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7 Underrated Films By Great Directors

Loads of directors have suffered, through the years, because they created a film that has since become canonised. (John Ford had The Searchers, George Lucas has Star Wars, and Spike Lee has Do the Right Thing.) Due to this, a consensus around a movie is built, which means the director’s other great films tend to get erased. This can be very problematic, especially if that film also gets erased from the public eye over time (Erich von Stroheim and Luchino Visconti are two examples of this).

1. A.I. Artificial Intelligence

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I should probably assert right away that I’m cheating on this one, because I don’t actually think Steven Spielberg is a great director. Why? For a start, because he’s made way too many mediocre films — 1941, the latter three Indiana Jones movies, Hook, War Horse, et al — to be considered great, and even then I have problems with some of his most beloved movies, like Schindler’s List and Saving Private Ryan.

However, I do think A.I. Artificial Intelligence,  Spielberg’s quasi-collaboration with Stanley Kubrick, is a masterpiece, and it may well be the most thought provoking film I’ve ever seen.

I’m not the only one to consider A.I. a very great and deeply misunderstood film either. Others as disparate as the late Andrew Sarris and James Naremore have more or less agreed, although a common complaint among them is that the film relies too heavily on Spielberg’s “old tricks” — by which they mean the seemingly sentimental ending. To this I can only say that these last scenes take place long after humanity has died, which, in turn, makes the ending a sort of ghostly echo; quite the opposite of sentimental, actually.

A.I. goes so openly and deeply into beneficent emotions that I don’t much care whether it’s a masterpiece or not — a verdict that still hasn’t been determined. What I can say is it’s a deeply affecting film, and it still has many unanswered questions.

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