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"Annie Hall" (1977): I saw this film in college when I was first studying screenwriting and starting out as a comic. It has forever been imprinted in my DNA. It's funny, it's emotional and it's unafraid. I was so struck when I saw it that it found the beauty in a breakup as opposed to wallowing in it. It also traffics in an area so specific
-- a neurotic, Jewish comedian -- but yet it feels so universal. Woody Allen does this in all of his films of that period
-- "Hannah and Her Sisters," "Manhattan," "Crimes and Misdemeanors"
-- but this one truly makes me laugh the most and get choked up in the same moment. It also has the line that my wife repeats to me all the time, which is the mother's line to the child Alvy when he asks what they'll do about the universe expanding: "WHAT, IS THAT YOUR BUSINESS?!" ___ Think of any other examples? Share them with AP Movie Critic Christy Lemire through Twitter: http://twitter.com/christylemire. And with Mike Birbiglia: http://twitter.com/birbigs
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