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The 100 best British films

Time Out counts down the best British films, as chosen by the film industry

By Dave Calhoun, Tom Huddleston and David Jenkins, with Derek Adams, Geoff Andrew, Adam Lee Davies, Gareth Evans, Paul Fairclough and Wally Hammond. Explore the individual top tens of every contributor.

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    The Third Man The Third Man

    The Third Man (1949)

    Dir Carol Reed (Joseph Cotten, Orson Welles, Alide Valli)

    Join the dots

    It swooped in at number one on the BFI’s 1999 British cinema poll, but here, Carol Reed’s The Third Man’ will have to settle for second spot. But, hey: it’s still a masterpiece. The genius at the core of this superlative, bible-black Euro noir is the way it teases you in to thinking that you’re watching a disposable pulp yarn about an honest schlub who touches down in a crumbling, post-war Vienna and won’t rest until he uncovers a conspiracy concerning the death of an old pal.

    Our hero, Holly Martins (Joseph Cotten), is a writer of dimestore westerns. His pal is Harry Lime (Orson Welles), a bootlegger whose latest grift has landed him in an early grave, or so it seems. The further down the rabbit hole Holly ventures, the more it becomes clear that Reed’s glibness is mere cover for a bleak lament to a world tainted by corruption and evil. Replace Vienna with Los Angeles, and it’s basically ‘Chinatown’.

    Inventive and exhilarating though the story is, its beauty lies in its flawlessly judged and occasionally eccentric construction: Robert Krasker’s high-contrast cinematography; Anton Karas’s eerily chipper zither score; and the depiction of a world so divided by politics, religion, gender and language, that you begin to understand why compassion would loose its appeal to these characters. ‘Would you really feel any pity if one of those dots stopped moving forever?’ asks Harry Lime. It’s a chilling conundrum that rings with truth and despair, and one of which politicians, businessmen and, well, everyone, should continually be wary. DJ

    Rent this DVD on Lovefilm

Picked by...

Andrew Eaton
Andrew Eaton, producer (‘9 Songs’)
Nigel Andrews, critic, The Financial Times
David Morrissey, actor (‘State of Play’)
Lynda Myles, writer and producer
Rob White, editor, Film Quarterly
Ben Kenigsberg, Film editor, Time Out Chicago
Sam Bain, writer (‘In the Loop’)
Mike Goodridge, editor, Screen International
Jesse Armstrong, writer (‘In the Loop’)
Stephen Woolley, producer (‘The Crying Game’)
Louisa Dent, managing director, Artificial Eye
Jane Giles, head of film and video distribution, BFI
Nick James, editor, Sight & Sound
Philip Kemp, critic and historian
Andrew Pulver, film editor, the Guardian
Geoffrey Macnab, critic
Tim Robey, critic, The Daily Telegraph
David Thompson, journalist and filmmaker
David Gritten, critic, The Telegraph
Gabriel Tate, TV editor
Xan Brooks, critic, the Guardian
Joshua Rothkopf, DVD editor, Time Out New York
Mark Salisbury, journalist and producer
Nev Pierce, editor-at-large, Empire
Derek Malcolm, critic, The Evening Standard
Jamie Graham, deputy editor, Total Film
Mark Dinning, editor, Empire
Adrian Wootton, chief executive of Film London
See all the contributors

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Comments

Ray Hyland
By Ray - Feb 23 2012

I wanted to disagree with this list but the reviewers made it very difficult. I have 9 out of the top 10 and thought they were all excellent so no complaints from me. Get Carter maybe shouldve been higher. But sincere thanks for leaving out Guy Richie!

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By iahan ivory - Feb 6 2012

what a shite and uninteresting list . Featuring movies from the 1940´s purely because of the fact there are enough decent British movies being made these days is a pathetic attempt to glorify the obviously sub standard British film industry . Pass me a prawn sandwich .

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By An angry Swede - Dec 17 2011

Where is Lock, Stock And Two Smoking Barrels? Where is Snatch? And Trainspotting should be in the Top 3

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By Neil Watson - Dec 9 2011

Enjoyed the poll , but where was my favorite film I.D, as well as Twin Town, Love honour and Obey?

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By Jean - Nov 5 2011

And what about Cashback... positively brilliant little indie flick. Just like Trainspotting and A Clockwork Orange I think it too will have its own following

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By John - Oct 30 2011

No 'Hobson's Choice'??

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By graham - Aug 30 2011

In wich we serve was one of the best 40s films made and should be listed.

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By Evelyn - Aug 24 2011

Miller changes a little bit . He and Benedict played
the Frankenstein.
I still love this film.

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Ann Blane
By Ann - Jul 15 2011

What happened to Sir John Mills who was in some great films : In Which We Serve, The Way To The Stars, Ryan's Daughter and more than 120 other movies and he is only mentioned once for Great Expectations.

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By Andy Wilkinson - Jul 3 2011

Where is The Full Monty???

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By cazuwaki - May 9 2011

This could qualify as the most terrifying yet at the same time the most beautiful film i have ever seen its evocation of venice loss and the loveliness of julie christie!! .Didnt we all want to look like that?The end is truly horrific the mist enters your living room and how can you understand ?Iit truly fantastic and unutterably memorable and what an unusual but sublime casting

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By edward - Apr 13 2011

Here are some suggestions: In the Name of Our Father, My Left Foot, O Lucky Man, The Wind that Shakes the Barley, Hard Day's Night, The Hound of the Baskervilles. Our Mutual Friend, Look Back in Anger, Casino Royale (Peter Sellers). Bridge on the River Kwai, Blythe Spirit.

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By xios - Mar 27 2011

And where is Genevieve?

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By Jane - Mar 25 2011

Yes very strange list and I agree with other's that commented on great films that were missed out.

A Room With A View, Howard's End, The Remains of the Day.

Billy Elliott, The Crying Game, Mona Lisa, Harry Brown. Slumdog millionaire

I think the iconic Lady Killers should have been first, its just a perfectly formed masterpiece. But I think depressing reality has won over for your judges.

There is still something to be said for damn good entertainment! Maybe do another list and let the people vote? Yes the list will not be so pretentious but thats not a bad thing.

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By Aloon Sigoon - Mar 24 2011

Delighted to happen upon your 100 and delightfully surprised to note your No.1. I saw it when it first came to Ottawa and the ending caused my hair to stand on end. Somehow unsatified, I went again the next night and, yes, I used the comb again. It belongs beside The Shining. Missed 7Up.

I must add a "cheers" to everything (that I know of) Masterpiece Theatre and Channel 4.

Alun

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By Sam Lowry - Mar 23 2011

What a random list. It over represents certain directors at the expense of better films (and heavily biased by the directors who were on the committee). 2 x Roeg + 2 x Powell/Pressburger (& not their best) in the top 10, but not Hitchcock, Losey or Leigh (ok, 11 is close, but am I alone in thinking that Naked is not his best?). The list also has foreign directors, foreign actors, foreign settings....what qualifies as British? Glaring Ommissions: Prick Up Your Ears, Darling, Victim, A Zed & Two Noughts, The Cook/Wife/Thief/Lover, Forever & A Day, I Am A Camera, The Ruling Class, A Taste Of Honey, Look Back In Anger, Lock/Stock/Barrels, Brighton Rock, Paranoiac, The War Zone, Room With A View . Gratuitious Inclusions: Peeping Tom, The Witchfinder General, Dracula, 24 Hour Party People, Barry Lyndon, 4 Weddings. Am I alone in thinking that Powell/Pressburger are over rated & don't hold up well?

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By Glitzy - Mar 3 2011

Just looked through the first 40 films - not a single film since 1999, and only 3 or since the eighties. Has the British film industry not made a film since, worthy of accolade? So many excellent recent films, most mentioned already by others, maybe the listmakers will review their choices one day...

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By Movie Bufff - Mar 1 2011

Where's Tim Roth's The War Zone?

A Room With A View, Howard's End, The Remains of the Day.

Ang Lee's Sense and Sensability

Billy Elliott, The Crying Game, Mona Lisa, Harry Brown.

Antonia Bird's Priest.

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By Dave - Feb 27 2011

Trainspotting at number 10. Really? Has anybody voting rewatched that lately, it hasn't aged well at all. I didn't undertsnad the critical adulation at the time, now I find it unwatchable. 'Shallow Grave' and '28 Days Later' were both better films.

20 - 11 would be a better top 10.

Nice to see 'Nuts In May' make an appearance. Even if it is a TV play and not a feature film.

Not much from the last 15 years which is odd - How about 'Dirty Pretty Things', 'Last Resort'. 'My Summer Of Love', also the omission of 'Snatch' and 'Lock Stock' is just snobbery surely.

PS: You may want to spell check the Third Man review.

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By martin christopher - Feb 24 2011

shirley a great movie is measured by which movies you've watched at the cinema more then once. Full \Monty and Life of Brian for me.

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By HD - Feb 24 2011

"Oliver!" Are you joking? Where's "Whistle Down the Wind?" Glad to see "The Offence" made the list though. One of my favourite films.

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By Neil - Feb 24 2011

What a lazy, up-itself list. Just because a film was made before 1960 does not automatically make it better than anything made since then. I suspect the pretentious knobwits at Time Out would have you think otherwise.

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By scruffylooking - Feb 24 2011

Wow! What a pretentious list! I wonder what the average age of the people polled was as, correctly pointed out below, it seems to omit the past 20 years of British cinema.
Also, what makes a film British? There are a number of titles on that list that were made by foreign directors, used foreign actors or were produced using foreign (mainly US) money. It is apparent that the criteria for selection was not fully explained otherwise you would not have, for example, Witchfinder General (a film that has not aged well at all) above 2001!!!
It is an incredibly bleak list. Where’s the fun? Anyone looking at it would think we are a nation obsessed with war, alcohol, social deprivation, self-loathing and drugs (OK – fair point!).
A few omissions IMO (unless I overlooked them in the list) – The Italian Job, Brassed Off, The Full Monty, the Constant Gardener, The Madness of King George, Quadrophenia, Gandhi, Slumdog Millionaire...

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By scruffylooking - Feb 24 2011

Wow! What an incredibly pretentious list! Wonder what the average age of the people polled was as it has pretty much overlooked the last 25 years of British Cinema.

What makes a film British anyway? This list is full of films with foreign directors, foreign actors and a lot of them were made with foreign (mainly US) money. It is obvious the criteria was not laid down sufficiently as you would not have Witchfinder General (a B-movie at best) above 2001!!!

It is an incredibly bleak list as well. Where's the fun? Anyone looking at it would think we are a nation obsessed with war, self-loathing, social deprivation, alcoholism and drugs (alright - fair point).

A few ommissions IMO - Quadrophenia, The Full Monty, Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels, The Italian Job, The King's Speech, Pride and Prejudice, Slumdog Millionairre, The Constant Gardener...

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By David Sutcliffe - Feb 24 2011

What a ridiculous list. Only a handful of films made in the last 20 years feature, and most of them come at 90-100 because clearly EVERY OTHER British film has already been listed ahead of them.

Codswallop.

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By James Poole - Feb 22 2011

No John Boorman? No John Boorman? Enjoyed the list as a talking point but no John Boorman?

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By Jerry - Feb 22 2011

Massive omissions? 'A Taste of Honey' (do you seriously think that 'Four Weddings blah blah.' is a better film?). Also, 'Spring and port Wine', 'Melody' and 'If...'...come on, where are they?

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By Robert - Feb 22 2011

OK, I spoke too soon. THE THIRD MAN was second, even though a vastly better film than DON'T LOOK NOW. What is it with people overrating PERFORMANCE, which is quirky and weird, but not great.

Two other comments. First I'm a huge Powell and Pressburger fan. Even own all their films on DVD (except ONE OF OUR AIRCRAFT IS MISSING). But even given my huge love for them I think there are too many of their films in the Top Twenty. But better than being unjustly neglected.

Second, I've read around 12 to 15 books on Hitchcock, listened to every commentary on every one of this films that has a commentary, and know that most Hitchcock scholars rate THE LADY VANISHES as his greatest British film. So why does THE THIRTY NINE STEPS, a film that I do in fact love, always rank higher on lists like this? Those most expert on Hitchcock always rank it below THE LADY VANISHES. Just a comment. I love them both, but I incline towards THE LADY VANISHES.

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By Robert - Feb 22 2011

DON'T LOOK NOW???????

I've seen that 3 or 4 times and while it is gorgeous to look at, I would not call it even a very good film. Vastly less of a film than THE THIRD MAN.

I'll have to look at this list a bit more closely, but any list that doesn't put THE THIRD MAN in the top 2 or 3 is really iffy.

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By dbinphilly - Feb 21 2011

Chariots of FIre? ---- it certainly is my personal top 10.

The Ipcress File? -----perhaps the best British Spy Film

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By Bill Houston - Feb 18 2011

As far as I know, Donald Sutherland is from Saskatchewan, which was located in Canada the last time I looked. Hollywood has a habit of turning all actors who don't have foreign accents into American actors, and this has helped to create the myth that all North Americans who don't have British accents are either U.S. citizens or French Canadians.

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By mel - Feb 18 2011

Quadrophenia?

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By Da Capo - Feb 16 2011

Another vote for O Lucky Man , I also have a soft spot for Overlord & O What a Lovely War.

This list is for me anyway, inspiring , demonstrating how British Cinema is grossly underrated.

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By ray gilbert - Feb 14 2011

I urge anyone who hasn't seen 'Tunes of Glory' to try to do so. It contains some of the best performances you will ever see from Guinness ansd Mills and just gets a grip on the class system.

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By ray gilbert - Feb 14 2011

I urge anyone who hasn't seen 'Tunes of Glory' to try to do so. It contains some of the best performances you will ever see from Guinness ansd Mills and just gets a grip on the class system.

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By hugh - Feb 13 2011

Why put in Four Weddings? Such a pile of..nonsense.

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By Paul Simmonds - Feb 13 2011

Lists like these are always likely to stir up dissent however, I think the truly world class British directors (Powell, Hitchcock and Lean) are well represented but would have had Lawrence of Arabia at number 1, followed by "The Third Man" and "Saturday Night and Sunday Morning". Can't see that Kubrick has any Britishness at all. "Women in Love" "The Charge of the Light Brigade" and "Tom Jones" should be in any list of great british films. I also have a soft spot for "The Ruling Class" and "Gumshoe."

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By James - Feb 13 2011

Am I the only one who thought "The WInd that Shakes the Barley" was bloody brilliant.

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By 886623 - Feb 12 2011

Winterbottom is dishonest, pretentious, calculating, sensationalist fraud. There should no films of his in this list.

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By Dee - Feb 12 2011

Uh, Donald Sutherland is Canadian. You'd think his director would know that.

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By fatha - Feb 11 2011

Scum ? italian job ? 633 Squadron ? Little Voice ?

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By Puzzled - Feb 11 2011

Nothing by Olivier? Maybe he's unfashionable at the moment, but Henry IV is still the first great Shakespeare film and remains one of the most colorful, buoyant, and magical films ever made in the UK.

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By edddddd - Feb 11 2011

brilliant list;

those I'd have liked to ahev seen are

OF TIME AND THE CITY
RED ROAD
MY SUMMER OF LOVE
LAST RESORT
BABYLON (was this for TV though?)
BULLET BOY
BROTHERS IN TROUBLE
MY SON THE FANATIC
FOUR LIONS
MORVERN CALLAR
NUNS ON THE RUN (joking!)

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By eddddddddddd - Feb 11 2011

oh yeah forgot - OF TIME AND THE CITY. One of the best odes to a city and a life ever committed to film and it happens to be about my home city Liverpool. Terence Davies = National Treasure. I prefer LONG DAY CLOSES to DISTANT VOICES. Pete Postlethwaite RIP. Special mention to the very short AMONGST GIANTS... (that film felt chopped! but was still brilliant)

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By eddddddddddd - Feb 11 2011

oh yeah forgot - OF TIME AND THE CITY. One of the best odes to a city and a life ever committed to film and it happens to be about my home city Liverpool. Terence Davies = National Treasure. I prefer LONG DAY CLOSES to DISTANT VOICES. Pete Postlethwaite RIP. Special mention to the very short AMONGST GIANTS... (that film felt chopped! but was still brilliant)

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By eddddddddddd - Feb 11 2011

oh yeah forgot - OF TIME AND THE CITY. One of the best odes to a city and a life ever committed to film and it happens to be about my home city Liverpool. Terence Davies = National Treasure. I prefer LONG DAY CLOSES to DISTANT VOICES. Pete Postlethwaite RIP. Special mention to the very short AMONGST GIANTS... (that film felt chopped! but was still brilliant)

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By Edddd - Feb 11 2011

Super list. A few films that would've been good to include would be Babylon (or was that made for TV), Bullet Boy (by Saul Dibb) and Andrea Arnold's Red Road.
My Son The Fanatic - which is probably (the crap intro aside) the very best Hanif Kureishi Film adapt to date. Brothers In Trouble is largely overlooked too....
Last Resort and My Summer Of Love would also elbow a few out... and maybe the Robert Carlyle move from a few years back called Summer. That was flawless.

Thanks for a great skive though.

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By Barry - Feb 11 2011

Where is Ken Russell???
The Devils, The Music Lovers and Women in Love to name but three!
Ridiculous to miss off the great Master!

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By filmmaker2011 - Feb 11 2011

I agree with the posters more than the 'experts'. OLM, HDN etc even Little Voice. Of course you can't get everything in or even hope to be 'accurate' (unless you take a true consensus which means only the film literatti get to vote), and I think that the point of this is far from trying to actually provide a list of academic interest, it's just more empty hype for the medium (which isn't film here).

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By Jon - Feb 10 2011

Great list! Even Hammer makes awell-deserved appearance! I'm sure many will complain about the number of Archers films, but how could you leave any off? I wish Edgar Wright were on there, as well as The Cook, The Thief, His Wife, & Her lover, and Lord of the Flies. 28 Days Later and Four Weddings & A Funeral could be justifiably removed to make room.

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