This is the dumbest fucking timeline
RT @masonmennenga@twitter.com
uh oh, evangelicals have NFT’d prayer
🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/masonmennenga/status/1507417980476420096
25. Imitation of Life
And a bonus one. :) I saw this in high school and it stuck with me ever since -- it introduced the concept of "passing" to my young brain and opened up the distinctly American history of racism. Amazing it was made back in 1959.
24. Miracle Mile
YMMV on this, but I love this one. Boy meets girl, boy misses date, boy gets a fucking terrifying call in the middle of the night....
It's an 80s fever dream of a movie that does the surreality of this horrific situation justice. The ending is just killer!
23. O Brother, Where Art Thou?
It was so hard to narrow it down to one Coen Brothers film. True Grit and Fargo are both absolute gems, but I have to say this is my favorite of the bunch.
I wore out three different copies of the soundtrack the year after it came out
22. Dawn of the Dead
The beginning so perfectly captures what makes zombies terrifying and nothing else comes close...going to bed with your husband and waking up to your neighbor's kid killing him...then he tries to kill you...and when you escape outside the world has ended.
21. The Tree of Life
This movie caught me off-guard, and it is a singularly great experience. More a visual poem than a movie, it's almost impossible to describe it. You really have to drop your barriers and engage with it as it is.
20. Ikiru
Kurosawa is one of the best film directors of all time, and this is the one I keep coming back to whenever I think of him. It's relatively minor, but its quiet humanism is simply lovely and affirming.
19. All Quiet on the Western Front
This movie is freaking remarkable. It is one of the best depictions of the wide gap between the perception of war and the reality of it, what war actually does to its participants. If you see only one WWI movie, this should be it.
18. Spirited Away
This movie just makes me feel warm and contented. A masterpiece, quite simply. I love how it presents the spirit world as dangerous until Chihiro interacts with it on its own terms. It really underscores the importance of adaptability to thrive in life.
17. Zootopia
HOT TAKE I STILL LOVE THIS MOVIE
Is it perfect? No, but I think Judy Hopps is an unfair target. It still gives me that childlike sense of wonder even after all this time, and it's such a GREAT representation of a furry world.
16. The Iron Giant
It's an oversight I haven't added this movie yet, but HOLY CRAP does it leave me a sobbing wreck at the end. Really takes me back to my imaginary giant friends when I was a wee leveret. <3
15. Last Night
I don't know where you can watch this movie, but it's this wonderful "cozy catastrophe" story about people in Canada spending their last six hours of life on Earth before the apocalypse. A singular movie, but "Seeking A Friend For The End of the World" comes close
14. Hot Rod
Another all-time favorite comedy. Weird, random, always throwing you off-guard with form-breaking jokes. This is an incredibly underrated gem. <3
@ThePenDrake@twitter.com 13. Talladega Nights
Quite possibly my all-time favorite comedy. Imminently quotable, just a pure joy to watch from start to finish, exactly my brand of humor. Every actor brought their A-game, there's really not a dud in the bunch. SO GOOD. XD
12. Snowpiercer
When @ThePenDrake@twitter.com leaned over to me and said "the train is capitalism" it blew my freaking mind. :O
An incredibly sobering metaphor for the unsustainability of the status quo, and a strong argument for the necessity of derailing it for our long-term survival.
11. Moulin Rouge!
I don't know about you, but some movies serve as a "skeleton key" that unlocks whole genres for me. Moulin Rouge did that for musicals -- it's such a heady, emotionally-breathless film that sweeps you up like a tornado. Baz Luhrmann at his best.
10. Hairspray
JUST TRY TO STOP ME from singing along to this movie. It helps that it's set in my hometown. FUN FACT: My local library and barber were both on North Ave., and I still have an aunt who lives in that neighborhood.
9. Friday
An unapologetic HOOD movie, this feels a lot like my neighborhood growing up in ways big and small -- like how simply being let into someone's house is a big step in your relationship as a neighbor.
It's also funny as fuck. "Bye Felicia" alone = XD XD XD
8. Bamboozled
Whew, this is a thorny-ass movie. There are lots of problems with it, especially in the third act, but I'm still haunted by Pierre Delacroix's act of frustrated rebellion becoming the very vehicle for his success...and how quickly he allows himself to justify it.
7. Get Out
An *instant* classic. Another movie that captures the modern Black American experience so well -- it's this perfect blend of social satire and horror. Inspired a slew of imitators who couldn't quite thread the needle, and it shows the size of Peele's achievement.
A digital jackalope living in a black man's body. Pronouns: he/him/his. I love my blackness, and yours.