Best Director of This Decade

Discuss the world of entertainment; movies, tv, journalism and radio.

Moderator: drizzle

Best Director of the Decade

Martin Scorsese
14
35%
Spike Lee
1
3%
Fernando Meirelles
4
10%
Alejandro Gonz
3
8%
Steven Spielberg
3
8%
Paul Greengrass
1
3%
Christopher Nolan
4
10%
Mel Gibson
0
No votes
Clint Eastwood
3
8%
Yimou Zhang
0
No votes
Brad Bird
0
No votes
Michael Gondry
2
5%
Judd Apatow
4
10%
David Cronenberg
0
No votes
Ken Loach
0
No votes
Wes Anderson
1
3%
 
Total votes: 40

Icesickle
Suburban Outfitter
Posts: 22728
Joined: Mon Mar 28, 2005 12:00 pm

Best Director of This Decade

Post by Icesickle »

This poll is a public service announcement for people like Money Gripp who think this decade has been shitty for films. When voting try and vote on the director's material this decade, not on who you think is the better director overall. I tried to include directors who've either made their mark this decade or have dropped a lot of great films (Spielberg, Eastwood, Scorsese, Lee).

This poll isn't cast in stone, so offer some suggestions if you see someone I missed.

ImageImage
Martin Scorsese (Gangs of New York, The Aviator, No Direction Home, The Departed)


ImageImage
Spike Lee (25th Hour, Inside Man, When the Levees Broke)


ImageImage
Fernando Meirelles (City of God, Constant Gardener)


ImageImage
Alejandro Gonz
Last edited by Icesickle on Tue Aug 28, 2007 10:46 pm, edited 5 times in total.

User avatar
AWAE
Posts: 3484
Joined: Tue Feb 03, 2004 8:44 pm

Post by AWAE »

i'd put spike jonze/david fincher/paul thomas anderson over half that list..

icedit: if we're really talking about the last 10 years..
Last edited by AWAE on Tue Aug 28, 2007 3:22 pm, edited 1 time in total.

User avatar
EMCEE DARTH MALEK
Posts: 9714
Joined: Tue Jan 25, 2005 12:51 am

Post by EMCEE DARTH MALEK »

spielberg is looking better than i expected now that i see the list. i gotta go with nolan or scorcese though. forget yimou zhang his movies are supremely boring.

what's "no direction home" btw?
1. Nas
2. Drake

that's pretty much it fam.

User avatar
Philaflava
King of The DPB'rs
Posts: 81382
Joined: Fri Jan 31, 2003 12:37 am
Contact:

Post by Philaflava »

1st and spent the vote on Eastwood cuz most won't.

Icesickle
Suburban Outfitter
Posts: 22728
Joined: Mon Mar 28, 2005 12:00 pm

Post by Icesickle »

AWAE wrote:i'd put spike jonze/david fincher/paul thomas anderson over half that list..

icedit: if we're really talking about the last 10 years..
We're not. Last decade is easier that saying "the 00s."

EDM: No Direction Home is Scorsese's Bob Dylan documentary. See if it you haven't: it's a great film. Also, even though I think Zhang's output since Hero is lackluster, Hero broke some new ground and is widely regarded as one of the best films of the decade.
Last edited by Icesickle on Tue Aug 28, 2007 3:32 pm, edited 1 time in total.

citizen
Posts: 10713
Joined: Mon Feb 09, 2004 3:08 am

Post by citizen »

cant vote, too many right choices

drizzle
Awesome Vatican Assassin
Posts: 55482
Joined: Fri Jun 17, 2005 2:55 pm
Location: where people throw ducks at balloons and nothing is as it seems

Post by drizzle »

Absense of Uwe Ball makes poll invalid. Just wait till revisionist history catches up with you on that one, stormy and I shall dance on your foolish graves
http://www.steadybloggin.com - some of these are my thoughts yo

Icesickle
Suburban Outfitter
Posts: 22728
Joined: Mon Mar 28, 2005 12:00 pm

Post by Icesickle »

I really, really don't see how you can front on Spielberg in this poll. He's had a prolific output in the past 7 years and is versatile as hell. He's made a great sci fi thriller (Minority Report), a great American drama (Catch Me If You Can), a classic political thriller (Munich), and the first half of AI and a lot of Minority Report have some pretty astounding filmmaking.

Spike Lee and Scorsese are good choices too because of their versatility. 25th Hour's a great drama, Lee aced the first thriller he's ever made (Inside Man), and When the Levees Broke is one of the best documentaries of the decade. GONY might be the last great "classic" historical epic, Departed is a great thriller, albeit a tad overrated, and No Direction Home is a solid, underappreciated doc.

Money Gripp
Posts: 15623
Joined: Tue Feb 03, 2004 5:11 pm
Location: Undetermined
Contact:

Re: Best Director of This Decade

Post by Money Gripp »

A lot of these movies are good. A few are great. A couple are unremarkable. If I had to give a reason for why I said that movies have been shitty in this decade, it's that the 90's were so damn good and this decade hasn't lived up to my expectations so far. I wish there were movies coming out that were as monumental as Fargo, Malcolm X, Pulp Fiction, JFK, Good Fellas, etc. Nothing that has come out this decade really deserves to be placed on the same level of those films, which you knew were classic the first time you saw them. Maybe my expectations are skewed because I am constantly comparing this decade to the preceding decade, which was a terrific decade for movies? Maybe I need to see more movies? I haven't seen Munich or The Constant Gardner, for instance. I'd like for you guys to prove me wrong, but I still stick by my opinion.

Although I'd like to point out that this

Image

was an excellent movie.

And I would add this to my Top Ten List. Highly SLEPT-ON:

Image

Carry on.

Icesickle
Suburban Outfitter
Posts: 22728
Joined: Mon Mar 28, 2005 12:00 pm

Post by Icesickle »

Money Gripp:

Just this year we had 3 great to classic films drop (Zodiac, The Wind that Shakes the Barley, and The Bourne Ultimatum). Have you seen any of these?

I would of put Ken Loach on here for The Wind that Shakes the Barley and Sweet Sixteen, but I doubt anyone on here's seen Sweet Sixteen. Money Gripp: knowing your background I almost guarentee you'd like either of these films, especially Sweet Sixteen.

ICE EDIT: Fuck it; I'm putting Ken Loach on here.
Last edited by Icesickle on Tue Aug 28, 2007 10:35 pm, edited 1 time in total.

RacquetballGangsta
Posts: 10905
Joined: Thu Oct 30, 2003 9:04 pm
Location: A satellite, bitch! I'm just that fly.
Contact:

Post by RacquetballGangsta »

list.meirelles

in real life...michael haneke
twitter.com/deweydimbabwe
www.stonesthrow.com/vex

nett ist der kleine bruder von scheiße

Money Gripp
Posts: 15623
Joined: Tue Feb 03, 2004 5:11 pm
Location: Undetermined
Contact:

Post by Money Gripp »

Icesickle wrote:Money Gripp:

Just this year we had 3 great to classic films drop (Zodiac, The Wind that Shakes the Barley, and The Bourne Ultimatum). Have you seen any of these?

I would of put Ken Loach on here for The Wind that Shakes the Barley and Sweet Sixteen, but I doubt anyone on here's seen Sweet Sixteen. Money Gripp: knowing your background I almost guarentee you'd like either of these films, especially Sweet Sixteen.
No, I haven't. I've been meaning to see Zodiac.

admiral
Posts: 9869
Joined: Thu Mar 18, 2004 10:28 am
Location: Beacon Hill projectz

Post by admiral »

Fernando Meirelles

Constant Gardener was ridiculous

Trademark
oil baron swaggasaurus
Posts: 19683
Joined: Thu Mar 04, 2004 3:37 pm

Post by Trademark »

I thought about this for a while....The answer is Spielberg. No one on that list is touching the depth of thematic expression, mastery of technical know how, humor, maturity and all around experience that we have seen from Spielberg in the last ten years....His list of great films in that time span is staggering, Minority Report, The Terminal, Catch Me if You Can, Munich, and although AI is weak as fuck I am really coming to appreciate it more and more as time passes.... I know he suffers from the over commerciality (is that a word) of his work but I've never held that against him. Spielberg is like Ingmar Bergman and Michael Bay mixed, or maybe Tony Scott and Kurosawa...He truly is one of the greatest of all times and most definitely has made the best movies period in the last 10 years...

Trademark
oil baron swaggasaurus
Posts: 19683
Joined: Thu Mar 04, 2004 3:37 pm

Post by Trademark »

and No Direction Home is not better than the Aviator, you asshole...

Icesickle
Suburban Outfitter
Posts: 22728
Joined: Mon Mar 28, 2005 12:00 pm

Post by Icesickle »

Trademark wrote:and No Direction Home is not better than the Aviator, you asshole...
LOL. When did I say that? I just think GONY is a better historical epic.

Good pic btw.

Trademark
oil baron swaggasaurus
Posts: 19683
Joined: Thu Mar 04, 2004 3:37 pm

Post by Trademark »

Icesickle wrote:
Trademark wrote:and No Direction Home is not better than the Aviator, you asshole...
LOL. When did I say that? I just think GONY is a better historical epic.

Good pic btw.


I thought you were listing what you considered the best three films of said director in said time period...


and also of course it's a good pick my taste is fucking impeccable...Plus if you think about the literal last ten years you would have to include Amistad and Saving Private Ryan, not to fucking shabby....his only misstep is the god fucking awful War of the Worlds....what an awful shit fest that was.....

RacquetballGangsta
Posts: 10905
Joined: Thu Oct 30, 2003 9:04 pm
Location: A satellite, bitch! I'm just that fly.
Contact:

Post by RacquetballGangsta »

Trademark wrote:I thought about this for a while....The answer is Spielberg. No one on that list is touching the depth of thematic expression, mastery of technical know how, humor, maturity and all around experience that we have seen from Spielberg in the last ten years....His list of great films in that time span is staggering, Minority Report, The Terminal, Catch Me if You Can, Munich, and although AI is weak as fuck I am really coming to appreciate it more and more as time passes.... I know he suffers from the over commerciality (is that a word) of his work but I've never held that against him. Spielberg is like Ingmar Bergman and Michael Bay mixed, or maybe Tony Scott and Kurosawa...He truly is one of the greatest of all times and most definitely has made the best movies period in the last 10 years...
:arrow: :roper: :arrow: :roper: :arrow:
twitter.com/deweydimbabwe
www.stonesthrow.com/vex

nett ist der kleine bruder von scheiße

cascarrabias
Posts: 12779
Joined: Thu Mar 11, 2004 7:32 pm
Location: NY

Post by cascarrabias »

Meirelles

Lol at Judd Apatow being on that list.

Trademark
oil baron swaggasaurus
Posts: 19683
Joined: Thu Mar 04, 2004 3:37 pm

Post by Trademark »

RacquetballGangsta wrote:
Trademark wrote:I thought about this for a while....The answer is Spielberg. No one on that list is touching the depth of thematic expression, mastery of technical know how, humor, maturity and all around experience that we have seen from Spielberg in the last ten years....His list of great films in that time span is staggering, Minority Report, The Terminal, Catch Me if You Can, Munich, and although AI is weak as fuck I am really coming to appreciate it more and more as time passes.... I know he suffers from the over commerciality (is that a word) of his work but I've never held that against him. Spielberg is like Ingmar Bergman and Michael Bay mixed, or maybe Tony Scott and Kurosawa...He truly is one of the greatest of all times and most definitely has made the best movies period in the last 10 years...
:arrow: :roper: :arrow: :roper: :arrow:

:nut:

Trademark
oil baron swaggasaurus
Posts: 19683
Joined: Thu Mar 04, 2004 3:37 pm

Post by Trademark »

cascarrabias wrote:Meirelles

.


I just don't think making two movies, no matter how great, can make someone the best of an entire decade.... Plus I thought the constant gardner was great but the two or three times I've seen it since makes me sleepy...

RacquetballGangsta
Posts: 10905
Joined: Thu Oct 30, 2003 9:04 pm
Location: A satellite, bitch! I'm just that fly.
Contact:

Post by RacquetballGangsta »

Trademark wrote:
cascarrabias wrote:Meirelles

.


I just don't think making two movies, no matter how great, can make someone the best of an entire decade.... Plus I thought the constant gardner was great but the two or three times I've seen it since makes me sleepy...
what if u interpreted best as "most talented"?
twitter.com/deweydimbabwe
www.stonesthrow.com/vex

nett ist der kleine bruder von scheiße

drizzle
Awesome Vatican Assassin
Posts: 55482
Joined: Fri Jun 17, 2005 2:55 pm
Location: where people throw ducks at balloons and nothing is as it seems

Post by drizzle »

You know i'm looking at this list and as far as truly NEW blood goes, i'm really liking Brad Bird. No specific reason, just personal preference

also, yimou's best work is in the 90's. Post Hero he's been in steady decline. House of Flying daggers is retarded once you get past the pretty pictures, so is Curse of the golden flower
http://www.steadybloggin.com - some of these are my thoughts yo

Trademark
oil baron swaggasaurus
Posts: 19683
Joined: Thu Mar 04, 2004 3:37 pm

Post by Trademark »

RacquetballGangsta wrote:
Trademark wrote:
cascarrabias wrote:Meirelles

.


I just don't think making two movies, no matter how great, can make someone the best of an entire decade.... Plus I thought the constant gardner was great but the two or three times I've seen it since makes me sleepy...
what if u interpreted best as "most talented"?


HE'S NOT MORE TALENTED THAN SCORCESE OR SPIELBERG TRY AGAIN.

Raphael De La Ghetto
Posts: 4851
Joined: Mon May 24, 2004 3:52 am
Location: Upper Beaches, Toronto

Post by Raphael De La Ghetto »

Scorsese

The Departed, GONY and the Aviator are too fuckin good.

ripweblo
pork
Posts: 1802
Joined: Wed Nov 17, 2004 1:15 pm

Post by ripweblo »

scorcese 1
speilberg 2
Image

Icesickle
Suburban Outfitter
Posts: 22728
Joined: Mon Mar 28, 2005 12:00 pm

Post by Icesickle »

Trademark wrote:
RacquetballGangsta wrote:
Trademark wrote:
cascarrabias wrote:Meirelles

.


I just don't think making two movies, no matter how great, can make someone the best of an entire decade.... Plus I thought the constant gardner was great but the two or three times I've seen it since makes me sleepy...
what if u interpreted best as "most talented"?


HE'S NOT MORE TALENTED THAN SCORCESE, SPIELBERG, GREENGRASS, GONDRY, LEE, OR BIRD; TRY AGAIN.

Icesickle
Suburban Outfitter
Posts: 22728
Joined: Mon Mar 28, 2005 12:00 pm

Post by Icesickle »

drizzle wrote: also, yimou's best work is in the 90's. Post Hero he's been in steady decline. House of Flying daggers is retarded once you get past the pretty pictures, so is Curse of the golden flower
True, I forgot about Raise the Red Lantern. But he's most famous over here for Hero. I haven't seen any of his 90s films beside Lantern; where should I start?

Cas: Judd Apatow's on the list cause he's the Golden Boy of comedy and everything he's touched in the past couple of years (40, Knocked, writing Superbad) has at least been an 8/10 film. He might not be the best visual director, but he's no Kevin Smith either.
Last edited by Icesickle on Tue Aug 28, 2007 10:42 pm, edited 1 time in total.

Gregg Popabitch1
Career Leader in LOL's
Posts: 29936
Joined: Thu Jan 29, 2004 10:36 pm
Contact:

Post by Gregg Popabitch1 »

drizzle wrote:Post Hero he's been in steady decline. House of Flying daggers is retarded once you get past the pretty pictures, so is Curse of the golden flower
curse of the golden flower is terrible but i liked house of flying daggers.

ackbar
Super Canadian
Posts: 23370
Joined: Fri Jan 30, 2004 1:48 pm

Post by ackbar »

not that i think he's the best or anything..
but you put judd apatow. what about wes anderson?

Locked