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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!

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  1. Japanese New Wave's icon

    Japanese New Wave

    Favs/dislikes: 35:0. The Japanese New Wave is the term for a group of Japanese filmmakers emerging from the late 1950s through the early 1970s. The term also refers to their work, in a loose creative movement within Japanese film, from a similar time period.—Wikipedia List created by arsaib
  2. Jacques Rivette Filmography's icon

    Jacques Rivette Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 30:0. All films directed by the neglected French master filmmaker Jacques Rivette.
  3. Kenji's Japanese Canon's icon

    Kenji's Japanese Canon

    Favs/dislikes: 25:0. Kenji's Japanese Canon List created by Kenji
  4. German New Wave's icon

    German New Wave

    Favs/dislikes: 19:0. New German Cinema: The Displaced Image List created by Apursan​sar
  5. Jean Eustache Filmography's icon

    Jean Eustache Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 13:0. All films directed by French filmmaker Jean Eustache (excluding the segment he directed for the TV Movie "Contes modernes: A propos du travail" (1982) and including "Der amerikanische Freund" in which he had a small acting role). Trivia: In 1981, Eustache was partially immobilized in an auto accident. Later that year he killed himself in his Paris apartment, four weeks before his 43rd birthday.
  6. New Austrian Film's icon

    New Austrian Film

    Favs/dislikes: 6:0. From the book "New Austrian Film" edited by Robert Von Dassanowsky and Oliver C. Speck. "From its scattered beginnings in the 1980s the Austrian new wave has developed into a cinema with broad international recognition. Out of a film culture originally starved of funds have emerged rich and eclectic works by film-makers that are now achieving the international recognition that they deserve"
  7. Akio Jissoji's icon

    Akio Jissoji

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0. Movies made by Akio Jissoji.
  8. CFB's Greatest New Zealand Films's icon

    CFB's Greatest New Zealand Films

    Favs/dislikes: 4:0.
  9. Alice In Videoland's 100 Greatest Films of All Time's icon

    Alice In Videoland's 100 Greatest Films of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. The only way to make a list of The 100 Greatest Films of All Time is to look at what has come before. So, a decision was made to review a selection of lists made by respected critics and others from around the globe. The commonality of these choices has helped form Alice's overall selection. The most famous poll since 1952 is Sight & Sound magazine's compilation, whereby every 10 years the world's leading film critics and directors are asked for their top 10 choices. Other sources utilised include the AFI (American Film Institute), the BFI (British Film Institute), the National Society of Film Critics, Cahiers du Cinema, Time, Time Out, Empire and so on. In all, 22 Top 100 lists featuring 2200 titles were cross-referenced and tweaked to arrive at this amazing collection that we feel truly represents the best that cinema can offer. Scroll, contemplate and enjoy.....
  10. Fairfax Media's Best New Zealand Movies of All Time's icon

    Fairfax Media's Best New Zealand Movies of All Time

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. Here are the results of Fairfax Media's poll to find the best New Zealand films of all time. The survey attracted more than 500 votes, including about 100 people from the New Zealand film industry and about 15 film critics. The voters named about 170 different films in the poll, ranging from 1927 to the present day and including everything from fantasy to horror, social realism to comedy, and documentary to animation. This is the critic's choices that includes every movie that was given at least 1 vote. See source for the ballots. 1: 13 votes 2: 11 votes 3: 10 votes 4-6: 8 votes 7: 7 votes 8-9: 6 votes 10-12: 5 votes 13-15: 4 votes 16-23: 3 votes 24-34: 2 votes 35-61: 1 vote
  11. New Zealand International Film Festival 2012's icon

    New Zealand International Film Festival 2012

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. A list of films included in the official selection for the 2012 New Zealand International Film Festival.
  12. Pardon le Cinéma vol.2: 100 films à voir d'urgence, des classiques aux pépites's icon

    Pardon le Cinéma vol.2: 100 films à voir d'urgence, des classiques aux pépites

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. [b]Pardon the Cinema, vol. 2![/b] The team of the first French podcast on cinema does it again with a new opus. New films, new classics to (re)discover, new nuggets lovingly unearthed, new great moments of the 7th art... But the objective is always the same: to wake up your screens with another cinema, an in-depth selection that travels across all continents and all genres, from 1907 to 2021, from Chile to Japan, from documentaries to action films... [b]100 unknown, forgotten or marginal films... to see urgently! [/b] "Pardon le Cinema" is Victor Bonnefoy (director, screenwriter and creator of the Youtube channel InThePanda), Sophie Grech (press officer and screenwriter), Marc Moquin (editor-in-chief of Revus & Corrigés), Simon Riaux (critic cinema in Le Cercle on Canal+ or on the Large Screen website), Arthur Cios (journalist for Konbini) and Alexis Roux (cinema journalist): a team that talks about cinema in an irresponsible but respectful atmosphere and brings together more than 100,000 listeners per month.
  13. Merry Xmas and Happy New Year's icon

    Merry Xmas and Happy New Year

    Favs/dislikes: 2:0. My personal Xmas favorites!
  14. Capitolfest 13's icon

    Capitolfest 13

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. Capitolfest is Central New York's premier summer Cinephile film festival—a place to see rarely-shown and newly-discovered films of the silent and early talkie era, held at the historic 1,788-seat movie palace, the Capitol Theatre, in Rome, New York, which opened in December, 1928 as a movie house. Set in the small upstate New York city of Rome (population c.33,000) and regarded by attendees from the U.S., Canada, and Europe as the movie lover’s dream vacation, the weekend festival starts late Friday morning and ends early on Sunday evening. Screenings are arranged by session, with each session essentially comprised of a double feature plus short subjects. Each session contains intermissions and there are generous breaks between sessions (allowing for meals) as well. The philosophy of Capitolfest is that there should be time to savor the films, thus our slogan, “A vacation, not a marathon.”
  15. french noir's icon

    french noir

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0.
  16. My list Starting Now: 2014's icon

    My list Starting Now: 2014

    Favs/dislikes: 1:5. This is my list of movies that I have watched so far. I will try to update it as soon as I am done. Sort of an experiment I guess. Trying to order it from the most recent to the least recent.
  17. New Zealand International Film Festival 2011's icon

    New Zealand International Film Festival 2011

    Favs/dislikes: 1:0. A list of films included in the official selection for the 2011 New Zealand International Film Festival.
  18. Documentaries's icon

    Documentaries

    Favs/dislikes: 0:1.
  19. Films Watched's icon

    Films Watched

    Favs/dislikes: 0:11. Films starting from 1910 - Present.
  20. Gorro's AUS/NZL/Oceania Top List - iCM Forum's icon

    Gorro's AUS/NZL/Oceania Top List - iCM Forum

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Submission for the poll on the iCM Forum
  21. New Zealand International Film Festival 2016's icon

    New Zealand International Film Festival 2016

    Favs/dislikes: 0:1. List of films included in the 2016 NZ International Film Festival
  22. Richard Brody’s The Best Horror Movies for Halloween - Without the Gore's icon

    Richard Brody’s The Best Horror Movies for Halloween - Without the Gore

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0.
  23. Richard Brody's The Greatest Independent Films of the Twentieth Century's icon

    Richard Brody's The Greatest Independent Films of the Twentieth Century

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. A counter-canon of masterworks by filmmakers who took control of the means of production. By Richard Brody Published in the New Yorker April 28, 2023 Number 16, "Mister E", is missing from IMDb
  24. Thomasin McKenzie's icon

    Thomasin McKenzie

    Favs/dislikes: 0:0. Thomasin Harcourt McKenzie (born 26 July 2000) is a New Zealand actress. After a minor role in The Hobbit: The Battle of Five Armies, she rose to critical prominence after portraying the young daughter of a military veteran in Debra Granik's drama film Leave No Trace (2018). She continued gaining recognition with supporting roles in the 2019 films The King, Jojo Rabbit, and True History of the Kelly Gang. In 2021, she starred in M. Night Shyamalan's thriller Old, and played Eloise, a wide-eyed woman from Cornwall, in Edgar Wright's psychological horror film Last Night in Soho.
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