The Wages of Fear (1953) Excellent movie. Four desperadoes truck lethally unstable nitro through godawful jungle, risking all for the big payday and a chance to start over. A shmupping as fuck premise that commands attention! And rewards it too, whether you go with this or William Friedkin's superb Black Label
Sorceror (1977).
Having already seen
Sorceror unavoidably coloured my experience, but the two films are easily diverse enough to complement one another.
Fear is a more romantic, humanistic movie, as personified by the conventionally dashing Yves Montand and his improbably glamorous flame, Véra Clouzot. There is a spark of struggle and hope throughout. The protagonists have arcs - hopes, dreams, lives to return to.
Sorceror is a more nihilistic take, steeped in Cold War dread. These are dead men walking, the jungle Stygian, the titular vehicles less promising of riches than a release from purgatory. IMO, watch
Fear slightly buzzed and
Sorceror stone cold sober.
Had the latter film come out three years later, I'd happily file it with
The Thing, The Fly and
The Blob in the "improbably successful 80s remake of 50s vintage" file. Good stuff all around. Watch both.
GaijinPunch wrote:And Tangerine Dream soundtrack.
Fuckin word 
So good that Konami ripped it off for
The Theme of Solid Snake
This vibe is profound and will always be new