100 YEARS...100 MOVIES AFI's 10 Top 10 Film Genres Part 10 - Epic |
See Filmsite's extensive section on Epic Films AFI described epic films as "a genre of large-scale films set in a cinematic interpretation of the past. Their scope defies and demands—either in the mode in which they are presented or their range across time. A bloody sword fight in an ancient coliseum; carnage on an open battlefield; a country on the eve of revolution. With sweeping interpretations of turbulent times, epics depict characters that, whether nobly heroic or shamefully depraved, are living life on the grandest of scales." (Winners marked with this icon and ranking number)
Nominees: 16 movies were war films; 11 movies were based on Biblical events. Winners:
Comments: No place for The Birth of a Nation (1915), Giant (1956), or Doctor Zhivago (1965) in the top 10? And why were war films grouped into epic films? -- there should have been an entire genre category for war films (or for Biblical films) instead. The war-related historical drama Schindler's List (1993) fits in a number of categories and probably shouldn't have been so high in the rankings. Gone With the Wind (1939) should have been the # 1 Epic Film. Where was Braveheart (1995) or Gladiator (2000) - two nominees that were perfect epic films! And nominee Queen Christina (1933) is no epic, by any stretch of the imagination -- and All Quiet on the Western Front (1930) isn't an epic on the same scale as other nominated films, such as The Big Parade (1925), The Birth of a Nation (1915), Intolerance (1916), and The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957). Malcolm X (1992) isn't really an epic film either, by definition -- it is more a dramatic biopic and shouldn't have been a nominee. |
Introduction | Part 1 - Animated | Part 2 - Fantasy | Part 3 - Gangster | Part 4 - Science Fiction | Part 5 - Western Part 6 - Sports | Part 7 - Mystery | Part 8 - Romantic Comedy | Part 9 - Courtroom Drama | Part 10 - Epic |