Dad And Daughter Sex Films

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From father-daughter comedies to heartbreaking art films and classic dad-bait action thrillers, these are the best movies that celebrate dads.
This Father's Day, some of us are spending more time with our families because we're quarantining with them. Others are far away from their moms and dads for multiple reasons. This Father’s Day, settle in with a few movies dedicated to fathers being good fathers—or the not-so-good fathers who are learning to be better. Sometimes dads are more of the bumbling Colin Firth type, who mean well but don’t really have a clue about what they’re doing. Some kids, like Sophie Sheridan in Mamma Mia, get three whole dads, while others, like Mia Thermopolis in The Princess Diaries, are missing their late fathers. Fathers and father figures look different depending on the family, but there are enough movies to celebrate all these differences. This Father’s Day, binge some of these 40+ films to celebrate the dads in your life, no matter what “dad” means to you.
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Jack (Billy Crystal), a cynical lawyer, and Dale (Robin Williams), a depressed writer, have one thing in common: Collette (Nastassja Kinski), the woman they each dated. When Collette enlists them to help her search for her runaway teenage son, Scott, there might also be a little paternity issue at stake.
Ellie Chu (Leah Lewis) is a shy, smart student living in a small, small-minded town in Eastern Washington where she moved with her single father, a Chinese immigrant, so he could take the only job he could get. Ellie makes extra money to help pay the bills by writing papers for students, and she helps a jock at her school get the attention of popular girl Aster Flores (Alexxis Lemire) while secretly crushing on Aster, too. This movie isn’t exactly about father-daughter relationships, but it’s clear Ellie’s dad is the person she loves most in the world: She grapples with going to college nearby so she can live and help out at home, and she and her dad have Old Hollywood movie nights.
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When Jack Butler (Michael Keaton), an auto engineer in Detroit, loses his job in a recession and his wife, Caroline (Teri Garr), finds work, Jack has to take over the responsibilities at home—thus becoming “Mr. Mom.” Remember that this movie was made in the 1980s, when other revolutionary films such as 9 to 5 (1980) and, later, Working Girl (1988) helped change the concept of the American workplace (that is, it’s perfectly normal for women to have titles other than “secretary”).
Daphne Reynolds (Amanda Bynes) grew up in New York City's Chinatown with her very cool mom Libby (Kelly Preston), but she’s always been missing one thing: a father. She knows the man is Lord Henry Dashwood (Colin Firth), a member of British nobility running for political office, but they’ve never met, and Henry doesn’t know Daphne exists. So the summer after Daphne graduates high school, she hops across the pond to meet him, much to the shock of Henry and his stuffy wife and stepdaughter-to-be. Daphne soon wins over even the stiffest-lipped Brits, but it’s still clear her world and her father’s are nothing alike. Someone's going to have to bend if they have any chance of the father-daughter relationship Daphne’s always wanted.
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Mia Thermopolis (Anne Hathaway) lives in San Francisco with her mom in a restored firehouse. Her father, whom she wasn't close with, recently died. She’s almost 16 and feels invisible at school, especially to her crush (Erik von Detten). But, out of nowhere, her estranged grandmother (Julie Andrews), comes to town with huge news: Mia's a princess (“Shut. Up!”). Soon, her whole world changes, and she has to decide if the royal life is something she wants. She obviously can’t talk to her father about it, but she still manages to find his guidance along the way.
There’s something about Steve Martin and a movie about fatherhood. Before the Father of the Bride movies, there was the Ron Howard-directed Parenthood. Gil Buckman (Martin) is a sales executive who already feels over his head with work and his children, who are having issues for which Gil blames himself. When his wife, Karen (Mary Steenburgen), reveals she's pregnant with their fourth child, Gil becomes fearful he won’t be able to handle one more kid, and—the ultimate fear—that he’s becoming his workaholic father.
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Edward Bloom (Albert Finney) and his son William (Billy Crudup) have always had a strained relationship, because Edward told big, elaborate stories that William never believed. When Edward falls ill, William, a journalist, returns home, and in the final days of his dad’s life, William investigates these tall tales and learns more about his dad than he ever expected.
As Clark Griswold (Chevy Chase) and his family (Dana Barron, Anthony Michael Hall, and Beverly D’Angelo) make their way from Illinois to a California amusement park, the family runs into some road blocks—including the death of a family member. By the time they make it to L.A., Clark worries his family will veer off track again and takes matters into his own (well-meaning but misguided) hands in order to make sure they make it to the park.
Kat (Julie Stiles) and Bianca (Larisa Oleynik) Stratford have a very strict single dad who forbids them to date. This isn’t a problem for Kat, who couldn't care less about the teen boys at her high school. But Bianca wants nothing more than to be like the rest of the popular set. When their father decides Bianca can date only if Kat does too, he inadvertently sets off a grand plan from new kid Cameron (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) to get bad boy Patrick Verona (Heath Ledger) to date Kat, so Cameron can take out Bianca. Basically, the plot of this entire movie revolves around a stern father and his archaic rules, so there you have it: Father’s Day movie.
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In this father-daughter classic (and remake of Vincent Minnelli's original from 1950), Steve Martin gets the age-old case of fatherly envy when his one and only daughter finds a guy she likes spending time with more than him—her fiancé! Daddy's little girl is all grown up, which makes Martin's George Banks a little cuckoo. It's endearing and hilarious to watch Martin go through wedding panic and have a full breakdown at a grocery store while tearing through bags of hot dogs and hot dog buns. Another comedic delight here is Martin Short, playing a European wedding planner who pronounces cake like "cock."
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989)
All Indiana Jones movies are arguably dad movies, but The Last Crusade is the dad-est of them all, as it features Harrison Ford as our favorite archaeologist working side by side with his father, Professor Henry Jones, played by the equally iconic Sean Connery. There's some good ol' father-son rivalry as they end up sleeping with the same woman (yikes), but it's nothing they can't set aside to fight the big bad guys (Nazis, in this case).
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There's nothing really dad about this movie except that dads seem to love it—at least, mine does. Every new Mission: Impossible movie is dad bait to get him to go to the movies with you, but nothing quite beats the first installment, directed by Brian De Palma. It's never not thrilling watching Tom Cruise's Ethan Hunt infiltrate the CIA, hanging by rope, just one sweat drop away from blowing the entire thing. Or heck, watching a helicopter chase a train inside a goddamn tunnel.
Perhaps this is for the dad who gets late-career Terrence Malick, but I'm sure even a Malick rookie can be persuaded by the fact that Roger Ebert declared this one of the ten greatest films ever made. Ever. While some parts of the movie look like Windows desktop images (the whole Big Bang sequence), The Tree of Life is, at the end of the day, about something far more intimate: family, specifically the relationship between father and son. Brad Pitt and Sean Penn star—though the former is the father (in flashback). This may not be your typical "good dad" movie, but it's a poetic depiction of the complexities in their relationship and how father and son mirror each other.
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Gotta include Heat on this list as it is, according to my own father, "the greatest movie ever made." First of all, the cast: Al Pacino and Robert De Niro. The two finally share screen time after a missed opportunity in The Godfather, Part 2, in which they shared a bill but never actually appeared in the same scene. In Michael Mann's Heat, Pacino, the cop, and De Niro, the crook, face off in an epic, nearly three-hour-long crime drama, which includes unforgettable lines ("She's got a GREAT ASS!") and an even more unforgettable shoot-out.
Mamma Mia! (2008) / Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again (2018)
Why just settle for one dad when you can have three? In the classic ABBA musical Mamma Mia!, Sophie (Amanda Seyfried) reads her mom’s old diary to try to figure out who her real dad is so he can walk her down the aisle at her wedding. Turns out her mom Donna (Meryl Streep/Lily James in the subsequent movie) had quite a busy summer when Sophie was conceived, leaving her with three paternal options: Sam, Harry, and Bill.
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In this endearing coming-of-age story, first-time actor Markees Christmas plays title character Morris, a 13-year-old black kid from New York living in Germany—adding a whole new challenge to the notion of growing up and fitting in. While all his classmates love dance music, Morris fancies himself a rapper, writing in-his-dreams rhymes like "fuckin' all the bitches, two at a time" and humping his pillow for practice during his awkward puberty phase. He gets relentlessly made fun of by his dad, played by Craig Robinson, who, between polar opposite appearances on The Office and Mr. Robot, finds the perfect balance of drama and comedy in this Chad Hartigan indie.
Ugh, dads don’t understand! Sometimes you just wanna plug in your earphones at the dinner table to tune them out. In Bo Burnham’s coming-of-age comedy, there are plenty of memory-triggering tween moments (especially involving crushes), but the emotional gut-punch of it lies in Kayla’s (Elsie Fisher) relationship with her single dad (Josh Hamilton), whose heart-to-heart speech at the end will surely get the waterworks going.
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Gene Hackman beguiles us all as a trickster dad who uses the guise of terminal illness to bring his weirdo family members back together under one roof again. Luke Wilson, Gwyneth Paltrow, and Ben Stiller play the Tenenbaum kids, who all possess quirks that can only be described as extremely Wes Anderson. Also extremely Wes Anderson are the supporting players (Anjelica Huston, Bill Murray, Danny Glover, Owen Wilson) and the killer soundtrack, which has Paltrow's Margot Tenenbaum getting off the bus in her iconic fur coat to Nico's "These Days." The Royal Tenenbaums is not just Wes Anderson's greatest achievement, but whimsical family dramedy at its best.
If you're not already watching this Vittorio De Sica classic because of Master of None, it's a good one to save for Father's Day. Bicycle Thieves is not only a central film for the Italian neo-realism genre, it's a heartfelt tearjerker that follows father and son on the streets of Rome as they look for the stolen bicycle their livelihood depends on. The father, Antonio (Lamberto Maggiorani), stoops to thievery himself in desperate times in this portrait of impoverished post-war life. Watch with your own papa, but if the tears come, don't say I didn't warn you.
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Okay, maybe don't watch this one with mom in the room. Robert Benton's Kramer vs. Kramer has become a somewhat contentious movie since its 1979 release, but it's still full of impeccable performances. Dustin Hoffman (one of the titular Kramers) initially starts off as a reluctant dad but finds fatherhood worth fighting for in a custody battle with the other Kramer, played by Meryl Streep. Hoffman and Streep are all-timers, but the kid (Justin Henry) is pretty damn good too, and earned himself an Oscar nomination at the tender age of eight.
If you had to choose a movie dad to save you from trouble, you probably couldn't do better than Taken's Liam Neeson, a retired government agent who must tap back into his "very particular set of skills" to track down and rescue his daughter (Maggie Grace) after she's abducted and auctioned off into a sex trafficking ring during her Parisian vacation. Taken is the pinnacle of Neeson's rebranding as an older action star, and the manner in which he kicks ass (remember that electrocution scene?) makes him the baddest dad in town. And why not make it a marathon with Taken 2 and 3?
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There are so many Disney movies in which a mother is the key parental figure, but this jungle-set Hamlet adaptation is a heart-wrencher for the tragic loss of Simba's father, Mufasa. It is impossible to watch the stampede scene without fully sobbing—a great Father's Day activity if you ask me. But it won't be a downer all the way through: Hakuna Matata will get you through.
While he doesn't do much on-screen fathering until the later films, Bruce Willis is a dad in this movie. (Sorry, but he's, like, busy trying to take down German terrorists at his estranged wife's holiday party, okay?) Die Hard has become a beloved Christmas movie, but it's also a great Father's Day movie, and heck, it's just a great movie to watch any day. Yell "Yippee ki yay, motherfucker" with your own dad as you root for Bruce Willis to take down the villainous Hans Gruber (played by the late, great Alan Rickman).
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If you have a dad with a sick sense of humor, who also happens to like trashy horror flicks, then go with Sinister, which set up Ethan Hawke as the hot horror movie dad of the season (see: the following year's The Purge). Hawke plays a crime writer who moves his family into a new home, where he finds a bunch of creepy Super 8 films—then strange things start to happen in the middle of the night. No spoilers here, but playing this movie for Dad on Father's Day would be a pretty sick prank.
Fact: Dads love cars. Sure, you can watch any of the eight F&F movies (and the latest one does have a strong fatherly motif), but there is a nostalgic simplicity to the first one, in which Vin Diesel, Paul Walker, and the rest of the fam were just drag racers. Pop open a beer with dad, kick back, and enjoy.
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Dad + President = the biggest dad of all. At least, that's the case in Air Force One, a plane thriller that has Harrison Ford's President James Marshall and his family mile-high and held hostage by a group of terrorists led by Gary Oldman. When Air Force One gets hijacked, Marshall must tap into his military training to get his family to safety.
Whose dads is this? Another trickster father can be found in this critically acclaimed German film. Dad jokes are taken to the extreme when Winfried (Peter Simonischek) dons a terrible wig and a set of fake teeth and appears as his alter ego "Toni Erdmann" in a way to reconnect with his workaholic daughter Ines (Sandra Hüller). They bicker like any father and daughter, but find a strange, touching middle ground that involves an epic Whitney Houston rendition and a Bulgarian folk monster costume.
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What's an offer your dad can't refuse? An invitation to watch The Godfather, of course. During production, this Francis Ford Coppola masterpiece was a disaster—with setbacks, studio drama, and a crew that didn't know what it was doing. So The Godfather is, in many regards, a miracle. Watching it now, you'd never know it was expected to fail. Mafia violence and the decapitated horse head are now classic elements of the movie, but it's also truly about family politics, especially of the patriarchal kind.
By the end of Call Me By Your Name's swooning summertime romance, the viewer may feel a deep emptiness as Elio becomes Oliver-less all too swiftly. Elio’s not only heartbroken but also confused about his sexuality after his first same-sex relationship, but some gentle reprieve comes in the form of his understanding father, who gives a warm, non-judgmental, non-pushy speech at the end. He advises Elio to listen to his feelings and nurse them rather than withdraw altogether. “I will have been a terrible father if, one day, you’d want to speak to me and felt the door was shut, or not sufficiently open,” he says. What a sweet dad.
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In this humanist film, which is as warm as an open fire on Christmas day, Jimmy Stewart plays the selfless George Bailey, who faces financial ruin and contemplates suicide in order to save his family. Not so fast—this is actually a feel-good movie. A guardian angel helps George see what life would be like if he wasn't around. It's a life-affirming picture with a gold-hearted father at the center.
Actually, maybe not one to watch with dad, thanks to the creepy, incestuous-ish (but not actually incestuous) dad moment in this movie. After FBI agent Sean Archer (John Travolta) and evil terrorist Castor Troy (Nicolas Cage) switch bodies, Sean's daughter (Dominique Swain) is rightly creeped out when her dad busts into her bedroom. (Are you following?) But 20 years later, Face/Off remains an incredible film—though not one for the incredulous. Not only do the foes' faces come off, but they also…face off…against each other. Bravo.
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Johnny Marco (Stephen Dorff) is a disillusioned Hollywood star who spends his days drinking, schmoozing, and having strippers entertain him in his Chateau Marmont room. A great father he is not, but he has to at least try when his 11-year-old daughter Cleo (Elle Fanning) unexpectedly visits, completely charming him with her ice-skating, egg-cooking, and Guitar Hero skills. There is no saccharine happily-ever-after in which Johnny suddenly becomes a world-class dad, but their brief time together does change him.
Maybe you're not a sports person, and that's been a barrier in bonding with your dad. But the good news is that sports movies are a whole other thing. Go for Spike Lee's late '90s basketball melodrama, which features Denzel Washington as a father on parole who tries to convince his son Jesus (played by NBA player Ray Allen) to play college basketball at Big State, with th
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Dad And Daughter Sex Films




















































