As if the cinema wanted to embody the saying of the German philosopher Nietzsche that "the man was created in order to walk in a path full of stones and obstacles" when she presented us with "blatant male" films that have no room for the female.

The bloody desert roughness in “Lawrence of Arabia”, the cold, strict neutrality with no emotions to achieve justice in the movie “12 angry men”, the fight against the cruelty of the sea and the brutality of the waves in the movie “All Lost”, and the struggle against the cruelty and brutality of life in the movie “Glen Ross Hat”, As if it is a translation of the rest of Nietzsche's saying that "the female spreads that fragrance that covers the atmosphere in order to moisturize it and make it quieter and farewell."

But far from philosophy, it remains that the cornerstone of cinematic work is the "text" or scenario, as it determines the shape of the film and the cinematic tools that guarantee its success regardless of location, color or type. So it is possible to see a film nominated for an Oscar, without dialogue, in which only the star Robert Redford is a lonely man lost at sea.

12 angry men

A television play written by Reginald Rose in 1954, and it was "The Text" that inspired director Sydney Lumet to make the film "12 Angry Men" in 1957, starring Henry Fonda (hero of the fighter to achieve justice), and Lee J Cobb (emotional opponent Fierce stubborn).

Although it is a male movie with no female impact, its events are limited to a closed jury meeting to decide the fate of a young man accused of a murder. However, he managed to hold his breath for 96 minutes by watching 12 men crammed into a bleak room in a sultry summer and suffocating humidity, to make them "a bundle of dynamite fingers," according to the movie trailer, which is considered one of the best produced by American cinema.

The film was nominated for 3 Oscars and 9 other awards, and won 16 awards. He was ranked seventh in the best films of all time, according to IMDB. In 2007 it was included in the National Film Archive by the Library of Congress as a "cultural, historical and aesthetic impact".

It was reproduced TV in 1997, directed by William Friedkin, and starring Jack Lemon and George. C. Scott. With some modifications, such as adding jury personalities to his jurors, reducing his masculinity by assigning the role of judge to Mary McDonnell. He won several awards, including Golden Globe.

Lawrence of Arabia

Lawrence Of Arabia is another male epic 1962 film directed by David Lane, script and dialogue by Robert Bolt and Michael Wilson, on the book "The Seven Pillars of Wisdom" by English officer Thomas Edward Lawrence, known as "Lawrence of Arabia", which reveals how British intelligence employed Arab powers to topple the Ottoman Empire.

Co-starring Peter O'Toole (TE Lawrence), Omar Sharif (Sherif Ali) and Anthony Quinn (The Return of Abu Tayeh) also participated in it, as did the artist Jamil Ratib Badour (Majed). He won 7 Oscars, 23 other awards, was nominated for 14 awards, and ranked 109th in the list of the best films in history, according to the IMDB evaluation.

In 1998, he was ranked fifth on the American Film Institute's list of the 100 Best American Films of the Twentieth Century.

Glenn Ross hat

"Glengarry Glen Ross" is a 1992 American male drama film, directed by James Foley, and the screenplay by American playwright David Mamet, adapted for a play of the same name. About 4 sales representatives are afraid of being fired.

The movie is a masterpiece in which stars Alan Arkin (George Aruno), Al Pacino (Ricky Roma), Jack Lemon (Shelley Levine) and Ed Harris (Dave Moss), were portrayed in portraying characters grappling to evade the terms of the president, star Alec Baldwin (Blake), who grants The first winner in sales sales is a Cadillac, the second winner is a kitchen knives crew, and the third and fourth are thrown onto the street.

The film won 8 awards, and was nominated for 13 others, including an Oscar.

The captain and the captain

Master And Commander: The Far Side Of The World. A fourth male-American adventure movie, 2003 production. Screenplay and directed by Peter Ware, on the novel by English writer Patrick O'Brien.

It takes place in 1805, during the Napoleonic Wars, when Captain Jacques Aubry (Russell Crowe) clashed with a colossal French warship near South America.

In contrast to Aubrey, the narrow-minded, is Stephen Maturin (Paul Bettany), the ship's doctor who believes in the Enlightenment. The 135-minute film, a reckless adventure without an atmosphere of fun and excitement, paints a picture of naval warfare and life aboard the ship and its sailors.

The film won two Oscars, in addition to 21 other awards, and was nominated for 90 different awards.

Everything is lost

"All Is Lost" is the fifth and final male American Survival movie on our list, produced in 2013, directed and directed by JC Chandor, and starring one, veteran superstar Robert Redford.

The film contains almost no dialogue over a period of 100 minutes, only a lonely man lost somewhere in the Indian Ocean, wakes up and finds the water sinking his boat after colliding with a container that caused a hole in it. As he tries to fix it to no avail, if a tropical storm blows in the opposite direction, it forces him to leave the ship and seek the help of a lifeboat in which he is fighting for survival.

The film won 3 awards, including the Golden Globe, and was nominated for 49, including the Oscar.