Celine Song Top 10 Films of All Time: Sometimes, the work of some artists dwells so deep within our souls that it has a great impact on our minds and hearts. The intricacies of their work engage our minds and make us think deeply about them. Perhaps that’s how something becomes our favorite and comes on our top list inadvertently. When it comes to films, everyone has a different perspective on what they want to watch. There are numerous articles on the internet today suggesting the best films and shows to watch. But what to choose often becomes a big hassle. Sometimes all we need is the perception of the best movies from the best filmmakers.

We have been bestowed with numerous notable filmmakers in the cinematic world who have delivered some incredible films. The plot, twists, theme, emotions, and the life brought to the characters by the actors, everything play a significant role in making a massive impact on the audience. 

The Korean-Canadian director, playwright, and screenwriter Celine Song surely has a keen eye for perfect films, as she describes her favorite in the best possible way. She is best known for her debut film “Past Lives.” The film received nominations for several accolades, including Best Picture and Best Original Screenplay at the 96th Academy Awards. The reason she tends to have a definitive vision and an eye for detail is that she studied psychology before receiving her MFA in playwriting from Columbia University. With the details and intricacies she describes her favorite films of all time, it is given that she is a great observer who dives deep into the expression of every emotion. Let’s see what Celine Song has to say about her top ten favorite films by various filmmakers and her profound experience watching them. 

1. The Tin Drum by VOLKER SCHLÖNDORFF

Celine Song Top 10 - The Tin Drum

I was in college when I read The Tin Drum for the first time as part of my German literature class—then, shortly afterward, I saw the film. It was one of my mom’s favorite movies, and she recommended it to me. I immediately loved it very much, but it gave me nightmares for about a month. Nothing overtly scary happens in it, but it’s a film about the war, and there’s just a feeling of terror that pervades it. There are some images in it that I have never stopped thinking about and which have served as reference points in making my own work, like the chopping and devouring of the fish or the head of the horse.

2. My Dinner with André by LOUIS MALLE

Celine Song Top 10 - My Dinner with André

I’m always on the edge of my seat when I watch My Dinner with André. It’s just one long conversation between two people talking about everything from the abstract to the mundane, but you never know when it’s going to take a left turn and suddenly become very deep and intimate and reveal something devastating. As a playwright first, I care about the way a conversation like this can be turned into something cinematic and riveting.

Wallace Shawn’s plays are the reason I wanted to be a playwright to begin with. He and André Gregory are massive figures in experimental theater, and I love that the film makes you feel like you’re a part of their conversation. You get to see them be petty and gossipy but also deep and worldly. It’s become one of my comfort movies that I watch over and over.

There’s a great line in it that is spoken in a voice-over as Shawn waits for the subway in New York: “When I was ten years old . . . all I thought about was art and music. Now I’m thirty-six, and all I think about is money.” When I first encountered this movie, I didn’t understand it because I was in my twenties, but now that I’m thirty-four, I understand him completely.

3. High and Low by AKIRA KUROSAWA

High and Low is a masterful thriller. What I admire most in it is the power of Kurosawa’s blocking. It’s magical what he can do with a roomful of men. Just the way the characters are positioned in the frame can shift our perspective on what’s happening. Three actors will move to another part of the room, and suddenly the whole space looks completely different. I love this movie as a textbook; sometimes, I rewatch it just so that I can learn something new about how you can tell a story using the characters’ body language and gaze without any words at all.

There’s something very theatrical about it, and that’s a running theme in films I connect to because that’s where the bones of my work are. These are films with very contained worlds, and by being contained, they become the whole world. That really excites me, and it’s that quality that led me to theater.

4. Pina by WIM WENDERS

Celine Song Top 10 - Pina

I saw this movie with a bunch of grad school friends, and when we came out of the screening, my friend Tara Ahmadinejad said: “So we have to quit theater, right?” We all looked at one another like, it’s never going to get better than that, right? We were so affected by the film then, and it remains one of those special movies for me. Pina Bausch was a total master. She was to dance what Kubrick was to film. There’s no one like her, no one who could do what she was doing. When she passed, there was a big collective moment of grief.

In the interludes between the spectacular dance sequences, the members of her company, who had such intimate relationships with her, are photographed sitting in silence, grieving by themselves without saying anything. But over these images, we hear their personal reflections about their love for Pina in the voice-over. That juxtaposition between sound and image is inspiring. Wim Wenders depicts their grief so beautifully.

5. The Age of Innocence by MARTIN SCORSESE

This is my favorite Scorsese film, and it features my favorite performance by Daniel Day-Lewis. It’s a period romance set in New York City, but it’s buoyantly modern in Scorsese’s hands. The film is about the tension between the practical matters of life and matters of the heart—and it takes this tension very seriously. The film’s depiction of intimacy is also exemplary. I look to it when I’m thinking about how to portray eroticism.

There’s a political and ideological undercurrent to what could have been a story just about longing or not getting your way. It’s actually a very scathing movie. You can feel his voice in the part of it that’s tough and sharp around the edges. In that way, it’s very much a Scorsese movie, even though he hasn’t made anything else quite like this one. He’s made other historical films, but not such a straight romance set in chambers and ballrooms. The ending, with Daniel Day-Lewis as aged Newland sitting in that courtyard staring up at Ellen’s window, always takes my breath away.

6. Barry Lyndon by STANLEY KUBRICK

Celine Song Top 10 - Barry Lyndon

Barry Lyndon contains what I believe is at the heart of Kubrick’s work—that people are really, really small in the face of history, time, and space. All of the characters are like dust as if they just might blow away any moment and disappear. Their pettiness, egos, and power-mongering are held up to be laughed at. It’s a comedy, even though it’s made up of a series of perfectly crafted unfortunate events. There’s quite a bit of trolling in it, which is a quality you always find in Kubrick’s films. Its sense of humor is very dark, which I love. The visual world of Barry Lyndon is unbelievable. I often pause the film when I’m watching it just so I can look at it as if it were a painting in a museum. It’s my favorite Kubrick.

7. The Celebration by THOMAS VINTERBERG

This is another film that has its own contained world. It’s a masterful film by Thomas Vinterberg, and in many ways it’s a Greek tragedy in which the characters are experiencing a divine revelation. The filmmaking and the performances are so psychologically sharp that they feel real, even though it’s depicting an extraordinary situation. It’s amazing to watch how Vinterberg hides and reveals truth—through the look on someone’s face, or through a spare line of dialogue. And it also has an amazing sense of humor, not unlike what you’d find in a Greek tragedy.

What we’re witnessing is devastating, but every psychological beat is so perfectly crafted that I feel totally taken in by it, taken on an emotional ride. That’s something I want to be able to achieve in my work.

8. Howards End by James IVORY

I most love the lightness with which life and death are treated in this film and its morbid gallows humor. Period romantic comedy is one of my favorite genres of movies. It’s a film that’s interested in materialism and the way money works, and it explores these themes directly and with totally clear eyes. The subject of property isn’t something we often talk about in the arts, and I understand that—we don’t want to talk about rent in a movie since we talk about rent in our everyday lives.

But the truth is, if you’re interested in humanity and are trying to depict a human life accurately, it would be absurd to dismiss the primary drama that rules people’s lives: where and how are we going to live? The movie tackles this existential question, and for that, I admire it tremendously.

9. Closely Watched Trains by JIŘÍ MENZEL

I grew up with the literature of Bohumil Hrabal, and I have read almost every book he’s ever written. Because I love the book that this movie is based on, it was hard to imagine loving the movie as much. However, as Hrabal’s fellow countryman and his deep soul match, Jiří Menzel tells the crushing story of a lazy young man in wartime. I believe every movie about war has the challenge to not accidentally become pro-war propaganda—and this film is passionately antiwar (as is the book) because it leads the audience to feel the complete meaninglessness of war.

There are no war heroes in the film, only ordinary nobodies whose passions and joys in life are ended brutally by war, without fanfare or a mention in history books. In the film, under the weight of history, human life is snuffed out as if it were a fly, and humanity is totally flattened. I connect deeply to stories like this.

10. And Everything Is Going Fine by STEVEN SODERBERGH

This was my first real encounter with Spalding Gray. I’d read him before I saw this film. Gray was such a gifted monologist that, while listening to his gentle voice telling stories, without even noticing, you take his hand and go through the woods and into the water, and then eventually you realize you’re drowning in the middle of the ocean. You slip into his language until you’ve gotten completely lost, and he’s the only person you’re holding on to. Of course, it would have been best to see this in the theater, but Soderbergh captures that live feeling by crafting the film in such a disciplined way.

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