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. Data Build Tool Online Certification Course | Techsolidity's icon

    Data Build Tool Online Certification Course | Techsolidity

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Data Engineering is one of the leading technologies in today's IT world. Data has become a new fule for modern businesses and enables companies in making more reliable decisions. Modern data stack requires multiple tools to make data engineering successful. DBT is one of the major technology is being used in modern data engineering. DBT is an open-source source platform that helps organizations to simplify the data transformation process in their data warehouse with simple SQL queries. DBT comes with rich features to effectively transform data and produce reliable data that can be used for various business operations. Schedule and Attend Free Demo here! TechSolidity Data Build Tool Training https://techsolidity.com/data-build-tool-training
  2. TNT Hair Restoration's icon

    TNT Hair Restoration

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. TNT Hair Restoration is providing the best hair treatment, transplantation and <a href="https://www.tnthairrestoration.com/">scalp micropigmentation near me</a> based in Atlanta. Hair is the basic part of the beauty of human being and now a days lots of people have lost their hair due to some diseases like Alopecia and cancer and after that they have lost their confidence and beauty but in this advance period they can bounce back and live life happily through Hair restoration services. This is the reason that <a href="https://www.tnthairrestoration.com/">hair transplants near me</a> is increasing rapidly.
  3. Criterion Collection iTunes / Amazon Instant Exclusives's icon

    Criterion Collection iTunes / Amazon Instant Exclusives

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Films that that have not appeared in the collection as a feature or as an extra for another feature. These also are not available streaming on the Criterion Collection Hulu Channel. Note: Currently iTunes and Amazon Instant have the exact same exclusive offerings.
  4. Criterion Collection Hulu Exclusives (not on Filmstruck or Criterion Channel)'s icon

    Criterion Collection Hulu Exclusives (not on Filmstruck or Criterion Channel)

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Films that were exclusive the Criterion Collection Hulu channel that have not appeared in the collection as a feature or as an extra for another feature and that also have not reappeared on Filmstruck.
  5. Alternativa Film Project - 2023 Shortlist's icon

    Alternativa Film Project - 2023 Shortlist

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. The Alternativa Film Awards present an alternative system for recognizing professionals from different countries and provide a platform for the exchange of experience. We honor films that bring change to the world and society, while appealing to a wide audience. Feature films, documentaries, animation and hybrid films from all Asian countries are eligible for the awards. 2023 - Central Asia This prestigious shortlist comprises 14 full-length films and seven shorts, representing the cinematic prowess of Central Asia and other Asian nations, The awards selection committee included eight feature films and six documentaries in the list of feature-length finalists. Among them are “Bauyryna Salu” (Parenting) by Askhat Kuchinchirekov (Kazakhstan) “Kidnapping of the Bride” by Mirlan Abdykalykov (the Kyrgyz Republic) “Prisoner of Vakhan” by Zhanyl Zhusupzhan (the Kyrgyz Republic) “100% Cotton” by Mikhail Borodin (Uzbekistan) “Qoryqpa” (Do not be afraid) by Katerina Suvorova (Kazakhstan). The list also features “Sunday” by Shokir Kholikov (Uzbekistan) “Tul” (Orphan) by Sharipa Urazbayeva (Kazakhstan) “Who’s Next?” by Nurzhamal Karamoldoeva and Sultana Usuvalieva (Kyrgyzstan) “12 Weeks” by Anna Isabel Matutina (Philippines) “Childless Village” by Reza Jamali (Iran) “Haeil” by Yoojeong No, Eun Lee, Dabin Ahn and Soyeon Kim (South Korea) “Son of Joseph” by Haobam Paban Kumar (India), among others. The shortlist of short films from Central Asia included seven films: “What the Birds Sing About” by Tolomush Zhanybekov (the Kyrgyz Republic) “The Stone Bride” by Guzeli Duishenkulova (Kyrgyzstan) “Bazaar” by Tomiris Orozoeva (the Kyrgyz Republic) “Fairy Tale” by Kamila Rustambekova (Uzbekistan) “Sary-omir” by Rustem Dastanuly (Kazakhstan) “Son of His Father” by Dastan Madalbekov (the Kyrgyz Republic) “Late Wind” by Shugyly Serzhan (Kazakhstan).
  6. 10 great gross-out comedies's icon

    10 great gross-out comedies

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. First, a word of advice about gross-out comedies. They’re not to be watched while eating even the most basic of snacks. Popcorn? No. Cappuccino? Out of the question. They’re not to be watched – by any means – with your parents. With their gags involving urine, vomit, semen and all manner of bodily fluids, these in-your-face foul movies are the kind that you watch, then have to immediately shower after. This is the sub-genre’s charm, of course: that you weirdly enjoy the ‘eww!’ and the ’too far!!’ and the ‘please God no, don’t eat that!!!’ The roots of the subgenre – one marked not only by insanely gross scenes but by comedies that deal with taboo subjects such as sex and bodily functions – date back to the late 60s, after the MPAA film rating system replaced the industry’s strict Hays Code (which laid out moral guidelines of what was and wasn’t acceptable to show on screen). Back then, some directors were beginning to dabble with subversive comedies that raised a middle finger to the status quo. Nothing was too OTT, nothing too far. The most notable among them? John Waters, aka the Pope of Trash, whose unashamedly lowbrow and tawdry comedies (including Pink Flamingos and Female Trouble) happily dwelled on humans being gross. Towards the late 70s, the same shock humour employed by arthouse provocateurs bled into mainstream comedy, with popular movies like The Kentucky Fried Movie and National Lampoon’s Animal House leading to the term ‘gross-out’ being used by critics. The glory years of the gross-out comedy came in the late 90s, though, with the Farrelly brothers (There’s Something about Mary) and the countless teen movies featuring scenes of sexual embarrassment – remember American Pie’s Jim caught masturbating into a tube sock? What tethers these movies to their older cousins is, put simply, your reaction, your facial contortions. You worm in your seat, wishing you could unsee the thing you just saw. You want to wash your eyes out with a bar of soap. Ah, to be grossed out!
  7. BFI's Dustin Hoffman: 10 Essential Films's icon

    BFI's Dustin Hoffman: 10 Essential Films

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. From The Graduate to Rain Man, we celebrate the career of two-time Oscar winner Dustin Hoffman, one of the finest actors of his generation. In the early 1960s, if casting directors were looking for a leading man, he was more likely to resemble Paul Newman than he was Dustin Hoffman. Hoffman – skinny-faced and unprepossessing – was working as a jobbing stage actor in New York when he found himself in the running for the lead role in a new Mike Nichols film. After his audition out in Hollywood, the story goes that Hoffman reached out to shake the prop man’s hand and a pile of NYC subway tokens fell out of his pocket. The man’s response as he helped gather them? “You’re gonna need these, kid.” Luckily for all of us, he didn’t end up needing them. Instead, Dustin Hoffman would unexpectedly take on the lead role as Benjamin Braddock in The Graduate (1967). Since then, he’s been one of the most dynamic actors in Hollywood, continually defying expectations, casting vanity aside and refusing to be pigeonholed. Here are 10 of his finest films. Christina Newland Published: 31 May 2017
  8. BFI's Top 10 Bangladeshi films's icon

    BFI's Top 10 Bangladeshi films

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. British Film Institutes Top 10 movies from Bangladesh.
  9. A guide to films for prison abolition's icon

    A guide to films for prison abolition

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. “We need to be critical of the police and power structure, we need to stand back and solve these problems, and films need to point to that.” -Charles Burnett
  10. 58th International Film Festival of Mexico Cinematheque's icon

    58th International Film Festival of Mexico Cinematheque

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Since its inception the International Film Festival of Mexico Cinematheque presents a selection of internationally renowned films.
  11. 59th International Film Festival of Mexico Cinematheque's icon

    59th International Film Festival of Mexico Cinematheque

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Since its inception the International Film Festival of Mexico Cinematheque presents a selection of internationally renowned films.
  12. 60th International Film Festival of Mexico Cinematheque's icon

    60th International Film Festival of Mexico Cinematheque

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Since its inception the International Film Festival of Mexico Cinematheque presents a selection of internationally renowned films.
  13. 61th International Film Festival of Mexico Cinematheque's icon

    61th International Film Festival of Mexico Cinematheque

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Since its inception the International Film Festival of Mexico Cinematheque presents a selection of internationally renowned films.
  14. Cinema 16 British Short Films's icon

    Cinema 16 British Short Films

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. This critically acclaimed DVD contains 16 of the best classic and award winning British short films and delivers a snapshot of British cinema past and present. (missing on the list: UK Images by Martin Parr)
  15. Russian UNESCO's icon

    Russian UNESCO

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Films submitted for UNESCO Memory of the World in 2015. Compiled by Seance magazine and State Film Fund after polling the leading film critics, historians, directors, actors and cinematographers.
  16. Harvard University's Suggested Film Viewing List: Single-channel Video (2012)'s icon

    Harvard University's Suggested Film Viewing List: Single-channel Video (2012)

    Favs/dislikes: 21:0. This list is "an educational resource that offers guidance and encouragement as students seek to find points of orientation within the vast history of film and video." It is not a list of the best films of all time. Rather, it reflects a variety of criteria. The list is divided into 5 sections: I. [url=http://www.icheckmovies.com/lists/harvard+universitys+suggested+film+viewing+list+narrative+films+2012/]Narrative Films[/url] [url=http://www.icheckmovies.com/lists/harvard+universitys+suggested+film+viewing+list+hollywood+genres+2012/mjf314/]Hollywood Genres (with an emphasis on the classical studio era)[/url] II. [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/lists/harvard+universitys+suggested+film+viewing+list+non-fiction+films+2012/]Non-Fiction Films[/url] III. [url=http://www.icheckmovies.com/lists/harvard+universitys+suggested+film+viewing+list+animated+films+2012/mjf314/]Animated Films[/url] IV. [url=http://www.icheckmovies.com/lists/harvard+universitys+suggested+film+viewing+list+experimentalslashavant-gardeslashunderground+films+2012/mjf314/]Experimental/Avant-garde/Underground Films[/url] V. [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/lists/harvard+universitys+suggested+film+viewing+list+single-channel+video+2012/mjf314/]Single-channel Video[/url] Many of the videos are missing from IMDb. However, most of them are available on DVD or online. Missing from IMDb: The Best of Ernie Kovacs (Ernie Kovacs, 1957ff., US) Stamping in My Studio (Bruce Nauman, 1968, US) Self Burial (Keith Arnatt, 1969, FRG) Hello (Allan Kaprow, 1969, US) TV Interruptions (David Hall, 1971, US) I Will Not Make Any More Boring Art (John Baldessari, 1971, US) Centers (Vito Acconti, 1971, US) Vertical Roll (Joan Jonas, 1972, US) Past Future/Split Attention (Dan Graham, 1972, US) Theme Song (Vito Acconci, 1973, US) TV Delivers People (Richard Serra/Nancy Holt, 1973, US) TV Ad (Chris Burden, 1973, US) The Meaning of Various News Photos (John Baldessari, 1973, US) Children’s Tapes (Terry Fox, 1974, US) Ball (William Wegman, 1974, US) Body Music (Charlemagne Palestine, 1974, US) The Eternal Frame (T.R. Uthco and Ant Farm, 1975, US) My Father (Shigeko Kubota, 1975, Japan) Probably the World’s Smallest TV Station (Media Bus, 1975, US) Upset Stomach—Fast (Paulo Herkenhoff, 1975, Brazil) Revolve (Nancy Holt, 1977, US) The Red Tapes (Vito Acconci, 1977, US) Cage, Wire (Sonia Andrade, 1977, US) Kiss the Girls and Make Them Cry (Dara Birnbaum, 1979, US) Hearts (Barbara Buckner, 1979, US) Beneath the Skin (Cecelia Condit, 1981, US) The Looking Glass (Juan Downey, 1981, US) Meta Mayan (Edin Vélez, 1981, US) Smothering Dreams (Daniel Reeves, 1981, US) Casual Shopper (Judith Barry, 1981, US) Rock My Religion (Dan Graham, 1982-84, US) Ohio to Giverny: Memory of Light (Mary Lucier, 1983, US) Subatomic Babies (Shalom Gorewitz, 1983, US) Sabda (Daniel Reeves, 1984, US) Why Do Things Get in a Muddle? (Come on Petunia) (Gary Hill, 1984, US) Incidence of Catastrophe (Gary Hill, 1987-8, US) Not a Jealous Bone (Cecelia Condit, 1987, US) Berlin: Tourist Journal (Ken Kobland, 1988, US) Some Aspect of a Shared Lifestyle (Gregg Bordowitz, 1986, US) Mike (Michael Smith, 1987, US) Political Advertisements II: 1956-1988 (Muntadas, 1988, US) Volcano Saga (Joan Jonas, 1989, US) Site Recite (A Prologue) (Gary Hill, 1989, US) Like a Prayer (DIVA TV, 1989, US) Desire Incorporated (Lynn Herschman, 1990, US) Corps étranger (Mona Hatoum, 1994, UK) Oh, Rapunzel (Cecelia Condit, 1996, US) The B.C. Corporate Story (Bernadette Corporation, 1996, US) Presenta (Yoshua Okón, 1998, Mexico) Involuntary Reception (Kristin Lucas, 2000, US) Trembling Time (Yael Bartana, 2001, Israel) La Tombola (Ximena Cuevas, 2001, Mexico) Still Life (Sam Taylor-Wood, 2001, UK) My Sneakers (Michael Blum, 2001, Israel) Mom and Me Watching Zoolander (Anne Walsh, 2002, US) 10 Minutes of Collective Activity (Sharon Hayes, 2003, US) Baghdad in No Particular Order (Paul Chan, 2003, US) Stoned & Dethroned (Slater Bradley, 2004, US) 30 Seconds Hate (Bryan Boyce, 2004, US) Returning a Sound (Jennifer Allora/Guillermo Calzadilla, 2004, US) Miranda July Videoworks: Volume 1 (Miranda July, 2005, US)
  17. Uzbekistan UNESCO's icon

    Uzbekistan UNESCO

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Перед рассветом - Pered rassvetom - O’tgan tong - 1933 Клятва - Klyatva - Qasam - 1937 Насреддин в Бухаре - Nasreddin v Bukhare - Nasriddin Buxoroda - 1943 Тахир и Зухра - Takhir i Zukhra - Tohir va Zuhra - 1945 Алишер Навои - Alisher Navoy - Alisher Navoiy - 1948 Ты не сирота - Ty ne sirota - Sen yetim emassan - 1962 Нежность - Nezhnost - Muloyim - 1966(67) Ташкент город хлебный - Tashkent gorod khlebny - Toshkent non shahri - 1968 Минувшие дни - Minuvshie dni - O’tgan kunlar - 1969 Без страха - Bez strakha - Qo’rqmas - 1971 Abu Raykhan Beruni - Абу Райхан Беруни - Abu Rayhon Beruniy - 1974 Горькая ягода - Gorkaya yagoda - Chuchuk olho’ri - 1975 Человек уходит за птицами - Chelovek ukhodit za ptitsami - Insonlar qushlar ortidan ketmoqda - 1975 Озорник - Ozornik - Shum bola - 1978 Юность гения - Yunost geniya - Yoshlik davri - 1984 Siz kim siz - Who Are You - Кто вы такой - 1989 Абдулладжан или Посвящается Стивену Спилбергу - Abdulladzhan ili posvyashchaetsya Stivenu Spilbergu - Abdullajon - 1991 source for the source https://web.archive.org/web/20131208201455/http://uzbekkino.uz/uz/unesco see comments for text version
  18. I Am Curious, Film (History of a Scandinavian Cinema)'s icon

    I Am Curious, Film (History of a Scandinavian Cinema)

    Favs/dislikes: 3:2. List of movies that was mentioned in BFI documentary project about nordic cinema
  19. iCMFFF: (all) International - Africa's icon

    iCMFFF: (all) International - Africa

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. All the African films featured in the International section of iCM Forum's Film Festivals, so far. Films.....Edition --------------------- 01..........ICMFFF 1 (2017) 02-06.....ICMFFF 2 (2018) 07-10.....ICMFFF 5 (2021) 11-14.....ICMFFF 6 (2022) 15-18.....ICMFFF 7 (2023) Note: ICMFFF 3 (2019) and 4 (2020) didnt feature any African films in International category.
  20. Official FIFA World Cup films's icon

    Official FIFA World Cup films

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Since 1954, FIFA has sanctioned an official documentary film for each football World Cup. This is the list of it....
  21. The Criterion Collection: Out at Criterion's icon

    The Criterion Collection: Out at Criterion

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. In 1961, Basil Dearden’s Victim became the first mainstream English-language drama to feature a sympathetic homosexual protagonist, played by matinee idol Dirk Bogarde. In 2011, Andrew Haigh’s boy-meets-boy romance Weekend defied expectations to become a crossover art-house hit. The fact that, fifty years after Victim, Weekend is also considered groundbreaking is evidence of how far cinema may still have to go in terms of gay representation. But between these two revelatory films, there have been plenty of other important and entertaining ones made about gay, lesbian, and bisexual people, and several of them are available in the Criterion Collection, including works by trailblazers like Robert Epstein, Derek Jarman, and Gus van Sant.
  22. Total Film's 20 Coolest Slow Motion Scenes's icon

    Total Film's 20 Coolest Slow Motion Scenes

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. The 20 coolest slow motion scenes in movies according to Total Film (in 2011).
  23. AFI's 100 Years of Film Scores's icon

    AFI's 100 Years of Film Scores

    Favs/dislikes: 24:0. Part of the AFI 100 Years… series, AFI's 100 Years of Film Scores is a list of the top 25 film scores in American cinema. The list was unveiled by the American Film Institute in 2005.
  24. AFI's Greatest Movie Musicals's icon

    AFI's Greatest Movie Musicals

    Favs/dislikes: 55:0. Part of the AFI 100 Years… series, AFI's Greatest Movie Musicals is a list of the top musicals in American cinema.
  25. International Documentary Association's Top 25 Documentaries's icon

    International Documentary Association's Top 25 Documentaries

    Favs/dislikes: 26:0. In 2007, in commemoration of their 25th Anniversary, the IDA asked their members to name their Top 25 documentaries of all time. This is the consensus Top 25, representing a range of styles, sensibilities and eras.
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