
Badlands: This is a unique movie, mostly due to its direction. Terrence Mallick has a distinctive, poetic style, here used in distancing you from the characters, showing a murder-spree with neutral eyes, but capturing details that make you love the movie. The numb acting and ironic, though naive narration, the haunting soundtrack, the natural cinematography, the slow-pace given by the editing, all add up to create an unforgettable experience. Everything about this movie is perfect and it all adds up to a thought-provoking, achingly beautiful but horrifying movie that I highly recommend.

How Green Is My Valley: This is a classic coming-of-age story with a winning charm. The screenplay inspiring: the characters are humane, the story is believable, the subplots are affecting. Its flaw is the corny dialog. The acting is very good, with a charismatic, natural performance by Roddy McDowall, a touching Donald Crisp and Maureen O'Hara perfectly capturing her character's changes. All the supporting cast is also attention-worthy. The editing gives the movie a slow, involving pace and the music is fitting. The direction is the standout. John Ford shapes up an iconic portrayal of a family and a village, giving us scenes that are remarkably heartfelt. I recommend this for anyone looking for a movie with a big heart.

Trust: This is a wonderful indie movie. From the very first moment, you are confronted with realistic, organic characters, witty, dry, unique dialog and an amazing capacity to find humor in the grimmest situations. The accting is simply fabulous: Adrianne Shelly convincingly carries her character through mood swings, despair, love and huge growth, while Martin Donovan shows hardly contained anger, withholding and darkness through subtlety. They have a fabulous chemistry and are supported by a brilliant cast. The soundtrack is beautiful and the cinematography is able to find poetry in these arid lives. The direction gets all these elements together showing Hal Hartley's spirit. It's a great lçove story and I highly recommend it.

Pretty Persuasion: I have mixed feelings about this acid comedy. On one side, it features a bunch of amazing comedy performances, specially the fantastic Evan Rachel Wood, portraying cold bitchiness perfectly and a flawless cinematography, with clean color and darkly funny tracking shots and zoom-ins. On the other side, there are too many story changes and mood changes. The dark, inappropriate humor is irregular, and sometimes there's just not enough humanity. Despite these flaws, Kimberly is a fascinating character and this is thought-provoking. This is the type of movie that you might just hate or love.

The Kid: This classic is my favorite Charlie Chapman movie. It's not just slapstick humor, though obviously those scenes are great and used to portray the characters. It has heart, it has a message, and it's not preachy but sweet and endearing. The chemistry between Charlie Chaplin and Jackie Coogan is priceless, and the later shows a natural talent for comedy while touching everyone's heart. The story is simple, but filled with precious moments of beauty. Overall, this is the heart-warming movie that inspired all the others.
