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.

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  1. Teen movies from 1980 to now - Drama's icon

    Teen movies from 1980 to now - Drama

    Favs/dislikes: 10:0. Teen movies from the 1980s to now. only Drama in high school/college limited to 50 movies. Comments will be appreciated
  2. Telefilm's icon

    Telefilm

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Telefilms are Dutch films made ​​specifically for Public Broadcasting. The films deal with current social issues. The aim of the project is to stimulate cooperation between the film industry and broadcasters and to promote homegrown drama productions among the Dutch public. There are six films produced annually (none in 2000 and nine in 2001). Several films won national and international film awards. The Telefilms are established with financial support from the Ministry of Education and the Co-production Fund Domestic Broadcasting.
  3. The good stuff's icon

    The good stuff

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0.
  4. Theater on Film's icon

    Theater on Film

    Favs/dislikes: 9:0. This is a list of the major film versions of important plays. It includes all of the films in the American Film Theatre series. This list excludes musicals and Shakespeare. I have included some television productions if the performance was particularly noteworthy.
  5. Tiny Mix Tapes: Favorite 30 Films of 2012's icon

    Tiny Mix Tapes: Favorite 30 Films of 2012

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Let’s all just admit that 2012 started to get a little weird towards the end. At least Stateside, anyway. There was all that unpleasant political stuff going on; somehow rape became a gift and then it was bad again; and there was that inclement weather along the East Coast that totally had nothing to do with man-made climate change. Amid all this socialecological turmoil, we shouldn’t blame you for missing some pretty big news in the world of cinema. But we will, anyway. After all, this year we said goodbye to one controversial auteur (Béla Tarr) and adopted a different personal pronoun for another (Lana Wachowski). Whit Stillman finally made another film after a nearly 15-year hiatus (Damsels In Distres), brilliantly showcasing the talent of Generation Me’s answer to Chloë Sevigny (Greta Gerwig). Plus, any year that a Zachary Oberzan film comes out (Your brother. Remember?) is a good year for movies. Thankfully, all that Mayan apocalypse dreck ran its course a couple years ago, leaving room for some more rarefied grapplings with the end of all things (Tarr’s number-one stunner, The Turin Horse). And all that IRL political stuff we mentioned earlier? Not nearly as troubling as 5 Broken Cameras or This Is Not A Film, movies that managed so brilliantly to elucidate the very real human loss of geopolitical conflict. But what really blew us away this year weren’t the super-good films that defied convention or made grand political statements. Instead, we were left with our mouths agape by films helmed by auteurs confident enough to be okay simply ignoring convention, never feeling the need to prove anything outside the piece of work at hand, some of which were at ease merely reveling in the sheer virtuosity of their principal actors’ performances (The Master). Oh, and Béla, you’ll be missed. –PAUL BOWER
  6. Total Film's 50 Greatest Courtroom Dramas's icon

    Total Film's 50 Greatest Courtroom Dramas

    Favs/dislikes: 27:0. We will have order!
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