Underrated Movies (1 Viewer)

My personal favorite film of all time is Spike Lee’s Do the Right Thing. Not sure if that can qualify as underrated, since it’s generally considered his best work and came out to a lot of critical acclaim back in 1989, but I bet a lot of people on PCF haven’t seen it, so do yourself a favor -

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One of the things I appreciated about DtRT was that despite the politically charged material, rap music, and contemporary styles/setting, Spike Lee made it like a classic 1950s drama.

The characters are developed in a slow, steady way, with plot lines evolving as in literature, and key events foreshadowed early on, rather than just hitting randomly.

In the ’50s, a lot of movies were based on books and/or successful plays (e.g. Streetcar Named Desire), and were structured / scripted a lot like novels or stage productions.

So Do the Right Thing has a lot more in common with much older classics like The Man With the Golden Arm than others made in the late ’80s.

It’s one of those great movies I assume everyone has seen… but then it turns out they haven’t.
 
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(Many years ago a roommate explained to me the difference a film and a movie; thank you for that)

As for a seasonally appropriate “under rated” suggestion:

“The Man Who Invented Christmas”

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I saw this just last week and it well done. It does Dickens what Shakespeare in Love did for the bard. You'd have to know Christmas Carol to get it and it helps if you know some of the other Dickens stories. A pleasant surprise.
 
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Outside Providence. This is one of the funniest movies I’ve ever seen. Do yourself a favor and find it.
 
Outside Providence. This is one of the funniest movies I’ve ever seen. Do yourself a favor and find it.

i love the first 2/3 of this movie so much.

"Today you should've seen me and Mousey today at school today."

it is also high in the running for best soundtrack of all times.
 
i'm going to add a couple that are not "underrated" per se, but more "underknown" because they are low-budget independent films. if you enjoy mind-bending sci-fi, these are both brilliant:

Primer
Coherence
 
As an admitted Sean Penn fan, I'll suggest U-TURN as one of his more underrated films.
 
“Atlantic City” with Burt Lancaster and Susan Sarandon. Some great performances plus a cool look into Atlantic City as it was in the early 80s.
 
The Sunset Limited with Samuel L Jackson and Tommy Lee Jones. Based on a play written by Cormac McCarthy. It might fall into the “nobody knows about it” category rather than “underrated”.
 
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Snake Eyes 1998 Brian De Palma and a 13 minute one shot. Worth a watch just for that.
 
OK, not to antagonize the posters so far, but… Movies often come up in the various poker games I play. I am constantly dismayed how players younger than me seem to only watch relatively recent superhero / sci-fi / action / fantasy / horror movies.

If I ask what someone’s favorite movie is, it’s going to be a Marvel film.

The oldest movie anyone seems to have seen is Gladiator. Or maybe Braveheart. Or Fight Club.

Jesus, people. 90% of movies used to be about the world we actually live in. They used to involve real acting, subtle scripts, brilliant cinematography. Not just a collection of effects, costumes and quips, with seven ridiculous plot twists in the last 30 minutes. Whooaaa oh my god I didn’t see that coming, except you’d have to be braindead not to.

If you haven’t seen the top 100 classics of the 1940s-1970s, you’re really missing out.

The most frustrating thing is that you can’t get younger people to be even a little curious. I was playing cards with a guy in his late 20s who had never seen classic 80s comedies like Spinal Tap… or Caddyshack… or Trading Places. I say, I guarantee you won’t be disappointed. But I can see their eyes glaze over. They’re never going to take up those suggestions. They don’t believe anything good can have been made before they were born.

I was trying to convince a 30something friend who only likes action movies to watch The French Connection with Gene Hackman. He nodded but I know he won’t.

Their idea of an “art movie” is Inception. So I’m not going to even dare suggest something by Cassavetes or Godard or early Jarmusch. Their films might as well be 16th Century British poetry.

I know I’m the old man yelling at clouds here. But when I talk to people who have never seen a single movie by Hitchcock, or Preminger, or Welles, or Altman, or Ashby, etc. … and then they tell me their favorite film is Iron Man or something, I just want to give up on humanity.

The bonkers part is that seeing all of the greatest movies of all time is easy now. You could stream all them in a matter of months. This used to be impossible, or would involve a ton of legwork, patience and expense. It’s never been easier or cheaper to give oneself an education, but fewer and fewer people have any real film background.

But they’ll argue who was the best Batman for a solid hour at the poker table. /rant
Old thread and post but, Amen!
 
I have really gotten more discerning with films as I’ve aged. I can’t watch a Marvel movie anymore, but give me something well acted, directed or an interesting story, and I’m hooked. It used to be that I would look to Oscar nominations to find the very best acting, directing, cinematography etc.
However, the fact that one of the nominees for Best Picture of 2024 was Barbie…should tell you everything you need to know about the state of modern filmmaking and viewership.
Barbie is not all Fantasyland, you'd be surprised.
 

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