Born in Flames
=243
1983
Directed by Lizzie Borden
In 1952, the Sight and Sound team had the novel idea of asking critics to name the greatest films of all time. The tradition became decennial, increasing in size and prestige as the decades passed.
The Sight and Sound poll is now a major bellwether of critical opinion on cinema and this year’s edition (its eighth) is the largest ever, with 1,639 participating critics, programmers, curators, archivists and academics each submitting their top ten ballot. What has risen up the ranks? What has fallen? Has 2012’s winner Vertigo held on to its title? Find out below.
Order list
=243
1983
Directed by Lizzie Borden
=243
Louise Brooks dazzles as the dangerously appealing seductress in GW Pabst’s classic adaptation of Frank Wedekind’s Lulu plays.
1928 Germany
Directed by G.W. Pabst
=243
Preston Sturges works his magic in a screwball tale of a film director who goes on the road as a tramp to help write his socially significant screenplay.
1941 USA
Directed by Preston Sturges
=243
Woody Allen’s breakthrough as a ‘serious’ filmmaker is a sublimely funny romantic comedy about an anxious comedian’s relationship with Diane Keaton’s ditzy eccentric.
1977 USA
Directed by Woody Allen
=243
Commissioned to make propaganda for Stalin’s farm collectivisations, the Soviet cinema’s great visual poet Alexander Dovzhenko instead delivered an impassioned hymn to nature.
1930 USSR, Ukrainian SSR
Directed by Alexander Dovzhenko
=243
Wyatt Earp tames Tombstone in John Ford’s stirring, poetic and visually stunning western.
1946 USA
Directed by John Ford
=243
Robert Bresson’s moving chronicle of 24 hours in the life of a neglected and abused teenage girl.
1966 France
Directed by Robert Bresson
=243
A dystopian future London is the playground of a teenage gang leader in Stanley Kubrick’s stylish, controversial take on Anthony Burgess’s novel about violence and free will.
1971 USA, United Kingdom
Directed by Stanley Kubrick
=243
Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger’s tale of the mysterious ‘glue man’ is one of their most gently moving films.
1944 United Kingdom
Directed by Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger
=243
James Woods and Debbie Harry star in David Cronenberg’s mind-melting sci-fi about media domination.
1983 Canada
Directed by David Cronenberg
=243
Andrzej Zulawski’s out-of-control horror is a bare-souled account of a broken relationship.
1981 France, Federal Republic of Germany
Directed by Andrzej Zulawski
=243
A vibrant humanist statement on racism and immigration that remains pertinent today.
1970 France
Directed by Med Hondo
=243
Post-war working-class Liverpool life is impressionistically evoked in Terence Davies’ two-part film, by turns lyrical, humorous and horrific.
1988 United Kingdom, Federal Republic of Germany
Directed by Terence Davies
=243
2010 France, Germany, Chile, Spain, USA
Directed by Patricio Guzmán
=243
2006 Thailand, France, Austria, Netherlands
Directed by Apichatpong Weerasethakul
=243
2004 France, Republic of Korea
Directed by Claire Denis
=243
Samantha Morton plays the enigmatic title character in Lynne Ramsay’s dreamy and atmospheric road movie.
2001 United Kingdom, Canada
Directed by Lynne Ramsay
=243
2000 Portugal, Germany, Switzerland
Directed by Pedro Costa
=243
2000 Hungary, Germany, France, Switzerland, Italy
Directed by Béla Tarr
=243
1997 Iran
Directed by Abbas Kiarostami
=243
1992 Spain
Directed by Víctor Erice
=243
1924 Germany
Directed by F.W. Murnau
=225
1976 USA
Directed by Barbara Kopple
=225
1972 Sweden
Directed by Ingmar Bergman
=225
1977 USA
Directed by George Lucas
=225
Responding to criticisms of racism for his record-breaking The Birth of a Nation, filmmaking pioneer D.W. Griffith made this epic drama depicting intolerance through the ages.
1916 USA
Directed by D.W. Griffith
=225
1968 Argentina
Directed by Fernando Solanas
=225
1952 Italy
Directed by Roberto Rossellini
=225
Abel Gance’s heroic depiction of the rise of Napoleon Bonaparte is an undisputed cinema landmark.
1927 France
Directed by Abel Gance
=225
1928 USA
Directed by King Vidor
=225
1969 Taiwan
Directed by King Hu
=225
1974 Belgium
Directed by Chantal Akerman
=225
Céline Sciamma’s mysterious and delicate exploration of childhood and grief.
2021 France
Directed by Céline Sciamma
=225
2000 USA
Directed by Jonas Mekas
=225
1998 Taiwan, Japan
Directed by Hou Hsiao-Hsien
=225
1997 Hong Kong
Directed by Wong Kar Wai
=225
Technology and sexuality meet in head-on collision in David Cronenberg’s controversial adaptation of writer J.G. Ballard’s transgressive 1973 novel.
1996 Canada
Directed by David Cronenberg
=225
Derek Jarman’s last miracle – an extraordinary reflection on his own imminent death from an AIDS-related illness.
1993 United Kingdom, Japan
Directed by Derek Jarman
=225
Studio Ghibli’s anti-war masterpiece is a stark but beautifully made classic.
1988 Japan
Directed by Isao Takahata
=225
Eric Rohmer’s sublime 1980s classic is a magical summer film about the serendipity of romance.
1986 France
Directed by Eric Rohmer
=211
1935 USSR
Directed by Boris Barnet
=211
Classic Marx Brothers comedy of two small countries finding themselves on the brink of war.
1933 USA
Directed by Leo McCarey
=211
Broadway diva Bette Davis tries to fend off her rivals in this Oscar-winning drama.
1950 USA
Directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz
=211
Turbulent passion and middle-class restraint combine in uniquely English style when a married woman falls for a doctor she meets at a railway station.
1945 United Kingdom
Directed by David Lean
=211
Dario Argento’s phantasmagoric gothic nightmare blends operatic violence, disorienting dream logic and hyper-real visuals to create a horror classic.
1977 Italy
Directed by Dario Argento
=211
Humphrey Bogart and Gloria Grahame excel in Nicholas Ray’s tale of murder, love and suspicion in 1950s Hollywood.
1950 USA
Directed by Nicholas Ray
=211
Along with Apocalypse Now, Michael Cimino’s brutal but ultimately contemplative war movie is a key American cinematic take on the Vietnam conflict.
1978 USA
Directed by Michael Cimino
=211
1969 France, Italy
Directed by Jean-Pierre Melville
=211
2011 Denmark, Sweden, France, Germany, Italy
Directed by Lars von Trier
=211
1984 Brazil
Directed by Eduardo Coutinho
=211
1992 USA
Directed by David Lynch
=211
1972 USA
Directed by John Waters
=211
1981 USA
Directed by Steven Spielberg
=211
1931 Brazil
Directed by Mário Peixoto
=196
Deborah Kerr and Roger Livesy star in this wondrous British Technicolor classic – one of cinema’s greatest studies of ‘Englishness’.
1943 United Kingdom
Directed by Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger
=196
1967 Canada
Directed by Michael Snow
=196
Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger’s heady romantic masterpiece.
1945 United Kingdom
Directed by Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger
=196
Michelangelo Antonioni’s film charts the hot and cold relationship of a young couple in bustling Rome.
1962 Italy, France
Directed by Michelangelo Antonioni
=196
An insurance salesman (Fred MacMurray) is seduced into murder and fraud in Billy Wilder’s classic dark thriller, adapted from the novel by James M. Cain.
1944 USA
Directed by Billy Wilder
=196
Peter Sellers plays three separate roles in Stanley Kubrick’s mordant Cold War comedy in which insanity and political manoeuvrings lead to nuclear meltdown.
1963 United Kingdom, USA
Directed by Stanley Kubrick
=196
1977 Cuba
Directed by Sara Gómez
=196
Cinema’s original vampire movie, this copyright-infringing adaptation of Bram Stoker’s Dracula is one of the great classics of German expressionist cinema.
1922 Germany
Directed by F.W. Murnau
=196
Roberto Rossellini’s ambitious and enormously moving follow-up to his breakthrough Rome, Open City.
1946 Italy
Directed by Roberto Rossellini
=196
Argentinian director Lucrecia Martel returns with a fine adaptation of Antonio Di Benedetto’s existential novel.
2017 Argentina, Brazil, Spain, France, Mexico, Netherlands, Monaco, Portugal, USA, Lebanon, United Kingdom, Dominican Republic
Directed by Lucrecia Martel
=196
2015 USA, Australia
Directed by George Miller
=196
Terrence Malick’s magnum opus is a visionary hymn to nature and grace.
2010 USA
Directed by Terrence Malick
=196
2010 Thailand, United Kingdom, France, Germany, Spain, Netherlands
Directed by Apichatpong Weerasethakul
=196
2008 Argentina, Spain, France, Italy
Directed by Lucrecia Martel
=196
1990 USA, United Kingdom
Directed by Jennie Livingston
=185
Harry Dean Stanton's finest role came as the near-mute Travis, on a journey across America to reunite his family, in Wim Wenders’ tale of loss and redemption.
1984 Federal Republic of Germany, France, United Kingdom
Directed by Wim Wenders
=185
Jacques Demy’s follow-up to Les Parapluies de Cherbourg is a joyous, large-scale tribute to the Hollywood musical.
1967 France
Directed by Jacques Demy
=185
Birds inexplicably turn against man and begin attacking the small community of Bodega Bay, in Alfred Hitchcock’s suspense classic.
1963 USA
Directed by Alfred Hitchcock
=185
Jean Renoir's intoxicating first colour feature is a lyrical adaptation of Rumer Godden's coming-of-age tale of an adolescent girl living with her English family on the banks of West Bengal.
1951 USA
Directed by Jean Renoir
=185
Yasujirō Ozu’s final film colourfully and emotionally revisits the themes of Late Spring.
1962 Japan
Directed by Yasujirō Ozu
=185
1984 USA
Directed by John Cassavetes
=185
Silent cinema’s most famous ‘lost’ film, Erich von Stroheim’s monumental study of three ordinary lives destroyed by avarice was ruinously edited down by the studio.
1923 USA
Directed by Erich von Stroheim
=185
Made late in his career, the last of Akira Kurosawa’s great historical epics transposes the story of Shakespeare’s King Lear to feudal Japan.
1985 France, Japan
Directed by Akira Kurosawa
=185
Guru Dutt’s classic, set in post-independence Kolkata (then Calcutta), tells of a young poet’s ambition.
1957 India
Directed by Guru Dutt
=185
In director Wim Wenders’ most metaphysical work, a guardian angel desires nothing more than to be human.
1987 Federal Republic of Germany, France
Directed by Wim Wenders
=185
Paul Thomas Anderson's sprawling, intense and multi-layered study of a collection of characters going through varying levels of crisis.
1999 USA
Directed by Paul Thomas Anderson
=169
Among the most famous of broken films, Orson Welles’ masterful follow-up to Citizen Kane was taken out of his control and re-edited by the studio.
1942 USA
Directed by Orson Welles
=169
1959 France, Japan
Directed by Alain Resnais
=169
Max Ophuls brought his trademark flowing camera style and a taste of the old Vienna to Hollywood for this tragic story of unrequited love.
1948 USA
Directed by Max Ophuls
=169
Satyajit Ray’s sublime portrait of a bored housewife living in 19th-century Bengal.
1964 India
Directed by Satyajit Ray
=169
1966 Italy
Directed by Sergio Leone
=169
Michelangelo Antonioni's mid-career masterpiece stars Monica Vitti as an emotionally anguished young woman embarking on a tentative affair with a businessman (Richard Harris).
1964 Italy, France
Directed by Michelangelo Antonioni
=169
Tensions grow when a group of nuns open a convent in the Himalayas in Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger’s remarkable melodrama.
1947 United Kingdom
Directed by Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger
=169
A complex character study of alienation amid tumultuous social change, from one of Cuba’s greatest filmmakers.
1968 Cuba
Directed by Tomás Gutiérrez Alea
=169
1962 Mexico
Directed by Luis Buñuel
=169
An alien Scarlett Johansson prowls the streets of Glasgow in Jonathan Glazer’s astonishing, mind-bending mixture of existential science fiction and inner-city realism.
2013 United Kingdom, USA, Switzerland
Directed by Jonathan Glazer
=169
Michael Mann’s virtuoso cat-and-mouse thriller starring Al Pacino and Robert De Niro.
1995 USA
Directed by Michael Mann
=169
1967 USA
Directed by William Greaves
=169
1990 France
Directed by Jacques Rivette
=169
A scabrous study of desire, the subconscious and anti-clericalism – Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dalí’s provocative first film is a classic of Surrealist cinema.
1928 France
Directed by Luis Buñuel
=169
Robert Bresson’s last film turns a Tolstoy novella about a forged banknote into a formidably focused meditation on the supposed root of all evil.
1983 France, Switzerland
Directed by Robert Bresson
=169
In Alain Resnais’ infamous art-house teaser, from a screenplay by Alain Robbe-Grillet, a male guest at a chateau claims he met a woman there the year before.
1961 France, Italy
Directed by Alain Resnais
=157
Luis Buñuel’s searingly powerful account of the brutalised lives of delinquent Mexico City street kids fuses stark realism with surrealist flourishes.
1950 Mexico
Directed by Luis Buñuel
=157
This study of a terminally ill civil servant seeking meaning in his life is one of Japanese director Akira Kurosawa’s finest achievements.
1952 Japan
Directed by Akira Kurosawa
=157
1947 USA
Directed by Jacques Tourneur
=157
Jean-Luc Godard’s fourth feature – his third with wife and muse Anna Karina – charts in 12 tableaux a would-be actress’s descent into prostitution.
1962 France
Directed by Jean-Luc Godard
=157
Federico Fellini returned for inspiration to his own childhood in 1930s Rimini for this colourful comedy-drama about life in a small seaside town under Fascist rule.
1972 Italy, France
Directed by Federico Fellini
=157
1983 USA, Italy
Directed by Sergio Leone
=157
Pier Paolo Pasolini’s third feature abandons the profane in favour of the sacred in a documentary-like retelling of the story of Christ.
1964 Italy, France
Directed by Pier Paolo Pasolini
=157
1987 Iran
Directed by Abbas Kiarostami
=157
Pedro Almodóvar's dazzling study of grief, motherhood and female solidarity.
1999 Spain, France
Directed by Pedro Almodóvar
=157
Hou Hsiao-Hsien breached political taboos in his Golden Lion-winning tale of a Taiwanese family in the mid-1940s.
1989 Taiwan
Directed by Hou Hsiao-Hsien
=157
Tilda Swinton stars in Sally Potter's dazzling interpretation of Virginia Woolf's novel.
1992 United Kingdom, Russian Federation, Italy, France, Netherlands
Directed by Sally Potter
=157
2002 People's Republic of China
Directed by Wang Bing
=152
1965 France
Directed by Agnès Varda
=152
1960 India
Directed by Ritwik Ghatak
=152
Richard Gere plays a Chicagoan trying to make a new life in the country and finding that love gets in the way.
1978 USA
Directed by Terrence Malick
=152
1979 France, Mauritania
Directed by Med Hondo
=152
David Lynch and Mark Frost’s mind-scrambling sequel series mounts a cosmic battle between good and evil on its cross-country odyssey back to the town of Twin Peaks and its tragic past.
2017 USA
Directed by David Lynch
=146
Roman Polanski’s brilliant thriller stars Jack Nicholson as a private eye uncovering corruption in 1930s Los Angeles, a desert town where water equals power.
1974 USA
Directed by Roman Polanski
=146
Jean Renoir’s pacifist classic is set in a German prisoner-of-war camp during WWI, where class kinship is felt across national boundaries.
1937 France
Directed by Jean Renoir
=146
1975 France
Directed by Marguerite Duras
=146
The crew of mining spaceship Nostromo answer an apparent distress signal and find themselves with an unwanted passenger, in Ridley Scott’s breakthrough sci-fi horror.
1979 USA, United Kingdom
Directed by Ridley Scott
=146
Carl Theodor Dreyer’s 1932 film is a founding and defining works of psychological horror cinema.
1932 Germany, France
Directed by Carl Th. Dreyer
=146
Acclaimed filmmaker Cheryl Dunye takes centre stage in this ode to love, community and the past.
1997 USA
Directed by Cheryl Dunye
=136
Carl Theodor Dreyer’s final masterpiece centres on a woman who rejects the compromise of her marriage and retreats into a serene isolation.
1964 Denmark
Directed by Carl Th. Dreyer
=136
Jane Wyman and Rock Hudson star in Douglas Sirk’s influential melodrama.
1955 USA
Directed by Douglas Sirk
=136
On a country picnic, a young girl leaves her family for a while and succumbs to an all-too-brief romance in Jean Renoir's sensuous tribute to the countryside.
1936 France
Directed by Jean Renoir
=136
Robert Bresson’s hugely influential study of a petty thief in late 1950s Paris is one of his most widely acclaimed films.
1959 France
Directed by Robert Bresson
=136
During the plague-ravaged middle ages, a knight buys time for himself by playing chess with Death in Ingmar Bergman’s much-imitated arthouse classic.
1957 Sweden
Directed by Ingmar Bergman
=136
1932 USA
Directed by Ernst Lubitsch
=136
A riveting neorealist testimony to Angola’s anti-colonialist struggle, not screened there until after independence.
1972 Angola, France, Congo
Directed by Sarah Maldoror
=136
A gang of outlaws goes out in a blaze of violence and glory in Sam Peckinpah’s elegiac film about the dying days of the wild west.
1969 USA
Directed by Sam Peckinpah
=136
Made during the Nazi occupation of France, Marcel Carne’s romantic epic of the 19th-century theatre world is a life-affirming tribute to love, Paris and the stage.
1945 France
Directed by Marcel Carné
=136
2001 Argentina, USA, Japan, France, Switzerland, Spain, Brazil
Directed by Lucrecia Martel
=133
Undervalued on its initial release, this small-town drama has become a Christmas favourite, though its tearful affirmation is laced with darker emotions.
1947 USA
Directed by Frank Capra
=133
In one of Alfred Hitchcock’s darkest thrillers, a traitor’s daughter is engaged by an American agent to get close to one of her father’s Nazi associates.
1946 USA
Directed by Alfred Hitchcock
=133
An eccentric English officer inspires the Arabs to unite against the Turks during WWI in David Lean’s seven Oscar-winner, an epic in every sense.
1962 United Kingdom
Directed by David Lean
=129
Quentin Tarantino’s crackling crime classic still retains its swagger as one of the great American films of the 1990s.
1994 USA
Directed by Quentin Tarantino
=129
Starring Robert De Niro as the middleweight boxer Jake La Motta, Martin Scorsese’s biopic is widely acknowledged as one of the greatest films of the 1980s.
1980 USA
Directed by Martin Scorsese
=129
A newspaper editor manipulates all around him for the sake of a scoop in one of the fastest and funniest comedies ever made.
1939 USA
Directed by Howard Hawks
=129
The grand summation of Ingmar Bergman’s career, this epic family drama drew on the director’s own childhood experiences in early 20th century Sweden.
1982 Sweden, France, Federal Republic of Germany
Directed by Ingmar Bergman
128
1976 USSR
Directed by Larissa Shepitko
=122
Danger, desire, death and a donkey – Cary Grant, Jean Arthur and Rita Hayworth are flying high in Howard Hawks's peerlessly entertaining tale of aviation in the Andes.
1939 USA
Directed by Howard Hawks
=122
Jacques Demy’s all-sung tale of first love is a ravishing mix of music, romance and fertile cinematic invention.
1964 France, Federal Republic of Germany
Directed by Jacques Demy
=122
Joan Crawford and Mercedes McCambridge excel in this fascinatingly strange Nicholas Ray western that takes in both sexual rivalry and xenophobia.
1954 USA
Directed by Nicholas Ray
=122
The film that Martin Scorsese compared to ‘opening a door and walking into another dimension, where time has stopped and beauty has been unleashed’.
1968 USSR, Armenian SSR
Directed by Sergei Paradjanov
=122
The Wachowksi sisters’ virtual-reality science-fiction epic marked a new high for effects-driven action sequences, and eventually launched a trilogy.
1999 USA, Australia
Directed by The Wachowskis
=122
This operatic portrait of a diabolical oil baron is a formal tour de force and a compelling portrait of all-American 20th century sociopathy.
2007 USA
Directed by Paul Thomas Anderson
=118
Twelve men at an Antarctic research station battle a shape-shifting alien that hides in human form, in John Carpenter’s groundbreaking sci-fi horror.
1982 USA
Directed by John Carpenter
=118
Unrivalled in its relentless vision of pure terror, Tobe Hooper’s horror masterpiece remains as brutal and horrific as it ever was.
1974 USA
Directed by Tobe Hooper
=118
Bernardo Bertolucci’s stylish period thriller stars Jean-Louis Trintignant as a repressed bureaucrat in Mussolini’s Italy who is assigned to kill his former professor.
1970 Italy, France, Federal Republic of Germany
Directed by Bernardo Bertolucci
=118
Werner Herzog’s visceral exploration of doomed adventure and savage beauty is one of German cinema’s totemic masterpieces.
1972 Federal Republic of Germany
Directed by Werner Herzog
=114
Set in off-season Venice, British director Nicolas Roeg’s tragedy combines an acute study of grief with a supernaturally charged thriller plot, to beautiful and devastating effect.
1973 United Kingdom, Italy
Directed by Nicolas Roeg
=114
Made to celebrate the bicentennial of American Independence, Robert Altman’s footloose epic blends the lives of 24 characters in the capital of country music.
1975 USA
Directed by Robert Altman
=114
1974 USA
Directed by John Cassavetes
=114
Ernst Lubitsch’s audacious farce, satirising ‘the Nazis and their ridiculous ideology’.
1942 USA
Directed by Ernst Lubitsch
=108
1938 USA
Directed by Howard Hawks
=108
The coming of civilisation brings an end to the wildness of the west in John Ford’s elegiac late film teaming John Wayne and James Stewart.
1962 USA
Directed by John Ford
=108
Orson Welles’ return to Hollywood after ten years working in Europe is a sleazy border tale in which he takes centre stage as gargantuan detective Hank Quinlan.
1958 USA
Directed by Orson Welles
=108
On a road trip to receive an honorary degree, an elderly academic (Victor Sjöstrom) looks back over his life in Ingmar Bergman’s art-cinema classic.
1957 Sweden
Directed by Ingmar Bergman
=108
Whisked by a tornado from Kansas to the colourful Land of Oz, Dorothy soon learns there’s no place like home in MGM’s immortal musical fantasy.
1939 USA
Directed by Victor Fleming
=108
2003 Taiwan
Directed by Tsai Ming-liang
=104
The expansive second part of Francis Ford Coppola’s Mafia saga continues the Corleone family story, charting in parallel young Vito’s earlier rise to prominence.
1974 USA
Directed by Francis Ford Coppola
=104
Steven Spielberg laid the template for the modern summer blockbuster with this expert thriller about the hunt for a man-eating great white shark.
1975 USA
Directed by Steven Spielberg
=104
1985 USSR, Byelorussian SSR
Directed by Elem Klimov
=104
1973 France
Directed by Jean Eustache
=101
1985 France, United Kingdom
Directed by Agnès Varda
=101
1962 Iran
Directed by Forough Farokhzad
=101
A decade after Red River (1947), Howard Hawks reteamed with John Wayne for this rambling western riffing on the director’s usual themes of friendship and professionalism.
1958 USA
Directed by Howard Hawks
=95
Sergio Leone’s operatic widescreen elegy to the old American West, with the forces of corporate capitalism coming down the railroad.
1968 Italy, USA
Directed by Sergio Leone
=95
This prison-break study is Robert Bresson at his most starkly essential: a man, four walls, his ingenuity and the mysterious inflections of fate.
1956 France
Directed by Robert Bresson
=95
Buster Keaton’s most lavish production and his warmest, bringing together a boy, a girl and a train amid the maelstrom of the US Civil War.
1926 USA
Directed by Buster Keaton, Clyde Bruckman
=95
Ousmane Sembène lifts the mask on France’s racist post-colonial relationship with Senegal in his small yet commanding feature debut.
1965 Senegal, France
Directed by Ousmane Sembène
=95
A work that defies straightforward understanding and suggests understandability may be overrated.
2004 France, Thailand, Germany, Italy, Switzerland
Directed by Apichatpong Weerasethakul
=95
A poster film for Black Lives Matter, Jordan Peele’s horror-satire of white vampirism gleefully needles America’s racial malaise.
2017 USA, Japan
Directed by Jordan Peele
=90
Like Get Out, Bong Joon Ho’s endlessly twisty, blackly sincere class-war thriller is a pop provocation for our unequal times.
2019 Republic of Korea
Directed by Bong Joon-ho
=90
Urban anomie and multi-generational growing pains are given rich, relaxed expression in Edward Yang’s heartfelt Taipei family tapestry.
1999 Taiwan, Japan
Directed by Edward Yang
=90
Kenji Mizoguchi’s bewitching, insinuating Edo-period ghost story renders civil war as a parable of heedless male greed.
1953 Japan
Directed by Kenji Mizoguchi
=90
Luchino Visconti’s sumptuous epic portrays the fall of 19th-century Sicilian nobility, its decadent displays of wealth tinged with melancholy.
1962 Italy, France
Directed by Luchino Visconti
=90
Max Ophuls’ woozy whirligig tracks a pair of unwanted earrings around high-society Paris – until they bear the weight of lost time and passion.
1953 France, Italy
Directed by Max Ophuls
=88
Stanley Kubrick’s much analysed and often spoofed psychological horror spends a chilling and claustrophobic winter at the empty Overlook Hotel.
1980 USA, United Kingdom
Directed by Stanley Kubrick
=88
A sense of wistful, romantic longing joins the two stories in Wong Kar Wai’s freewheeling portmanteau portrait of Hong Kong.
1994 Hong Kong
Directed by Wong Kar Wai
=85
David Lynch’s adult fairytale follows teen sleuth Kyle MacLachlan’s murder inquiry into the surreal, perverse corners of small-town America.
1986 USA
Directed by David Lynch
=85
Victor Erice’s exquisite impressionistic distillation of childhood fear and wonder in the ruins of the recently ended Spanish Civil War.
1973 Spain
Directed by Víctor Erice
=85
Jean-Luc Godard’s most effervescent escapade, a primary-coloured lovers-on-the-run blow-out heading south with Anna Karina and Jean-Paul Belmondo.
1965 France, Italy
Directed by Jean-Luc Godard
=78
The apotheosis of Jean-Luc Godard’s experimental era, this sprawling essay film indicts the 20th century through its most popular medium.
1988 France, Switzerland
Directed by Jean-Luc Godard
=78
Love is rescued from the jaws of the afterlife in the Archers’ delirious World War II air-pilot fantasia.
1946 United Kingdom
Directed by Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger
=78
Industrial modernity proves mercilessly madcap in Charlie Chaplin’s final (mostly) silent feature, one of the most inspired and ingenious of all his comedies.
1936 USA
Directed by Charles Chaplin
=78
Tinseltown’s greatest self-satire, a gothic requiem for big-screen bygones and the highs of screen stardom.
1950 USA
Directed by Billy Wilder
=78
Jacques Rivette’s most playful, innovative frolic, in which his irreverent Parisian heroines dissolve worlds, genres, social codes and boundaries.
1974 France
Directed by Jacques Rivette
=78
Young love and teen delinquency in Taiwan’s early 1960s adolescence, in Edward Yang’s slow-burn, bittersweet epic.
1991 Taiwan
Directed by Edward Yang
=78
As timely as ever in its grim poeticisation of demagogues and doom, helplessness and hope. If music be the food of death, play on.
1994 Hungary, Germany, Switzerland
Directed by Béla Tarr
=75
Hayao Miyazaki’s rich anime fantasy follows its ten-year-old heroine into the labyrinth of a spirit-world bathhouse, teeming with phantoms and peril.
2001 Japan
Directed by Hayao Miyazaki
=75
Kenji Mizoguchi’s tragic folk saga of the tribulations of an exiled governor’s family in feudal Japan, tracked with exquisitely moving camerawork.
1954 Japan
Directed by Kenji Mizoguchi
=75
Douglas Sirk’s melodrama holds a mirror to the hypocrisies of 1950s America with its pairs of mothers and daughters across class and racial divides.
1959 USA
Directed by Douglas Sirk
=72
Michelangelo Antonioni’s high-modernist breakthrough sends Monica Vitti in search less of her disappeared friend than her own self, via images to get lost in.
1960 Italy, France
Directed by Michelangelo Antonioni
=72
Roberto Rossellini’s plaintively simple portrait of a marriage on the rocks, imprinted with the ghosts of love, cultures and civilisations.
1954 Italy, France
Directed by Roberto Rossellini
=72
The storytelling is as simple as Totoro is inscrutable, unfolding in a series of delightful, exquisitely constructed sequences.
1988 Japan
Directed by Hayao Miyazaki
=67
The feverish Technicolor and astonishing ballet sequences for which this film is so renowned are as spellbinding as they are disturbing.
1948 United Kingdom
Directed by Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger
=67
Fritz Lang’s bombastic, stylised depiction of a future of profound inequality has influenced generations of genre filmmakers.
1927 Germany
Directed by Fritz Lang
=67
Andrei Tarkovsky’s epic portrait of a medieval artist may be the most wrenching depiction of belief, creativity and the search for meaning ever filmed.
1966 USSR
Directed by Andrei Tarkovsky
=67
The rare short film in this list, Marker’s dazzling photo montage ruminates on memory from beyond the apocalypse.
1962 France
Directed by Chris Marker
=67
Agnès Varda’s essay portrait of society ’s scavenger-recyclers – herself included – is both free-radical and infectious.
2000 France
Directed by Agnès Varda
66
A restless young couple dream of escaping Senegal for Paris in Djibril Diop Mambéty ’s stylish, poetic, irreverent expression of post-colonial fantasies.
1973 Senegal
Directed by Djibril Diop Mambéty
=63
Joseph Cotten chases Orson Welles’s agent of corruption through the ruins of divided post-war Vienna in this evocative classic thriller.
1949 United Kingdom
Directed by Carol Reed
=63
The dizzying story of wiseguy Henry Hill, from his seduction into a life of crime to his paranoid, cocaine-fuelled departure.
1990 USA
Directed by Martin Scorsese
=63
Ingrid Bergman rallies Humphrey Bogart’s embittered cynic to the anti-Nazi cause in this classic romance.
1942 USA
Directed by Michael Curtiz
=60
Julie Dash’s visionary visual marriage between Afrocentric aesthetics and the rich emotional depth of Black womanhood is a cinematic triumph.
1991 USA
Directed by Julie Dash
=60
Federico Fellini’s ode to Rome presents a lush, vibrant exterior to the swinging city, before revealing its rotting moral core.
1960 Italy, France
Directed by Federico Fellini
=60
Instantly heralded as a modern masterpiece, Barry Jenkins’ stunning three-part story of queer identity is both a technical and an emotional marvel.
2016 USA
Directed by Barry Jenkins
59
Chris Marker’s speculative travelogue-essay, reflecting on culture and history in narrated letters from Guinea to Japan to Iceland.
1982 France
Directed by Chris Marker
=54
Billy Wilder’s then-risqué romcom, with Jack Lemmon and Shirley Maclaine finding love amid corporate New York’s sea of sexual deception.
1960 USA
Directed by Billy Wilder
=54
Buster Keaton’s would-be sleuth dreams himself into movie-heroic mastery in this dazzling, evergreen, meta masterpiece of silent comedy.
1924 USA
Directed by Buster Keaton
=54
Disillusion in love and cinema in Jean-Luc Godard’s most opulent and emotive production, with lovers and film legends at loggerheads in Capri.
1963 France, Italy
Directed by Jean-Luc Godard
=54
Sergei Eisenstein’s renowned agit-drama of proto-revolutionary mutiny and repression, often quoted but still powerful in its montage effects.
1925 USSR
Directed by Sergei M. Eisenstein
=54
Iconic neo-noir in a befouled sci-fi Los Angeles where humans and their machine replicas vie to be predators rather than prey.
1982 USA, Hong Kong
Directed by Ridley Scott
=52
Chantal Akerman’s epistolary film, shot in the grime of 70s New York, bridges the distance from Brussels through dictated letters from her mother.
1976 France, Belgium
Directed by Chantal Akerman
=52
Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s heart-on-sleeve melodrama of a doomed romance across racial and age divides probes social hypocrisy with feeling.
1974 Federal Republic of Germany
Directed by Rainer Werner Fassbinder
=50
This virtuoso drama of a mute woman’s and her daughter’s silent defiance of patriarchy in 19th-century New Zealand still has searing emotional heft.
1992 Australia, France
Directed by Jane Campion
=50
François Truffaut’s free-wheeling debut, with Jean-Pierre Léaud as his rebel-schoolboy surrogate, is still a banner film for nouvelle vague lyric realism.
1959 France
Directed by François Truffaut
=48
An austere parable on the power of faith, Carl Theodor Dreyer’s penultimate film culminates in a transcendent resurrection scene.
1955 Denmark
Directed by Carl Th. Dreyer
=48
Barbara Loden’s tough, unsentimental portrait of a woman adrift in the industrial heartlands of the north-eastern United States.
1970 USA
Directed by Barbara Loden
=45
Stanley Kubrick’s meticulously designed epic recounts the picaresque exploits of an 18th-century Irish adventurer.
1975 USA, United Kingdom
Directed by Stanley Kubrick
=45
Insouciant big-screen thrill-games from the Master of Suspense, hounding Cary Grant’s smug adman across a continent’s span of peerless set pieces.
1959 USA
Directed by Alfred Hitchcock
=45
A window on Algeria’s wider liberation war, recreating a violent phase of guerrilla struggle and suppression in powerful free-documentary style.
1966 Italy, Algeria
Directed by Gillo Pontecorvo
=43
Two men recruit a guide to take them into ‘the Zone’, a mysterious realm where one’s innermost wishes come true, in this metaphysical sci-fi epic.
1979 USSR
Directed by Andrei Tarkovsky
=43
Charles Burnett’s tender and witty tale of a disillusioned slaughterhouse worker and the solace to be found in the simplest moments of life.
1977 USA
Directed by Charles Burnett
=41
The film that brought Japanese cinema to the world, this 88-minute firecracker proved a seminal assault on the notion of objectivity.
1950 Japan
Directed by Akira Kurosawa
=41
The film that topped Sight and Sound’s inaugural Greatest Films of All Time poll in 1952, Vittorio De Sica’s indelible neorealist parable offers a sharp-eyed portrait of Italy’s post-war privations.
1948 Italy
Directed by Vittorio De Sica
=38
The Master of Suspense ratchets up the tension while dishing out insights into obsession, urban living and the dangers of the gaze.
1954 USA
Directed by Alfred Hitchcock
=38
Jean-Luc Godard’s cock-of-the-walk calling card, mixing pulp pastiche and upstart rebellion with Jean-Paul Belmondo’s footloose Parisian delinquent.
1960 France
Directed by Jean-Luc Godard
=38
Billy Wilder’s supreme gender-bending comedy has Jack Lemmon and Tony Curtis as female-posing musicians on the lam, and many knickers in a twist.
1959 USA
Directed by Billy Wilder
=36
Fritz Lang’s rack-taut first talkie, with a searing, animalistic Peter Lorre as a serial child-murderer turned manhunt target.
1931 Germany
Directed by Fritz Lang
=36
A purely beautiful outing from the Tramp, this delightful urban romance features one of cinema’s most heartbreaking smiles.
1931 USA
Directed by Charles Chaplin
35
All the mischief, discoveries, joys and tragedies of life are given endlessly lyrical expression in Satyajit Ray’s debut, the first entry in ‘The Apu Trilogy’.
1955 India
Directed by Satyajit Ray
34
Jean Vigo’s headily poetic portrait of young newlyweds on – and off – Michel Simon’s barge on the Seine.
1934 France
Directed by Jean Vigo
=31
Federico Fellini’s portrait of the film director as harried ringmaster and unreliable dreamer, spinning gold from his memories and fantasies.
1963 Italy, France
Directed by Federico Fellini
=31
Alfred Hitchcock’s unsparing wrong-motel shocker starring Janet Leigh is a watershed for mainstream horror and still seminal in its suspense games.
1960 USA
Directed by Alfred Hitchcock
=31
Cinema scaled new heights of visual poetry in this deeply personal, elliptical film by the master of ‘sculpting in time’.
1975 USSR
Directed by Andrei Tarkovsky
30
Portrait of a Lady on Fire demonstrates Céline Sciamma’s ability to make a timelessly beautiful film that also crystallises the gender politics of her era.
2019 France
Directed by Céline Sciamma
29
Martin Scorsese and Paul Schrader’s high-art vigilante movie for fallen times, with a coiled Robert De Niro as psycho-saviour of an infernal NYC.
1976 USA
Directed by Martin Scorsese
28
This feminist milestone is an anarchic comedy of subversion whose approach to montage is as exuberant as the film’s two protagonists.
1966 Czechoslovakia
Directed by Věra Chytilová
27
To make sense of the 20th century’s most horrific atrocity, Claude Lanzmann reinvented documentary itself, giving the form colossal new significance.
1985 France
Directed by Claude Lanzmann
=25
Actor Charles Laughton’s only film as director, starring Robert Mitchum as an implacable child-hunting preacher, still leaves an indelible mark.
1955 USA
Directed by Charles Laughton
=25
Robert Bresson gave us a typically stark vision of humanity as experienced by a put-upon, maltreated beast of burden that passes from owner to owner.
1966 France, Sweden
Directed by Robert Bresson
24
Racial tensions reach boiling point in Spike Lee’s incandescent portrait of a Brooklyn neighbourhood on the hottest day of the year.
1989 USA
Directed by Spike Lee
23
Jacques Tati’s most painstaking accomplishment blends deft slapstick, endless visual ingenuity and sonic comedy in a stupendous modern satire.
1967 France
Directed by Jacques Tati
=21
The first of Yasujirō Ozu’s great cycle of dramas that place the joys and sadnesses of family life in the context of a Japan disrupted by modernity.
1949 Japan
Directed by Yasujirō Ozu
=21
Carl Theodor Dreyer’s rapturous silent masterpiece, with soulful close-ups of Renée Jeanne “Maria” Falconetti’s tremulous martyr, transcending tyranny and temporality.
1927 France
Directed by Carl Th. Dreyer
20
Akira Kurosawa’s monumental, scintillating tale of hired samurai protecting a peasant village: period thriller and moral/political fable in one.
1954 Japan
Directed by Akira Kurosawa
19
Francis Ford Coppola’s Vietnam War blowout, a hell-trip through the smoke and dazzle of imperial America’s most grandstanding rogue show.
1979 USA
Directed by Francis Ford Coppola
18
Any sense of a conventional psychodrama is constantly disrupted by the experimental, improvisatory filmmaking.
1966 Sweden
Directed by Ingmar Bergman
17
The more ‘information’ we’re offered about the case, the more we come to realise that there are no easy answers to any of the questions being raised.
1989 Iran
Directed by Abbas Kiarostami
16
Had Californian sunlight ever looked as suggestive or sinister before the sharply etched dreamworld of Meshes of the Afternoon?
1943 USA
Directed by Maya Deren, Alexander Hackenschmied
15
This poll’s last western standing, John Ford’s sweeping, stirring rescue-or-revenge quest remains a film of magnificent mystery and poetry.
1956 USA
Directed by John Ford
14
In real time, Cléo becomes more real, more subject than object. She discards her whipped-cream wig and polka dots for a simple black shift. She performs less and feels more.
1962 France, Italy
Directed by Agnès Varda
13
Huge-spirited and sharp-eyed, Jean Renoir’s French-society fresco gathers high classes and low for a weekend of country-house fallout.
1939 France
Directed by Jean Renoir
12
The first of Francis Ford Coppola’s epic trilogy about the Corleone crime family is the disturbing story of a son drawn inexorably into his father’s Mafia affairs.
1972 USA
Directed by Francis Ford Coppola
11
The first American film by one of German expressionism’s leading exponents, this lush, atmospheric silent drama is replete with groundbreaking cinematography.
1927 USA
Directed by F.W. Murnau
10
Hollywood’s troubled transition from silent to talking pictures at the end of the 1920s provided the inspiration for perhaps the greatest of movie musicals.
1951 USA
Directed by Gene Kelly, Stanley Donen
9
Bottomless invention and frenetic, dizzying montage make this city symphony one of cinema’s sharpest, most exciting experiences nearly a century after its release.
1929 Ukrainian SSR, USSR
Directed by Dziga Vertov
8
Hollywood is dark and dangerous, yet alluring, in David Lynch’s acclaimed thriller.
2001 France, USA
Directed by David Lynch
7
Claire Denis’s great gift is to evoke emotion with gesture and juxtaposition. In the desert, water shimmers and ripples, naked shoulders perspire, black mosquito nets recall sheer lingerie.
1998 France
Directed by Claire Denis
6
Stanley Kubrick’s grand vision of mankind’s journey from its hominid beginnings to its star-child evolution is a towering achievement of science-fiction cinema.
1968 USA, United Kingdom
Directed by Stanley Kubrick
5
Wong Kar Wai’s masterpiece is a heartbreaking story of illicit love that pulses with the ache of repressed desire.
2000 Hong Kong, France
Directed by Wong Kar Wai
4
Told in Yasujirō Ozu’s simple and elegant style, this story of intergenerational discord is heartbreaking and deeply human.
1953 Japan
Directed by Yasujirō Ozu
3
Famously sitting at the top of the Sight and Sound Greatest Films of All Time poll from 1962 to 2002, Orson Welles’s debut, about newspaper magnate Charles Foster Kane, remains an enduring classic.
1941 USA
Directed by Orson Welles
2
A former detective with a fear of heights is hired to follow a woman apparently possessed by the past, in Alfred Hitchcock’s timeless thriller about obsession.
1958 USA
Directed by Alfred Hitchcock
1
A magnificent epic of experimental cinema offering a feminist perspective on recurrent events of everyday life.
1975 Belgium, France
Directed by Chantal Akerman
Discover a selection of hand-picked highlights available to watch at home.
Explore now