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. Italian Political Film's icon

    Italian Political Film

    Favs/dislikes: 16:0. Political indictments and social invectives, Italian style.
  2. James Bond's icon

    James Bond

    Favs/dislikes: 16:0. All James Bond movies together in one list
  3. Jane Fonda Filmography's icon

    Jane Fonda Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 16:0.
  4. Jim Emerson's "102 Movies You Must See"'s icon

    Jim Emerson's "102 Movies You Must See"

    Favs/dislikes: 16:0. "These are the movies I just kind of figure everybody ought to have seen in order to have any sort of informed discussion about movies. They’re the common cultural currency of our time, the basic cinematic texts that everyone should know, at minimum, to be somewhat ‘movie-literate.’ I hope these movies are experiences we can all assume we share….This isn’t like Roger Ebert’s ‘Great Movies’ series. It’s not my idea of The Best Movies Ever Made (that would be a different list, though there’s some overlap here), or limited to my personal favorites or my estimation of the most important or influential films…. I tried to represent key examples of all important genres, movie stars, directors, historical movements, and so on — like an overview of the 20th century in 101 movies. Yes, there are many more I’d like to add, but remember, this is only a primer. How many have you seen?" —Jim Emerson
  5. Kenji's "Canon": The Big 1000's icon

    Kenji's "Canon": The Big 1000

    Favs/dislikes: 16:0. Kenji's MUBI list "I’ve called this list a canon, cos the original intention was of a wide-ranging canon, including established “classics” but also balancing the domination by Hollywood with a geographical spread. Now i’ve thought better of reinforcing received wisdom and the position of many popular and major films which hardly need promoting and which i’m not so keen on. So it’s become a personal “canon” like Rosenbaum’s 1000. Notable films I intend to see can be found on my “Percy the Porcupine” list. I need to keep extending my viewing in neglected areas of the world- Africa, Latin America, the Balkans and parts of Asia should then be better represented. We didn’t have a TV till i was 12. My first memory of going to the cinema was Fantasia- my introduction to the devil and dinosaurs. Then there was a film called Emil and the Detectives. My small town’s cinema closed when i was 7- TV was too strong a competitor-, my sole memory of films there of “red Indians” on a hill. The bigger films were at the grand metropolis of the county town of 3,000 people 20 miles away, or an even greater city of a few thousand more in the other direction. How i wept when the childcatcher caught them in Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, and the sky outside had changed, with castles hidden in the majestic domes of cumulo-nimbus. At 11, The Great Escape was the greatest adventure, at 12, El Cid. At 13, i joined the school film society. I gazed in awe at the naked female on a motorbike in Vanishing Point- more fun than that boring Wild Strawberries. In my mid teens, the best discoveries were North by Northwest and Fred Astaire. At uni, on a French course, my special subject was French Cinema of the 30s- Renoir and Pagnol.. but i really got obsessively hooked on world cinema once i’d bought a video player in the late 80s (ooh those Wenders road movies!) and John Kobal’s book The Top 100 Movies (see my list on that); Tarkovsky and Mizoguchi were new names to me. Soon i saw Andrei Rublev and the rain and light had changed. Then a few years on (less availability in those days) it was the turn of Sansho the Bailiff." Notes: #361 Teen Kanya (Three Daughters, 1961) only refers to the segment "Postmaster" #471 Le plus vieux métier du monde (1967) only refers to the segment "Anticipation, ou l'amour en l'an 2000" #671 Fanny och Alexander (1982) specifically refers to the television version 1007 entries because.... #6-10 Fantômas (5 episodes) counted as one entry #339-341 Ningen no jôken trilogy counted as one entry #603-605 La batalla de Chile trilogy counted as one entry Kenji's list now has only 999 entries
  6. List of Films that most Frequently use the word 'Fuck''s icon

    List of Films that most Frequently use the word 'Fuck'

    Favs/dislikes: 16:0. The use of profanity in films has always been controversial, but has increased significantly in recent years. The use of the word fuck in film has always drawn particular criticism; in 2005, the documentary Fuck dealt entirely with this phenomenon (this one contains a 824-times use of the word fuck, followed by a 435-count in the movie: 'Summer of Sam'). The word fuck is thought to be the taboo term used most in American film. This is a list of non-pornographic, English language films containing at least 150 spoken uses of the word fuck (or one of its derivatives), ordered by the number of such uses. (source: en.wikipedia.org)
  7. Los Angeles Film Critics Circle: Best Films of the 2000 Decade's icon

    Los Angeles Film Critics Circle: Best Films of the 2000 Decade

    Favs/dislikes: 16:0. Selected by members of the Los Angeles Film Critics Circle, the 193 best films of the 2000s.
  8. Lucio Fulci filmography's icon

    Lucio Fulci filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 16:0.
  9. Manoel de Oliveira Complete Filmography's icon

    Manoel de Oliveira Complete Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 16:0. All feature films directed by Manoel de Oliveira, as well as shorts, anthology films and things for TV. From Portugal and foreign.
  10. Marcel Carne filmography's icon

    Marcel Carne filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 16:0.
  11. Mario Bava filmography's icon

    Mario Bava filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 16:0.
  12. Max von Sydow Filmography's icon

    Max von Sydow Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 16:0. Films starring Max von Sydow.
  13. Michael Vaughn's The Ultimate Guide to Strange Cinema's icon

    Michael Vaughn's The Ultimate Guide to Strange Cinema

    Favs/dislikes: 16:0. From the back cover: "It isn’t every film that features man-eating zombie sushi. But for those searching for just that and more strange things in their viewing queue, this film guide is for you. Organized by genre, including comedy, horror, action, drama, fantasy, and sci-fi, this title offers 300 reviews of genre films from all over the world, 160+ photos, and exclusive interviews and quotes from the people behind some of the most offbeat films ever made." The book is split into the following sections: Section 1: Action/Adventure - #1-24 Section 2: Cars, Trucks & Choppers #24-38 Section 3: Comedy #39-87 Section 4: Crime/Thriller #88-110 Section 5: Drama #111-139 Section 6: Fantasy #140-156 Section 7: Horror #157-379* Section 8: Sci-Fi #380-393 *The Horror section of the book is further split up by country but isn't practical to call out each specific group in this description.
  14. Midnight Only's 100 Essential Films of the Fantastic's icon

    Midnight Only's 100 Essential Films of the Fantastic

    Favs/dislikes: 16:0. "An entirely subjective list of 100 essential fantasy films", as compiled by Jeff Kuykendall, editor of MidnightOnly.com. "First off, this list is entirely personal. You will have 100 of your own. The intention is to draw a broad outline of fantasy films since the start of cinema in hopes that the reader might find some helpful recommendations. It’s an admittedly ludicrous endeavor to define 100 of the most essential of anything, which is why this is just “100 Essential Films of the Fantastic,” not the most essential. To pare this last down to 100, I found myself discarding many acknowledged classics, and holding tight to others for the sake of variety or my own passion for them."
  15. Montages.no – Top 100 films from the 90s's icon

    Montages.no – Top 100 films from the 90s

    Favs/dislikes: 16:0. The major Norwegian internet film site Montages.no's list over the top 100 films from the 1990s. Shared spots: 03 – Trois couleurs: Bleu, Blanc & Rouge (1993, 1994, 1994) 10 – Chungking Express (1994) & Fallen Angels (1995) 16 – Schindler's List (1993) & Saving Private Ryan (1998) 74 – Home Alone 1 & 2 (1990, 1992) 75 – Toy Story 1 & 2 (1995, 1999)
  16. Most International Industry Awards's icon

    Most International Industry Awards

    Favs/dislikes: 16:1. Below are the films that have won over five "industry awards," defined as those awards selected by professionals in the movie business. I limited the pool of film industry bodies to those from the following countries: Australia (AACTA, formerly AFI), China (Golden Horse & Golden Rooster), France (Cesar), Germany (Lola), Great Britain (BAFTA), Italy (Donatello), India (Lotus), Japan (Awards of the Japanese Academy), Mexico (Ariel), Russia (Nika), Sweden (Guldbagge), and the United States (Oscar). All titles are sorted first by total, then by year of release. The leader (at 23) is "The Last Emperor" with 9 Oscars, 9 Donatellos, 3 BAFTAs, 1 Cesar, and an award from the Japanese Academy.
  17. Moviefone: Best Christmas Movies's icon

    Moviefone: Best Christmas Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 16:1. Top 25 Christmas movies from the staff of Moviefone
  18. My Voyage to Italy's icon

    My Voyage to Italy

    Favs/dislikes: 16:0. One of the most acclaimed directors of our time, Academy Award nominee Martin Scorsese, directs and narrates this remarkable in-depth look at the careers of great Italian filmmakers and their profound influence on him. With My Voyage To Italy, Scorsese takes the viewer on a fascinating journey highlighting the classics of Italian cinema, from the neorealism of postwar Italy through its transition into opulent period drama and surrealist fantasy. Illuminated by insightful movie clips and his own impassioned commentary, Scorsese's deeply personal observations offer not only an absorbing lesson in the history of Italian film, but its direct connection to the best in contemporary filmmaking as well.
  19. Natural Horror & Related Movies's icon

    Natural Horror & Related Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 16:0. Natural horror is a sub-genre of horror films featuring nature running amok in the form of mutated beasts, carnivorous insects, and normally harmless animals or plants turned into cold-blooded killers. Many movies on this list are only loosely related to the genre of Natural Horror. Not only does it include various “animal-movies” in the genres of thriller, drama and comedy, but it is also built around rather loose definitions of exactly what “animals” is, hence the inclusion of various types of monsters, cryptids, plants, dinosaur and other creatures. And as always with these kinds of list: suggestions of movies that should be added or removed are always welcome.
  20. Oscar and Razzie Nominated Films's icon

    Oscar and Razzie Nominated Films

    Favs/dislikes: 16:0. Films that have nominations in both The Oscars and The Razzies, in order of imdb user score.
  21. Out Movie Guide's icon

    Out Movie Guide

    Favs/dislikes: 16:0. List of all GLBT-themed movies as they are added to the Out Movie Guide at outmovieguide.blogspot.com. Last update: February 13, 2016.
  22. Paul Rudd Filmography's icon

    Paul Rudd Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 16:0. An unofficial list of actor Paul Rudd's filmography
  23. Peter Weir filmography's icon

    Peter Weir filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 16:0.
  24. Premiere Magazine's 25 Most Dangerous Movies's icon

    Premiere Magazine's 25 Most Dangerous Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 16:0. List from Premiere Magazine.
  25. Psychology in Movies's icon

    Psychology in Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 16:0. Psychmovies.com's list of films portraying mental illness and its treatment
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