16. Through a Glass Darkly (1961) dir. Ingmar Bergman — 13:28

17. Ivan’s Childhood (1963) dir. Andrei Tarkovsky — 14:02

“From my understanding, [Bergman] saw Ivan’s Childhood and that began to get him to try to create cinema as dream. Not that he didn’t do that before, but he felt like this movie was like a key to him.” - R.E.

18. Hour of the Wolf (1968) dir. Ingmar Bergman — 15:03

“Hour of the Wolf is not as scary as Cries and Whispers, even though it’s the closest thing Bergman got to a horror movie.” - R.E.

19. From the Life of the Marionettes (1981) dir. Ingmar Bergman — 15:13

20. The Wizard of Oz (1939) dir. Victor Fleming — 16:10

“I hereby designate Midsommar ‘The Wizard of Oz for perverts.’ That was not my intention. It was the first thing I said, and now it’s the last word.” - A.A.

21. Carrie (1976) dir. Brian De Palma — 22:15

“Carrie really destroyed me. I wasn't able to watch it again until my 20s, and then I realized it's a really sad comedy. I could not get the image of Piper Laurie chasing Sissy Spacek around this candlelit house out of my head. She's got this horrible smile, holding a knife. That has come back to me in so many ways. Still, I'll have a nightmare about that.” - A.A.

22. The Cook, the Thief, His Wife & Her Lover (1989) dir. Peter Greenaway — 23:25

“If we're talking about things that affected us, like The Cook, the Thief, His Wife & Her Lover. I saw that too young. That really bothered me in a deep, deep way.” - A.A.

23. The Snowman (1982) dir. Dianne Jackson, Jimmy T. Murakami — 23:37

“There was a kid's cartoon, 30 minutes long, called The Snowman, a little boy gets on a snowman's back, and flies through the world. I can't remember what the story was, but I just remember that it bugged me. There's something about the maudlin when combined with the grotesque, as a kid I couldn't process that.” - A.A.