Charts: Lists

This page shows you the list charts. By default, the movies are ordered by how many times they have been marked as a favorite. However, you can also sort by other information, such as the total number of times it has been marked as a dislike.

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  1. Sight & Sound: Filmmakers’ Greatest Documentaries of All Time's icon

    Sight & Sound: Filmmakers’ Greatest Documentaries of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. The greatest documentaries ever made, as voted by 103 directors including John Akomfrah, Thom Andersen, Michael Apted, Clio Barnard, Sophie Fiennes, Amos Gitai, Paul Greengrass, José Luis Guerin, Isaac Julien, Asif Kapadia, Sergei Loznitsa, Kevin Macdonald, James Marsh, Joshua Oppenheimer, Anand Patwardhan, Pawel Pawlikowski, Nicolas Philibert, Walter Salles and James Toback… (La batalla de Chile counts for 3 entries)
  2. Sight & Sound Films of the Month's icon

    Sight & Sound Films of the Month

    Favs/dislikes: 26:0. List of films selected as Film of the Month in the reviews section of Sight & Sound. From January 1998 - August 2012, one film per month was selected. Since the September 2012 issue there are usually 3 (sometimes more) each month.
  3. Sight and Sound films of the year's icon

    Sight and Sound films of the year

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Since 2005 the BFI surveys film critics and curators to poll the best films of the year. It is then published in Sight and Sound and on the BFI website. The television series Twin Peaks:The Return finished second in 2017. rather than listing all 18 episodes, the first episode has been listed as a place holder for the series.
  4. Sight & Sound Polls's icon

    Sight & Sound Polls

    Favs/dislikes: 26:0. Every film to appear on the BFI Sight & Sound Poll Top 10. The magazine conducts the poll every 10 years, starting in 1952. In 1992, the poll was split into Critics' and Directors' lists. I have included both.
  5. Sight & Sound's 50 best films of 2019's icon

    Sight & Sound's 50 best films of 2019

    Favs/dislikes: 7:0. In a year in which the future of cinema – of independent filmmaking, and collective film-watching – seems more fraught than ever, our poll of 100 S&S contributors has produced a list of 50 outstanding reasons for movie watching. Here below the reflections of past masters jostle with bold experiments from new voices – capped by a triumphant top movie that finds its British female director both looking back and moving forward. In our January 2020 issue we spotlight some of the themes and stories that have defined the cinema of 2019 – from post-#MeToo movies to the fortunes of the European arthouse, as well as expanded cinema and a countdown of the best TV of the year.
  6. Sutherland Trophy's icon

    Sutherland Trophy

    Favs/dislikes: 6:0. Created in 1958, the Sutherland Trophy was awarded annually by the British Film Institute to "the maker of the most original and imaginative [first or second feature] film introduced at the National Film Theatre during the year". In 1997, the criteria changed to honour the maker of the most original and imaginative first feature screened during the London Film Festival.
  7. The BFI 30 Best LGBT Films of All Time's icon

    The BFI 30 Best LGBT Films of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. To mark the 30th anniversary of BFI Flare: London LGBT Film Festival, BFI is delighted to announce the Top 30 LGBT Films of All Time in the first major critical survey of LGBT films. Over 100 film experts including critics, writers and programmers such as Joanna Hogg, Mark Cousins, Peter Strickland, Richard Dyer, Nick James and Laura Mulvey, as well as past and present BFI Flare programmers, have voted the Top 30 LGBT Films of All Time. The poll’s results represent 84 years of cinema and 12 countries, from countries including Thailand, Japan, Sweden and Spain, as well as films that showed at BFI Flare such as Orlando (1992), Beautiful Thing (1996), Weekend (2011) and Blue Is the Warmest Colour (2013).
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