385 Comments
- webkami, on 06/06/2008, -1/+79Mirror: http://64.233.183.104/search?q=cache:AMne46sheykJ: ...
And the list:
The Truman Show (1998)
I Heart Huckabees (2004)
Waking Life (2001)
The Matrix (1999)
Dark City (1998)
American Beauty (1999)
Fight Club (1999)
Donnie Darko (2001)
Brazil (1985)
Network (1976) - metapop, on 06/06/2008, -6/+68should have added "the game" with michael douglas and sean penn.
- bossm4n, on 06/05/2008, -4/+49A decent list of flicks, not sure about the whole mind-blowing thing. Memento would probably be near the top of mind-blowing movies I've seen.
- DrCrankenstein, on 06/05/2008, -5/+48That's a pretty legit list. Dugg.
- Oztog, on 06/06/2008, -9/+46What about requiem for a dream, Pi and Trainspotting those should be on the list.
- bkienzle22, on 06/06/2008, -11/+46If you were offered the chance to learn the truth…would you take it?
My English teacher once told me that good short stories were the ones that spoke to universal truths.
These were the stories that go beyond mere characters and their antics through an imaginary universe. They offer an insight into the human condition: what is life? what is truth? what is reality?
The same could be said for memorable films. Only films convey their meaning in a more sensory way - using both audio and visual elements to enter the mind of the viewer.
And perhaps even shift your perspective.
The following 10 films are chosen because they shed light on the forces at work within our lives, this very moment. They use satire and metaphor to approach the truths that would otherwise be too difficult to understand, or too terrifying to comprehend.
Most of all, these films challenge you to wake up.
The Truman Show (1998)
Jim Carrey plays Truman Burbank, the first child ever legally adopted by a corporation. His entire life is constructed inside a gigantic set, encompassing the picturesque town of SeaHaven. Everything is artificial — from the buildings, to the people, to the very sun above his head.
It’s too easy to call the film a satirical extension of “reality television.” Instead, Peter Weir deftly uses the motif of reality TV to present the “un-realities” of our own world. How the majority of us are psychologically controlled, through fear and comfort to, as Cristof says, “accept the reality of the world that we’re given.”
Read more: The Meaning Of The Truman Show
I Heart Huckabees (2004)
Imagine you were experiencing an existential crisis. But rather than work through it yourself, you hire existential detectives to help you track down the source of your suffering. Imagine one of those detectives is Dustin Hoffman with a bad haircut.
I Heart Huckabees is a quirky, rabbit hole of a film. Many of the characters, from the smarmy marketing executive (Jude Law), to the angry nihlistic firefighter (Mark Walberg) act out the various philosophies of the past thousand years.
Read more: Essay on I Heart Huckabees
Waking Life (2001)
What if you were chained in a dimly-lit cave your whole life where you saw only shadows of real things reflected on its back wall?
Suddenly you’re free and come into the sunlight. Would you recognize this new world as more real than your cave world? Would you be able to wake up?
Talk about a mind trip. Richard Linklater’s film Waking Life, is both visually beautiful and intellectually stimulating. The filmmakers use a ground-breaking technique (at the time) called ‘rotoscoping’ to colour over the images to create a dream-like animation.
Just a few of the ideas covered in unbroken dialogues: dreaming versus reality, existentialism, buddhism, situationism, post-modernism, the list goes on.
Read more: Essay on Waking Life
The Matrix (1999)
For obvious reasons, this was a paradigm-shifting film in the world of movies. But it also introduced a whole generation (myself included) to question the nature of reality. What is real? And how do you know it’s real?
The film’s other great contribution to mass society was the possibility that an unseen force is controlling our destiny. Morpheus reveals the ultimate truth that Neo’s mind can barely process: the Matrix is control. And the only way to break free? Open your mind.
Read more: Collection of essays on The Matrix
Dark City (1998)
Do you ever feel like you’re playing a role? Released 1 year before The Matrix, another film introduced the concept of a hidden beings controlling the destiny of humanity.
Dark City follows Rufus Sewell, a man framed for murder, as he’s pursued by faceless super beings that can manipulate time. Unfortunately for the beings, the protagonist is unwittingly gifted with their own powers of psychokinesis, and a challenge for domination ensues.
Read more: Dark City on Wikipedia
American Beauty (1999)
Horny suburban dad obsesses over his daughter’s friend, a vapid cheerleader. But there’s much more to this dark tale of the American dream gone awry.
Notable elements of this award-winning film include the dehumanizing effects of consumerism, the repressed sexuality of a gay military man, and the pot smoking defiance of Ricky Fitts, who sees the beauty of the entire universe in a single, swaying plastic bag.
Read more: American Beauty and the Idea Of Freedom
Fight Club (1999)
“Advertising has us chasing cars and clothes, working jobs we hate so we can buy ***** we don’t need. We’re the middle children of history, man. No purpose or place. We have no Great War. No Great Depression. Our Great War’s a spiritual war… our Great Depression is our lives.”
Tyler Durden’s words ring true in this dark, angry look at young people’s failures to interact with the value system they’re expected to uphold. Far from being a manifesto for violence, the film is rumination on the lengths we will go to experience real emotion, even if it means (metaphorically) bashing someone’s head in.
Read more Fight Club: A Ritual Cure For The Spiritual Ailment Of American Masculinity
Donnie Darko (2001)
Sometimes, to make something better, you’ve got to burn it all down and start over. Such is the relationship between Graham Greene’s The Destructors, and the cult classic Donnie Darko.
The film seamlessly weaves together notions of God, the non-linear nature of time, mind-control, and the freakiest bunny mask you’ve ever seen. It may take multiple viewings to discern a few messages from this multi-layered flick, but each time around will be just as rewarding.
Read more: Essay on Donnie Darko
Brazil (1985)
A dystopian, black comedy, Brazil reveals the terrifying indifference of bureaucracy in a totalitarian state. Although director Terry Gilliam claims never to have read 1984, the themes are too similar to dismiss.
Sam Lowry, a government cog in their machine, habitually escapes his dead-end job by imagining a fantasy world of romantic struggles.
Unfortunately, the system roots out dissidents with fervour. The villains in the film are neither malicious nor sadistic, they are merely doing their jobs.
Read more: Analysis of Brazil
Network (1976)
The news stopped being about enlightening the masses a long time ago.
Instead, news attempts to portray a world view that allows those in power to stay in power. This is never more true than 30 years after the film Network was released, when Howard Beale proclaimed “I’m mad as hell, and I’m not going to take it anymore!”
He called for viewers everywhere to stand up, and demand democratic control over their lives once again. The irony is even more biting when it’s revealed democracy, along with nations, peoples, and countries, no longer exists. The only thing left: the global system of finance. - furbyboy, on 06/06/2008, -2/+35it didnt blow my mind, just the server
- timfitz99, on 06/06/2008, -2/+32Good list, but no "2001: A Space Odyssey"?
- SkippyDoorknob, on 06/06/2008, -3/+28Dark City is brilliant, you owe yourself to see it.
- nmayotte, on 06/06/2008, -2/+27*cough* primer *cough*
- KrazyIan, on 06/06/2008, -3/+27Dugg for Dark City. Man that movie is criminally under-appreciated.
- theradical, on 06/06/2008, -2/+24"Primer" is another one. Everyone should watch it.
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=3909854615 ... - absurdist, on 06/06/2008, -1/+21Brazil is just ***** amazing. No director other than Fellini crams such a visual overload into each frame as Terry Gilliam. You can watch it half a dozen times and still see new things every time. Brilliant.
- drlha, on 06/06/2008, -0/+18For the record, I liked "Huckabee's", but I'm also smart enough to realise that people can have perfectly valid reasons for hating a movie other than them being too dumb to understand it.
- rarmstr2, on 06/06/2008, -34/+52I heart Huckabees sucks.
- drlha, on 06/06/2008, -3/+19Ah the good old "you only thought it sucked because you're too dumb to get it" elitist defense of a movie.
- xplode90, on 06/06/2008, -1/+17requiem for a dream could give a grown man nightmares. I know.
- MaynardJK, on 06/06/2008, -1/+16No kidding. I think it should be shown in schools. It would probably do a much better job than the joke that is D.A.R.E.
- mattyd12466, on 06/06/2008, -3/+17no Blade Runner - Momento, Children of men?
- Rabbittt, on 06/05/2008, -5/+16Seen 'em all except two: Dark City and Waking Life.. Since I approve of most of the others on the list, I know what I'll be watching this weekend!
- allenthar, on 06/06/2008, -0/+11Equilibrium is a great film, but not exactly mind-blowing...
- QGYH2, on 06/05/2008, -24/+35American Beauty was awesome. Probably one of the best films ever made..
- danormsby, on 06/06/2008, -1/+12Memento would probably be near the top of mind-blowing movies I've seen.
- noen, on 06/06/2008, -0/+11Intro to philosphy? I guess, but compared to Adam Sandler it's post Doctorate work. To get any philosophy from Hollywood at all is a major accomplishment.
- LukeHenry, on 06/06/2008, -2/+13Waking Life is great. as a low budget film maker myself I fell in love with the way Waking Life was made. I may not agree with everything the film had to say... but it was for sure worth a watch.
- warriorscot, on 06/06/2008, -0/+10Dark City is a fantastic film, really brilliant I saw it on a whim and never regretted it.
- hasslinthehoff, on 06/06/2008, -2/+12What about Jacob's Ladder? I'd say it was disturbingly mind-blowing.
- built2spill, on 06/06/2008, -1/+11Happiness.
- bobangitanov2, on 06/06/2008, -0/+9Who guarantess this? What do I get when they don't blow my mind?
- trogdor282, on 06/06/2008, -0/+9"It's like that drug trip I saw in that movie when I was on that drug trip!"
- damnclem, on 06/06/2008, -0/+9Awesome that they failed to mention that Waking Life is Socrates' allegory of the cave.
- insomniacal, on 06/06/2008, -0/+9The Game chewed me up and spat me out. I was floored.
- Perk, on 06/06/2008, -1/+1010 diggs guaranteed to blow your server.
- op12, on 06/06/2008, -0/+8Dark City was pretty under the radar, and is surprisingly good. Plus, Jennifer Connelly! And Keifer Sutherland is pretty funny in it.
- megalaser, on 06/06/2008, -13/+21No it wasn't, it was pretty good, no more than that.
- NathanielJ, on 06/06/2008, -1/+9"Memento"
- iamnotbatman, on 06/06/2008, -0/+7***** yeah. This classic seems to be overlooked more and more often these days. IMHO it's one of the greatest ever made.
- xplode90, on 06/06/2008, -3/+10The prestige is one of the best movies I have ever seen yet it doesn't get the recognition it deserves. Neither does Christian Bale, probably one of the most if not the most underrated actor in todays movies.
- inactive, on 06/06/2008, -0/+7Are you hungry? I haven't eaten since later this afternoon.
- Dreadnok, on 06/06/2008, -0/+7I though all of the "Mind Blowing" stuff in I Heart Huckabees was supposed to be tongue-in-cheek.
- jonnymj, on 06/06/2008, -0/+7"The Fountain" should be on this list. One of my favorite recent films
"The Ninth Configuration" should also be there, it is a quasi sequel to the Exorcist although it has nothing to do with the events in that film/book http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0081237/
"A Scanner Darkly" is a far better movie than "Waking Life" and messes with your head about 100 times more
"Session 9" is another lesser known good one and as a bonus David Caruso delivers the best ever "***** You" in film history. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rwSYBMLTbWY - count011, on 06/06/2008, -0/+6Rotoscoped, a term that likely no one has ever heard in conversation except when referencing this movie. Therefor to describe this movie with the term brought into the common vernacular because of this movie, seems a little redundant doesn't it? Obviously he was speaking in more general terms for those people reading who haven't had the benefit of watching it already.
- HyperJack, on 06/06/2008, -3/+9Mirror:
http://64.233.183.104/search?q=cache:AMne46sheykJ: ...
(text only) - gooberguy, on 06/06/2008, -0/+6.seen I've movies blowing-mind of top the near be probably would Memento
- theragu40, on 06/06/2008, -0/+6Memento, sure. But I thought The Fountain was pretty overrated. It started reaching pretty far into the "weird for the sake of being weird" area.
- deviouskoopa, on 06/06/2008, -0/+6I have seen Primer many many times, and even with this timeline it still blows my mind completely...
http://www.freeweb.hu/neuwanstein/primer_timeline. ... - DeQuinceysDiet, on 06/06/2008, -1/+7The seediness and desperation of suburbia is such a tired trope. I guess American Beauty might register as impressive for those who hadn't seen its major antecedents, like Blue Velvet (1987), or River's Edge (1985), or Over The Edge (1980), or the Swimmer (1968), or Lolita (1962), or the novel Lolita (1955), or the short stories of John Cheever (fifties), or Shadow of A Doubt (1943) , or West's novel Day of the Locust (1939), all of which I submit are far superior works.
I know there's no new ideas under the sun, but I couldn't let the "Probably one of the best films ever made.." absurdity stand. - gaapgod, on 06/06/2008, -1/+7Addition: A Scanner, Darkly
- iamnotbatman, on 06/06/2008, -0/+5Now that's a film. Right on.
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