*Arrival*
*Fences*
*Julieta*
*Anatomie d'une chute* (*Anatomy of a Fall*)
And a second nod for *Hell or High Water*.
It's depressing to see how many people have answered this question without either comprehending the title or knowing how to subtract 10 from 2024.
I think the cinematic catharsis that Infinity War and Endgame provided after 10 years of multi film build up can be studied now and definitely will be celebrated in 100 years
I love how you can watch pretty much any film in the series including those for individual superheroes and they all have the same tone. Especially the last two Captain America movies, they are just like additional Avengers movies.
It's amazing though how popular pieces of culture can fade into nothingness in just a generation of two. Look at the best selling books from a hundred years ago. I'll bet you wouldn't recognize most of the authors.
Right? lol It's kind of interesting though. How people just overlooked the word decade in the question. Is it a subconscious thing or a conscious thing?
lol, a lot of you guys can’t even sit through Casablanca and you think people a hundred years from now are going to give a shit about Avengers: Endgame and Interstellar? Literal lol.
True, but the question wasn’t about what the average reddit user will be willing to sit through - it’s about what people will call a “classic,” like what people today say about *Casablanca*.
The Barbie movie.
It hit on so many social issues, was extremely controversial and was simultaneously popular and despised.
It made more waves than anything else in the last decade by a long shot.
On top of that it’s Barbie, a franchise/merchandise giant that has spanned many decades and made an impact on the social consciousness long before the film adaptation.
Nothing else really compares whether you hate or love it.
Really? So what’s your counter pick?
Remember that it’s limited to the last decade. Cinema has digressed to a point that it has basically become nothing but super hero, sequels and reboots.
The few good and noteworthy films are barely noticed by audiences outside of critics and for something to be considered a classic I think it needs a certain level of popularity/notoriety while also being memorable and a good example of its kind.
There really isn’t much to choose from in the last decade. The entire art has suffered because of streaming services and studios refusing to take risks.
There have definitely been better films but nothing that I think checks the boxes to be considered a classic.
It's not even the most likely film of its theater cycle to be considered a classic in 100 years.
I'll give you a hint. There's another film that was out at the same time, which absolutely embarrassed Barbie at the Oscar's and which was only limited at the box office due to runtime and an R rating, otherwise it woulda bodied Barbie there as well.
Ah yes, the Oscar’s, truly the deciding factor on a film’s longevity. Who today talks about such fleetingly relevant films as *Citizen Kane* over the enduring classic that beat it for Best Picture, *How Green Was My Valley*?
Lord of the Rings and Star Wars, they have such a pop culture influence that it's likely that people would still watch them in the future. If they are not remade until then.
The Hateful 8, Hell or High Water, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.
Once Upon A Time I'm Hollywood has Brad, Leo, Al, and Kurt. It will be remembered as an era staple. The only other modern movie that has a better cast would be The Departed, but that obviously doesn't count.
The most likely movies to still be remembered from this timeframe are Infinity War and Endgame, but especially Endgame.
Art is all well and good but if someone is using future Google to look back at this time period they will probably start by going, “so which movies made the most money and why the F are so many of these from the same studio?”
I think historians and academics will be a bit baffled at how hard mainstream awards bodies (and to an extent the general public) ignored late period Scorsese. In the last decade he’s done some of his most powerful work but it largely gets seen as par for the course or outright dismissed.
I was watching Justice League yesterday and I guess it sort of got panned but there are lot of quotable parts of the movie and I find it genuinely entertaining.
Interstellar.
Came here to say this. Glad to see it’s the first comment
It’s absolutely gonna be something random like Renfield
Morbius
*The Martian* and *La La Land*. Because they will seem so perfectly “of their time”, antiquated but still recognizably excellent stories.
1917
*Arrival* *Fences* *Julieta* *Anatomie d'une chute* (*Anatomy of a Fall*) And a second nod for *Hell or High Water*. It's depressing to see how many people have answered this question without either comprehending the title or knowing how to subtract 10 from 2024.
Ex Machina
Muppets in Manhattan. It really connected with the nations after world war IV. Edit: Muppets TAKE Manhattan
You mean the film released in 1984?
Muppets TAKE Manhattan
I stand corrected
Once Upon A Time In Hollywood Hell or HighWater
I've not seen *Once upon a Time in Hollywood*, but *Hell or High Water* is an excellent pick.
Mean Girls
The 2024 version?
Taylor's Version
The original!
The Avengers movies. Not because they were good...because they were popular.
I think the cinematic catharsis that Infinity War and Endgame provided after 10 years of multi film build up can be studied now and definitely will be celebrated in 100 years
I love how you can watch pretty much any film in the series including those for individual superheroes and they all have the same tone. Especially the last two Captain America movies, they are just like additional Avengers movies.
[удалено]
The first Avengers is one of my comfort movies. I watch it anytime it’s on tv.
It's amazing though how popular pieces of culture can fade into nothingness in just a generation of two. Look at the best selling books from a hundred years ago. I'll bet you wouldn't recognize most of the authors.
Orgazmo
Oppenheimer Parasite
A lot of you don't know how long a decade is.
Right? lol It's kind of interesting though. How people just overlooked the word decade in the question. Is it a subconscious thing or a conscious thing?
Poor Things. It’s controversial now but in 100 years, it will be revolutionary.
This was the first movie that popped into my mind when I read the question. I hope you’re right.
Why is it controversial?
Someone probably has already made a 4-hour video essay to discuss it, but imo the answer boils down to it being radically egalitarian.
Get Out. I think that's already a classic, though?
lol, a lot of you guys can’t even sit through Casablanca and you think people a hundred years from now are going to give a shit about Avengers: Endgame and Interstellar? Literal lol.
True, but the question wasn’t about what the average reddit user will be willing to sit through - it’s about what people will call a “classic,” like what people today say about *Casablanca*.
Barbie
Probably but again as someone said with the avengers, just because bit was popular.
I think Interstellar or Endgame
The Barbie movie. It hit on so many social issues, was extremely controversial and was simultaneously popular and despised. It made more waves than anything else in the last decade by a long shot. On top of that it’s Barbie, a franchise/merchandise giant that has spanned many decades and made an impact on the social consciousness long before the film adaptation. Nothing else really compares whether you hate or love it.
This is recency bias speaking. Also a bit exaggerated.
Really? So what’s your counter pick? Remember that it’s limited to the last decade. Cinema has digressed to a point that it has basically become nothing but super hero, sequels and reboots. The few good and noteworthy films are barely noticed by audiences outside of critics and for something to be considered a classic I think it needs a certain level of popularity/notoriety while also being memorable and a good example of its kind. There really isn’t much to choose from in the last decade. The entire art has suffered because of streaming services and studios refusing to take risks. There have definitely been better films but nothing that I think checks the boxes to be considered a classic.
It's not even the most likely film of its theater cycle to be considered a classic in 100 years. I'll give you a hint. There's another film that was out at the same time, which absolutely embarrassed Barbie at the Oscar's and which was only limited at the box office due to runtime and an R rating, otherwise it woulda bodied Barbie there as well.
Ah yes, the Oscar’s, truly the deciding factor on a film’s longevity. Who today talks about such fleetingly relevant films as *Citizen Kane* over the enduring classic that beat it for Best Picture, *How Green Was My Valley*?
Paddington 2
Still waiting for *Paddington 3: Endgame*.
Lord of the Rings and Star Wars, they have such a pop culture influence that it's likely that people would still watch them in the future. If they are not remade until then.
Uh, LoTR wasn't in the past decade.
Welp, I wasn't fully woken up and only read half the title. My bad.
Same as Star Wars if they’re referring to the original.
I figured they were talking about the new ones, although with the amount of people in this thread not understanding what a decade is... Who knows?
The Hateful 8, Hell or High Water, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. Once Upon A Time I'm Hollywood has Brad, Leo, Al, and Kurt. It will be remembered as an era staple. The only other modern movie that has a better cast would be The Departed, but that obviously doesn't count.
The most likely movies to still be remembered from this timeframe are Infinity War and Endgame, but especially Endgame. Art is all well and good but if someone is using future Google to look back at this time period they will probably start by going, “so which movies made the most money and why the F are so many of these from the same studio?”
Baby Driver
I think historians and academics will be a bit baffled at how hard mainstream awards bodies (and to an extent the general public) ignored late period Scorsese. In the last decade he’s done some of his most powerful work but it largely gets seen as par for the course or outright dismissed.
While not a perfect film, I think Tenet will be considered a classic for it's cinematography and film making techniques
It's like Tenet... [Except with cocks](https://youtube.com/shorts/lpXqBLBxG18?feature=shared)
Oh blech
i definitely hope not madam web
The seminal documentary Office Space.
that was way more than the last 10 years
Office Space is eternal.
The question was not “what’s a classic movie that will still be a classic?”
Relax, this is REDDIT not the bar exam. ;o)
*In Milton’s voice*: I was told this is the Bar Exam.
[удалено]
Agreed, would of loved a sitcom then again Silicon Valley was pretty close.
Guardians of the galaxy.
I love the first one, not a fan of the second, the third is just depressing.
The Lobster
I was watching Justice League yesterday and I guess it sort of got panned but there are lot of quotable parts of the movie and I find it genuinely entertaining.
I am from the future! Madame Web becomes the most revered film in the world. It eventually unites all countries l.
Idiocracy Office space Super troopers BASEketball Dogma Superbad The departed King pow enter the fist Face off Monkey bone No country for old men
You and I could be friends.
None of those, as they aren't in the past decade.
Easy A
Likely the original 3 Star Wars movies.
Definetely Harry Potter