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The tendency in movie runtimes seems to be trending toward length, and even if the data doesnât really bear this out, recent, super-long installments in big box office franchises like Marvel and James Bond (the movies being watched the most, that is) at least mean the bloat feels real. For some reason these wildly popular series feel the need to justify their existence by lashing us to our seats for well over two hours, when many of us might have happily paid the same price for a flick that would give us the hope of ever getting home to see our dogs again.
Still, a movieâs quality isnât determined by its length, and most of us are watching these things at home anyway. Some stories are just more effective when they take their timeâeither because they have so much to say and do that nothing feels wasted, or because it allows them the freedom to luxuriate in setting a mood and building a compelling world filled with interesting characters. As the critic Roger Ebert once said, no good movie is too long, and no bad movie is short enough.
So here are 30 good (or great) movies, all of which run to nearly three hours (or much longer), all of which also justify their runtimes by generally make every second worth the sit.
Running time: 2 hours and 45 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: The late, great MiloĹĄ Forman directs this unconventional biopic of musical genius Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, adapting the play by Peter Shaffer, who also wrote the screenplay (they both won Oscars for it, as did lead F. Murray Abraham). Unlike the typical plodding biography, Amadeus tells its story not through the eyes and experiences of Mozart (Tom Hulce) himself, but those of his archenemesis, Antonio Salieri (Abraham), a composer doomed to exist forever in the shadow of the greater talent. The result is an epic, bitchy meditation on relative mediocrityâSalieri is good, maybe even great, but struggles to achieve a portion of what seems to come to Mozart without effort. Itâs got all of the gorgeous period trappings youâd expect, while also telling a deep, juicy story about the price of (understandable) jealousy.
Where to stream: Netflix, digital rental
Running time: 2 hours and 45 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: It might have come across as a gimmick, but Richard Linklater (Dazed and Confused, School of Rock, Before Sunrise) is far too good, and consistent a filmmaker to fall into that trap. By design, this coming-of-age story was produced over the course of 12 years, filming year by year in order to capture the growth and changes in the lead characters, particularly the titular boy-to-man, Mason Evans Jr., played by Ellar Coltrane. It won overwhelming praise for its extraordinary sense of realism and emotional power, with great performances all around.
Where to stream: The Criterion Channel, digital rental
Running time: 2 hours and 47 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: First of all, bear in mind that the running time listed above is for the short version. Thereâs a much longer cut that Iâd recommend, generally (itâs the only one Iâve seen), but perhaps isnât for everyone. Director Ingmar Bergman is joined by Liv Ullmann and Erland Josephson (two of the most impressive modern film actors) to create this fascinating portrait of a disintegrating marriage. Itâs not a soap opera, and not movie of screaming fights and thrown ashtrays, but instead a story of two people who havenât fallen out of love, precisely, but who definitely longer know how to live with each other. As beautiful as it is brutal, its realism and believability is such that it often feels like weâre peeking around a corner, seeing something that we ought not be seeing. Director and actors returned to these characters 30 years later for Saraband, a poignant epilogue and Bergmanâs final film.
Where to stream: Max, The Criterion Channel
Running time: 2 hours and 50 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: This documentary, about two Black teenagers (William Gates and Arthur Agee) recruited for a predominantly white high schoolâs basketball program, is every bit as fascinating and relevant today as it was back in 1994, in ways both inspiring and depressing. Their stories of their lives, told over the course of six years, are fascinating and engaging, though they speak to much larger issues: these teenagers see success in professional basketball as their only way out and up in the America they inhabitâthat vanishingly small chance of success still representing their best hopes. Through Gates and Agee, documentarian Steve James explores daily life beyond media depictions of âthe ghettoâ as merely a place for white people to avoid, as well as the grift thatâs at the heart of anyone promising the American dream.
Where to stream: Max, Paramount+, The Criterion Channel, Crackle, digital rental
Running time: 2 hours and 50 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Released just a year after the conclusion of World War II, this William Wyler drama tells the stories of three United States servicemen readjusting to civilian life following harrowing tours overseas. Al left home as a successful bank employee, but risks his post-wartime promotion with excessive drinking and a soft touch when it comes to giving loans to fellow vets; Fred suffers from PTSD and has trouble finding a job; Homer lost both hands and struggles with being an object of pity. Given the era and the timing, it's almost shockingly prescient in its depiction of the struggles that veterans would face following not just WWII, but each war that would follow (and probably all preceding, though no one ever talked about it). The film always pull back from melodrama in favor of sobering realism.
Where to stream: Peacock, Prime Video, Freevee
Running time: 2 hours and 54 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Julie Andrews and Christopher Plummer star in this popular musical with gorgeous scenery and some of the most sing-along-able songs in musical history. It's all delightful, until the encroaching shadow of Naziism threatens the budding, unlikely romance between a novitiate nun and a stern, wealthy former naval officer. Its blend of big screen style and at least a little bit of substance have made it one of our most beloved musicals for decades.
Where to stream: Disney+, digital rental
Running time: 2 hours and 56 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Wildly kinetic, Da 5 Bloods doesnât feel nearly as long as its runtime. Revisiting the Vietnam War film genre with an insistent focus on the (often ignored) experience of Black Americans, Spike Lee brings new relevance to stories from the period by drawing some stark and straight lines between then and now with the story of four veterans who return to Vietnam in search of the remains of their fallen squad leader...and the gold he helped them hide. Every actor in it is incredible, including Chadwick Boseman in one of his final roles.
Where to stream: Netflix
Running time: 3 hours
Why itâs worth your time: The wellspring of nearly all modern wuxia filmmaking (think Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon), A Touch of Zen is a gorgeous widescreen martial arts epic, worth watching for the cinematography alone, though the fight choreography is equally thrilling. Itâs the story of a noblewoman-turned-fugitive who seeks refuge in a remote village and winds up using stories of the locationâs rumored hauntings as a weapon against her pursuers. It has big ideas on its mind, as well: Yang, the fugitive, struggles with issues of social order versus corruption, as well as ideas of traditional womanhood that defy her role as a warrior.
Where to stream: The Criterion Channel, digital rental
Running time: 3 hours
Why itâs worth your time: This Best Picture Oscar winner follows brilliant, conflicted Cillian Murphy as the titular theoretical physicist, who helped America to develop the world's first nuclear weapons during World War II. Amid a talky screenplay peppered with occasional bravura effects sequences, writer/director Christopher Nolan never loses sight of his complicated lead, nor of the muddy, ugly morality behind Oppenheimer's work.
Where to stream: Peacock, digital rental
Running time: 3 hours
Why itâs worth your time: Look: Inland Empire is not for everyone. It's possibly the most purely Lynchian of any film in the director's oeuvre, and that's either a massive selling point, or a reason to stay far away. I love it, but I also have no idea what it's about. I'm not sure anyone does, but Laura Dern gives a brilliant, shattering performance as a Hollywood actress whose life descends into utter madness, and that's worth taking in all on its own. You'll feel as though you're walking through a nightmare with her, in ways both draining and thrilling.
Where to stream: Max, The Criterion Channel, digital rental
Running time: 3 hours and 1 minute
Why itâs worth your time: It probably requires at least a passing familiarity with the 20+ films that preceded itâI doubt that this would have nearly the power it does for someone who hadnât seen a key handful of themâbut there is power here, at least in terms of cinematic spectacle. For all of our sequel-obsessed movie culture, no one else has ever made it to this point, to be able to offer an effective summing up of a series thatâs been so successful over so many films. The whole âtime heistâ bit allows clever way to revisit scenes from the past, while the climactic action set piece is one for the ages. The movie even manages to end, once the fightingâs done, on a several impressively emotional notes. Itâs not a jumping-on point, really, but itâs a satisfying climax... even if as a conclusion. itâs really more of a pause.
Where to stream: Disney+, digital rental
Running time: 3 hours and 2 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: So much springs from Akira Kurosawasâs Seven Samurai: it was remade in Hollywood as The Magnificent Seven, and thus became the template for a certain type of âteam is assembled/goes on missionâ style of movie. Itâs been a tremendous inspiration to George Lucas, Quentin Tarantino, and even Zack Snyder. The coming together of a band of misfits and outsiders, theretofore virtually unheard of in Japanese filmmaking, is also an element thatâs frequently referenced. Samuraiâs length (itâs the longest film of Kurosawaâs career) is justified by its performances, as well as by writer/director Kurosawa himself: heâs best known in the west for his samurai movies, but his filmography encompasses quiet, meditative character dramas as well, and so he brings sharp characterization alongside the action.
Where to stream: Max, The Criterion Channel, digital rental
Running time: 3 hours and 7 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Action movies should almost certainly not be as long as RRR, but unlike many examples of American blockbuster, there is not one single dull moment in this Tollywood epic. Likewise, a historical drama that touches on the national trauma brought on by the British Raj and depicting two real-life revolutionaries who died as martyrs to the cause of independence shouldnât be this much fun, but somehow the context only makes it more satisfying. Find me a more thrilling moment in the movies than the bit where a truck full of wild animals is forcefully unleashed upon a sedate gathering at a British politicianâs estate.
Where to stream: Netflix
Running time: 3 hours and 5 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: The Leopard is absolutely gorgeous, no question. Probably one of the most beautifully directed and photographed films in historyâwhich still wouldnât be enough to justify its length if it wasnât also dramatically compelling. But that it is, and itâs also challenging: itâs a portrait of an oppressive way of life among the extraordinarily wealthy Sicilian aristocracy of the 19th century as they have their last big fling, whether they knew it or not. Built on the backs of the poor and working class, their lifestyle deserves to die out (if only), and witness to it all is Burt Lancasterâs Don Fabrizio Corbera, a generally good man of his time whose gaze turns the display of excess into something almost funereal. Director Luchino Visconti was a Marxist who had no love for the aristocracy, so the fact that heâs willing to present a sympathetic portrait of a social class on the verge of extinction (in that time and place, anyway) provides enough tension to keep you glued to the couch. There are a few different versions, but the director's preferred version runs at 185 minutes, and that's mostly the one you'll find streaming.
Where to stream: Digital rental
Running time: 3 hours and 8 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Itâs been joked that Paul Thomas Andersonâs films arenât long because the stories call for it, but because they need more editing. Thatâs unfair, particularly here, in a film that is certainly meandering by design: full of stories of love and loss intersecting, often by coincidence, the filmâs core thesis has to do with the cycles of abuse that weâre locked into as childrenâbut explores that idea in ways that are frequently funny and surprising. Like the Aimee Mann song sung by all the characters at the impressive, infamous, amphibious climax, itâs all about the hurt weâll keep inflicting on ourselves if we refuse to wise up.
Where to stream: Paramount+, digital rental
Running time: 3 hours and 8 minutes
Originally conceived as a television miniseries, the three-hour+ theatrical version of Ingmar Bergman's later-career triumph actually represents something like a director's cut; the full version is more than five hours. Fanny and Alexander stars Pernilla Allwin and Bertil Guve as the young siblings of the title, living happily with their theater-people parents. Then, their father dies and their mother remarries a joyless jerk of a bishop. Intended to be the director's swan song, the autobiographical story feels like a summation of Bergman's career, exploring many of the very heavy themes that he'd tackled earlier, but with a greater sense of perspective, and even a little whimsy.
Where to stream: Max, The Criterion Channel, digital rental
Running time: 3 hours and 10 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Spencer Tracy leads an all-star cast (Burt Lancaster, Marlene Dietrich, Judy Garland, William Shatner, and Montgomery Clift, among others) in this genuinely gripping legal drama depicting a fictionalized version of one of the twelve Nuremberg Military Tribunals that determined the horrifying extent of Nazi war crimes following World War II. If the familiar faces in the cast can be a little distracting, it remains a sober, serious film that builds to a climax simultaneously moving and disturbing. Some 60 years later, it remains depressingly timely in its conviction that everyday, ordinary people are capable of monstrous behavior, given the right incentive.
Where to stream: Tubi, MGM+, digital rental
Running time: 3 hours and 14 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Say what you will about the (occasionally) clunky characterization and dialogue, James Cameron makes tremendous use of the lengthy running time here: by the time the iceberg appears onscreen, more than an hour in, Cameron and company have provided us a thorough tour of the ship without our even realizing it: weâve poked out heads into the bridge, the engine rooms, parlors, staterooms of every class and decks on nearly every levelâeven gotten a thoroughly sweaty look at the cars in cargo. When the ship meets its destiny during the real-time sequence that takes up most of the rest of the movie, weâre nearly as familiar with it as we would be had we been onboardâwhich makes the action easier to follow, and the tragedy hit harder.
Where to stream: Paramount+, Prime Video
Running time: 3 hours and 17 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Stanley Kubrick's first foray into epic-scale filmmaking feels like an outlier in his oeuvre, blending the director's stylistic trademarks with the elements that feel a little more traditionally Hollywood. It all works, especially given the subtext at play: Written by blacklisted writer Dalton Trumbo, the slave revolt depicted here draws strong parallels to America's communist witch hunts. (The insistence on the part of lead Kirk Douglas that Trumbo be given credit under his own name, rather than a pseudonym, helped put the blacklistâwell, that particular blacklistâto bed once and for all.) What's on screen, then, is an uncommonly smart old-school action spectacle...sword-and-sandal action with plenty to say about modern American life and politics.
Where to stream: Digital rental
Running time: 3 hours and 20 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Thereâs an awful lot to tell when it comes to the life Malcolm X, even given his untimely murderâhis story crosses continents and political eras, bringing various disparate elements of the Civil Rights Movement into its orbit. Itâs hard to imagine any sort of comprehensive biopic not taking up a lot of time. There are standard beats to these types of movies, but Spike Lee is one of the most accomplished and significant directors in modern history, and so manages to sidestep the obvious choices and sameness that often plagues the âimportant biopic.â Likewise, Denzel Washingtonâs performance is uncanny and essential.
Where to stream: Tubi, digital rental
Running time: 3 hours and 20 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Itâs tempting to joke about those cascading faux-endings, but, in truth, this movie justifies its runtimeâand that of the entire trilogy. Itâs a crowning achievement in terms of spectacle and pure watchability, but also impressively emotional in the ways in which it brings various character arcs to often poignant conclusions. It didnât win a (still unmatched) record number of Academy Awards, including Best Picture, for nothing. Honestly, when watching it Iâll always go for the extended version, which is an hour longer still, though that length is much easier to handle at home.
Where to stream: Max, digital rental
Running time: 3 hours and 21 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Over three suffocating days (and over three hours of runtime), single mother Jeanne Dielman (Delphine Seyrig) cooks, cleans, and engages in a bit of light but joyless sex work in order to pay the bills. Chantal Akermanâs weird and funny masterpiece crafts the drudgery of one womanâs daily life into an unconventional, uncompromising, and mesmerizing epic. Many critics at the time felt that there had never before been quite such an exploration of a the feminine experience (not surprising given the dearth of women directors), and it inspired filmmakers of later decades to reconsider what a movie about women could achieve. (It's worth noting that a 2002 Sight and Sound critics poll of the best films ever made put this one right at the top.)
Where to stream: Max, The Criterion Channel, digital rental
Running time: 3 hours and 22 minutes (in the âRoadshowâ version)
Why itâs worth your time: First of all: there are a couple of versions of Stanley Kramerâs zany road movieâthe cut youâll find most readily is the shorter 2 hour and 43 minute one, but viewers with exceptionally strong bladders might opt for the premiere-length 3 hour and 22 minute version (The Criterion Collection has it). Neither feels nearly so long, and thatâs to the credit of the filmâs light touch. Lead by Spencer Tracy and a huge cast of â60s-era stars, itâs about several different groups of motorists who get wind of $350,000 in cash buried in a park at the other end of the state, and set off on a race for the money. What makes it work as more than a setup for slapstick driving antics is the incredibly smart decision to have these beloved stars play universally terrible people who only get worse as various setbacks they encounter on the road serve to feed their greed; that shading adds some delicious schadenfreude to the silliness.
Where to stream: Tubi, MGM+, digital rental
Running time: 3 hours and 22 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Each film in this series is on the long side, but Part IIis the longest by quite a bit. Perhaps unusually, itâs also the best, justifying all those extra minutes with a subplot as compelling as the filmâs primary thread: while Al Pacinoâs Michael Corleone continues the long descent that concludes with a fatal kiss, we visit the origin of the Corleone family in America through Robert De Niroâs portrayal of young Vito Corleone. Thereâs hardly a moment here that isnât thoroughly compelling.
Where to stream: Paramount+, digital rental
Running time: 3 hours and 28 minutes
While there's no question that it would be nice had this story told by Osage filmmakers, we could do a lot worse than to have Martin Scorsese behind the camera for an epic account of unspeakable greed in a specifically American vein. Lily Gladstone is transcendent as the real-life Mollie Burkhart, who finds herself at the center of the Osage Indian murders. when a blessing of oil discovered on tribal land turns to a nightmare as white settlers.
Where to stream: Apple TV+, digital purchase
Running time: 3 hours and 47 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Itâs probably the most obvious choice for a list like this, but David Leanâs epic has retained its power for so many decades (and over so many minutes of screentime) for a reason: It is, in many ways, the platonic ideal of a Hollywood epicâthe one by which all others are judged. But itâs also impressively complex, set during a period with continued relevancy, and starring a title character who skirts the line between philosophical hero and delusional megalomaniac. At nearly 60 years old, itâs still a transporting work.
Where to stream: MGM+, digital rental
Running time: 4 hours and 2 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Historically, even most stage versions of Hamlet(Shakespeareâs longest work) are truncated; there are entire scenes even devoted fans of the Bard have likely never seen performed. Kenneth Branaghâs 1996 adaptation doesnât take any such shortcutsâthe rare instance (and the only filmed version) of the play presented in its entirety. There are compensations for your time, though: Branagh eschews Hamletâs traditional gloominess for gorgeous, bright visual spectacle; he also presents an impressive cast (with himself at the lead) that includes Julie Christie, Kate Winslet, and Derek Jacobi. There are even appearances by several very unexpected performers in bit parts (Billy Crystal, for example, is shockingly good as the First Gravedigger). And, unlike a live performance, you can stop this one for snacks whenever you want.
Where to stream: Digital rental
Running time: 2 hours and 56 minutes
Another three-hour comic book movie? At least Avengers: Endgame had the decency to be the climax of a 22-film saga...surely the eighth solo Batman flick (depending on how you count) has no excuse. And maybe notâbut co-writer/director Matt Reeves' first go-round with Robert Pattinson under the cowl actually manages to keep you engaged for the entire time by allowing Batman to be a detective again. Watching a younger, (even more) emotionally damaged Bruce Wayne methodically piece together the clues in a vast conspiracy tied to his own origins and involving familiar baddies like the Riddler (Paul Dano), the Penguin (Colin Farrell under pounds of makeup), and Catwoman (ZoĂŤ Kravitz) feels like binging a season of one of those Swedish crime procedurals on Netflix. All the better: It's gorgeous to look at, with moody black and red cinematography from Oscar nominee Greig Fraser.
Where to stream: Hulu, Max, digital rental
Running time: 3 hours and 5 minutes
Stanley Kubrickâs drama, smartly, doesnât judge Ryan OâNealâs Barry Lyndon...it doesnât have to.
Why itâs worth your time: Ryan OâNealâs Barry Lyndon is hardly the type of protagonist weâre used to in this type of epic period drama: heâs largely a character without any defining morality, and one to whom events occur that he doesnât take much hand in shaping. When it suits him to tell the truth, heâs conspicuously honestâŚbut heâs perfectly content to lie if thatâs the easiest route. Kubrick is one of the very few filmmakers who could draw us in to the story of this 18th century golddigger, and Ryan OâNeal makes him compulsively watchable, if not particularly sympathetic.
Where to stream: Tubi, digital rental
Sure, this thing totally bombed in theaters, and its excesses are definitely not for all tastes. But as screen spectacles go, they don't get much grander than La La Land helmer Damien Chazelle's literally and figuratively orgiastic Hollywood coming of age story. It's an unhinged three-hour dive into the glitz, glamor, and wild indulgences of the movie business circa the switchover from silents to talkies. It's loud, garish, and buzzing with cocaine-fueled energy, but for every misstep (an opening sequences featuring a mountain of elephant excrement sprayed directly into the camera) there are two bravura sequences (my favorite being a tortured depiction of what it's like to film a movie scene under intense pressure that could be a short film all on its own), and the cast is full of movie stars (Brad Pitt and a pre-Barbie Margot Robbie being the standouts) the way they used to make 'emâbigger than life, and too much to crame into a standard runtime.
Where to stream: Prime Video, digital rental
Full story here:
Still, a movieâs quality isnât determined by its length, and most of us are watching these things at home anyway. Some stories are just more effective when they take their timeâeither because they have so much to say and do that nothing feels wasted, or because it allows them the freedom to luxuriate in setting a mood and building a compelling world filled with interesting characters. As the critic Roger Ebert once said, no good movie is too long, and no bad movie is short enough.
So here are 30 good (or great) movies, all of which run to nearly three hours (or much longer), all of which also justify their runtimes by generally make every second worth the sit.
Amadeus (1984)
Running time: 2 hours and 45 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: The late, great MiloĹĄ Forman directs this unconventional biopic of musical genius Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, adapting the play by Peter Shaffer, who also wrote the screenplay (they both won Oscars for it, as did lead F. Murray Abraham). Unlike the typical plodding biography, Amadeus tells its story not through the eyes and experiences of Mozart (Tom Hulce) himself, but those of his archenemesis, Antonio Salieri (Abraham), a composer doomed to exist forever in the shadow of the greater talent. The result is an epic, bitchy meditation on relative mediocrityâSalieri is good, maybe even great, but struggles to achieve a portion of what seems to come to Mozart without effort. Itâs got all of the gorgeous period trappings youâd expect, while also telling a deep, juicy story about the price of (understandable) jealousy.
Where to stream: Netflix, digital rental
Boyhood (2014)
Running time: 2 hours and 45 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: It might have come across as a gimmick, but Richard Linklater (Dazed and Confused, School of Rock, Before Sunrise) is far too good, and consistent a filmmaker to fall into that trap. By design, this coming-of-age story was produced over the course of 12 years, filming year by year in order to capture the growth and changes in the lead characters, particularly the titular boy-to-man, Mason Evans Jr., played by Ellar Coltrane. It won overwhelming praise for its extraordinary sense of realism and emotional power, with great performances all around.
Where to stream: The Criterion Channel, digital rental
Scenes from a Marriage (1973)
Running time: 2 hours and 47 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: First of all, bear in mind that the running time listed above is for the short version. Thereâs a much longer cut that Iâd recommend, generally (itâs the only one Iâve seen), but perhaps isnât for everyone. Director Ingmar Bergman is joined by Liv Ullmann and Erland Josephson (two of the most impressive modern film actors) to create this fascinating portrait of a disintegrating marriage. Itâs not a soap opera, and not movie of screaming fights and thrown ashtrays, but instead a story of two people who havenât fallen out of love, precisely, but who definitely longer know how to live with each other. As beautiful as it is brutal, its realism and believability is such that it often feels like weâre peeking around a corner, seeing something that we ought not be seeing. Director and actors returned to these characters 30 years later for Saraband, a poignant epilogue and Bergmanâs final film.
Where to stream: Max, The Criterion Channel
Hoop Dreams (1994)
Running time: 2 hours and 50 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: This documentary, about two Black teenagers (William Gates and Arthur Agee) recruited for a predominantly white high schoolâs basketball program, is every bit as fascinating and relevant today as it was back in 1994, in ways both inspiring and depressing. Their stories of their lives, told over the course of six years, are fascinating and engaging, though they speak to much larger issues: these teenagers see success in professional basketball as their only way out and up in the America they inhabitâthat vanishingly small chance of success still representing their best hopes. Through Gates and Agee, documentarian Steve James explores daily life beyond media depictions of âthe ghettoâ as merely a place for white people to avoid, as well as the grift thatâs at the heart of anyone promising the American dream.
Where to stream: Max, Paramount+, The Criterion Channel, Crackle, digital rental
The Best Years of Our Lives (1946)
Running time: 2 hours and 50 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Released just a year after the conclusion of World War II, this William Wyler drama tells the stories of three United States servicemen readjusting to civilian life following harrowing tours overseas. Al left home as a successful bank employee, but risks his post-wartime promotion with excessive drinking and a soft touch when it comes to giving loans to fellow vets; Fred suffers from PTSD and has trouble finding a job; Homer lost both hands and struggles with being an object of pity. Given the era and the timing, it's almost shockingly prescient in its depiction of the struggles that veterans would face following not just WWII, but each war that would follow (and probably all preceding, though no one ever talked about it). The film always pull back from melodrama in favor of sobering realism.
Where to stream: Peacock, Prime Video, Freevee
The Sound of Music (1965)
Running time: 2 hours and 54 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Julie Andrews and Christopher Plummer star in this popular musical with gorgeous scenery and some of the most sing-along-able songs in musical history. It's all delightful, until the encroaching shadow of Naziism threatens the budding, unlikely romance between a novitiate nun and a stern, wealthy former naval officer. Its blend of big screen style and at least a little bit of substance have made it one of our most beloved musicals for decades.
Where to stream: Disney+, digital rental
Da 5 Bloods (2020)
Running time: 2 hours and 56 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Wildly kinetic, Da 5 Bloods doesnât feel nearly as long as its runtime. Revisiting the Vietnam War film genre with an insistent focus on the (often ignored) experience of Black Americans, Spike Lee brings new relevance to stories from the period by drawing some stark and straight lines between then and now with the story of four veterans who return to Vietnam in search of the remains of their fallen squad leader...and the gold he helped them hide. Every actor in it is incredible, including Chadwick Boseman in one of his final roles.
Where to stream: Netflix
A Touch of Zen (1971)
Running time: 3 hours
Why itâs worth your time: The wellspring of nearly all modern wuxia filmmaking (think Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon), A Touch of Zen is a gorgeous widescreen martial arts epic, worth watching for the cinematography alone, though the fight choreography is equally thrilling. Itâs the story of a noblewoman-turned-fugitive who seeks refuge in a remote village and winds up using stories of the locationâs rumored hauntings as a weapon against her pursuers. It has big ideas on its mind, as well: Yang, the fugitive, struggles with issues of social order versus corruption, as well as ideas of traditional womanhood that defy her role as a warrior.
Where to stream: The Criterion Channel, digital rental
Oppenheimer (2023)
Running time: 3 hours
Why itâs worth your time: This Best Picture Oscar winner follows brilliant, conflicted Cillian Murphy as the titular theoretical physicist, who helped America to develop the world's first nuclear weapons during World War II. Amid a talky screenplay peppered with occasional bravura effects sequences, writer/director Christopher Nolan never loses sight of his complicated lead, nor of the muddy, ugly morality behind Oppenheimer's work.
Where to stream: Peacock, digital rental
Inland Empire (2006)
Running time: 3 hours
Why itâs worth your time: Look: Inland Empire is not for everyone. It's possibly the most purely Lynchian of any film in the director's oeuvre, and that's either a massive selling point, or a reason to stay far away. I love it, but I also have no idea what it's about. I'm not sure anyone does, but Laura Dern gives a brilliant, shattering performance as a Hollywood actress whose life descends into utter madness, and that's worth taking in all on its own. You'll feel as though you're walking through a nightmare with her, in ways both draining and thrilling.
Where to stream: Max, The Criterion Channel, digital rental
Avengers: Endgame (2019)
Running time: 3 hours and 1 minute
Why itâs worth your time: It probably requires at least a passing familiarity with the 20+ films that preceded itâI doubt that this would have nearly the power it does for someone who hadnât seen a key handful of themâbut there is power here, at least in terms of cinematic spectacle. For all of our sequel-obsessed movie culture, no one else has ever made it to this point, to be able to offer an effective summing up of a series thatâs been so successful over so many films. The whole âtime heistâ bit allows clever way to revisit scenes from the past, while the climactic action set piece is one for the ages. The movie even manages to end, once the fightingâs done, on a several impressively emotional notes. Itâs not a jumping-on point, really, but itâs a satisfying climax... even if as a conclusion. itâs really more of a pause.
Where to stream: Disney+, digital rental
Seven Samurai (1954)
Running time: 3 hours and 2 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: So much springs from Akira Kurosawasâs Seven Samurai: it was remade in Hollywood as The Magnificent Seven, and thus became the template for a certain type of âteam is assembled/goes on missionâ style of movie. Itâs been a tremendous inspiration to George Lucas, Quentin Tarantino, and even Zack Snyder. The coming together of a band of misfits and outsiders, theretofore virtually unheard of in Japanese filmmaking, is also an element thatâs frequently referenced. Samuraiâs length (itâs the longest film of Kurosawaâs career) is justified by its performances, as well as by writer/director Kurosawa himself: heâs best known in the west for his samurai movies, but his filmography encompasses quiet, meditative character dramas as well, and so he brings sharp characterization alongside the action.
Where to stream: Max, The Criterion Channel, digital rental
RRR (2022)
Running time: 3 hours and 7 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Action movies should almost certainly not be as long as RRR, but unlike many examples of American blockbuster, there is not one single dull moment in this Tollywood epic. Likewise, a historical drama that touches on the national trauma brought on by the British Raj and depicting two real-life revolutionaries who died as martyrs to the cause of independence shouldnât be this much fun, but somehow the context only makes it more satisfying. Find me a more thrilling moment in the movies than the bit where a truck full of wild animals is forcefully unleashed upon a sedate gathering at a British politicianâs estate.
Where to stream: Netflix
The Leopard (1963)
Running time: 3 hours and 5 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: The Leopard is absolutely gorgeous, no question. Probably one of the most beautifully directed and photographed films in historyâwhich still wouldnât be enough to justify its length if it wasnât also dramatically compelling. But that it is, and itâs also challenging: itâs a portrait of an oppressive way of life among the extraordinarily wealthy Sicilian aristocracy of the 19th century as they have their last big fling, whether they knew it or not. Built on the backs of the poor and working class, their lifestyle deserves to die out (if only), and witness to it all is Burt Lancasterâs Don Fabrizio Corbera, a generally good man of his time whose gaze turns the display of excess into something almost funereal. Director Luchino Visconti was a Marxist who had no love for the aristocracy, so the fact that heâs willing to present a sympathetic portrait of a social class on the verge of extinction (in that time and place, anyway) provides enough tension to keep you glued to the couch. There are a few different versions, but the director's preferred version runs at 185 minutes, and that's mostly the one you'll find streaming.
Where to stream: Digital rental
Magnolia (1999)
Running time: 3 hours and 8 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Itâs been joked that Paul Thomas Andersonâs films arenât long because the stories call for it, but because they need more editing. Thatâs unfair, particularly here, in a film that is certainly meandering by design: full of stories of love and loss intersecting, often by coincidence, the filmâs core thesis has to do with the cycles of abuse that weâre locked into as childrenâbut explores that idea in ways that are frequently funny and surprising. Like the Aimee Mann song sung by all the characters at the impressive, infamous, amphibious climax, itâs all about the hurt weâll keep inflicting on ourselves if we refuse to wise up.
Where to stream: Paramount+, digital rental
Fanny and Alexander (1982)
Running time: 3 hours and 8 minutes
Originally conceived as a television miniseries, the three-hour+ theatrical version of Ingmar Bergman's later-career triumph actually represents something like a director's cut; the full version is more than five hours. Fanny and Alexander stars Pernilla Allwin and Bertil Guve as the young siblings of the title, living happily with their theater-people parents. Then, their father dies and their mother remarries a joyless jerk of a bishop. Intended to be the director's swan song, the autobiographical story feels like a summation of Bergman's career, exploring many of the very heavy themes that he'd tackled earlier, but with a greater sense of perspective, and even a little whimsy.
Where to stream: Max, The Criterion Channel, digital rental
Judgement at Nuremberg (1961)
Running time: 3 hours and 10 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Spencer Tracy leads an all-star cast (Burt Lancaster, Marlene Dietrich, Judy Garland, William Shatner, and Montgomery Clift, among others) in this genuinely gripping legal drama depicting a fictionalized version of one of the twelve Nuremberg Military Tribunals that determined the horrifying extent of Nazi war crimes following World War II. If the familiar faces in the cast can be a little distracting, it remains a sober, serious film that builds to a climax simultaneously moving and disturbing. Some 60 years later, it remains depressingly timely in its conviction that everyday, ordinary people are capable of monstrous behavior, given the right incentive.
Where to stream: Tubi, MGM+, digital rental
Titanic (1997)
Running time: 3 hours and 14 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Say what you will about the (occasionally) clunky characterization and dialogue, James Cameron makes tremendous use of the lengthy running time here: by the time the iceberg appears onscreen, more than an hour in, Cameron and company have provided us a thorough tour of the ship without our even realizing it: weâve poked out heads into the bridge, the engine rooms, parlors, staterooms of every class and decks on nearly every levelâeven gotten a thoroughly sweaty look at the cars in cargo. When the ship meets its destiny during the real-time sequence that takes up most of the rest of the movie, weâre nearly as familiar with it as we would be had we been onboardâwhich makes the action easier to follow, and the tragedy hit harder.
Where to stream: Paramount+, Prime Video
Spartacus (1960)
Running time: 3 hours and 17 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Stanley Kubrick's first foray into epic-scale filmmaking feels like an outlier in his oeuvre, blending the director's stylistic trademarks with the elements that feel a little more traditionally Hollywood. It all works, especially given the subtext at play: Written by blacklisted writer Dalton Trumbo, the slave revolt depicted here draws strong parallels to America's communist witch hunts. (The insistence on the part of lead Kirk Douglas that Trumbo be given credit under his own name, rather than a pseudonym, helped put the blacklistâwell, that particular blacklistâto bed once and for all.) What's on screen, then, is an uncommonly smart old-school action spectacle...sword-and-sandal action with plenty to say about modern American life and politics.
Where to stream: Digital rental
Malcolm X (1992)
Running time: 3 hours and 20 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Thereâs an awful lot to tell when it comes to the life Malcolm X, even given his untimely murderâhis story crosses continents and political eras, bringing various disparate elements of the Civil Rights Movement into its orbit. Itâs hard to imagine any sort of comprehensive biopic not taking up a lot of time. There are standard beats to these types of movies, but Spike Lee is one of the most accomplished and significant directors in modern history, and so manages to sidestep the obvious choices and sameness that often plagues the âimportant biopic.â Likewise, Denzel Washingtonâs performance is uncanny and essential.
Where to stream: Tubi, digital rental
The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003)
Running time: 3 hours and 20 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Itâs tempting to joke about those cascading faux-endings, but, in truth, this movie justifies its runtimeâand that of the entire trilogy. Itâs a crowning achievement in terms of spectacle and pure watchability, but also impressively emotional in the ways in which it brings various character arcs to often poignant conclusions. It didnât win a (still unmatched) record number of Academy Awards, including Best Picture, for nothing. Honestly, when watching it Iâll always go for the extended version, which is an hour longer still, though that length is much easier to handle at home.
Where to stream: Max, digital rental
Jeanne Dielman, 23 quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles (1975)
Running time: 3 hours and 21 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Over three suffocating days (and over three hours of runtime), single mother Jeanne Dielman (Delphine Seyrig) cooks, cleans, and engages in a bit of light but joyless sex work in order to pay the bills. Chantal Akermanâs weird and funny masterpiece crafts the drudgery of one womanâs daily life into an unconventional, uncompromising, and mesmerizing epic. Many critics at the time felt that there had never before been quite such an exploration of a the feminine experience (not surprising given the dearth of women directors), and it inspired filmmakers of later decades to reconsider what a movie about women could achieve. (It's worth noting that a 2002 Sight and Sound critics poll of the best films ever made put this one right at the top.)
Where to stream: Max, The Criterion Channel, digital rental
Itâs a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963)
Running time: 3 hours and 22 minutes (in the âRoadshowâ version)
Why itâs worth your time: First of all: there are a couple of versions of Stanley Kramerâs zany road movieâthe cut youâll find most readily is the shorter 2 hour and 43 minute one, but viewers with exceptionally strong bladders might opt for the premiere-length 3 hour and 22 minute version (The Criterion Collection has it). Neither feels nearly so long, and thatâs to the credit of the filmâs light touch. Lead by Spencer Tracy and a huge cast of â60s-era stars, itâs about several different groups of motorists who get wind of $350,000 in cash buried in a park at the other end of the state, and set off on a race for the money. What makes it work as more than a setup for slapstick driving antics is the incredibly smart decision to have these beloved stars play universally terrible people who only get worse as various setbacks they encounter on the road serve to feed their greed; that shading adds some delicious schadenfreude to the silliness.
Where to stream: Tubi, MGM+, digital rental
The Godfather, Part II (1974)
Running time: 3 hours and 22 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Each film in this series is on the long side, but Part IIis the longest by quite a bit. Perhaps unusually, itâs also the best, justifying all those extra minutes with a subplot as compelling as the filmâs primary thread: while Al Pacinoâs Michael Corleone continues the long descent that concludes with a fatal kiss, we visit the origin of the Corleone family in America through Robert De Niroâs portrayal of young Vito Corleone. Thereâs hardly a moment here that isnât thoroughly compelling.
Where to stream: Paramount+, digital rental
Killers of the Flower Moon (2023)
Running time: 3 hours and 28 minutes
While there's no question that it would be nice had this story told by Osage filmmakers, we could do a lot worse than to have Martin Scorsese behind the camera for an epic account of unspeakable greed in a specifically American vein. Lily Gladstone is transcendent as the real-life Mollie Burkhart, who finds herself at the center of the Osage Indian murders. when a blessing of oil discovered on tribal land turns to a nightmare as white settlers.
Where to stream: Apple TV+, digital purchase
Lawrence of Arabia (1962)
Running time: 3 hours and 47 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Itâs probably the most obvious choice for a list like this, but David Leanâs epic has retained its power for so many decades (and over so many minutes of screentime) for a reason: It is, in many ways, the platonic ideal of a Hollywood epicâthe one by which all others are judged. But itâs also impressively complex, set during a period with continued relevancy, and starring a title character who skirts the line between philosophical hero and delusional megalomaniac. At nearly 60 years old, itâs still a transporting work.
Where to stream: MGM+, digital rental
Hamlet (1996)
Running time: 4 hours and 2 minutes
Why itâs worth your time: Historically, even most stage versions of Hamlet(Shakespeareâs longest work) are truncated; there are entire scenes even devoted fans of the Bard have likely never seen performed. Kenneth Branaghâs 1996 adaptation doesnât take any such shortcutsâthe rare instance (and the only filmed version) of the play presented in its entirety. There are compensations for your time, though: Branagh eschews Hamletâs traditional gloominess for gorgeous, bright visual spectacle; he also presents an impressive cast (with himself at the lead) that includes Julie Christie, Kate Winslet, and Derek Jacobi. There are even appearances by several very unexpected performers in bit parts (Billy Crystal, for example, is shockingly good as the First Gravedigger). And, unlike a live performance, you can stop this one for snacks whenever you want.
Where to stream: Digital rental
The Batman (2022)
Running time: 2 hours and 56 minutes
Another three-hour comic book movie? At least Avengers: Endgame had the decency to be the climax of a 22-film saga...surely the eighth solo Batman flick (depending on how you count) has no excuse. And maybe notâbut co-writer/director Matt Reeves' first go-round with Robert Pattinson under the cowl actually manages to keep you engaged for the entire time by allowing Batman to be a detective again. Watching a younger, (even more) emotionally damaged Bruce Wayne methodically piece together the clues in a vast conspiracy tied to his own origins and involving familiar baddies like the Riddler (Paul Dano), the Penguin (Colin Farrell under pounds of makeup), and Catwoman (ZoĂŤ Kravitz) feels like binging a season of one of those Swedish crime procedurals on Netflix. All the better: It's gorgeous to look at, with moody black and red cinematography from Oscar nominee Greig Fraser.
Where to stream: Hulu, Max, digital rental
Barry Lyndon (1975)
Running time: 3 hours and 5 minutes
Stanley Kubrickâs drama, smartly, doesnât judge Ryan OâNealâs Barry Lyndon...it doesnât have to.
Why itâs worth your time: Ryan OâNealâs Barry Lyndon is hardly the type of protagonist weâre used to in this type of epic period drama: heâs largely a character without any defining morality, and one to whom events occur that he doesnât take much hand in shaping. When it suits him to tell the truth, heâs conspicuously honestâŚbut heâs perfectly content to lie if thatâs the easiest route. Kubrick is one of the very few filmmakers who could draw us in to the story of this 18th century golddigger, and Ryan OâNeal makes him compulsively watchable, if not particularly sympathetic.
Where to stream: Tubi, digital rental
Babylon (2022)
Sure, this thing totally bombed in theaters, and its excesses are definitely not for all tastes. But as screen spectacles go, they don't get much grander than La La Land helmer Damien Chazelle's literally and figuratively orgiastic Hollywood coming of age story. It's an unhinged three-hour dive into the glitz, glamor, and wild indulgences of the movie business circa the switchover from silents to talkies. It's loud, garish, and buzzing with cocaine-fueled energy, but for every misstep (an opening sequences featuring a mountain of elephant excrement sprayed directly into the camera) there are two bravura sequences (my favorite being a tortured depiction of what it's like to film a movie scene under intense pressure that could be a short film all on its own), and the cast is full of movie stars (Brad Pitt and a pre-Barbie Margot Robbie being the standouts) the way they used to make 'emâbigger than life, and too much to crame into a standard runtime.
Where to stream: Prime Video, digital rental
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