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. 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.
  2. 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!"
  3. 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.
  4. 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
  5. 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
  6. 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
  7. CriticsTop10.com Best Movies of 2020's icon

    CriticsTop10.com Best Movies of 2020

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. An aggregation of 772 critics' lists, compiled by CriticsTop10.com
  8. CriticsTop10.com Best Movies of 2021's icon

    CriticsTop10.com Best Movies of 2021

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. An aggregation of 801 critics' lists, compiled by CriticsTop10.com
  9. CTV News: Jim Gordon Picks The Top Films of the Past Decade's icon

    CTV News: Jim Gordon Picks The Top Films of the Past Decade

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. For the past 11 years, weekly CTV film critic Jim Gordon has appeared on the 6 p.m. newscast to reveal his picks for the top 10 films of the year. But this year, Gordon decided instead to say farewell to the Aughts by listing his favourite 20 films of the decade. "It was difficult to keep the list to only 20 films," Gordon admitted. "Every year had it's memorable films, be they Hollywood, foreign, indie or documentary -- and many of those are on this list." Here, in chronological order............
  10. Dårligdommerne * Podcast (Listen du ikke har lyst til at krydse af)'s icon

    Dårligdommerne * Podcast (Listen du ikke har lyst til at krydse af)

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Podcasten hvor værterne ser dårlige film - så vi ikke behøver. Afsnit 29: Selfie Mangler da kortfilmen ikke er på IMDB
  11. David Edelstein’s Top Ten Movies of 2012's icon

    David Edelstein’s Top Ten Movies of 2012

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0.
  12. Dossiê SuperInteressante - 99 filmes que você precisa ver agora's icon

    Dossiê SuperInteressante - 99 filmes que você precisa ver agora

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Publicada pela revista Super Interessante. A lista contem 100 filmes porque a revista considera Ninfomaníaca Vol. I e II como um filme só, mas eles estão separados no IMDb e iCheckMovies. Dossie - 99 Movies you Need to Watch Now Published by the brazilian magazine SuperInteressante. The list has 100 movies because the magazine considers Nymphomaniac Vol. I e Vol. II as a single movie but it has two entrances in IMDb and iCheckMovies.
  13. Ebert & Scorsese: The Best Films of the 1990s's icon

    Ebert & Scorsese: The Best Films of the 1990s

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Ebert's 10 best: 1. "Hoop Dreams" 2. "Pulp Fiction" 3. "GoodFellas" 4. "Fargo" 5. "Three Colors Trilogy": "Blue," "White," and "Red" 6. "Schindler's List" 7. "Breaking the Waves" 8. "Leaving Las Vegas" 9. "Malcolm X" 10. "JFK" Scorsese's 10 best: 1. "Horse Thief" 2. "The Thin Red Line" 3. "A Borrowed Life" 4. "Eyes Wide Shut" 5. "Bad Lieutenant" 6. "Breaking the Waves" 7. "Bottle Rocket" 8. "Crash" 9. "Fargo" 10. "Malcolm X" and "Heat" (tie)
  14. Entertainment Weekly: The 20 Best Movies of 2016's icon

    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.
  15. Eric D. Snider's Top 50 Movies of 1995-2005's icon

    Eric D. Snider's Top 50 Movies of 1995-2005

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Here is Top 50 Movies of 1995-2005 selected by one of OFCS' member Eric D. Snider.
  16. Fifty Great War Films's icon

    Fifty Great War Films

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. List of movies from the book "Fifty Great War Films" by Timothy Newark
  17. Film Comment: 20 Best Films of 2016's icon

    Film Comment: 20 Best Films of 2016

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Two artists entering full bloom—Maren Ade (with our first non-American #1 since 2012’s Holy Motors) and Barry Jenkins—topped our annual survey, next to a redoubtable team-up of Paul Verhoeven and Isabelle Huppert. Dramas of psychological realism thrived alongside varieties of nonfiction experience, Grand Guignol, surrealism, and visionary history, all with Hollywood conspicuously absent. The poll, conducted among the magazine’s contributors and editorial staff, is divided into 1) films that received U.S. theatrical runs and 2) those viewed in 2016 but having no announced plans for U.S. theatrical distribution. For each ballot, a first-place choice was allotted 20 points, 19 for second, and so on. (Film Comment)
  18. Film Comment's 50 Best Films of the Decade (2010s)'s icon

    Film Comment's 50 Best Films of the Decade (2010s)

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0.
  19. Film Comment's Best Unreleased Films of 2018's icon

    Film Comment's Best Unreleased Films of 2018

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Film Comment's annual list of the best 20 movies without US distribution at the time of writing.
  20. Filmgenres: Animationsfilm (Reclam)'s icon

    Filmgenres: Animationsfilm (Reclam)

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. The movies listed in the German book "Filmgenres: Animationsfilm" which was published in 2007. It's a more or less chronological overview about the history of animated movies from a german point of view. The movies were selected by german film scholars and journalists.
  21. Filmgenres: Western (Reclam)'s icon

    Filmgenres: Western (Reclam)

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. The movies listed in the German book "Filmgenres: Western" which was published in 2003. It's a more or less chronological overview about the history of Western movies from a german point of view. The movies were selected by german film scholars and journalists.
  22. flickfilosopher's movies for the resistance's icon

    flickfilosopher's movies for the resistance

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0.
  23. Gary Wolcott's Best Films of the 2000s's icon

    Gary Wolcott's Best Films of the 2000s

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Gary Wolcott was published his list best film of the decade in Tri-City Herald. Nb: (tie) Mystic River and Million Dollar Baby for 8th place.
  24. Hitfix: Daniel Fienberg's Top 31 Movies of the Decade's icon

    Hitfix: Daniel Fienberg's Top 31 Movies of the Decade

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. For me, this list is a lark. While I've been counting down the Top 31 TV Shows of the Decade, my movie-centric colleagues Gregory Ellwood and Drew McWeeny handled the big screen, with Greg offering his Top 25 of The Aughts and Drew doing an exhaustive Top 50. Let's just say that HitFix has already done an extra job of covering the best of the decade in movies, with or without me. My only pause in my Top 31 (approaching No. 2 tomorrow!) was to count down the Top 20 TV Shows of 2009. At a certain point, listing has become as central to my December routine as caffeinating and showering and more essential than shaving and watering my struggling tree. And since I also have been known to write about movies on this blog, it only seemed natural that I whip out a Best of the Decade list for movies as well. I started with 10, but that didn't work. I was leaving out too many. I got down to 20 comfortably, but I was still leaving out a few movies that I *really* wanted to mention. From there I pushed to 30 and, at the urging of a Twitter follower, went that extra step to 31, just for symmetry. I'm not going to do these as a one-per-day affair with entries approaching 2500 words as I get near the top. Been there, doing that. I'm breaking these out as three blog posts. Simple enough. Unlike TV, where my list is The *Best* 31 Shows Of The Decade Which Aren't "The Shield," I'm not playing this out as having any sort of Best of the Decade definitiveness. It's not quite a "favorites" list, because I've given some thought to craft and importance beyond just pure rewatchability. Mostly, I'm sticking my blog's name in from of the list so you know that these are probably the 31 movies I liked the most from the past decade. Secretly, do I think they're the best? Probably. But this isn't like my TV list, where if you disagree with my No. 1, I'm going to surreptitiously sneak over to your house and cut the cable lines, because you're not worthy of television service. If you aren't happy here? This is my list, but feel very free to share your opinions (Daniel Fienberg)
  25. Hollywood Reporter Critics Pick the 50 Best Films of the 21st Century (So Far)'s icon

    Hollywood Reporter Critics Pick the 50 Best Films of the 21st Century (So Far)

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Over the course of a few months, several Zoom meetings, and countless emails, six THR film critics came together to hash out, and rank, what they consider the greatest films since 2000. BY JON FROSCH, DAVID ROONEY, SHERI LINDEN, LOVIA GYARKYE, LESLIE FELPERIN, JORDAN MINTZER APRIL 6, 2023 Why now? Why not? Sure, we’ve yet to hit the quarter-century mark, when these sorts of lists tend to start landing. But we’ve arguably already lived through 100 years’ worth of upheaval, progress, pain, destruction, hope and heartache in the world — not to mention the film industry — since 2000. We thought it as good a time as any to look back at the films that have, to us, stood the ever-unfolding test of time. In the spirit of transparency, our methodology went something like this: We all offered up titles we thought were worthy of consideration (an initial list of well over 100 movies). Everyone voted “yea” or “nay” on each of those titles. The films with the most yeas — about 80 — advanced to the next round. Everyone scored each title from 0 to 3. We tallied up the points, and then hashed it out from there. Countless emails and a few long Zoom meetings later, we had our list. Our only parameters: All six of us had to love, like or at least respect every film on the list. And we did not consider anything from 2022; it just felt too soon (translation: after the forever-long awards season, we needed a breather from talking about Tár, Everything Everywhere All at Once and the rest of ’em). Picking the movies we love the most, while being mindful of variety and inclusivity, significance and staying power, was difficult (we know: world’s smallest violin). We wanted our list to reflect the breadth of world cinema and of our tastes, but we also didn’t want to placate or pander or allow fear of Film Twitter or Outrage Twitter (or any Twitter) to weigh on our process. That doesn’t mean we weren’t plagued by doubts along the way. What are we missing? Who are we leaving out? Why this movie and not that one? We know certain omissions and selections are bound to incite eye rolls, grumbles and maybe a shriek or two. But we tried to stay true to our love of movies, these movies, and others that didn’t make the cut. (Remember, it’s only 50!) The final list is a reflection of that love, but also of a system that favors certain stories and storytellers at the expense of others. If the list is not a model of representational balance, call us out — we can take it — but also continue to call out an industry that hasn’t given us a more diverse landscape of voices to love, hate and argue over. The most conspicuous, surprising (including to us) and, surely to some readers, infuriating, thing about our list is how many masters are missing. After all our deliberating, point tallying, reconsidering, revoting, retallying and re-deliberating, none of the following directors cracked the top 50 films or 15 honorable mentions: Clint Eastwood, Steven Spielberg, Martin Scorsese, Terrence Malick, Spike Lee, Gus Van Sant, Jean-Luc Godard, David Cronenberg, Michael Mann, Quentin Tarantino, Steven Soderbergh, Alexander Payne, Jim Jarmusch, James Gray, Jia Zhangke, Abbas Kiarostami, Jafar Panahi, Asghar Farhadi, Apichatpong Weerasethakul and Hou Hsiao-Hsien. Ditto polarizing though prolific auteurs like Woody Allen, Roman Polanski and Lars von Trier. This wasn’t the result of any kind of “out with the old, in with the new” intention. In some cases — Scorsese, Spike, Godard — we felt their best work was pre-21st century. In Spielberg’s case, there were several films that had love (including Minority Report and West Side Story), but none that united all six of us in full-throated enthusiasm. In other cases, as in Eastwood’s Million Dollar Baby, Malick’s The New World and The Tree of Life, and Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, there were ardent supporters but also just-as-ardent detractors. In other words, we didn’t reverse-engineer the list by starting with great directors and pulling from their filmographies; we allowed the titles to emerge organically, via memory and good old-fashioned brainstorming. (Five directors — or six if you count the Coens separately — ended up with two films apiece on the list: Jane Campion, Joel and Ethan Coen, Alfonso Cuarón, David Fincher and Richard Linklater. For more stats and specifics about the results, read [url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/?p=1235362388]this breakdown[/url].) Straight-up studio comedy, action, sci-fi and horror are largely, though not entirely, absent from our final selections (cue the cries of film-critic elitism). We love those genres, we swear! Movies like Borat, The 40-Year-Old Virgin, Collateral, The Bourne Ultimatum, Master and Commander and, yes, Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy were all in contention at one point or another. But the scarcity of this type of entertainment on our list reflects what we see as a certain creative impoverishment in those genres over the past few decades. The lack of risk-taking in mainstream filmmaking, the sameness and safeness of so much of that “product,” results in few of those movies lingering in the mind for longer than their runtimes. We could go on and on about the shortcomings of our work here — not enough animation! — but that’s what we count on you for! Without further ado, here are what we consider the 50 best films of the 21st century so far. Honorable mentions (in alphabetical order): [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/cache/]Caché[/url] (Michael Haneke, 2005); [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/the+dark+knight/]The Dark Knight[/url] (Christopher Nolan, 2008); [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/lenfant/]L’Enfant (The Child)[/url] (Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne, 2006); [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/holy+motors/]Holy Motors[/url] (Leos Carax, 2012); [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/the+hurt+locker/]The Hurt Locker[/url] (Kathryn Bigelow, 2009); [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/margaret-2011/]Margaret[/url] (Kenneth Lonergan, 2011); [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/marriage+story/]Marriage Story[/url] (Noah Baumbach, 2019); [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/la+pianiste/]The Piano Teacher[/url] (Michael Haneke, 2002); [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/the+royal+tenenbaums/]The Royal Tenenbaums[/url] (Wes Anderson, 2001); [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/lheure+dete/]Summer Hours[/url] (Olivier Assayas, 2009); [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/there+will+be+blood/]There Will Be Blood[/url] (Paul Thomas Anderson, 2007); [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/sous+le+sable/]Under the Sand[/url] (François Ozon, 2001); [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/under+the+skin-2013/]Under the Skin[/url] (Jonathan Glazer, 2014); [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/vera+drake/]Vera Drake[/url] (Mike Leigh, 2004); [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/vals+im+bashir/]Waltz With Bashir[/url] (Ari Folman, 2008)
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