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List

I published a film list before, and now, I share great films that you should watch. Some of them can disturb you and they may be for +18. However, the movies are representing some real issues.

Please do not be confused because of the list order. I just add movies according to remembering order 🙂

A Clockwork Orange (8.4)

In future Britain, charismatic delinquent Alex DeLarge is jailed and volunteers for an experimental aversion therapy developed by the government in an effort to solve society’s crime problem – but not all goes according to plan.

Director:  Stanley Kubrick

Writers:  Stanley Kubrick (screenplay), Anthony Burgess(novel)

Natural Born Killers (7.3)

Two victims of traumatized childhoods become lovers and psychopathic serial murderers irresponsibly glorified by the mass media.

Director:  Oliver Stone

Writers:  Quentin Tarantino (story), David Veloz(screenplay), 2 more credits

2001: A Space Odyssey (8.3)

Humanity finds a mysterious, obviously artificial, object buried beneath the Lunar surface and, with the intelligent computer H.A.L. 9000, sets off on a quest.

Director:  Stanley Kubrick

Writers:  Stanley Kubrick (screenplay), Arthur C. Clarke(screenplay), 1 more credit

The Tenant (7.8)

A bureaucrat rents a Paris apartment where he finds himself drawn into a rabbit hole of dangerous paranoia.

Director:  Roman Polanski

Writers:  Roland Topor (novel), Gérard Brach (screenplay), 1 more credit

The Shining (8.5)

A family heads to an isolated hotel for the winter where an evil and spiritual presence influences the father into violence, while his psychic son sees horrific forebodings from the past and of the future.

Director:  Stanley Kubrick

Writers:  Stephen King (novel), Stanley Kubrick(screenplay), 1 more credit

Mulholland Drive (8.0)

After a car wreck on the winding Mulholland Drive renders a woman amnesiac, she and a perky Hollywood-hopeful search for clues and answers across Los Angeles in a twisting venture beyond dreams and reality.

Director:  David Lynch

Writer:  David Lynch

Full Metal Jacket (8.3)

A pragmatic U.S. Marine observes the dehumanizing effects the U.S.-Vietnam War has on his fellow recruits from their brutal boot camp training to the bloody street fighting in Hue.

Director:  Stanley Kubrick

Writers:  Gustav Hasford (novel), Stanley Kubrick(screenplay), 2 more credits

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