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. CineFix’s The 10 Most Uplifting Movies of All Time's icon

    CineFix’s The 10 Most Uplifting Movies of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. You know what? It's time to start feeling better about things. At the risk of being late to the party, Cinefix is happy to present our list of feel good movies. This Movie List is a painstakingly curated collection of all the different ways a movie can make you feel good about the world. From underdog stories to absurdist comedy, and heart-warming to heartbreak, these are the 10 Most Uplifting Movies of All Time.
  2. CineFix’s Top 10 Movie Beginnings of All Time's icon

    CineFix’s Top 10 Movie Beginnings of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. First impressions are important anywhere you go, but especially at the movies. And for as wide and varied as film can be, every single movie ever made has a beginning. So how do filmmakers go about starting a movie? Where do they begin? For this CineFix Movie List, we're looking at Cinema's 10 Best Beginnings of All Time.
  3. Guillaume Evin's The 101 Historical Films to See's icon

    Guillaume Evin's The 101 Historical Films to See

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. from the french "Les 101 films historiques à voir - De la Guerre du feu à Zero Dark Thirty" and expanded from the 2013 version "L'histoire fait son cinéma en 100 films: de La Guerre du feu à Démineurs". History has always made its cinema. This has been the case since the advent of the latter at the turn of the 20th century. The 7th Art takes hold of a historical phenomenon to restore it (rarely), magnify it or mishandle it (sometimes), revisit it (often), thus taking some liberties with the reality of events. From Prehistory to the war in Iraq, from Cleopatra to Napoleon, from the fall of the Roman Empire to that of the Ancien Régime, certain eras, certain events, certain figures have been brilliantly captured over the decades by the discerning eye of filmmakers from around the world (DeMille, Eisenstein, Kubrick, Visconti, Lean, Kurosawa, Renoir, Annaud, Mankiewicz, Tavernier, Leone, Malle, Spielberg, Malick, Cimino, Coppola, Bertolucci, Melville, Losey, Bigelow... ), while other moments have been purely and simply forgotten if not obscured. From The War of Fire to Zero Dark Thirty, here is an overview of the 101 best historical films, where we meet the intimate and the monumental, the derisory and the grandiose, the austere and the spectacular. Note: The book is divided in the following sections: Prehistory, Antiquity, The Middle Ages, Modern Times and Contemporary Times with subset sections within them. PS: If anyone can get ahold of the book, please send me a pm with the name of the missing movie.
  4. Kansas City Here I Come's icon

    Kansas City Here I Come

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. A Personal List of every movie I can find that mentions Kansas City. I believe it may be mentioned in more movies than just about any other city.
  5. KORT!'s icon

    KORT!

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. KORT! ("short" in Dutch) gives a mix of both beginners/young and more experienced/established screenwriters/filmmakers the chance to make short (stand-alone) fiction films. The films will be screened at the Dutch Film Festival, then online and a year later on television during the so-called evening of the short film. The NTR (a Dutch public broadcaster), the Dutch Film Fund, the Dutch Cultural Broadcasting Fund and the Co-production Fund Domestic Broadcasting facilitate the production of these short fiction films. Shorts remarkably not included in the IMDb: Rat (Roel Boorsma & Berend Boorsma) Salt-battle (Ron Termaat) 11:59 (Johan Kramer) Dialoogoefening (Esther Rots) De laatste dag (Saskia Diesing) Ruwe honing (Annick Vroom) Salto Mortale (Vincent Schuurman)
  6. Messianic Archetypes in Movies's icon

    Messianic Archetypes in Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. The Messianic Archetype is a character whose role in the story echoes that of Christ. They are portrayed as a savior, whether the thing they are saving is a person, a lot of people or the whole of humanity. They endure a sizable sacrifice as the means of bringing that salvation about for others, a fate they do not deserve up to and including death or a Fate Worse than Death. Other elements may be mixed and matched as required but the Messianic Archetype will include one or more of the following: being the Chosen One, gaining a group of devoted followers, being betrayed by one of these followers, persecution by nonbelievers, parallels to the Passion Play, obvious Crucified Hero Shot, a figurative or literal resurrection, and even a Second Coming. Bonus points if the character has the initials JC. [url]http://tvtropes.org[/url] Checklist: 01. Odd, unexpected and obscure birth or otherwise strange origin and arrival 02. Central protagonist and/or object of concern within the narrative 03. Outsider 04. Sent by deliberate outside intervention 05. Alter ego or dual identity (one mundane and the other fantastic) 06. Very special, rare and unusual being although appears as normal human doing mundane activities throughout normal working live 07. Apostle-figures (intimate friends-cum-associate) 08. Begin “divine” mission at the age of thirty 09.Judas-figure (inner circle intimates who betrays friend for essentially unwholesome reasons). 10. Mary Magdalene-figure (sexually tagged women who are related to the Christ-figure in some close way, but do not know exactly how to express her sexuality with him) 11. John the Baptist-figure (prophetically point the way to the Christ-figure) 12. Dies (cruelly) and then miraculously comes back to life again as good-as-new, if not better 13. Death results in victory 14. Sacrifice made by Christ-figure specifically benefit others and are based upon higher principles, although these others are usually of lesser worthiness, talent or power, comparatively speaking 15. Choose sacrifice out of newfound knowledge, status, position or cosmic mission requirements 16. Accused of crimes although totally innocent 17. Cruciform posture 18. Acompanied by cross imagery 19. Incredible behaviour (walking on water) 20. Appears as simple, fool or crazy 21. Pronounced poverty 22. White clothing (toga, cloth) 23. Blue eyes 24. Verbal tags (“My God!” or “Jesus Christ!” or “Jesus!” or “Christ!”) 25. Initials J.C. (Kozlovic)
  7. Rediff.com: Bollywood's Best Hindi Films of 2010's icon

    Rediff.com: Bollywood's Best Hindi Films of 2010

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Film critic Sukanya Verma ranks his 10 favorite Hindi movies of 2012.
  8. Richard Crouse's Son of the 100 Best Movies You've Never Seen's icon

    Richard Crouse's Son of the 100 Best Movies You've Never Seen

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Son of the 100 Best Movies You’ve Never Seen is the eighth book by Canadian author and film critic Richard Crouse. Published in September, 2008 by ECW Press, the book is a sequel to the author's best selling 2003 book The 100 Best Movies You’ve Never Seen. The new book's check list of the best overlooked and under appreciated films of the last 100 years caters to fans of offbeat cinema, discriminating renters and collectors, and movie buffs. Each essay features a detailed description of plot, notable trivia tidbits, critical reviews, and interviews with actors and filmmakers. Sidebars feature quirky details, including legal disclaimers and memorable quotes, along with movie picks from a-list actors and directors.
  9. TCM Classic Film Festival 2015's icon

    TCM Classic Film Festival 2015

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. The 2015 TCM Classic Film Festival will cover a wide range of programming themes, including our central theme History According to Hollywood. Working directly with the Hollywood studios, the world’s notable film archives, and private collectors, our programs feature some of the most revered movies of all time — many with new restorations — and long lost gems.
  10. TCM January 2018's icon

    TCM January 2018

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0.
  11. 100 Must-See Movies 's icon

    100 Must-See Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 1:1. It is always a challenge to produce a definitive list of “must- see” movies, because value judgments are, by definition, extremely subjective. However, the 100 handpicked films in this section have delighted, moved or educated audiences of all ages, all over the world. Over the last nine decades, these films have changed our perceptions of cinema, and most have left an indelible mark on film history.
  12. 2013 Watched's icon

    2013 Watched

    Favs/dislikes: 1:8. Personal list of movies watched 2013. Completely random, yes.
  13. 365 movies's icon

    365 movies

    Favs/dislikes: 1:17.
  14. Amazon Original Movies's icon

    Amazon Original Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Movies produced by Amazon Studios.
  15. Best Supernatural Horror/Sci-Fi/Fantasy Movies's icon

    Best Supernatural Horror/Sci-Fi/Fantasy Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0.
  16. BFI's 100 Bible Films's icon

    BFI's 100 Bible Films

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. From The Passion of the Christ to Life of Brian, and from The Ten Commandments to Last Temptation of Christ, filmmakers have been adapting the stories of the Bible for over 120 years, from the first time the Höritz Passion Play was filmed in the Czech Republic back in 1897. Ever since, these stories have inspired musicals, comedies, sci-fi, surrealist visions and the avant-garde not to mention spawning their own genre, the biblical epic. Filmmakers across six continents and from all kinds of religious perspectives (or none at all), have adapted the greatest stories ever told, delighting some and infuriating others. 100 Bible Films is the indispensable guide to this wide and varied output, providing an authoritative but accessible history of biblical adaptations through one hundred of the most interesting and significant biblical films. Richly illustrated with film stills, this book depicts how such films have undertaken a complex negotiation between art, commerce, entertainment and religion. Matthew Page traces the screen history of the biblical stories from the very earliest silent passion plays, via the golden ages of the biblical epic, through to more innovative and controversial later films as well as covering significant TV adaptations. He discusses films made not only by some of our greatest filmmakers, artists such as Martin Scorsese, Jean Luc Godard, Alice Guy, Roberto Rossellini, Pier Paolo Pasolini, Lotte Reiniger, Carl Dreyer and Luis Buñuel, but also those looking to explore their faith or share it with lovers of cinema the world over.
  17. Capitolfest 13's icon

    Capitolfest 13

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Capitolfest is Central New York's premier summer Cinephile film festival—a place to see rarely-shown and newly-discovered films of the silent and early talkie era, held at the historic 1,788-seat movie palace, the Capitol Theatre, in Rome, New York, which opened in December, 1928 as a movie house. Set in the small upstate New York city of Rome (population c.33,000) and regarded by attendees from the U.S., Canada, and Europe as the movie lover’s dream vacation, the weekend festival starts late Friday morning and ends early on Sunday evening. Screenings are arranged by session, with each session essentially comprised of a double feature plus short subjects. Each session contains intermissions and there are generous breaks between sessions (allowing for meals) as well. The philosophy of Capitolfest is that there should be time to savor the films, thus our slogan, “A vacation, not a marathon.”
  18. CINEVENT 47 Classic Film Convention 2015's icon

    CINEVENT 47 Classic Film Convention 2015

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. The 2015 version of CINEVENT (47th annual) is a gathering of fans of silent and early sound films, and of collectors of motion pictures and related items. Movie screenings are available from Friday morning through Monday afternoon (with a few hours off to sleep!) each Memorial Day Weekend. Dealers fill over a hundred tables full of film, video, sound recordings, posters, stills, lobby cards, books, autographs...everything imaginable associated with film.
  19. David Edelstein’s Top Ten Movies of 2012's icon

    David Edelstein’s Top Ten Movies of 2012

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0.
  20. Favorite Films of Modern USA Presidents's icon

    Favorite Films of Modern USA Presidents

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. This list chronologically shows favorite films of US presidents starting from Harry S. Truman.
  21. Favorite Kannada Movies's icon

    Favorite Kannada Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0.
  22. Garret Reza' My Favorite Movies's icon

    Garret Reza' My Favorite Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0.
  23. IMDb Bottom 100's icon

    IMDb Bottom 100

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. The bottom IMDb 100 as voted on by IMDb users. I know there's another list of the IMDb bottom 100, but it hasn't been updated in 3 years, and I will updating this one regularly.
  24. Jason Friedlander's 100 Favorite Movies of All Time's icon

    Jason Friedlander's 100 Favorite Movies of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. This is just a personal list of my favorite movies of all time.
  25. Krzysztof Kieslowski Filmography's icon

    Krzysztof Kieslowski Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. A list of all feature films directed by Kieslowski. This list excludes the various shorts, documantries, TV episodes and TV movies he directed.
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