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6 Star Films
Films we have rated as 6 out of 10 stars


The Cockleshell Heroes (1955)
The Cockleshell Heroes is a compelling British war film based on the real-life Operation Frankton, a daring 1942 British Royal Marines raid on German shipping in the port of Bordeaux. Directed by and starring José Ferrer, the film was a rare attempt in the 1950s to dramatize British military heroism with an American-Hollywood sensibility while retaining a fundamentally British tone.

Soames Inscker
4 min read


Running Scared (1986)
Released in 1986, Running Scared is a quintessential 1980s buddy-cop action-comedy that blends sharp dialogue, charismatic leads, and brisk pacing with an emotional core that's rare for the genre. Directed by Peter Hyams (Capricorn One, 2010), the film pairs Billy Crystal and Gregory Hines as two wisecracking Chicago cops on the brink of retirement who are forced back into action when a drug lord they've been chasing resurfaces.

Soames Inscker
4 min read


Dead Calm (1989)
Phillip Noyce’s Dead Calm is a taut, minimalist psychological thriller that wrings maximum tension from a deceptively simple setup. Set almost entirely on the open sea, the film traps its trio of characters—each battling their own past traumas and inner demons—within the isolating confines of a sailboat in the middle of nowhere.

Soames Inscker
5 min read


Play Misty For Me (1971)
Clint Eastwood’s directorial debut, Play Misty for Me (1971), is a taut, unnerving psychological thriller that helped usher in a new era of American cinema in the 1970s—where violence, sexuality, and psychological instability were explored with a rawness previously rare in mainstream film.

Soames Inscker
5 min read


Escape to Victory (1981)
Escape to Victory (also released simply as Victory in the U.S.) is a peculiar and oddly charming fusion of World War II prison escape drama and rousing underdog sports film.

Soames Inscker
4 min read


See No Evil, Hear No Evil (1989)
See No Evil, Hear No Evil (1989) is the third in a string of collaborative comedies between two of the most beloved comic actors of the 1970s and 1980s: Richard Pryor and Gene Wilder. Following the massive success of Silver Streak (1976) and the solid reception of Stir Crazy (1980), this film attempted to capitalize on their proven chemistry with a high-concept premise—two men, one blind and the other deaf, unwittingly caught in a murder and jewel-smuggling plot.

Soames Inscker
5 min read


Three Amigos! (1986)
Released in 1986 and directed by John Landis, Three Amigos! is a comedic Western that brings together three of the biggest comedy stars of the era—Steve Martin, Chevy Chase, and Martin Short—in a spoof that lovingly pokes fun at silent film-era heroes, Mexican Western tropes, and the inflated egos of Hollywood performers.

Soames Inscker
5 min read


Roxanne (1987)
Roxanne (1987) is a romantic comedy that wears its intelligence—and its heart—on its sleeve. Written by and starring Steve Martin, and directed by Fred Schepisi, the film is a modern reimagining of Edmond Rostand’s 1897 play Cyrano de Bergerac, transporting the story of the eloquent, big-nosed hero into a quirky American mountain town in the 1980s.

Soames Inscker
4 min read


Black Rain (1989)
Black Rain (1989) is a stylish, noir-inflected action thriller directed by Ridley Scott that stands as a moody cultural artifact of late-1980s cinema. Set against the atmospheric backdrop of Osaka, Japan, the film explores themes of cultural clash, moral ambiguity, and personal redemption through the lens of a gritty crime narrative.

Soames Inscker
4 min read


Scandal (1989)
Michael Caton-Jones’s Scandal (1989) dramatizes one of the most sensational political controversies in modern British history: the 1963 Profumo affair, in which a cabinet minister’s liaison with a young showgirl became the flashpoint for a broader collapse of public trust in the British establishment.

Soames Inscker
4 min read


Fanny By Gaslight (1944)
A quintessential example of the Gainsborough melodramas that captivated wartime British audiences, Fanny by Gaslight (released in the U.S. as Man of Evil) is a moody, emotionally charged Victorian tale of passion, class, scandal, and survival.

Soames Inscker
4 min read


Love Story (1944)
In the middle of wartime Britain, when audiences yearned for solace, escapism, and romance, Gainsborough Pictures delivered a series of sweeping melodramas—and among them was Love Story (1944), a film that elegantly combines wartime anxiety, doomed love, and classical music into a richly sentimental drama.

Soames Inscker
4 min read


The Prince and the Showgirl (1957)
The Prince and the Showgirl is a unique cinematic artifact, notable not only for its content but for the behind-the-scenes drama that surrounds its production. Directed by and starring Laurence Olivier and co-starring Marilyn Monroe, the film represents a collision of Old World theatrical gravitas and New World Hollywood charisma.

Soames Inscker
4 min read


Houseboat (1958)
Few films of the late 1950s capture the intersection of glamour, family comedy, and romantic fantasy quite like Houseboat (1958). At its core, this is a classic romantic comedy wrapped in the trappings of post war family life, delivered with a dash of European elegance and American sentimentality.

Soames Inscker
5 min read


Every Girl Should Be Married (1948)
In the golden age of romantic comedies, Every Girl Should Be Married (1948) stands out as a brisk, bright, and mischievously subversive entry. Directed by Don Hartman and starring Cary Grant alongside Betsy Drake—who would later become his real-life wife—the film explores courtship, gender roles, and the institution of marriage with a humorous, lightly satirical touch.

Soames Inscker
5 min read


Road House (1989)
When it comes to over-the-top '80s action cinema, Road House is in a category all its own. Equal parts barroom brawler, western pastiche, macho soap opera, and pop-philosophical fever dream, it defies easy classification.

Soames Inscker
4 min read


Flash Gordon (1980)
In an era dominated by Star Wars knock-offs and earnest space operas, Flash Gordon (1980) rocketed into theatres as something completely different: a vibrant, garish, and unabashedly campy throwback to the sci-fi serials of the 1930s. Based on Alex Raymond's legendary comic strip hero, the film is a kaleidoscopic spectacle that’s more comic book than cinema, more operatic than logical—and it wears its absurdity with dazzling confidence.

Soames Inscker
5 min read


Annie (1982)
Annie (1982) is a bold and extravagant big-screen adaptation of the hit 1977 Broadway musical, directed—perhaps surprisingly—by legendary filmmaker John Huston (The Maltese Falcon, The Treasure of the Sierra Madre), in what would be his only musical.

Soames Inscker
5 min read


Red Dawn (1984)
Released during the height of Cold War anxiety, Red Dawn (1984) is an unapologetically jingoistic and militaristic fantasy in which the United States becomes the battleground for World War III. Directed by John Milius—a man known for his bombastic, patriotic filmmaking style—Red Dawn imagines a Soviet-led invasion of the American heartland and follows a group of high school students turned guerrilla fighters resisting the occupation.

Soames Inscker
4 min read


Firefox (1982)
In an era of rising Cold War tensions and increasing interest in high-tech espionage, Firefox (1982) aimed to deliver a cerebral thriller rooted in political intrigue and military fantasy. Directed by and starring Clint Eastwood, the film attempts to bridge the gap between moody character study and high-concept espionage tale.

Soames Inscker
4 min read
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