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. that dope's icon

    that dope

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. movies i watch
  2. That Film Guy - Top 30 Film Trilogies of All Time's icon

    That Film Guy - Top 30 Film Trilogies of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Our list of the Top 30 Movie Trilogies of all Time. Do you Agree?………Before the 1970s a film trilogy was a rare entity. Usually if a film was successful it was simply left to run or re-released at a later date. However the success surrounding The Godfather trilogy and latterly the Star Wars saga lead Hollywood to consider sequels and threequels as a viable way of making money. Since this period there has been an explosion in the film trilogy release cycle, even going as far as to coin the ˜franchise’ term for those that run over the standard three films format. Now just because George Lucas, Steven Spielberg or Marvel studios decide to release a fourth instalment after a film trilogy finishes does not preclude the first three films being a fully-fledged film trilogy in their own right and so you can fully expect to see your favourites in the list. The only exceptions to inclusion are those that are too loosely linked, film trilogies such as Kevin Smith’s so-called ˜Jersey Film Trilogy’ (Clerks, Mallrats and Chasing Amy) and the James Bond franchise of films of which there are enough to make a enough entires to fill the whole top 30 list.
  3. ThatAnimeSnob's Top 60 Anime list (2014)'s icon

    ThatAnimeSnob's Top 60 Anime list (2014)

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0.
  4. That's Dancing!'s icon

    That's Dancing!

    Favs/dislikes: 7:0. This list consists of the 42 movies featured in the 1985 compilation documentary “That‘s Dancing!”.
  5. That's Entertainment!'s icon

    That's Entertainment!

    Favs/dislikes: 22:0. This list consists of the 124 movies featured in the “That’s Entertainment!” compilation documentary series, plus those three films: “That’s Entertainment!” (1974), “That’s Entertainment, Part II” (1976) and “That’s Entertainment! III” (1994).
  6. The 10 and 3's top 50 Canadian Films's icon

    The 10 and 3's top 50 Canadian Films

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Canadian films have often struggled to find a worthy spotlight, even in their own country. But with the Canadian Screen Awards just around the corner, it's an appropriate moment for us to all do our parts to try and change that. And perhaps a good start is this list of 50 Canadian films that data journalism website The 10 and 3 — which aims to "tell compelling and unusual stories about Canada through maps, interactive charts and other interesting visualizations" — decided to put together last month. Unlike other (and certainly worthy) lists like this recent one from TIFF, The 10 and 3 compiled its list not from critics and academics but from a formula derived from the folks who rated the films on online film database IMDb. They came with an "adjusted rating," based on this confusing but seemingly legit equation: (v/(v+m))R+(m/(v+m))C, where: R = average IMDB rating for the film v = the number of IMDB ratings that the film received m = parameter that effectively downweights films with very few ratings (in our case m = 1000) C = average rating across all films in our ranking
  7. The 10 Best African Films in the History of Cinema's icon

    The 10 Best African Films in the History of Cinema

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. The [url=http://www.festival.fcat.es/2018/04/la-critica-vota-las-10-mejores-peliculas-africanas-de-la-historia/]15th annual Tarifa-Tangiers African Film Festival[/url] and magazine [url=http://www.fotogramas.es/Cinefilia/mejores-peliculas-africanas]Fotogramas[/url] asked a group of 10 critics to vote on the best African films in the history of cinema.
  8. The 10 Best Electronic Film Scores of All Time's icon

    The 10 Best Electronic Film Scores of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. Since the invention of electronic instruments in the 1960s, a giant multiplicity of genres had evolved. With the huge possibilities regarding the synthesis of futuristic sounds, it doesn’t surprise that electronic instruments established themselves as essential part of movie scoring. The following list will name the 10 best all-electronic scores of all time. It only contains scores with a complete or nearly complete electronic instrumentation.
  9. The 10 best Filipino films of all time - Bulatlat.com's icon

    The 10 best Filipino films of all time - Bulatlat.com

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. A total of 37 activists representing people's organizations and non-government groups were asked to name their 10 best films in random order; 29 of them replied.
  10. The 10 Best Films About The Nature of Truth's icon

    The 10 Best Films About The Nature of Truth

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. “Photography is truth. The cinema is truth twenty-four times per second” – Jean-Luc Godard From Akira Kurosawa to Sidney Lumet, many directors have managed to create great movies illustrating the nature of truth. Here is a list of some exquisite works of art on this subject.
  11. The 10 Best Films by Sabu's icon

    The 10 Best Films by Sabu

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. My favorite director.
  12. The 10 Best Micro-Budget Movies of The 21st Century's icon

    The 10 Best Micro-Budget Movies of The 21st Century

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. The term “microbudget” may seem a little vague, and while many authorities on film can’t quite agree on what amount of money qualifies as a microbudget film, this list will focus on feature films made for less than $250,000 USD (or equivalent). I will mostly discuss first-time films and/or features that established their respective directors as a “new voice” or gained them a much wider global audience. With the advent of affordable, accessible and powerful filmmaking tools such as the DSLR and DV cameras and even the iPhone, an entirely new generation of filmmakers have been granted the power to make a feature film without the help of a major studio or major financial investors. While the 1980’s and 90’s saw the rise of self-funded films such as The Evil Dead, Clerks and El Mariachi, the turn of the new millennium saw the rise of the video-maker, and movements such as Mumblecore, which, spurred on by the Dogme 95 movement in Europe, led to a much wider acceptance of not only digital cinema in general, but also the use of consumer-grade cameras within mass cinema culture. Below are some of the best, most influential and most groundbreaking microbudget films made since the year 2000. While only three were shot on actual celluloid film, all are remarkable pieces of cinema that have left a lasting impression on audiences and moviemakers alike. All serve as a reminder that no matter your budget, you can craft a great movie from little more than the resources at your disposal and an iron will to create. The films are in no particular order.
  13. The 10 Best Movies About The Poetry of Everyday Life's icon

    The 10 Best Movies About The Poetry of Everyday Life

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Here’s something most of you have probably figured out already: things don’t always work out like they do in most movies. Sometimes you get the girl, sometimes you don’t. Sometimes you get the girl and lose her within a short space of time. It doesn’t matter how much you love her. People have a mind of their own, they don’t follow a conventional movie script. We make plans for this grand future only for something to happen that will forever ruin this future from happening. You ask the Gods why this is happening. You’ve been a good person. You don’t deserve any of this. It’s their silence that hurts the most. Dreams don’t always come true. Movies are full of dreamers who make their dreams come true: Rocky goes the distance, Billy Elliot defies his blue-collar upbringing and becomes a professional ballet dancer, a slumdog can become a millionaire, the short but spirited Rudy can fulfill his dream of playing football for the University of Notre Dame, etc. Sometimes these films can brighten our day and there’s certainly truth to be found in each of these movies. You should chase your dreams. You shouldn’t give up when faced with an obstacle. But sometimes we need to watch something a little closer to life. A little less fluff, a little more human. A film that doesn’t sugarcoat the existential darkness woven into our existence. Something far more relatable. These people on the screen are just like you and me. We are not alone. In this list I have compiled 10 films that celebrate or portray everyday life. Some are more cynical than others, but I thought it was important to not just choose depressing films because even those with daily struggles – though don’t we all have them? – life isn’t constantly depressing. Sometimes it’s perfectly mundane. Sometimes there’s incredible joy to be found in the smallest of things. One film introduces a series of selfish human animals. Another film shows the sadness of a lonely man, the necessity of friendship. There’s redemption in there. There’s the acceptance that things don’t always go as planned. Individuals overcoming bureaucratic entities. There are men on barstools waiting for their lives to start, not realizing that it has already started. There are those who understand that time is running out and begin to make the best of the little time they have. These are films that take their sweet time. They can be slow. They take their time with the environment and the characters. They give us that moment of awareness of the present moment. It’s fleeting, but it’s there. We smile and rejoice. We hope we’ll remember it as life goes on.
  14. The 10 Best Movies Influenced by 20th Century Occultism's icon

    The 10 Best Movies Influenced by 20th Century Occultism

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Aleister Crowley, an English novelist, poet, artist and “ceremonial magician” has had a acute influence on art. However, this influence is woven within the context of his philosophical religious movement, Thelema, and the impact that it has had upon its adherents (both past and present). Thelema’s influence throughout the last century is an influence that is one that persists within the shadows of culture. It developed as a re-imagining of renaissance-era philosophical law/logic that originated within the secret societies of Europe, such as Francis Dashwood’s Hellfire Club, The French Club des Hashischins (Hashish-User’s Club), the philosophy of Francois Rabelais (a Franciscan Monk, most known for his synthesis of Christian humanism with the ideals of the Greek Stoic philosophy), as well as the influence of various other hermetic orders such as the Freemasons. Crowley, influenced by the ideals of Dashwood and the humanist philosophy of Rabelais, decided to embark on a path toward the design of a hermetic order that would combine the organizational structure of such previous groups with the philosophical underpinnings of Rabelais. In this way, Crowley believed he could revive interest into what was termed ‘Magick’, a ritual practice different from stage performance what is generally termed by Thelemites as “magic”. To Crowley, the performance of ceremonial Magick was essential to the process of self-discovery and self actualization. He described the process of Magick as being the act of : “[finding out for oneself], and make sure beyond doubt, who one is, what one is, why one is …Being thus conscious of the proper course to pursue, the next thing is to understand the conditions necessary to following it out. After that, one must eliminate from oneself every element alien or hostile to success, and develop those parts of oneself which are specially needed to control the aforesaid conditions.” This process of self-discovery actualized by the practice of Magick has found its way into experimental film, blockbusters, comic books, novels, television and performance art. Thelema, though not as popular as an organized religious practice as it was in the past has seeped its way into the creation of popular media by creators like Alan Moore, Grant Morrison, H.R. Giger and Alejandro Jodorowsky. The following list of films expresses the impact that Thelema and its occult antecessors have had on film culture.
  15. The 10 Best Movies That Criticize Consumerism (Taste of Cinema)'s icon

    The 10 Best Movies That Criticize Consumerism (Taste of Cinema)

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0.
  16. The 10 Most Philosophical Animated Movies of All Time (Taste of Cinema)'s icon

    The 10 Most Philosophical Animated Movies of All Time (Taste of Cinema)

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0.
  17. The 10 Weirdest Documentaries of All Time's icon

    The 10 Weirdest Documentaries of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. The cliché that fact can be stranger than fiction rings true in the case of these documentaries. Unbelievable characters, unexpected twists and general weirdness make this list a little unsettling when you stop to consider it is all really life drama. At times you feel like you are watching a Lynch, or Cronenberg film, but the fact that this all actually happened may leave you feeling a little unhinged.
  18. The 10 Worst Edited Movies of All Time's icon

    The 10 Worst Edited Movies of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. Editing is a heavily overlooked aspect of films when it comes to casual audiences. Good editing makes the very existence of a film’s edits seem invisible; someone who wills to dissect movies will pay close attention to the pacing and cutting of a film. Either way, a film that is well edited will never distract you from everything else that is going on. The only exception to this rule is a segment that blows you away with either something innovative or something swift. “Requiem For a Dream” features many cuts, but it boils an anxiety within its viewers to mimic the withdrawals the onscreen characters are facing. Thelma Schoonmaker has famously turned every Scorsese film she has worked on into a cinematic waltz. If you pay enough close attention to the less-blatant examples as well, you will find a new respect for some of your favourite films.

But, this list isn’t about that. This is a list of 10 of the most toxic editing you can find. These are edits that will either give you a migraine within microseconds, confuse you beyond belief, or will be so pointless that the featured film will annoy you. Unlike most good editing jobs, these examples detach you from a film and will make you aware of each and every little cut (or lack thereof). With that being said, here are 10 films with some of the worst editing in cinematic history.
  19. The 100's icon

    The 100

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0.
  20. The 100 Best British Films Ever (by Empire)'s icon

    The 100 Best British Films Ever (by Empire)

    Favs/dislikes: 34:0.
  21. The 100 Best Film Noirs of All Time's icon

    The 100 Best Film Noirs of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. This list acknowledges the classics of the genre, the big-budget studio noirs and the cheapest of B noirs made on the fringes of the Hollywood studio system. But we’ve also taken a more expansive view of noir, allowing room for supreme examples of the proto-noirs that anticipated the genre and the neo-noirs that resulted from the genre being rebooted in the midst of the Cold War, seemingly absorbing the world’s darkest and deepest fears.
  22. The 100 Best Films on World War II's icon

    The 100 Best Films on World War II

    Favs/dislikes: 7:0. The 100 Best Films About World War II Not created by me.
  23. The 100 Best Horror Movies of All Time's icon

    The 100 Best Horror Movies of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. One of the most common claims made about horror films is that they allow audiences to vicariously play with their fear of death. Inarguable, really, but that’s also too easy, as one doesn’t have to look too far into a genre often preoccupied with offering simulations of death to conclude that the genre in question is about death. That’s akin to saying that all an apple ever really symbolizes is an apple, and that symbols and subtexts essentially don’t exist. A more interesting question: Why do we flock to films that revel in what is, in all likelihood, our greatest fear? And why is death our greatest fear? A startling commonality emerges if you look over the following films in short succession that’s revelatory of the entire horror genre: These works aren’t about the fear of dying, but the fear of dying alone, a subtlety that cuts to the bone of our fear of death anyway—of a life unlived. There’s an explicit current of self-loathing running through this amazing collection of films. What are Norman Bates and Jack Torrance besides eerily all-too-human monsters? Failures. Success also ultimately eludes Leatherface, as well as the socially stunted lost souls of Kurosawa Kiyoshi’s Pulse. What is the imposing creature at the dark heart of F.W. Murnau’s Nosferatu? He makes for quite the presence, but his hungers ultimately lead him to oblivion. So many films, particularly American ones, tell us that we can be whatever we want to be, and that people who don’t achieve their desired self-actualization are freaks. The horror film says: Wait Jack, it ain’t that easy. This genre resents platitude (certainly, you can count the happy endings among these films on one hand), but the best horror movies of all time usually aren’t cynical, as they insist on the humanity that’s inextinguishable even by severe atrocity. Which is to say there’s hope, and catharsis, offered by the horror film. It tells us bruised romantics that we’re all in this together, thus offering evidence that we may not be as alone as we may think. Chuck Bowen
  24. The 100 Best Movies from the 2010s's icon

    The 100 Best Movies from the 2010s

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. By the critic and journalist Christian Ramírez
  25. The 100 Best Sci-Fi Movies of All Time (Popular Mechanics)'s icon

    The 100 Best Sci-Fi Movies of All Time (Popular Mechanics)

    Favs/dislikes: 9:0. "Cinema exists to project our dreams. Science-fiction cinema exists to project our most creative dreams -- time-travel, alternate worlds, expanded consciousness, and more. That's why we're science-fiction maniacs and why we gathered up our top 100 movies." -- Popular Mechanics
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