically a memo to mankind letting us know Lewis is one of the greatest actors alive.
books-Mystic-River.jpg #49 – MYSTIC RIVER
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 87%
Synopsis: During a summer in 1975, Dave Boyle and two friends, Jimmy and Sean, are playing on a sidewalk in Boston when Dave is abducted by two men and subjected to sexual abuse over a period of several days. Eventually escaping, but haunted into adulthood by his trauma, Dave becomes a primary suspect when Jimmy’s daughter, Katie, is found murdered. Sean, assigned to investigate the crime, finds himself facing both demons from the past and demons in the present as the circumstances surrounding Katie’s death are uncovered.
John’s Thought: This movie flat out haunted me for a while after I watched it. Tragic and poetic ending. Intense personal, moral and violent conflict. I basically laugh at people who dis on Eastwood as a director.
books-Sophies-Choice.jpg #48 – SOPHIE’S CHOICE
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 84%
Synopsis: Sophie is the survivor of Nazi concentration camps, who has found a reason to live in Nathan, a sparkling if unsteady American Jew obsessed with the Holocaust. They befriend Stingo, the movie’s narrator, a young American writer new to New York City. But the happiness of Sophie and Nathan is endangered by her ghosts and his obsessions.
John’s Thought: First movie I ever saw Meryl Streep in. I still think she’s never been better (and that’s not a bad thing)
Top 100 Lord Of The Flies #47 – LORD OF THE FLIES (1963)
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 100%
Synopsis: A group of boys are marooned on an island after their plane crashes. With no adult survivors, they create their own “micro-society”. Ralph is elected “chief”, and he organises shelter and fire. Jack, the head of the choir takes his boys hunting for food (wild pigs). A bitter rivalry develops between Jack and Ralph as both want to be in charge. The “hunters” become savage and primal, under Jack’s rule, while Ralph tries to keep his group civilised. The growing hostility between them leads to a bloody and frighting climax.
John’s Thought: When watching the film “Doomsday” earlier this year I was struck by how much of a rip off it was (in basic theme) of this film. Except this film did it… you know… in a not sucky way.
books-Kiss-Spider-Woman.jpg #46 – KISS OF THE SPIDER WOMAN
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 88%
Synopsis: Luis Molina and Valentin Arregui are cell mates in a South American prison. Luis, a homosexual, is found guilty of immoral behaviour and Valentin is a political prisoner. To escape reality Luis invents romantic movies, while Valentin tries to keep his mind on the situation he’s in. During the time they spend together, the two men come to understand and respect one another.
John’s Thought: Have I ever mentioned that William Hurt just absolutely rules?
Top 100 books-Willy-Wonka.jpg #45 – WILLY WONKA AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 90%
Synopsis: The world is astounded when Willy Wonka, for years a recluse in his factory, announces that five lucky people will be given a tour of the factory, shown all the secrets of his amazing candy, and one will win a lifetime supply of Wonka chocolate. Nobody wants the prize more than young Charlie, but as his family is so poor that buying even one bar of chocolate is a treat, buying enough bars to find one of the five golden tickets is unlikely in the extreme. But in movieland, magic can happen. Charlie, along with four somewhat odious other children, get the chance of a lifetime and a tour of the factory. Along the way, mild disasters befall each of the odious children, but can Charlie beat the odds and grab the brass ring?
John’s Thought: Unlike most people, I almost liked the Tim Burton version of this story as much as the original. ALMOST.
books-Kiss-Kiss-Bang-Bang.jpg #44 – KISS KISS, BANG BANG
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 83%
Synopsis: A noir send-up. A narrator introduces himself at a Hollywood party: he’s Harry Lockhart, a thief from New York, in L.A. for a screen test. He meets Gay Perry, a glitzy private eye who’s to school him for his role; there’s Harmony Lane, a wannabe actress whose time has passed; the host is an aging actor who starred in detective movies, plus his daughter, with starlet looks and a choppy past. The next day, Gay and Harry stake out a house where Gay is to take surreptitious photographs for a client – what they find is a corpse. From there, twists and connections abound and bodies pile up. Who’s double-crossing whom? And, has Harry found Harmony too late to save himself from misery?
John’s Thought: This movie ranks right up there with Bubba Ho-Tep where the fact that it never got a wide release should be considered a crime against humanity. Robert Downey Jr. and Val Kilmer were both just amazing in this flick
books-Mice-And-Men.jpg #43 – OF MICE AND MEN
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 100%
Synopsis: Based on John Steinbeck’s 1937 classic tale of two travelling companions, George and Lennie, who wander the country during the Depression, dreaming of a better life for themselves. Then, just as heaven is within their grasp, it is inevitably yanked away. The film follows Steinbeck’s novel closely, exploring questions of strength, weakness, usefulness, reality and utopia, bringing Steinbeck’s California vividly to life.
John’s Thought: So beautifully and tragically crafted. I’m always saddened by how many people have never watched this movie.
Top 100 books-Harry-Potter-Goblet.jpg #42 – HARRY POTTER AND THE GOBLET OF FIREr
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 90%
Synopsis: Harry Potter returns to Hogwarts for his fourth year, where the Trizwizard tournament is becoming ready to begin. Students must be over 17 to enter, with the winner receiving eternal glory. Harry can’t enter it this year…or can he. When his name is read out from the Goblet of Fire, everyone assumes that Harry Potter has cheated. Harry insists that he never placed his name in there, with someone else behind it. But Who? Harry must now survive through dragons, sea creatures and a terrifying maze, all before coming face-to-face with a particular dark wizard.
John’s Thought: This one will be hotly debated, but to me it’s head and shoulders the best of the Potter films so far.
Top 100 books-Year-Living-Dangerously.jpg #41 – THE YEAR OF LIVING DANGEROUSLY
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 96%
Synopsis: Guy Hamilton is a journalist on his first job as a foreign correspondent. His apparently humdrum assignment to Indonesia soon turns hot as President Sukarno electrifies the populace and frightens foreign powers. Guy soon is the hottest reporter on the story with the help of his photographer, half- Chinese dwarf Billy Kwan, who has gone native. Guy’s affair with diplomat Jill Bryant also helps. Eventually Guy must face some major moral choices and the relationship between Billy and him reaches a crisis at the same time the politics of Indonesia does.
John’s Thought: You’d think Mel Gibson thought 2007 was the year to live danerously by shooting off his stupid drunk ass mouth about the Jews
books-ordinary-people.jpg #40 – ORDINARY PEOPLE
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 90%
Synopsis: Beth, Calvin, and their son Conrad are living in the aftermath of the death of the other son. Conrad is overcome by grief and misplaced guilt to the extent of a suicide attempt. He is in therapy. Beth had always preferred his brother and is having difficulty being supportive to Conrad. Calvin is trapped between the two trying to hold the family together.
John’s Thought: One of those films that leaves you speechless after seeing it. For my money the best job Robert Redford ever did as a director.
Top 100 books-Bourne-Ultimatum.jpg #39 – THE BOURNE ULTIMATUM
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 93%
Synopsis: Bourne is once again brought out of hiding, Jason Bourne is now hunted by the people who made him what he is–legendary assassin. Having lost his memory and the one person he loved, he is undeterred by the barrage of bullets and a new generation of highly-trained killers. Bourne has only one objective: to go back to the beginning and find out who he was.
John’s Thought: I was never all that impressed with either of the first two Bourne movies (they were ok), but this one was flat out brilliant.
books-Thing.jpg #38 – THE THING
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 77%
Synopsis: An American scientific expedition to the frozen wastes of the Antarctic is interrupted by a group of seemingly mad Norwegians pursuing and shooting a dog. The helicopter pursuing the dog crashes leaving no explanation for the chase. During the night, the dog mutates and attacks other dogs in the cage and members of the team that investigate. The team soon realises that an alien life-form with the ability to take over other bodies is on the loose and they don’t know who may already have been taken over.
John’s Thought: One of my favorite openings to a film, especially as the movie goes on and you understand the significance of it more and more.
books-LA-Confidential.jpg #37 – L.A. CONFIDENTIAL
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 99%
Synopsis: 1950’s Los Angeles is the seedy backdrop for this intricate noir-ish tale of police corruption and Hollywood sleaze. Three very different cops are all after the truth, each in their own style: Ed Exley, the golden boy of the police force, willing to do almost anything to get ahead, except sell out; Bud White, ready to break the rules to seek justice, but barely able to keep his raging violence under control; and Jack Vincennes, always looking for celebrity and a quick buck until his conscience drives him to join Exley and White down the one-way path to find the truth behind the dark world of L.A. crime.
John’s Thought: It’s only years after it was made that you realise just how stacked this cast was. Kevin Spacey, Russell Crowe and Guy Pearce were hardly the recognizable names that they are today.
Top 100 Silence OF The Lambs #36 – THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 96%
Synopsis: Clarice Starling, a young intelligent FBI trainee, has been sent to the Batlimore state hospital for the Criminally insane to interview an inmate Dr. Hannibal-the cannibal- Lecter. A Brilliant renowned psychiatrist turned infamous Psychopathic Serial killer. She must match wits with Lecter -who has the darkest of all minds- and trust him to give her clues in the search for “Buffalo Bill”. a nick name for a loose,unknown, unstoppable Pyschopathic Serial killer.
John’s Thought: Who knew that a cannibalistic serial killer could become a pop culture hero?
books-Planet-Apes.jpg #35 – PLANET OF THE APES
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 88%
Synopsis: In the year 3978A.D. a spaceship with a crew of 4 crashes down on a distant planet. One of the crew members had died in space and the other 3 head out to explore the planet. They soon learn that the planet is much like their own. They then find the planet is inhabited by intelligent apes. One of the men is shot and killed and the others are taken to the apes’ city. There, one undergoes brain surgery and is put into a state of living death. The other befriends some of the apes but is feared by most. After being put through ape trial he escapes with a female human native to the planet. After helping his ape friends escape a religious heresy trial he escapes out into the wilderness with the female. There he learns the planet might not be so distant after all.
John’s Thought: I lost count of how many sequels they made of this amazing films. I think they stopped just short of having “The Apes Do Disco”.
Top 100 The Secret of Nimh #34 – THE SECRET OF NIMH
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 94%
Synopsis: A fieldmouse named Mrs. Brisby must move her family to a safe location before the farmer plows the field where they live, but her invalid son Timmy cannot go outside due to his pneumonia. She enlists the aid of some highly intelligent, escaped lab rats that have built a subterranean society inside a rose bush near the farmer’s garden. The rats, led by the wise Nicodemus, decide to help her physically move her house to repay a debt of gratitude to her late husband, who made possible the rats’ escape from the laboratory. But things become complicated when some of the rats decide to use the situation to kill Nicodemus and make it appear to be accidental.
John’s Thought: I often forget about this magnificent animated film. Truly one of best films that captures your imagination.
Top 100 books-Sideways.jpg #33 – SIDEWAYS
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 96%
Synopsis: A week before the marriage of his great friend, the decadent actor Jack (Thomas Haden Church), the bitter frustrated writer divorced oenologist English teacher Miles Raymond (Paul Giamatti) travels with him to the wine country of California to spend a week together. While Miles intends to drink wine and play golf, Jack indeed intends to score and get laid with as many women as possible. While hosted in the Windmill Inn, they meet the waitress Maya (Virginia Madsen) and the attendant Stephanie (Sandra Oh), and they spend some time together, visiting different wine makers and and Miles and Maya disclosing their inner secrets and falling in love for each other.
John’s Thought: I still don’t really understand how Paul Giamatti didn’t get nominated for his performance in this.
Top 100 books-Children-Of-Men.jpg #32 – CHILDREN OF MEN
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 92%
Synopsis: “Children of Men” envisages a world one generation from now that has fallen into chaos on the heels of an infertility defect in the population. The world’s youngest citizen has just died at 18, and humankind is facing the likelihood of its own extinction. Set against a backdrop of London torn apart by violence and warring nationalistic sects, “Children of Men” follows an unlikely champion of Earth’s survival: Theo, a disillusioned ex-activist turned bureaucrat, who is forced to face his own demons and protect the planet’s last remaining hope.
John’s Thought: Some of the scenes in this flick have the most amazing cinematography and continuous shots.
books-Stand-By-Me.jpg #31 – STAND BY ME
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 91%
Synopsis: Based on Stephen King’s Short story “The Body”, “Stand By Me” tells the tale of Gordie Lachance, a writer who looks back on his preteen days when he and three close friends went on their own adventure to find the body of a kid their age who had gone missing and presumed dead. The stakes are upped when the bad kids in town are closely tailing – and it becomes a race to see who’ll be able to recover the body first.
John’s Thought: Hey everybody look… it’s Wesley Crusher
books-2001.jpg #30 – 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 91%
Synopsis: This movie is concerned with intelligence as the division between animal and human, then asks a question; what is the next division? Technology is treated as irrelevant to the quest – literally serving as mere vehicles for the human crew, and as a shell for the immature HAL entity. Story told as a montage of impressions, music and impressive and careful attention to subliminal detail. A very influential film and still a class act, even after 25 years.
John’s Thought: There are parts of this film that still confuse the hell out of me.
books-Master-Commander.jpg #29 – MASTER AND COMMANDER: THE FAR SIDE OF THE WORLD
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 84%
Synopsis: The year is 1805. Europe has fallen to Napoleon, and only the Royal Navy stands in his way to total victory. Off the cost of South America, a new conflict is brewing. Captain Jack “Lucky Jack” Aubrey (Russel Crowe) of the Man-of-War HMS Surprise is under orders to sink or capture the French privateer Acheron, which has been deployed to the region. After seven weeks of uneventful sailing, the Acheron strikes first, all but crippling the Surprise in an engagement in which Aubrey realizes his enemy’s ship is nautically superior to his own. Along with his close friend and confidant Stephan Maturin (Paul Bettany) who also happens to be the ship’s surgeon, Aubrey is now faced with the choice of retreating to England and admitting defeat or remaining at the Acheron’s mercy. Aubrey must now do the impossible if he is to survive, repair his ship, catch up to his enemy and defeat the Acheron–somehow.
John’s Thought: Tragically overlooked film. The young kids in the cast actually add to the film
Top 100 books-Memento.jpg #28 – MEMENTO
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 94%
Synopsis: Point blank in the head a man shoots another. In flashbacks, each one earlier in time than what we’ve just seen, the two men’s pasts unfold. Leonard, as a result of a blow to the head during an assault on his wife, has no short-term memory. He’s looking for his wife’s killer, compensating for his disability by taking Polaroids, annotating them and tattooing important facts on his body. We meet the loquacious Teddy and the seductive Natalie (a barmaid who promises to help) and we glimpse Leonard’s wife through memories from before the assault. Leonard also talks about Sammy Jankis, a man he knew with a similar condition. Has Leonard found the killer? Who’s manipulating whom?
John’s Thought: Such a unique way to tell a story and the movie that put Christopher Nolan (director of Batman Begins and The Dark Knight) on the map for people.
Top 100 books-Dances-Wolves.jpg #27 – DANCES WITH WOLVES
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 77%
Synopsis: Lt. John Dunbar is dubbed a hero after he accidentally leads Union troops to a victory during the Civil War. He requests a position on the western frontier, but finds it deserted. He soon finds out he is not alone, but meets a wolf he dubs “Two-socks” and a curious Indian tribe. Dunbar quickly makes friends with the tribe, and discovers a white woman who was raised by the Indians. He gradually earns the respect of these native people, and sheds his white-man’s ways.
John’s Thought: Yeah people got sick of Costner, but that doesn’t change the fact that this is one hell of a movie.
books-Assassintion-Jesse.jpg #26 – THE ASSASSINATION OF JESSE JAMES BY THE COWARD ROBERT FORD
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 75%
Synopsis: The last months of Jesse James’s life, from meeting Robert Ford, a 19-year-old who idolizes Jesse, to the day Ford shoots him. Jesse’s a wanted man, living under a pseudonym, carrying out a train robbery, disappearing to Kentucky, and reappearing to plan a bank holdup with Robert and Robert’s brother as his team. The rest of the gang is dead, arrested, or gone from Missouri. Whenever Jesse’s around, there’s tension: he’s murderous, quixotic, depressed, and cautious. Ford wants to be somebody and wants the reward. On April 3, 1882, things come to a head: Jesse is 34, Robert 20. Ford becomes famous, reenacting the shooting on stage, facing down the label “coward,” shot dead in 1892.
John’s Thought: Deliberately paced, beautifully told with a couple of stunning performances to boot.
books-Das-Boot.jpg #25 – DAS BOOT
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 96%
Synopsis: A detailed look into the claustrophobic and terrifying world of a German U-boat crew hunting ships from undersea. Gritty, realistic, and peppered with black humour, this is one of the few sympathetic portrayals of the war from the German side to be released in western distribution.
John’s Thought: I think this might have been the first foreign film I ever saw… it still might be the best.
Top 100 books-Raging-Bull.jpg #24 – RAGING BULL
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 98%
Synopsis: When Jake LaMotta steps into a boxing ring and obliterates his opponent, he’s a prizefighter. But when he treats his family and friends the same way, he’s a ticking time bomb, ready to go off at any moment. Though LaMotta wants his family’s love, something always seems to come between them. Perhaps it’s his violent bouts of paranoia and jealousy. This kind of rage helped make him a champ, but in real life, he winds up in the ring alone.
John’s Thought: A different kind of sports movies and one of DiNero’s best performances.
books-Last-Mohicans.jpg #23 – THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 97%
Synopsis: As the English and French soldiers battle for control of the North American colonies in the 18th century, the settlers and native Americans are forced to take sides. Cora and her sister Alice unwittingly walk into trouble but are saved by Hawkeye, an orphaned settler adopted by the last of the Mohicans.
John’s Thought: STAY ALIVE! Man, the scene where he kills the guy who was about to get tortured… yikes
books-Postman-Rings-Twice.jpg #22 – THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE
Rotten Tomatoes Rating
Synopsis: This remake of the 1946 movie of the same name accounts an affair between a seedy drifter and a seductive wife of a roadside cafe owner. This begins a chain of events that culminates in murder. Based on a novel by James M. Cain.
John’s Thought: A lot of the so called “all time classics” don’t end up living up to the hype. This one does.
books-Untouchables.jpg #21 – THE UNTOUCHABLES
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 82%
Synopsis: Young Treasury Agent Elliot Ness arrives in Chicago and is deternimed to take down Al Capone but he learns that it’s not going to be easy, because Capone has the police in his pocket. But Ness meets Jimmy Malone a veteran patrolman and probably the most honorable one in the force. He asks Malone to help him get Capone but Malone warns him that if he goes after Capone, he is going to war. They recruit academy cadet, George Stone and Treasury agent Oscar Wallace, who is also an accountant, who wants to prosecute Capone for tax evasion. When they make headway, Capone tries to get them but they are untouchable.
John’s Thought: Leave it to a wop to bring a knife to a gun fight. Yeah, we tend to do that.
books-310-Yuma.jpg #20 – 3:10 TO YUMA
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 88%
Synopsis: The rancher Daniel Evans, who lost part of his leg in the Civil War, is broken and owing a large amount to a powerful man in Bisbee. When the outlaw Ben Wade is captured after the heist of a stagecoach, Dan offers to escort the cold blood killer to the city of Contention to take the 3:10 PM train to Yuma to be sent to trial. In return, he would receive US$ 200,00, enough to save his land and give a better life to his family. During their journey, Ben gets closer to Dan while his gang of criminals follows the group to rescue their boss.
John’s Thought: I honestly don’t know why this movie didn’t get better received because I thought it was flat out amazing and my favorite western since Unforgiven.
Top 100 books-Die-Hard.jpg #19 – DIE HARD
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 96%
Synopsis: Tough New York cop John McClane finds himself in a tight situation when an office building in Los Angeles is taken over by terrorists. Apart from himself, everyone else in the building – including his wife – is held at gunpoint while their captors spell out their demands. The F.B.I. are called in to survey the situation, but John McClane has other plans for the terrorists…
John’s Thought: Betcha didn’t know this was based on a book. Yeah neither did I at first.
Top 100 books-Beautiful-Mind.jpg #18 – A BEAUTIFUL MIND
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 78%
Synopsis: From the heights of notoriety to the depths of depravity, John Forbes Nash, Jr. experienced it all. A mathematical genius, he made an astonishing discovery early in his career and stood on the brink of international acclaim. But the handsome and arrogant Nash soon found himself on a painful and harrowing journey of self-discovery. After many years of struggle, he eventually triumphed over his tragedy, and finally – late in life – received the Nobel Prize.
John’s Thought: Russell Crowe is hands down the best all around actor alive today. This film is just exhibit 4 on the list that proves that point.
books-Casino-Royale.jpg #17 – CASINO ROYALE
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 94%
Synopsis: Recently promoted to 00 status, James Bond takes over his first mission, in which he faces a mysterious private banker to world terrorism and poker player, Le Chiffre. Along with a beautiful Treasury agent and the MI6 man in Montenegro, Bond takes part in a high stakes poker game set up by Le Chiffre in order to recover a huge sum of his clients’ money he lost in a failed plot that the British spy took down. 007 will not only discover the threatening organization behind his enemy, but the worst of all truths: to not trust on anyone.
John’s Thought: Daniel Craig because my all time favorite James Bond, and Casino Royale became my favorite Bond film. Too bad Quantum of Solace didn’t live up to Royale’s level.
books-Million-Dollar-Baby.jpg #16 – MILLION DOLLAR BABY
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 91%
Synopsis: Maggie Fitzgerald, a poor thirty-one year old waitress from the very lower classes and with a dysfunctional loser family, decides to make a difference through boxing. She convinces the experienced hardened boxing trainer Frankie Dunn to coach her and be her manager, with the support of his old partner Eddie Scrap-Iron Dupris, who sees her potential as a boxer. Frankie has a problematical relationship with his daughter, and practically adopts Maggie along her career.
John’s Thought: Holy crap this movie twisted my emotions into a thousand knots and inside out. Love this movie. Eastwood is indeed one of the premiere directors in the business.
books-Misery.jpg #15 – MISERY
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 90%
Synopsis: Novelist Paul Sheldon crashes his car on a snowy Colorado road. He is found by Annie Wilkes, the “number one fan” of Paul’s heroine Misery Chastaine. Annie is also somewhat unstable, and Paul finds himself crippled, drugged and at her mercy.
John’s Thought: All of today’s torture porn movies can kiss my ass. The stuff poor James Caan goes through in this flick still makes me squirm.
books-Shadowlands.jpg #14 – SHADOWLANDS
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 96%
Synopsis: CS Lewis is the author of the Narnia books – The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe. Known as Jack, he teaches at an Oxford College, during the 1930’s. An American fan, Joy Gresham, arrives to meet him for tea in Oxford. It is the beginning of a love affair. Tragically Joy becomes terminally unwell and their lives become complicated.
John’s Thought: Touching and deep at the same time. Dealing with the issues of faith and suffering isn’t not an easy theme to navigate, but Shadowlands does beautifully.
books-No-Country-Old-Men.jpg #13 – NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 94%
Synopsis: After stumbling across a case of money among dead bodies, Llewelyn Moss thinks he can keep it quiet, but when silent killer Anton Chigurh locates Moss and his money, Vietnam veteran Moss makes a run for it. With bodies falling everywhere Anton goes, it’s only a matter of time before he catches up with Llewelyn. Whilst all this is going on, Sheriff Ed Tom Bell is overseeing the investigation and begins to see the country in a different light than it once was.
John’s Thought: What can be said about this flick that hasn’t been said this year already?
books-Goodfellas.jpg #12 – GOODFELLAS
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 94%
Synopsis: Henry Hill is a small time gangster, who takes part in a robbery with Jimmy Conway and Tommy De Vito, two other gangsters who have set their sights a bit higher. His two partners kill off everyone else involved in the robbery, and slowly start to climb up through the hierarchy of the Mob. Henry, however, is badly affected by his partners success, but will he stoop low enough to bring about the downfall of Jimmy and Tommy?
John’s Thought: An absolutely stacked cast with some of the most memorable and quoted lines in mobster movie history.
Top 100 Scarface #11 – SCARFACE
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 87%
Synopsis: A remake of the 1932 classic, the 1983 version follows cuban refugee, Tony Montana and his close friend Manny Ray, and together they build a strong drug empire in Miami. Of course Montana must deal with the hardships of this type of buisness. And as Montana’s power begins to grow so does his ego and his paranoia.
John’s Thought: Which line was better? “Say hello to my little friend” or “first, you get the money…”?
books-Wuthering-Heights.jpg #10 – WUTHERING HEIGHTS (1939)
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 100%
Synopsis: The Earnshaws are Yorkshire farmers during the early 19th Century. One day, Mr. Earnshaw returns from a trip to the city, bringing with him a ragged little boy called Heathcliff. Earnshaw’s son, Hindley, resents the child, but Heathcliff becomes companion and soulmate to Hindley’s sister, Catherine. After her parents die, Cathy and Heathcliff grow up wild and free on the Moors and despite the continued enmity between Hindley and Heathcliff they’re happy– until Cathy meets Edgar Linton, the son of a wealthy neighbor.
John’s Thought: so many versions of this story, but this one will always be the measure.
Top 100 books-Princess-Bride.jpg #9 – THE PRINCESS BRIDE
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 95%
Synopsis: When the lovely Buttercup is kidnapped by a ghastly gang intent on fermenting an international incident they find they are pursued by the Dread Pirate Roberts who just might be Westley, her one true love. Also after everyone is nasty Prince Humperdinck to whom Buttercup is now betrothed but who seems to care little for her continued survival. The stage is set for swordfights, monsters, and tortures – but will Grandpa be allowed to finish telling the story with all these kissy bits?
John’s Thought: One of the most special movies ever made that is nothing short of pure magic. Holds a special place in the hearts of a lot of people.
books-Bridge-River-Kwai.jpg #8 – THE BRIDGE ON THE RIVER KWAI
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 95%
Synopsis: The film deals with the situation of British prisoners of war during World War II who are ordered to build a bridge to accommodate the Burma-Siam railway. Their instinct is to sabotage the bridge but, under the leadership of Colonel Nicholson, they are persuaded that the bridge should be constructed as a symbol of British morale, spirit and dignity in adverse circumstances. At first, the prisoners admire Nicholson when he bravely endures torture rather than compromise his principles for the benefit of the Japanese commandant Saito. He is an honorable but arrogant man, who is slowly revealed to be a deluded obsessive. He convinces himself that the bridge is a monument to British character, but actually is a monument to himself, and his insistence on its construction becomes a subtle form of collaboration with the enemy. Unknown to him, the Allies have sent a mission into the jungle, led by Warden and an American, Shears, to blow up the bridge.
John’s Thought: I was pretty young the first time I saw this movie, and it confused me how Obi Wan Kenobi was suddenly a british soldier.
books-Hunt-Red-October.jpg #7 – THE HUNT FOR RED OCTOBER
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 95%
Synopsis: This film tells the story of Captain Marko Ramius, the skipper of the Soviet Union’s newest nuclear sub. Jack Ryan of the CIA gets involved in a tense, tangled hunt for this sub, when Ramius defects, taking the “Red October” with him. The story is an action packed techno-thriller.
John’s Thought: This is probably the one in my top 10 that will make most people scratch their heads. So freaking brilliant. I really liked the way they transitioned between russian to english.
books-Schindlers-List.jpg #6 – SCHINDLER’S LIST
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 96%
Synopsis: The true story of Oscar Schindler, a German businessman who owns a factory. He witnesses the horrifying visions of the Holocaust and the toll it takes on the Jewish people. Eventually, he creates a list of over 1100 Jews whom he saves from death.
John’s Thought: Funniest movie since Slapshot! Just kidding… sort of a Seinfeld reference.
Top 100 books-LOTR-Two-Towers.jpg #5 – THE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE TWO TOWERS
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 96%
Synopsis: Sauron’s forces increase. His allies grow. The Ringwraiths return in an even more frightening form. Saruman’s army of Uruk Hai is ready to launch an assault against Aragorn and the people of Rohan. Yet, the Fellowship is broken and Boromir is dead. For the little hope that is left, Frodo and Sam march on into Mordor, unprotected. A number of new allies join with Aragorn, Gimli, Legolas, Pippin and Merry. And they must defend Rohan and attack Isengard. Yet, while all this is going on, Sauron’s troops mass toward the City of Gondor, for the War of the Ring is about to begin.
John’s Thought: The big question in a lot of people’s mind’s was “Was the first LOTR movie just a fluke?” Nope.
books-LOTR-Fellowship.jpg #4 – THE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE FELLOWSHIP OF THE RING
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 92%
Synopsis: An ancient Ring thought lost for centuries has been found, and through a strange twist in fate has been given to a small Hobbit named Frodo. When Gandalf discovers the Ring is in fact the One Ring of the Dark Lord Sauron, Frodo must make an epic quest to the Cracks of Doom in order to destroy it! However he does not go alone. He is joined by Gandalf, Legolas the elf, Gimli the Dwarf, Aragorn, Boromir and his three Hobbit friends Merry, Pippin and Samwise. Through mountains, snow, darkness, forests, rivers and plains, facing evil and danger at every corner the Fellowship of the Ring must go. Their quest to destroy the One Ring is the only hope for the end of the Dark Lords reign!
John’s Thought: The masterpiece that started the trilogy. A lot of people (me included) didn’t think they’d be able to properly capture the novel. They went far beyond anyone’s expectations.
books-Shawshank.jpg #3 – THE SHAWSHANK REDEMPTION
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 89%
Synopsis: After the murder of his wife, hotshot banker Andrew Dufresne is sent to Shawshank Prison, where the usual unpleasantness occurs. Over the years, he retains hope and eventually gains the respect of his fellow inmates, especially longtime convict “Red” Redding, a black marketeer, and becomes influential within the prison. Eventually, Andrew achieves his ends on his own terms.
John’s Thought: As we get into the top 3, I also have all these films on my all time top 3 (not just for movies based on books). Shawshank never won best picture… one of the greatest crimes at the Oscars in History.
Top 100 books-Godfather.jpg #2 – THE GODFATHER
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 100%
Synopsis: Vito Corleone is the aging don (head) of the Corleone Mafia Family. His youngest son Michael has returned from WWII just in time to see the wedding of Connie Corleone (Michael’s sister) to Carlo Rizzi. All of Michael’s family is involved with the Mafia, but Michael just wants to live a normal life. Drug dealer Virgil Sollozzo is looking for Mafia Families to offer him protection in exchange for a profit of the drug money. He approaches Don Corleone about it, but, much against the advice of the Don’s lawyer Tom Hagen, the Don is morally against the use of drugs, and turns down the offer. This does not please Sollozzo, who has the Don shot down by some of his hit men. The Don barely survives, which leads his son Michael to begin a violent mob war against Sollozzo and tears the Corleone family apart.
John’s Thought: Probably the single most important and influential film ever made. I still can’t believe how many people have never seen this movie. GO SEE IT.
Top 100 books LOTR-Return-King.jpg #1 – THE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE RETURN OF THE KING
Rotten Tomatoes Rating – 94%
Synopsis: Gondor is overrun by the orcs of Mordor, and Gandalf rides to Minas Tirith to aid the humans in the war that is ahead. Aragorn must realize his true identity and purpose as the King of Men, and journey with Gimli and Legolas to summon the Army of the Dead so that the battle against evil can be won. Meanwhile, paranoia and suspicion rises between Frodo, Sam and Gollum as they continue their increasingly dark and dangerous travel to Mount Doom, the one place where The Ring can be destroyed once and for all.
John’s Thought: It only makes sense for this film to be on the top of the list considering I call it the greatest all around achievement in film history (when you take all the elements of effects, cinematography, direction, acting, writing, etc, etc, etc.

So there you have it folks… the Top 100 Movies Based On Books. Now, I’m sure in all the time I spent putting this list together that there are probably 2 or 3 that I left out or forgot about that I’ll slap my head about later. That’s to be expected. But for now, what are some of your favorites? Which ones did I leave off this list that you think should have been included and why? What would you bump off the list?

What other little gems should be all know about?

*UPDATE* – Like I said in the paragraph above, after spending weeks going through literally thousands of movies, a few obvious ones slipped through the cracks. So here is an update on films I SHOULD have included on the list:

– To Kill A Mocking Bird
– Jaws

Many people are asking why Gone with the Wind isn’t on the list. It’s a great movie, but I sometimes use the “Buddy with DVDs” test. If a buddy showed up with 2 DVDs, Gone with the Wind, and any movie on this list… which movie would I choose to watch? Answer: Any movie on this list, thus Gone with the Wind doesn’t make the list of Top 100 Movies Based On Books.

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