That sounds a lot friendlier than your previous reply! :)
It all comes down to taste. I grew up watching films from the '30s and '40s, and later got very much into the silent era. For me, those will always be the glory days, and likely never be topped. I don't think there were no good films made between 1960 and 1994, but overall I think it was a pretty bad time for film, and even some of the best ones have some significant flaws. I attribute it to a lack of studio oversight, where directors were allowed free rein, and Hollywood hadn't quite found its stride yet.
While the studio system was still in place, there was a method to filmmaking that had been fine-tuned, and it worked well. It took a long time for that to come to be the case after the '50s. Pulp Fiction really seemed like a turning point, because after that there seemed to be a balance between director and studio that hadn't been there before.
There are awful films from all eras as well as great ones, but for my taste, films before the '60s work, as do modern films, but most of those in between just seem amateurish.
Even when I think of my favorite filmmakers, they all seem to fall into those two eras... Preston Sturges, Howard Hawks, John Ford, Alfred Hitchcock, Quentin Tarantino, Wes Anderson, the Coen Brothers. Martin Scorsese may be the one exception, or perhaps Woody Allen, though I think most of his best work came later in his career.
Anyway, I like plenty of '70s and '80s films, but as a whole I don't rate the cinema of that time the way I do the older and newer stuff.
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