The Daily - The 100 Best Movies of the 21st Century
Episode Date: August 14, 2025Warning: This episode contains strong language.This summer, The New York Times put out a list of the top 100 movies of the past 25 years. It prompted furious debate about what movies stand the test of... time, why they matter and what those movies tell us about ourselves.Kyle Buchanan, a pop culture reporter for The Times, discusses how the list came to be, and actors and directors including Celine Song, Molly Ringwald and Ebon Moss-Bachrach speak about their votes.Guest: Kyle Buchanan, who is a pop culture reporter and serves as The Projectionist, the awards season columnist for The New York Times.Background reading: Read the list of the 100 best movies of the 21st century so far.Here’s how The Times decided on the list.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday. Photo: Jake May/The Flint Journal-MLive.com, via Associated Press Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From The New York Times, I'm Natalie Kittrow-F.
This is The Daily.
This summer, the New York Times put out a list of the top 100 movies of the 21st century.
It prompted furious debate about what movies stand the test of time
You shall not pass
Why they matter and what those movies tell us about ourselves
Does he make you laugh?
He doesn't make me cry
My colleague Kyle Buchanan explains
Are you not detained
Are you not detained?
It's Thursday.
It's Thursday, August 14th.
Kyle, welcome to the show.
It is really wonderful to be talking to you about movies at this time when the news has just been coming at us like a fire hose every single day.
Thank you for this.
I'm happy to provide that relief.
You've been covering this industry for what?
Two decades or something like that?
Yes, I started as a child prodigy, if that's what you're getting at.
Exactly, yeah.
Here you are, 25 years old, talking to us here at the Daily.
Okay, we are here to discuss something really ambitious that you and your colleagues at the Culture Desk did this summer,
which is that you ranked the top 100 movies of the 21st century.
And this is coming at a pretty interesting time for the movies.
Some might say it's not the best moment for the movies, for the craft, for the business.
And yet, you put out this list and people kind of lost their minds.
Millions of people read it.
It was commented upon.
There were TikTok videos made about it.
There was a separate reader list that we will get to.
It was a thing, is the point.
It was a massive thing.
And honestly, very encouraging for me as somebody who loves movies to see just how strongly people responded to this.
You know, as you said, I think there's been some debate recently over, you know, the art form of movies.
Have movies lost their cultural influence?
They used to feel so primary when it came to art.
And I think this poll, this reaction to it, is kind of a refutation of that.
It proves movies still matter.
And I think one of the things that made this list.
really special, is how you actually constructed it. You called these filmmakers, actors,
writers, directors, and asked them to tell you what their favorites were. And the Daily actually
called some of them and had some pretty amazing conversations about it.
So, first of all, should I call you, Steve? You should call me Steve. Just don't call me late
to dinner. But my name is Stephen King. My name is Barry Jenkins.
Amosene Song. I'm Molly Ringwald. I'm Gina Prince Bythwood. I'm Benny Safty. I make movies and I act in movies.
Writer, director, producer. I'm an actor. Writer director. And I've been fortunate enough to be able to write a number of books and stories that have been made into movies.
Okay, how'd you collect all of these ballots?
Basically, we went to about 500 people who work in the movie industry and around.
it. And we asked them to submit their ballots for what they thought were the 10 best movies
released since January 1st, 2000. And we really went after an eclectic group of people. We have
the director and the star of the Last Best Picture winner, that be Sean Baker, who made
Anora and Mikey Madison, who starred in it. We have other movie stars, Julianne Moore, Tilda Swinton,
she would tell Egya four, and an incredible array of Oscar-winning directors like Pedro Medova,
Sophia Coppola, Guillermo del Toro,
Cor Jefferson.
It's a really exciting list,
and as those ballots came in,
I couldn't wait to see what they picked.
The idea of a 10 best or 10 favorite anything,
it's impossible.
Anything that makes me want to choose it
because it's going to make me look cool,
I won't choose.
I'll be honest.
The only reason why I agreed to do this podcast
is so I could get two more films onto my list.
You know, there's a part of you
that just like wants to like pick the ones
that nobody else picks.
but I didn't do that.
I actually picked the ones that I thought were really the best.
And really the most exciting thing for me has been to see how many different people interpret that prompt.
The idea of what are my 10 favorite movies, or are they 10 best, or are they 10 most serious, or 10 funniest?
You know, that can be anything to you.
I'll start with Moonlight.
In Moonlight, Black boys look blue.
I just remember being so still at the end of it.
I didn't want to move.
At some point, you got to decide for yourself.
Tell you what, we could have had a good life together,
but you didn't want it, Ennis.
So what we got now is Brokeback Mountain, I think,
was one that I remember just being floored by in the movie theater.
I wish I knew how to quit you.
Yeah, this is a deal.
Hey, it's me.
This guy from L.A., Barry Egan.
He's called...
Hush drunk love is on my list.
It's just my favorite movie by Paul Thomas Anderson.
Hello, sir.
My name's Barry Egan.
I called your service the other night.
Oh, what's that?
I'm not saying it's his best movie or whatever.
I don't care about that.
You know, it's my favorite movie.
So you guys got 500 people to give a very personal take
on the movies that move them,
and that's really the best way to sum up
what this list means.
If I'm channel surfing and what...
One of these movies comes on, I will do my best to stay and watch it.
It was really, at the end of the day, a guttural drive that they got me to that 10 of films that really meant something to me and changed my life.
And in putting this ballot together, you're telling a story about yourself.
You know, the ballot is indicating something about your sensibility.
Even more than that, unconsciously, you're telling the story of your last 25 years, you know, the 25 years.
You know, the 25 years that you've experienced, the movies that you've watched, the things that really stick to you that maybe you saw 23 years ago, but you can't stop thinking about them, that says something about you.
And I think what's really been gripping about this is that these ballots, even more than just revealing something about the state of the movie industry, can reveal something about ourselves.
Okay. You know this world very, very well. What did you see when you?
you looked at this list. Now you've had time to analyze it.
There's movies that you wouldn't have expected to make the list or make it as highly as they
did. And then there's things that I thought were no-brainers that were absolutely going to make
the 100 that were left off totally. And also, in addition to that, a lot of revealing themes
that tell their own story of where the film industry has gone over the last 25 years.
Okay, we're obviously not going to be able to go through every single one of the top 100.
but I am very excited to get into this.
Let's start by talking about a category
that you wouldn't have expected to be on there.
Honestly, I didn't think we'd see as many comedies as we saw,
and I was delighted that we saw them.
There are movies like bridesmaids.
You know what?
Why can't you just be happy for me
and then go home and talk behind my back later
like a normal person?
Borat,
This is my country of Kazakhstan.
Best in show.
We both have so much in common.
We both love soup.
Even Anchorman.
I'm on Burgundy.
Damn it, who typed a question mark on the teleprompter?
For the last time, anything you put on that prompter,
Burgundy will read.
And I don't know that necessarily we would have expected those
because when you give people a prompt like this,
maybe the assumption is they default to prestige movies,
you know, big Oscar-venated classics.
Comedies at the Oscars often get short shrift,
and I was pleased to see that on our list
they were well represented.
You know, even somebody like Julianne Moore
who we think of as the actress
who would star in the prestige drama
is picking movies like the 40-year-old virgin on her ballot.
No, Gailie Clarkson!
Right, I saw that. Amazing.
I loved that.
I loved the idiosyncrasies that we all have
if we're being honest
about what art we respond to
and I really appreciated
that people were honest about those things.
I want to talk about Superbad.
It's number 100 on the list.
It's the first one you see when you open the list up.
And I think that one is kind of important because it's the one where you say, like, wow, I guess I'm surprised to see that this movie is in the top 100 of the 21st century.
And yet, it's a movie where I can remember specific scenes from it.
I really connected with it.
What do you make of that one being on here?
I mean, I was surprised too, but I think it's part of the fun of the list.
You know, when people are thinking of best movies, sometimes they're thinking of movies they've only watched once.
Sometimes those movies are so harrowing, you'd only want to watch them once.
Right.
And so you'd expect to be encountering that when you open up this list, and instead, number 100 is super bad.
Wait, you changed your name to McLeaven?
McLevin?
What kind of a stupid name is that, Fogel?
What are you trying to be an Irish R&B singer?
That is a film that, honestly, I think.
Once you see it on this list, it maybe hopefully recontextualizes how you think of this film.
But ultimately, you know, this is a movie that the fans of it have watched countless times
and honestly minted a whole new generation of stars.
Hey, Jules, your partner in coming today?
It's a kind of personal question.
What?
Nothing.
It's my attempt to humor.
I was just...
Including Jonah Hill, Michael Sarah, and Emma Stone, who this is a movie that's turbocharged her.
That was one of the defining teen movies of its generation.
I would say, alongside mean girls, which I wish had made the list.
I know.
Huge snub.
Okay.
So what other patterns did you notice here?
I saw a lot of autour filmmakers through this list.
You know, honestly, there's a handful of people who made movies on this list that take up a really outsized portion, almost a quarter of the hundred.
Okay, so just define autore filmmakers for those of us who may not know exactly what it means.
Yeah.
An autour filmmaker is typically a writer.
director. It's somebody who has such a personal vision or a distinctive style that, you know, you could
essentially call them the author of the movie. And what are some movies? I understand you're saying
a lot of the ones on the list are made by people like that. But give me some examples of movies
that fit that bill. Well, for example, there's four movies on this list that are made by the Cohn
brothers, Joel and Ethan Cohen. You know, they've made no country for old men. Oh,
Brother Were Art Thou, Inside Lewin Davis, a serious man. They have these films that they're shot a
certain way. They tend to have a similar bench of actors. And also there's just all these language
idiosyncrasies that you find in their movies. Even when they're playing with genre, you're seeing
different themes and ideas keep cropping up. I think that's the mark of a true tour. Right. You know
when you're watching a Cohen Brothers film, right? Yes, just as you know when you're watching something by
David Lynch, or even Christopher Nolan, who has the most movies on this list with five.
And what do you make of that, the fact that Nolan is so present on this list?
Yeah, you know, it's a true sign that if anybody could be regarded as the Spielberg of this century,
it's Chris Nolan who manages to make studio movies like The Dark Night and Inception that feel highbrow,
that feel like there's something to them, and that connect in a major way with audiences.
One movie I immediately noticed was Mahal and Drive.
It's number two on the list, David Lynch film, anuteur filmmaker.
I want to talk about that one because while this movie is not my favorite, just to admit that,
I was so amazed and really happy that it was so high on this list, in part because I felt like, wow, this is a weird film.
And yet it connected with so much.
many people like so many people out there loved this kind of really strange dreamlike piece of
art you know it's not a movie that's for everybody but i can guarantee you that everybody will have
their own unique reaction to that movie i think that you could make the case that moholland drive
is too highbrow you know if people didn't connect with it that's probably the pejorative that
they would fling i i think i'm going to get that i'm already my editors are telling me that
I am lowbrow for not getting it. So I agree. We're all allowed to be a little lowbrow. And honestly,
at the same time, even if you don't like Mahal and Drive, there's going to be images, vibes,
scenes, and ideas from it that stick with you forever. You know, it's not a movie that can be
easily forgotten. I think that's part of the reason it showed up on this list. Even its haters
were somewhat transfixed by what that movie was putting forward. And the people who really love it,
You know, it's everything to them.
There's a man in back of this place.
He's the one who's doing it.
I can see him through the wall.
I can see his face.
My name is Evan Moss Backrack.
I'm an actor.
I am in the new Fantastic Four movie.
I work on the bear.
I've worked on girls, and I'm currently making Avengers Five Doomsday.
I hope that I never see that face ever outside of a dream.
Mahal and Drive, number two on the list, I can't tell you this great artist, David Lynch,
and his unique renderings of the world and darkness and this sort of beguiling dream logic,
that so many people felt moved by this movie to vote for it.
I mean, like, number two, David, I mean, I feel like he might, he would be shocked.
What are you doing?
We don't stop here.
A surprise.
For me, what I like in a movie is not knowing what's going to happen from one moment to the next.
I am interested in sitting in the theater.
with a bunch of people and everyone having experience
and nobody knows where anything is going to go.
And certainly in the Mulholland Drive
and all of David Lynch's work,
it's like that he's such a great filmmaker.
You're in the hands of a master.
You're taken care of,
but you're taken on a ride
that you really don't know where you're going.
Man's attitude goes some ways
the way his life will be.
Is that something you might agree with?
Sure.
Sure.
Now, did you answer because that's what you thought I wanted to hear?
Or did you think about what I said and answer?
Because you truly believe that to be right.
I agree with what you said.
Truly.
What I say.
Okay, Kyle, can you give me the rest of the top ten?
Yeah, number ten is the social network.
And I'll bet what you hated the most.
is that they identified me as a co-founder of Facebook.
That's David Fincher's film about the founding of Facebook.
Number nine is Spirited Away,
which is the highest-placing animated movie on our list.
I got my name back.
Will we meet again sometime?
Sure we will.
Promise?
Promise.
Now go and don't look back.
Number eight is get out.
Where are those keys, Rose?
You know I can't give you the keys, right, babe?
So good.
So good, and I was thrilled that it was in the top ten.
Number seven is Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.
Joel, the Eraser Guys are coming here, so what if you take me somewhere else, somewhere where I don't belong, and we hide there till morning?
Man, I can't remember anything without you.
That's very sweet, but try, okay?
Number six, no country for old men from the Cone Brothers.
What's the most you ever lost on the coin toss?
Sir?
The most.
You ever lost, according to us.
I don't know.
I couldn't say.
Call it.
On my list.
Oh, was that on your ballot, too?
Yes.
Number five, Moonlight.
But you ain't got to love me.
Lord knows, I did not have love for you when you needed.
I know that.
So you ain't got to love me.
But you won't know that I love you.
Number four, In the Mood for Love from Wong-Car-Wye.
I don't know you to see what you're going to.
I don't know-lampo.
Number three, there will be blood from the director Paul Thomas Anderson,
starring Daniel Day-Lewis.
I drink your milkshake.
Incredible.
Incredible.
And number two is Mahal and Drive.
This is the girl.
Excellent.
choice. Number one was Parasite.
Not, huh? It's fact!
Okay, let's get into Parasite. I want to know why you think, I mean, you were getting at this, but why you think it is number one.
What about that movie resonated so widely? Well, you know, Parasite was the first movie not in
English to win the Best Picture Oscar, and I think the reasons that it triumphed there have only become
more pronounced in the year since it came out. In addition to just being a damn good movie,
Parasite is about the issues that we're contending with on daily basis right now. In particular,
that wealth gap, that feeling that the boundary between classes is only getting worse and
we're only suffering more and it's stripping away our humanity. That's something that we felt
in 2019 when Parasite came out. That's something we only feel more acutely about now. It is a
film that felt prescient at the time that speaks to our current moment even better than it did
when it came out.
Totally.
I mean, and when you think about Parasite, a movie that is quite literally about class war
in the most violent sense, it sort of feels like it's not just capturing inequities baked
into Korean society.
It's telling us something about the world.
I mean, clearly because it's number one for hundreds.
of people.
Yeah.
You know, honestly,
in the specific,
you find the universal.
And I think the films
that made the list,
especially the films
that placed highly on this list,
are a good example of that.
Yes, Parasite is very specifically
about this section
of South Korean society,
but who can't relate to that?
Right.
Just as even, you know,
some of the stranger films on this list,
there's something that you feel,
something you respond to
that tells you something about your own life.
I'm,
Molly Ringwald. Most people would probably know me from a lot of movies that I did when I was young,
16 Candles, Breakfast Club, Pretty in Pink, and I'm also a writer.
I remember where I saw it. I was in Topanga Canyon at the time, and I was watching it with my husband,
and we really didn't know anything about it.
Wow, really good kind of.
Why do you?
I remember there is that long sequence.
Yama!
You know, they're walking in the house, in the basement.
And I remember it, like, going down a hallway.
And then when you discover this family living in the house.
It's not so.
I remember both my husband and I were just,
like, oh my God, then you're just completely focused.
And there's just not that many movies, I think, that do that on that level.
We'll be right back.
Kyle, we've talked about what is on the list.
I want to talk about what's not on the list.
Among the emissions that we at the daily noticed,
besides for mean, mean,
justice for mean girls.
I can't believe it.
Stop trying to make fetch happen.
It's not going to happen.
Is that there aren't a lot of superhero movies.
What do you make of that?
There are two.
We have Black Panther and the Dark Knight on this list.
But you're right. What do I make of the fact that there are only two on this list?
I think it's an indication that the movie has to be really, really good to stand the test of time,
especially, you know, a lot of superhero storytelling. It's meant to set up the next chapter, right?
Like, these are essentially cliffhangers. They've got post-credit scenes saying,
go to this movie, go to this movie. Maybe at a certain point, it all starts to blur together.
So what are the truly unique visions that come out of this, you know,
corporate studio mandated superhero storytelling, is it even possible to make a film that feels
especially unique when you're serving all of those corporate mandates?
You know, it isn't easy to make an action film that feels distinctive.
There are only a couple people who are even capable of wielding the camera like that.
So when you see films made by, you know, superhero films made by Christopher Nolan and
Ryan Coogler, that those are the only two movies that made this list.
Well, think of the men who made those.
You know, those are true autores.
Those are two of the people who you'd be most excited to see a new movie by.
You know, they're people with a point of view.
Y'all sitting up here comfortable.
Must feel good.
It's about two billion people all over the world that looks like us.
But their lives are a lot harder.
Wakanda has the tools to liberate them all.
And they want to tour us.
Vibran you.
Your weapons.
Our weapons will not be used to watch.
I'm Gina Prince Bythwood, writer-director.
Some of my works include Love and Basketball,
the Woman King, and now the upcoming children of blood and bone.
And now present to you, King, Tijala, the Black Panther.
Black Panther just absolutely reset the game.
And certainly for black filmmakers and black artists,
Ryan was able to infuse so much culture into the Marvel Universe,
and most studios shy away from that because they feel like culture specificity pushes people away,
but it actually pulls them in. It draws you in, and it makes these stories feel fresh.
And Ryan just put so much of our culture in such a beautiful way on such a beautiful big canvas,
at the same time telling a story where we care deeply about both the hero and the villain.
You would destroy the wilder.
What can't I include that?
The world took everything away from me.
Everything I have a love.
Like my two sons, you know, they love Kilmonger.
And I could understand why.
To see my sons walk out of a theater, I think they were 12 and 15 at the time.
Like, with their chests out and their shoulders back,
I mean, that's an amazing thing for them to be able to see themselves reflected like that.
Yeah, he just took Marvel and twisted it and made it.
into something I'm absolutely worthy of praise.
Maybe we can still heal you.
Why?
So you could just lock me up?
Killmonger's death when he and Black Panther
were up on the cliff overlooking the continent
and just his line about those of us who jumped off the slave ships
and into the water.
Just bury me in the ocean.
with my ancestors that jumped from the ships
because they knew death
was better than bondage.
A line like that in a Marvel film.
It was ridiculous and the power of that
and again to see the emotion
not only for my husband and I
who could fully understand that statement
but my sons as well.
Kyle, I wanted to bring up
that the highest ranking version
I think, of this thing you're talking about
where it's like anuteur
blockbuster type of movie
is Mad Max Fury Road.
You wrote a book on this movie.
I could not believe the passion
that this movie elicited
when I talked to people in the industry about it.
So what do you think it was
about this particular action?
movie that made people feel so strongly about it.
I just don't think there's any action movie like it, and I don't think there ever will be again, you know?
I think that's a particularly interesting thing to note, because that movie was the product of a singular
visionary, the director George Miller, but also the way it was made, where it was shot on location with real car,
ashes. Yes, there were special effects aiding everything, but the amount of doing it for real
is something you simply do not get at this scale and will not get at this scale, I think,
ever again. Almost everything is shot on green screen or, you know, in much more studio-managed
environments. Whereas for as fantastical as Madamax Ferry Road is, when you see somebody fall off
a car or a car flips over, you think, wow, I just watched people die.
Totally.
It is visceral in a way that almost nothing is anymore.
Most every superhero temple or action temple we watch right now,
I'm not feeling very much because I think that car was computer generated
and I'm just watching two people slug each other
who aren't feeling anything and do not bleed.
Whereas Mad Max Fury Road, I felt everything and continued.
to, even after having written a book about it, I could watch that and still be transported.
Amazing. You're making me want to go watch it right now.
Good. That was my whole mission doing this podcast.
You, success.
Witnesses!
Witnesses!
Okay, obviously Black Panther and Fury Road are these huge action blockbusters,
but those are not the norm on this list, as we've said.
And I think people who see that might say, well, sure, Hollywood Insiders made this list.
They're kind of the elite.
It's not surprising they didn't choose, you know, superhero movies.
What would you say to that?
Well, what I found very surprising is that ultimately we put together a separate poll.
That poll was drawn from the reader ballots.
When people were given the ability to craft their own ballot, eventually those ballots got tabulated
into their own master list of over 200,000 ballots from the readers.
Wow.
So something that you would...
200,000.
Yeah, something that you would think would be maybe more populist or reflect different
sensibilities.
And we did see some differences.
But what I was struck by is that a lot of those so-called highbrow films that are in the
Hollywood top 10, we also...
found in the reader top 10. In fact, you know, we had rolled out the ability to to cast your
own ballot long before we'd revealed the top 20 movies on the Hollywood list, which we did
in batches of 20 every day. And even, you know, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday of that week as people
were casting their ballots, I was so struck to see both Parasite and Mulholland Drive leading
the reader ballot poll. And many of those same films like No Country for Old Men,
there will be blood, the social network, also in the top 10 for the readers.
Yes, there is more of a willingness to embrace action movies and genre fair.
You've got both Dune movies on the reader list.
You have all three Lord of the Rings movies.
But not many more superhero movies, although you do see Avengers Endgame in the number 100 slot on the reader's list.
What were some of the other similarities you noticed between the two lists?
Well, again, you might expect a Reader's List to reflect the current trends, which, let's be real, the streaming landscape has upended almost everything about our culture.
But at the same time, there were no streaming movies in the top 100 of the Reader's List.
Wow. And in the Hollywood List?
Only one on the Hollywood List, Roma by Alfonso Quaron, who was one of the most represented filmmakers on the Hollywood list.
But I think that's revealing, you know. I love the fact that you.
have a list like this of 100 movies, and if you're curious about any of the films that you haven't
seen, you can almost immediately go to one streaming service or another and fire that movie up
and watch it. That is an incredible level of access, and it really doesn't matter where you live
if there is a movie theater, even by you. But at the same time, I think for the readers to not
be choosing streaming movies may be an indication of how little they're really watching those
movies when they watch them. You know, you can fire up something on streaming and be on your phone.
You can be live tweeting it. You can be checking your Instagram. You can be doing laundry and folding it
as something plays out in the background. And I don't think that's the experience that people are
going to remember when they're thinking about their favorite movies of the last 25 years.
Like I said, you know, that theatrical experience can put such an impressive thumbprint on your
memory of the movie. And I'm not sure that streaming can
replicate that. But it's so interesting because this is something that came up a lot in the conversations
that I had with, you know, the filmmakers and the actors and the writers is that pretty much all of them
said that their favorite movies were ones they had seen on the big screen. And obviously,
these are people that literally do this for a living. But I, too, you know, remember where I was
when I saw, you know, some of my favorite movies physically. Like, I could tell you what row I was in.
And I just wonder if there's something about that, the physical experience, the communal experience that makes it different substantively.
Well, can I answer your question with the question, Natalie?
Oh, yes. You may.
If you had to put a movie that would be your no-brainer pick on your own ballot of 10, what do you remember about the experience of watching that movie?
Okay, I'm so glad you asked. Uncut Gems is the one I would put.
put on there.
Uncut Jems, number 58 on our list, was not nominated for any Oscars, but made that list over many
other films that won Oscars that year.
Okay, it's the best.
I'm so glad to hear that.
You're sending collectives to fuck with me at my office?
Are you out of your fucking mind?
I'm literally minutes away from closing the biggest deal of my goddamn life.
I saw that movie in the second row of the theater.
And it was such an intense, propulsive movie.
I loan that.
That being where I was in the theater
made it feel like I was in a car that had no brakes
and I was speeding down the highway.
Are you going to get that bitch down here now?
It was just overwhelming as an experience.
My friend told me she has a picture of me.
She saw it with me in the movie
just to speak to the communal part of this
at the very end of it.
What the fuck did you just do?
With my hands, like, over my face,
just kind of, like, grabbing my face
because it was palpable, the energy of it.
And I think that energy is what you remember, right?
There is just something about that experience
of seeing that in a theater,
and this list is a real tribute.
to that.
It's like entering another world.
It's like being on a magic carpet, going into somebody else's dream.
You could be a hero.
What I mean is that you would go into the theater and forget yourself.
You would become post.
part of the movie. You would be scared for the people in the movie. You would laugh with people
in the movie. I think watching a movie in a theater, it just transports you.
Where else do you get to have a sound blasting like that, right? Or have an image that big
in front of you. It's a magical place because of that.
The physical requirements of the act of going to see a movie, you know, you have to be a movie.
There's a set amount of time, the lights go down, you're with people.
You are taken on a journey and you have to endure it.
I mean, I suppose you could leave, but you're in the hands of the artist.
There's something about being in a theater with people, you know,
where everybody's laughing at the same moment.
Everybody's crying at the same moment.
It's the shared experience.
of people you don't even know, but we're all laughing at the same time.
We're all crying at the same time.
We're all feeling.
We're all lifted.
We're all scared.
It's an incredible thing.
It's a beautiful thing that theatrical experience.
Okay. So I don't mean to rain.
on our parade of loving the theaters right now.
But I don't think that the fundamental dynamics
of this industry are really going to shift
because of this list or anything else, right?
I mean, streamers are still going to be dominant.
Movies are still going to be competing
with these short little bursts of video on our phone.
I mean, it does make you kind of wonder,
you know, in 25 years,
are we going to be listing the top 100 TikToks of the 21st century?
Is that possible?
I mean, I'd watch them.
It would be quick.
But, you know, at the same time, things do move at the speed of light.
Will TikTok even be around in 10 years for as dominant as it is now?
It's hard to tell.
But I do guarantee you that movies will be.
They've been around for as long as they have.
The process of watching them may continue to change.
You know, the way the movie industry has changed over the last 10 years has been dizzying.
But movies will be around.
And when you have that really wonderful, specific experience with a movie where you feel like a movie gets you and you get a movie in a way that is surprising and maybe even reveal something about yourself, well, who'd pass that experience up?
Kyle, this has been a lot of fun.
Thank you so much for coming on.
I'm glad that I could bring a little bit of fun to the daily.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
We had a very good call. He was on the call. President Zelensky was on the call.
I would rate it at 10, you know, very, very friendly.
Ukrainian president Vladimir Zelensky and European leaders said on Wednesday that they'd worked out a strategy with President Trump
for his upcoming meeting with President Vladimir Putin of Russia.
They agreed upon parameters included insisting that any peace plan start
with a ceasefire, which wouldn't be negotiated without Ukraine at the table,
and that any land swaps between Russia and Ukraine wouldn't be discussed before a ceasefire is put in
place. And on Wednesday, a federal appeals court cleared the way for the Trump administration
to keep withholding billions of dollars in foreign aid that had already been appropriated by
Congress. The court found that the global health nonprofits that received government funding
and had sued to recover that money,
didn't have the right to bring the challenge.
It was the latest in a series of decisions by appeals courts,
which have overturned lower court rulings
curbing sweeping actions by the president.
Today's episode was produced by Michael Simon Johnson,
Shannon Lynn, Rochelle Bonja, and Sidney Harper.
It was edited by Brendan Klinkenberg and Mike Benoit.
contains original music by Alicia E. Toup, Diane Wong, Rowan Nemistow, Michael Simon Johnson, and Dan Powell, and was engineered by Chris Wood.
Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Landsberg of Wonderly.
That's it for the Daily. I'm Natalie Kittrow. See you tomorrow.
Thank you.