In the ranking, Gary Oldman placed films from Hollywood, Italy, France and Hong Kong
winning actor oscar in Best Actor by the movie The Destiny of a Nation (2017), Gary Oldman became well known for also acting in cinema classics, such as Batman the dark knight (2008), Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1992), The professional (1994) and films by Harry Potter.
In search of the magazine Sight And Soundwhich also included lists of directors Martin Scorsese It is Wes Anderson, old man listed the 10 best films in history, according to his opinion. The actor brought a diverse ranking, with hollywood, Italy, France and Hong Kong. However, there was no feature film with his participation.
Something interesting was a similarity in the list of Gary Oldman It is Scorsese: both put Eight and a half (1963) at the top of the ranking. The film ranked third and second, respectively.
In first place on the actor’s list, was the French film The Boulevard of Crime (1945), directed by Marcel Carne and written by Jacques Prévert. The cast featured arletty (Caire Reine), Jean-Louis Barrault (Jean-Baptiste), Marcel Herrand (Pierre-Francois), Pierre Brasseur (Frederic Lemaître), Pierre Renoir (Jericho), Maria Casares (Nathalie), between others. Read the synopsis below:
At the Crime Boulevardbetween actors and street artists, love and death put together a theatrical play. Nathalie fall in love with the mime Baptiste Debureauwhich loves guaranteewhich is coveted by the actor Frederic Lemaître and by the count of Montray.
A Conversação, released on October 17, 1974 in Brazilian cinemas, took second place. the movie of Francis Ford Coppolalegendary director, had actors like Gene Hackman (Harry Caul), Harrison Ford (Martin Stett) It is John Cazale (Stanley). As stated earlier, Eight and a half complete the podium. See the complete list below:
- The Boulevard of Crime (1945)
- The Conversation (1974)
- Eight and a half (1963)
- The Misunderstood (1959)
- doctor Fantastic (1963)
- Love to the Flower of the Skin (2000)
- The Wages of Fear (1953)
- The Husbands (1970)
- Rome, Open City (1945)
- The Wind Will Take Us (1999)
Source: Rollingstone

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