Growing up I used to be one of those guys who was always like "movies just don't appeal to me" or "I'm not much of a movie guy" since I thought they were too long and either really stupid entertainment or too pretentious, so I never really gave them a chance and just casually dismissed the medium.
But recently I've realized that throughout all this I've been missing out on some great cultural capital over the past century. So as a part of "reinventing myself" to become a more artistically literate person, I've decided to watch every single film listed on the National Film Registry's list.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Film_Registry
This will probably take a few years at least unless I watch like ten films a week.
Initially, I was planning on doing the AFI top 100, but not only is that list fairly short, it is far too restrictive and looks ONLY at the biggest and most essential stuff. Meanwhile, the NFR, while of course including the biggest and most essential stuff (there's a lot of overlap), also includes a lot more niche content, and more variety, since it wasn't just compiled by a bunch of snobby critics. Not only does it include films, but it includes a lot of indie stuff, documentaries, short subjects, and experimental artistic stuff. And even then, this is still scratching the surface, but it serves as a succinct opener to American cinema. Of course there are some things in there that are questionable (Iron Man? Home Alone? Spy Kids? Really?). I might also delve into the Criterion Collection after this, which has essential films globally (I'm looking at UK, French, and Japanese cinema next).
Will watching all of these films make me a film buff? Not really, since I'm only going through the most significant stuff, and a real film buff spends his or her time on film analysis and watching everything he or she can get their hands on. But I can at least pretend to be more well versed.
Anyway, I've made a spreadsheet cataloguing every film I've seen so far on this journey. I've seen a lot of the films listed before, but for the intents of this list, I'm gonna rewatch them all for the sake of completeness. You can see my ratings and any comments I made here, and if you scroll to the right you can see what each of my ratings indicate.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/ ... sp=sharing
So far the vast majority of the films I've seen have been good or artifacts, which basically are films that are only listed due to their importance in the development of film technologically, or only listed because of their importance in extremely niche contexts. Only one film on here I've watched I actually fucking hated, and over 80 films in that isn't so bad.
Thoughts?
Watching every film on the National Film Registry
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Watching every film on the National Film Registry
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- aroneous
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Re: Watching every film on the National Film Registry
That's quite the list, I've seen a good number of them but still that only amounts to like 2%. I'm not at all confident at my ability to keep up with your pace, I might get to one per month (at most). Though I'll probably get around to watching a lot of the "artifact" short films. It's a real shame that Nacho Libre isn't on there.
As for my own recommendations, I guess I'm obligated to suggest some French films. There is of course the film "Amélie" which is pretty well-known worldwide, though it wasn't really my favorite. Though I did quite like another film by the same director, "Delicatessen", which is about cannibals in post-apocalyptic France, it's pretty funny. There are also some films adapted from novels by Marcel Pagnol, in particular I enjoyed "Jean de Florette" and its sequel "Manon des Sources" (Manon of the Spring), I quite like the setting and the soundtrack, and as a French learner it was interesting to hear their funny southern accents.
Regarding other international films, from the UK the first one that comes to mind is Trainspotting, if you want to watch a movie about heroin junkies in Scotland (I actually read the book in high school, of my own free will). From Japan, you can't go wrong with Seven Samurai, Yojimbo/Sanjuro, Rashomon, and other Kurosawa films. Then there's all of the Miyazaki animated films, my favorites are Princess Mononoke and Howl's Moving Castle. And of course some other non-Miyazaki studio Ghibli movies, "When Marnie was There" if you're at all into soppy stuff (I'm not in general, but this one *almost* got me going). Otherwise, I'd also recommend the Brazilian movie "City of God", it has some pretty harrowing scenes but it's a very interesting portrayal of organized crime in Brazilian slums.
As for my own recommendations, I guess I'm obligated to suggest some French films. There is of course the film "Amélie" which is pretty well-known worldwide, though it wasn't really my favorite. Though I did quite like another film by the same director, "Delicatessen", which is about cannibals in post-apocalyptic France, it's pretty funny. There are also some films adapted from novels by Marcel Pagnol, in particular I enjoyed "Jean de Florette" and its sequel "Manon des Sources" (Manon of the Spring), I quite like the setting and the soundtrack, and as a French learner it was interesting to hear their funny southern accents.
Regarding other international films, from the UK the first one that comes to mind is Trainspotting, if you want to watch a movie about heroin junkies in Scotland (I actually read the book in high school, of my own free will). From Japan, you can't go wrong with Seven Samurai, Yojimbo/Sanjuro, Rashomon, and other Kurosawa films. Then there's all of the Miyazaki animated films, my favorites are Princess Mononoke and Howl's Moving Castle. And of course some other non-Miyazaki studio Ghibli movies, "When Marnie was There" if you're at all into soppy stuff (I'm not in general, but this one *almost* got me going). Otherwise, I'd also recommend the Brazilian movie "City of God", it has some pretty harrowing scenes but it's a very interesting portrayal of organized crime in Brazilian slums.
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Re: Watching every film on the National Film Registry
Again this will likely take a few years if I manage to watch three films a week. There are also a lot of documentaries, but I'm allowing myself to watch those on 2x speed if available. Depends on what type of stuff you're interested in, I can reccomend some stuff as I go along the list. So far my favorite 'Artifact' films are Winsor McKay's stuff:aroneous wrote: ↑Thu May 29, 2025 1:20 pm That's quite the list, I've seen a good number of them but still that only amounts to like 2%. I'm not at all confident at my ability to keep up with your pace, I might get to one per month (at most). Though I'll probably get around to watching a lot of the "artifact" short films.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=32pzHWUTcPc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wq7hMuiz1mI
I've considered watching the films in order of release so I see a nice evolution of American film, but that might be a tedious slog. Haven't ruled it out entirely though.
They add 25 films a year so don't give up hope.
When this is done I'm gonna go through French films, includeing stuff from the French New Wave. I should learn a bit of French so I don't have to rely on shit subtitles. I might mainly reference the Criterion Collection on this one: https://www.criterion.com/shop/browse/l ... try=Francearoneous wrote: ↑Thu May 29, 2025 1:20 pmAs for my own recommendations, I guess I'm obligated to suggest some French films. There is of course the film "Amélie" which is pretty well-known worldwide, though it wasn't really my favorite. Though I did quite like another film by the same director, "Delicatessen", which is about cannibals in post-apocalyptic France, it's pretty funny. There are also some films adapted from novels by Marcel Pagnol, in particular I enjoyed "Jean de Florette" and its sequel "Manon des Sources" (Manon of the Spring), I quite like the setting and the soundtrack, and as a French learner it was interesting to hear their funny southern accents.
Perhaps as a lifelong goal I'll go through the entirety of the Criterion Collection.
I am really interested in viewing Japanese cinema and seeing how it developed alongside western cinema, and seeing how many films are ripped off from Japan (Fistful of Dollars is just a Western version of Yojimbo).aroneous wrote: ↑Thu May 29, 2025 1:20 pmRegarding other international films, from the UK the first one that comes to mind is Trainspotting, if you want to watch a movie about heroin junkies in Scotland (I actually read the book in high school, of my own free will). From Japan, you can't go wrong with Seven Samurai, Yojimbo/Sanjuro, Rashomon, and other Kurosawa films. Then there's all of the Miyazaki animated films, my favorites are Princess Mononoke and Howl's Moving Castle. And of course some other non-Miyazaki studio Ghibli movies, "When Marnie was There" if you're at all into soppy stuff (I'm not in general, but this one *almost* got me going). Otherwise, I'd also recommend the Brazilian movie "City of God", it has some pretty harrowing scenes but it's a very interesting portrayal of organized crime in Brazilian slums.
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Re: Watching every film on the National Film Registry
Something I might have gone for as a youngin' if the internet as such existed back then. I don't pay enough attention to watch current movies and remember what went on in them.
It could be a useful project to go through the registry and offer an environmental/vegan perspective critique on the films, and highlight those that are more socially valuable with consideration for their didactic (moral) qualities.
It could be a useful project to go through the registry and offer an environmental/vegan perspective critique on the films, and highlight those that are more socially valuable with consideration for their didactic (moral) qualities.
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Re: Watching every film on the National Film Registry
If it makes you feel any better I've barely seen any films released in the past 25 years. Maybe 30-40 max. My strategy is to just wait until the decade is over to see what films actually are good and which ones are just hyped up trash.brimstoneSalad wrote: ↑Mon Jun 02, 2025 3:39 amSomething I might have gone for as a youngin' if the internet as such existed back then. I don't pay enough attention to watch current movies and remember what went on in them.
You have to keep in mind though that cinema died in 1999. Only 12 good films have been released since then, most of them in 2000, having already been shot in 1999. Film reached its creative peak in works such as Lawrence of Arabia, 8½, and Seven Samurai, elevating the medium to a true art form. However, thanks to the Phantom Menace and the ever-increasing reliance on CGI, all of this potential has been squandered, and it has been turned into fast-cutting, color-graded sludge for attention-deficit morons who look at their phones the entire time (i.e., the lowest common denominator – stop trying to turn cinema into YouTube-tier greenscreen spectacle for people who think storytelling peaked with Avengers: Endgame).
I would really need to reach for a lot of them, though I could point out the consistent lack of focus on animal rights issues present.brimstoneSalad wrote: ↑Mon Jun 02, 2025 3:39 amIt could be a useful project to go through the registry and offer an environmental/vegan perspective critique on the films, and highlight those that are more socially valuable with consideration for their didactic (moral) qualities.
There are though a lot of films that resonated with me, not just on moral levels but also existentially. I've grown to prefer films with morally dubious characters and ambiguous and/or cynical endings, rather than films with one clear good guy where everyone enjoys a happy ending, though of course seeing the same type of ending over and over again does get tiring regardless of tone.
I think a more interesting thing to look out for in sci-fi films, is if they view eating animals the same way they do now, or if they have technology to mimic meat. Like this scene in 2001:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6U5_p29naIM
'What's that? Chicken?"
"Something like that. Tastes the same anyway."
Not sure if that was included to point out how humans would eventually move beyond animal agriculture or because astronauts wouldn't be able to sustain themselves on just meat.
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