All lists - page 2

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. Letterboxd's Official Top 100 Movies of the 2020s's icon

    Letterboxd's Official Top 100 Movies of the 2020s

    Favs/dislikes: 12:0. LAST UPDATE: April 29th, 2024 The 100 narrative feature fiction films, of this current decade, with the highest average ratings. No miniseries, TV episodes/films, documentaries, short films, music films, etc.
  2. Letterboxd's Official Top 250 Documentary Films's icon

    Letterboxd's Official Top 250 Documentary Films

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. LAST UPDATE: April 2024 A companion piece to Dave Vis' list of Letterboxd's official top 250 films of all-time, which excludes documentaries from consideration. Ranked by average user rating. This list was extracted from here. Updated once a month. This is an official list progress project on all-time stats pages for Pro and Patron users. Expanded from a top 100 to a top 250 on June 27th, 2021, on the list's 3-year anniversary. ~~ ELIGIBILITY RULES: • Documentaries must be feature-length (45+ minutes), with a theatrical and/or festival release in its entirety. • TV series, miniseries, and episodes are excluded but docs listed as 'TV movie' on IMDb are eligible. Exceptions made for series and episodes that also had a limited theatrical release. • No featurettes unless theatrically distributed, even if feature-length (featurettes are marked as 'Video' on IMDb, such as 'making of' docs). • In an attempt to combat unintentional fan manipulation, all music-adjacent films must have screened at a film festival to qualify. • No standup comedy marked as a documentary, nor any stage shows. Exceptions may be made for borderline exceptions. • Skateboarding compilations are excluded. • There is a 1,000 minimum ratings threshold. NOT ON IMDB: #112 Disintegration Loop 1.1 (2024, Basinski)
  3. Letterboxd’s Top 250 Highest Rated Narrative TV Miniseries Of All Time's icon

    Letterboxd’s Top 250 Highest Rated Narrative TV Miniseries Of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. LAST UPDATE: April 2024 Ranked by average user rating. Updated once a month. ELIGIBILITY RULES: • There is a 500 minimum views threshold.
  4. Letterboxd’s Top 250 Highest Rated Short Films Of All-Time's icon

    Letterboxd’s Top 250 Highest Rated Short Films Of All-Time

    Favs/dislikes: 5:0. LAST UPDATE: April 2024 Ranked by average user rating. Updated once a month. ELIGIBILITY RULES: • No concert films, stand up comedy/talks, TV episodes or "minisodes", making-of documentaries, deleted scene compilations, theme park rides, recorded plays, or individual segments from feature films or anthology films. • There is a 1000 minimum views threshold. • No examples of "movies that have extremely high average ratings because people tried to log their favorite tv shows" boxd.it/14DTs • No music videos or "visual albums" MISSING: #3 Hello FatherDog (2017, Younesi) #101 The Girl and the Robot (2023, Mullen & Friedland) #113 rain (2019, Stauber)
  5. Letterboxd's Women Directors: The Official Top 250 Narrative Feature Films's icon

    Letterboxd's Women Directors: The Official Top 250 Narrative Feature Films

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. LAST UPDATE: April 2024 Ranked by average user rating. The list was extracted thanks to here and here. This was not possible without the curation of these megalists. It will be updated monthly. [Please note: Ágnes Hranitzky co-directed Werckmeister Harmonies and The Turin Horse with her husband Béla Tarr. Read more below the eligibility rules.] An official list progress project on all-time stats pages for Pro and Patron users. Expanded from a top 100 to a top 250 on September 26th, 2022, on the list's 3-year anniversary. ~~ ELIGIBILITY RULES: • This list counts female co-directors, even if uncredited. The developers are working towards co-directors getting their credit listed on main pages. • Includes cis, transgender and female-identifying directors. • Films must be feature-length (45+ minutes), with a theatrical and/or festival release. • Documentaries of any kind, short films, theater/stage, TV movies, TV series or miniseries, and episodes are excluded. • There is a 1,000 minimum ratings threshold.
  6. Mark Kermode's 25 of the Best Films for Children's icon

    Mark Kermode's 25 of the Best Films for Children

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. In compiling this list of 25 great movies for children, I have attempted to bear in mind the vast range of films that I was lucky enough to have encountered at an impressionable age, and to acknowledge that, until fairly recently, young moviegoers were raised on a diet of movies that played to audiences of all ages. My choices range from short animations to feature-length live-action films, from silent films to foreign-language classics (I’m assuming subtitles aren’t an issue) from a century of international cinema. Along with the more obvious contenders, I’ve included a few titles that some readers may not consider to be children’s films at all. Fair enough. But, crucially, these are all films that kids could watch, if they wanted. The list is arranged not by merit but by date.
  7. Most fans per viewer on Letterboxd's icon

    Most fans per viewer on Letterboxd

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. 2022 Version A list ranked by the number of fans as a ratio of the number of members who’ve watched each film. Films watched by fewer than 500 members were excluded.
  8. Netflix Polska's icon

    Netflix Polska

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. only films, no series Last update 05/10/2020 No more updates bc I now live in BE
  9. Sight & Sound: Anime 50 Essential Films's icon

    Sight & Sound: Anime 50 Essential Films

    Favs/dislikes: 6:0. From the breakthrough of Akira in 1988, through the exquisite films of Miyazaki Hayao and others, Japanese animation has captivated audiences around the world. But anime’s history runs deeper still. Here we select 50 titles that celebrate its full, fascinating riches.
  10. Stephen Brockmann's A Critical History of German Film's icon

    Stephen Brockmann's A Critical History of German Film

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. From early masterpieces such as The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920) and Metropolis (1927) to the post-1945 films of Fassbinder, Herzog, and Wenders, German film constitutes a crucial part of the history of world cinema. It helped to shape Hollywood cinema and had a major impact on other cinemas as well. This tried and tested book, popular in college classrooms and among general-interest readers, is the most comprehensive and readable introduction to the history of German cinema, specifically designed to meet the needs of those who want a comprehensible, accessible introduction to the subject. There is no other book that covers the history of German cinema in the same depth and also explores the genesis and meaning of the most important masterpieces in German film history. It does so in chapters devoted to each of thirty-two individual films and in seven interchapters that provide context for historical periods from early German cinema to postunification. The book now appears in an improved, expanded, and up-to-date second edition that covers five additional films, expands the coverage of women's cinema, and brings the history of filmmaking in Germany up to the present moment. The book is specifically designed to appeal to cinema aficionados and for use in college classrooms, where it has been greeted with acclaim by students and teachers alike. Stephen Brockmann is Professor of German at Carnegie Mellon University. #1: Early German Film History 1895-1918 #2-7: Weimar Cinema 1919-1933 #8-10: Nazi Cinema 1933-1945 #11: German Cinema at the Zero Hour 1945-1949 #12-15: Postwar East German Cinema 1949-1989 #16-25: Postwar West German Cinema 1949-1989 #26-32: German Film after Reunification 1990-2019
  11. test's icon

    test

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. test test
  12. The Hankyoreh's 100 Korean Films's icon

    The Hankyoreh's 100 Korean Films

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. For the 100th anniversary of Korean film, Hankyoreh and CJ Cultural Foundation organized a selection committee with 38 experts from the film industry, (including directors, producers, critics, programmers, and researchers of film history) to select 100 films to represent 100 years of Korean film. Top 11 in chronological order "The Border City" (2002) and "The Border City 2" (2009) are included together, but the former is missing on ICM and IMDB.
  13. The MUBI Top 1000's icon

    The MUBI Top 1000

    Favs/dislikes: 7:0. [Updated weekly: Latest Monday July 17th, 2023] The greatest films ever made, as voted by MUBI’s global community of film lovers.
  14. The Playlist's The 100 Best Sci-Fi Films of All Time's icon

    The Playlist's The 100 Best Sci-Fi Films of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. If there was ever a time where sci-fi was seen as something only for geeks, that time has long gone. You could debate the exact point at which it changed — when Stanley Kubrick’s “2001” had audiences dropping acid for a better trip, when the blockbuster success of “Star Wars” changed film forever, when comic book movies dominated screens, when CGI made it possible to do almost anything, when even nerdy old “Star Trek” got a sleek, hip makeover — but there’s no doubt that the genre is firmly within the mainstream. Indeed, looking at the blockbuster season ahead, there’s all kinds of science-fiction adventures to come, with this week bringing the second space adventure in three weeks, with Ridley Scott’s “Alien: Covenant,” which follows “Guardians Of The Galaxy Vol. 2” into theaters, where it’s currently doing gangbusters. And three of the all-time top-five worldwide grossers are hard sci-fi movies: “Avatar,” “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” and “Jurassic World.” Scott’s return once again to the sci-fi franchise he helped create has had us thinking about the genre’s place in history, so we decided to take our most comprehensive look at the genre ever, and pick out what, in our view, are the 100 greatest sci-fi movies of all time. It’s a genre almost as old as cinema, so it was understandably difficult to pin down, even with a few ground rules (most notably that we sort of consider superhero films their own thing). But we’ve found a list that we’re pretty happy with in the end, though we’re sure it’ll inspire plenty of debate. Take a look below.
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