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-   -   Foreign films you liked? (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/foreign-films-you-liked-568373/)

mimosa Nov 2nd, 2005 06:10 PM

The Spanish films, Spirit of the Beehive and Cria.

DejaVu Nov 2nd, 2005 06:11 PM

France: L'Auberge Espagnole; He Loves Me, He Loves Me Not; Amelie

Italy: Bread and Tulips!!

keb0503 Nov 2nd, 2005 06:17 PM

No one has mentioned:

Ma Vie en Rose (france)
Amor es Perros (mexico)
The Crime of Father Amaro (mexico)
La Mala Educacion (spain)-I love all Almodovar movies
Atame / Tie me up Tie me Down (spain)
The Chorus (france)
Nine Queens (argentina?)
Maria Full of Grace (columbia/mexico)
Carandiru (brazil)
Dirty Pretty Things (england w/audrey tautou)
He Loves me he Loves me Not (france)

I just had netflix sent me my whole rental history the other day. Perfect timing! Great thread I love foreign movies.

felice592 Nov 2nd, 2005 06:24 PM

Most of my favorite films come from Iran:
The Wind Will Carry Us
Taste of Cherry
Leila
Crimson Gold

Other favorites:
Maria Full of Grace (Columbia)
Salaam Bombay (India)
Diva (France)

I'm currently waiting for "Respiro" (Italian, filmed on the island of Lampedusa) to arrive in the mail and am hoping it becomes another favorite! I'm also excited to start trying some of the movies named in this thread; many of them sound very good.


viaggio_sempre Nov 2nd, 2005 06:31 PM

"King of Masks" Chinese
"The Diva" French (can't find it anymore :'(
"Cosi" Australian


chatham Nov 2nd, 2005 06:56 PM

Two Irish films that are really good Omagh and The Boxer. They are wonderful and sad.
AA, I also injoyed The Unberable Lightness and Europa, Europa.
Yipper, it's time for my to rent Mediterrano again. I love that film.

cigalechanta Nov 2nd, 2005 06:56 PM

viaggio, if you mean, 'Diva," by Jean-Jaques Beineix, you can buy it for $29.95 or you can choose to rent it.

www.facets.org

They have a huge inventory.

Tuscanson Nov 2nd, 2005 06:56 PM

The Battle of Algiers -- an important political film as relevant today as it was 40 years ago.

chatham Nov 2nd, 2005 06:58 PM

Sorry about my mistakes. Next time I'll proof read my message.

AAFrequentFlyer Nov 2nd, 2005 07:27 PM

I can't resist.....

few more:

<b>No Man's Land</b> - a brillaint, modern, anti-war movie. I'm not totally against war, when necessary, but this movie does show the ridiculousness of it, at least in most cases... The movie is about the very recent Serbian/Bosnian conflict.

and now for the lighter fare....

<b>Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels</b>

and the follow up

<b>Snatch</b>,

both directed by Madonna's husband Guy Ritchie.

Extremely funny/violent and just pure entertainment.


and I agree with many above, any Almodovar movie is fine with me.

<b>Das Boot</b> - classic!!!

any movie with Juliette Binoche is ok with me. Some favorites are:

as already mentioned above - Three colors - <b> Red, White and Blue</b>, all 3 directed by Kieslowski, a genious Polish director, and <b>Damage</b>, a British movie. Another beautiful but very sad love story.

I'm sure I'll remember few more before this thread goes away.....:-D


cigalechanta Nov 2nd, 2005 07:29 PM

A few Favorites:
Jules and Jim,
Celine and JKulie go Boating,
400 Blows,
Cocteau's, Beaty and the Beast and The Eternal return,
La Balance,
Nelly and Monsieur Arnaud,
A very curious Girl,
La Strada,
Nights of cabria,
Juliet of the Spirits
The Postman,
Rashamon,
The Throne of Blood
oh just too many!!

Neil_Oz Nov 2nd, 2005 07:33 PM

&quot;Downfall&quot; (&quot;Der Untergang&quot;, 2004 - the last days of the Fuhrerbunker, with Bruno Ganz as a disturbingly believable Hitler.

Ingmar Bergman's &quot;The Seventh Seal&quot; and &quot;The Virgin Spring&quot; made a big impression on me as a callow youth - likewise Luchino Visconti's &quot;Rocco and His Brothers&quot; (&quot;Rocco e i suoi fratelli&quot;).

And does anyone remember Sergei Bondarchuk's mammoth 8-1/2-hour &quot;War and Peace&quot; of 1968? de Mille would have been green with envy.

cigalechanta Nov 2nd, 2005 07:40 PM

Visconti's, &quot;The Conformist&quot;
&quot;The Garden of the Fitzi-Visconti&quot; (sp?)

Beatchick Nov 2nd, 2005 08:28 PM

AAFrequentFlyer, I love Guy Ritchie movies!!

Finally watched <u>Bleu</u> week before last, <u>Blanc</u> last week (hubby didn't like the ending because it had no resolution but I loved it - the best movies don't have resolution, such as Gone with the Wind) and either tomorrow night or Saturday night I'm watching <u>Rouge</u>!

schnauzer Nov 2nd, 2005 08:30 PM

I thought one of the funniest was Tais Toi with Gerad Depardieu and Jean what's his name. A real hoot, and teenagers would love it also. Ma soeur and moi was also very good, it was on at this years french film festival in Sydney. Funny but sad, about two sisters (obviously) who are so different.

Voyager2006 Nov 3rd, 2005 02:25 AM

&quot;The Garden of the Finzi-Continis&quot; (for Cigalechanta)

&quot;Cinema Paradiso&quot;..watch it AFTER you watch &quot;Christ Stopped at Eboli&quot;

Absolutely any and everything by Almodovar, especially &quot;Talk to Her&quot;

&quot;A Month by the Lake&quot;


lobo_mau Nov 3rd, 2005 02:44 AM

&quot;Motorcycle Diaries&quot; - based on young Che Guevara travels when he and his friend Albert bought an Old Norton motorcycle to see Americas. Quite a long film but very touching. Actually more a documentary

Voyager2006 Nov 3rd, 2005 03:32 AM

I agree about &quot;Motorcycle Diaries&quot;..really wonderful film whether you agree with anyone's &quot;political&quot; philosophy or activities or not.

rex Nov 3rd, 2005 04:02 AM

Another 150_ answers, from 2002-2005, wth a focus on Italian films. There re other threads like this as well.

Best wishes,

Rex

david_west Nov 3rd, 2005 04:29 AM

I suppose it all comes down to what you call “foreign”. Technically my favourite foreign film is Goodfellas. But if we mean foreign language (ie non English)…..

La belle du jour (this film made a LASTING impression on a young boy at an English boarding school)

Battleship Potemkin (it really is as good as it’s reputation suggests)

Triumph of the Will (despite it’s horrible subject matter)

The Seventh Seal (pretentious? Moi?)

Napoleon (the 1912 one with three screens)

La Cage aux Folles (can anyone else think of funny foreign films?)

Seven Samurai (although I prefer the westernised version)

Battle Royale

M (aka Metropolis) – still visually striking

Nosferatu – still scary

Betty Blue.

La Femme Nikita

La Dolce Vita – Sigh.

Sher Nov 3rd, 2005 04:34 AM

Many of my favorites posted but no one mentioned:

Nobody Knows (China, I believe)

Available on DVD. It is heartbreaking.

111op Nov 3rd, 2005 04:37 AM

&quot;M (aka Metropolis)&quot;

These are two different movies, by the way. &quot;M&quot; is on a serial killer. &quot;Metropolis&quot; is on a futuristic society. They're both interesting.

&quot;Battleship Potemkin&quot; is one of my favorite movies. Eisenstein pioneered montage.


nini Nov 3rd, 2005 05:17 AM

I cannot believe I have forgotten the title of a French film we rented two months ago. It was about the family who owned Limoges potteries--excellent film. Available at Blockbuster under foreign movies--with subtitles, of course.

eliztrav Nov 3rd, 2005 05:57 AM

Another vote for Bread and Tulips! And, though a black &amp; white film from the late 40s in Italian with English subtitles, it is on VHS and coming out (about $18) on DVD this month, &quot;Follie per l'opera.&quot; This last is an oddball comedy set in London after THE war, involving a bunch of Italians and including a very young Gina Lollobrigida. Madcap, corny &amp; funny. A period piece when you are in the mood for it! And, a gem for opera lovers, features baritones Titto Gobbi and Gino Bechi in cameos in their prime.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...ance&amp;n=130

or, go to http://www.belcantosiciety.org

eliztrav Nov 3rd, 2005 05:59 AM

Sorry, that's

http://www.belcantosociety.org

or http://www.belcantosociety.com

And no, I have no financial interest in amazon or bcs!

enroute Nov 3rd, 2005 06:35 AM

ttt

viaggio_sempre Nov 3rd, 2005 06:39 AM

Cigalechanta - thanks for the heads-up. I have not done a search on it for a while, forgetting how the search has changed. Appreciate it.

jsmith Nov 3rd, 2005 06:42 AM

I'm All Right, Jack (1958) with the incomparable Peter Sellers

The Man in the White Suit (1951) Alec Guinness

Tunes of Glory (1960) Alec Guinness and John Mills. One reviewer said he'd like to see the Guinness and Mills roles reversed just to see how such incomparable actors would play the others role.

The Krays (1990). One of the earlier English gangster films with two of the more menacing people you'd never want to cross.

The Girl in the Cafe (2005). Bill Nighy plays a minor government official about to attend an international conference in Iceland. A comedy with serious overtones. May be a lttle cute but Nighy is wonderful.

JJ5 Nov 3rd, 2005 06:58 AM

david west, almost all yours are used in our film class here at my University.

So few mentioned it and it is SO good, that I just want to add this:

Christ Stopped at Eboli takes place within a most Southern Italian town during WWII- it is not religious. And it is the most realistic and FUNNY study of the true nature of authority in that region than has ever been filmed, IMHO.

Regardless if you harbor any great love or aversion for Italy and/or its psyche- see this film.

david_west Nov 3rd, 2005 07:17 AM

Blimey! If you’re going to include British Films:

Brief Encounter – So sad.

The Dambusters – for the score alone, (and the germans getting it in the neck too, of course)

633 Squadron – Ditto score and germans

The Lavender Hill Mob

The Long Good Friday (sod the Krays mentioned above, with the pair of mary’s out of Spandau Ballet – you want a proper english ganster flick this is the one for you)

Get Carter (another good brit noir)

Performance

Life of Brian

If

Withnail and I

Trainspotting (almost a foreign language film)

In fact anything that doesn’t involve any of the following: Helena Bonham-Carter; Merchant and/or bloody Ivory; Ruffs; ruffles; Jane bleedin’ Austen; Kenneth chuffin’ Branagh; Country houses; bints banging on about how hard it is to get a husband; any one of the Brontes; elves; goblins; dick van dyke (mine ears! That accent!); any pop group that isn’t the beatles (yes Spice Girls I’m looking at you); Sting; Sting and especially Sting.

helsinkiflyer Nov 3rd, 2005 07:33 AM

I have really liked Tarantino´s Jackie Brown. I also liked that Brooklyn tobacco store story called Smoke, with Harvey Keitel. What else? I´ve liked many American films, but not that many come into my mind at the moment.

Isn´t this whole question kind of dumb, if posed on the Internet? What is foreign? Just wondering.

lobo_mau Nov 3rd, 2005 07:40 AM

In Fodors accepted terminology, foreign means &quot;not made in USA&quot;

Beatchick Nov 3rd, 2005 07:46 AM

Oh, no, lobo_mau! I love seeing what people outside the US think of our films - which ones they determine are the best.

David, I can't help it, I love Helena Bonham Carter movies!! :) But I have to concur with you on <u>Life of Brian</u>. We realized recently that we'd done a huge disservice to the kids by not exposing them to Monty Python humor. We've moved to correct that egregious error! They love <u>The Young Ones</u> so we thought it time to show them who influenced that comedy troupe.

Mathieu Nov 3rd, 2005 09:22 AM



Very much agree with many of Custard's choices, especially 'Betty Blue' and 'Withnail and I'. Both excellent.

A couple of my favourites (out of many) :

The Commitments - who cannot love this movie ?

(While London burns) Sammy and Rosie get Laid. - I'm a fan of all the written work of Hanif Querishi, including this straight-to-film (I think) work.

Shallow Grave. (the use of colour in this movie is fantastic)

Lagaan. (from India. Long at 3+ hours but well worth it. Simple villagers combat Imperial taxes through cricket and willpower)

Eat Drink Man Woman. (from Taiwan. See it for yourself. Wonderful)

Raise the Red Lantern. (China, if I remember correctly. Again full of colour and great cinematography)

...ah, there're so many more.

amp322 Nov 3rd, 2005 04:34 PM

Unbearable Lightness of Being, Diva, Kolya

amp322 Nov 3rd, 2005 04:36 PM

Oh, and Madame Destinnova (sp?), which I haven't seen in like 9 years, because if I buy it in Prague, the video tape is not compatible with my vcr. Hopefully they've put it onto DVD by now..

cigalechanta Nov 3rd, 2005 04:51 PM

amp, ther are vid stores that will convert. In my neighborhood, there is an Indian shop that carries foods and vids and for a price converts.

grandmere Nov 3rd, 2005 05:11 PM

Mathieu, Raise the Red Lantern is Chinese; did you happen to see Red Sorghum, too? Good cinematography, too, but contains some brutal scenes.
I was glad to see some gentler films from China, such as King of Masks and what was the name of the one that was about an elderly man who ran a public bath in Beijing?

Amp, glad to see someone else mention Kolya; I thought it was such a touching--both funny and sad-- film.

pat Nov 3rd, 2005 05:31 PM

Hear my song Great scenes of Ireland, and the movie is funny too.
Indochine--wonderful scenery around Saigon during the french Occupation.
The Lover-- also great scenes around Saigon, and also during the french occupation. I love the music in it too.

grandmere Nov 3rd, 2005 05:39 PM

Waking Ned Devin--wonderful soundtrack
The Secret of Roan Innnish, kind of a fairy tale for grown-ups


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