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7 Star Films
Films we have rated as 7 out of 10 stars


Dirty Dancing (1987)
Dirty Dancing isn’t just a movie—it’s a cultural milestone. Released quietly in 1987 by a small studio with modest expectations, it exploded into a global sensation. With its blend of sensual dance, social commentary, unforgettable music, and heartfelt romance, the film became an enduring symbol of emotional and sexual awakening.

Soames Inscker
4 min read


Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986)
Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home is one of the most unique entries in the long-running Star Trek franchise. Released in 1986 and directed by Leonard Nimoy, the film marked a daring departure from the more serious and militaristic tones of its immediate predecessors. Instead, it delivered a vibrant, humorous, and environmentally conscious time-travel adventure that brought the crew of the USS Enterprise to 20th-century San Francisco—with no battles, no villains, and no starship-t

Soames Inscker
4 min read


The Living Daylights (1987)
After the increasingly comedic tone of the Roger Moore era reached its peak in A View to a Kill (1985), the Bond franchise faced a major turning point. With Moore stepping down, producers Albert R. Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson were tasked with redefining 007 for a new generation. The result was The Living Daylights, a film that walked the tightrope between classic Bond spectacle and a return to the more serious, Fleming-esque roots of the character.

Soames Inscker
5 min read


Licence to Kill (1989)
Licence to Kill is the sixteenth James Bond film, and the second—and final—outing for Timothy Dalton as 007. Released in the summer of 1989, the film diverged sharply from the glamorous escapism of previous entries. It abandoned the globe-trotting fantasy and gadget-laden spectacle of Roger Moore's tenure for something darker, more grounded, and emotionally intense.

Soames Inscker
5 min read


The Final Countdown (1980)
The Final Countdown is a high-concept science fiction thriller with a military twist: What if a modern American aircraft carrier were transported back in time to the eve of the attack on Pearl Harbour?

Soames Inscker
5 min read


Midway (1976)
Midway (1976) is an ambitious World War II epic that dramatizes the U.S. Navy’s stunning victory over the Imperial Japanese Navy at the Battle of Midway, a critical turning point in the Pacific Theatre. Riding on the coattails of the 1970s revival in large-scale war films (following hits like Tora! Tora! Tora!), Midway assembled an all-star cast and employed extensive archival footage to bring the historic events of June 1942 to life.

Soames Inscker
4 min read


WarGames (1983)
Few films have managed to capture the anxieties of their time while simultaneously anticipating the technological future as elegantly as WarGames. Released in 1983, during the peak of Cold War paranoia and the dawn of the personal computing era, the film acts both as a nuclear-age thriller and a cautionary tale about the emergent digital world.

Soames Inscker
5 min read


The Railway Children (1970)
The Railway Children is a beloved British family film adapted from Edith Nesbit’s classic children’s novel. The story centres on the lives of three siblings — Roberta (Bobbie), Peter, and Phyllis — who, along with their mother, move from London to a quaint house near a railway after their father mysteriously disappears and is presumed imprisoned for a crime he did not commit.

Soames Inscker
3 min read


The Anniversary (1968)
The Anniversary (1968) is a darkly comic, offbeat British film that delivers a masterclass in screen villainy through a deliciously wicked performance by Bette Davis. Adapted from the play by Bill MacIlwraith, the film blends elements of domestic drama, grotesque comedy, and psychological torment.

Soames Inscker
5 min read


Don't Look Now (1973)
Nicolas Roeg’s Don’t Look Now (1973) is a film that defies easy categorization. Ostensibly a supernatural thriller or horror story, it is, at its core, a harrowing meditation on grief, trauma, and the instability of perception.

Soames Inscker
5 min read


Scarecrow (1973)
In the pantheon of 1970s American film—a decade dominated by gritty realism, moral ambiguity, and character-driven storytelling—Scarecrow (1973) stands as one of its most understated, poignant, and sadly overlooked works.

Soames Inscker
4 min read


High Plains Drifter (1973)
High Plains Drifter is Clint Eastwood’s second directorial feature, following Play Misty for Me (1971), and it is arguably one of his boldest early works. On the surface, it is a revenge Western in the tradition of Sergio Leone’s spaghetti Westerns, but it quickly reveals itself to be something darker, stranger, and more allegorical.

Soames Inscker
4 min read


Loguns Run (1976)
Logan’s Run (1976) is a landmark of 1970s science fiction cinema—an ambitious, visually inventive, and thematically rich dystopian adventure. Released a year before Star Wars, it arrived at the tail end of an era when sci-fi was used not to thrill with action, but to provoke thought. Set in a future society where youth is preserved and death comes by design at the age of 30, Logan’s Run explores hedonism, social control, and the search for authenticity in a sterile, controlle

Soames Inscker
5 min read


The Time Machine (1960)
George Pal’s The Time Machine (1960) is a landmark in cinematic science fiction and one of the most enduring film adaptations of H.G. Wells’ literature. With its elegant blending of philosophical inquiry, imaginative visuals, and Cold War–era anxieties, this adaptation reimagines Wells’ 1895 novella as both a thrilling time-travel adventure and a contemplative warning about humanity’s future.

Soames Inscker
4 min read


The War of the Worlds (1953)
Paramount’s The War of the Worlds (1953) is a landmark in mid-century science fiction cinema. Loosely adapted from H.G. Wells’ seminal 1898 novel, this Cold War-era interpretation directed by Byron Haskin and produced by George Pal reinvents the classic alien invasion narrative for a post-WWII American audience.

Soames Inscker
4 min read


Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (1982)
Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan is not just a landmark within the Star Trek franchise—it is widely considered one of the greatest science fiction films of all time. Released in 1982, this second instalment in the film series resurrected the waning cinematic fortunes of Star Trek after the lukewarm reception of Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979).

Soames Inscker
5 min read


Von Ryan's Express (1965)
Von Ryan’s Express (1965) is a taut, thrilling, and occasionally unconventional World War II adventure film that combines the high-stakes tension of a prisoner-of-war drama with the pulse-pounding spectacle of a heist-like escape. Directed by Mark Robson and starring Frank Sinatra at the height of his cinematic charisma, the film rides a narrow but effective track between traditional war movie conventions and a more modern, morally ambiguous hero narrative.

Soames Inscker
5 min read


The Heartbreak Kid (1972)
The Heartbreak Kid (1972) is a landmark of American dark comedy, a film that balances pathos and satire with unnerving precision. Directed by Elaine May and written by Neil Simon—adapting Bruce Jay Friedman’s short story “A Change of Plan”—this is not your average romantic comedy.

Soames Inscker
5 min read


There Was a Crooked Man… (1970)
There Was a Crooked Man… (1970) is a unique and subversive entry in the Western genre, directed by the veteran filmmaker Joseph L. Mankiewicz in his final directorial effort. Written by Bonnie and Clyde scribes David Newman and Robert Benton, the film straddles the line between traditional Western iconography and the dark, ironic revisionism that defined the genre during the late 1960s and early '70s.

Soames Inscker
5 min read


Suddenly, Last Summer (1959)
Suddenly, Last Summer (1959) is a riveting, disturbing, and richly layered film adaptation of Tennessee Williams’s one-act play, expanded into a full-length feature with the help of screenwriter Gore Vidal and under the elegant, often provocative direction of Joseph L. Mankiewicz. The film dives deep into themes of repression, mental illness, class, and sexual secrecy with an intensity that was bold for its time and still feels unsettling today.

Soames Inscker
5 min read
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