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. Brandon Tenold Reviewed Films's icon

    Brandon Tenold Reviewed Films

    Favs/dislikes: 3:1. This list is only for those to keep track of any films they had watched that Brandon Tenold had also reviewed. All listed, with the exception of top lists and Run! Wonder Princess. Please inform me if any films are missing otherwise, or if they had been given a page on IMDB. "Welllll....." - Brandon Tenold
  2. Central Asian cinema according to David Cook's icon

    Central Asian cinema according to David Cook

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. Central Asian films pulled from David A. Cook's book, "A History of Narrative Film." Comprises of films from Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Turkmenistan. Many are not listed on here (on LB and consequently on list). (and even less on IMDb) to add ya tebya ne zabyl https://letterboxd.com/film/i-did-not-forget-you/ Sobaka https://letterboxd.com/film/dog-2011/ stantsiya lyubvi https://letterboxd.com/film/love-station-1993/ Когда цветут розы https://letterboxd.com/film/film:726833/
  3. Chris Stuckmann Blu-Ray Collection (2017. jan.)'s icon

    Chris Stuckmann Blu-Ray Collection (2017. jan.)

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. Could not include 'Star Wars: Rebels', 'True Detective', 'War of the Worlds' and X-Files series.
  4. Classics of the Foreign Film, A Pictorial Treasury by Parker Tyler's icon

    Classics of the Foreign Film, A Pictorial Treasury by Parker Tyler

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. From a book published in 1962 titled Classics of the Foreign Film, A Pictorial Treasury by Parker Tyler "Out of thousands of films from abroad from "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari" to the present, one of the nation's leading film authorities selects seventy-five he considers the greatest. With a perceptive commentary and hundreds of carefully selected photographs." 77 films are listed because the author included Olympia and Ivan the Terrible as single entries.
  5. Danny Peary's Cult Horror Movies (2014)'s icon

    Danny Peary's Cult Horror Movies (2014)

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. Discover the 33 Best Scary, Suspenseful, Gory, and Monstrous Cinema Classics. The Bride of Frankenstein to House of Wax to The Texas Chain Saw Massacre to The Brood—horror is a beloved and multifaceted genre, with no two classics truly alike. And almost all of them—great and not-so-great—inspire the kind of passion that only cult films truly reach. In this collection of 33 essays drawn from his revered Cult Movies series, cult film specialist Danny Peary.
  6. David Thomson's Suspects's icon

    David Thomson's Suspects

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. Films referenced in David Thomson's 1985 fictional biography/noir novel of movie characters.
  7. Elizabeth Klynstra's: My favorite movies of the 2000’s's icon

    Elizabeth Klynstra's: My favorite movies of the 2000’s

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. With this list I hope to accomplish two things: 1 – generate debate amoung movie fans about what I included, overlooked, or how I ranked ’em… what would you choose? 2 – movie fans can use this list as a rental guide… start at the top and watch your way down! Most of the movies on this list are award winners, some were box office winners, and some just standout for me from the hundreds of movies released from 2000-2009….
  8. Empire's Top 20 Films of 2011's icon

    Empire's Top 20 Films of 2011

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0.
  9. Entertainment Weekly's Best Movies You've Never Seen's icon

    Entertainment Weekly's Best Movies You've Never Seen

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. "We bet at least some of these will be new even to dedicated movie fans... and you'll be glad you found them."
  10. Erik Childress' Top 50 Greatest Films's icon

    Erik Childress' Top 50 Greatest Films

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. Erik Childress picks his top 50 films of all time. He is one of four executive positions at Chicago Film Critics Association. Alphabetical order...
  11. Film Comment's Best Unreleased Films of the Year's icon

    Film Comment's Best Unreleased Films of the Year

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. Critic's Poll Annual Top 10 seen (but not released in the US) best films. Missing: The Extravagant Shadows (2012) - David Gatten
  12. Film Comment’s End of Year Critics’ Poll 2003's icon

    Film Comment’s End of Year Critics’ Poll 2003

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. Filmcomment magazine asked many important American film critics to compiled "Best Films of 2003".
  13. Filmgenres: Science Fiction (Reclam)'s icon

    Filmgenres: Science Fiction (Reclam)

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. The movies listed in the German book "Filmgenres: Science Fiction" which was published in 2003. It's a more or less chronological overview about the history of science fiction movies from a german point of view. The movies were selected by german film scholars and journalists.
  14. Helena Ylänen's "100 best movies (and 10 bad ones on the side)"'s icon

    Helena Ylänen's "100 best movies (and 10 bad ones on the side)"

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. A ranked list of 100 best films chosen by Finnish film critic Helena Ylänen among all the films that that she reviewed in the Finnish newspaper Helsingin Sanomat during years 1977-2004. The list was published in her Finnish language book "Sata parasta elokuvaa (ja kymmenen kehnoa kaupan päälle)" in 2005 (edited by Kati Sinisalo), which includes her original reviews of the films. In addition, the book contains ten reviews of films which Ylänen didn't like. They're in chronological order (ranks 101-110).
  15. Hitfix: Drew McWeeny's The 50 Best Films Of 2000 - 2009's icon

    Hitfix: Drew McWeeny's The 50 Best Films Of 2000 - 2009

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. Okay... making a ten best list was fun, especially since I got to technically cram in 25 films. That was all for one year, 2009, which was a darn fine year of film overall, if not one for the record books. That list, though, was just a warm-up for the big list, in which we break down the 50 best films of the past ten years. Yes, calendar nerds. I know. In your reality, all decades refer to something starting a year that ends in a 1. But I am not talking about an astronomically-calculated decade. I'm talking about the period of ten years that started on January 1, 2000, and which will end in about eight days. That's the decade we're looking at, and that pretty much every sane person on the planet understands as a given in this conversation. There's a top ten, and I'm surprised how quickly it shook itself out. I feel pretty strongly about it, too. The others on the list were grouped and regrouped and regrouped, and finally I feel like the list represents a real x-ray of the decade, and what kept me engaged over the last ten years. Because let's face it... anyone who really loves movies could look at the last ten years of film on the surface and be stricken with a crippling despair. The studios are, more than ever, churning out garbage that defies description. The trend to remake the remakes of the remakes while also rebooting the sequel to the prequels to the reimagining of the homage is enough to make you wish celluloid had never been invented. You have to look deeper than that into the last ten years, and you have to consider just how many really remarkable films have come out, and from how many different countries and cultures, and then maybe it's easier to get your head around just how many good things we've been gifted with in the last decade. For most of that time, I was working and writing at Ain't It Cool News, and many of my writings about the decade are still archived there under my pen name "Moriarty." For the last year, though, I've been right here, slowly figuring out what to do with Motion/Captured and how to make it special for you guys. It feels like writing this list puts a big chapter of my professional life to bed, even as I work to make this next chapter great. I look forward to adding new features like video reviews and audio podcasts to the rotation in 2010, and expanding on the things you guys enjoy already like Film Nerd 2.0. The one thing I'll say before we start this list is that if you're going to get hung up on what's not on the list, you probably shouldn't read it. I've gotten e-mails and comments about how my 2009 list is wrong because "The Hurt Locker" isn't on it, and if I dare respond, then suddenly people get extra-touchy. Just because other critics like something or love something or give awards to something... that doesn't matter to me. Never has. Lists are personal. That's the point. I'm not about to tell you what the 50 best films of the last decade are in any empirical sense... all I can do is tell you what films resonated the most for me, and which films I'll personally return to the most. If there are films you feel strongly about, I'd love to hear why they're important TO YOU... but don't scream at me because they don't mean the same thing to me. That's not a conversation. Lists should only ever be considered a jumping-off point for a larger conversation about where we agree and where we don't, and if approached correctly, that can be huge fun. Let's keep that in mind, okay? (Drew McWeeny)
  16. Horror Film: A Critical Introduction's icon

    Horror Film: A Critical Introduction

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. All the films mentioned in the book [url=https://books.google.co.uk/books/about/Horror_Film.html?id=Q2WkDAEACAAJ&redir_esc=y]Horror Film: A Critical Introduction[/url] by Murray Leeder. [quote]Throughout the history of cinema, horror has proven to be a genre of consistent popularity, which adapts to different cultural contexts while retaining a recognizable core. Horror Film: A Critical Introduction, the newest in Bloomsbury's Film Genre series, balances the discussions of horror's history, theory, and aesthetics as no introductory book ever has. Featuring studies of films both obscure and famous, Horror Film is international in its scope and chronicles horror from its silent roots until today. As a straightforward and convenient critical introduction to the history and key academic approaches, this book is accessible to the beginner but still of interest to the expert.[/quote]
  17. Horror Movie A Day by Brian W. Collins's icon

    Horror Movie A Day by Brian W. Collins

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. The filmography of the book that was published in 2016. A curated selection of 366 obscure horror movies.
  18. J. Hoberman's Annual Best Films Lists's icon

    J. Hoberman's Annual Best Films Lists

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. As the other list isn't updated since 2012. I created this updated one (some missing films from old list were added too). Notes: - Lists since 1977 - In 1978, two lists were released (Narrative and Non-narrative ones). Both were added - Golden Eighties aka Window Shopping, Chantal Akerman (1986) was named twice (1983 and 1992 lists). Actually, the first reference could be the film Les années 80 (1983), but I'm not sure. - Allemagne 90 neuf zéro, Jean-Luc Godard (1991) was named twice (1992 and 1995 lists) - Honorable mentions from multiple years weren't added - Leviathan, Lucien Castaing-Taylor & Verena Paravel (2012) was named twice (2012 and 2013 lists) - The Americans TV series was named twice (2014 and 2018 lists) - #5. Mexico at Midnight: Film Noir From Mexican Cinema’s Golden Age (series at New York’s Museum of Modern Art) source: https://www.moma.org/calendar/film/1533 (from 2015 list) - #7. Ten documentary shorts, Vittorio De Seta: source: https://www.filmlinc.org/nyff2019/films/ten-documentary-shorts-by-vittorio-de-seta/ (from 2019 list) - No list was released in 2020 Missing in IMDB: #10. We Imitate; We Break-Up, Ericka Beckmann (1977) (from 1978 non-narrative list) #7. Triscuits, Amy Sillman (2010) (from 2013 list) (https://vimeo.com/166613623) #9. Continuous Variation, Manuel De Landa (2015) (from 2015 list) #7. Aproposessexstreetmarket, Ernie Gehr (2018) (from 2021 list) #7. Circling Essex Crossing, Ernie Gehr (2018) (from 2021 list) #8. Paths of Fire II, Neelon Crawford (1976) (from 2021 list) Not properly an entry: #05. Game Six, 1986 World Series [TV sport] (from 1986 list) #02. The Carl Stalling Project [sound recording] (from 1990 list) #9. Panoramas of the Moving Image, Ernie Gehr (2005) (video installation) (from 2007 list) #1. Werner Schroeter retrospective at MOMA (from 2012 list) #4. Il Cinema Ritrovato XVI (annual festival in Bologna) (from 2012 list) #4. Oskar Fischinger: Space Light Art, Whitney Museum exhibition (multimedia projections) (from 2012 list) #10. Clint Eastwood on YouTube (from 2012 list) #8. “Video” column, NYTimes, by Dave Kehr (from 2013 list) #6. The Marx Brothers TV Collection [DVD box set] (from 2014 list) #7. Die Farbe, Sigmar Polke (Film Installation) (from 2014 list) #10. Walkers: Hollywood Afterlives in Art and Artifact at Museum of the Moving Image, New York (memorabilia exhibition) (from 2016 list) #5. The Kavanaugh Hearing (from 2018 list) #5. Jordan Belson exhibit at Matthew Marks Gallery, New York (paintings exhibition) (from 2019 list) #4. On the Royal Road: The Burgher King, Elfriede Jelinek (book) (from 2021 list) Souces: 1977-2005: https://www.mistdriven.com/critics/hoberman.html 2006: https://www.villagevoice.com/2006/12/26/hobermans-top-10/ 2007: https://www.villagevoice.com/2007/12/25/j-hobermans-top-10-films-of-2007/ 2008: https://www.villagevoice.com/2008/12/31/j-hobermans-top-10-of-2008/ 2009: https://www.villagevoice.com/2009/12/22/j-hobermans-favorite-films-of-2009/ 2010: https://www.riverfronttimes.com/stlouis/j-hobermans-top-10-movies-of-2010/Content?oid=2492695 2011-2021: https://www.yearendlists.com/list_authors/j-hoberman-e42284d6-b54b-4332-8742-e2f1f26f4273
  19. Jean Serroy's Les 1000 Films Culte de l'Histoire du Cinema's icon

    Jean Serroy's Les 1000 Films Culte de l'Histoire du Cinema

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. University professor emeritus and film critic, Jean Serroy takes the reader through the history of cinema which, in 120 years of existence, has never stopped reinventing itself, going from silent to talkies in the early 1930s, from black and white to color, from small format square screens to the spectacular dimensions of ever larger screens, from film and cellulose nitrate to 4D. This book thus proposes to return to the 1,000 cult films that have marked our era and which, each, have punctuated the life of generations of yesterday and today. Hundreds of films from all genres and all countries are presented, decade by decade, according to a selection based on objective data such as the annual admissions rankings, in France and abroad, the major festivals such as Cannes and Venice but also on major celebrations such as the Oscars and the Césars or even on the notoriety consecrated by critics. So many criteria that have allowed cinema to establish itself as a new, unique and irreplaceable art.
  20. Jorge Ayala Blanco's El cine actual: confines temáticos's icon

    Jorge Ayala Blanco's El cine actual: confines temáticos

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. Mexican film critic Jorge Ayala Blanco's selection of 395 films from 2005 to 2013 to see what kind of topics concerned filmmakers around the world at the time. Not in the database: The Bedridden Triptych (Deniz Eroglu, 2012) El ojograma de la historia: Alexander Kluge (Marcelo Schuster, 2010)
  21. Jung Sung-Il’s A Guide to Cinephilia's icon

    Jung Sung-Il’s A Guide to Cinephilia

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. This list was created by Korean film critic Jung Sung-Il for the Korean FIlm Archive's web magazine, written in 2016. The list is divided into the following categories: 1. Three Films to Start With (1-3) 2. Three Alternatives to 1 (4-6) 3. Ten Silent Era Classics (7-16) 4. Three Excellent Hollywood Films (17-19) 5. Three Hollywood Cult Films (20-22) 6. Ten Hollywood Films, the 70s (23-33) 7. Ten Famous Hollywood Classics (34-43) 8. Three European Films Just Before World War II (44-46) 9. Ten European FIlms Just After World War II (47-56) 10. Ten European Films, the 60s (57-66) 11. Ten European Films, the 70s (67-76) 12. Ten Asian Classics (77-88) 13. Ten Sinosphere FIlms After the 80s (89-99) 14. Ten Masterpieces Over Four Hours (100-117) 15. Ten Famous Films of the 20th Century (118-127) 16. Fifteen Korean Films Before the 90s (128-142) 17. Ten Films to Start the 21st Century (143-152) Note: the source for this list is in Korean. You can view an English translation of the article at this link: https://www.reddit.com/r/TrueFilm/comments/bdk9zo/a_guide_to_cinephilia_140_films_every_aspiring/
  22. Les Inrockuptibles - 100 Must-See Films directed by women's icon

    Les Inrockuptibles - 100 Must-See Films directed by women

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. "With all the subjectivity and inherent limits to the exercise, we have chosen and analyzed important films directed by women which put a change of viewpoint on the table, thus writing a necessary, feminine counter-history of cinema". Assembled by Jean-Marc Lalanne, with Philippe Azoury, Emily Barnett, Romain Blondeau, Patrice Blouin, Iris Brey, Faustine Chevrin, Luc Chessel, Bruno Deruisseau, Marilou Duponchel, Hélène Frappat, Mia Hansen-Love, Murielle Joudet, Thierry Jousse, Olivier Joyard, Gérard Lefort, Eponine Le Galliot, Elena Lopez, Axelle Ropert, Théo Ribeton, Justine Triet.
  23. Marie Claire's The 83 Best Rom-Coms of All Time, Ranked's icon

    Marie Claire's The 83 Best Rom-Coms of All Time, Ranked

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. "Romantic comedies: Love them or tolerate them—and let's be honest, you can't hate a rom-com—they're always good for a cozy evening in and a life lesson or two. They're also versatile: You can enjoy a good romantic comedy with almost anyone in your life, from your boyfriend to your parents to your best friend. Not to mention, they pair perfectly with just about any kind of snack (I'm partial to M&Ms with my rom-coms, but you do you). For the next time that nothing but a good rom-com will do, we ranked the best and the most classic rom-coms of all time. Where does your fave fall on the list?"
  24. Mary-Ann Johanson Top 100 Best Films's icon

    Mary-Ann Johanson Top 100 Best Films

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. MaryAnn Johanson is writer and ponderer from New York City now living in London who loves movies but hates what Hollywood sometimes does to them. A pioneering online film critic, she founded FlickFilosopher.com in 1997; the site is now one of the longest-running, most popular, and most respected independent film sites on the Net. She is a Tomatometer critic at Rotten Tomatoes, a featured critic at Movie Review Intelligence, and a top critic at Movie Review Query Engine and the Internet Movie Database. Johanson is the only major film critic who is a member of The International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences (the Webby organization), an invitation-only, 1000-member body of leading Web experts, business figures, luminaries, visionaries and creative celebrities.
  25. Murder on Tape - A Comprehensive Guide to Over 1,000 Murder and Mystery Movies on Video (1997)'s icon

    Murder on Tape - A Comprehensive Guide to Over 1,000 Murder and Mystery Movies on Video (1997)

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. All the movies in the book. NOTE: Despite the book's title, it features less than 1,000 movie entries. Ratings: #1-37: **** Excellent #38-143: ***½ Very Good #144-458: *** Good #459-711: **½ Average #712-881: ** Fair #882-910: *½ Poor #911-990: * The Worst
Remove ads

Showing items 351 – 375 of 616