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. 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.
  2. Pascale Ogier Films's icon

    Pascale Ogier Films

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Pascale Ogier (26 October 1958 – 25 October 1984) was a French actress. For her performance in the Éric Rohmer film, Full Moon in Paris, Ogier was nominated for a César Award for Best Actress and won the Volpi Cup for best actress at the 1984 Venice Film Festival. Shortly afterwards, at age 25 — on the day before she was to celebrate her 26th birthday — Ogier died of a heart attack probably caused by a heart murmur condition she had since age 12 combined with drug use.
  3. Secret life of shadows (the fantastic in French cinema)'s icon

    Secret life of shadows (the fantastic in French cinema)

    Favs/dislikes: 11:0. As published on the Spanish Book by Gonzalo de Lucas (2001, Paidós Ibérica)
  4. The French Ministry of Foreign Affairs' Top French Films's icon

    The French Ministry of Foreign Affairs' Top French Films

    Favs/dislikes: 22:0. This chronological listing was posted on the French Ministry of Foreign Affair’s website c. 2000.
  5. Time Out's 50 Best Films Set in Paris's icon

    Time Out's 50 Best Films Set in Paris

    Favs/dislikes: 15:0. Romance blooms on a belle époque street corner. A dark-eyed girl in Montmartre runs her hand through a bag of dried beans. In the suburbs, Arabs square up to skinheads. Nicotine-stained tales of sexual misadventure unfold in beds all over the city, while gangsters commit crimes and cartoon rats cook up a storm. Paris, which boasts a higher concentration of picture houses than any other city, has been the inspiration and the backdrop for countless films. Below, we present 50 of the best, organised by era. Be they Nouvelle Vague masterpieces or populist comedies, the capital is always in the starring role... -Time Out Paris This list is organized chronologically.
  6. Timeline of Pivotal French Film Noir's icon

    Timeline of Pivotal French Film Noir

    Favs/dislikes: 13:0.
  7. Une belle histoire du cinéma français en 101 films par Michel Marie's icon

    Une belle histoire du cinéma français en 101 films par Michel Marie

    Favs/dislikes: 7:0. A list of 101 French films, divided into eight periods, that follows the development and history of French cinema according to French film historian Michel Marie. This list is taken from the companion anthology "La belle histoire du cinéma français en 101 films" published by Armand Colin. The eight periods of French film are as follows: 1895-1929 : Le cinéma muet, de l’invention au passage au parlant ; 1930-1944 : des débuts du parlant à la libération ; 1945-1958 : Le cinéma de la IVe République ; 1959-1969 : Autour de la Nouvelle Vague ; 1970-1980 : Les années politiques ; 1981-2000 : Cinéma d’auteurs et industrie culturelle ; 2001-2012 : Les vétérans et les jeunes cinéastes du second siècle ; 2013-2016 : Épilogue.
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