50 Movies That Make You Feel Good
50 Movies That Make You Feel Good
50 Movies That Make You Feel Good
There are movies that make you feel good and there are
feelgood movies. The latter is a stupid word (like 'chick-
flick' or 'rom- com') that has become a vague, dubious
genre of films specifically and cynically designed to fill
the shallowest hole in your soul - your need for mild,
'heartwarming' entertainment. They often star Meg Ryan
or Hugh Grant, and they are as fleetingly satisfying as
cheap burgers. But you can always go back to something
better, the movies that you can, as Quentin Tarantino
put it, "hang out with". They will always pick you up,
never let you down, and whether in jest or seriousness,
they only tell you what you want or need to hear. Here is
a list of 50 that might work. You're welcome to disagree,
if it makes you feel good.
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lilies of the goddamn field," he suggests, with twitchy
good cheer.
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46. Evil Dead 2 (1987) "Who's laughing now?" shrieks Ash
(Bill Campbell), as he taunts his own left hand, which he
has just chopped off because it was possessed by
demons. The most violent, delirious and hilarious
slapstick comedy ever made.
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39. Say Anything (1989) More people know and love
Cameron Crowe's later chocolate-hearted smash-hit
Jerry Maguire, but this attraction of opposites between
honourable underachiever John Cusack and beautiful
academic Ione Skye provides lasting delight - sharply
observed, nervously plausible and brilliantly played.
Young men who watch this will go on to secretly imagine
themselves as a Cusack figure in all subsequent
relationships.
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36. Jamon, Jamon (1992) The love triangle between the
heir to an underwear empire (Jordi Molla), the daughter
of the town whore (Penelope Cruz), and a well-hung
ham-factory worker (Javier Bardem) is played out with
ecstatic, spectacular carnality. Not to sound crude, but
this movie could give even the most kosher viewer both
a literal and metaphorical hunger for hot pork.
31. Midnight Run (1988) "If you say another word, I will
bury this telephone in your head." Forming between the
lines of such wonderfully terse and abusive dialogue, the
reluctant, underplayed friendship between Robert De
Niro's tetchy bounty hunter and Charles Grodin's white-
collar prisoner makes Martin Brest's road movie a lost,
dusty treasure.
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there are a hundred good jokes and revelatory details
half-hidden in the story and performances.
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and revolting. In the telling, it builds awesome power
through observation and restraint.
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23. Down By Law (1986) Jack the DJ (Tom Waits) and
Zack the pimp (Rod Lurie), both too laid-back to avoid
being framed for crimes they didn't commit, are thrown
in the slammer with Italian optimist Roberto Benigni,
who doesn't speak English too good but knows an escape
route. Scruffy but uplifting, like a barfly with a
tremendous singing voice.
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kicked so hard it releases atomic shockwaves and fiery
demons.
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above) makes sure everybody gets who and what they
secretly want with omnipotent, benevolent cunning. The
whole film runs on the same kind of wishful thinking that
keeps fairies in the air.
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posters as "The Snooty Society Beauty Who Slipped And
Fell - IN LOVE."
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4. The Shawshank Redemption (1994) For all the prison-
movie cliches and bible-parable martyrdom, Frank
Darabont's adaptation of Stephen King's novella - Tim
Robbins suffers, suffers, and escapes the hell of wrongful
incarceration - transmits a powerfully pure and simple
belief in hope and transcendence.
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