The Godfather & 9 Other Iconic Movies That “Insist Upon Themselves”

In Seth MacFarlane’s iconic animated sitcom Family Guy, Peter Griffin created a new term for cultural debate in the idea that The Godfather “insists upon itself.” Having since become shorthand for expressing the pretentious, self-indulgent style of various iconic movies, it’s worth looking at just how many classics share this reputation. Film criticism has always been a divisive topic of conversation, but it’s worth looking at what makes a story work — and where some expect too much of their audiences.

Movies can be pretentious and insist upon themselves in a number of ways, from expecting too much from the audience to directors who become overly-impressed with their own style or plot. It’s important to note how much of this can boil down to personal taste, excessive hype from critics, and the general expectation that people admire a film. These are by no means bad, but it’s hard to deny they insist upon their own quality.

10

Forrest Gump (1994)

Directed By Robert Zemeckis

Movie

My Favorite Movies
My Watchlist

Success!

Forrest Gump Movie Poster

Your Rating

close

10 stars

9 stars

8 stars

7 stars

6 stars

5 stars

4 stars

3 stars

2 stars

1 star

Rate Now

0/10

Leave a Review

Your comment has not been saved

Forrest Gump

PG-13

Romance

Drama

ScreenRant logo

7/10

41

8.6/10

Release Date

July 6, 1994

Runtime

142 minutes

Director

Robert Zemeckis

Writers

Winston Groom, Eric Roth

Cast

See All

  • Headshot Of Mykelti Williamson

    Mykelti Williamson

  • Headshot Of Gary Sinise

    Gary Sinise

In this iconic piece of American film history, the presidencies of Kennedy and Johnson, the events of the Vietnam war, Watergate, and other history unfold through the perspective of an Alabama man with an IQ of 75.

Main Genre

Drama

Studio(s)

Paramount Pictures

Distributor(s)

Paramount Pictures

Powered by

Expand
Collapse

To say that Forrest Gump was one of the biggest sensations of ’90s cinema would undersell how popular the movie was. Here, audiences were shown an epic work of alternative history, one that places its naive but innocent protagonist at the heart of mid-twentieth-century American history in his search for his beloved Jenny. While the story has some great notes, especially in the story of Lt. Dan, it sidelines them in favor of yet another “how Forrest changed America” moment.

The film also demonstrates a lack of self-awareness in some moments, notably in how it presents Jenny as a sympathetic character — while viewers see her as the film’s villain.

Forrest Gump tests the audience’s suspension of disbelief a little too much, practically casting its hero as the most influential American since George Washington himself. The film also demonstrates a lack of self-awareness in some moments, notably in how it presents Jenny as a sympathetic character — while viewers see her as the film’s villain. While Forrest himself is sympathetic, it can come off as sickly-sweet in its character journey, robbing him of depth until the end.

9

The Shawshank Redemption (1994)

Directed By Frank Darabont

Movie

My Favorite Movies
My Watchlist

Success!

Your Rating

close

10 stars

9 stars

8 stars

7 stars

6 stars

5 stars

4 stars

3 stars

2 stars

1 star

Rate Now

0/10

Leave a Review

Your comment has not been saved

The Shawshank Redemption

R

Drama

ScreenRant logo

9/10

22

9.6/10

Release Date

October 14, 1994

Runtime

142 minutes

Director

Frank Darabont

Writers

Stephen King, Frank Darabont

Cast

See All

  • Headshot Of Tim Robbins

    Tim Robbins

  • Headshot Of Morgan Freeman In The 63rd International Television Festival - 'The Gray House'

    Morgan Freeman

Tim Robbins and Morgan Freeman star in Frank Darabont’s 1994 adaptation of Stephen King’s novella Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption. After being sentenced to life in prison for the alleged murder of his wife, Robbins’ Andy Dufresne learns the value of hope, persistence, and true friendship as he befriends kindhearted convicts like Freeman’s “Red” Redding and uses his wits to expose the secret crimes of Bob Gunton’s cruel penitentiary warden Samuel Norton.

Main Genre

Drama

Studio(s)

Columbia Pictures

Distributor(s)

Columbia Pictures

Powered by

Expand
Collapse

Based on Stephen King’s story, The Shawshank Redemption has become the definitive prison movie in the eyes of millions of movie fans since its 1994 release. Telling the story of an innocent man incarcerated in a dangerous penitentiary, it explores life behind bars, from guard corruption and abuse to the psychological toll of being institutionalized. Although many of the character arcs are great, the film sacrifices realism for its message every step of the way.

John Coffey escorted in cuffs by policemen in The Green Mile

Related

10 Best Protagonists In Stephen King Movies, Ranked

From Andy Dufresne to Gordie and Chris, a ranking of the best and most well-written protagonists in movies based on the stories of Stephen King.

Posts

3

The Shawshank Redemption is a brilliant movie, and it more than earned its subsequent success through the home video market (despite having flopped). At the same time, it isn’t without its faults, from the story’s overly sympathetic, even angelic depiction of some of its inmates, who could benefit from some moral ambiguity, to its obsessive fan base. It’s a touching film, but it lays its message on a bit too thick.

8

2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)

Directed By Stanley Kubrick

Movie

My Favorite Movies
My Watchlist

Success!

Your Rating

close

10 stars

9 stars

8 stars

7 stars

6 stars

5 stars

4 stars

3 stars

2 stars

1 star

Rate Now

0/10

Leave a Review

Your comment has not been saved

2001: A Space Odyssey

G

Adventure

Mystery

Sci-Fi

ScreenRant logo

9/10

14

8.6/10

Release Date

April 3, 1968

Runtime

149 minutes

Director

Stanley Kubrick

Writers

Stanley Kubrick, Arthur C. Clarke

Cast

See All

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Keir Dullea

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Gary Lockwood

2001: A Space Odyssey is one of Stanley Kubrick’s most well-known films. A science-fiction epic, the film tells the story of the journey of Discovery One, a spacecraft operated by a group of scientists, astronauts, and a sentient computer, on a mission to Jupiter to investigate a mysterious monolith. Considered one of the greatest films ever made, Kubrick combines sparse dialogue with the heavy use of scoring and ambiguous imagery to create something that eschews conventional filmmaking. 

Studio(s)

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

Distributor(s)

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

Powered by

Expand
Collapse

Developed by Stanley Kubrick and Arthur C. Clarke, 2001: A Space Odyssey revolves around a space voyage to Jupiter as the ship’s sentient AI, HAL-900, endangers the crew. The film is loaded full of mystery and complex themes, something that defined the director’s career. However, here it takes the cake as the audience is shown some of the longest, most drawn-out scenes in cinematic history.

Stanley Kubrick was always known for his slow pacing and attention to detail, but 2001 pushes even his most devoted fans to the limits of their patience. Once the film really gets going and embraces its weirdness, it makes for a fun, enigmatic piece of fiction that still has people analyzing it today. However, with its long run time and decompressed storytelling, the film comes across as incredibly self-indulgent, and it’s common for even the biggest sci-fi fans to need a few sittings to get through it.

7

The Godfather (1972)

Directed By Francis Ford Coppola

Movie

My Favorite Movies
My Watchlist

Success!

The Godfather Poster

Your Rating

close

10 stars

9 stars

8 stars

7 stars

6 stars

5 stars

4 stars

3 stars

2 stars

1 star

Rate Now

0/10

Leave a Review

Your comment has not been saved

The Godfather

R

Drama

Crime

ScreenRant logo

9/10

136

9.2/10

Release Date

March 24, 1972

Runtime

175 minutes

Director

Francis Ford Coppola

Writers

Mario Puzo, Francis Ford Coppola

Sequel(s)

The Godfather Part II, The Godfather Part III

Cast

See All

  • Marlon Brando

    Marlon Brando

    Don Vito Corleone

  • Headshot of Al Pacino

    Al Pacino

    Michael Corleone

The Godfather chronicles the Italian-American Corleone crime family from 1945 to 1955. Following an assassination attempt on family patriarch Vito Corleone, his youngest son Michael emerges to orchestrate a brutal campaign of retribution, cementing his role in the family’s illicit empire.

Main Genre

Drama

Studio(s)

Paramount Pictures

Distributor(s)

Paramount Plus

Powered by

Expand
Collapse

The Godfather documents the saga of an Italian-American crime family, the Corleones, as the son, Michael, returns from World War II and is roped back into the family business. From the outset, the film makes clear that it isn’t an action-thriller, nor a morally black and white crime movie. Instead, it’s a nuanced character study of Michael Corleone, using every step of the story to explore the corruption of his soul and destruction of his status as a literal hero.

Close

I view Coppola’s Godfather as a true masterpiece, but I can understand why fans of modern cinema might feel the movie — but it depends on a viewer’s taste. For people who enjoy films with a wide emotional range, from highs to lows, the film brings an almost unparalleled degree of seriousness. In a world where cinema tends to blend genres and emotions, some might take the story as too stern, serious and self-impressed with its own use of subtext.

6

Citizen Kane (1941)

Directed By Orson Welles

Movie

My Favorite Movies
My Watchlist

Success!

Your Rating

close

10 stars

9 stars

8 stars

7 stars

6 stars

5 stars

4 stars

3 stars

2 stars

1 star

Rate Now

0/10

Leave a Review

Your comment has not been saved

Citizen Kane

PG

Drama

Documentary

Mystery

ScreenRant logo

10/10

10/10

Release Date

April 17, 1941

Runtime

119 minutes

Director

Orson Welles

Writers

Herman J. Mankiewicz, Orson Welles, John Houseman, Roger Q. Denny, Mollie Kent

Cast

See All

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Orson Welles

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Joseph Cotten

Directed by and starring Orson Welles in his feature film debut, Citizen Kane tells the life story of Charles Foster Kane, a self-made business tycoon partially based on William Randolph Hearst. The film tells the story of Kane’s rise and fall from power, narratively framed by the sensation caused by death at the beginning and end of the film. Besides Welles, Joseph Cotten, Dorothy Comingore, Ray Collins, Agnes Moorehead, and Ruth Warrick also star. 

Studio(s)

Warner Bros. Pictures

Distributor(s)

Paramount Pictures, Warner Bros. Pictures

Powered by

Expand
Collapse

Citizen Kane retroactively explores the life of a business magnate, Charles Foster Kane, after his death. Throughout the story, the audience slowly begins to realize the tragedy behind the man as, despite his enormous wealth, he is full of regrets and nostalgia for his childhood. Here, the classic “money can’t buy happiness” story that’s defined so many movies was brought to perfection.

Imagery-from-Forrest-Gump-and-No-Country-For-Old-Men

Related

10 Great Drama Movies With Amazing Rewatch Value

Drama movies rarely have as much rewatch value as comedies, musicals or children’s movies, but there are a few exceptions to this rule.

Posts

1

Despite being a truly brilliant piece of cinema, whose technical achievements deserve respect, Citizen Kane is one of those films that almost expects the admiration of critics and audiences. This isn’t entirely the fault of Welles, nor the story, but rather an image that has been foisted upon it by generations of pretentious critics since. It isn’t enough that the film be respected; some insist much too hard that it’s the greatest film of all time, and are happy to ignore its flaws.

5

Everything Everywhere All At Once (2022)

Directed By Daniel Kwan And Daniel Scheinert

Movie

My Favorite Movies
My Watchlist

Success!

Your Rating

close

10 stars

9 stars

8 stars

7 stars

6 stars

5 stars

4 stars

3 stars

2 stars

1 star

Rate Now

0/10

Leave a Review

Your comment has not been saved

Everything Everywhere All at Once

R

Adventure

Comedy

Action

ScreenRant logo

8/10

22

8.7/10

Release Date

March 25, 2022

Runtime

132 minutes

Director

Daniel Kwan, Daniel Scheinert

Writers

Daniel Scheinert, Daniel Kwan

Cast

See All

  • Headshot Of Jenny Slate In The 2024 Disney Upfront

    Jenny Slate

  • Headshot Of Ke Huy Quan

    Ke Huy Quan

In Everything Everywhere All at Once, a middle-aged laundromat owner (Michelle Yeoh) is distracted from her financial and family issues by a multiversal crisis. With just her husband (Ke Huy Quan) to support her through the confusion, she must contend with her overbearing traditional father (James Hong), a pencil-pushing auditor (Jamie Lee Curtis), and her emotionally-distant daughter (Stephanie Hsu). 

Powered by

Expand
Collapse

In 2022, Everything Everywhere All At Once became an overnight sensation as it put Michelle Yeoh on the map for a new generation and swept the Oscars. Telling the story of an immigrant woman who becomes the focus of a fight to save the multiverse from an evil version of her daughter, it’s a great exercise in style and cinematography. However, as the story progresses, the film-makers get lost in the novelty behind the concept.

A classic piece of Oscar-bait, critics didn’t help dispel the film’s reputation as overrated when they gave it seven Academy Award wins.

Everything Everywhere All At Once almost feels like a movie that was simply created to serve as the ‘thinking person’s’ take on the multiverse. While the character arcs are good and the film’s unique style is captivating, it also comes across as self-congratulatory in some sequences. Though the film’s message of acceptance and generational trauma is powerful, the idea that it needed an epic multiversal adventure to be said is a bit silly. A classic piece of Oscar-bait, critics didn’t help dispel the film’s reputation as overrated when they gave it seven Academy Award wins.

4

Gone With the Wind (1939)

Directed By Victor Fleming

Movie

My Favorite Movies
My Watchlist

Success!

Your Rating

close

10 stars

9 stars

8 stars

7 stars

6 stars

5 stars

4 stars

3 stars

2 stars

1 star

Rate Now

0/10

Leave a Review

Your comment has not been saved

Gone With the Wind

pg-13

Drama

Documentary

Romance

War

ScreenRant logo

10/10

9.3/10

Release Date

December 15, 1939

Runtime

238 minutes

Director

Victor Fleming, George Cukor, Sam Wood

Writers

Margaret Mitchell, Sidney Howard, Oliver H.P. Garrett, Ben Hecht, Jo Swerling, John Van Druten

Cast

See All

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Thomas Mitchell

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Barbara O’Neil

Based on Margaret Mitchell’s classic novel, Gone With the Wind follows Scarlett O’Hara, the daughter of a plantation owner in the American South during the Civil War. Through the hardships of the war and the Reconstruction Era, Scarlett’s intense romantic life is documented, particularly her relationship with two different men Ashley Wilkes and Rhett Butler. Vivien Leigh stars as Scarlett, with Clark Gable as Rhett. 

Studio(s)

Warner Bros. Pictures

Distributor(s)

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Warner Bros. Pictures

Powered by

Expand
Collapse

Argued by many to be one of cinema’s first true epic dramas, Gone With the Wind details the life of a Southern woman in the aftermath of the Civil War as she pursues her love. What follows is a long, albeit visually stunning, exploration of the lives of a plantation family as the war is won, slavery ends and Reconstruction begins. At no point does the film meaningfully address virtually anything of substance of its era, instead pushing its backdrop to the side for a pretentious romance story.

At four hours long, Gone With the Wind is a film that, despite some beautiful scenery, lacks all self-awareness in just how tedious it can be. Not only is the audience simply expected to go along with its sometimes rosy depiction of the Antebellum South, but the film is packed full of moments that seek to cast Confederates in a sympathetic light. The more time passes and the more society progresses, the more tone-deaf and pretentious the movie becomes. If anything, the film has coasted by on its iconic “frankly my dear, I don’t give a damn” line.

3

Inception (2010)

Directed By Christopher Nolan

Movie

My Favorite Movies
My Watchlist

Success!

Your Rating

close

10 stars

9 stars

8 stars

7 stars

6 stars

5 stars

4 stars

3 stars

2 stars

1 star

Rate Now

0/10

Leave a Review

Your comment has not been saved

Inception

PG-13

Adventure

Sci-Fi

Thriller

Action

ScreenRant logo

10/10

42

8.9/10

Release Date

July 16, 2010

Runtime

148 minutes

Director

Christopher Nolan

Writers

Christopher Nolan

Franchise(s)

Inception

Cast

See All

  • Headshot Of Leonardo DiCaprio In The 35th Annual Palm Springs International Film Festival Awards Night

    Leonardo DiCaprio

    Cobb

  • Headshot Of Joseph Gordon-Levitt In The Hollywood Critics Association's 2023 HCA Film Awards

    Joseph Gordon-Levitt

    Arthur

Inception, directed by Christopher Nolan, features a skilled thief who uses dream-sharing technology to steal corporate secrets. He is tasked with planting an idea into a CEO’s mind, while confronting his troubled past, which threatens the mission and his team.

Main Genre

Action

Studio(s)

Warner Bros. Pictures

Distributor(s)

Warner Bros. Pictures

Powered by

Expand
Collapse

When Christopher Nolan made Inception, he had many fans singing its praises as the best film of his career. Exploring a team of specialists who infiltrate peoples’ dreams to extract information, the film built up a great idea, effectively being a psychological heist. As fun as the story is, it seems to work backwards from its elevator-pitch premise, and attaches too many rules to something that would be so much more interesting without them.

(Matthew-McConaughey-as-Cooper)-from-Interstellar-&-(Leonardo-DiCaprio-as-Cobb)-from-Inception-&-(John-David-Washington-as-Protagonist)-from-Tenet-&-(Christian-Bale-as-Bruce-Wayne--Batman)-from-The-Dark-Knight

Related

3 Christopher Nolan Movies Have A Rare Letterboxd Record (That Only 3 Other Films Have Achieved)

Three of Christopher Nolan’s movies have managed to achieve a rare record on Letterboxd that only three other (non-Nolan) movies have accomplished.

Posts

Like many of Christopher Nolan’s films, Inception practically demands the audience respect it for its intricate, cerebral plot, playing on its use of time and mystery to intrigue people. More than anything else, I always felt that the film actually wasted its premise. The ability to explore someone else’s dreams should be a vehicle for a trippy, psychedelic experience — but all the audience gets is bland gimmicks with the expectation they will be impressed.

2

Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1992)

Directed By Francis Ford Coppola

Movie

My Favorite Movies
My Watchlist

Success!

n39glc4gkbecbwdenes8zbodim8.jpg

Your Rating

close

10 stars

9 stars

8 stars

7 stars

6 stars

5 stars

4 stars

3 stars

2 stars

1 star

Rate Now

0/10

Leave a Review

Your comment has not been saved

Bram Stoker’s Dracula

R

Horror

Romance

1/10

Release Date

November 13, 1992

Runtime

127 Minutes

Director

Francis Ford Coppola

Writers

Bram Stoker, James V. Hart

Cast

See All

  • Headshot Of Gary Oldman In The 77th Cannes Film Festival

    Gary Oldman

    Dracula

  • Headshot Of Winona Ryder In The Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards

    Winona Ryder

    Mina Murray / Elisabeta

Bram Stoker’s Dracula, set in 19th century England, follows Count Dracula as he journeys to London. There, he encounters Mina Harker, who bears a striking resemblance to his long-lost love.

Main Genre

Horror

Powered by

Expand
Collapse

In 1992, Francis Ford Coppola released what has since become the most iconic modern Dracula movie, casting Gary Oldman as the vampire. While audiences had typically associated the character with evil, Coppola sought to bring a tragic, romantic plot to the story. By contrast, the prior iterations of the villain, as defined by the likes of Christopher Lee, had always been considerably darker figures driven by intelligence, obsession, and power. In effect, the director tried too hard to romanticize the villain, losing the edge of the original story.

Close

Coppola’s version of Dracula has its moments, but his take plays too much into the tragic, lovesick image of vampires that has become so irritating for many fans of the genre. The movie’s bizarre character designs also straddled the line between dark fantasy and camp, with the aged Dracula’s infamously bad hairdo being too much to take seriously. The film tries much too hard to work as a period piece, and it ironically makes it that much less believable — not to mention the American cast members’ terrible accents.

1

Fight Club (1999)

Directed By David Fincher

Movie

My Favorite Movies
My Watchlist

Success!

Fight Club Movie Poster

Your Rating

close

10 stars

9 stars

8 stars

7 stars

6 stars

5 stars

4 stars

3 stars

2 stars

1 star

Rate Now

0/10

Leave a Review

Your comment has not been saved

Fight Club

R

Drama

ScreenRant logo

9/10

49

8.7/10

Release Date

October 15, 1999

Runtime

139 minutes

Director

David Fincher

Writers

Jim Uhls

Franchise(s)

Fight Club

Cast

See All

  • Headshot Of Brad Pitt In The Babylon Premiere

    Brad Pitt

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Meat Loaf

Fight Club, David Fincher’s 1999 thriller starring Brad Pitt, Edward Norton, and Helena Bonham Carter, is the cinematic adaptation of Chuck Palahniuk’s eponymous 1996 novel. In it, reckless soapmaker Tyler Durden helps the desolate Narrator find meaning in his monotonous life by creating an underground fight club where dejected men release their frustration in the form of fistfights.

Main Genre

Drama

Studio(s)

20th Century

Distributor(s)

20th Century

Powered by

Expand
Collapse

Explored through the eyes of its nameless narrator, Fight Club follows its protagonist as he seeks a break from the soul-crushing monotony of life in corporate America. Accompanied by the dangerous but affirming Tyler Durden, he goes on a journey to discover his masculinity and individualism by starting an underground fight club. While the story presents us with a good message about not being consumed by “the system,” its overly-edgy style sometimes comes across like a sullen teenager’s worldview. Shockingly, many of the film’s fans embraced this without a hint of irony.

The film’s themes of being subsumed by a corporation and loss of identity still resonate, but its borderline romanticism of nihilism can be too much.

Fight Club is one of those movies that, while good, insists upon its irreverent, nonconformist message so much that it created one of the most conformist fandoms in movie history. In Fincher’s defense, it would be silly to say anyone involved in the movie saw Tyler Durden as heroic, but the film still plays into that persona for the viewers. The film’s themes of being subsumed by a corporation and loss of identity still resonate, but Fight Club’s muddied sense of nihilism can be too much.

Leave a Comment