The best directorial debuts
Citizen Kane (1941) Orson Welles
The Maltese Falcon (1941) John Huston.
12 Angry Men (1957) Sydney Lumet
Citizen Kane (1941) Orson Welles
The Maltese Falcon (1941) John Huston.
12 Angry Men (1957) Sydney Lumet
trying to leave aside what's been named already...
repo man
bottle rocket (not an anderson obsessive myself, but i mostly enjoy his films, & i think this is pretty great).
the evil dead
l'age d'or
gates of heaven
eraserhead (i actually don't really love eraserhead, but i like almost everything else he's done, & it's certainly revered by lots of people).
the texas chainsaw massacre
performance
Nil by Mouth (1997) - Gary Oldman. ⤵
https://m.imdb.com/title/tt0119792/?ref=m_nv_sr_1
Not mentioned so far:
They Live By Night - Ray
Night of the Hunter - Laughton
400 Blows -Truffaut
Breathless - Godard
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? - Nichols
Badlands - Malick
The Spirit of the Beehive - Erice
The Seventh Continent - M. Haneke
Welcome to the Dollhouse - Solondz
Gattaca - Niccol
Synecdoche NY - Kaufman
Son of Saul - Nemes
Few film-makers ever make a film as good as any of these debuts!
I recently watched They Live By Night - a pretty good film noir.
shareoof, good call on welcome to the dollhouse. i should have named that myself.
shareA few more previously unmentioned spectacular debuts (although perhaps a notch down from my previous examples):
La Pointe Courte - Varda
Ivan's Childhood - Tarkovsky
Duel - Spielberg
Risky Business - Brickman
Heathers - Lehmann
Shallow Grave - Boyle
Once Were Warriors - Tamahori
Hunger - McQueen
Bottom Line: There have been so many smashing, curve-ruining directorial debuts that the standard for making a big splash with your first film is the same standard as for making a big splash period: Is your film one of the best films of its year/its decade/all-time?
Pi - Darren Aronofsky
shareSteven Soderbergh; Sex, Lies, and Videotape
Michael Moore; Roger and Me
both from 1989
Eraserhead
share