A-List

Father's Day Movies

By Josh Spiegel

June 19, 2009

I'm just saying there are worse jobs in the world. Not many, of course, but some.

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Die Hard

Here it is: the quintessential action movie. Yes, the Die Hard series just came up in discussion in last month's A-List about franchises, but the first movie, from 1988, is the only one to put on come Fathers' Day. Oh, all four Die Hard movies are a lot of fun, but the original is the best. Before there were action movies that were Die Hard in a mall, on a plane, and so on, there was the first Die Hard: a movie about an off-duty cop who inadvertently becomes the only hope for hundreds of office workers when a group of European terrorists take everyone hostage. Die Hard made Bruce Willis a bona fide movie star; as John McClane, he typifies the wisecracking, too cool for school action hero. What elevates Die Hard above the competition and the sequels are its great humor, scary villain, and memorable supporting roles. No other Die Hard film can boast the same friendship between John and Al Powell, a chubby LAPD officer who's first to arrive at the Nakatomi Plaza when the terrorists start up their campaign to steal as much money as possible. Willis and Reginald VelJohnson (also known as Carl Winslow on Family Matters) have great chemistry, as do Willis and Alan Rickman, the nefarious Hans Gruber. There are action movies, there are great action movies, and then there's Die Hard. For a quick fix on Fathers' Day, this is the best choice.


Finding Nemo

On this A-List, Finding Nemo may be the only movie to boast a father going truly above and beyond the call of duty. Would your father brave a trio of sharks to find you if you were lost? How about a sea of jellyfish? Okay, sure, this situation probably doesn't occur to most humans and their fathers, but for the clownfish known as Marlin in Finding Nemo, it's all too real. This was the fifth animated feature from Pixar Animation Studios and remains its most successful (though Pixar's latest, Up, is doing well, it'd be quite the surprise to see Finding Nemo lose its top position). The plot is incredibly simple: Marlin, a clownfish who lost his wife and all but one of his children to a barracuda attack, has to search for his remaining son, Nemo, when he's swept up by a diver miles from the shores of Sydney, Australia. Marlin ends up pairing up with Dory, a charming but baffled fish who has short-term memory loss, while Nemo makes some friends in the aquarium of a dentist's office. What makes Finding Nemo work so well is the completely believable dedication Marlin has about finding his son; sure, part of that determination is the inability to lose all his children, but it's admirable, still. Since it's Pixar, the animation is drop-dead gorgeous, there's plenty of humor, and lots of emotional pay-offs. It may not bring on any tears, but Finding Nemo is a great movie to watch if you want to remind your dad how much you appreciate him.




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Ghostbusters

By the time Fathers' Day approaches, it'll only be two weeks since the 25th anniversary of the release of Ghostbusters. One of the best comedies ever made, Ghostbusters is about three paranormal scientists who get kicked out of New York University and go into business against the ghostly spirits who haunt the Big Apple. All of this is just an excuse for Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, and Harold Ramis to riff for two hours, which is just fine by me. Even after all of these years, the film is incredibly quotable. Though I won't bog down this entry for too long, here are just a few classic lines worth laughing over: "Egon, your mucus," "No human would stack books like these," and "Back off, man. I'm a scientist." Did I mention that all of those come within the first 15 minutes of the movie? If you haven't seen Ghostbusters yet...well, my jaw has officially dropped. If you have, this is still a great movie to pop in this coming Sunday. It's guaranteed to provide plenty of laughs for the family.


The Godfather

Like I said, one of these movies is about family. Like I said, this family isn't exactly picture perfect. Sure, they're not poor, they've got enough food on the table, but would you really want to be Don Vito Corleone? How about Sonny, getting your body riddled with bullets next to a toll booth? Don't worry: this movie doesn't really portray dads in a bad light. There's not really a villain, and Don Vito (Marlon Brando, in an iconic if oft-parodied performance) isn't a terrible person. I mean...he doesn't want to deal with drugs! That's...that's good, right? Okay, seriously, this 1972 classic is...well, it's classic. If you've not yet seen this Francis Ford Coppola film, it's definitely worth checking out, even on Fathers' Day. At its core, this film is not only a celebration of America and what makes it great (in terms of how people can rise from rags to riches) but about how important family can be. Al Pacino's Michael Corleone doesn't really want to get involved in the business of the Mafia, but his family is too important to ignore, so he makes a fateful choice. Pacino, Brando, Robert Duvall, and many others make their stamp here in the beginning of an epic trilogy that was continued over the next 18 years. Of course, we'd all like to forget the third film ever happened, but for Fathers' Day, just stick with the one and only original.


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