Terence Nance’s Top10
Terence Nance was born and raised in Dallas, Texas. His first feature film, An Oversimplification of Her Beauty, premiered in the New Frontier section of the 2012 Sundance Film Festival. The film garnered him recognition from Filmmaker magazine, which selected him as one of the twenty-five new faces of independent film. Terence is also a 2014 Guggenheim Fellow, and his most recent films are Swimming in Your Skin Again and Univitillen.
Photo by Barbara Anastacio
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1
Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Ali: Fear Eats the Soul
I watched this movie because someone told me that Fassbinder made more than forty movies in fifteen years, and at the time I was having a quarter-life crisis revolving around the question of how to crack the nut of being prolific. So I watched it to figure that out, and it was transcendent but casually so. Then later someone told me that Fassbinder achieved his output by consuming lots of meth (or the sixties version of meth) and never sleeping and that he died at thirty-seven, so I decided being prolific wasn’t for me because I want to meet my grandkids and get foot massages.
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2
Federico Fellini
8½
Watched a lot of this on my phone on the RER B because I kept seeing the cover or poster or something. Watched it in sections on my phone, which must be blasphemy. I watched it while I was in postproduction for An Oversimplification of Her Beauty and briefly became insecure about finishing the movie because I felt that, as a person making a movie about making a movie about all the women in my life, I was accidentally plagiarizing 8½.
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4
Krzysztof Kieślowski
The Double Life of Véronique
Watched this while on walkabout in France because I had an idea to make a movie about dysphasic doppelgängers of the opposite sex. Don’t know why it affected me, but it did.
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5
Terrence Malick
Days of Heaven
Dad showed this to me when I was four, I think. I didn’t remember that until I watched it in my early twenties after seeing Badlands and recognized all of it. Changed my life. Didn’t know you could do something both epic and casual.
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7
Spike Lee
Do the Right Thing
Saw it with my whole family when I was seven. Sat in my uncle Linny’s lap, I think, or next to him. He covered my eyes when Mookie rubbed ice on Tina’s areola. I saw through his fingers. I thought I was those people, but I was a child.
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8
Peter Bogdanovich
The Last Picture Show
Saw it in Paris; Wes hosted a screening. I didn’t know white Americans made good movies. Got me digging. Finally watched Citizen Kane because of it.
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9 (tie)
Wes Anderson
Rushmore
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Wes Anderson
The Royal Tenenbaums
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Wes Anderson
The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou
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Wes Anderson
The Darjeeling Limited
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Wes Anderson
Fantastic Mr. Fox
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Wes Anderson
Moonrise Kingdom
Don’t know why he works on me, but he does. Saw Life Aquatic in a theater but was oblivious before that. Didn’t know you were allowed to go for the internal laugh before this.
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10
Alfonso Cuarón
Y tu mamá también
Ja’Tovia, my be-all and end-all at the time, took me to see this in the theater. I didn’t know people could make movies that were art. So she started my career by taking me to this and then to Amélie not too long after that. I didn’t know that filmmakers were allowed to go off on tangents, and since I don’t think linearly, this introduced me to the idea that I had a place in cinema.