Posted by Leon Nicholson on August 1, 2012 · Leave a Comment
Vertigo has replaced Citizen Kane as the greatest movie of all time.
A poll conducted every ten years by Sight & Sound Magazine asks film critics for what they consider to be the best film of all time; and for the first time since 1962, Citizen Kane has finally been knocked off the top spot.
Vertigo, directed by the great Alfred Hitchcock starring James Stewart and Kim Novak, which initially received mixed reviews on its release, tells the story... Read More
Filed under Films, News · Tagged with 2001: A Space Odyssey, 8 ½, Alfred Hitchcock, Andrei Tarkovsky, Apocalypse Now, Bicycle Thieves, Carl Theodor Dreyer, Citizen Kane, Dziga Vertov, F.W. Murnau, Federico Fellini, Francis Ford Coppola, James Stewart, Jean Renoir, John Ford, Kim Novak, La Règle du jeu, Man with a Movie Camera, Martin Scorsese, Mirror, Orson Welles, Quentin Tarantino, Stanley Kubrick, Sunrise: a Song of Two Humans, Taxi Driver, The Godfather, The Passion of Joan of Arc, The Searchers, Tokyo Story, Vertigo, Vittorio De Sica, Yasujirô Ozu