Category
page 11999 drama films

Eyes Wide Shut
Eyes Wide Shut is a 1999 erotic psychological drama film directed, produced, and co-written by Stanley Kubrick, and starring Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman. The plot centers on a Manhattan doctor who is shocked when his wife reveals that she contemplated cheating on him. He embarks on a night-long adventure and infiltrates a masked orgy of a secret society. It is based on the 1926 novella Dream Story by Arthur Schnitzler, and transfers the story's setting from early twentieth-century Vienna to 1990s New York City.

Girl, Interrupted
1999 film by James Mangold

Magnolia
1999 film by Paul Thomas Anderson

The Cider House Rules
1999 film directed by Lasse Hallström

The Insider
1999 film directed by Michael Mann

Boys Don't Cry
1999 film by Kimberly Peirce

The Messenger: The Story of Joan of Arc
1999 film by Luc Besson

The Straight Story
1999 film by David Lynch

Any Given Sunday
1999 film by Oliver Stone

The Virgin Suicides
1999 film directed by Sofia Coppola

The Hurricane
1999 film directed by Norman Jewison

Audition
1999 film by Takashi Miike

Angela's Ashes
1999 film directed by Alan Parker

True Crime
1999 film by Clint Eastwood

Bringing Out the Dead
1999 film by Martin Scorsese

Rosetta
1999 film by Luc Dardenne, Jean-Pierre Dardenne

The Color of Paradise
1999 film by Majid Majidi

Sunshine
1999 film directed by István Szabó

With Fire and Sword
1999 film by Jerzy Hoffman

The Wind Will Carry Us
1999 film by Abbas Kiarostami

East/West
East/West (; ) is a 1999 drama film directed by Régis Wargnier, starring Sandrine Bonnaire, Oleg Menshikov, Catherine Deneuve and Sergei Bodrov Jr. It received generally positive reviews from critics. The film was nominated for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 72nd Academy Awards.

Holy Smoke!
1999 film by Jane Campion
Pirates of Silicon Valley
1999 film directed by Martyn Burke

Topsy-Turvy
Topsy-Turvy is a 1999 British musical period drama film written and directed by Mike Leigh, starring Jim Broadbent as W. S. Gilbert and Allan Corduner as Sir Arthur Sullivan, along with Timothy Spall, Lesley Manville and Ron Cook. The story concerns the 15-month period in 1884 and 1885 leading up to the premiere of Gilbert and Sullivan's The Mikado. The work explores the creative conflict between playwright and composer, and depicts their decision to continue their partnership, which led to their creation of several more Savoy operas.
She and Her Cat
1999 anime directed by Makoto Shinkai

Not One Less
1999 film by Zhang Yimou

Taboo
, also known as Taboo, is a 1999 Japanese film directed by Nagisa Ōshima. Its subject is homosexuality in the Shinsengumi during the bakumatsu period, the end of the samurai era in the mid-19th century.
The production was Õshima's final film before his death, thirteen years after Gohatto's premiere.

Instinct
1999 film directed by Jon Turteltaub

Blackboards
Blackboards (, Takhté siah; ) is a 2000 Iranian film directed by Samira Makhmalbaf. It focuses on a group of Kurdish refugees after the chemical bombing of Halabja by Saddam Hussein's Iraq during the Iran–Iraq War. The screenplay was co-written by Makhmalbaf with her father, Mohsen Makhmalbaf. The dialogue is entirely in Kurdish. Makhmalbaf describes it as "something between reality and fiction. Smuggling, being homeless, and people's efforts to survive are all part of reality... the film, as a whole, is a metaphor."

Taal
1999 Hindi film directed by Subhash Ghai

Himalaya
1999 film by Éric Valli

For Love of the Game
1999 film by Sam Raimi

Aimée & Jaguar
1998 film by Max Färberböck

The Deep End of the Ocean
1999 film by Ulu Grosbard

Humanité
Humanité () is a 1999 film directed by Bruno Dumont. It tells the story of a withdrawn police lieutenant investigating a rape and murder of a schoolgirl in rural France, his slow enquiries interspersed with everyday scenes of his quiet life. The film is shot with little dialogue in a contemplative and symbolical style. The policeman is named after a distinguished French painter, Pharaon de Winter, who was from the town where the film is set.

Snow Falling on Cedars
1999 film by Scott Hicks

Goya in Bordeaux
1999 film by Carlos Saura

Brokedown Palace
1999 film by Jonathan Kaplan

Grey Owl
1999 film directed by Richard Attenborough

Eye of the Beholder
1999 film by Stephan Elliott

Volavérunt
Volavérunt is a 1999 French-Spanish historical drama film directed by Bigas Luna. Based on a novel with the same title by Antonio Larreta, the film is set in Spain at the beginning of the nineteenth century.

Felicia's Journey
1999 film by Atom Egoyan
Jesus
1999 Biblical telefilm directed by Roger Young

No One Writes to the Colonel
1999 film by Arturo Ripstein

Time Regained
1998 film by Raúl Ruiz
RKO 281
1991 historical drama film directed by Benjamin Ross, about the 1941 film Citizen Kane
The Devil's Arithmetic
1999 film directed by Donna Deitch

It All Starts Today
1999 film by Bertrand Tavernier
Mary, Mother of Jesus
1999 American television film

Sophie's World
1999 film directed by Erik Gustavson

Three Seasons
1999 film by Tony Bui

Best Laid Plans
1999 film directed by Mike Barker

Romance
1999 film directed by Catherine Breillat

Cradle Will Rock
1999 film by Tim Robbins

Clouds of May
1999 film by Nuri Bilge Ceylan

Olympic Garage
1999 film by Marco Bechis

Harem Suare
1999 film by Ferzan Özpetek

Human Resources
1999 film by Laurent Cantet

The Third Miracle
1999 film by Agnieszka Holland
Introducing Dorothy Dandridge
1999 television film directed by Martha Coolidge