Sara Davidson
|December, 8, 2025
Every Friday night my friend, Tina, invites a few women to her home to watch a move she’s chosen, on her large screen TV, while her small white Shih Tzu, Tashi, sits at our feet.
Last Friday it was Annie Hall with Diane Keaton and Woody Allen, who directed it, almost fifty years ago—1979. Was it really that long ago? The movie was as fresh and funny last Friday as it was in the 1970’s.
“La dee da,” says Keaton, looking charming, wearing a men’s vest and tie.

Woody, of course, is as humorously neurotic as we’ve remembered, and when the film ended, we all were smiling.
There are few rituals in most of our lives, and for me, the week seems to pass more quickly and happily when I know we have the movie coming Friday. Tina has a unique sense of humor and charm, and so far, she hasn’t picked a single movie we haven’t enjoyed, if not loved.
Tina’s been going to the Telluride, CO, film festival held over Labor Day for more than three decades, along with her two sons and their partners. They rent a condo, watch movie screenings, and listen to panel discussions by directors and actors for three days and nights. “It’s a ritual trip that none of us ever want to miss,” she says.
Many of the films they see are forgettable, but when she sees one she finds outstanding, she adds it to the list she’s been keeping for more than thirty years. And it’s from that list that she selects our Friday night films.
“Personally, I feel a movie has the potential to be a perfect gem—like a painting, a sculpture or piece of music,” Tina says. “A great movie has something more to give you than thrills, explosions and gunshots for an hour and a half.”
She says that some films on her list “I haven’t seen for twenty or thirty years, like Gone with the Wind, and it’s compelling to see how they impact us in our current lives.” She adds that they’re not all Academy Award Winners. “Often the Academy doesn’t value the films I do.”
The film critic Judith Crist once told me you can make a great movie from a mediocre book, but you can’t make a great film from a great book. Because the power of the book is in its voice, and the power of the film is in its images. If you know of an exception, I’d like to hear it.
Here’s a list of what we’ve seen, in case you’d like to start a movie group or watch on your own. (All films available online, some for a small fee) And we’d love to hear suggestions of films we might add to the list. I especially loved A Chorus Line for the spectacular dancing. And, The Painted Veil filled me with awe. As Tina put it, “Every single frame in that film is like a painting. It’s well cast, heartrending, and inspirational.”
1 Beaches 32 Legends of the Fall
2 Longshot 33 The Reader
3 Broadcast News 34 The Ides of March
4 The Painted Veil 35 World According Garp
5 The Long Hot Summer 36 Reds
6 Notes on a Scandal 37 The Sting
7 Postcards from the Edge 38 Harold and Maud
8 Body Heat 39 A Chorus Line
9 The Big Chill 40 Gone with the Wind
10 Midnight in Paris 41 Chinatown
11 Network 42 Out of Africa
12 The Way We Were 43 Almost Famous
13 All about Eve 44 Dr. Zhivago
14 The Graduate 45 A Real Pain
15 Rust & Bone 46 Annie Hall
16 Trainwreck 47 Manhattan
17 The Cider House Rules 48 The Pawnbroker
18 The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie 49 Memoirs of a Geisha
19 Rain Man 50 The Last Picture Show
20 Hereafter (Matt Damon) 51 Julia
21 Water (Widows in India in 1940’s)
22 Splendor in the Grass (Warren Beatty ‘s first film)
23 The Lives of Others (E German)
24 Starting Out in the Evening. 52 Heartburn
25 The Stories we Tell 53 Steetcar Namd Desire
26 McCabe & Mrs. Miller 54 The Children’s Hour
27 Butch Cassidy & the Sundance Kid
28 Watermarks (Jewish women swim champions defy Hitler)
29 Devil Wears Prada 55 All the President’s Men
30 Monsters’ Ball
31 Terms of Endearment
If you have any suggestions of other films to watch, please respond to this blog. Maybe start a movie group of your own?
Tina’s planning to put her movie list on Substack with opportunities for discussion, if you’re interested, let us know.
Happy watching!
AND DO LEAVE A COMMENT: What was the last film you loved and why? Or, what’s on your mind today?
Hi Sara. Marcia and I just watched the new George Clooney film Jay Kelly. We were surprised how sad and moving it was. It will be his last film as he has announced his retirement to focus on philanthropy and raising his children. It was definitely a movie of art imitating life. Wishing you and yours a wonderful holiday season and a safe and healthy 2026.
There are two Bette Davis films that I thought of when I read your blog. Both of these films I have watched dozens of times. “The Little Foxes” from 1940 or 1941, with screenplay by Lillian Hellman based on her play. It is a masterpiece. With great performances by Dan Duryea and Herbert Marshall. The second film is Bette’s next to last film as I recall: “The Whales of August.” From 1986, I think. With excellent performances by Lillian Gish, Vincent Price, and Ann Sothern. A very quiet, very moving film about two sisters living in Maine at end of WWII. Just stunning.
Is there a film of your great book “Loose Change”? Or since, as Crist said, “You can’t make a great film from a great book,” maybe the film, if it exists, isn’t great? In any case, I would love to see it because I loved your book.
Hi, sorry to be late in replying. There was a terrible tv movie made of “Loose Change,” I doubt you’d enjoy it. Maybe some day, somehow, someone will make a good film of it. Thanks for getting in touch.
Want a laugh? Watch Bridesmaids. Wait for the airplane scene. Brilliant comedic acting. Too long, but worth the watch, for sure. Your movie club sounds fabulous. Myneighborhood women have been playing Mah Jongg weekly for a year. It’s not movies, but it’s so wonderful!
my mother played mah jong, and I have a friend in HI who plays. But I’m not big on games. I saw Bridesmaids some time ago. Maybe I’ll watch it again. Thanks for your message. Sara
I love the list, have seen many of them, and have gotten some great suggestions! I would suggest Living Out Loud, Passion Fish, and Sliding Doors. The last movie I watched was the new Bruce Springsteen movie, which I loved! Thank you!
Thanks, Kristin, for your note. I’ll try the movies you recommended. Are you, by chance, related to Kathy or Paul Butterfield? Warmest, Sara
So pleased to see The Lives of Others here. Another compelling film is The Zone of Interest based loosely on a book by the late, great writer, Martin Amis. So many more! I like your selections very much. I am a major film buff and am attending two screenings (pre release ) this week at our local film center..
I hosted a Girls’ Movie Night for years when I lived in California — usually every few months. I miss it! Here’s the blog I wrote about it. 🙂 https://hilaryrobertsgrant.weebly.com/blog/my-movie-nights