Ty Burr, film critic, The Boston Globe

In American history, it has to be D. W. Griffith’s The Birth of a Nation (1915 )—the first cinematic blockbuster and a revisionist racist artifact that helped resurrect the Ku Klux Klan, led to a fresh wave of violence, bolstered myths about the antebellum South, and cemented the false image of the black male “savage” in the white cultural mainstream. One hundred years on, the movie still has far too much to answer for.

Tom McCarthy, director, Spotlight

The Great Train Robbery (1903), directed by Edwin S. Porter, was one of the first films to combine multiple story lines into a narrative structure. The film also used innovative camera and editing techniques that are still very much a part of our cinematic vocabulary today. All of that in 12 minutes—and it was commercially successful to boot!

Laura Mulvey, film and media-studies professor, Birkbeck, University of London

An Italian neorealist film from the 1940s: Roberto Rossellini’s Rome, Open City (1945) or Vittorio De Sica’s Bicycle Thieves (1948). The films were played across the world, demonstrating the power and immediacy of location shooting; they influenced the French New Wave, Brazilian Cinema Novo, and other new-film movements.

Josephine Decker, actor and filmmaker

Ingmar Bergman's Persona features the tightest blend of narrative and poetics. A nurse and her patient boil in each other’s personal histories until their two identities steam into a fog of form and formlessness. One of them never walks out of the movie, and neither do we.

Reader Responses

Nancy Wolske Lee, Marietta, Ohio

In 26.6 seconds and 486 frames, the Zapruder film brought a brutal assassination into our living rooms and the world to its knees in shock and grief.

Graham Roumieu

Tim Cox, Chicago, Ill.

Jaws—the first summer blockbuster—changed the business of filmmaking, gave us an iconic score, and continues to make us fearful of ocean swimming even though we know better.

David Baker, DeLand, Fla.

The Godfather. Francis Ford Coppola’s Corleone family represents the American dream, with all of its pros and cons.

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