Greatest Directors Ever - Part 2

50 Sam Fuller
The hack
Forged in the frontlines of crime reporting and war, Sam Fuller was a cigar-chomping attention-grabber who thrived on human extremes. Sent a 16mm camera by his mother, his first film was footage of the Falkenau concentration camp in 1945. Postwar, his singular movies hinged on embattled emotions, slam-bang stylisations and spiky material – communism, madness, racism, war. “Ballsy yarns,” he’d say. Shock Corridor, The Naked Kiss and Pickup On South Street knew no affiliations, though: Fuller preferred the “smell of something real”, trailblazing for mavericks to come.
Picture perfect The Big Red One. Surviving during wartime.


49 Mike Leigh
The grouch
“I defy anyone to walk away from any of my films and say exactly what the message is. I’m far more concerned that you come away reflecting on the way we live.” Firmly ensconced as a national treasure, Leigh’s extensive use of rehearsal and improvisation to sculpt his mordant explorations of working-class life have produced some of this country’s most insightful ensemble dramas. Recent films Topsy-Turvy and Vera Drake have revealed a refreshing willingness to explore beyond the confines of contemporary Britain.
Picture perfect Naked. Truth in the raw.

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