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. Pilkipedia's Top 100 Films's icon

    Pilkipedia's Top 100 Films

    Favs/dislikes: 3:1.
  2. Total Film's 100 Greatest Movies of All Time's icon

    Total Film's 100 Greatest Movies of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 22:1.
  3. 101 Movies to See Before You Grow Up's icon

    101 Movies to See Before You Grow Up

    Favs/dislikes: 7:0. "Movies are made to entertain! Movies can make you think, teach you a lesson, or just let you escape into a fantasy world for a few hours. This book serves as an interactive bucket list of films for children ages 8 and up to watch before they grow up. 101 Movies to See Before You Grow Up goes beyond mainstream films. From modern flicks to classic films, the list offers a wide selection of "must see" movies. "
  4. 101 Must-See Movies for Gay Men's icon

    101 Must-See Movies for Gay Men

    Favs/dislikes: 26:1. n this 2005 book, author Alonso Duralde (arts and entertainment editor of The Advocate, the national gay and lesbian newsmagazine) presents a list of films every gay man should watch before considering his cultural education complete! From “The Apple” to “Xanadu”, “Auntie Mame” to “Zero Patience”, this list covers all the bases: Hollywood spectaculars, indie hits, cult faves, critical darlings and clamp classics.
  5. Box-Office 2009 (Top 100)'s icon

    Box-Office 2009 (Top 100)

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. This is the top 100* most grossing movies of 2009 in the USA. Source : BoxOfficeMojo. *Toy Story / Toy Story 2 (3D) was a double feature, and is added as two movies.
  6. Superinteressante's The 101 Greatest Films of Cinema History's icon

    Superinteressante's The 101 Greatest Films of Cinema History

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Selected by Superinteressante (Brazilian Magazine about cultural and scientific curiosities) The most intelligent, innovative and astonishing productions of all time."
  7. They Draw Anime, Don't They?'s icon

    They Draw Anime, Don't They?

    Favs/dislikes: 11:0. The most acclaimed anime series of all time, compiled from 57 lists. Last updated: October 2022
  8. 100 Bible Films's icon

    100 Bible Films

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. 100 Bible Films - from the BFI book by Matt Page
  9. 100 Movies, 100 Quotes, 100 Numbers's icon

    100 Movies, 100 Quotes, 100 Numbers

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. Movies from YouTube video "100 Movies, 100 Quotes, 100 Numbers"
  10. 100 Movies, 100 Quotes, 100 Numbers: The Centennial Edition's icon

    100 Movies, 100 Quotes, 100 Numbers: The Centennial Edition

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. Movies from YouTube video "100 Movies, 100 Quotes, 100 Numbers: The Centennial Edition"
  11. 100 Shakespeare Films (BFI Screen Guide)'s icon

    100 Shakespeare Films (BFI Screen Guide)

    Favs/dislikes: 29:0. The top 100 filmed Shakespeare adaptations, as selected by Daniel Rosenthal in BFI Screen Guides' "100 Shakespeare Films."
  12. ASC's 100 Milestone Films in Cinematography of the 20th Century's icon

    ASC's 100 Milestone Films in Cinematography of the 20th Century

    Favs/dislikes: 22:0. On January 8, 2019, the American Society of Cinematographers (ASC) celebrated its 100th anniversary. As part of the celebration, the Society released that day a list of 100 cinematographic masterpieces of the 20th Century, as voted on by ASC members. The first ten films are ranked by number of votes. The remaining films are listed chronologically.
  13. Box-Office 2006 (Top 100)'s icon

    Box-Office 2006 (Top 100)

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. This is the top 100 most grossing movies of 2006 in the USA. Source : BoxOfficeMojo.
  14. Box-Office 2012 (Top 100)'s icon

    Box-Office 2012 (Top 100)

    Favs/dislikes: 6:0. This is the top 100 most grossing movies of 2012 in the USA. Source : BoxOfficeMojo.
  15. Box-Office 2013 (Top 100)'s icon

    Box-Office 2013 (Top 100)

    Favs/dislikes: 13:0. This is the top 100 most grossing movies of 2013 in the USA. Source : BoxOfficeMojo.
  16. David N. Meyer's The 100 Best Films to Rent You've Never Heard of's icon

    David N. Meyer's The 100 Best Films to Rent You've Never Heard of

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. The 100 Best Films to Rent You've Never Heard Of: Hidden Treasures, Neglected Classics, and Hits From By-Gone Eras
  17. Entertainment Weekly's 100 Greatest Movies of All Time's icon

    Entertainment Weekly's 100 Greatest Movies of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 14:0. Entertainment Weekly's 100 Greatest Movies of All Time, a hardcover guide published in 1999 by Time-Life Inc. and written by senior editor Ty Burr, celebrated films that can't be forgotten, that "help us understand and define who we are." The final list was whittled down from a preliminary collection of 500 nominated choices, excluding short films, documentaries, or any movies from the previous five years (from 1994 onward). The list deliberately corrected the American Film Institute's most glaring omissions - Preston Sturges, Buster Keaton, and Ernst Lubitsch, and added some of the best foreign films - from Fellini, Truffaut, and Kurosawa. According to the book's introduction, the most represented male star was James Stewart (with five films); Cary Grant, Robert De Niro and Alec Guinness had four films each, and Janet Leigh had three films. The most represented director was Alfred Hitchcock (with four films), and there were three films each from Michael Curtiz, David Lean, Martin Scorsese, Steven Spielberg, and Billy Wilder. (The book also includes 25 additional films "too beloved to ignore." This list is here: http://www.icheckmovies.com/lists/entertainment+weeklys+25+films+just+too+beloved+to+ignore/marchosias/)
  18. Frank Ocean's Favorite Movies's icon

    Frank Ocean's Favorite Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 6:0. Frank Ocean's favorite movies, as listed in his Boys Don't Cry zine.
  19. Great Movies - 100 Years of Cinema's icon

    Great Movies - 100 Years of Cinema

    Favs/dislikes: 9:0. Based on the book by Andrew Heritage. Over 1,500 key movies are referred to in this book, but only the 100 main entries are to be found on this list. Index: 1-10: Comedy 11-20: Action & Adventure 21-30: Romance & Melodrama 31-40: Musicals 41-50: Thrillers & Crime 51-60: Historical 61-70: War 71-80: Family 81-90: Fantasy, Sci-fi & Horror 91-100: Drama
  20. Guillaume Evin's The 101 Historical Films to See's icon

    Guillaume Evin's The 101 Historical Films to See

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. from the french "Les 101 films historiques à voir - De la Guerre du feu à Zero Dark Thirty" and expanded from the 2013 version "L'histoire fait son cinéma en 100 films: de La Guerre du feu à Démineurs". History has always made its cinema. This has been the case since the advent of the latter at the turn of the 20th century. The 7th Art takes hold of a historical phenomenon to restore it (rarely), magnify it or mishandle it (sometimes), revisit it (often), thus taking some liberties with the reality of events. From Prehistory to the war in Iraq, from Cleopatra to Napoleon, from the fall of the Roman Empire to that of the Ancien Régime, certain eras, certain events, certain figures have been brilliantly captured over the decades by the discerning eye of filmmakers from around the world (DeMille, Eisenstein, Kubrick, Visconti, Lean, Kurosawa, Renoir, Annaud, Mankiewicz, Tavernier, Leone, Malle, Spielberg, Malick, Cimino, Coppola, Bertolucci, Melville, Losey, Bigelow... ), while other moments have been purely and simply forgotten if not obscured. From The War of Fire to Zero Dark Thirty, here is an overview of the 101 best historical films, where we meet the intimate and the monumental, the derisory and the grandiose, the austere and the spectacular. Note: The book is divided in the following sections: Prehistory, Antiquity, The Middle Ages, Modern Times and Contemporary Times with subset sections within them. PS: If anyone can get ahold of the book, please send me a pm with the name of the missing movie.
  21. Hollywood's 100 Favorite Films's icon

    Hollywood's 100 Favorite Films

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Who better to judge the best movies of all time than the people who make them? Studio chiefs, Oscar winners and TV royalty all were surveyed as The Hollywood Reporter publishes its first definitive entertainment-industry ranking of cinema's most superlative. Is it wrong to already declare this the No. 1 movie list of all time? After all, there are other movie lists. Lots and lots of others. So many lists, you couldn't list them all. But this is the first to ask the entertainment industry itself to pick its choices for the best pictures ever made. In May, THR sent an online ballot all over town — to every studio, agency, publicity firm and production house on either side of the 405. Not everybody was initially thrilled to participate. "I reject the idea," Breaking Bad creator Vince Gilligan told THR. "To me, it's the equivalent of having a party-size bag of Nacho Doritos, then being told to eat only five." In the end, though, he sent in his favorites (one of which is 1961's Yojimbo), as did a total of 2,120 industry members, including Fox chief Jim Gianopulos, Disney's Alan Horn, director Gary Ross, producer Frank Marshall, Warners' Sue Kroll, agent Robert Newman, attorney John Burke, filmmaker John Singleton and many more. These are the results: the greatest movies ever made, according to Hollywood. There are some surprises here. It's a far more commercial list than the usual critics' picks. Who knew, for instance, that Back to the Future would get more love than Lawrence of Arabia? There also are shocking omissions — The 400 Blows, La Dolce Vita, The Gold Rush and dozens of other undeniably great films. And there are interesting differences of opinion along professional divides: Directors, writers and agents all agreed on their choice for the greatest movie ever (hint: It rhymes with "Schmodfather"), while cinematographers chose 2001: A Space Odyssey and entertainment lawyers, the big softies, picked The Shawshank Redemption. But keep in mind, movie lists aren't forever. As Michael Bay points out, "Your favorite film could change every day." http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/lists/best-hollywood-movies-all-time-818512
  22. ICM Forum's Favorite Train Films (2024)'s icon

    ICM Forum's Favorite Train Films (2024)

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. From the moment in 1896 when the Lumière brothers screened their film of a train arriving at La Ciotat Station, trains have made an indelible mark on cinema. Now, 32 iCM Forum voters rank our favorite train films (films that take place on a train). This is the top 100 films from the forum poll. Go here for the list of all films: https://www.icheckmovies.com/lists/icm+forums+favorite+train+films+-+all+votes+2024/beasterne/
  23. Lash! The Hundred Great Scenes of Men Being Whipped in Movies's icon

    Lash! The Hundred Great Scenes of Men Being Whipped in Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 6:0. From the book by Alvin Easter
  24. Name that movie's icon

    Name that movie

    Favs/dislikes: 6:0. All the movies featured in the "Name that movie - 100 illustrated movie puzzles" by Paul Rogers
  25. Pardon le Cinéma vol.2: 100 films à voir d'urgence, des classiques aux pépites's icon

    Pardon le Cinéma vol.2: 100 films à voir d'urgence, des classiques aux pépites

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. [b]Pardon the Cinema, vol. 2![/b] The team of the first French podcast on cinema does it again with a new opus. New films, new classics to (re)discover, new nuggets lovingly unearthed, new great moments of the 7th art... But the objective is always the same: to wake up your screens with another cinema, an in-depth selection that travels across all continents and all genres, from 1907 to 2021, from Chile to Japan, from documentaries to action films... [b]100 unknown, forgotten or marginal films... to see urgently! [/b] "Pardon le Cinema" is Victor Bonnefoy (director, screenwriter and creator of the Youtube channel InThePanda), Sophie Grech (press officer and screenwriter), Marc Moquin (editor-in-chief of Revus & Corrigés), Simon Riaux (critic cinema in Le Cercle on Canal+ or on the Large Screen website), Arthur Cios (journalist for Konbini) and Alexis Roux (cinema journalist): a team that talks about cinema in an irresponsible but respectful atmosphere and brings together more than 100,000 listeners per month.
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