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Saving Private Ryan as the best war film, and Monty Python's Life of Brian as the best comedy. But wait for it, while they are all the best of the best, the Ultimate' film is Gone With The Wind. Of course, that list was based on ticket sales, whilst the others were compiled from fan voting, but their legitimacy is fairly arbitrary. Everyone will disagree with them in some form or another, but it does raise the question of why we love our favorite movies and how do each of us come to our choices?
I simply can't put my finger on exactly why Aliens is my favorite but perhaps, if I disregard my notion that it is an important work within the science-fiction genre, at its core it probably represents a reminder of the familiar and safe experience I had when I first viewed it. Psychologists have mused with the idea that familiarity breeds a more positive reaction to something than if it had no relative connotation to the person in question. It is a major facet of advertising and branding in that familiar brand names are more likely to be preferred over new ones. Maybe it could be extended to film, in that our favorites remind us of something within that makes us feel happy and safe? In evolutionary terms, what didn't hurt us before won't hurt us again, and through the basic logic of human habits we are more likely to return to the things we've done before. Does Aliens subliminally remind me of the first time I saw it as a seven year old, sitting on the couch with my mum, in the safe and harmonious surroundings of the family home? I remember I used to love turning off all the lights in the house and running around with my friend, pretending we were on the alien planet fighting the aliens with all the characters, so is it a warm reminder of the best parts of my childhood? Then again, does Aliens offer me an outlet for my suppressed nihilistic emotions, showing that I do indeed think guns are great and that everyone should have one? Do the male characters represent a machismo that I never had and thus I watch to imagine I am the hero, or as Freud would say, I have some issues with my father and the alien's themselves offer me an extension of some twisted, sexual anguish? Again, I ask, what makes a favorite movie?
Everyone's got either one definitive favorite film or a small handful that vie for the prestigious title. Yet, the question isn't what film or films they are, the question is why do they grab our attention and force us to go back, watching them time after time?
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