Is he an elite director?


Now that he's won his second directing Oscar that puts him along some greats like Spielberg, Ang Lee and Milos Foreman. However, with the exception of Spielberg, I've always been reluctant to call all these guys elite. Do you consider Iñárritu to be elite since critics have generally gave all his movies a positive response? What constitutes an elite director to you?

Here are some directors I think are elite:

Stanely Kubrick
Federico Fellini
Ingmar Bergman
Alfred Hitchcock
Akira Kurosawa
Woody Allen

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I think he is but probably will get a more wide recognition later in his carreer

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He is no Stanley Kubrick yet but he is now in a different category of directors.

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Yes since birdman definitely. Always been top drawer with getting great performances from his actors

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Working directors are always in a tricky spot when debating all-time greats for a few reasons. The biggest issue tends to be warped perception -- there will always be the naïve young fans who think "X Current Director" is the greatest of all-time. That then leads to a backlash from cinephiles who subconsciously diminish how good the director actually is to compensate for some 14-year old kid who made a thread on imdb. As such, it's often not until the director stops working that he's given the mainstream respect he deserves.

Oppositely though, and perhaps equally interesting, cinephiles will often overcompensate and over inflate the greatness of older directors. I am confident that I've been guilty of both of those psychological blunders at various times over the years.

As for your question regarding where Inarritu stands, I think he deserves relatively high placement. He's directed only six films, but they're all great. In fact, I can easily argue that Inarritu's worst film is better than any other director's worst film throughout film history (director's with at least six films). That's a very impressive achievement.

I keep a running, dynamic list of my all-time favorite directors and Inarrittu currently ranks #20. Considering his small filmography, I can understand why many film snobs might look down their nose at me, but I'd argue that they're probably not being very honest with themselves.

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I agree with that. As great as Jennifer Hudson was in "Dreamgirls", what Adriana Barraza did in "Babel" positively gutted me. My family has had a housekeeper from Nicaragua with us since I was an infant that we consider part of the family and Barraza's last ten minutes in the film was like a horrid dream of the worst that could happen to her if her citizenship wasn't in order.

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no not really. i dont think he has made something among the works of the people you mentioned other than Birdman.

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Not yet. If he makes one or two more good films he will be elite in my book. Right now, Birdman was kinda 50/50 with audiences and The Revenant only got good reviews because of hype from Birdman.

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He's not in the Bergman or Kubrick league yet but as far as directors working today go he's for sure among the best.

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