7. Full Metal Jacket (1987) (Dir. Stanley Kubrick)
Truly a movie in two halves, Stanley Kubrick’s mediation on war and its effect on human nature has endured as a classic of the genre, and certainly holds up as one of the master’s greatest achievements. Full Metal Jacket focuses on Pvt. Joker: we watch him triumph through the hell that is boot camp (where he and his company are terrorised by real-life drill instructor R. Lee Ermey) to the actual hell that is 1960s Vietnam. Though it’s been pondered as to what Kubrick was trying to say with Full Metal Jacket, it’s an unashamedly entertaining ride on even a surface level basis: Kubrick peppered the movie with a rocking soundtrack, glorious set-pieces and put them shoulder to shoulder with moments of genuine horror. As the movie ends with troops marching through a burned out city singing the theme from the Mickey Mouse club, there’s no doubt as to Full Metal Jacket’s lingering power.