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.

  1. Richard Widmark Filmography.'s icon

    Richard Widmark Filmography.

    Favs/dislikes: 2:1. A list of all Richard Widmark's film & tv acting appearances.
  2. Rita Tushingham Filmography's icon

    Rita Tushingham Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. All feature and television films starring Rita Tushingham
  3. Rob Lowing's Top 100 Films of All Time's icon

    Rob Lowing's Top 100 Films of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Film critic Rob Lowing racked her brain to settle on her favourite flicks, ranging from futuristic thrillers to screwball comedies to Rodgers and Hammerstein musicals.
  4. Rob Reiner filmography's icon

    Rob Reiner filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0.
  5. ROBERT (Danish Film Award)'s icon

    ROBERT (Danish Film Award)

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. The Robert Award is a Danish film prize awarded each year by the Danish Film Academy (Filmakademiet). It is the Danish equivalent of the American Oscars, British BAFTAs for films and Australian AACTA Awards. The award—voted only by academy members—is an acknowledgement by Danish industry colleagues of a person's or film's outstanding contributions during the previous year. The Robert was awarded for the first time in 1984 and is named after the statuette's creator, the Danish sculptor Robert Jacobsen. In 1998 the votes for best film tied, resulting in the award being given to two films. Barbara and Let's Get Lost. Although listet here as two titles, Nymphomaniac: Vol. I and Nymphomaniac: Vol. II was concidered one piece (Nymphomaniac Director's Cut) and received only one award for best film.
  6. Robert Ryan's Westerns's icon

    Robert Ryan's Westerns

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0.
  7. Rockumentaries's icon

    Rockumentaries

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. A bunch of documentaries about rock music and music stuff in general. Rock on!
  8. Rolling Stone 10 Best Movies of the Decade's icon

    Rolling Stone 10 Best Movies of the Decade

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Rolling Stone's film critic Peter Travers pick his best movies of 2000s
  9. Rolling Stone Top 40 Sci-Fi Movies of the 21st Century's icon

    Rolling Stone Top 40 Sci-Fi Movies of the 21st Century

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Ask any science-fiction movie fanatic what their go-to films are, and you’ll get a lot of great answers back: Metropolis, Blade Runner, 2001, The Day the Earth Stood Still, the original Godzilla, The Thing etc. But let’s face it – those answers are so last century. Great sci-fi movies didn’t decide to party like it’s 1999 then call it a day; a host of thrilling, intelligent, offbeat, funny and frightening SF films have hit art houses and multiplexes since Y2K. In 2014, we concocted a list of the Best Sci-Fi Movies of the 21st Century — a quick and dirty survey of the best the genre has had to offer since the millennium’s beginning. More than a few major science-fiction flicks, however – from franchise-expanding blockbusters to arthouse headscratchers – have dropped since then, so it was time for an overhaul and an update. We’ve now expanded our list to 40 titles, to better highlight the best and brightest SF films of our still-new–ish millennium. Some noteworthy favorites of ours just barely missed the cut (very sorry, Alex Rivera’s Sleep Dealer) or some major titles were dinged on quality-control issues. (Avatar may have been a gamechanging film for 3D, but “unobtainium”? Really?!?) We’re confident, however, that there’s a place in the canon for these relative latecomers.
  10. Rolling Stone's 40 Greatest Animated Movies Ever's icon

    Rolling Stone's 40 Greatest Animated Movies Ever

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. [quote=Rolling Stone]It’s crazy to think that, in the century-plus since Winsor McCay and the French Fantasmagorie first made moving drawings on a screen a form of popular entertainment, animation has given us everything from steamboat-steering mice and sly stop-motion foxes to, well, you name it: a septet of singing dwarves, psychic Japanese teens, counterculturally hip cats, crooning French triplets, classical-gassed satyrs and demons, humanity-saving robots, superhero families, the young-female brain’s emotional terrain and a lovable, unclassifiable creature known as a Totoro. What was once considered a cinematic distraction for children has blossomed into a medium that’s as creatively fertile and emotionally resonant as any live-action films aimed at the 18-and-over crowd (or, in the case of a stunner like Anomalisa, an incredible substitute for “adult” movies featuring actual adults). So we’re counting down our picks for the 40 greatest animated movies of all time — the features (and a handful of key shorts too good not to include) that have pushed the boundaries of what drawn lines, computerized pixels or manipulated puppets could accomplish for filmgoers. These are the ones that scare us, move us, crack us up and remind us of how fun and moving it is to watch cartoons, etc. with a crowd.[/quote]
  11. Rolling Stone's The 100 Greatest TV Shows of All Time (2022)'s icon

    Rolling Stone's The 100 Greatest TV Shows of All Time (2022)

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. "A ranking of the most game-changing, side-splitting, tear-jerking, mind-blowing, world-building, genre-busting programs in television history, from the medium’s inception in the early 20th century through the ever-metastasizing era of Peak TV." (Alan Sepinwall) - #16 Twin Peaks (1990-1991) also includes Twin Peaks (2017) - #66 is 'The Daily Show With Jon Stewart' (1999-2015)
  12. Rolling Stone's The 150 Greatest Science Fiction Movies of All Time (2024)'s icon

    Rolling Stone's The 150 Greatest Science Fiction Movies of All Time (2024)

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Published January 1st 2024 From space odysseys to star wars, alien invaders to guardians of the galaxy — the best sci-fi films from the beginning of the movies until now.
  13. Rolling Stone's Top 10 Movies of 2011's icon

    Rolling Stone's Top 10 Movies of 2011

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Peter Travers selects his top 10 of 2011 10. is a three way tie (War Horse, The Help, Harry Potter)
  14. RollingStone's 100 Greatest Music Videos's icon

    RollingStone's 100 Greatest Music Videos

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. From Adele to ZZ Top — our ranked list of the best music videos of all time from July 30th, 2021
  15. RollingStone's 60 Greatest Horror Movies of the 21st Century (2019)'s icon

    RollingStone's 60 Greatest Horror Movies of the 21st Century (2019)

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Ranked. From topical zombie apocalypses to retro-slasher flicks, Rolling Stone chooses the best scary movies since the turn of the millennium. Compiled by Charles Bramesco, Jovanka Vuckovic, Sam Zimmerman, Scott Tobias, Noel Murray, Tim Grierson, Sam Adams, David Fear, Kory Grow, Sean T. Collins & Dan Epstein .
  16. romance's icon

    romance

    Favs/dislikes: 2:2.
  17. Romanian films's icon

    Romanian films

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. The films are not in preferential order (anymore)
  18. Rooney Mara Filmography's icon

    Rooney Mara Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0.
  19. Rosenbaum Only's icon

    Rosenbaum Only

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. These are the 235 films which appear on Jonathan Rosenbaum's Essential Films list and on no other official lists
  20. Rotten Tomatoes: 30 Essential LGBTQ Documentaries's icon

    Rotten Tomatoes: 30 Essential LGBTQ Documentaries

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Queer cinema hinges on stories about the one and the many. LGBTQ documentary films, though, can only ever offer both: portraits of individuals necessarily speak more broadly about the community they come to represent, while chronicles of a group (or a family, or a segment of the population) can only ever do so through individual testimonials and the singular vision of the filmmaker at hand. Films like Portrait of Jason and Tongues Untied, for instance, tell contemporary viewers as much about the individual stories about gay Black men presented on screen as about the communities (real and imagined) that their respective filmmakers brought to bear on their finished films. The following list of LGBTQ documentaries offers us windows into the past, allowing us glimpses into moments made worthy by their mere documentation. Yet to say nonfiction filmmaking has merely documented the LGBTQ community is to sell short the work that some of the seminal documentaries listed below have accomplished. Projects like 1977’s Word is Out, which compiled testimonials from men and women about their experiences coming to terms with their sexuality and coming out, began sketching on screen what a community could and did look like. Similarly, aptly-titled works like Before Stonewall: The Making of a Gay and Lesbian Community and Forbidden Love: The Unashamed Stories of Lesbian Lives offer not just potent history lessons but snapshots of how Americans were conceiving of their own community-building in the years following the 1969 Stonewall riots. There is also, of course, no way of discussing queer nonfiction cinema without calling up the urgent historiographical work of films like Common Threads: Stories from the Quilt, How to Survive a Plague, and We Were Here. These projects remind us that telling the history of the AIDS crisis necessarily inverts ACT UP’s famous Silence=Death rallying cry: to memorialize those lost and to chronicle their activist fights is to refuse the erasure which so drove the early years of the crisis, both in the press and at the White House. The list below, which reaches back to the late 1960s and includes recent projects from around the globe that have further broadened what kinds of LGBTQ stories get told, is an invitation to see how queer and straight filmmakers alike have made real-life narratives pulsate with meaning. To look at this list of documentaries is to see the commingling of the one and the many. Together they create a kaleidoscopic vision of what the queer community has looked like on the big screen. Here are our 30 essential LGBTQ documentaries, in order of release. – Manuel Betancourt
  21. Rotten Tomatoes Horror Countdown 2012 Update's icon

    Rotten Tomatoes Horror Countdown 2012 Update

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. "You got your costume. Pumpkins all carved up. Disco ball of doom, check. Next up: Picking the night's feature creature attractions. We submit to you then Best Horror Movies: (2012 Update)! 'Tis a grimoire (or, if you will, an evil binder) full of women on the run, vampires and zombies, and night-stalking psycho killers. However! May we have a word before you turn the page? To calculate Best Horror, we used a special mathematical formula, forged in the very depths of hell by Hollywood accountants. This formula considers a movie's Tomatometer, its number of reviews (requiring at least 20) and release year, delivering a unique weighted ranking for each. Better put on your Gloves of Evil Handling: Here comes the Best Horror Movies (2012 Update)!"
  22. Rotten Tomatoes Top 100 on Netflix's icon

    Rotten Tomatoes Top 100 on Netflix

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. The films from the top 100 highest rated movies of all time from Rotten Tomatoes that are currently streaming on Netflix Instant in the United States. Thanks to bcacace, who originated and maintains the source list on IMDb (see source link at bottom). Here is the link to the complete top 100: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/top/bestofrt/
  23. Roy Andersson - Complete filmography's icon

    Roy Andersson - Complete filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Excludes commercials.
  24. Rudolph Valentino Filmography's icon

    Rudolph Valentino Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0.
  25. Rue Morgue's 25 Ghastliest Music Videos of the Past 25 Years's icon

    Rue Morgue's 25 Ghastliest Music Videos of the Past 25 Years

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Missing on IMDb: Tinashe - Naturally (2022) Carpenter Brut - Leather Teeth (2019)
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