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News / Columns / Five Favorite Films
Five Favorite Films with Michael Phillips
The new co-host of At the Movies also talks about audiences and a special HBO cameo.
by Tim Ryan | September 22, 2009
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John Malkovich

Chicagoans Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert changed the face of movie criticism with At the Movies; now, another critic from the Windy City, Chicago Tribune film critic Michael Phillips, is ready to take up the mantle on the venerable show. Phillips was a theater writer at the LA Times, the San Diego Union-Tribune, the St. Paul Pioneer Press and the Dallas Times Herald before taking over as the movie beat at the Tribune. In 2006 and 2007 he was a frequent guest on At the Movies, filling in for Roger Ebert alongside Richard Roeper. Now he's a full-time occupant of the critics' chair, alongside New York Times pundit A.O. Scott (find out what Scott's Five Favorite Films are here.)

Phillips spoke with RT about his favorite films (he's a sucker for Orson Welles and musicals) as well as the joys of watching a movie with an audience and what it's like to make a cameo on a popular HBO series.



The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928, 97% Tomatometer)
The Passion of Joan of Arc

It is the most vexing challenge because I just find that, depending... I'm not so psychotic that my mind changes constantly on that subject, but it really depends on where you are in your life. You sort of have a rolling list of a few dozen that you cherish for different reasons. All you try to do is avoid interviews like this so you don't get pinned down. [laughs] No, I always have trouble pinning anything to a fixed list. Why is it hard? Is it easy for you? You start thinking about the directors you leave off the list and your heart starts breaking.

In chronological order, The Passion of Joan of Arc. The last time I saw that film, it struck as me as if it was an artifact from the period itself that it's depicting. It was like a medium unto itself, and [Maria] Falconetti's performance, it really cannot be compared to anything else. It's beyond naturalism, it's beyond melodrama, it's beyond everything. It's just coming straight out of her soul. But mainly, the last time I saw it I just had this weird time slip kind of experience where I felt like I was really seeing a mad visionary from the time who somehow invented the movie camera. [laughs] Putting on this intense pageant on this subject of intense religious devotion. I find that film a knockout. You can't watch it lightly, but that's all right.




His Girl Friday (1940, 97% Tomatometer)
His Girl Friday

I'm desperately trying to find a way not to include His Girl Friday because it's kind of been touted a lot. But it's my favorite romantic comedy couple on screen. I think Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell in that picture are roughly as great as Beatrice and Benedict in Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing. That's how great they are. It's my favorite Cary Grant performance because it combines the leading man side of his persona with this crazy farceur. I just love hearing people talk as fast as most people think. And I love the fact that they condense this three-hour play into whatever the running time is -- ninety, ninety-two minutes -- and they basically didn't cut anything; they just got it all in. I adore this film.

That first scene... You watch that first scene when she comes back to the office, and it's 10 of the greatest minutes of romantic byplay ever, and it's beautifully performed. I revere Hawks more highly than I do John Ford, and that's saying something. For me, if you don't have a Hawks film on that list, you're lying.




Citizen Kane/The Magnificent Ambersons (1941, 100% Tomatometer)
Citizen Kane

I really was trying to avoid Citizen Kane, but I would say Kane and the first fourth, the first half of The Magnificent Ambersons, for, you know, reasons that are obvious. I mean, it's all miserably compromised after the first half -- actually after the first third, I think -- but I think the first twenty, twenty-five minutes of Ambersons is in many ways richer than anything in Kane, and that really is saying something. It struck a tone in American moviemaking; it was just absolutely new to me as a kid when I first saw that. I had never seen that kind of lightly ironic, very bittersweet, but achingly nostalgic... It's just great, it's just great. It's also got probably one of my single favorite shots in cinema, that silhouette combined with the two couples after the ball. It's the most incredible moment, and you just can't believe you're seeing it, and it lasts only as long as it could humanly last, and then it's over. It's great.

Do you have any hope that they'll actually find the missing full-length version of Ambersons?

No. You know, I keep hearing it's turning up in Brazil, or I heard a story that some idiot destroyed a copy in the 1980s. You know, there's a lot of urban myths going around, but nothing would make me happier. Well, not nothing, but with Wells, nothing would make me happier. But look at Wells! I mean, Touch of Evil, Chimes at Midnight...




The Band Wagon (1953, 100% Tomatometer)
The Band Wagon

I gotta throw a musical in there, and I'd go with The Band Wagon. Singin' in the Rain is more exuberant, but [Vincent] Minnelli is one of my favorite stylists in cinema. You know, I love {Fred] Astaire, and I'm crazy about that film. I've loved it since I was in high school. Often, these favorites come and go, and they change position on your list, and you make room for other things that maybe you didn't appreciate as strongly when you were younger, but I've always been crazy about that movie.




Taxi Driver (1976, 98% Tomatometer)
Taxi Driver

So here's where, for me, it comes down to either the second Godfather, Taxi Driver, which is [Martin] Scorsese's best film, I think, or one of two or three Altmans, I guess. And of those three, I'd probably go with Taxi Driver. It's pretty great, and it's one of the most dangerous films ever to come out of this country, I think. And it's got great performances, and it's got such electric ambiguity in what it's saying about this guy. For me, that film marks, probably, the end point of that great period of the 1970s. So many fine directors; Altman, Coppola, the freedom of expression. I almost didn't have the resources to deal with Taxi Driver when I first saw it . I don't go back to it all the time, because it's such a handful, but I think that's Scorsese's best film.


Next, Phillips talks about how different it is to watch a film with an audience and what it was like guest-starring on Entourage.
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Comments (1-20 of 52 posts) | Reply
thedownstar
thedownstar writes:
on Sep 22 2009 06:22 PM

if thom yorke ever leaves Radiohead, Mr. Phillips is a perfect doppelganger.

(Reply to this)
King Kubrick
King Kubrick writes:
on Sep 22 2009 06:32 PM

Respectable list. One day may the full version of the magnificent amberson's be found.

(Reply to this)
King Kubrick
King Kubrick writes:
on Sep 22 2009 06:33 PM

Respectable list. One day may the full version of the magnificent amberson's be found.

(Reply to this)
RobotWookie
RobotWookie writes:
on Sep 22 2009 07:11 PM

Excellent list

(Reply to this)
Katherine S.
Katherine S. writes:
on Sep 22 2009 07:23 PM

Wow,so many films made before the seventies, I personally have difficulty with old movies just because of production value.

(Reply to this)
nathanpoitras
nathanpoitras writes:
on Sep 22 2009 07:29 PM

Pleasantly surprised to see The Band Wagon on there, I really like that one too.

(Reply to this)
planetawesome
planetawesome writes:
on Sep 22 2009 07:45 PM

I'm so happy Philips and Scott are taking over at At The Movies!

(Reply to this)
oyguvaltshappy
oyguvaltshappy writes:
on Sep 22 2009 08:12 PM

haha, i thought it said Michael Phelps. didn't really look at the pic, then i saw the choices and was quite a bit surprisde.



(Reply to this)
MadMan23
MadMan23 writes:
on Sep 22 2009 08:19 PM

I am proud to have Michael Phillips as my movie reviewer. If only the Tribune would hire more quality guys or girls like him, they wouldn't be bankrupt.

(Reply to this)
ledawg1138
ledawg1138 writes:
on Sep 22 2009 08:33 PM

Great critic. I still think Scott is lacking on the show, but Phillips is still great. Average list.

(Reply to this)
NTROST
NTROST writes:
on Sep 22 2009 08:56 PM

In reply to this comment (#2547125)
@Katherine S.

You have a problem with old films' production values? Man, I feel truly sorry for you (missing out on so much). Just to tell you? that today's films also have production value problems as well. Haven't you ever heard the saying "films get better with age"? I'm assuming not. Maybe you have heard the saying "a close mind is a failed mind" or how about the saying "film is about storytelling not about the special effects."


@ledawg

Can I ask where does the word "average" fit in on this list?


(Reply to this)
Blake J.
Blake J. writes:
on Sep 22 2009 09:28 PM

I don't think I've seen a list without Taxi Driver. I see it on more lists then Citizen Kane or the godfathers. It is one of the best movies though.

(Reply to this)
ledawg1138
ledawg1138 writes:
on Sep 22 2009 09:40 PM

In reply to this comment (#2547147)
Average as in "Seen it before." I'm not saying he can't say these are his favorites, but I've seen it all before.

(Reply to this)
Calvin M.
Calvin M. writes:
on Sep 22 2009 10:15 PM

In reply to this comment (#2547118)
I think they're the same person. Yorke is the absent-minded rocker, whilst Ryan is the clean-cut, corporate newspaper film critic. Sounds like a movie plot.

(Reply to this)
NTROST
NTROST writes:
on Sep 22 2009 10:18 PM

In reply to this comment (#2547166)
@ledawg

fair enough man.


(Reply to this)
scifimark
scifimark writes:
on Sep 22 2009 10:51 PM

ummm wine gets better with age. or sometimes you here women get better with age. There is no saying films get better with age.(as far as i know anyways) In fact movies generally get dated as you go from generation to generation. Im not personally into older movies but im not a close minded person. I think its harder for some audiences because they cant relate to it since its from 20-50 years ago or more. Its a good list although i always feel like when someone has this many older movies i feel like "look at how sophisticated my movie selections are." It is a good list of movies though

(Reply to this)
dahluzz
dahluzz writes:
on Sep 23 2009 12:05 AM

In reply to this comment (#2547147)
get off your high horse and stop trying to sound so appreciative of old movies. sure, there are some classics, but a lot of them also suck. things like stilted acting and fake-looking sets or action scenes take you out of the world the film's trying to create and make you remember it's just a movie. It couldn't always be helped due to technical constraints of the time, but these are still legit flaws in the movies that would have been avoided if possible.

(Reply to this)
Mann is the Man
Mann is the Man writes:
on Sep 23 2009 12:08 AM

To me, masterpieces from pre-1960 are......slower movies to watch but that is not necessarily a bad thing. I think they take a while to digest and realize they are great movies (then again, a lot of masterful films are like that - Blade Runner IMO). I watched Casablanca a few weeks back and I liked it. But after thinking about it over the weeks I realize how great of a film it is. I would not put it on my top 20 but I have a lot of respect for the movie.

(Reply to this)
KingRock22
KingRock22 writes:
on Sep 23 2009 12:13 AM

i could not stomach watching Citizen Kane... not sure what the fuss is about... i cant believe i actually watched the whole movie... i made it through just because everyone says it is the greatest movie ever... truthfully i would rather watch Blankman, or The Garbage Pail Kids Movie...

(Reply to this)
KingRock22
KingRock22 writes:
on Sep 23 2009 12:14 AM

i could not stomach watching Citizen Kane... not sure what the fuss is about... i cant believe i actually watched the whole movie... i made it through just because everyone says it is the greatest movie ever... truthfully i would rather watch Blankman, or The Garbage Pail Kids Movie...

(Reply to this)
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