Robin Baker

Robin Baker

Head curator, BFI National Archive
UK
Voted in the critics poll

Voted for:

Annie Hall 1977 Woody Allen
Atalante, L' 1934 Jean Vigo
Barry Lyndon 1975 Stanley Kubrick
Gold Diggers of 1933 1933 Mervyn LeRoy
Long Day Closes, The 1992 Terence Davies
Man with a Movie Camera 1929 Dziga Vertov
Matter of Life and Death, A 1946 Michael Powell/Emeric Pressburger
Pather Panchali 1955 Satyajit Ray
Third Man, The 1949 Carol Reed
Vertigo 1958 Alfred Hitchcock

Comments

When compiling this list I remembered Rex Harrison’s appearance as a castaway on BBC Radio 4’s Desert Island Discs – he had the chutzpah to select a playlist comprising almost exclusively of Benny Goodman tracks. By the same rules I could very easily have been happy with wall-to-wall Hitchcock, Powell or mid-period Woody Allen. In the name of diversity I have added a few other directors and, given that I know of no useful measure of greatness, I worked largely by the pleasure principle. I have watched each of these films repeatedly for decades. Each time I watch them they surprise with new meanings or details that I had failed to spot in the past. Even writing down their names makes me want to turn on the DVD player as soon as I get home. If, howver, I was eschewing notions of greatness and my list was wholly determined by the number of times I have watched a film it might have looked rather more like this: Parkgate Iron and Steel Co., Rotherham (Mitchell and Kenyon, 1901); N or NW (Len Lye, 1937); English Harvest (Jennings, 1938); Kiss Me Kate (Sidney, 1953); Land of the Pharaohs (Hawks, 1955); Imitation of Life (Sirk, 1959); Snow (Jones, 1963); Zulu (Endfield, 1964); Fahrenheit 451 (Truffaut, 1966) and Les Demoiselles de Rochefort (Demy, 1967).