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Top ten films every kid should see

post #1 of 18
Thread Starter 
The X-rated films every child should see
By Richard Garner, Education Editor
Published: 20 July 2005

A 1950s thriller and a Danish film exploring the sexuality of teenage girls are among the top 10 films that British schoolchildren should see by the age of 14.

The list, compiled by the British Film Institute (BFI) after consulting up to 80 experts in cinema and education, includes only one film made in England. That film was Kes, Ken Loach's award-winning production about the relationship between a working-class boy from Barnsley and a kestrel.

A surprise omission was Billy Elliot, about a boy from a pit village who becomes a ballet dancer - which is on the curriculum in Sweden.

Cary Bazalgette, head of education at the BFI, said the top 10 was " quite a controversial list that's likely to provoke continuing debate".

"But that's the idea," she added. "We want people to discuss what children should see - rather than what they shouldn't see."

She said she was surprised that Charles Laughton's The Night of the Hunter was chosen. It was banned in Finland and subsequently given a 16 rating there. Starring Robert Mitchum and Shelley Winters, the 1955 black and white film tells the story of a murderous preacher in pursuit of money.

The list also includes Show Me Love, a Danish film marketed in some countries asFucking Amal, which was distributed as a 15-certificate film, and deals with two adolescent girls growing up and exploring their sexuality.

"If you want to show the film Show Me Love to 11-year-olds, they can't arrest you for it," said Ms Bazalgette. "Parents and teachers in loco parentis can make their own decisions - but a teacher would be wise to clear it with the parents first."

She admitted the top 10 included some films which might be appreciated by an older audience.

"I also thought it surprising there was a lack of British material," she said. "We consulted some European film institutions and they seemed to be more pro British films than our own people. A lot of them had Billy Elliot down as a must, Ms Bazalgette said."

The top 10, which is on the BFI website, is open for discussion. "We're not imposing this selection," said Ms Bazalgette. "We intend the list to evolve so we'll be inviting continued comment and nominations."

The initiative has been backed by the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority, the government body responsible for monitoring the national curriculum. It believes the use of moving image texts in teaching English often enhances a child's love of reading.

The top 10 were chosen from a list of 50 suggested by BFI staff. David Lean's Oliver Twist and Lionel Jeffries' The Railway Children. failed to make the top 10.

Top ten for British schoolchildren

BICYCLE THIEVES

Vittorio de Sica (Italy 1948)

A boy goes with his father on a desperate hunt for a stolen bicycle that he needs for his new job, after being unemployed for two years, and, finally, sees his father's public shame: the one true horror film in the list.

E.T. THE EXTRA-TERRESTRIAL


Steven Spielberg (USA 1982)

One of cinema's great love stories, rendered in terms that any child can understand - spacemen, bicycles, annoying siblings. For once, Spielberg doesn't betray a hint of phoney feeling.

KES

Ken Loach (UK 1969)

Loach's story of a working-class lad's rapturous relationship with a kestrel: the quintessential "grim up North" film, but the poetic currents and superb amateur actors mean the grimness never feels forced.

LES QUATRE CENT COUPS


Francois Truffaut (France 1959)

A bleak and enchanting parable about the joys and fears of childhood, and the indifference of adults. Jean-Pierre Léaud is brilliant as Antoine, a Parisian schoolboy in ever-deepening trouble with the adult world.

THE NIGHT OF THE HUNTER

Charles Laughton (USA 1955) Laughton's film, a thriller about two children on the run from a psychopathic preacher, was a commercial and critical disaster: now, it looks like the 20th century's most sumptuous and terrifying fairy-tale.

SHOW ME LOVE

Lukas Moodysson (Sweden/Denmark 1998)

A sweet, painfully realistic film about small-town adolescence: the difficulties exacerbated for Agnes by a crush on her friend Elin, for Elin by the realisation that she might share Agnes's feelings.

SPIRITED AWAY


Hayao Miyazaki (Japan 2001)

When Chihiro's parents are turned into pigs, she has to work in a bathhouse scrubbing witches, demons and monsters: Miyazaki's animation has more imagination and emotion than the entire Disney canon.

TOY STORY

John Lasseter (USA 1995)

"To infinity and beyond": a wonderfully witty, well-observed and affecting story of a toy that gets left on the shelf when a newer, shinier one comes along. If only the humans were a little more real.

WHERE IS THE FRIEND'S HOUSE?

Abbas Kiarostami (Iran 1987)

A boy has to take a school notebook to his friend's house across town, or the friend will be in trouble. The film has been interpreted as a political allegory; but arbitrary adult authority is the same for children everywhere.

THE WIZARD OF OZ

Victor Fleming (USA 1939)

Great songs, Judy Garland in top form, and essential cultural equipment if you even half-suspect your child is gay. But this is the most lurid, simplistic film on the list: and ugh, those scary flying monkeys.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------

Pretty good list there, apart from the shocking absence of Eraserhead of course.
post #2 of 18
Excellent list and nice to see an institution not betraying itself by bowing down to pressure groups/religious organisations/political correctnes/kneejerk-tabloid mentality.

This is a fantastic idea and as a former English Lit. student, I know that watching both versions of Lord of the Flies whilst reading the book gave me a greater appreciation of the text, as well as a deeper understanding of its intricacies and subtext. The same can be said of the much more successful adaptation of The Remains of the Day. Both of these books entered my canon when I never would have bothered to pick them up, and inspired me to have a more open approach to literature.

I'm a graduated film student now and consider myself a writer - short stories and scripts - and my understanding of the grammar of literature and film, and the differences inherent to the separate approaches to similar source material in opposing media stems from my interest in those classes years ago. I think its very easy to downplay the entertainment value of reading a book (BORING!) and the levels of craftsmanship and subtext that can go into a film (DUMB!) and if lists like this can help bring the two schools of thought together for young teenagers, I think this sort of initiative can only be a good thing.

Going back to the list, Night of the Hunter is a film that I saw when I was 15 and, while some of the acting in it is outmoded (not bad, just of a style which we have moved away from), its a film that has stuck with me and which I tend to watch once a year now. It has scenes of surreal power and enchantment, driven by extraordinary visuals and powerhouse Mitchum. I think more adults should see that film, let alone teenagers.

ET, Toy Story, Wizard of Oz, Spirited Away - don't think I need say anymore... though i would have preferred TS2 to be on the list.

And its good to see the nouvelle vague and Italian neo-realism represented as those films will give a neat introduction to schools of filmmaking and the history and evolution of cinema. Maybe Fritz Lang's M could go on there too? We owe a lot to the Germans as well.
post #3 of 18

Where is Eraserhead?

for that matter, where are:

Kids
Salo'
and David Cronenberg's Crash...
post #4 of 18
I would add "To Kill a Mockingbird" and "Stand by Me".
post #5 of 18
No film can teach kids about losing a loved one better than TRANSFORMERS: THE MOVIE.
post #6 of 18
Watership Down.

Guaranteed to fuck any kid up for at least a week.
post #7 of 18
I know my film cannon growing up included cupious amounts of Friday the 13th and Nightmare on Elm Street. Every kid should know about the things waiting to snatch them up in the dark...
post #8 of 18
Quote:
Originally Posted by DeviatedPrevert
Watership Down.

Guaranteed to fuck any kid up for at least a week.
No shit! A kid's movie that takes away their childhood. Damn bunnies...

Quote:
BICYCLE THIEVES

Vittorio de Sica (Italy 1948)

A boy goes with his father on a desperate hunt for a stolen bicycle that he needs for his new job, after being unemployed for two years, and, finally, sees his father's public shame: the one true horror film in the list.
I'm curious as to what the father's shame is. Does it turn out that the father was lying about the job in the first place, lying about the bicycle being stolen? I'm not going to lose sleep over this, but I am curious as to what it is.
post #9 of 18
replace Toy Story with the bar none best animated movie of the 90's

The Iron Giant
post #10 of 18
spirited away? are you serious?
post #11 of 18
Good call on Iron Giant
I'd add The Outsiders
post #12 of 18
I second The Outsiders.

And I think Goonies ought to be on the list. Goonies was awesome. Maybe not as awesome for British kids, but still...

"SLOTH LOVE CHUNK!"
post #13 of 18

Malena?

A boy learns how to get with Monica Bellucci
post #14 of 18
Quote:
Originally Posted by Momotaro

I'm curious as to what the father's shame is. Does it turn out that the father was lying about the job in the first place, lying about the bicycle being stolen? I'm not going to lose sleep over this, but I am curious as to what it is.

Bicycle Thief Spoilers, I guess...


Well, the father finds the titular thief and tries to get his bike back, but the thief is protected by the mob and the father walks away empty handed. He then sees an unmanned bike and, in a moment of impulse, steals it, he himself becoming a bicycle thief. But unlike the other thief, he is caught, forced to give the bike back and shamed. And all of this happens right in front of his young son, who idolizes him.
post #15 of 18
Debbie Does Dallas

Cheap, I know, but a kid's gotta learn sometime...
post #16 of 18
I know that when I was a kid, I loved watching the '33 King Kong, and the original Mighty Joe Young. Plus, (almost) any Godzilla.
post #17 of 18
Born Free.
post #18 of 18
Quote:
Originally Posted by Moltisanti
No film can teach kids about losing a loved one better than TRANSFORMERS: THE MOVIE.

That should be someones sig!
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