http://www.rollingstone.com/movies/l...-best-20151013
Steven Spielberg's Movies, Ranked Worst to Best
Destaco:
#24 La ultima cruzada
The third film in the Indiana Jones series has several fantastic set pieces, but it's also marred by lazy plotting that simply tries to ape the vastly superior Raiders.
#18 Templo maldito
#16 Jurassic Park
#12 CE3K
#9 Diablo sobre ruedas
#5 E.T.
Despite plenty of unforgettable set pieces, iconic images (that moonlight bike ride!), the instantly recognizable John Williams score and a host of wonderful child-actor performances, what really makes the movie resonate decades after achieving pop-cultural immortality is its honest depiction of bonding through mutual loneliness.
#4 Atrápame si puedes
#3 La lista de Schindler
#2 Tiburón
Despite his reputation in the 1980s as a director (and patron-saint producer) of cuddly, kid-friendly adventures, Spielberg's first blockbuster was this terrifying, often gory adaptation of Peter Benchley's shark thriller. It's been endlessly imitated, in terms of its influence and as an easy target for parody (think of how many times John Williams' deceivingly simple, undeniably ominous theme music has been used as a punchline),
Yet the film has lost none of its power after all these years, in part because of its ruthlessness: In Spielberg's hands, the shark becomes not just a great movie monster, but also an existential fact – consuming its victims with little care for who they are. That unhinged, anything-goes quality, enhanced by an almost mathematical deployment of scares, still keeps us riveted and shocked, even after multiple viewings. It's a magic trick like very few others in film history.
#1 En busca del arca perdida
Spielberg's thrills-spills-and-chills masterpiece is both an homage to classic movie serials and also something totally of its early Eighties' moment. It's a film of beautifully conceived and precisely executed action – each scene more surprising, ornate, and eye-popping than the last – yet archeologist and man of adventure Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford) is never just a figure inside a big, SFX machine; the set pieces work because the film is so firmly invested in character. Watch how our hero and his duplicitous guide go back and forth in the film's breathtaking opening sequence; or Indy's interactions with Marion (Karen Allen) in the Well of Souls; or his weirdly jokey exchanges with the various Nazi foot-soldiers and drivers throughout the film's incredible desert truck chase scene. Its effects and technique are dazzling; it's a perfect blend of jaw-dropping spectacle and the sort of actor-driven movie-movie moments that are redolent of Golden-Age-of-Hollywood classics; and it's as perfect a piece of pure, uncut entertainment as anyone has produced in the last few decades.
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