126 Comments

North by Northwest, Rear Window, To Kill a Mockingbird, Lawrence of Arabia (mostly because the memory of seeing it at Radio City Music Hall is so vivid), It Happened One Night

Expand full comment

Rear Window, Some Like it Hot, It Happened One Night, It's a Wonderful Life, Singing in the Rain

Expand full comment
Jun 8, 2023Liked by Ty Burr

Philadelphia Story (Hepburn/Grant/Stewart), Psycho, The Letter, His Girl Friday, Adam's Rib or almost anything Hepburn/Tracy

Expand full comment
Jun 8, 2023Liked by Ty Burr

A post close to my heart as I have a 10 and 12 year old and often think about what classic movies I can show them. I can't answer which ones you should show them but I can tell you what has resonated so far. Stage Coach, Bad Day at Black Rock, Robin Hood (w/ Errol Garner), Key Largo, Rear Window, North by Northwest (to some extent, a little long and dry in parts), The Lady Vanishes, and The Seventh Samurai (to some extent, a little long and slow moving in parts) have all been fun watches with them. I look forward to trying more.

Expand full comment
Jun 8, 2023Liked by Ty Burr

The Wizard of Oz and Chariots of Fire were bad misses.

Expand full comment

Old friends on Facebook regularly message me to say they have teens getting into movies and that they're looking for suggestions for movies to watch and my top pick always is Malcolm X. It's mature without featuring anything that could be considered objectionable, it's loaded with style (so much so that it's practically a compendium of everything Lee has learned from a lifetime of watching movies) and it does what I remember liking most about movies when I was a teen: It sparks a conversation.

Second pick: Rear Window. Always recommend Rear Window.

Expand full comment

Ok, these are all (of course) wonderful movies … I’m thinking of movies that might say something to a kid about their eff’d up world now. I have more than five to think on: White Heat/Public Enemy, Key Largo, Face in the Crowd, Sullivan’s Travels, On the Waterfront, Grapes of Wrath, 400 Blows. All in different ways speak to power and perception. And with great, iconic speeches and scenes. Personally, I’d get a kid to watch Great Escape, too. But that’s just me.

Expand full comment
Jun 8, 2023Liked by Ty Burr

Just how old do classics have to be? I have a teenage son, and the 40-year-old "The Road Warrior" and "The Terminator" are right over the plate for him.

Expand full comment

Seven Samurai and Citizen Kane were the classic movies that resonated with me a youth, so I think I'd try those and see how they land.

Casablanca really resonates off of so many contemporary urgent issues--refugees, authoritarian invaders, the impulse to engage with or cynically retreat from the problems of the world.

Expand full comment

The Man who shot Liberty Valance, The Magnificent 7…I know not that old but…A river runs thru it is timeless

Expand full comment
Jun 8, 2023Liked by Ty Burr

Another interesting question is why do older movies resonate with preteens/teenagers? I would argue that for mine pacing is a critical component. They loved Stagecoach. The pacing is phenomenal without being crazy like so many movies today.

Expand full comment
Jun 8, 2023Liked by Ty Burr

Just to add other films to the discussion:

The Apartment

Singin' in the Rain

The Third Man

Sherlock Jr.

Citizen Kane

Expand full comment
Jun 8, 2023Liked by Ty Burr

I’ve tried showing young people Bringing Up Baby in my class on comedy filmmaking I teach. It does not play well. It’s just too hokey by today’s standards (according to them). Some Like It Hot is a much better choice. It holds up very well and makes new fans every time I show it.

Expand full comment
Jun 8, 2023Liked by Ty Burr

All of the above + Elmer Gantry (Burt Lancaster as a con man gaining power) All About Eve, The Little Foxes, Gentleman's Agreement, Guess Who's Coming to Dinner

Expand full comment

I took a select group of seventh and eighth graders to see "Rome, Open City," and "The Third Man" with great success. I took my son, when he was younger than that, to Yojimbo and Red River with equal success (Seven Samurai was too long). "Safety First" I've taught in a film elective, but I do have to fast forward over a racist bit a train station at the beginning. Not sure if they are the five best, but they are five that work.

Expand full comment
Jun 8, 2023Liked by Ty Burr

I now realize classics here is specifically golden ahi Hollywood, but before realizing that this the list I was thinking of, under an expansive definition of classics:

City Lights

Casablanca

The 400 Blows

High and Low

The Godfather

For golden age Hollywood (let’s say 1930-1960):

City Lights

Casablanca

Double Indemnity

Touch of Evil

Psycho

Expand full comment
Jun 8, 2023Liked by Ty Burr

Interesting variety of picks so far, some light as a feather, some very dark indeed. For me, Lawrence of Arabia for sure, also To Kill a Mockingbird, Pennies from Heaven (Steve Martin 1981 version), American Hot Wax (if it can be found), and the foundation of my adolescence: West Side Story (original version). And for the musically/mythologically/ethnically inclined teen: Black Orpheus.

Expand full comment

Singin' in the Rain, To Kill a Mockingbird, Butch Cassidy, West Side Story, Sound of Music

Expand full comment

Bringing Up Baby, Some Like It Hot, Arsenic and Old Lace, Singin' In the Rain, The Gold Rush. But what's a "classic?" I would add some more recent films like Young Frankenstein, What's Up, Doc?, The Great Escape, West Side Story, Charade, Breakfast at Tiffany's, To Kill a Mockingbird, Ben-Hur. I honestly think "funny" is the way to get teens into older films. Although I guess a case could be made for action films like Road Warrior (esp. if they liked Fury Road). It's so dependent on the kid's interests and background.

Expand full comment
Jun 8, 2023Liked by Ty Burr

Great movies, all! And your book rocks—I gave it to my brother when his two girls were young, and was happily surprised by them singing along to “Moses Supposes” when we watched “Singing’ in the Rain” together!

These made a big impression on me in my teen years and might still resonate with teens: Vertigo, The Picture of Dorian Gray, Dr Strangelove, Gaslight, Top Hat (and all the Astaire/Rogers movies).

Expand full comment
Jun 8, 2023Liked by Ty Burr

Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Woodstock, Platoon, Forrest Gump, and Reefer Madness

Expand full comment

Two years ago when my son was 8 I made him watch some classics (he always refused to watch old movies) on my birthday. We watched What’s Up Doc? and Some Like It Hot. He loved them both. We also watched North by Northwest and To Catch a Thief that year and lots of Chaplin and Keaton. He liked it all although he won’t admit it now. Two weeks ago we rewatched North by Northwest and Rear Window which he enjoyed. It’s so fun to share all of these films with him. The next five I would like to convince him to watch is The Thin Man, Sullivan’s Travels, Key Largo, The Third Man, & Bringing Up Baby.

Expand full comment

I too picked up Ty's book when my daughters were young and they really enjoyed Abbott & Costello Meet Frankenstein. And they even loved Charlie Chaplin's The KId. My youngest daughter has been watching Casablanca since she was a teen and loving it. Not sure how far back you need to go but the Redford/Newman movies The Sting and Butch Cassidy & the Sundance Kid were both big hits. And I would think In The Heat Of The Night would be a winner.

Expand full comment
Jun 8, 2023Liked by Ty Burr

The Last Laugh ::: The General ::: Double Indemnity ::: The Big Sleep ::: The Third Man

Expand full comment

I’ve invested years already indoctrinating my child with classic movies thanks to your book, Ty! She’s 10 now and her faves are Some Like It Hot, The Court Jester, North by Northwest, and all Marx Brothers especially Animal Crackers. (Hooray for Captain Spaulding!) She recently felt pretty grownup watching subtitles with Beauty and the Beast (1946) and Good Morning.

She’s probably ready for Bogart soon (The Treasure of the Sierra Madre and Casablanca) and more Hitchcock like Strangers on a Train and Rebecca.

Expand full comment
Jun 8, 2023Liked by Ty Burr

Casablanca, Chinatown, Blood Simple. The Godfather, Vertigo

Expand full comment
Jun 8, 2023Liked by Ty Burr

To Kill a Mockingbird

12 Angry Men

Do the Right Thing

Life is Beautiful

One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest

Expand full comment
Jun 8, 2023Liked by Ty Burr

Go to early Barbara Stanwyck. Pre-code Baby Face is a shocker. Her acting in Miracle Woman shows what she would become. Ball of Fire is hilarious. The Lady Eve and Stella Dallas place her in the top 3 of Golden Age actors.

Expand full comment
Jun 8, 2023Liked by Ty Burr

To Kill a Mockingbird

North by Northwest

American Graffiti

The Shining

Spinal Tap

The last three may not be "classics", but I was trying to think of movies involving main characters who were younger and movies that weren't boring. (not sure the definition of "old movies")

Expand full comment

Casablanca, Citizen Cane, The Graduate, Double Indemnity, the Wizard of Oz

Expand full comment
Jun 8, 2023Liked by Ty Burr

Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, Swing Time, Gun Crazy, I Walked with a Zombie, and Out of the Past

Expand full comment
Jun 8, 2023Liked by Ty Burr

I’ll just mention The Great Race and The Russians Are Coming, The Russians Are Coming because then they would understand where a lot of family catch phrases come from.

Expand full comment
Jun 8, 2023Liked by Ty Burr

One more: It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World

Expand full comment

It is good to hear that. I have loved that movie since I was about 10. Likewise my son, who is in his 50s.

Expand full comment
Jun 8, 2023Liked by Ty Burr

For older teens in the mood for something dark:

Chinatown

Don't Look Now

The Manchurian Candidate

Psycho

Rosemary's Baby

Expand full comment

FYI, my son is now 24, but the movies he loved when he was a teenager were (and still are) A HARD DAY'S NIGHT : WITHNAIL & I : MEPHISTO : THE MAN WHO WOULD BE KING : MY MAN GODFREY :

Expand full comment
Jun 8, 2023Liked by Ty Burr

Design for Living

The Lady Eve

Holiday

Sullivan’s Travels (and O Brother, Where Art Thou?)

On the Waterfront

I also have a melodramatic teen classics list, e.g., Valley of the Dolls, Gidget, A Patch of Blue, Up the Down Staircase, Rebel Without a Cause

Expand full comment

He's a big fan of Klaus Maria Brandauer. Mephisto, Colonel Redl, Hanussen....wonderful trilogy from Istvan Szabo. He's been in college at St Andrews in Scotland, graduating next week (late, but right on time...Covid.) I'm heading over there in a few days. Been a wild & interesting ride.

Expand full comment

It's so hard to make a list of just five but here goes: Rear Window, Casablanca, The Wizard of Oz, It's a Wonderful Life, and The Godfather.

So many others: Shane, A Christmas Carol (the one with Alistair Sim), Groundhog Day, When Harry Met Sally, The Big Lebowski, This Is Spinal Tap, The Producers (the one with Zero Mostel & Gene Wilder), The Red Shoes, Psycho, Taxi Driver, Singin' in the Rain, Goodfellas, Psycho, Lincoln, Schindler's List, Mary Poppins, Sound of Music, Lawrence of Arabia, On the Waterfront, Chinatown, The African Queen, and Toy Story.

Expand full comment
Jun 8, 2023Liked by Ty Burr

When my daughter was growing up we watched and she loved musicals, all of the above-named plus Meet Me in St. Louis, On the Town, Guys and Dolls (but really, how could they cast Brando as the musical lead AND have Sinatra in the movie?), Music Man, The King and I, An American in Paris, Carousel, Oklahoma, My Fair Lady, Brigadoon, and all the Rogers/Astaire movies. They were a great way to get into older movies. Also anything with Katherine Hepburn, extra points if Spencer Tracy is in it (but Philadelphia Story and of course Bringing up Baby even without). The Jimmy Stewart/Lionel Barrymore double-feature, It’s a Wonderful Life and You Can’t Take it With You. I can’t count but I think that’s more than five so I’ll stop there.

Expand full comment

I also mis-read the assignment - we started pre-teen.

Expand full comment

Great invitation to remember what I loved in my youth. Here are 5 movies that I loved as a high schooler: The Magnificent Seven (what a cast!), West Side Story, The Great Escape, A Shot in the Dark (The Pink Panther 2), and Goldfinger. Then came my film education at The Thalia in Manhattan’s West Side during my college years where I saw double bills like Night at the Opera/Day at the Races, Casablanca/Maltese Falcon, Wild Strawberries/Smiles of a Summer Night, and on and on. Maybe what excited me then would excite young folk today. I would hope so. These are still great films in my book.

Expand full comment

Random Harvest, Butch Cassidy, American Graffiti, Star Wars, and Lawrence of Arabia

Expand full comment

I asked my just turned 14 yes old what he would pick. His picks are:

White Heat

Rio Bravo

Some Like it Hot

Maltese Falcon

North by Northwest

He is not sure people are really into musicals but if he picked one it would be Singin’ in the Rain

I decided to make my list skew a little more mature and chose movies that present opportunities for good conversation with teens

The Apartment

Sweet Smell of Success

The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance

All About Eve

Seven Brides for Seven Brothers

Expand full comment

My 15 year old is currently loving the James Stewart Anthony Mann westerns

Expand full comment
Jun 8, 2023Liked by Ty Burr

Some like it hot. Psycho. On the waterfront. Lawrence of Arabia. Young Frankenstein.

Expand full comment

I recently watched The Awful Truth for the first time, on TCM, and can't agree with Robbie Collin choosing it. I felt Irene Dunne was miscast, had an unappealing personality, and had no chemistry with Cary Grant. I felt terrible for Ralph Bellamy & Joyce Compton, who were ridiculed throughout the film and were so much nicer human beings than the two leads! I was hoping for a fun screwball comedy, but found the movie tedious...

Expand full comment
Jun 8, 2023·edited Jun 8, 2023Liked by Ty Burr

The Lady Eve

To Be or Not to Be (Lubitsch, not Brooks, although I love them both)

Random Harvest

Out of the Past

All About Eve

(Eves FTW.)

Expand full comment

When my son was young:

Singing in the Rain

Forbidden Planet

Fantasia

Wizard of Oz

Jason and the Argonauts (skeleton army!)

Expand full comment

Les enfants de paradis, wait until dark, all about Eve, the assassination bureau, the African queen. Also the lion in winter.

Expand full comment