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. Total Film's 50 Best British Movies's icon

    Total Film's 50 Best British Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0.
  2. Traverse City Film Festival's icon

    Traverse City Film Festival

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. Movies that have been shown at the Traverse City Film Festival
  3. Treasures from American Film Archives's icon

    Treasures from American Film Archives

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. In 2000, 18 of America's premier film archives joined forces with the NFPF to release films preserved in their collections for the first time on video. The resulting Treasures from American Film Archives, 50 Preserved Films showcases the breadth of American filmmaking during the first 100 years of the motion picture. With rarities ranging from the first movie exhibited in the United States to a 1985 experimental documentary of New York's Battery Park, the 11-hour four-DVD box set received critical accolades and was covered on The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer.
  4. Trippy Cinema's icon

    Trippy Cinema

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. A personal list bunch of surreal, strange films that surprise, confuse, and entertain. Ordered semi-logically, not by rank. (In progress)
  5. True Cult's icon

    True Cult

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0.
  6. TSPDT 1950s Films's icon

    TSPDT 1950s Films

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. 1950s Films from the TSPDT 1000 Films List.
  7. TSPDT 21st Century Top 1000 - All Films's icon

    TSPDT 21st Century Top 1000 - All Films

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. Every film that has appeared in TSPDT's 21st Century Top 1000 list
  8. TSPDT’s 50 most critically acclaimed films of 2022(based only on end-of-year ballots)'s icon

    TSPDT’s 50 most critically acclaimed films of 2022(based only on end-of-year ballots)

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. Posted on January 28, 2023 on the TSPDT website, these were the best films of 2022, solely based on the end-of-year ballots from critics.
  9. TV Series I have Watched's icon

    TV Series I have Watched

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. This is a personal list of TV series I have watched.
  10. UNESCO: Not available online's icon

    UNESCO: Not available online

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. The UNESCO-list has the most obscure titles of all official ICM-lists. I have searched for all titles on the list and made three separate ICM-lists of my search. 1. A list with all titles that are available online with English subs if necessary: [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/lists/unesco+available+online+with+english+subs+if+necessary/joachimt/]click here[/url] 2. A list with all non-English titles that are available online, but without subs: [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/lists/unesco+available+online+non-english+titles+without+subs/joachimt/]click here[/url] 3. This list contains all titles that are not available online. If you know where to find one of the titles on this list, subbed or unsubbed, please send me a PM.
  11. United Productions of America (UPA)'s icon

    United Productions of America (UPA)

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. "United Productions of America, better known as UPA, was an American animation studio of the 1940s through present day, beginning with industrial films and World War II training films. UPA Pictures' legacy in the history of animation has largely been overshadowed by the commercial success of the vast cartoon libraries of Warner Brothers and Disney. Nonetheless, UPA had a significant impact on animation style, content, and technique, and its innovations were recognized and adopted by the other major animation studios and independent filmmakers all over the world. UPA pioneered the technique of limited animation, and though this style of animation came to be widely abused during the 1960s and 1970s as a cost-cutting measure, it was originally intended as a stylistic alternative to the growing trend (particularly at Disney) of recreating cinematic realism in animated films." from Wikipedia.org
  12. Varg Veum's icon

    Varg Veum

    Favs/dislikes: 4:1.
  13. Vera Chytilová filmography's icon

    Vera Chytilová filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. Movies made by Vera Chytilová.
  14. VGDebatt - Top 30 from the 1990s's icon

    VGDebatt - Top 30 from the 1990s

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0.
  15. Video Game Adaptations's icon

    Video Game Adaptations

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0.
  16. Viking Movies's icon

    Viking Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. Movies about the old norsemen that once was knowned as the vikings.
  17. Vinnypassy Top 250's icon

    Vinnypassy Top 250

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. My personal top 250
  18. Vintage and Badass's icon

    Vintage and Badass

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. The great writer Fabien Nury, who is also an avid cinema lover, made a book about all the movies who inspired him and the drawer Brüno for their series "Tyler Cross". 80 movies, from USA, England, France, Italy and even from Asia, 78 old movies but also some very recent, 78 movies about crime, madness and badass attitude. An incredible journey through litterature, comic book and cinema.
  19. Vulture's 55 Essential Queer Horror Films's icon

    Vulture's 55 Essential Queer Horror Films

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. By Jordan Crucchiola JUNE 26, 2018 From 1934 until 1967, Hollywood movies were shaped by the Production Code, otherwise known as the Hays Code. Written in 1930, but not implemented until four years later, this set of rules was generally intended to keep movies from “corrupting” the people who watched them. Given that homosexuality was considered either a physical or psychological malady in the early 20th century, the code effectively legislated any limited queer presence out of existence. While homosexuality was not explicitly banned in the Hays’ text, it was mandated that “no picture shall be produced that will lower the moral standards of those who see it. Hence the sympathy of the audience should never be thrown to the side of crime, wrongdoing, evil or sin.” It was also codified that only “correct standards of life” should be presented,” and that “sex perversion or any inference to it is forbidden.” In other words, for a long time, cinematic queers were pushed underground, relegated to existing only in subtext — and most often as villains. In order to get queer stories onscreen, filmmakers had to find creative ways to subvert the system. Horror films in particular have made for a fascinating case study in the evolving perceptions of queer presence; queer-horror filmmakers and actors were often forced to lean into the trope of the “predatory queer” or the “monstrous queer” to claim some sense of power through visibility and blatant expressions of sexuality. Below is a beginner’s guide to the most essential queer horror of the past 90 years. It also doubles as a timeline of the evolution of queer horror: How LGBTQA themes and characters went from hiding between the lines in movies with “gay sensibilities” in the 1930s to breaking out as Pride memes almost a century later — going from invisible (lesbian ghosts!) to closeted (literally, in the case of Dorian Gray) to fabulously out (who wouldn’t have given in to Catherine Deneuve’s Miriam Blaylock?), before finally being allowed to exist as multidimensional characters onscreen. From the coded abominations of James Whale’s taboo-skirting films of the 1930s to the Pride reign of The Babadook, here’s our guide to queer horror cinema. 1-7: The 1930s and 1940s — Fear the Queer Monsters 8-12: The 1950s — Kitschy Monsters and More Queer Subtext 13-17: The 1960s — Farewell to the Hays Code 18-22: 1970s — The Lesbian Vampires Are Loose! 23-32: 1980s — Resurgent Conservatism, the AIDS Crisis, and the Mainstreaming of Queer Culture 33-38: 1990s — New Queer Cinema and Gay Vampire Dads 39-47: 2000s — Out and (Getting) Proud 48-55: 2010s — They’re Here. They’re Queer. Get Used to It.
  20. Vulture's Every Movie of the 2010s, Ranked's icon

    Vulture's Every Movie of the 2010s, Ranked

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. "Our critics pored over 5,279 of the decade’s films. Here’s the best, worst, and mehst." #1-53: ranked #54-267: alphabetical order
  21. Vulture's The 100 Scares That Shaped Horror (2018)'s icon

    Vulture's The 100 Scares That Shaped Horror (2018)

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. Vulture's chronological exploration of the 100 key films that shaped the evolution of the horror genre. Written by Jordan Crucchiola, with Bilge Ebiri, Angelica Jade Bastién, Brittney-Jade Colangelo, Kalyn Corrigan, Michael Gingold, Alexandra Heller-Nicholas, April Wolfe, and Mark H. Harris.
  22. Vulture's The 50 Best Foreign-Language Movie Musicals Ever's icon

    Vulture's The 50 Best Foreign-Language Movie Musicals Ever

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. Fifty great musicals in languages other than English.
  23. Vulture's The 50 Greatest Western Movies Ever Made's icon

    Vulture's The 50 Greatest Western Movies Ever Made

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. A hard look at one of cinema’s oldest genres. By Keith Phipps JAN. 18, 2021 America can only claim a few art forms as its own. Jazz, for sure. Comic books, certainly. It’s probably safe to add the Western to that list, too, even if — like jazz and comics — the Western has roots around the globe and has since been adopted in many lands. The history of movie Westerns more or less begins with the end of the Old West itself. Westerns thrived in the silent era, and though the genre’s popularity has ebbed and flowed ever since — largely fading from view in the ’80s but enjoy several resurgences in succeeding decades — it’s never threatened to fade away. The Western is a vital genre with the habit of reinventing itself every few years that doubles as a way to talk about America’s history while reflecting on its present. A strand of violent, psychologically complex Westerns that appeared in the 1950s, for example, captures both changing attitudes toward the settlement of the West and the treatment of Native Americans while channeling the spirit of a country still recovering from a devastating World War. And while there are certain themes and elements that define the genre, it’s also proven to be flexible, capable of playing host to many different stories and an infinite variety of characters. In Paul Greengrass’s terrific new film [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/news+of+the+world/]News of the World[/url], for instance, Tom Hanks plays a traveling newsreader whose attempt to return a girl to her family doubles as a tour of a country whose divisions look like clear roots to some of our current national troubles. This list of the 50 greatest Westerns reflects that wide legacy from the very first entry, a film directed by a Hungarian and starring a Tasmanian. It’s been assembled, however, working from a fairly traditional definition of the Western: films set along the America frontier of the 19th and the first years of the 20th century. That means no modern Westerns, no [url=https://www.icheckmovies.com/movies/logan/]stealth Westerns starring aged X-Men[/url], and no space Westerns with blasters instead of pistols. (We did, however, make an exception for a certain comedy that concludes with its stars attending its own premiere.) That, of course, still leaves a lot of great Westerns. More, of course, than could possibly fit on a top-50 list interested in capturing the full scope of the genre. As such, not every John Ford film made the list. Anthony Mann and James Stewart made eight Westerns together. Any of them could have been included, but not all of them have been. This list is designed to double as a guide to the genre’s many different forms in the hopes it will send readers to corners they might not know and reconsider some classics they might not have seen before. So with all that said, let’s kick it off with a trip to an especially rowdy Old Western town.
  24. Walter Hill filmography's icon

    Walter Hill filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0.
  25. Walter Pidgeon Filmography's icon

    Walter Pidgeon Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0.
Remove ads

Showing items 4801 – 4825 of 23420