Unlike Gloria, I thoroughly enjoyed the AFI's "100 Best"--rather against my expectations. This doesn't mean I don't think they did a number of things wrong, including the treatments of race she cites (but "Birth of a Nation" does belong on the list) or that it's not blatantly directed toward selling/renting films, as Jessica Rosner has argued (if I caught this correctly--it was a brief promo toward the end--the AFI is offering all 100 as a video tape subscription series). I was throughout struck by the power of the film image--again and again. This connects with some of the remarks that Mike Frank makes. More accurately, the list is the 100 <most popular> American Films, and I don't mean this in a dismissive way. It is the list of films that have enthralled and moved the mainstream American audience, films that have made an impression on us and that we (want to) see again and again. (In this regard, the AFI is a Hollywood institution--not a surprise.) This is film as "entertainment," of course, but not just entertainment--there's a lot of truth (or seriousness, if you prefer) out there, too (time and again commentators spoke of how these films, when they were new and they first saw them, spoke to their own experience). In this regard, the list is not at all bad. And, in <this> regard, the way the final 100 were chosen is understandable--an attempt at some "cross section" of the American audience (mostly, I suspect, between the ages of 40-70 and many not in any way professonally involved with film). The list, then, is not so much a celebration of the "best" American films but of the ones we (as a country) "really like the best," and in that regard, a celebration of the effect and place Movies have in the American psyche. ---- Online resources for film/TV studies may be found at ScreenSite http://www.tcf.ua.edu/screensite