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. Claire Trevor Filmography's icon

    Claire Trevor Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0.
  2. ClassicLine Catalogue's icon

    ClassicLine Catalogue

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. Brazilian DVD Distributor of classic movies
  3. Cliff Robertson Filmography's icon

    Cliff Robertson Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0.
  4. Complete Buster Keaton Feature Film Filmography's icon

    Complete Buster Keaton Feature Film Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. Complete Buster Keaton Feature Film Filmography
  5. Complex's The 100 Best Films of the Complex Decade's icon

    Complex's The 100 Best Films of the Complex Decade

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. Complaining about the film world’s lack of originality and daringness would feel shameful if it wasn’t so damn easy to find reasons to grumble. And the last 10 years, which have seen a multitude of trends come and go, A-list movie stars continually fail to open non-franchise movies, and the box office dominance of one Harry Potter, have given us plenty reasons to criticize. For instance, we’d need at least four hands to count the number of lifeless and inept horror remakes that genre fans have been assaulted with, and you know it’s slow creatively in Hollywood when Spider-Man gets completely rebooted (with this summer’s The Amazing Spider-Man) a mere five years after a $337-million-earning sequel (2007’s Spider-Man 3). As you can tell, though, it’s a celebration around the Complex offices these days, after 10 years doin' it, and doin' it well, and when it came time to reflect upon the films that best represent our brand’s decade-long run, one fact became clear: For all of the whining movie purists do these days, those of us who painstakingly seek out quality over instant accessibility have more cause for elation than bitching. Thanks to names like Judd Apatow, David Fincher, Daniel Day-Lewis, and Joel and Ethan Coen, as well as sick genre purveyors from countries such as France and Spain, the last 10 years have collectively been catnip for us reel folks. See for yourselves as we count down The 100 Best Movies Of The Complex Decade. (Complex Magazine)
  6. Contemporary Japanese cinema: starter kit's icon

    Contemporary Japanese cinema: starter kit

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. A list of 100 films from the past 25 years that should function as a good starter kit for people who want to explore Japanese cinema. The list is a mix of personal preference, critical darlings, future classics and hidden gems.
  7. Costume Designers Guild Award Winners's icon

    Costume Designers Guild Award Winners

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. All of the winners of the Costume Designers Guild Awards, from 1998 to the present.
  8. Criterion Channel Expiring March 2024's icon

    Criterion Channel Expiring March 2024

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0.
  9. Criterion Collection Themes - Avante-Garde's icon

    Criterion Collection Themes - Avante-Garde

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. Surreal, structural, et cetera: A handful of visionary, largely nonnarrative works belong to the collection, from some of the most important experimental film artists around the world—Jean Painlevé, Kenneth Macpherson, Stan Brakhage, and Chantal Akerman among them.
  10. Criterion Collection Themes - British Realism's icon

    Criterion Collection Themes - British Realism

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. The tradition of social realism in British film is often said to have begun with the Free Cinema movement of the mid-1950s. The aim of these documentaries—shown at the National Film Theatre in London from 1956–1959, and made by the likes of Lindsay Anderson, Karel Reisz, and Tony Richardson—was to bring to the screen authentic representations of the working class, largely absent from the conservative mainstream British culture of the day. In the early sixties, this rebellious sensibility was transposed to narrative cinema in the form of rough-edged, often black-and-white character pieces, often referred to as “kitchen-sink dramas,” such as Anderson’s major success This Sporting Life. At the end of the decade, Ken Loach, a political filmmaker with a background in television, took realism even further with the groundbreaking Kes, a grimy, unsentimental portrait of a boy in a Northern England mining town, featuring nonprofessional actors. Today, the legacy of British social realism continues to be felt in the work of many filmmakers, including Mike Leigh, Lynne Ramsay, and Andrea Arnold.
  11. Criterion Collection Themes - Cannes's Big Winners's icon

    Criterion Collection Themes - Cannes's Big Winners

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. Since its inception in 1946, cinephiles have counted on the Cannes Film Festival, the most prestigious annual film program in the world, to keep up with the medium’s most important artists and movements. Its star-studded red carpets and glorious French Riviera scenery may get as much attention as the carefully selected films in its competition showcases, but the true legacy of Cannes has always been the masterpieces that premiered there—and especially those that have emerged as winners. The festival’s top award was originally called the Grand Prix, and the trophy for it designed each year by a different artist. Then, beginning in 1955, it became the Palme d’Or, with a new trophy modeled after the city of Cannes’s coat of arms. (The festival continues to bestow a Grand Prix, although it’s a second-place honor now.) At Criterion, we’ve collected many titles that have won the festival’s highest award, hailing from many nations of the world, Russia (The Cranes Are Flying), Italy (The Leopard), Japan (Kagemusha), and the U.K. (If….) among them.
  12. Criterion Collection Themes - Classic Hollywood's icon

    Criterion Collection Themes - Classic Hollywood

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. Oh, those movies from the dream factory. There’s nothing quite like them. Products of a streamlined studio system, classic Hollywood films have always had a peculiar magic. With their clearly delineated cause-and-effect narratives, invisible continuity cutting style, and glamorous stars, these movies were designed to go down as easy as champagne. Yet we now recognize the directors, writers, cinematographers, and technical craftspeople behind the studios’ effervescent entertainments as artists, and the style they forged is one of the most distinct, beautiful, and important in cinema history. Here are the comedies, romances, melodramas, thrillers, and fantasies in the Criterion Collection that hail from those golden years of Hollywood, commonly defined as 1917 to 1960.
  13. Criterion Collection Themes - Dysfunctional Families's icon

    Criterion Collection Themes - Dysfunctional Families

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. To paraphrase Tolstoy, happy families are all alike: they’re really boring to watch on-screen. Thus, cinema is besotted with deliciously unhappy families. Below, scan Criterion’s collection of miserable moms, depressed dads, and their sullen offspring, nestled as uncomfortably in the houses and yards of the suburbs of Connecticut as in the apartments of the side streets of Paris.
  14. Criterion Collection Themes - Faith on Film's icon

    Criterion Collection Themes - Faith on Film

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. Joyful professions of belief, self-flagellating admissions of guilt, and heretical abnegations of religion seem to sit alongside one another a bit more easily on the shelves of cinephiles than they do in the world at large. This list includes some films that engage matters of faith as their raison d’etre and others that deal with them more glancingly or derisively, but taken as a whole, it underlines both the compulsion of humankind to ask itself the eternal questions and the paradoxical power of a visual medium to capture the intangible.
  15. Criterion Collection Themes - Heist Movies's icon

    Criterion Collection Themes - Heist Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. At Criterion, it’s clear that heist movies have stolen our hearts. What is it that makes them so compelling? The clockwork precision, the array of characters needed, the potential consequences hanging in the air, our inevitable identification with the thieves (and our frustration when they don’t get away with it)—not to mention all that shiny loot. Here are some great movies to check out in a pinch, from French (Rififi) to American (The Friends of Eddie Coyle) to Japanese (Cruel Gun Story); they’re sure to inspire your inner criminal mastermind.
  16. Criterion Collection Themes - Poetic Realism's icon

    Criterion Collection Themes - Poetic Realism

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. Poetic realism was a cinematic style that emerged in France during the 1930s, the peak of that nation’s classic period of filmmaking. With its roots in realist literature, this movement combined working-class milieus and downbeat story lines with moody, proto-noir art direction and lighting to stylishly represent contemporary social conditions. Julien Duvivier’s Pépé le Moko, with the iconic Jean Gabin as the titular antihero, is generally regarded as the start of this melancholic, often fatalistic brand of cinema, which in part reflected the ominous atmosphere of prewar France but also lent itself to the individual sensibilities of a wide range of brilliant directors, such as Jean Renoir (Grand Illusion, La bête humaine) and Marcel Carné (Le jour se lève), and set designers like Alexandre Trauner. Poetic realism is thought to have greatly influenced such later film movements as Italian neorealism, which was equally sympathetic to the proletariat, and the French new wave, which looked to these great masters who had retained their artistic freedom while working in the French film industry.
  17. Critics' Choice Movie Award Winners's icon

    Critics' Choice Movie Award Winners

    Favs/dislikes: 5:1. All the winners of the Broadcast Film Critics Association's Critics' Choice Awards, from 1995 to the present.
  18. CriticsTop10.com Best Movies of 2022's icon

    CriticsTop10.com Best Movies of 2022

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. An aggregation of 1,020 critics' lists, compiled by CriticsTop10.com https://criticstop10.com/best-movies-of-2022/
  19. CultMovieForum's The 100 Greatest Horror & Exploitation Films Ever's icon

    CultMovieForum's The 100 Greatest Horror & Exploitation Films Ever

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. "Back in the summer of 2006 I started a poll aimed at finding the 100 Greatest Horror & Exploitation Films Ever. Votes were tabulated, I stalled,stalled some more then stalled a bit longer but finally here we are! I think you will agree this is a fantastic Top 100 representing horror and exploitation cinema in all its forms. Thanks once again to everyone who took time out to vote. "
  20. Cyb3r R34lm's icon

    Cyb3r R34lm

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. Cyborgs, virtual reality, the future.
  21. Czech Lion Award's icon

    Czech Lion Award

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. The Czech Lion (Český lev) is an annual film award in the Czech Republic.
  22. Daily Mail's 50 Best Movies of the Noughties's icon

    Daily Mail's 50 Best Movies of the Noughties

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. From Tolkien's Middle Earth to the Calendar Girls' Middle England, our critic picks the 50 best movies of the first decade of the Noughties. So get out the popcorn and see if you agree...
  23. Dan Duryea Filmography's icon

    Dan Duryea Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. All movies in the Dan Duryea Filmography are listed below.
  24. Dana Andrews Filmography's icon

    Dana Andrews Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. A list of Dana Andrews's (1909-1992) film appearances. Does not include his work in television.
  25. Daniel Cohen's 500 Great Films's icon

    Daniel Cohen's 500 Great Films

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. Published in 1987.
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