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. McKrees' Cult Weird Sick Classics / Watched's icon

    McKrees' Cult Weird Sick Classics / Watched

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0.
  2. Must Watch: An Under-rated Movie List's icon

    Must Watch: An Under-rated Movie List

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. This is a list of very great movies that I personally feel do not get enough attention, or people might consider having a cult following. I feel these fall into the Must Watch category and those who haven't seend these are really missing out on some great flix.
  3. B Horror Movies's icon

    B Horror Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. list of b horror films to watch
  4. Best Moustaches's icon

    Best Moustaches

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Epic moustaches.
  5. Guy Maddin Feature Filmography's icon

    Guy Maddin Feature Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 18:0. Canadian director Guy Maddin's favorite things include artifice! melodrama! taboos! repression! hyperspeed editing! and exclamation points!!!
  6. German Cult Movies's icon

    German Cult Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 6:0.
  7. Stuart Gordon Filmography's icon

    Stuart Gordon Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 13:0. The filmography of all features films directed by the great Stuart Gordon. "Bleacher Bum" (1979) is not on the list since it is unavailable.
  8. AV Club The Old Cult Canon's icon

    AV Club The Old Cult Canon

    Favs/dislikes: 20:1. 16 cult films that paved the way for the new cult canon
  9. Teen Cult Movies's icon

    Teen Cult Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 6:0. All those movies with and about teens that we still love as adults.
  10. Recent Cult Horror's icon

    Recent Cult Horror

    Favs/dislikes: 6:0. Cult horror movies from recent years.
  11. Tarantino Top 20 Since 1992's icon

    Tarantino Top 20 Since 1992

    Favs/dislikes: 54:2. In 2009 Quentin Tarantino listed his favorite 20 films released since he released his first film in 1992
  12. Abel Ferrara's Filmography's icon

    Abel Ferrara's Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 11:0.
  13. De Jonge Ruige Cult Classics's icon

    De Jonge Ruige Cult Classics

    Favs/dislikes: 6:1. The best, most awesome, brilliant, and rock 'n roll cult classics, as selected by the coinnaisseurs cinematique of 'De Jonge Ruige'. Always in progress. In random order.
  14. Kim Newman's 25 Must-See Direct-to-Video Pictures's icon

    Kim Newman's 25 Must-See Direct-to-Video Pictures

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Unranked list. Published in the Second Empire Movie Miscellany by Empire Magazine on 2007-08-09. All films were direct-to-video in the UK, where this list was published.
  15. Teen Cult Movies's icon

    Teen Cult Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 4:2. A personal list of films that I find iconic to teen audiences, including a range of genres.
  16. Universal Classic Monsters: 30 Classic Monster Film's icon

    Universal Classic Monsters: 30 Classic Monster Film

    Favs/dislikes: 7:0. From the era of silent
  17. Danny Peary's Cult Horror Movies (2014)'s icon

    Danny Peary's Cult Horror Movies (2014)

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. Discover the 33 Best Scary, Suspenseful, Gory, and Monstrous Cinema Classics. The Bride of Frankenstein to House of Wax to The Texas Chain Saw Massacre to The Brood—horror is a beloved and multifaceted genre, with no two classics truly alike. And almost all of them—great and not-so-great—inspire the kind of passion that only cult films truly reach. In this collection of 33 essays drawn from his revered Cult Movies series, cult film specialist Danny Peary.
  18. Watch Mojo: Top 10 Cult Classics's icon

    Watch Mojo: Top 10 Cult Classics

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. The Top 10 Cult Classics per WatchMojo. 1-10: Comedies 11-20: Sci-Fi 21-30: Horror 31-39: Action The list only includes 39 movies due to WatchMojo considering "Repo Man" both a Sci-Fi and an Action movie (and the #4 one at that).
  19. French movies 's icon

    French movies

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0.
  20. Movies with real animal cruelty's icon

    Movies with real animal cruelty

    Favs/dislikes: 4:2. Stay away from these films, some versions may contain real animal cruelty.
  21. 5 Minutes 2 Live Top 50 Cult Films's icon

    5 Minutes 2 Live Top 50 Cult Films

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. 50 top cult movies chosen by the now defunct website 5 Minutes 2 Live in response to a somewhat less interesting and more populist list made by Entertainment Weekly.
  22. Time Warp: The Greatest Cult Films of All-Time's icon

    Time Warp: The Greatest Cult Films of All-Time

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. From “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” to “The Room” and everything in between, this documentary series celebrates the greatest cult movies of all-time.
  23. "Cult Movies in Sixty Seconds" by Soren McCarthy's icon

    "Cult Movies in Sixty Seconds" by Soren McCarthy

    Favs/dislikes: 11:0. "Presenting the information movie fans need about those films that the insiders seem to know and love, this handy guide to cult flicks offers perceptive and entertaining entries containing an outline of the plot, characters, and themes; insight into why the film is considered a classic; and essential little-known facts. Featuring such favorites as Barbarella, Betty Blue, Harold and Maude, Roger and Me, The Wickerman, and Withnail and I, this book highlights the best films from more than 50 years of movie making. Also explored are the qualities that make a film a cult movie and whether a film can be both cult and a box office hit."
  24. Entertainment Weekly’s Top 50 Cult Movies's icon

    Entertainment Weekly’s Top 50 Cult Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 30:0. Published in 2003, Entertainment Weekly Magazine described their Top 50 Cult Movies thusly: "most died at the box office, some of them horribly. Mangled and despised, they were re-animated on video. And now they compose our cultural Esperanto, a subliminal vocabulary of vaguely subversive images, ideas, and phrases that we continue to obsess over and dissect at parties, around water coolers, in bars, over the blaring banalities of the mainstream media din. They are Cult Movies...So if you take your dead evil and your buckaroos banzai-ed, pour yourself a tall glass of Kool-Aid and peruse this list…" Note: Reader response to the original list was so great, that EW subsequently annexed their list with 11 “readers’ choice” picks. Why 11? Well, it's one longer, isn't it …?
  25. EXCEPTIONALLY STRANGE HORROR CULT CLASSICS by Zachar_Laskewicz on IMDB's icon

    EXCEPTIONALLY STRANGE HORROR CULT CLASSICS by Zachar_Laskewicz on IMDB

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. A simplistic definition of the horror genre assumes that it has to contain monsters and to follow a strict set of genre rules. I believe, however, that horror has the potential to work on a number of different levels, both metaphorical, existential and purely visceral. By its very nature it creates possibilities for expression of pretty complex questions about the nature of existence; more importantly it allows questioning film-makers to completely shatter any pre-existing ideas about what can be defined as normal. Here it is used to explore and criticise society in ways no other genre can, primarily because it is much maligned and misunderstood; film-makers have the freedom to create metaphysical spaces that would be otherwise impossible. In this list I'm interested in looking at those aspects of particular films which make them stand out from the others, which make fans of those of us who are attuned to what horror sometimes tries to communicate (and alienates as many). Horror is also an ambiguous zone of possibility that allows experimentation with forms of representation not allowable in anything outside the avant-garde. These days it's hard to find a horror film that really touches you deeply in the nightmarish kind of way true horror really should. The more recent Hollywood spectacles may look good but lack true depth, often providing a humanistic outlook frosted with a prudishly moral acceptance of empty concepts. In short, I rarely see anthing that more than skirts the edges of true horror. Sometimes you have to look really hard, both into the past and to films that aren't produced by the formulaic cemetery for cinema which calls itself an industry. The idea is to include some of them here. I'm going to try to suggest in short some of the reasons why I've added them to the list (with as few spoilers as possible); the ultimate plan is to include at my website more detailed analyses and descriptions which you can find here: http://www.nachtschimmen.eu/places/projects/ESHCC. My other lists contains films that follow the rules set by Hollywood and are not necessarily awful, but should in any case be avoided by anyone who expects something cogent from the genre. Any suggestions for this or my other list are welcome; I'd love to be made aware of more truly weird and exceptional horror films that may be worthy of this list. I'd also like to thank Frank Edelamn who is the sole creator of his astoudingly complete exploration of low-budget, exploitation and anti-Hollywood cinematic offerings in his extensive website, both well written and well-researched. He calls it, aptly, 'Critical Condition' and can be found at the following URL: http://www.critcononline.com. His site and advice helped me add many of the titles to this list.
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