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. Fangoria's 101 Best Horror Films You've Never Seen's icon

    Fangoria's 101 Best Horror Films You've Never Seen

    Favs/dislikes: 73:1.
  2. 101 B- and Trash-Movies You Must See Before You Die's icon

    101 B- and Trash-Movies You Must See Before You Die

    Favs/dislikes: 12:0. THIS IS NOT AN OFFICIAL 101-LIST! I tried to make an list inspired by the 101-Lists, so I compared a lot of lists and looked for B-Movies in these. For each time a film was mentioned in one of the lists, it gain one point. These are the 101 films with the most points.
  3. Sight and Sound 101 Hidden Gems's icon

    Sight and Sound 101 Hidden Gems

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. "One-vote wonders from Sight and Sound’s Greatest Films of All Time Poll" (2022 edition) The list has only 97 films because I couldn't find the following on IMDb: No. 1: "Le chat qui joue" (1897) No. 36: "6 et 12" (1968) No. 51: "Mouth to Mouth" (1975) No. 91: "Qabyo 2" (2003)
  4. Rotten Movies We Love: The Book's icon

    Rotten Movies We Love: The Book

    Favs/dislikes: 3:1. Ever been crushed to learn your favorite movie -- or a new one you're dying to see -- has been given the big green splat from Rotten Tomatoes' infamous Tomatometer? The site's editors stand by their critics and scores, but they also feel your pain: Fresh films shouldn't get all the glory! In Rotten Movies We Love, the RT team celebrates 101 Rotten movies that can't be missed, including: 01-19 - Box office slayers and household names 20-27 - So bad they're good 28-36 - Not their best work (or so they said) 37-50 - Cult leaders 51-66 - Ahead of their time 67-78 - Sequels worth a second look 79-101 - Basic Instincts Featuring 16 essays from some of the world's most well-known film critics -- Leonard Maltin, Terri White, Amy Nicholson, David Fear, K. Austin Collins, and more -- and punctuated with black-and-white film stills and punchy graphics, it's a fun romp through the quirkier corners of film history, sure to delight any cinephile or pop-culture fanatic.
  5. 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.
  6. Empire magazine issue 101 - November 1997's icon

    Empire magazine issue 101 - November 1997

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. A list of all the cinematic films reviewed by Empire magazine in this issue. The films have been placed in order, from the highest rated to the lowest. They are also listed in alphabetical order (based on the UK title) within each of the different star ratings.
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