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  • Some films are a must-see because of the part they play in our collective cultural conversation.

  • Watching them unlocks a world of references, pub trivia answers, metaphors, and dinner

  • party icebreakers.

  • But other films are required viewing because of what they can teach us about love, hope,

  • despair, faith, family, and evenwarm and fuzzy alertourselves.

  • Here are just a few movies you need to see...

  • Before Sunrise

  • Regardless of your own romantic track record, it behooves you to catch Richard Linklater's

  • 1995 romantic drama Before Sunrise before you kick the bucket.

  • It's perhaps the most accurate depiction of two young people falling in love in cinematic

  • history.

  • And since it takes place in as close to real-time as most people would be willing to bear, it

  • affords you the privilege of being swept-up into the ardorin beautiful Vienna, Austria,

  • no less.

  • It's like you're a fly on the wall of a room two impossibly charming people have built

  • out of pure conversation, on the first day of a decades-long relationship.

  • Dear Zachary

  • The 2008 documentary Dear Zachary is one of the rawest, most heart-wrenching depictions

  • of what it means to be a family ever committed to film.

  • It's an emotionally devastating love letter that also requires you to think critically

  • about the meaning of justice, friendship, and parenting.

  • Just one thing: make sure you watch it with someone who has already seen you ugly cry,

  • because tears are almost guaranteed.

  • Groundhog Day

  • Harold Ramis's 1993 comedy fantasy Groundhog Day is mandatory viewing not only because

  • it's widely considered a comedy masterpiece but also because it's been adopted, and rightfully

  • so, as a sort of Zen guide to self-improvement.

  • "Ugh..."

  • "What?"

  • The fact that Bill Murray's spiritual makeover is thoroughly non-denominational makes the

  • film, and its message, all the more universal.

  • The change comes from within and is ultimately motivated not by a desire to escape his time-prison

  • but to instead improve himself and improve the lives of those around him.

  • And it's funny to boot.

  • How could you go wrong?

  • Spotlight

  • In the same family as "All the President's Men" - Spotlight shows the power of investigative

  • journalism and how a free press can take down the powerful; Spotlight is the film for you.

  • The film, which won the Oscar for Best Picture in 2016, is a tense, dramatic thriller, even

  • though almost all of the action involves people talking - debating, discussing, and thinking

  • about what the ultimate meaning and importance of truth is.

  • "We gotta nail these scumbags.

  • We gotta show people that nobody can get away with this.

  • Not a priest, or a Cardinal, or a freakin' Pope!"

  • It's not always an easy film to watch, but when you're done, chances are you'll want

  • to watch it again.

  • O.J.: Made in America

  • Dedicating almost eight hours of your life to a 2016 documentary series about the O.J.

  • Simpson trial may sound like a lot to ask, especially to those who already sat through

  • a lifetime of media coverage about the trial back in 1995.

  • But O.J.: Made in America is less about the trial itself and more about celebrity, misogyny,

  • Los Angeles, identity, justice, race, and, yes, the American Dream, including why that

  • dream is off-limits to large parts of the population.

  • It's essential, not just to understanding the O.J. trial, but to understanding our nation

  • as well.

  • Election

  • Alexander Payne's 1999 comedy Election is an almost perfect film about high school,

  • politics, class, and infidelity.

  • Set in Nebraska, the film captures the dreary midwestern sadness and also takes stereotypical

  • characters, the jock, the trying-to-leave-the-closet lesbian, and the overachiever and masterfully

  • humanizes them..

  • And of course, there's Reese Witherspoon's masterful performance as the deceitful Tracy

  • Flick.

  • "I don't know what you're referring to, but maybe if certain older, wiser people hadn't

  • acted like such little babies and gotten so mushy, then maybe everything would be OK."

  • Of course, almost everyone in the film is also a pretty awful person, but hey.

  • This is high school, after all.

  • Going Clear: Scientology and the Prison of Belief

  • If you've ever wondered what the big deal about Scientology is, 2015's Going Clear:

  • Scientology and the Prison of Belief is exactly the documentary for you.

  • But even if you don't think you're interested in Scientology, the film is a fascinating

  • discourse on blind faith, manipulation, and the willingness of crowds to follow charismatic

  • leaders, despite all logic and reason.

  • And that's a message for everyone, no matter what your religion.

  • Citizen Kane

  • No doubt some of you have avoided watching 1941's Citizen Kane simply because everyone

  • keeps telling you to see it.

  • But there's a reason the Orson Welles classic is considered by many film fans and historians

  • to be the most important, most influential, and straight up best film of all time.

  • Not only did it innovate all sorts of filmmaking techniques that are still in use today, it

  • did it in service to a dazzlingly well-told, thoroughly contemporary story about a rich

  • businessman who uses his money, personal charisma, and influence over the media to become a powerful

  • politician.

  • "I made no campaign promises, because until a few weeks ago, I had no hope of being elected."

  • Some stories - and some movies - are simply timeless.

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Some films are a must-see because of the part they play in our collective cultural conversation.

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