The 10 Most Underrated Movies Made By Legendary Directors

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More often than not, the only way to really get a complete understanding of the way that a director works is to watch everything of theirs that is available. Interviews, movies, behind the scenes documentaries… all of it! However, sometimes even this isn’t enough, and this can come as a great disappointment for some film fans who are really looking to have a strong understanding on how the most cinematic minds work.

There’s always one bonus to exploring the back catalogue of a director though – you usually find a brilliant film, deserving of the acclaim of their biggest and most popular works, that has been forgotten about and left behind.

The majority of the best directors have at least one, some have many, and some have none, but usually there is at least one that makes all of the digging worth it. This list is… hopefully… a handy aid to save you some time in exploring the back catalogues of some of the following directors, or at least to try to convince you to look at some of their films that usually get skimmed over.

Every director featured is terrific, some having a couple of duds but still being completely worth exploring heartily! So, without further ado, here are ten sadly underrated films from either very well known or very acclaimed directors!

 

1. Who’s That Knocking At My Door? (Martin Scorsese, 1967)

Starting off with one of the most well known directors of all time, the legendary Martin Scorsese’s debut feature Who’s That Knocking At My Door? Starring Harvey Keitel as a western movie buff and a religious young man in a very early performance, and following his character as he navigates a blossoming relationship until striking a brick wall when he finds out that his partner was once raped, the film intricately glares at the kind of Catholic guilt that got in the way of relationships during much of the first half of the 20th century.

Keitel brings the film his all, and though the direction is a little amateurish at times (understandable, as this is a first feature after all), it continues to boast the energy of Scorsese’s later work in the most endearing ways. With incredible editing, a stunning lead performance and so much intelligent imagery throughout, the film is a totally unexpected treat, as well as something very different compared to the majority of Scorsese’s work.

It’s sadly very overlooked, with many of those who do see it having very low expectations to later be blown out of the water and the rest simply skipping over, but just as with almost all of Scorsese’s work in general, it’s a show-stopper.

 

2. The Testament of Doctor Cordelier (Jean Renoir, 1959)

The horror genre seems like the last one that Jean Renoir would attempt to meddle with, never mind be successful with, but somehow in 1959 he hit yet another home run. Whilst typically passing with flying colours in comedies, satires and romances, Renoir switched up his game here and decided to go for a TV-made horror inspired by the story of Jekyll and Hyde.

With one hell of a leading performance from the excellent Jean-Louis Barrault, consistently stunning chiaroscuro lighting reminiscent of the very best that film noir has to offer and playing out Renoir’s taut, masterful direction (as always), it’s kind of a wonder that this one didn’t seem to stick the landing, the blame more than likely deserving to be placed on poor distribution at the time of release and the rarity of the film even now. It’s a shame, as Renoir clearly has the eye for creating terrific horror (as he did for most any genre), but it was not to be!

 

3. The Long Gray Line (John Ford, 1955)

It’s a well known fact that John Ford is one of the most important directors to ever grace the screen with their directorial presence, however, one thing that many fail to consider is that maybe his most well known films – The Searchers, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, Stagecoach, etc. – aren’t all that Ford has to offer. In doing so, they miss out on a lump of the greatest films of all time, and whilst Liberty Valance still stands out as Ford’s crowning moment – truly a masterpiece, a film so incredible that it is genuinely quite hard to believe – The Long Gray Line (alongside A Quiet Man, They Were Expendable, The Sun Shines Bright… the list goes on) is just remarkable.

Following the majority of the life of the loveable Irish Immigrant Marty Maher as he works in the United States Military Academy, this based-on-a-true-story drama not only glistens in technicolour in a way that would make Stanley Donen blind with envy, but it also manages to capture a ridiculous number of points throughout, intent on exploring a great deal of opposing ideas and viewpoints whilst somehow never becoming confused in what it is actually interested in.

The entire cast is just brilliant, the cinematography is as dreamy as any Hollywood melodrama or musical of the 1950s and 1960s and the emotion involved is breathtaking. If ever you need a film to clean your palette, this is it, a film so perfect that it makes most others look a little bit pathetic in comparison. It towers above most.

 

4. The Trial (Orson Welles, 1962)

The Trial

Orson Welles and Citizen Kane are almost synonymous at this point, with almost all of his success often being attributed to his 1941 masterpiece, however, many people seem to believe that he only ever made a couple of truly great films when the reality is quite different – Welles has one of the most consistently astonishing film careers of any directors, to the point that it was genuinely difficult to choose between three of his masterful works (Othello, The Trial and The Immortal Story) for the one to be featured on this list, and that is coming from someone who hasn’t even finished Welles’ body of work yet.

Adapted from the famous Kafka novel of the same name, Welles’ film fixates on the story of a man, played by Anthony Perkins in what would certainly be his finest performance if it weren’t for his mesmerising turn in Hitchcock’s Psycho just two years before, who is placed under trial without ever being told what he has actually done, or supposed to have done, that is the cause of the trial in the first place.

Using black and white to an astonishing effect and playing up the surrealist shadowy settings of Welles’ production, The Trial is a bamboozling and disorienting film if ever there was, using trippy set design, narrative and cinematography to almost force the audience into seeing this bizarre world from the perspective of our alienated leading man, and yet the film receives a surprisingly small amount of acclaim nowadays, especially considering that it is a story adapted from no less than one of literature’s most adored writers. The reasoning for this not being so well known is quite unknown, but for your own sake, see it.

 

5. Ludwig (Luchino Visconti, 1973)

Ludwig (1972)

Luchino Visconti isn’t the most well known director, but he sure is acclaimed, and it’s no surprise considering the fact that this man is the cinematic mastermind behind the likes of The Leopard and Death In Venice, but he is also yet another director for whom most of their deserved acclaim is only assigned to their two most recognised films, whilst the rest are left to fend for themselves in the background.

This is especially surprising considering the consistency in his quality of output, and the fact that he has adapted some of the most acclaimed books of all time (such as Camus’ The Stranger – the film even starred Marcello Manstroianni!), but for now we will just look into Ludwig, his unforgettably gorgeous four hour period drama epic abut the titular King of Bavaria, going from his crowning onwards.

If ever there was a visual treat of a film, this is it – a film in which the colours seem to drip over the screen, looking much more like a painting than anything attributive to cinema – and yet, still, it received little attention and continues to be skipped over. Fortunately, it is slowly gaining a following, mainly due to MUBI showing the film at the start of this year and it being giving a treatment by Arrow Academy.