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- CINEMA, Page 101BEST OF THE DECADE
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- Raging Bull (1980). Realism so intense it transcends and
- transforms the ugly banalities of boxer Jake La Motta's life. The
- talents of Robert De Niro and director Martin Scorsese turn the
- film into a crazy-angry vision of the American Lower Depths.
-
- E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982). All of Steven Spielberg's
- gifts -- his narrative gusto and suburban wit, his technical
- finesse and an emotional directness that buoys the heart -- blend
- sublimely in this fable of intergalactic friendship. One of the
- greats.
-
- The Purple Rose of Cairo (1985). The middle film in Woody
- Allen's splendid trilogy about American celebrity dreaming. It
- shares Zelig's technical and narrative virtuosity and Radio Days'
- insinuating nostalgia, but suffuses them with a unique spirit --
- a sort of cautionary romanticism.
-
- Prizzi's Honor (1985). John Huston's favorite country was the
- social margin, where improbable characters pursue impossible
- dreams. A hit man (Jack Nicholson) and a hit moll (Kathleen Turner)
- seek love and find death in a film that deliciously combines
- operatic emotions and black comedy.
-
- Out of Africa (1985). Sydney Pollack's romantic adventure movie
- showed that Hollywood could still make 'em like it used to, with
- as much power and more subtlety. Meryl Streep had her most popular
- role as author Isak Dinesen, her restless heart liberated by the
- untamed beauty of Kenya.
-
- Brazil (1985). The movie too good to be seen! That's what
- Universal Pictures suggested when it hedged on releasing Terry
- Gilliam's apocalyptic satire about a man caught in the vise of
- bureaucracy. The studio couldn't see that Brazil does brilliantly
- what movies do best: create teeming, coherent worlds beyond our
- imagining.
-
- The Fly (1986). Adults need bedtime stories too. This one,
- about a man who turns into a huge insect, was the decade's
- scariest. And the most affecting, because director David Cronenberg
- made it a parable about how little we know of the people we love,
- and how much we still love them as they slip out of their control
- and ours.
-
- Blue Velvet (1986). Deadpan humor and deadpan violence in
- small-town America. If Sinclair Lewis and Mickey Spillane had
- collaborated on a Sandra Dee movie, they might have created a
- dreamscape something like writer-director David Lynch's -- vivid,
- dislocating, utterly original.
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- The Last Emperor (1987). And, arguably, the last movie epic,
- for its hero is the prisoner of world events, not the shaper. With
- sumptuous visual intelligence, director Bernardo Bertolucci created
- a poignant tale about the last Emperor of China -- the poorest
- little rich boy in the world.
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- Wings of Desire (1988). The Berlin Wall -- the one that
- divides not just East and West, but fantasy and documentary, high
- art and popular art -- comes crumbling down in Wim Wenders'
- heartaching fairy tale. See it, concentrate, and be astonished.