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. The Irish Times' The 50 best Irish films ever made's icon

    The Irish Times' The 50 best Irish films ever made

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. "When it comes to Irish film, however, the debate will invariably focus less on relative placings – whether Garage is better than The Quiet Man – than on how we are defining our terms. Is The Quiet Man Irish at all? It was financed by an American studio and set in a fanciful version of the real nation. Our rules are looser than some may prefer. Significant numbers of Irish personnel is a factor. Notable levels of Irish funding scores you a few more points on our jerry-rigged scale. Shooting a film in Ireland gets you a long way down the road, but, as should be obvious, external productions that use the country as a stand-in for somewhere else aren’t getting anywhere with the jury."
  2. theFLICKpick Top 10 Most Epic Movies's icon

    theFLICKpick Top 10 Most Epic Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. a movie reviewer theFLICKpick picked Top 10 Most Epic Movies ever made
  3. Time Out's Top 10 Movies of 2011's icon

    Time Out's Top 10 Movies of 2011

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0.
  4. Top 20 Croatian Films by Croatian Film Critics's icon

    Top 20 Croatian Films by Croatian Film Critics

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Top 25 Croatian films by Croatian film critics in the article in Slobodna Dalmacija on the 28th November 1999.
  5. Variety's The 100 Greatest Movies of All Time's icon

    Variety's The 100 Greatest Movies of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. "The movies are now more than 100 years old. That still makes them a young medium, at least in art-form years (how old is the novel? the theater? the painting?). But they’re just old enough to make compiling Variety’s first-ever list of the 100 Greatest Movies of All Time a more daunting task than it once might have been. Think about it: You get an average of one film per year. A great deal of ardent discussion and debate went into the creation of this list. Our choices were winnowed from hundreds of titles submitted by more than 30 Variety critics, writers and editors. As we learned, coming up with which movies to include was the easy part. The hard part was deciding which movies to leave out."
  6. 100 Animated feature films's icon

    100 Animated feature films

    Favs/dislikes: 1:1. All movies listed in the book '100 Animated feature films', 2010. Editor Andrew Osmond.
  7. 100 Greatest One-Liners: After The Kill's icon

    100 Greatest One-Liners: After The Kill

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2MmryrXKUU8 see also Before The Kill list
  8. 100 to Watch (TimeOut)'s icon

    100 to Watch (TimeOut)

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. This is a list that's in the same book as the official "TimeOut's 1000 Films to Change Your Life." After discovering that a lot of the films on that list are just merely passing titles in the book, I noticed at the end there was a list of 100 films. That section is titled "100 to Watch." The 1000 film list is just pulling it from the index, ergo, all the films on this list also appear on that one.
  9. 1001 film du skal se før du dør's icon

    1001 film du skal se før du dør

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Two movies, one entry: Olympia Ivan the Terrible
  10. 1001 Filme, die Sie sehen sollten, bevor das Leben vorbei ist's icon

    1001 Filme, die Sie sehen sollten, bevor das Leben vorbei ist

    Favs/dislikes: 1:1. Aktualisierte 10. Neuausgabe This is the german version of the book "1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die" which includes some german movies as well.
  11. 50 Klassiker Film's icon

    50 Klassiker Film

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Films from the book "50 Klassiker Film" (50 classics: film) by Nicolaus Schröder. The book contains also documentaries and films that are important from the perspective of German film history. (Because "Olympia" is in two parts, the list contains 51 films)
  12. A.O Scott - Movies of Influence's icon

    A.O Scott - Movies of Influence

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Anthony Oliver Scott (born July 10, 1966) is an American journalist and film critic. Along with Manohla Dargis, he serves as chief film critic for The New York Times. This list about 12 movies from 2000s that he thought influential.
  13. Al Alexander's Best Films of the 2000s's icon

    Al Alexander's Best Films of the 2000s

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Al Alexander is film critic from The Patriot Ledger and also one of reviewer in Rotten Tommatoes
  14. Alex Simon's The Best Films of the Decade 2000s's icon

    Alex Simon's The Best Films of the Decade 2000s

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Alex has been a lifelong cinemaniac, since seeing Charles Chaplin's City Lights (1931), at the age of five. Following graduation from The University of Southern California's School of Cinema-Television, Alex had six screenplays produced as major motion pictures, the last of which, My Brother's War (1997), won the Best Feature prize at the first annual Hollywood Film Festival in 1998. Alex served as Editor-In-Chief of "Venice Magazine", Los Angeles' premiere arts and entertainment publication, from 2000-2007. Since 2007, Alex has served as Co-Editor of "The Hollywood Interview.com" with Terry Keefe, and has several film projects in pre-production under his "Wanderer Productions" banner.
  15. América Latina en 130 películas's icon

    América Latina en 130 películas

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. List of films featured in the 2010 book. Author: Jorge Ruffinelli Publisher: Uqbar Editores The book aims to reclaim the powerful filmography of the region, spanning countries like Argentina, Brazil, Mexico, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, Venezuela, Cuba, and Central America. Ruffinelli, a professor, critic, and researcher with deep knowledge and a vast collection of these films, has curated a selection of the most significant works. The book, filled with images from the films themselves and presented in a screen format, stands as a unique and essential piece for cinema enthusiasts, showcasing the hidden or forgotten gems of Latin American cinema. Country Index: Argentina Prisioneros de la tierra (1939) Historia de una noche (1941) La guerra gaucha (1942) El retrato (1947) La escalinata (1950) Más allá del olvido (1956) Alias Gardelito (1961) La mano en la trampa (1961) Los inundados (1962) Crónica de un niño solo (1965) Invasión (1969) Breve cielo (1969) Tiempo de revancha (1981) Camila (1984) La historia oficial (1985) La película del rey (1986) Imagen latente (1988) El misterio de la felicidad (1988) La casa del ángel (1989) La despedida (1991) Corazón iluminado (1994) Historias mínimas (1997) El hijo de la novia (2001) Relatos salvajes (2014) La patota (2015) Infancia clandestina (2012) La odisea de los giles (2019) Brazil Limite (1931) Ganga Bruta (1933) Vidas Secas (1963) Deus e o Diabo na Terra do Sol (1964) Os Fuzis (1964) Todas as Mulheres do Mundo (1966) Macunaíma (1969) A Hora e Vez de Augusto Matraga (1965) São Paulo, Sociedade Anônima (1965) Lucía (1968) Memorias del subdesarrollo (1968) Canoa (1976) Aleluia Gretchen (1976) Coronel Delmiro Gouveia (1978) Bye Bye Brasil (1980) Pixote: A Lei do Mais Fraco (1981) El super (1989) Dona Flor e Seus Dois Maridos (1979) Sargento Getúlio (1979) A Intrusa (1979) Eles Não Usam Black-Tie (1981) Gaijin - Os Caminhos da Liberdade (1980) Cidade de Deus (2002) Central do Brasil (1998) Amores perros (2000) Chile El húsar de la muerte (1925) ¡Vámonos con Pancho Villa! (1936) Fuera de la ley (1937) La vuelta al nido (1938) Palomita Blanca (1973) La zona (2007) La lección de pintura (2008) Neruda (2016) No (2012) Colombia Cóndores no entierran todos los días (1984) María, llena eres de gracia (2004) El abrazo de la serpiente (2015) Cuba Lucía (1968) Memorias del subdesarrollo (1968) De cierta manera (1977) Retrato de Teresa (1979) El Super (1979) Mexico Ahí está el detalle (1940) Pueblerina (1949) Calabacitas tiernas (1949) Una familia de tantas (1949) Apenas un delincuente (1949) Los olvidados (1950) Aventurera (1950) La oveja negra (1949) Tiburoneros (1963) La tarea (1997) El crimen del padre Amaro (2002) Y tu mamá también (2001) María, llena eres de gracia (2004) Babel (2006) Lake Tahoe (2008) Como agua para chocolate (1993) Amores perros (2000) La nana (2009) Peru La teta asustada (2009) Spain La niña de tus ojos (1998) La frontera del miedo (1992) La mujer sin cabeza (2007) La historia oficial (1985) El Norte (1983) Uruguay La tregua (1974) La película del rey (1986) La noche de 12 años (2018) Gigante (2009) Venezuela El pez que fuma (1977)
  16. Armond White's Eleventh Annual Better Than List 2015's icon

    Armond White's Eleventh Annual Better Than List 2015

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. January 8, 2016 The year’s best films versus the overrated worst In 2015 more movies were released than ever (an average of a dozen a week). And while many of them offended one’s sense of truth, beauty, and politics, mainstream media (both conservative and liberal) promoted them nonetheless — as if only newness mattered, and not quality. Commerce smothered art in 2015, disguised as movie love. But that doesn’t mean there weren’t still excellent, satisfying films — the best, Queen and Country, released in early January by British master filmmaker John Boorman, remained unsurpassed. You could still have a good time going to movies in 2015, but it required discernment, personal taste, and political rigor. Thus, this year’s Better-Than List reminds filmgoers that in cinema as in politics, quality and integrity are more important than popularity. It’s never too late to vote for the better movies. Armond White, a film critic, writes about movies for National Review Online and received the American Book Award’s Anti-Censorship prize. He is the author of The Resistance: Ten Years of Pop Culture That Shook the World and the forthcoming What We Don’t Talk about When We Talk about Movies Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/author/armond-white
  17. Armond White's Twelfth Annual Better Than List 2016's icon

    Armond White's Twelfth Annual Better Than List 2016

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Armond White‘s critical review of the year’s best and worst films January 6, 2017 Armond White, a film critic, writes about movies for National Review Online and received the American Book Award’s Anti-Censorship prize. He is the author of The Resistance: Ten Years of Pop Culture That Shook the World and the forthcoming What We Don’t Talk about When We Talk about Movies Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/author/armond-white Quote: It’s no accident that the very best movies of 2016 challenged the mainstream and were not from Hollywood. Too many American filmmakers have lost the ability to look at human experience without cheapening our responses to it. Our most urgent issues as human beings, and our most sensitive needs as people who think and feel, are betrayed by a culture committed to childish escapism produced to shore up fatuous, fashionable tenets — which then get endorsed by media shills. The year’s Better-Than List has expanded because film culture has exploded beyond homogenous tastes and interests; multimedia competition has only exacerbated our fragmentation. But the point of the Better-Than List is always to inspire critical thinking and encourage personal response against the conformist hive-mind that aims to tame our diverse tastes. The best movies reward cultural courage, making it easier to reject the garbage.
  18. Barry Norman's Top 10 Greatest Epics's icon

    Barry Norman's Top 10 Greatest Epics

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Broadcaster and film journalist Barry Norman compiled the top 10 for the Radio Times. The Lord Of The Rings trilogy (2001-03) are the most recent films on the list, while Napoleon (1927) is the oldest. In alphabetical order.
  19. Bill Gibron's The 10 Best Films of the Decade (2000 - 2009)'s icon

    Bill Gibron's The 10 Best Films of the Decade (2000 - 2009)

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Bill Gibron is a writer and film critic for popmatters. He wrote the 10 best films of decade in the end of 2009. Here his about that description for the list: Talk about tough! Even if this wasn’t a full time job, taking up as much of one’s life as any career plus concept of entertainment could, trying to pick out ten titles from an equal number of years is almost impossible. It’s not like television, which tends to keep its beloved entities on the air long enough to make a memorable impact. It’s also not like music, which can play in the background of one’s life sometimes decades after release. No, movies demand attention. They require patience and perspective. They are the most unique of artforms because they come at you complete. You can love a particular band or album even with one or two clunkers among the set list. No TV show is ever going to be 100% funny/dramatic/thrilling/thought-provoking all the time. But film doesn’t dignify such flaws. Instead, it amplifies them, destroying brilliant direction, excellent acting, or superb storytelling along the way. Naturally, this creates a kind of cinematic standard, a benchmark by which we measure both the good and the bad. And yet, going back over the near 3500 entries for possible inclusion here (figure it out - that’s 350 per year, or almost one a day for the last decade…and yes, I did watch each and every one, be they theatrical or on DVD) is still a mammoth undertaking, one that gears itself noticeably toward the most recent viewing experiences. Indeed, a lot of lists out there currently offer pickings from 2007 - 2009 almost exclusively, making you wonder if these so called experts even saw anything prior to the second Bush Administration. Add in the almost infinite and exhaustive “honorable mentions” and you’ve got a pointless combination of limited perspective and bet hedging. Don’t worry - this list won’t be any better. As a matter of fact, one can probably pick it apart point-by-point and argue over the merits of each selection. Still, as a function of one person’s own individual likes and dislikes, as a Herculean attempt to take one’s passion and profession and summarize it in several hundred words or less, it’s the way things stand…today…at this moment…without too much internal kvetching. Could it all change tomorrow? Probably. Are some of these choices set in cement, almost inarguable in their inclusion? Yes. So grab your cinematic salt (you’ll need it to take most of what you’ll read next) and settle in for SE&L"s Top 10 Films of the Decade (2000 - 2009), starting with a very unusual selection in the final spot:
  20. Cahiers du cinéma top 10 Movies of 2011 by its readers's icon

    Cahiers du cinéma top 10 Movies of 2011 by its readers

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. The readers of the Cahiers du cinéma select their top 10 of 2011.
  21. Cinema Blend's The 30 Best Romantic Comedies of All-Time's icon

    Cinema Blend's The 30 Best Romantic Comedies of All-Time

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. "The list that follows is Cinema Blend's definitive comment on the best romantic comedies ever made. It's littered with beautiful love stories, hysterical lines and even rodents of unusual size. You may not agree with all of our choices, but we can all but guarantee quite a few of your favorites will be on the list. So, grab your invitation to Bogey Lowenstein's party, put in some fresh hair gel and grab what she's having on the way because these are the 30 best romantic comedies ever to hit theaters!"
  22. Clayton Davis' Best Films of the Century's icon

    Clayton Davis' Best Films of the Century

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Clayton Davis is the esteemed Editor and Owner of AwardsCircuit.com. Born in Bronx, NY to a Puerto Rican mother and Black father, he’s been criticizing film and television for over a decade. Clayton is a proud member of the Broadcast Film Critics Association where he votes and attends the kick off to the awards season, the Critics Choice Awards. He's also an active member of New York Film Critics Online, the International Press Academy, and the Broadcast Television Journalists Association. Here the lists of best films of the century so far with sixteen years into the 21st century (2000-2016) by Clayton Davis.
  23. Communism (Sally Jane Black)'s icon

    Communism (Sally Jane Black)

    Favs/dislikes: 1:2. List by Sally Jane Black Films that support actual existing socialism, oppose imperialism, raise class consciousness or are emphatically in support of workers, support proletarian revolution, support the right of a people's self-determination, actually anti-fascist, come from a communist nation/group/filmmaker, or otherwise uphold and/or might have some value to Marxism Leninism. check out the original for updates, or search for communism and see my other imported lists to find more stuff
  24. Cosmoetica Great Films's icon

    Cosmoetica Great Films

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. A list of great films by Dan Schneider of Cosmoetica.com. He distinguishes between great, near great, and genre great. I listed them in the order in which they appear on the site, so check the webpage to find his distinctions. He also links to his reviews if he's written one. http://cosmoetica.com/Cinegreatfilms.htm
  25. CriticsTop10.com Best Movies of 2019's icon

    CriticsTop10.com Best Movies of 2019

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. An aggregation of 867 critics' lists, compiled by CriticsTop10.com
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