HACKER Q&A
📣 pizza

Films that made you see the world differently?


Hello all. There are nice frequent Ask HN threads where people share books that made a large impact on them and how they saw the world, and I was just thinking it would be good if there were a similar thread about movies.


  👤 trykondev Accepted Answer ✓
My answer might sound like a joke, but I'm being sincere -- the Adam Sandler movie "Click" had a profound impact on me. I saw that movie in theatres on a total whim when I was a teenager. After watching the movie, I felt extremely emotionally affected -- I literally spent the drive home sobbing.

I felt so moved by how the movie showed time passing by, especially as the main character started to lose control of how quickly time went by. I visualized myself being in the same situation as the main character at the end of the movie -- his entire life having passed by, and this sensation of guilt and regret he must be feeling for not having spent his time in a meaningful way and for having missed things like the last conversation with his father. I imagined the despair the character must have felt at having wasted his life, and then the incredible relief he must have felt when he got a chance to do it over and do it right.

Ever since seeing that movie, I've made an extra effort to remain present in my life, prioritize my family and close friends, and always question whether the way I'm spending my time is meaningful, or if I'm doing things that I'll one day look back on and feel regret. This movie made me confront what it would feel like to look back on my life and evaluate my choices, and consequently it helped me see what's important to me in life.


👤 jollofricepeas
“Fight Club” had such a huge impact on my life that I won’t even mention other films.

QUOTES:

"This is your life and it's ending one minute at a time."

“Generations have been working in jobs they hate, just so they can buy what they don't really need."

"You are not special. You are not a beautiful or unique snowflake. You're the same decaying organic matter as everything else."

"Getting fired is the best thing that could happen to any of us. That way, we’d quit treading water and do something with our lives."


👤 Eyght
Snowpiercer

Most people see this movie as a very on-the-nose example of class struggle. But I see it as a commentary on how we humans build and interact with the very system that we collectively create to sustain ourselves as a species. The system always has its apologists, supporters and opposition, but deep down all but the most extreme zealots understand that the system has to change with time or fail, and the longer it takes for change to occur, the worse the inevitable failure will be. It ties in nicely with what Nassim Taleb says about fragility of rigid systems.

In the movie the system is represented by the train and its architect. All people on the train are grateful for what the train has provided them: safety from certain death outside. The poor at the back of the train are constantly threatened and preached to by the train loyalists how important it is for everything to stay as it is, that the train is eternal and will be there forever as long as they obey and believe. But as it becomes apparent that the loyalists are lying and things don't seem all that rosy with the train, the poor start to push forward, for information, and ultimately, change. As they go forward in the train they discover that the wealthy passengers have fallen into either hypernormalisation or a drug fueled apathy. They either believe so much in the train that they can't see how it could ever fail, or they know that it will inevitably fail but have given up hope to do anythin about it - perhaps facilitated by their own relative comfort (why jeopardize such comfort for an uncertain, risky change?).

After watching the movie, it struck me how we're perpetually living in an unsustainable system, but we avoid the abyss by constantly changing from one unsustainable system to another.


👤 spanhandler
Team America: World Police. Now I get to hear the AIDS song and “America, Fuck Yeah” in my head at least once every day for the rest of my life. It’s changed my mind about the concept of entertainment being so crap that it’s actual brain poison that the wise will avoid, which I thought was just old stick-in-the-mud folks being old. But no, it’s real. Be careful what you expose your brain to.

Bonus round: the wiener-modified Game of Thrones theme from an episode of South Park. Those guys are uniquely good at writing ear worms I wish I’d never heard.


👤 catears
I would suggest "The Big Short". It mainly focuses on the huge disaster of the 2008 financial bubble, and what led up to it.

Before watching the movie I had this feeling of how impossible it could have been for so many normal people to be screwed over so royally. The crisis obviously happened, but I lacked the understanding of how something like that could have happened. After the movie it was clear to me how systemic issues can be institutionalized if everyone is willing to look the other way.

Also, if you watch that movie and start hating everyone working with finance I recommend watching "Margin Call" and you'll only hate some people working in finance.


👤 morpheuskafka
Going in a slightly different direction, the two saddest films I have ever seen are 火垂るの墓 / Grave of the Fireflies (1988 - Ghibli - Japan) and Hiss Dokhtarha Faryad Nemizanad / Hush! Girls Don't Scream (2013 - Iran). In both of them you can feel the exact moment when the protagonist loses hope and it really hits you.

Both of them deserve a pretty strong warning--I guess the second one more of a true "trigger warning" and the first just a warning of how sad it is. You cannot get them out of your head after you have seen them.


👤 rmrfstar
Watched "They Live" [1] while working as a quant dev at a large bank in '09. Work the next day was super weird.

[1] https://signal.org/blog/they-live/


👤 muzani
Jiro Dreams of Sushi. It highlights the true nature of mastery, how deep it goes, and what an actual master looks like. One of the chefs needed 10 years of experience before they would let him do the egg sushi. There's the deep networks that support it too, the master fishmongers, the master rice planters, and all the master brokers in between who knew how to find the good stuff.

👤 franksvalli
12 Angry Men

----

Walkabout

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Koyaanisqatsi

A profound movie with no words except the chanting of a Hopi word, meaning "life out of balance", or "a way of life that calls for another way of life".

----

My Dinner With Andre

"We're bored. We're all bored now. But has it ever occurred to you, Wally, that the process that creates this boredom that we see in the world now, may very well be a self perpetuating, unconscious form of brainwashing created by a world totalitarian government based on money and that all of this is much more dangerous than one thinks, and its not just a question of individual survival, Wally, but that somebody who's bored is asleep, and somebody who's asleep will not say no?"

----

The Third Man

(Long shot from Martins' eye line of the fairground far below and the people now on it.)

"Would you feel any pity if one of those dots stopped moving forever? If I offered you £20,000 for every dot that stopped - would you really, old man, tell me to keep my money? Or would you calculate how many dots you could afford to spare? Free of income tax, old man......free of income tax. It's the only way to save money nowadays."


👤 pjmorris
My dad took me to see '2001: A Space Odyssey' when I was about 10. He didn't understand it, I only thought I did, or I didn't care. It was beautiful, magical, it boosted my interest in space and in computers, and got me reading science fiction.

If you frame 'Groundhog Day' as a story of a self-centered man learning how not to be self-centered, I see one framing of my own life's story.


👤 qwe098cube
Princess Mononoke [1] (1997) had an impact on how I value our environment and also was my gateway into anime

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Princess_Mononoke


👤 infofarmer
Ikiru / To Live (1952, Kurosawa)

Only saw it once long ago, among many other masterpieces. It immediately and singularly became my deeply ingrained reference model for the mechanics of fateful changes in life, following your heart, the absolute happiness of meaningful sacrifice, cathartic paradigm shifts, and a host of other vital concepts that are otherwise difficult to visualize.


👤 jjulius
Synecdoche, New York

As to why, Roger Ebert said it best[1].

[1]https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/synecdoche-new-york-2008


👤 Pedrit0
Life is beautiful (1997, 'La vita e bella' with Roberto Begnini) No other film made me laugh and cry like this one. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0118799/?ref_=nm_knf_i1

Little Big Man (1970) and Dance with wolves (1990) . I saw them many times when I was a kid. It made me understand early that the adult world would be tough. I was also amazed with the landscapes. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0065988/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0 https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0099348/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0

Un Prophète (2009 by J. Audiard). A weird gangster movie that makes you realize that even in the worst situation, even if you reached the bottom, there is a path to get out... https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1235166/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0

Ghost Dog (1999). I was obsessed for months by the music and by the scene when Withaker steals the car... https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0165798/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1


👤 copperx
Blue by Kieslowski. A movie about loss and freeing youself from the past. I saw it when I was 15, and I still remember how I felt when I got out of the theater. It has shaped the way I handle difficult times in life such as the loss of loved ones. Losing someone close to you breaks your soul, and to keep on living, you have to reinvent yourself every time.

Loss is an integral part of life. Acquiring material goods fools us into thinking that as life goes on, we have more things. But if you make it into old age, you will lose everything. Things go broke, your friends and family die, your health and mind fade, and finally you will lose your life. Being aware of this will help you lead a happier life. It seems contradictory. But somehow it isn't.


👤 kstenerud
The 13th floor. I liked it better than Matrix because it touched upon the ethical issues dealing with AR and potentially sentient simulated beings.

12 Monkeys. Probably my favorite time travel movie, and the trouble with fate.

Grave of the Fireflies. Probably the saddest movie ever made, touching on so many aspects of human suffering.

Lola Rennt (Run Lola Run). It's been done so many times, but not as well as here.

Buffy the Vampire Slayer episode "The Body". The show itself was basically mindless entertainment that I almost stopped watching, UNTIL this episode. I've never been thrown so much. If you're going to experience it, you MUST watch the entire series up to and including that episode to understand why it's so powerful, and you must not read anything about that episode beforehand.


👤 nknealk
Wall-E.

The first like 15 minutes have no dialog. The rest of the movie is a profound commentary on modern life told as a children’s story


👤 cmehdy
La Haine (1995)[0]: not so much that I saw it differently, more that I felt less crazy for seeing it as it was. I come from those exact areas and times, and even twenty years later there is a terrible amount of similarity in how things are unraveling.

Children of Men (2006)[1]: for the combination of cinematography and the dystopian atmosphere.

Departures / Okuribito (2008)[2]: the subtlety and elegance of the Japanese touch when brushing against Life and Death.

Persona (1966)[3]: I can and can't wrap my head around this movie. I think it left a trace on me in a way that my conscious self doesn't address but the subconscious plays with.

The Diving Bell and the Butterfly (2007)[4]: there are few things that can put a person against their own mind more than the locked-in syndrome. There's a lot of confusion, humility and strength to find in such apparent helplessness and lack of control. I think of it when I encounter people with ALS or other neuro-degenerative illnesses, and I think of it when I explore my own journey throughout the depths of mental illness.

Amour (2012)[5]: when you go through certain inevitable journeys with people you love, there's so much to be found in the most essentially simple things.

I'm sure there are other impactful things out there but my memory is pretty spotty at times.

[0] https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0113247/

[1] https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0206634/

[2] https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1069238/

[3] https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0060827/

[4] https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0401383/

[5] https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1602620/


👤 hardwaregeek
Andrei Rublev. It's long. And slow. And in black & white. And about a Russian medieval iconography painter. But the last sequence is stunning.

It's about a young boy who is the son of a bell maker. Everybody in his town, bell maker included, has died. Some soldiers come around looking for a bell maker and the boy claims that he was taught by his father. He proceeds to make the bell.

I won't go any further, but the story is one of the greatest analogies for creation and creativity. Tarkovsky was likely talking about his own films and his process of creation, but I believe it applies to anything creative, whether that's a startup or a programming language.


👤 cocacola1
Going through the list, I noticed a lot of films from the Criterion Collection. For people that love film, I think it's a great subscription. $9.99 per month (US; I signed up before the release, so it might've gone up since then) for a host of film and commentary – probably some of the best ever made. At this point, besides Apple Music, it's the only subscription I've kept (unless you count Amazon Prime Video included in Amazon Prime).

Films that had a great impact on me, however:

1. Lord of the Rings – Lord of the Rings is, to me, the epitome of the epic. It is grand, sweeping, and larger than life. I inevitably compare all movies to the trilogy.

2. Hamilton - Its made me think a lot about ambition and legacy and, to a lesser extent, representation and sanitization of those that came before us.

3. Apollo 13 - I think few films come close to capturing how ingenious some people can be – as well as how many people it takes to get us off the world and back to it safely.


👤 clairity
crouching tiger, hidden dragon

like all of the best wuxia, the fight scenes are dances that metaphorically relate interpersonal conflict and resolution. also, raw ambition and talent without vision and principle leads to (self-)destruction.

bonus edit: spirited away

a young girl comes of age by bridging the spirit world. a child apprehensive of change, an ethereal melancholy, ancestral and karmic deference for life. it’s a masterpiece.


👤 hbcondo714
V for Vendetta

People should not be afraid of their governments. Governments should be afraid of their people.


👤 kls
I would say the following had a profound effect on me:

The Reflecting Skin - I found the movie to be quite disturbing to the point that I felt mentally violated having watch it. While I would not say I was traumatized by it, in a strange way having the feeling of I wish I would have never seen that, has allowed me to empathize with people that have been truly traumatized. I guess you could say the move takes you right to that edge.

OfficeSpace - It was with this movie that I realized that most employers really don't care, you are just a cog in the machine and that many-times upward trajectories have nothing to do with performance.



👤 Omie6541
Samsara - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsara_(2011_film)

4 years of filming in locations from 25 countries using 70mm cameras. No narration, just spectacular captures of life. They say it's a form of guided meditation.

I can't really explain how it affects me in detail. Certainly in a very positive way though. I feel humble.


👤 ARandomerDude
Patton (1970)

A great movie about an impressive commander. Key takeaways for me were:

1. Don't assume that because someone isn't very personable that they are bad at their job.

2. Have the courage to have a strong sense of duty.

3. Lead from the front.

4. Be willing to learn from people you dislike (Patton read Rommel's book on tank tactics, to his great advantage).


👤 trevett
Koyaanisqatsi (1982) - made me realize the degree to which society has been mechanized, how our alienation to nature and each other is almost guaranteed if we give ourselves over to technology.

👤 sriku
Not a movie, but a Monty Python sketch - "Ministry of Silly Walks"

In the sketch, the Python gang presents a culture that values silly walks and their development and a government that sponsors their study and development. There's even a critical discussion of what constitutes an "interesting silly walk".

Mind blown.

It offered a fresh perspective where I thought, what if we look at music (ex: singing) as "silly talk". Pretty much the entire sketch would hold. I started taking art stuff less seriously which had a lightening effect on my life .. coming from a family of musicians.


👤 duxup
Henry V (1989 film)

I randomly saw it one night on PBS. I thought I had caught it in the middle of the movie, not realizing I turned it on the moment it started. I was pretty young and had no real interest in literature, the arts, whatever. But it looked neat "hey a dude in a castle" ... and I realized ... I kinda understood it. I couldn't explain it word for word in plain English, but I got the metaphors and the story enough hand was hooked. It opened up a world to me that I didn't think was within reach.

Certainly doesn't hurt that the film is absolutely packed with great actors.

Dead Poets Society (1989 film)

Bunch of kids find inspiration at a stuffy school from a special teacher and some poetry that they might have otherwise found to be stuffy and simply passed over had they not looked at it differently.


👤 nabilhat
Falling Down.

I grew up in fundamentalist cults and lived in a rural area favored by the antisocial. This film was the indulgent catharsis of reactionary Luddism, anticulture, bigotry, and social paranoia I was immersed in. A naked display of antisocial fantasies. I couldn't have avoided watching it. Everyone I knew watched it over and over, feeding antisocial yearnings. I took away a sharp new perspective on my world which formed the tip of the wedge that separated me from those communities.


👤 perryh2

👤 evo_9
Swimming to Cambodia[0] because it was both highly insightful and stylistically unique - it’s a monologue by a single person(Spalding Gray [1]) and Lauri Anderson’s excellent soundtrack adds just enough you visualize much of what he describes. At least I did but that might have been the LSD.

Rest in piece Spalding Gray.

[0] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swimming_to_Cambodia [1] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spalding_Gray


👤 mlboss
The Matrix - For me it is a deeply philosophical/spiritual film. We are surrounded by illusion that we cannot see. All suffering/joy is nothing but electrical signal in our brain. We always have this yearning that there is more to life than this. Also the action sequences are not bad :).

👤 creeble
_Idiocracy_ of course. Most prescient movie ever.

And maybe the ridiculous Jesse Eisenberg movie I saw last night, _Vivarium_. It changed my opinion on how reasonably good actors can do horrible movies, obviously not for the money because there isn't going to be any.


👤 gattacamovie
Movies with great impact on me:

1. Untouchable - must see

2. Gattaca - are we going there?

3. 1984 - must see

4. Idiocracy - initially looks like joke/stupid movie, but it's more real then we may want to agree

5. Life of others (made in Ge)

6. Amelie Poulain (made in Fr)

7. Turtles can fly (made in Ir)

8. Stalker - the russian original (3 parts) (made in Ru)

9. Metropolis

Other good movies:

Lost Horizon

The Bucket List

The Truman Show

Solaris 1972

Enemy at the Gates

The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy

Tips for good movies in general: take countries one by one and search best ever movies from that country.


👤 hd4
Ghost in the Shell, which also doubled as my gateway into anime.

👤 grugagag
Kubrick’s Barry Lyndon, Forman’s Amadeus, again Kubrick’s Clockwork Orange, Antonioni’s Blowup, De Sica’s Miracle in Milan are some of the first films that come to mind and wish more people came to enjoy them

👤 cinephiliac
All of them, to some degree. But here's a few off the top of my head that are maybe a little less well known that have really stuck with me over the years. I'll try not to say too much about them, and encourage you to go into them without spoilers, as I did:

* Leviathan (Russia, 2014) - It's a minor miracle this film was made and saw the light of day, depicting as it does the banality of corruption and impunity in provincial Russia. Not especially obscure, it won a slew of awards including a Golden Globe but it's not nearly as well-known as it should be. This film isn't didactic and there really are no "good guys" - it's at least as much a tale of love and loss. I certainly understood local corruption at an intellectual level - I saw plenty of it growing up in the American "Deep South," but as a middle-class white boy it was never really aimed at me. This film helped me feel the weight of it at a visceral level in a way I hadn't before.

* Nobody Knows (Japan, 2004) - Sometimes what shapes us is only visible in retrospect. Most parents, in my experience, will acknowledge the profound shift in mindset and empathy that occurs when you have a kid. Half a decade before my first, I can trace the first experience of those feels to this film. Surely this has something to do with my (20s) age when I saw it, but it's a rare film that triggers such a re-programming of the psyche. I feel duty-bound to warn this isn't a comedy.

* Leningrad Cowboys Go America (1989, Finland and America) - This IS a comedy. A band from (fictional) northern Russia unable to hit it big in the terminal-stage USSR (this film was released 8 months before the fall of the Berlin Wall) comes to America to seek fame. By Finland's (arguably) greatest director Aki Kaurismäki, the heart of the film is a journey through the forgotten routes and dives of the American South. The places are real. The extras are local. As a cinematographic document, it's the best road movie since Easy Rider. The band (by virtue of being visible outsiders) obliviously crosses all kinds of social boundaries, playing in redneck bars and juke joints alike. This film gave me an outsiders frame of reference to a part of the country where I grew up, and was an inspiration to me to get out and see the world. Inconsistently available, I've bought it on multiple physical formats over the years. For folks in the US, I guess HBO Max has a lot of Criterion-distributed films now so they might have it? But I can't tell because that service isn't available in the country where I now live.


👤 kleer001
Memento.

Just the right movie at the right time with the right themes and tone.

Its sister movie 50 First Dates is pretty fundamental too to certain perspectives.


👤 pizza
My own picks would be HyperNormalisation, The Pervert's Guide to Cinema, and Koyaanisqatsi

👤 DoingIsLearning
As a European, I thought I had a basic understanding of the dynamics of racism in the U.S. until a friend of mine from Mississippi recomended I should watch "Free State of Jones".

That film made me realize in a shocking and eye-opening way, how much more of a "fresh wound" race issues are in the US comparing with other places in the world with different history and timelines.


👤 bigmattystyles
Jean de Florette (1986) and its conclusion Manon des Sources (1986), great 80s French movies, top notch cast you would even recognize in the US. Also Le château de ma mère (1990) and La gloire de mon père (1990). I haven’t watched the second pair since I was a small boy, but I remember being captivated.

A complete tangent is this Kurzgesagt video on YouTube where they consider the possibility that you will be every human and live every life. I can’t stop thinking about it. https://youtu.be/h6fcK_fRYaI


👤 indigodaddy
Before The Rain about love and war in Macedonia. Amazing and impactful film.

Time of the Gypsies by Emir Kusturica - just go in cold to this, one of my favorite movies. Featuring musical score from the incomparable Gorman Bregovic.

Enemy by Villeneuve (or literally anything from this director; also check out the compelling Incendies, and Sicario of course; Prisoners is also amazing)

Literally pick any movie from Iranian director Asghar Farhadi. The Salesman is probably my favorite from him. Very impactful and each of his movies shows a compelling and unique slice of life.


👤 abeyn
Glengarry Glen Ross

"If you can't think on your feet, you should keep your mouth closed."


👤 Markoff
it depends on your age, I don't think you can really change your world view based on movie if you are in 30s or older, but you can be definitely influenced if you are teenager and into 20s

taking this into consideration I would recommend these parts of the movies, you can find them all on YouTube without watching whole movie:

Se7en - final John Doe monologue about innocence of his victims in back seat

Collateral - Vincent monologue on back seat about not doing anything with your life

Fight club - pretty much all movie, very influential, should be mandatory for teenagers

American beauty - less extreme version of fight club for older men that you can rebuild your life even in higher age

the big Lebowski - if you care about your clothing maybe it can help you to watch Lebowski

the beach - encouraged me to travel more, although wanted already before


👤 frereubu
Schizopolis by Steven Soderbergh. Made after Sex, Lies and Videotape made him famous, it's a wonderfully playful meditation on all sort of things. I think the thing I most appreciate is the play with language, as in these clips with meta-language: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pct9smNM6u4 (The whole film isn't like this - just these excerpts).

Apparently it got such a frosty reception at Cannes after he was so lauded for SL&V that he added the amusing introduction that includes the lines "When I say this is the most important motion picture you will ever attend, my motivation is not financial gain, but a firm belief that the delicate fabric that holds all of us together will be ripped apart unless every man, woman and child in this country sees this film - and pays full ticket price, not some bargain matinée cut-rate deal. In the event that you find certain sequences or ideas confusing, please bear in mind that this is your fault, not ours. You will need to see the picture again and again until you understand everything.": https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qU_na__nfSU


👤 axaxs
Probably 'Crash'. Yes I know it's contrived, cheesy, and everything else. But I thought it did a pretty good job of explaining the fact that everyone you meet is having their own struggles, and to a lesser extent why some people act the way they do.

Also, Run Lola Run. It was the first movie I'd seen that showed how each seemingly small thing you do each day affects outcomes.


👤 h2odragon
Jimmy Stewart's "Harvey". There's so many things i could say about it, i can't say them effectively. The illustration of choosing to live in a state of graceful peace was a revelation; then there the layers of "wow good story telling, worth learning from", the performances still stand out as exemplary, and so on.

👤 cbanek
First, the Last Starfighter. My mom said this was the first movie I stayed awake for the entire time as a toddler, and while I don't remember seeing it in a theater, I think this made me instantly interested in everything computers and space, and I eventually became a rocket scientist (kinda). Yay!

Network - It was made a long time ago, but it's really about Facebook. Watch it.

Requiem for a dream - I'll never forget this movie, ever. This will make you want to quit all your drugs.

Hearts of Darkness (A Filmmaker's Apocalypse) - This is the making of Apocalypse Now, and it's amazing. It's so much more than a documentary about how to make a movie, it's about life, movie making, and youtube, long before it existed.

Wargames - still relevant about how technology could destroy us. I feel like this is the Ferris Bueller's Day Off for Hackers.

And lastly, who could forget, Hackers.


👤 mindcrime
The Matrix

👤 mke
1) It’s a classic and perhaps a cliche, but The Shawshank Redemption will profoundly change your view of the world.

2) Then, on the nature of competition, obsession and greatness The Prestige and There Will Be Blood

4) And then there are days where I still wonder to myself, what the heck happened in Primer ?


👤 archagon
It’s strange. I can definitely give you a list of books that made me see the world differently, but I find it much harder to come up with a list of films, even though I tend to enjoy the medium more. Broadly speaking, I keep reflecting on scenes from Tarkovsky, Kurosawa, and Miyazaki films more than any others, even though they’re not necessarily my favorite films. I would recommend Stalker, Dreams, and Mononoke.

There’s also Man on Wire, for both the sheer joy of impossible achievement that it evokes, as well as the beautiful minimalist soundtrack. On reflection, maybe that’s one of the few films I’ve seen that had a different person leaving the theater. The mood of that film is imprinted in my personality.


👤 pupdogg
The Dark Knight: I searched the entire thread before posting and was surprised to not see this movie on the list. I would say that this was one of the very few movies that ever challenged me morally. To this day, it's one of my favorite movies to rewatch.

👤 zwieback
I grew up in Germany and maybe around 1980 we watched "Die Brücke" in school. It's about a group of unprepared teenagers made to defend a bridge against advancing US troops. I don't really know if it's that good but left me shaken.

👤 dwd
"In Time" - okayish film but led me to start thinking about the time value of what I'm doing at any one moment.

👤 praveen9920
"schindler's list" made me appreciate what I have in life. Changed my perspective on war and consequences.

👤 yewenjie
Godard's Pierrot Le Fou kind of changed my life.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierrot_le_Fou


👤 asgard1024
When I was a kid in the early 90s (in Czechoslovakia), I watched Wargames and Short Circuit, and they influenced me a lot to become interested in artificial intelligence. I found the idea of intelligent computers fascinating. Although the anti-war message in these movies sorta went over my head at the time.

I still like Wargames today, although I appreciate very different things about it. I also really like the library montage, which just so nicely captures the effort sometimes needed to solve a problem.


👤 fiftyacorn
Vera drake. It's about a woman who does abortions when it was illegal in UK. She is caught and ends up in jail.

It shows whatever your stance on abortion that making it illegal doesn't stop it and is risky for women

The film also shows the hypocrisy of the well off woman who can still get an abortion. While the poor can't access this

Finally when the film was released it struggled in America as people expected Vera drake to get off, but she ends up in jail. As the director says this is how it works in real life


👤 omar12
Hable con Ella (Talk to Her) by Pedro Almodovar: I was young when I watched it, the impact it made on me was how important is to stop talking and listen.

Interstellar: I loved it the first time I watched. I recently watched with the perspective as a father to a daughter and it hit me differently. It emphasized the importance of the father/daughter relationship. One quote has stayed with me since: "Cooper: Parents are the ghosts of their children's future."


👤 polo
Human, vol 1-3 [1]

Watch it for the mesmerizing aerial footage of parts of the earth you’ve never seen before.

More importantly, watch it to hear people from around the world, of many nations, creeds and economic status share their stories, hopes and fears.

It will make you smile. It will bring you to tears. It will make you realize that we are all so much alike. I will make you want to embrace humanity.

[1] https://youtu.be/vdb4XGVTHkE


👤 grugagag
The Color of Pomegranades is a film that stuck deeply in my mind. Another russian was director is Tarkovsly and his The Mirror is also deeply abstraact and very visual.

👤 dan_can_code
Parasite.

The movie (for me) is such a reflection of globalisation, capitalism and the hard truths of the lives of the people at the bottom as well as the top. I really enjoyed its portrayal of class in our modern society and how we, as humans in this society, can be 'parasitic' towards each other. The poor want the riches of the top, and the rich use the poor to enable their high living lifestyles. It really changed my perspective.


👤 aguilar
Hello!

"The Game Changers" - Shows that a change in diet allowed world record elite athletes, special ops soldiers, among others, to absolutely improve their performance and health. Available on Netflix.

"Earthlings" - Absolutely changed the way I see and interact with animal products. Available to watch online for free: http://www.nationearth.com/


👤 LargoLasskhyfv
"Tales from the Script", a documentary about the many ways a movie you see has been changed, cut, (partially) rewritten, by many involved parties for a variety of (hilarious) reasons until it finally reached you(if ever/at all). Or in short the nature of the business.

[1] http://talesfromthescript.com/ [2] https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/tales_from_the_script [3] https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1045642/

Maybe [4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wizards_(film) but not for changing, but rather reinforcing my world views, altough much later after it premiered/ran. Between 2010 and 2015, actually.


👤 EdwardWarren
"Days of Wine and Roses" influenced my life completely. I saw it when I was a teenager and never took a drink of alcohol because of it and the book "I'll Cry Tomorrow" about Lillian Roth that I read at almost the same time. Anyone can become an alcoholic and it starts with taking one drink. I never took that drink because of the movie and the book.

👤 monkin
Natural Born Killers, so much underrated but a great commentary to our world.

👤 tutfbhuf
The Man from Earth (2007)

https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0756683/

The film solely depends on dialoge. If it works for you, then it is tough to describe what it does to your brain. Works best for the open minded and get lost in their own thoughts personalities.


👤 valand
Commenters here gave great recommendations. I'll try mentioning the unmentioned.

- Gifted (2017):

Drama about a single man raising a genius girl. Some small bits of the film explore about the responsibility of extraordinary people vs their right to feel like normal human, but most of the film is about the human aspect of it.

- The Wind Rises (2013):

The Ghibli Studio film dramatizing the story of Jiro Horikoshi, the designer of Mitsubishi A5M fighter aircraft and its successor, the Mitsubishi A6M Zero. This is one of Ghibli film that is more grounded to reality than the others.

- Sorry to Bother You (2018):

Black Comedy Drama about a young black telemarketer who are really good at his jobs, gets involved in a huge corporate conspiracy where he must choose between profit and joining his activist friend.

- Don't fuck with cats (2019):

Documentary about people over the internet brings down the infamous murderer Luka Magnotta.

- The Great Hack (2019):

A great documentary for the Cambridge Analytica scandal.

- Justice League (2017):

Please don't flag, I'm not joking! The film itself didn't change anything. It was a little under my expectation. What happens following the release of the film, though, is the gem. The snydercut movement is a very rare phenomenon where a significant amount of people actually take action against disappointment from a change in a film's direction. Long story short, fans investigate how it could be and uncovered a great deal of what they think a miss-handling of a film production. It opened a window where we can see how moviemakers and everyone involved has their own political agenda and some actually falls for what they do. The movement is actually successful considering it has the power for the film industry to react and the fans seems to get what they wanted.


👤 airstrike

👤 stareatgoats
"Die Marquise von O" with Bruno Ganz. A study of the relationship between appearances and reality, and how it can be difficult to say which is which. A relief for a youngster like me who was just then coming to grips with the layers and layers of appearances underneath which we still can't be sure of much.

👤 jcun4128
The Aviator - I don't know why I was so obsessed with this guy eg. Howard Hughes his tragic/surreal life having so much money and descent into madness. The passage of time makes me sad as well, you see the peak/height of the day...

The Master - this is emotional the churning water scenes in particular with the music great sound track

Her - mostly I enjoy the intro, I don't know maybe it's a part of being alone a lot up to where he meets the OS for the first time, something like this is interesting

Lost in Translation - somehow I found this movie and the social aspect is nice

Iron Man movies - for motivation

Blade Runner - I was obsessed with this movie in high school 10 years ago quoting it ha "I've seen things..."

2001 Space Odyssey - probably my most favorite humbling scene the bone becoming a space craft [1] it's just so emotional "exiting the system". It felt freeing briefly to think you can leave everything that exists and go to nothing, it was an idea of escape for me at the time. It makes me want to strive for that, but it's not a 1-man job and it takes a while eg. probably not in our life time... the whole 4 years to nearest star at light speed thing. And what is there anyway.

Jobs - probably get hate for this but there was something profound the idea of the chips becoming state/data on a screen.

Social Network - sorry to be basic but I used to watch that to get pumped trying to come up with something big(lol). It's funny when I first watched that movie I was not into software/web dev and later on I understood more and more of the basic stuff he was doing to make the girl comparison app and also mentioning Apache to host the initial The Facebook like "Ooh I know what that is".

[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ZoSYsNADtY


👤 princevegeta89
Not movies, but documentaries about space, universe, and our existence are what made me truly open my eyes.

I watched a bunch of those - Cosmos, The Universe, How the Universe Works, and a bunch of other PBS Nova and Discovery content.

Seriously, we don't know why we are here. Why we are so alone, and why we have so many problems in the world. Our lives are short, insignificant, and petty, yet we have so many problems from racism to hunger to wars and international affairs. To be frank, we're no special compared to the other animals around us. We just have the most powerful brain that gives us thinking capability, but it also comes with overflowing emotions all the time.

I keep pondering over these thoughts on why we exist, and that while we do, we need to make sure others around us are happy. Money is just a materialistic medium we introduced to make our lives way too complex.


👤 nlh
Devs (2020, FX/Hulu). Not a movie, but movie-like (8-part series).

I’m not religious and I don’t believe in the traditional religious god. But Devs presents a fascinating framework for what that could look like that passes the nerd/science test (with some obvious creative/technological liberties).


👤 zJayv
A few films with an emphasis on dialogue. Made me realize how much can be carried (plot, mood, the whole world of the work of art) by party A and party B doing nothing but talking.

* Jiang Wen - Keep Cool https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keep_Cool_(film)

* Malle - My Dinner with Andre https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/My_Dinner_with_Andre

* Jarmusch - Coffe and Cigarettes https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coffee_and_Cigarettes


👤 brandonmenc
Casino - "An equal amount of blueberries in each muffin"

Heat - "You must've worked some dipshit crews"

Extreme professionalism: what it really looks like, how it mixes and intersects with street smarts, and that it can be applied to any enterprise - even "low" ones.


👤 anonu
Minority Report is thought provoking. The movie takes place in the future. The police have a new "precrime" division where they stop crimes before they happen.

Makes you think about how we apply AI today that makes decisions that can affect human lives.


👤 pks016
Late comment but for me it's Planet of Apes (original) and Blade runner.

I have never questioned my free will, consciousness, evolution and what makes us human so much.

And there are some french and hindi films that changed my perspective about love and life


👤 vicedvin
To be watched with your loved ones: What Dreams May Come; Ameli

Those which make you question our society (not mentioned so far): The Platform; Snowpiercer

Others: OtherLife; The Origin; The Wave (it would have bigger impact if I watched it earlier in my life)



👤 hkhanna
Dead Man Walking

Growing up, I was always pro-death penalty and never thought much about it. My parents were pro-death penalty, after all, and I always assumed their political positions were well reasoned.

Dead Man Walking depicted the horrors of the death penalty, and how it can sentence an innocent man to an irreversible punishment. And, even if the man is guilty, it is barbaric for the state to put someone to death.

I never thought deeply about the death penalty before that movie. After watching it, I understood that the only real reason for the death penalty to be inflicted is vengeance, an instinct a just society should not indulge.


👤 zengineer
"About Time" - absolutely beautiful story about life and time.

"What The Health" - motivated me successfully when I started to eat less meat

"The Secret Life of Walter Mitty"

"Bourne Identity" - motivated me to get into self-defense


👤 Balgair
The Apartment (1960) staring Jack Lemmon and Shirley MacLaine: "A man tries to rise in his company by letting its executives use his apartment for trysts, but complications and a romance of his own ensue."

Great comedy, great film. The twist ending is also amazing.

It made me see that though 'the past' may be a foreign country, but we're all people just the same. The problems they had, and that we have, are the same problems. The good ol' days never existed. And we can learn from our forefathers, not as semi-divine laws and sayings, but as one would learn from a friend.


👤 MichaelMoser123
Spartacus with Kirk Douglas (the book Spartacus by Howard Fast is also very impressing) i mean we were taught history through from the POV of the state and its rulers etc, here you learn there is another side of the story.

Wall-E


👤 itstrue
NatGeo Peace Prize Short Films [0] showed me that the suffering of many people can be greatly reduced by just one person. Another great film that showed me the same thing was "The Price of Free" [1].

[0] https://www.nobelprize.org/peace-prize-documentary-films/ [1] https://youtu.be/UsqKz1hd_CY


👤 hodgesrm
A River Runs Through It

I loved the multi-threaded story--a love affair with fishing, a coming-of-age story, and an ode to the beauty of Montana in a simpler time. The movie was better than the book. My son has lived the first of those threads on rivers like the Nooksack in Washington. For me the movie articulated the transience of human existence and the receding beauty of the natural world as time passes--a fading that grows within us as we age.

Edit: added last sentence


👤 ttyprintk
'Between the Folds' is an independent documentary about origami, far more captivating than it sounds. As people become artists, there's a tension between developing technique versus exploring expression. Relevant to HN, the younger artists use complex software to model geometry -- older artists want the sensibilities of origami as an art form to serve as a lesson when there's pressure to pursue technicality.

👤 techer
Kind Hearts and Coronets Withnail and I First Blood (Rambo)

👤 harleypig
I know this is an late comment and won't be seen, but I have to say 'Come and See' made me realize just how much I had in a time when I thought I was suffering.

I found myself identifying with the boy, but also the soldiers who did the most horrible things ... and I realized I could be a monster under the right circumstances.

I have spent my life trying to make myself not be that kind of person no matter what my circumstances were.


👤 gedy
The Road (2009) is like a horror movie for fathers, really destroyed me watching it but made my more aware of how tough it is to be a father & husband.

👤 dvfjsdhgfv
The classic: eXistenZ. Released just a few days after The Matrix, and that's probably why this astonishing movie is far less known. Much better IMO.

👤 FairDune
Schindler's List

👤 basementcat
A Girl Walks Home Alone At Night. Nothing like 2001: A Space Odyssey or anything but it was my gateway drug to independent non-English language cinema.

👤 wj
City of God (and the documentary that was a special feature of the DVD and was better than the film)

Hector and the Search for Happiness

Ghost in the Shell (as someone else mentioned)


👤 billylo
Dead Poets Society.

Quotes from Mr. Keating.

"Why do I stand up here? Anybody? I stand upon my desk to remind myself that we must constantly look at things in a different way."

"Boys, you must strive to find your own voice. Because the longer you wait to begin, the less likely you are to find it at all. Thoreau said, "Most men lead lives of quiet desperation." Don't be resigned to that. Break out!"


👤 bioplastic
Oh, too many. First coming in mind:

Harold and Maude (1971), Taking Off (1971), Blade Runner (1982), Repo Man (1984), Brazil (1985), They Live (1988)


👤 nanomonkey
The Holy Mountain (La montaña sagrada)(1973) by Alejandro Jodorowsky, is perhaps one of my favorite mind bending movies. It takes awhile before you realize that there is an actual plot, but the last scene is profound.

Tampopo (1985) is perhaps my favorite Japanese movie, all about the beauty of food. A noodle western of sorts that is immensely entertaining.


👤 whygodwhy
Fight Club, Interstellar and Whiplash would be my vote.

I made a letterboxd list with some of the movies mentioned here. https://letterboxd.com/whygodwhy/list/hn-films-that-made-you...


👤 tvbuzz
#1: The Man From Earth (Most here have seen it)

#2: Jeff Who Live At Home Slow moving (very), but worth it for the last 5 minutes of the movie.


👤 clay_the_ripper
Baraka. The most accurate interpretation of the human experience and our current human culture. One of my all time favorites.

👤 freddiemerkury
The Japanese film "Black Rain(1989)" directed by Shohei Imamura is one of the most powerful movies I've even seen. It's about a young woman trying to have a marriage arranged after the Horoshima bombing. It has nothing to do with the US film of same name starring Michael Douglas. Seek it out.

👤 t_serpico
Tree of Life - Tererence Malick

Stalker - Andrei Tarkovsky


👤 gentryb
One of the most hard-hitting movies for me lately: Wheels (2014)[1] - Especially after spending a decent amount of the last year in a wheelchair.

[1]: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt2170667/


👤 elliekelly
Je ne suis pas un homme facile. (I am not an easy man)

It’s a fairly recent, maybe two or three years old, romantic comedy. It’s light-hearted and funny but it really highlighted the absurdity of gender roles - for men and women - in a way I hadn’t ever stopped to consider before.


👤 mellonmarshall2
I would add What We Did On Our Holiday, it is a comedy and you will laugh but more it is a film about family and how painful you can hurt the ones you love while showing the love you have and at the same time of the pain you can cause when trying as well

👤 DoreenMichele
A Sound of Thunder was possibly literally life saving for me. I generally like time travel stories anyway as a game of "what if," but this came out shortly after my husband physically moved out and impacted some decisions I made that year.

👤 RichardCA
Johnny Got His Gun.

Back in the 80's they would show this on PBS and cable TV from time to time, no "trigger warnings" back then.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uUfBVLAY_pU


👤 every
La Belle et la Bête (1946), Black Orpheus (1959), Our Town (1940), The Seventh Seal (1956)...

👤 jazzyjackson
I just want to draw attention to how much more compelling these movie descriptions are then the bylines netflix gives to them. I can never take those descriptions seriously or use them to make a choice about whether a movie sounds interesting.

👤 JacksonGariety
Lost Highway

👤 berbec
American history x

👤 slowhand09
Being There - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Being_There

  Memento  

  The Usual Suspects  

  Lawrence of Arabia

👤 Melchizedek
Tropa de Elite (2007) - One of few films with a genuine right wing (not Neocon Globalist Corporatist) perspective.

A Swedish Love Story (1970) - The innocence of youth vs. the cynical defeat of adulthood. Don't let the world corrupt your soul!

Apocalypse Now (1979) (must watch the Redux cut!) - The heart of man behind all the artifice and words.

In the Mood for Love (2000) - Dignity and beauty despite everything.


👤 gaoryrt
Whiplash (2014)

👤 chachan
The Secret Life of Walter Mitty - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0359950/

👤 dvh
Happy end. I watched that movie, then went to play table tennis and simply couldn't because my mind was a wreck. It's a movie shot (or played) backwards where plot moves forward.

👤 dawnerd
Couple of them: Children of Men, The Matrix, Le Jetée, Behind the Curve

There’s a couple others I can’t for the life of me remember the name of but I can recall very vividly.


👤 syedmeesamali
“Dancer in the Dark” and the absolute performance of Bjork. Unbelievable. Discovered movie from her song and it was deeply deeply painful. Cried so much.

👤 plessthanpt05
I saw Terminator when I was very young and more recently, Ex Machina was pretty great regarding what "passing" the Turing test might look like.

👤 simonblack
"The Magnificent Seven" (the version with Yul Brynner) if you can't find the original Kurosawa movie "Seven Samurai".

👤 chrstphrknwtn
Network (1976)

Koyaanisqatsi (1982)


👤 edgarvm
For me 500 days of summer is a documentary movie, it helped me to deal with many stupid ideas I had about relationships.

👤 Smaug123
Daybreakers, a subverted vampire film. The film is bad, but good grief is it terrifying that humans have to eat food.

👤 forix
There are many. Most have been mentioned. Didn't see these mentioned yet: Gladiator, Ip Man, The Last Samurai

👤 nelsonic
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind

👤 supernihil
Smoke

The Auggie Wren christmas story still gives me goosebumbs and that movie singlehandedly god me into Tom Waits


👤 juniper_strong
That made me see the world differently? Faces of Death I guess. Would not recommend.

👤 s4ik4t
Pather Panchali by Satyajit Ray

👤 ilaksh
Zeitgeist: The Movie. Which might totally deconstruct your worldview.

But as far as what next, technocracy usually oversimplifies and fails to integrate an understanding of the successes of capitalism and some of the failures of socialism.

Because technocracy usually assumes a type of AI-based central planning and has little or no room for markets. But I believe that any realistic plan must have accomodations for some significant amount of competition and inequality as well as a strong emphasis on facilities to evolve the system and have types of local specialization.

So my belief is that we do need a more holistic view of information and more ways to track and regulate than is provided by the basic concept of assigning monolithic points (money) which is also a gross oversimplification, but there also needs to be some concept like that, just more sophisticated. Such as tracking points available for different categories of things or autotaxing different activities or just tracking resources per transaction.

So I think it will not work to get rid of money, but we need money to be much smarter and less one dimensional etc.


👤 CyanLite2
Contact w/ Jodi Foster

👤 philliphaydon
American History X

👤 jennablair
Boyz N The Hood, especially as a female.

👤 type0
Trainspotting

👤 sustbird
12 Angry men.

👤 scott31
Shrek! Ogres are like Onions

👤 godisdad
Death By Hanging

Fando Y Lis

The Decline Of Western Civilization


👤 JacksonGariety
High and Low (Kurosawa)

👤 stakkur
The Razor's Edge.

👤 drummer
Zeitgeist and Thrive.

👤 sunstone
Deer Hunter

👤 joaofiliperocha
For Sama

👤 RemingtonLak
I try to watch movies that show me who/what I am, where I came from to better understand myself for the future wherever I can find it. One requirement however, is that it cannot be a reflection of current events except that is of my own making.

Not in any particular order and may repeat many of the fine recommendations already said....

1. The Five-Year Engagement https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1195478/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0

2. The Trigger Effect https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0117965/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1

3. Sweet November https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0230838/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1

4. Les Miserables (1978) https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0077936/

5. The Vow (i got married to the music from The Nationals - England (instrumental) :) https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1606389/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1

6. The Family Man (Nicolas Cage before he gone off the edge) https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0218967/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1

7. Boyz n the Hood https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0101507/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1

8. Up (I'm a new dad and I did Big Brothers to 3 boys so Up means a lot to me) https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1049413/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1

9. Ghost Town https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0995039/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1

10. People Like Us https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1716777/?ref_=fn_al_tt_2

11. One Hour Photo (Reminding us how incredible Robin William...was ) https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0265459/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1

WOW...few things..

1. I realize a little psych profiling can show how old you are ;-) [EDIT] I mean how old I am!! :)

2. I'm a sucker for romcom light hearted shows that gives me time to reflect.

man.. I realize I need to look into this list, grow it and rewatch.

Enjoy!


👤 sam1r
Inception

👤 jasonv
Cold Fever

Fandango


👤 runawaybottle
The Matrix

👤 hulitu
Hiroshima mon amour.

City of the lost children.

Stalingrad


👤 ygmelnikova
The Deer Hunter