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. MovieMeter Film of the Year 2016's icon

    MovieMeter Film of the Year 2016

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. 591 members of the site MovieMeter.nl submitted their ranked top 10 from the year 2016. This top 100 is the result of that poll.
  2. Movies in the catalog of Netflix Mexico's icon

    Movies in the catalog of Netflix Mexico

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0.
  3. Movies where more than 90% of dialogue is from men's icon

    Movies where more than 90% of dialogue is from men

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Based on the splendid project "Film Dialogue from 2,000 screenplays, Broken Down by Gender and Age" by Hanah Anderson and Matt Daniels I made a number of lists. This list contains the 340 movies (out of 2000) that have more than 90% male dialogue (sorted from high to low).
  4. Movies with the most dialogue's icon

    Movies with the most dialogue

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Based on the splendid project "Film Dialogue from 2,000 screenplays, Broken Down by Gender and Age" by Hanah Anderson and Matt Daniels I made a number of lists. This list contains the 138 movies (out of 2000) that have more than 21000 words of dialogue (sorted from high to low). The average number of words from the 2000 scripts is 10500.
  5. MyAnimeList Top 15 Best Horror Anime's icon

    MyAnimeList Top 15 Best Horror Anime

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. "Let’s take a look at some of the best horror anime ever, featuring all the scary elements a horror story should have - death, zombies, ghosts, gore, tragedy, the paranormal, and more! So clear your schedule, call over some friends, switch off the lights, grab the popcorn and prepare to be terrified! We all know there’s no dearth of options for people who’re into horror and scary movies, but when it comes to anime, horror becomes a somewhat elusive genre. As hard as it may seem to get your hands on, there’s no turning back once you step inside the world of scary anime! Let's take a look at some of the scariest horror anime out there!"
  6. NBC New York The Ten Best Movies of the Decade's icon

    NBC New York The Ten Best Movies of the Decade

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. NBC film critic Drew Magary rank the 10 best movies of the decade. Lord of The Rings count as one movie.
  7. NerdMuch's 21 Best Horror Anime That'll Scare the Crap Out of You's icon

    NerdMuch's 21 Best Horror Anime That'll Scare the Crap Out of You

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. "October, the month of spooky, scary skeletons, pumpkin carvings, haunted houses, and delicious cider, is centered around Halloween fun. Halloween is such an awesome holiday, and seemingly everyone seems to be in the mood for candy, scares, horror, and everything bloody. For anime fans, there are plenty of options that fit this criterion, from tales about ghosts, haunted house episodes, and scary shows that will terrify anyone who dares to watch. Below are 21 of the best horror anime that will get anyone in the spooky mood, especially for fans of horror movies and eerie settings." RANKED
  8. NRC Handelsblad | 50 Beste Films Ooit's icon

    NRC Handelsblad | 50 Beste Films Ooit

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. The 50 best movies of all time according to the readers of Dutch newspaper NRC Handelsblad as of September 2012.
  9. Old Movie Stars Dance to Uptown Funk's icon

    Old Movie Stars Dance to Uptown Funk

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Based on the YouTube video by Michael Binder, now with over 48M views.
  10. Oscars: Top 25 Best Picture Winners's icon

    Oscars: Top 25 Best Picture Winners

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Eighty-nine movies in elite club, but some stand taller than others: EW's picks
  11. Parade's 71 Best Music Videos of All Time's icon

    Parade's 71 Best Music Videos of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. The very first music video ever played on MTV was The Buggles‘ “Video Killed the Radio Star,” but that statement isn’t entirely accurate: music videos have helped launch the careers of countless musical artists. The first music video was created in 1895 for the kinetophone and The Big Bopper was credited with coining the term “music video.” But there’s no doubt that MTV and VH1, networks that were originally devoted solely to playing music videos, brought the form of musical entertainment into the mainstream, with shows like MTV’s Total Request Live becoming certified phenomenons in the late 1990s and early aughts. A great music video can launch an otherwise meh song into the stratosphere or launch an unknown to new heights. Whether it’s cinematic or simple, the makings of the best music videos of all time are pretty consistent: Creativity, be it in the form of storytelling or styling; artistry in direction, choreography and/or aesthetics; legacy and ongoing influence long after its left the charts: Did they make you dance, laugh, cry, think? Here are our picks for the 71 best music videos of all time (minus some of the ones that may give you nightmares or that were once iconic but now are questionable). **Missing from IMDB** Aaliyah, “We Need a Resolution”
  12. Paste's 20 Radical Protest Films to Watch Right Now's icon

    Paste's 20 Radical Protest Films to Watch Right Now

    Favs/dislikes: 2:1.
  13. Rolling Stone's 40 Greatest Animated Movies Ever's icon

    Rolling Stone's 40 Greatest Animated Movies Ever

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. [quote=Rolling Stone]It’s crazy to think that, in the century-plus since Winsor McCay and the French Fantasmagorie first made moving drawings on a screen a form of popular entertainment, animation has given us everything from steamboat-steering mice and sly stop-motion foxes to, well, you name it: a septet of singing dwarves, psychic Japanese teens, counterculturally hip cats, crooning French triplets, classical-gassed satyrs and demons, humanity-saving robots, superhero families, the young-female brain’s emotional terrain and a lovable, unclassifiable creature known as a Totoro. What was once considered a cinematic distraction for children has blossomed into a medium that’s as creatively fertile and emotionally resonant as any live-action films aimed at the 18-and-over crowd (or, in the case of a stunner like Anomalisa, an incredible substitute for “adult” movies featuring actual adults). So we’re counting down our picks for the 40 greatest animated movies of all time — the features (and a handful of key shorts too good not to include) that have pushed the boundaries of what drawn lines, computerized pixels or manipulated puppets could accomplish for filmgoers. These are the ones that scare us, move us, crack us up and remind us of how fun and moving it is to watch cartoons, etc. with a crowd.[/quote]
  14. Rolling Stone's The 100 Greatest TV Shows of All Time (2022)'s icon

    Rolling Stone's The 100 Greatest TV Shows of All Time (2022)

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. "A ranking of the most game-changing, side-splitting, tear-jerking, mind-blowing, world-building, genre-busting programs in television history, from the medium’s inception in the early 20th century through the ever-metastasizing era of Peak TV." (Alan Sepinwall) - #16 Twin Peaks (1990-1991) also includes Twin Peaks (2017) - #66 is 'The Daily Show With Jon Stewart' (1999-2015)
  15. RollingStone's 100 Greatest Music Videos's icon

    RollingStone's 100 Greatest Music Videos

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. From Adele to ZZ Top — our ranked list of the best music videos of all time from July 30th, 2021
  16. Rotten Tomatoes: 30 Essential LGBTQ Documentaries's icon

    Rotten Tomatoes: 30 Essential LGBTQ Documentaries

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Queer cinema hinges on stories about the one and the many. LGBTQ documentary films, though, can only ever offer both: portraits of individuals necessarily speak more broadly about the community they come to represent, while chronicles of a group (or a family, or a segment of the population) can only ever do so through individual testimonials and the singular vision of the filmmaker at hand. Films like Portrait of Jason and Tongues Untied, for instance, tell contemporary viewers as much about the individual stories about gay Black men presented on screen as about the communities (real and imagined) that their respective filmmakers brought to bear on their finished films. The following list of LGBTQ documentaries offers us windows into the past, allowing us glimpses into moments made worthy by their mere documentation. Yet to say nonfiction filmmaking has merely documented the LGBTQ community is to sell short the work that some of the seminal documentaries listed below have accomplished. Projects like 1977’s Word is Out, which compiled testimonials from men and women about their experiences coming to terms with their sexuality and coming out, began sketching on screen what a community could and did look like. Similarly, aptly-titled works like Before Stonewall: The Making of a Gay and Lesbian Community and Forbidden Love: The Unashamed Stories of Lesbian Lives offer not just potent history lessons but snapshots of how Americans were conceiving of their own community-building in the years following the 1969 Stonewall riots. There is also, of course, no way of discussing queer nonfiction cinema without calling up the urgent historiographical work of films like Common Threads: Stories from the Quilt, How to Survive a Plague, and We Were Here. These projects remind us that telling the history of the AIDS crisis necessarily inverts ACT UP’s famous Silence=Death rallying cry: to memorialize those lost and to chronicle their activist fights is to refuse the erasure which so drove the early years of the crisis, both in the press and at the White House. The list below, which reaches back to the late 1960s and includes recent projects from around the globe that have further broadened what kinds of LGBTQ stories get told, is an invitation to see how queer and straight filmmakers alike have made real-life narratives pulsate with meaning. To look at this list of documentaries is to see the commingling of the one and the many. Together they create a kaleidoscopic vision of what the queer community has looked like on the big screen. Here are our 30 essential LGBTQ documentaries, in order of release. – Manuel Betancourt
  17. Rotten Tomatoes Top 100 on Netflix's icon

    Rotten Tomatoes Top 100 on Netflix

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. The films from the top 100 highest rated movies of all time from Rotten Tomatoes that are currently streaming on Netflix Instant in the United States. Thanks to bcacace, who originated and maintains the source list on IMDb (see source link at bottom). Here is the link to the complete top 100: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/top/bestofrt/
  18. Sky's 100 Best Sports Movies's icon

    Sky's 100 Best Sports Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. "We take a look back at the top 100 sports movies, from Raging Bull to Chariots of Fire." The list appears to be unranked. Olympia counted as a single entry.
  19. Slant's The 50 Best Films of 2021's icon

    Slant's The 50 Best Films of 2021

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. By Slant Staff on December 10, 2021 A staggering number of visceral, ambitious, and glorious movies were released in 2021, covering a vast spectrum of tones, sizes, and intentions. And yet one always encounters people who continue to say that “cinema is dead.” Ask for elaboration and they often say that there’s nothing to see in the theaters, which isn’t, paradoxically, the same as saying that movies are well beyond their expiration date. Instead, movies that people tend to remember and take seriously have mostly scurried to streaming outlets, where they’ve proliferated and mutated in the abundance of choice. For one, the thing we used to call a “documentary” has taken on particularly radical contours, and films like Robert Greene’s Procession, a formally and socially audacious documentary-slash-personal confessional, have come as close as modern cinema has to evoking a stream of consciousness. It’s also playing on Netflix, available to every subscriber, and could easily be mistaken by the uninitiated for the kind of routine true-crime shows in which the outlet specializes. Such realizations lead us back to a familiar refrain: that there are lots of great movies without the theater experience to lend them a patina of exceptionalism. And this complication has been intensified by the Covid-19 pandemic and the panic that it’s understandably inspired in Hollywood, which is more determined than ever to rely on spectacle for the global bucks. The easiest short-term solution is to accept that this theatrical patina—save for the arthouses in the larger cities and the few formally adventurous filmmakers, such as Wes Anderson, who can get his work booked in big theaters—is an outdated notion and reacclimate to reality. For people who aren’t fortunate enough to live near a venue playing, say, Janicza Bravo’s Zola or Hamaguchi Ryûsuke’s Drive My Car, theaters are bloated stadiums playing mega-act dinosaurs, and should be accorded appropriate respect or lack thereof, while the best films are usually hidden somewhere on a streamer’s menu between Hallmark Christmas movies and various seasons of Everyone Loves Raymond. In other words, good movies require the effort of personal vigilance, and the films below merit the expansion of purview. In troubled times, these daring, highly disparate productions show that a cherished medium isn’t only not dying but may, in fact, just be beginning to get its sea legs. Cinema could be evolving into a form that’s more personal and eccentric than ever, in accordance with the newfound intimacy that arrives from learning that theaters can be lovely but are also essentially beside the point. Chuck Bowen Click [url=https://www.slantmagazine.com/film/best-films-of-2021-the-ballots/]here[/url] for our contributors’ individual ballots. Editor’s Note: Hong Sang-soo’s [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/dangsin-eolgul-apeseo/]In Front of Your Face[/url], which isn’t scheduled for release until 2022, has been removed from our list due to eligibility criteria. See you next year, Hong.
  20. /cyb/'s Live Action Cyberpunk Guide's icon

    /cyb/'s Live Action Cyberpunk Guide

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0.
  21. Slashfilm.com's The 95 Best Family Movies Ever's icon

    Slashfilm.com's The 95 Best Family Movies Ever

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. BY BRENDAN KNAPP/JULY 17, 2023 5:15 AM EST In my home, family movie night is a weekly tradition. It's a shared experience that safely introduces my children to new ideas, places, cultures, people, and emotions. It reinforces qualities like humility, persistence, and kindness. And, of course, it's fun to snuggle up on a couch to laugh, cry, and scream together. Movie night doesn't require conversation, though it might spark one after you watch a film that challenges viewers' perceptions of reality. And unlike in the theater, you can sit wherever you want, too, though a small couch will help keep young ones within a hug's reach during tense moments. Don't worry about snacks or bathroom breaks, either; both are only a quick pause and short walk away. To help you find the best films for the event, I put together a list of the 95 best family films you can watch today. They will make family movie night (or morning, or afternoon) memorable for the entire clan, from the kindergarten-aged on up. Some films feature innovative artistic techniques, kicking open doors to new universes of creative discovery. Some films sneak in a moral lesson, the medicine the cinematic spoonful of sugar helps go down. Some may inspire impromptu dance parties, especially during the end credits. And all 95 of these movies are perfect for film-loving families, including mine. {List is ordered alphabetically, and the four Toy Story films are counted as a single entry.} ...and the ones that didn't make the cut When compiling this list, I wanted to make sure everyone in the family could enjoy every film, from kindergarten-age on up. However, young viewers, even those who can read, might struggle with captions. That means that incredible foreign films like "[url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/estiu+1993/]Summer 1993[/url]" and "[url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/wadjda/]Wadjda[/url]" won't work for most U.S. families, although animated films that are dubbed in English will be just fine. Violence is another issue. I fell in love with "[url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/raiders+of+the+lost+ark/]Raiders of the Lost Ark[/url]" after seeing it in the theater when I was four. That's two years after I saw my first horror movie (a miniseries, actually), "[url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/salems+lot/]Salem's Lot[/url]." I could handle it. I know my five-year-old daughter cannot. Many parents don't want their children to see a Nazi's face melt or bald men get butchered by propeller blades — and that's okay.  "Raiders" and other violent, scary classics I loved as a kid, like "[url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/poltergeist/]Poltergeist[/url]," "[url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/conan+the+barbarian/]Conan the Barbarian[/url]," and "[url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/jurassic+park/]Jurassic Park[/url]," can go on other family film lists, but not this one. With my picks, you may need to offer a few comforting snuggles or answer questions about violence and intolerance, but I want to make sure that everyone feels comfortable watching these films. That said, you know your kids best; if you think they're ready for slightly more mature fare, there's no better way to introduce it than by viewing the movies together.
  22. SmashingList: Top 10 Movies of the 21st Century's icon

    SmashingList: Top 10 Movies of the 21st Century

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Trying to determine the best films of the 21st Century can be quite a challenge. After all, everyone has their own tastes and opinions when it comes to movies. Not to mention, there have been thousands and thousands of movies made since 2000. So, in this list, we will just give our opinion on the best movies of the 21st Century Note: In the original list, Titanic was included, but it actually released in 1997 (20th Century) so, it doesn't include.
  23. Stuff's 25 Best Prison Movies Ever's icon

    Stuff's 25 Best Prison Movies Ever

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. The greatest caged classics of all time – all boxed into one list Sam Kieldsen 8 August 2013 / 14:45 BST Choky. The pen. The can. The cooler. The clink. The nick. The big house. And, indeed, the slammer. Just some of the many slang terms we have prison, and the concept of a life behind bars has proven a rich seam for filmmakers to mine – whether they’re making a comedy, an action romp, a crusading morality tale, a musical, a sports film (yes, there’s actually quite a few of these) or simply a piece of good old-fashioned entertainment. Since people have made movies, movies have been set in jails, and there’s an absolutely brilliant stack of must-see prison flicks that should be on any self-respecting cineaste’s watch list. In between sips of (surprisingly potent) ‘wine’ lovingly fermented in our toilet cistern, we’ve racked our collective brains and compiled this line-up of our 25 favourite films about life in the joint. All you need to do is bring the popcorn – and the shiv. Note: List does not appear to be ranked.
  24. The 10 Best Films About The Nature of Truth's icon

    The 10 Best Films About The Nature of Truth

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. “Photography is truth. The cinema is truth twenty-four times per second” – Jean-Luc Godard From Akira Kurosawa to Sidney Lumet, many directors have managed to create great movies illustrating the nature of truth. Here is a list of some exquisite works of art on this subject.
  25. The 10 Weirdest Documentaries of All Time's icon

    The 10 Weirdest Documentaries of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. The cliché that fact can be stranger than fiction rings true in the case of these documentaries. Unbelievable characters, unexpected twists and general weirdness make this list a little unsettling when you stop to consider it is all really life drama. At times you feel like you are watching a Lynch, or Cronenberg film, but the fact that this all actually happened may leave you feeling a little unhinged.
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