Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
Dir. Steven Spielberg
The adventure movie all other adventure movies wish they were. Every set piece is iconic.
Maridaje de palomitas: Classic butter
Blockbusters got bigger, soundtracks got louder, and practical effects peaked. The 80s gave us action heroes, teen comedies, and some of the most rewatchable films ever made.
Dir. Steven Spielberg
The adventure movie all other adventure movies wish they were. Every set piece is iconic.
Maridaje de palomitas: Classic butter
Dir. Robert Zemeckis
The script is airtight, the chemistry is perfect, and the DeLorean is the coolest car in movie history.
Maridaje de palomitas: Kettle corn
Dir. John McTiernan
One guy, one building, one legendary villain. Still the gold standard for contained action thrillers.
Maridaje de palomitas: White cheddar with cracked pepper
Dir. John Hughes
Five teenagers stuck in Saturday detention. Hughes found the universal in the specific, and it still resonates.
Dir. Ridley Scott
The neon-soaked dystopia that defined sci-fi aesthetics for decades. The Final Cut is the version to watch.
Dir. John Carpenter
Practical creature effects that still hold up better than most modern CGI. Paranoia in a frozen research station.
Maridaje de palomitas: Jalapeño cheddar
Dir. Steven Spielberg
Spielberg aimed directly at the heart and nailed it. The bike-across-the-moon shot is permanently tattooed on cinema.
Dir. Ivan Reitman
A comedy that built a world. Murray, Aykroyd, and Ramis turned ghost-hunting into the funniest franchise of the decade.
Maridaje de palomitas: Everything bagel seasoning
Dir. Rob Reiner
Adventure, romance, comedy, and sword fights, all wrapped in a bedtime story. Inconceivable that anything could top it.
Dir. James Cameron
Cameron turned a horror film into a war movie and somehow made it just as scary. Ripley became an action legend.
Dir. John Hughes
The ultimate skip-day fantasy. Broderick breaks the fourth wall and makes you want to ditch everything and drive a Ferrari.
Dir. Martin Scorsese
De Niro disappears into Jake LaMotta so completely you forget you're watching a performance.