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. Metro Goldwyn Mayer Films: 1972's icon

    Metro Goldwyn Mayer Films: 1972

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0.
  2. Metro Goldwyn Mayer Films: 1973's icon

    Metro Goldwyn Mayer Films: 1973

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0.
  3. Metro Goldwyn Mayer Films: 1974's icon

    Metro Goldwyn Mayer Films: 1974

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0.
  4. Metro Goldwyn Mayer Films: 1975's icon

    Metro Goldwyn Mayer Films: 1975

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0.
  5. Metro Goldwyn Mayer Films: 1976's icon

    Metro Goldwyn Mayer Films: 1976

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0.
  6. Metro Goldwyn Mayer Films: 1977's icon

    Metro Goldwyn Mayer Films: 1977

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0.
  7. Metro Goldwyn Mayer Films: 1978's icon

    Metro Goldwyn Mayer Films: 1978

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0.
  8. Metro Goldwyn Mayer Films: 1979's icon

    Metro Goldwyn Mayer Films: 1979

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0.
  9. Metro Weekly Gay Films Everyone Should See's icon

    Metro Weekly Gay Films Everyone Should See

    Favs/dislikes: 9:0. The following list combines the original 25 films plus 50 more from the “sequels”. Ties result in a total of 81 films.
  10. Metro Weekly's 13 Camp Films Everyone Should See's icon

    Metro Weekly's 13 Camp Films Everyone Should See

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. From Hollywood's golden age to John Waters's trash cinema, the camp films that define a genre By Sean Bugg, Will O'Bryan and Doug Rule February 22, 2012 Camp, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder. For some, a camp movie is the unintentional hilarity of an earnest story gone wildly awry. For others, the best camp movies are those in which the camp is intentionally baked in from the beginning. We all know that a camp movie by definition is filled with quotable lines, like Divine’s ”I told you cha cha heels! Black ones!” But a movie with memorable quotes isn’t necessarily camp, like Steel Magnolias‘ ”Drink your juice, Shelby.” It’s just all so confusing. So when we set out to pick our favorite camp movies, we focused on the movies that we’ve watched over and over until they’ve become part of our queer pop-culture DNA. They’re the movies we watch with old friends and the movies we introduce to new friends. They’re the movies that over decades have become the shared cultural touchstones for everything gay. And, frankly, they’re simply and supremely silly, even if they’re trying not to be. These aren’t the movies that won Academy Awards (with one notable exception). They’re the movies that gave us an attitude.
  11. Metro Weekly's 15 Black LGBTQ Films Everyone Should See's icon

    Metro Weekly's 15 Black LGBTQ Films Everyone Should See

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. From "Bessie" to "Young Soul Rebels" these movies showcase the best of black gay cinema By André Hereford, Chris Heller, Rhuaridh Marr, Will O'Bryan, Doug Rule and Randy Shulman February 23, 2017 Every culture is comprised of subcultures. They are essential veins to a greater artery. And there is, arguably, no more profoundly resonant subculture within the LGBTQ movement than the African-American community. It’s been such a fertile territory for filmmakers that when deciding on a sixth installment for our “LGBTQ Films Everyone Should See” series, it stood out as a no brainer. Of course, it helps that the low-budget Moonlight has become a launching pad of sorts, renewing a rapture for honest black cinema in a way that alluded such recent high profile entries like Nate Parker’s Birth of a Nation. Moonlight came in, stealth-like, and stole every bit of the thunder. Deservedly so. The Oscar-nominated, Golden Globe-winning masterpiece sets a new bar for black gay cinema, if not all independent film. Poetic and resonant, it deploys a magnificently complex, ethereal narrative structure, offering the world a moviegoing experience that eschews Hollywood’s typical cookie cutter aesthetic for one daring, brave, and emotionally, intellectually powerful. It’s the standard from which all LGBTQ cinema will be compared moving forward. And like the the finest LGBTQ films — Beautiful Thing, Boys Don’t Cry, Brokeback Mountain — it remains true to itself, true to its heart. And that truth is what sticks with you long after the movie has ended. Each of the 15 films selected for our list are just as true, making every single one of them — no matter who you are, no matter what your cultural assignation, no matter your sexual orientation — essential viewing. They inform, they entertain, they enlighten, they stir our collective souls. Most importantly, they leave us with a far better understanding of our LGBTQ culture, as well as the subcultures within, subcultures that provide real muscle to our mass. In alphabetical order:
  12. Metro Weekly's 20 Gay Short Films Everyone Should See's icon

    Metro Weekly's 20 Gay Short Films Everyone Should See

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Short on length, big on impact, these gay films are a must-see By Rhuaridh Marr and Randy Shulman on February 19, 2015 “I’m not sure that these are the greatest LGBT films ever,” says Jon Gann. “To me they are significant. I like them because they are about the entire community. In some of the stories, the LGBT portion is very small, but the LGBT component is really critical to how the story unfolds.” best, gay films, gay movies, gay film, gay movie Illustration by Christopher Cunetto Since 2009, just prior to the Oscars, we’ve occasionally put together lists of “25 Gay Films Everyone Should See.” When it came time for this year’s list, we thought we’d give feature films a break and turn our attention to an oft-neglected, but much beloved category — the short. And who better to curate our mini-festival for us than Gann, executive director of DC Shorts, which, every fall, stages a massive, citywide shorts festival. Gann (see profile, page 20) unearthed 20 LGBT nuggets for us to review, and while, as with any collection of shorts, the quality varies considerably, the collection as a whole captures the entire gamut of the LGBT experience. The beauty of a short film — most of which range from 2 to 20 minutes — is that even if they’re not perfect, they can be easily endured and then you’re onto the next. It takes a special gift to craft a cogent narrative, to capture a powerful emotion, to convey an idea in a film whose average length is 9 minutes. So, when a filmmaker gets it right — such as Carlos Molina with the unnerving thriller Red or Lance Larson with the emotionally raw Bloom or Arnaud Lalanne with the blissful La Princesse — you have to admire the craftsmanship at work. Yes, short films are sometimes easy to figure out — when the genre is specifically LGBT, it can be hard to truly surprise your viewer — but look beyond that and, in the fleeting moments you spend with each film, absorb what the filmmaker is trying to impart. A link and instructions on how to stream or download the shorts are available after this feature. Read our thoughts on each, then follow the link at the bottom of this page to enjoy all 20 shorts, courtesy of DC Shorts. No matter how you digest these shorts — in bitesize nuggets, or one long session, on iPad, computer, or even via Chromecast — it’s an experience worth having. With 20 films from across the gay spectrum, it’s three hours of LGBT cinema that won’t leave you feeling shortchanged. Missing from imdb: The Gay Who Wasn't Gay Enough (2:39min, Canada 2011) Freedom on the Rocks (10min, USA/Israel, 2011)
  13. Metrograph A to Z's icon

    Metrograph A to Z

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. A series of films screened at the Metrograph theater in New York. The films screened in alphabetical order, with the only restriction being that only one film (or sometimes, one program of shorts) was selected for any director. They only broke this rule for John Ford, who has multiple "S" movies on the list (http://metrograph.com/series/series/75/welcome-to-metrograph-john-ford-edition). Now expanded to include the films from the currently-ongoing A to Z Round 2 series. One film in the series isn't on IMDB: Tighten Your Belts, Bite the Bullet (1980, directed by Martin Lucas, James Gaffney, and Jonathan Miller)
  14. Meus Favoritos's icon

    Meus Favoritos

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Not organized in any particular order
  15. Meus Filmes's icon

    Meus Filmes

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Meus Filmes
  16. meus filmes's icon

    meus filmes

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0.
  17. Mexican films in Cinema Tropical lists's icon

    Mexican films in Cinema Tropical lists

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0.
  18. Mexican movies produced in 1940's icon

    Mexican movies produced in 1940

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Mexican movies produced in 1940
  19. Mexican Movies you must watch's icon

    Mexican Movies you must watch

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Unfortunately, Mexican cinema is underrated, but there are some movies that are actually worth watching :)
  20. Mexican submissions for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film's icon

    Mexican submissions for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0.
  21. Mexican watchlist (November 2020)'s icon

    Mexican watchlist (November 2020)

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0.
  22. Mexico's Cinema: The Golden Age (1930-1959)'s icon

    Mexico's Cinema: The Golden Age (1930-1959)

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Taken from fra_angelica at Imdb.
  23. MFI.in [Movies From India] Top 100's icon

    MFI.in [Movies From India] Top 100

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. The 100 best Bollywood films ever made, as voted on by the community at MoviesFromIndia.in
  24. MGM Animated Shorts's icon

    MGM Animated Shorts

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. A list of every MGM animated short produced from 1934-1967.
  25. mi Favourites from decade of 2010s's icon

    mi Favourites from decade of 2010s

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0.
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