Gina Telaroli August 20, 2008 | 8:31 am EST
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A good way to start the morning is with Robin Wood’s (Hitchcock’s Films and Hollywood from Vietnam to Reagan) list of his Top 10 Criterion Releases.

They’re all worth seeing - so takepart and try something new!

Already a fan of Criterion? Let us know your favorite.

My favorite? Fassbinder’s BRD Trilogy - including The Marriage of Maria Braun, Lola and Veronika Voss!

1. Sansho the Baliff
Kenji Mizoguchi

A strong candidate for Greatest Film Ever Made. A perfect and profound masterpiece, rivaled only by its near companion Ugetsu.

2. Playtime
Jacques Tati

Tati invites the spectator into a game of which one never tires, every viewing revealing fresh nuances and discoveries.

3. The Complete “Mr. Arkadin”
Orson Welles

The critics of Cahiers du cinéma once chose this over Citizen Kane for their Ten Best Ever list. I am inclined to agree. The three versions suggest an endless, fascinating work in progress.

4. Seven Samurai
Akira Kurosawa

For me, three films stand out in Kurosawa’s uneven career (the other two being Ikiru and High and Low): one of the cinema’s greatest action movies, thrilling and sublime. (Beware the dread Hollywood remake!)

5. Pickup on South Street
Samuel Fuller

Mistakenly seen as a crude anticommunist movie, Pickup juxtaposes the commies with an America in which the only characters are criminals or dropouts. The death of Moe, sacrificing herself for a country that abandoned her, is heartbreaking. Arguably Fuller’s best film.

6. The Lady Eve
Preston Sturges

Sturges’s masterpiece, from the long buildup to the most hilarious and brutal payoff in the history of Hollywood comedy.

Black Narcissus DVD 7. Tokyo Story
Yasujiro Ozu

Influenced by (but in some respects transcending) Leo McCarey’s Make Way for Tomorrow, this is perhaps the greatest film about the Family and its degeneration under the stresses of capitalism.

8. I Know Where I’m Going!
Michael Powell & Emeric Pressburger

My favorite Powell and Pressburger movie. It’s eternally fresh, unpredictable, yet perfect in its apparent digressions.

Gimme Shelter DVD 9. Band of Outsiders
Jean-Luc Godard

Godard at his freshest, most spontaneous and improvisatory.  Inexhaustably captivating.

10. Notorious
Alfred Hitchcock

Arguably Hitchcock’s most perfect (but not necessarily most profound) movie, in which every shot, every look counts, and Grant and Bergman achieve sublimity.

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