Top Ten Living Directors
This type of list needs a few honorable mentions. I’ve taken the liberty of five: Paul Thomas Anderson, Woody Allen, Christopher Nolan, Coen Brothers, Steven Soderbergh. This list is not absolute. I made it about a year ago and have refined it. For example, Del Toro took Soderbergh’s spot. And I should probably put Nolan on there after Inception. Definitely after the next Batman movie.
10. Alfonso Cuaron
His film Y Tu Mama Tambien might be me my favorite movie ever made. I don’t know exactly why. His other film, Children of Men, ranks among the best science fiction movies. He is one of the three Mexican New Wave directors, all of which are on this list.
9. Quentin Tarantino
I constantly knocked the guy. I don’t know what I disliked about him. It is not unlike my annoyance of Wes Anderson. Film School students probably jaded me. Tarantino’s Kill Bill and Inglorious Bastards are two of my favorites.
8. Guillermo Del Toro
write often about this fat, funny, nerd from Mexico. He’s a very, very big hero of mine and makes some of my favorite movies. He is, and was, an important figure in the Mexican new wave and his film Pan’s Labyrinth one of greatest, if not the greatest movie, of the past fifteen years.
7. David Lynch
What a master. Elephant Man, Blue Velvet, Muholand Drive, and the great Inland Empire are greats. What a enigmatic genius. What a weird visionary. He one of the few avant-garde directors who can remain in the mainstream. I’m hoping Digital Filmmaking hasn’t freed his madness too much. At least financial constranits made his films watchable.
6. Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu
He only has three films I’ve seen. But for some reason he’s so influential on me and Babel remains one of my favorites. I can’t really explain this one, but I guess we all have to deal with it.
5. Darren Aronofsky
I read some people who garnered this dude as the next Kubrick. Obviously people might be jumping the gun a bit. But Aronofsky is a baby still in terms of age. Pi, Requiem for a Dream, The Fountain, The Wrestler, and Black Swan are all great films. He’s definitely not the greatest living director, not by a long shot, but has the potential to be.
4. Peter Jackson
It is funny because my brother and I were already PJ fans before he became famous with Lord of the Rings. His film Dead Alive and Bad Taste remain cinema’s bloodiest, weirdest treasures. I was skeptical hearing that he was going to helm the LOTR’s series. Who would have thought?
3. Werner Herzog
Who is Herzog? Well, most won’t know his name. He made a kind of famous documentary about a dude getting eaten by a bear. Other than that he isn’t a house hold name. Me thinks bad lieutenant will bring him into more widespread acclaim. See his movies, please.
2. Clint Eastwood
A lot of people dismiss him as a ludicrious director from a boring age of filmmaking. I just say piss off to all of them. Unforgiven, Mystic River, Changling, Million Dollar Baby, Letters from Iwo Jima, Gran Tarino, what great movies. He has been pumping out great movies in the best two decades. He will likely not make films in his nineties so I’m hoping his last is more of the same. Letters from Iwo Jima is slowly becoming my favorite movie of all time. No movie defines more clearly the dangers of militarism, delusion, and war overall.
1. Martin Scorsese
If you haven’t caught Mean Streets, his early mafia film, go see it. In fact, watch all his movies. Raging Bull remains his triumph, but so does his ability to adjust to Hollywood’s trends. The seventies was high time for small art house movies in the mainstream. Godfather probably wouldn’t get made these days. If it did, it would be hard to fid. These days Spielberg sucks outside of Munich. Coppola went crazy. De Palma is in no man’s land. George Lucas is raping his legacy, as shown in South Park. All these great directors came from the same generation of greatness, but where everyone else failed, Scorsese flourished. How much Catholic guilt and male insecurity can one man pack into mainstream, audience-friendly films? A lot, that is how much.
Let me know what you ladies and gents think. Comment or E-mail me. Don’t troll me, you trolls.










Recent Comments