All lists - page 89

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!

  1. Cléo - a journal of film and feminism's icon

    Cléo - a journal of film and feminism

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. https://letterboxd.com/cleojournal/list/cleo-the-film-list/ Films from each issue of Cléo - a journal of film and feminism
  2. Coen Brothers' favorite films's icon

    Coen Brothers' favorite films

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0.
  3. Collider's The Best Horror Movies of the Decade So Far, Ranked's icon

    Collider's The Best Horror Movies of the Decade So Far, Ranked

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0.
  4. Consequence of Sound: The 50 Greatest Rock and Roll Movies of All Time's icon

    Consequence of Sound: The 50 Greatest Rock and Roll Movies of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. Published by CoS Staff on February 13, 2018. "I’d argue that it’s easier to identify a rock and roll movie than define one. Looking through this list, there are docs and biopics, concert films and musicals, movies with flick-making and generation-defining soundtracks, and films that don’t seem to have very much to do with music at all. And yet, they all feel like they should be categorized under the old devil horns in some way. They boast a common ethos, carry a certain swagger, and feel rebellious in their own, often unlikely, ways. So, here they are: The 50 Greatest Rock and Roll Movies of All Time. For all these movies (and others) that rock, we salute them." – Matt Melis, Editorial Director
  5. Conspiracy films's icon

    Conspiracy films

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. Anti-Capitalist, Anti-Government, conspiracy films, secret society films, cover-up political & economic thrillers, contradictory films against social order & elite.
  6. Criterion Channel Expiring December 2023's icon

    Criterion Channel Expiring December 2023

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0.
  7. Criterion Channel Expiring January 2024's icon

    Criterion Channel Expiring January 2024

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0.
  8. Criterion Channel Expiring November 2023's icon

    Criterion Channel Expiring November 2023

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0.
  9. Criterion Collection Themes - America, America's icon

    Criterion Collection Themes - America, America

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. Call it star-spangled skepticism—there’s a whole host of movies in the collection that celebrate the United States by taking a hard, clear-eyed look at it. Uncompromising documentaries, historical dramas, surreal countercultural head trips: these are films that wrestle with the idea and reality of America, from the Civil War (Ride with the Devil) to the bicentennial (Dazed and Confused) to the contemporary political landscape (Tanner ’88).
  10. Criterion Collection Themes - First Films's icon

    Criterion Collection Themes - First Films

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. It takes some master movie artists years to hone their craft, working through ideas and aesthetics until they achieve their consummate creative statement. But cinema history is also dotted with thunderous works of art that announced their makers’ brilliance right out of the gate. There’s no dearth of dazzling debuts in the Criterion Collection, from the New Wave launchers Breathless and The 400 Blows, by Jean-Luc Godard and François Truffaut, respectively, to the still career-defining early masterworks of Victor Erice (The Spirit of the Beehive), Marco Bellocchio (Fists in the Pocket), and Maurice Pialat (L’enfance nue). Here’s a great way to savor the beginnings of some of the pillars of cinema.
  11. Criterion Collection Themes - New German Cinema's icon

    Criterion Collection Themes - New German Cinema

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. Written and signed by two dozen German filmmakers pledging themselves to “the new German feature film,” the 1962 Oberhausen Manifesto boldly announced the arrival of New German Cinema, with young, innovative, and politically radical directors taking up arms against the propriety of West German society and its failing film industry. In the late sixties and early seventies, filmmakers such as Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Margarethe von Trotta, Volker Schlöndorff, Wim Wenders, Werner Herzog, Alexander Kluge, and Hans-Jürgen Syberberg set out to create smaller, more independent and artistically challenging films to investigate the state of contemporary Germany (Schlöndorff and von Trotta’s The Lost Honor of Katherine Blum), as well as to grapple with the ghosts of the past, from the Weimar era (Fassbinder’s Berlin Alexanderplatz) and the Nazis (Schlöndorff’s The Tin Drum) to their aftermath (Fassbinder’s “BRD Trilogy”). Like other countries’ new waves, New German Cinema, which ended in the mid-eighties, embraced politically akin but artistically disparate directors with diverse interests, working methods, and spheres of influence, from the avant-garde (Kluge’s Artists Under the Big Top: Perplexed) to major international productions (Fassbinder’s Querelle).
  12. Criterion Collection Themes - New York Stories's icon

    Criterion Collection Themes - New York Stories

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. Take a time-traveling tour of New York, starting with the waterfront dives of the late twenties (The Docks of New York), the Upper East Side during the depressed thirties (My Man Godfrey), and the Lower East Side in the noirish forties (The Naked City). Then there are the jazzy fifties beatniks (Shadows) and the artsy sixties Central Park dwellers (Symbiopsychotaxiplasm Take One), melancholy midtown memories in the seventies (News from Home), and sweltering Bed-Stuy tension in the eighties (Do the Right Thing). Finally, the dying debutante society of the nineties (Metropolitan) gives way to a nostalgic, picture-book image of Manhattan circa 2001 (The Royal Tenenbaums). There are eight million stories in the Naked City. Here are some of them.
  13. Criterion Collection Themes - Oscar Winners's icon

    Criterion Collection Themes - Oscar Winners

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. The Criterion Collection is bursting with films that have earned Hollywood’s prestigious little golden guy—though, perhaps unsurprisingly, many of them were made pretty far from Hollywood. On our shelves you’ll find eighteen best foreign-language film winners, which make up a fairly comprehensive history of art-house cinema in the U.S., from Kurosawa, Bergman, and Fellini to Tati, Costa-Gavras, and Buñuel. A handful of these trophy-winning foreign films (like Bicycle Thieves, Rashomon, and Forbidden Games) even hail from the period before the competitive foreign-language film category was established—they had such cultural impact that the Academy gave them special honorary awards. Furthermore, two of the best picture winners in the collection have the very rare distinction of also being foreign films: Hamlet, which was the first movie from a country other than the U.S. to garner the prize, and The Last Emperor, which, with its nine Oscars, remains one of the most Academy-honored films of all time. Of course, Criterion also offers a selection of Oscar-embraced American films, which have won in such categories as best documentary feature (Hearts and Minds), cinematography (Days of Heaven), screenplay (Missing), visual effects (The Curious Case of Benjamin Button), editing (The Naked City), and even best documentary short (Paul Robeson: Tribute to an Artist). Explore all the Academy-awarded Criterion films below.
  14. Criterion Collection Themes - Scary Movies's icon

    Criterion Collection Themes - Scary Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. A deranged doctor performs ghastly experiments at his secluded country home. A murdered man’s body vanishes from the depths of a filthy swimming pool. A mysterious samurai spirit behind a demonic mask stalks two women isolated in a hut surrounded by tall grasses. The Criterion Collection is filled with terrifying stories to tell in the dark, from silent horror (Benjamin Christensen’s 1922 witches’ brew Häxan) to contemporary gore (Lars von Trier’s controversial gut-wrencher Antichrist). There’s much to fear in the films below, whether it’s a disembodied brain, a murderous blob, or Boris Karloff.
  15. Criterion Collection Themes - Silent Cinema's icon

    Criterion Collection Themes - Silent Cinema

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. Many moviegoers think the silent era ended with the advent of sound. Yet cinema history is not so simple. While Al Jolson’s first performance in 1927’s The Jazz Singer was certainly a shot heard round the world, some film artists chose to stick with the quiet old ways for a while, and some national cinemas were slower to adopt the new talking-picture technology than others. As a result—and as demonstrated by the silent films in the Criterion Collection—presound cinema extended into the thirties, for financial and cultural reasons (in Japan, for instance, silent and sound films coexisted until 1938, out of necessity and popularity) or aesthetic ones (Charlie Chaplin was still perfecting the art of silent comedy in 1936’s partly sound Modern Times). Investigate Criterion’s collection of nontalkies, which includes groundbreaking early works from such legends as Cocteau, DeMille, Dreyer, Micheaux, Ozu, Pabst, Sternberg, and more!
  16. Curtis Hanson Movies's icon

    Curtis Hanson Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0.
  17. cynical sadness's icon

    cynical sadness

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. it's sad, true and therefor funny.
  18. Dan Sallitt - The 50 Greatest Films (2009)'s icon

    Dan Sallitt - The 50 Greatest Films (2009)

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. Made for a broader poll to find "the 50 Greatest movies". But Sallitt's list was the best to single out, because he is a great critic, director, and blogger. Frequent maker of lists on http://sallitt.blogspot.com/search/label/lists
  19. Dan Sallitt - The top 100 of the 00s (2011)'s icon

    Dan Sallitt - The top 100 of the 00s (2011)

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0.
  20. < 400 >'s icon

    < 400 >

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. favourites with less than 400 checks.
  21. <400's icon

    <400

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0.
  22. <400's icon

    <400

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0.
  23. David Ayer Filmography's icon

    David Ayer Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0.
  24. DC animated movies's icon

    DC animated movies

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. All DC animated movies
  25. DC Universe Original Movies's icon

    DC Universe Original Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 3:1. Original animated movies created based on DC Comics.
Remove ads

Showing items 2201 – 2225 of 13715