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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Endişe Sineması
Favs/dislikes: 0:0. various generation, various thriller sample -
Engineer Movies
Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Movies with Engineering in the Plot, Important scenes or an Engineer as a main Character. Who is the Engineer we are looking for? The Engineer combines Science and Technology to improve the Society and the World. (Of course he/she can do the opposite, but that is not the one we are after.) Simplified, the Engineer do Analyzis, Design or Construction on Practical Issues or Tools. His/Her work is is a mix of Science, Mathematics, Experience and Creativity. Note: Engineering is often classified into main branches as Chemical, Civil, Electrical and Mechanical Engineering, all with a lot of subdisciplines. Other important branches are Aerospace, Computer, Petroleum, Software and Biomedical Engineering. New specialities develop constantly. A Great basis for fascinating Movies! Feel free to comment on other convenient candidates for the list. And Enjoy! -
english
Favs/dislikes: 0:0. -
English Civil War (or thereabouts)
Favs/dislikes: 0:0. ECW (OT) -
English Movies
Favs/dislikes: 0:0. English Movies -
Enjoyable films
Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Films I enjoyed watching -
enjoyed
Favs/dislikes: 0:0. -
Ennio Morricone
Favs/dislikes: 17:0. All feature films featuring a score composed by Ennio Morricone. -
ennurkurall watchlist
Favs/dislikes: 0:0. -
Entertainment Weekly: The 20 Best Movies of 2016
Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Among Entertainment Weekly's best movies of the year, you'll find heartbreakingly personal dramas, a superhero movie or two, a bittersweet ode to Hollywood, and an allegory for modern relationships that features a man potentially being turned in a crustacean. These are original, honest, and thrilling films that tap into what connects us and take audiences to places they could only conjure up in their dreams (or nightmares). This year was not good for many things, but it was excellent for movies. Anyone who says otherwise isn't looking hard enough. -
Entertainment Weekly: The Best Movies of 1990-2015
Favs/dislikes: 0:0. A look back at the year’s top flicks chosen by Entertainment Weekly’s movie critics -
Entertainment Weekly's 100 All-Time Greatest Movies (2013)
Favs/dislikes: 15:0. In their July 5/12, 2013 double issue, Entertainment Weekly published their lists of the 100 all-time greatest movies, television series, albums, and books. Here is their list of 100 all-time greatest movies. (Note: Olympia, at #84, includes both Part I and Part II. Both parts are included in the list.) -
Entertainment Weekly's 100 Best Movie Soundtracks
Favs/dislikes: 13:0. Entertainment Weekly selected their definitive list of movie music, dubbed their "guide to the movie soundtracks that move us most." -
Entertainment Weekly's 100 Best Movies You've Never Heard Of
Favs/dislikes: 5:0. From the July 19, 1991 edition of EW. Old list, so, some may no longer be considered obscure. -
Entertainment Weekly's 100 Greatest Movies of All Time
Favs/dislikes: 14:0. Entertainment Weekly's 100 Greatest Movies of All Time, a hardcover guide published in 1999 by Time-Life Inc. and written by senior editor Ty Burr, celebrated films that can't be forgotten, that "help us understand and define who we are." The final list was whittled down from a preliminary collection of 500 nominated choices, excluding short films, documentaries, or any movies from the previous five years (from 1994 onward). The list deliberately corrected the American Film Institute's most glaring omissions - Preston Sturges, Buster Keaton, and Ernst Lubitsch, and added some of the best foreign films - from Fellini, Truffaut, and Kurosawa. According to the book's introduction, the most represented male star was James Stewart (with five films); Cary Grant, Robert De Niro and Alec Guinness had four films each, and Janet Leigh had three films. The most represented director was Alfred Hitchcock (with four films), and there were three films each from Michael Curtiz, David Lean, Martin Scorsese, Steven Spielberg, and Billy Wilder. (The book also includes 25 additional films "too beloved to ignore." This list is here: http://www.icheckmovies.com/lists/entertainment+weeklys+25+films+just+too+beloved+to+ignore/marchosias/) -
Entertainment Weekly's 20 Classic TV Miniseries
Favs/dislikes: 1:0. In chronological order. Published November 10, 2009. -
Entertainment Weekly's 25 Films "Just Too Beloved to Ignore"
Favs/dislikes: 2:0. An additional 25 more films were listed in the book Entertainment Weekly's 100 Greatest Movies of All Time and were included in the book's appendix in alphabetical order. Supposedly, they were "just too beloved to ignore." (The 100 Greatest Movies list is here: http://www.icheckmovies.com/lists/entertainment+weeklys+100+greatest+movies+of+all+time/marchosias/) -
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." -
Entertainment Weekly's Essential Movies Kids Must Experience (Before They Turn 13)
Favs/dislikes: 7:0. There are people out there who have never seen The Princess Bride. They walk among us, holding down jobs, contributing to society, and generally living happy, semi-fulfilled lives. But whisper a perfectly-timed “mawage” in their direction during a wedding, and the resulting blank stare or awkward chuckle will expose an inconceivable pop-cultural blind spot. Someone failed them when they were growing up. In many ways it’s too late for them, but we can still save the next generation. The 55 Essential Movies Kids Must Experience (Before They Turn 13) is a starting point. This isn’t a list of the 55 “best” kids movies, nor a compendium of hidden gems. Rather, it’s a survival-guide syllabus of films that we all need to know to be able to speak the same pop-cultural language, listed in order by when they might be best introduced. It starts with a film that is a perfect introduction to the cinematic universe and ends with one that is an ideal capper before graduating into the world of PG-13 and R movies—and the age when kids begin to make their own theater decisions. These are the cinematic building blocks for future film connoisseurs, movie-literate enthusiasts who can gracefully segue from a George Bailey impression into a spirited debate over whether Han Solo shot first. The important stuff. -
Entertainment Weekly’s The New Classics
Favs/dislikes: 31:0. Chosen by Entertainment Weekly in 2008, these are their 100 best films from the “past 25 years” (1983 to 2008). -
Entertainment Weekly's Top 10 Movies of 2011
Favs/dislikes: 2:0. -
Entertainment Weekly’s Top 50 Cult Movies
Favs/dislikes: 30:0. Published in 2003, Entertainment Weekly Magazine described their Top 50 Cult Movies thusly: "most died at the box office, some of them horribly. Mangled and despised, they were re-animated on video. And now they compose our cultural Esperanto, a subliminal vocabulary of vaguely subversive images, ideas, and phrases that we continue to obsess over and dissect at parties, around water coolers, in bars, over the blaring banalities of the mainstream media din. They are Cult Movies...So if you take your dead evil and your buckaroos banzai-ed, pour yourself a tall glass of Kool-Aid and peruse this list…" Note: Reader response to the original list was so great, that EW subsequently annexed their list with 11 “readers’ choice” picks. Why 11? Well, it's one longer, isn't it …? -
Entflix Top Films
Favs/dislikes: 20:0. The official list of /r/entflix's top films, as voted by the users. -
Entry Level Art House
Favs/dislikes: 1:0. -
Environmental Media Awards - Documentary Film Winners
Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Winners of the Environmental Media Award for Documentary Film. www.green4ema.org
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