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. MyLife inFilms's icon

    MyLife inFilms

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0.
  2. Never Have I Ever's icon

    Never Have I Ever

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Episode List for Never Have I Ever
  3. New Argentine Cinema's icon

    New Argentine Cinema

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0.
  4. Nika Awards for Best Film's icon

    Nika Awards for Best Film

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. The Nika Award is an annual ceremony held by the Russian Academy of Cinema Arts and Sciences which was established in 1987 and is the main national film award in Russia.
  5. Nominadas al Premio Pepón por la Mejor Película's icon

    Nominadas al Premio Pepón por la Mejor Película

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Nominadas al prestigioso galardón del Premio Pepón a la Mejor Película
  6. Northern Norway on film's icon

    Northern Norway on film

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. Essential portrayals of Northern Norway (including Svalbard) on film.
  7. Nye film's icon

    Nye film

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Film fra den seneste tid, der virker seværdige
  8. NYFCC's icon

    NYFCC

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. All New York Film Critics Circle award winners.
  9. pari-lists's icon

    pari-lists

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0.
  10. Peaky Blinders (2013)'s icon

    Peaky Blinders (2013)

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Episode list
  11. Peter Weir filmography's icon

    Peter Weir filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 16:0.
  12. pitn's favourite prison movies's icon

    pitn's favourite prison movies

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. list made for the ICM forum poll
  13. Polish Film School 's icon

    Polish Film School

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0.
  14. Popmatters - The 10 Greatest Motion Picture Trilogies of All Time's icon

    Popmatters - The 10 Greatest Motion Picture Trilogies of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 3:1. It’s safe to say that, unless they are based on some similarly styled source material (book, play, etc.), the motion picture trilogy is a product of popularity. Though its narrative and cinematic symmetry can be breathtaking to behold, most three part films were not preplanned. Instead, they were forged out of a desire to please the audience mixed with a need to repay the cast/crew. George Lucas can argue all he wants to that his Star Wars saga—now finally out on Blu-ray—was always intended as three separate three-part projects (guess the crappy prequels destroyed that dream, right big G?) but Fox barely wanted to release the first film. So what fodder did he have for contemplating such a massive vision? The answer is obvious—he didn’t. Like most eventual franchises, box office gave Luke Skywalker’s real pappy a chance to dream, resulting in the genre’s first example of the law of diminishing returns. There are a couple of factors inherent in determining the best trilogies of all time. First, the three films included have to be linked in some significant way. They can’t be a pure product of money-oriented moviemaking. Secondly, all three movies must be worth watching. A sloppy second act or atrocious third movement means the overall quality is compromised. A few can survive this kind of scrutiny—most cannot. Finally, there is a subjective element known as “completeness”. Do the films that make up this multi-faceted narrative really deliver on their designs, is there an all encompassing arc, or are we stuck seeing the same old story told over and over again? By answering these important questions, and taking into consideration other objective criteria like continuity and completeness, a final assessment can be reached. With the high def arrival of everyone’s favorite (?) space sagas, now’s as good a time as any to countdown the all time greats of triangular tale-spinning. Some may surprise you. Others will shock you. But in the context of this discussion, all are worthy of classics consideration:
  15. Post-1995 Danish cinema's icon

    Post-1995 Danish cinema

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. My personal selection of the best Danish films, starting from 1995, the year the Dogme manifest was made public.
  16. Pre-Code.com’s Thirty Essential Pre-Code Films's icon

    Pre-Code.com’s Thirty Essential Pre-Code Films

    Favs/dislikes: 10:0.
  17. ProZD's Top 30 Anime Films of All Time's icon

    ProZD's Top 30 Anime Films of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Published in 2020.
  18. René Clair filmography's icon

    René Clair filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Movies directed by René Clair
  19. Rene Clement filmography's icon

    Rene Clement filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 6:0.
  20. Richard Brody's The Best Movie Performances of the 21st Century's icon

    Richard Brody's The Best Movie Performances of the 21st Century

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. The film performances of the beginning of the twenty-first century are a product of the drastic transformations that have taken place in moviemaking in recent decades, as a new generation of directors, both in Hollywood and outside of it, has managed to invent modes of moviemaking capable of adapting to unprecedented crises in the industry. The competition from television (“prestige” or otherwise), the top-heavy expansion of blockbuster franchises, and the rise of streaming platforms have led to a decline in studio movie production. As a result, independent producers have grown significantly in prominence and power, and their financing has had a liberating effect on directors, and, by extension, on actors: working largely with modest budgets (yet occasionally with larger ones than studios would provide), filmmakers have been able to take greater risks and make more unusual films—and to develop new methods of performance with actors whose artistry closely fits their own.
  21. Robert Altman Feature Films's icon

    Robert Altman Feature Films

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0.
  22. 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
  23. Rotten Tomatoes: Greatest Shakespeare Movies's icon

    Rotten Tomatoes: Greatest Shakespeare Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 18:0. Filmmakers have long mined the riches of The Bard to create some of the most lasting and universal stories in the movie history. With his 38 collected tragedies, comedies, and historical epics, Shakespeare remains one of Hollywood's most prolific screenwriters - after all, his works have been turned into films many times over, adapted splendidly by the likes of Franco Zefferelli (Romeo and Juliet), Baz Lurhmann (William Shakespeare's Romeo & Juliet), Kenneth Branagh (Henry V, Much Ado About Nothing, Hamlet, Love's Labour's Lost, As You Like It), Orson Welles (Othello) and Akira Kurosawa (Ran). But which Shakespearean adapatations fared the best with the critics? Find out below in our countdown of the 30 Best Shakespeare Movies of all time. As The Bard himself might say, "To thine own Tomatometer be true..."
  24. Ruth Gordon Filmography's icon

    Ruth Gordon Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0.
  25. Scores by Randy Newman's icon

    Scores by Randy Newman

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0.
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