Top 5 (in no particular order because that would be impossible):
- Beauty and the Beast
- Tangled
- Top Gun
- Titanic
- Kingsman
- Monsters Inc.
- Love Actually
- Jason Bourne
- Slumdog Millionaire
-Love, Rosie
- Bridesmaids
- The Breakfast Club
- The Grinch
- Catching Fire
- Despicable Me
- Alice in Wonderland
- Harry Potter (all except 6, if pushed I would have to say 4's my favourite)
This was very difficult to narrow down my because I love watching films however, I've kind of done it, but I'm pretty sure my top 5 will change again tomorrow (or at least after I've seen the new Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them).
Beauty and the Beast:
A Disney classic and I love Disney so I think my connection to this film was an inevitable fact of life. I have watched it my entire life, from being very little to just last week and I think that's why it holds such a place in my heart. Whenever I watch it it's like being wrapped in a warm blanket whilst being handed a cup of hot chocolate; it has a feeling of safety about it that I'm drawn to every time my life hits a bump in the road.
The story itself is so good and Belle is a great, strong female lead who I'm so glad I looked up to as a child. Unfortunately in the early Disney films, it's not often the female character is the hero of the story, but here it's Belle who gives herself up in the place of her father being brave, strong and independent. This is what I've grown up to be, yes because of my environment and how I was raised, but also because my childhood hero was a strong, selfless girl and I think that's something really important.
This film is so familiar that even the opening chords of the intro give me goosebumps - I'd know them anywhere. This is actually one of the two films whose
soundtrack I hear come in and out simply because I know it so well. This happened when I watched the teaser trailer for the new live action Beauty and the Beast, the first thing we heard was the music which I believe was a very good editing decision for a film with such a big fanbase.
The opening sequence is a
voiceover telling us a story to give us a background view on the characters and an idea of what the story is going to be. This also makes it feel like a bedtime story adding to the warm, relaxing mood I experience when watching it. However, to the younger viewer, the film is actually quite scary. The beast is very menacing and the music used when he's around really creates a frightening scene for younger viewers - the
target audience for the film. This is an interesting choice made by the director as it risks the film actually being too scary for the
target audience, possibly reducing profit as parents refuse to buy the film that traumatised their child. However, luckily for Gary Trousdale and Kirk Wise, they managed to strike the balance just right, appealing to older children with the heightened level of maturity than in other early Disney films such as Cinderella and Snow White, but keeping it child friendly enough for younger children and therefore making a profit of $424,967,620.
Titanic:
I will hang my head in shame as I confess that I didn't see the Titanic until I was 17. The thing was, I am a very emotional person, especially when it comes to films and books, as I become heavily invested in the characters and storyline. Therefore I chose not to put myself through the crushing pain this film would undoubtably bring. And I should have waited longer. When it comes to pausing the film because you can't actually hear what's happening over the all-consuming sound of your sobs, you know a wrong decision was made somewhere down the line. However, despite the emotional trauma and scarring, you cannot fault the extraordinary film making demonstrated on all parts to create this masterpiece.
There must have been just a slight bit of pressure recreating the most famous ship sinking disaster in history but I believe they pulled it off flawlessly. Leonardo Dicaprio and Kate Winslet played their parts down to a 'T', completely engrossing me in their story that, in just 3 hours and 15 minutes, totally finished me off (as in, we had to order a pizza and watch Jurassic World just to try and recover the strength to get me up the stairs).
The sets on the film were amazing, creating all the grandeur the Titanic would have had and, when it came to it sinking the effects were so real I struggled to remind myself that I was in fact sat in a living room and not aboard myself.
And lets not even mention the heart wrenching
soundtrack provided by Cèline Dion. It was so perfect for the film and fitted in seamlessly, even though there was lyrics. I can find that if a song with lyrics is used in a film it ca detract from the action as you are focussed on the wrong thing. Not here. This added to the tone of the film, creating an absolutely heartbreaking tragedy.
Overall I thought this film was phenomenal, an absolutely epic creation that did the real event justice. I was awed by the
visual effects, storyline and music, all combining to create one of my definite top 5 films however, it's not one I will be watching in the near future, there's only so much emotional upheaval one person can take.
Slumdog Millionaire:
Again, I was a little late on the bandwagon but I finally got round to watching this film in February this year. I thought it was amazing. The time and effort that must of gone into creating such a phenomenally complex and intertwined storyline is unimaginable but massively appreciated by viewers of the film.
At first the film is quite confusing as we jump from the beginning to the very end all the way through, slowly finding out how our
protagonist knows the answers to the questions on the gameshow 'Who Wants to be a Millionaire'. The filming and
editing process must have been so complicated and, now having an insight into the world of media and production, I have the upmost respect for everyone involved in the creation of such a film. Not only did the film have an amazing storyline but it dealt with serious issues affecting developing countries and hammered home the impact this is having by making them personal to the characters we support and warm to. It's a very effective way of raising awareness without it being boring or just words on a leaflet, it makes it seem more real and upsetting as we sympathise with the characters.
The
camera work and
editing also make the film feel so personal and life-like.
Close-up shots and the use of and
handheld cameras make us feel as though we're in the action, living through each moment with the
protagonist. It's exceptionally well done and still sticks out to me as one of the best film's I've ever watched.
Bridesmaids:
This is by far one of my absolute favourite films of all time. I love comedies because, as good as it is to watch a film as jaw-dropping as the Titanic, sometimes you need to come away from the settee with a spring in your step rather than with your knuckles dragging along the floor.
The opening scene is certainly an eyebrow raiser and the
narrative enigma really draws the audience into the film. Slowly they reveal character relationships and backgrounds but this is done gradually so it's not an onslaught of information. This makes the film easy to watch as there's not a huge amount of concentration required. It also helps that everything is laid out for the viewer, they're not left wondering who's who or trying to figure out a complicated plot. This means we can just sit back and accept what we're given making it my go-to chill out film.
The acting is incredible and that's what makes it such a success; the storyline is fab and the script is funny but the lines delivered any other way than they were in the film wouldn't have been even half as hilarious as they were.
The
non-diegetic sound is subtle and creates the right mood at certain points in the film. This is important as, although it's a comedy, there's still the underlying sad plot line of the main character which gives the film some depth and adds even greater satisfaction to the audience at the end when her problems are resolved, increasing it's feel-good effect. But the stand out sound moment has to be the perfectly selected Wilson Philips song which caps off the entire film making us feel like we can do anything at all. This
intertextuality also adds to the film's 'real life' feel and appeals to the audience as it's a song they've possibly listened to before making the film seem really personal and applicable to their own lives. I for one just love the song and have it on my phone for an instant boost if I'm ever feeling down.
Although it's my favourite
genre of film to watch, I would never take on a comedy as they are so difficult to pull off. You have to strike the right note on something that is relatable but still exaggerated just enough for it to be comical. This is a balance 'Bridesmaids' strikes perfectly.
I love the concept and I can't believe it wasn't fallen upon sooner; each character's individual personality trait is funny in it's own right and combined they leave me struggling for breath and with abs an olympian would die for.
Alice in Wonderland:
As much as I'm a fan of original Disney, my favourite version of this film is Tim Burton's live action remake of the classic. Even if you hated the story there's no way you could come away from this film in anything other than awe at it's
visual effects. They are outstanding, Wonderland may as well exist. Of course I had no real appreciation of this when I first watched it 7 years ago but as I re-watched it through my teenage years I started to realise the phenomenal techniques required to create such a life like land. That's when I started looking online at how they did it, I watched hours of behind the scenes footage, looking at sets, make up, costume and
post-production visual effects to see the whole film come together. What really surprised me was that almost the entire film was done on a green screen. I kind of expected there to be sets built of things like rooms in the Red Queen's Castle or the tea party for the Mad Hatter and the March Hare, but no, everything in Wonderland was green screened, even down to some costumes such as Tweedledum and Tweedledee (both of which were played by Matt Lucas) who were just in green suits. Everything we see was added afterwards - a huge task that took design after design. It's truly unbelievable.
And what struck me after I found out about all this was how talented the actors must've been to act in a world that didn't exist, to talk to things that weren't there and react to actions that weren't happening. I have a huge amount of respect for anyone involved in the production of such a cinematic masterpiece.
I love this film so much I could sing you the theme music right now, I would know it anywhere and this is the second of the only two films I notice the music in at all, when it starts to play and when it stops - I love it that much! In fact last night they played it in the recap of I'm a Celebrity Get Me Out of Here and the Australian jungle simply faded into total insignificance. It fits the tone of the film so perfectly, it's haunting and magical and tense and exciting all at the same time. They somehow managed to make a nursery rhyme-like tune dark and thrilling to listen to, it's truly outstanding (in my humble and admittedly quite biased opinion).
I went to see it at the cinema and, at the tender age of 10, the first thing I said when it ended was, "Will they make a second?!" I never held out much hope for that and, after 6 years I'd all but given up. Then, out of nowhere I had a mini breakdown in the cinema as a trailer for 'Alice through the Looking Glass' flashed before my very eyes. I could return to Wonderland.
And what had enticed me so greatly into that world? Well, the world. It's amazing, a whole society that co-exists with our comparatively mundane, boring one where animals and flowers can talk, where drinks make you shrink and cakes make you grow, where exciting and terrifying creatures roam free and absolutely anything you dream of is possible, especially the impossible. It was something that captured the mind of little ten year old me and is still a world I love to be enveloped in now. Even the words, exciting simply because they were different from ours, etched themselves into my mind and I can still shamelessly remember every single word of the Jaberwocky poem and the six impossible things Alice can do before breakfast.
It's safe to say I'm a little obsessed.