All lists - page 295

iCheckMovies allows you to check many different top lists, ranging from the all-time top 250 movies to the best science-fiction movies. Please select the top list you are interested in, which will show you the movies in that list, and you can start checking them!

Filter

  1. Venerdì festino's icon

    Venerdì festino

    Favs/dislikes: 2:1. FIlm horror in Carmen's house
  2. Venice Days's icon

    Venice Days

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Giornate degli Autori were born in 2004, as an independent event on the fringes of the Venice Film Festival, modeled on the prestigious ‘Directors' Fortnight' of the Cannes Festival and promoted by the associations of Italian film directors and authors (Anac and 100autori). The aim of the event is to draw attention to high quality cinema, without any kind of restriction, with special care for innovation, research, originality and independence. These are all features of the 12 films selected as well as being reflected in the special events held during the Days in the Villa degli Autori.
  3. Venice Film Festival Queer Lion Award's icon

    Venice Film Festival Queer Lion Award

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. The Queer Lion Award was created in 2007 thanks to the efforts of Daniel N. Casagrande, journalist and film critic, and Marco Müller, back then director of the Venice Film Festival, as a collateral prize for the “Best Film with Homosexual & Queer Culture Contents”. From the [url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Queer_Lion]Wikipedia article[/url]: All the movies containing LGBTQ themes, stories, plots, or characters, presented in any of the sections of the Venice Film Festival are considered eligible for the award. Specifically, these sections are: Concorso (Competition), Fuori Concorso (Out of Competition), Orizzonti (Horizons), Controcampo italiano (Italian Reverse Shot), Giornate degli Autori (Venice Days), and Settimana Internazionale della Critica (International Critics' Week). The Queer Lion jury, composed of journalists, directors, critics, persons with a deep knowledge of cinema, views all the movies deemed to contain noteworthy LGBTQ elements during the Venice Film Festival, picking the "best film" among them.
  4. Vera Farmiga Filmography's icon

    Vera Farmiga Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0.
  5. VGDebatt - Top 20 from the 1980s's icon

    VGDebatt - Top 20 from the 1980s

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0.
  6. VHS Collector: Media Home Entertainment's icon

    VHS Collector: Media Home Entertainment

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. no imdb listing for: Popeye In The Wild West (1984) Surfing Beach Party (1983) Cincinnati Bengals:1988 Video Yearbook (1989) Cartoon Classics of the 1930's (1982)
  7. VHS Collector: Vestron Video's icon

    VHS Collector: Vestron Video

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. no imdb listing for: National Geographic Video: Rocky Mountain Beaver Pond (1987) Nova - UFO's: Are We Alone? (1982) Pope John Paul II Visits America 1987 (1987) Carlin at Carnegie (1983) Carlin on Campus (1984) Ultraflash! (1983) Peter and the Wolf and Other Tales (1981) The Jimi Hendrix Concerts Videogram (1983) Tales Of Beatrix Potter (1986)
  8. Victor McLaglen Filmography's icon

    Victor McLaglen Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0.
  9. Video Game adaptations into (Live-Action) "Films"'s icon

    Video Game adaptations into (Live-Action) "Films"

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. All Current and Upcoming Live-Action Film adaptations of Video Games
  10. Video game movies's icon

    Video game movies

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Compilation of movies adapted or based on video games
  11. Vinegar Syndrome - Partner Label Releases's icon

    Vinegar Syndrome - Partner Label Releases

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Vinegar Syndrome is a film restoration and distribution company with a catalogue of hundreds of feature films, produced primarily between the 1960s and 1990s. Our namesake is a constant reminder of what we’re fighting against. Simply put, the term ‘vinegar syndrome’ describes a chemical reaction that deteriorates motion picture film over time. Film preservation is a race against time, especially with long-neglected genres and underground films. In addition to the standard catalog of releases, Vinegar Syndrome also hosts a variety of partner labels including: Altered Innocence American Genre Film Archive (AGFA) Big World Pictures Canadian International Pictures (CIP) Circle Collective Culture Shock Dark Star Deaf Crocodile Dekanalog ETR Media Factory 25 Film Movement Fun City Editions Gunpowder & Sky Kani Music Box Selects Pulse Video Saturn's Core Subkultur USA Terror Vision Umbrella Entertainment Utopia VHSHitfest XYZ Films Yellow Veil Pictures Note, missing: Altered Innocence Vol. 1 Altered Innocence Vol. 2 Smut Without Smut: Satanic Horror Nite The Adam Rifkin Film Festival The Tortured Soul Trilogy Bloodfeast!: The Adventures of Sgt. Lunch Slopes Game Room: Sega the Complete History Vol. 1 We Kill for Love What Doesn't Float Psycho Paul's Film Festival Halloween Horrors (1992) Surf Reality Movie of the Month Club Collection Gay USA: Snapshots of 1970s LGBT Resistance Stice's Satyricon Animation Night In Canada, Vol. 1 Hey Folks! It's the Intermission Time Video Party!
  12. Viralmozo's 19 Most Epic Movies Ever's icon

    Viralmozo's 19 Most Epic Movies Ever

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. A list 19 most epic movies chosen by viralmozo.com
  13. Voyage à travers le cinéma français's icon

    Voyage à travers le cinéma français

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Bertrand Tavernier's personal journey through French cinema, from films he enjoyed as a boy to his own early career, told through portraits of key creative figures. This is the mini-series version, which features an altogether different list of films. Currently missing from IMDb: Autour d'un film (1957, dir. Charles Gérard) Le Travail d'un cinéaste: Julien Duvivier 1896-1967 (1996, dir. Hubert Niogret)
  14. VPRO Cinekid Top 100's icon

    VPRO Cinekid Top 100

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0.
  15. Vulture's The 50 Greatest War Movies Ever Made's icon

    Vulture's The 50 Greatest War Movies Ever Made

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. A look back at a genre that has inspired a century of cinema. By Keith Phipps NOV. 11, 2020 This article originally ran in January and is being republished with the addition of Spike Lee’s Da 5 Bloods. Speaking to Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune in 1973, Francois Truffaut made an observation that’s cast a shadow over war movies ever since, even those seemingly opposed to war. Asked why there’s little killing in his films, Truffaut replied, “I find that violence is very ambiguous in movies. For example, some films claim to be antiwar, but I don’t think I’ve really seen an antiwar film. Every film about war ends up being pro-war.” The evidence often bears him out. In Anthony Swofford’s Gulf War memoir Jarhead, Swofford recalls joining fellow recruits in getting pumped up while watching Apocalypse Now and Full Metal Jacket, two of the most famous films about the horrors of war. (On the occasion of the death of R. Lee Ermey, the real-life drill instructor who played the same in Full Metal Jacket, Swofford offered a remembrance in the New York Times with the headline “Full Metal Jacket Seduced My Generation and Sent Us to War.”) Is it true that movies glamorize whatever they touch, no matter how horrific? And if a war movie isn’t to sound a warning against war, what purpose does it serve? Even if Truffaut’s wrong — and it’s hard to see his observation applying to at least some of the movies on this list — it might be best to remove the burden of making the world a better place from war movies. It’s a lot to ask, especially since war seems to be baked into human existence. So, like other inescapable elements of the human experience, we tell stories about war, stories that reflect our attitudes toward it, and how they shift over time. War movies reflect the artistic impulses of their creators, but they also reflect the attitudes of the times and places in which they were created. A World War II film made in the midst of the war, for instance, might serve a propagandist purpose than one made after the war ends, when there’s more room for nuance and complexity, but it also might not. Maybe the ultimate purpose of a war movie is to let others hear the force of these stories. Another director, Sam Fuller, once offered a quote that doesn’t necessarily contradict Truffaut’s observation but better explains the impulse to make war movies: “A war film’s objective, no matter how personal or emotional, is to make a viewer feel war.” The films selected for this list of the genre’s most essential entries often have little in common, but they do share that. Each offers a vision that asks viewers to consider and understand the experience of war, be it in the trenches of World War I, the wilderness skirmishes of Civil War militias, or the still-ongoing conflicts that have helped define 21st-century warfare. Compiled as Sam Mendes’s stylistically audacious World War I film, [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/1917/]1917[/url], hit theaters, this list opts for a somewhat narrow definition of a war movie, focusing on films that deal with the experiences of soldiers during wartime. That means no films about the experience of returning from war ([url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/coming+home/]Coming Home[/url], [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/the+best+years+of+our+lives/]The Best Years of Our Lives[/url], [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/first+blood/]First Blood[/url]) or of civilian life during wartime ([url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/mrs.+miniver/]Mrs. Miniver[/url], [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/jeux+interdits/]Forbidden Games[/url], [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/hope+and+glory/]Hope and Glory[/url]) or of wartime stories whose action rests far away from the battlefield ([url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/casablanca/]Casablanca[/url]). It also leaves films primarily about the Holocaust out of consideration, as they seem substantively different from other sorts of war films. Also excluded are films that blur genres, like the military science fiction of [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/starship+troopers/]Starship Troopers[/url] and [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/aliens/]Aliens[/url] (even if the latter does have a lot to say about the Vietnam War). That eliminates many great movies, but it leaves room for many others, starting with a film made at the height of World War II in an attempt to help rally a nation with a story of an operation whose success required secrecy, extensive training, and beating overwhelming odds. Notes: [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/nobi/]Nobi (1959)[/url] was originally #12, but was replaced by Da 5 Bloods. The #12 spot is still missing in the updated list. Che 1 & 2 are counted as a single film.
  16. W. S. Van Dyke Filmography's icon

    W. S. Van Dyke Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0.
  17. Wallace Beery Filmography's icon

    Wallace Beery Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0.
  18. Walt Disney Animation Studios films's icon

    Walt Disney Animation Studios films

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. This list include the films made by Walt Disney Animation Studios, and will be updated with each release.
  19. Walt Disney Pictures films's icon

    Walt Disney Pictures films

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. This is a list of films released theatrically under the Walt Disney Pictures banner (known as that since 1983, with Never Cry Wolf as its first release) and films released before that under the former name of the parent company, Walt Disney Productions (1929-1983). This list is organized by year of release date (US release) and includes live action feature films, animated feature films (including films developed and produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios and Pixar Animation Studios), and documentary films (including titles from the True-Life Adventures series and films produced by the Disneynature label). However, this list does not include films released by other existing, defunct or divested labels or subsidiaries owned by The Walt Disney Studios (i.e. Marvel StudiosMVL, Touchstone Pictures, Hollywood Pictures, Miramax Films, Dimension Films, ESPN Films etc.), foreign produced films released in the United States under the Walt Disney Pictures name that are solely produced by a third-party studio (e.g. Studio Ghibli) nor any direct-to-video releases, TV films, theatrical re-releases, or films originally released by other non-Disney studios.
  20. Walter Neff's 2023 500<400's icon

    Walter Neff's 2023 500<400

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0.
  21. Wam & Vennerøds Filmografi's icon

    Wam & Vennerøds Filmografi

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Wam & Vennerød er benevnelsen på en norsk film-duo, Petter Vennerød og Svend Wam, som produserte og regisserte en rekke norske filmer mellom 1975 og 1995. De fleste av deres filmer hadde et mørkt dramapreg, men også noen komedier føyer seg inn i rekken. Betegnelsen Wam & Vennerød var ofte ensbetydende med filmer som befattet seg med sosialrealisme og hadde en dyster tone og dramatisk slutt. Selv om de ofte blir husket for å lage kalkuner, ble flere av filmene deres godt mottatt både i sin samtid av både kritikere og publikum. Duoen proklamerte seg selv som anarkister, og var bestemt på å lage filmer som skilte seg fra klassiske norske dramaer og komedier.
  22. Ward Bond filmography's icon

    Ward Bond filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. All feature films starring Ward Bond. Excludes shorts, TV shows, and TV films. Updated 2017-06-14.
  23. Warner Baxter Filmography's icon

    Warner Baxter Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0.
  24. Warner Bros. Films: 1931's icon

    Warner Bros. Films: 1931

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0.
  25. Warner Bros. Films: 1933's icon

    Warner Bros. Films: 1933

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0.
Remove ads

Showing items 7351 – 7375 of 19069