All lists
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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Fritz Lang's Filmography
Favs/dislikes: 141:2. All the available Fritz Lang feature films. -
The Top 300 Silent Era Films
Favs/dislikes: 113:2. All the films from the Silent Era top 100, plus the 200 films that didn't make the list. [b]Note:[/b] The original list actually contains 298 movies. This iCM-list contains 304 movies because the following titles consist of multiple entries: - Die Nibelungen (2 parts) - Das indische Grabmal (2 parts) - Fantômas (5 parts) -
F. W. Murnau Filmography
Favs/dislikes: 44:0. A list of all feature films directed by Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau. This list excludes lost films he directed. -
iCM Forum's Favourite Silent Films
Favs/dislikes: 42:0. The Top 300 Silent Films as voted by members of the iCM Forum. Huge thanks to [url=http://www.icheckmovies.com/profiles/allisoncm/]allisoncm[/url] for hosting! -
D.W. Griffith Filmography
Favs/dislikes: 35:3. All feature films by director David Wark Griffith. - Lost films are excluded - Films in which he is uncredited are excluded -
Best Portuguese Films - Instituto Camoes
Favs/dislikes: 31:0. Composed by feature films from 1907 to 2006 and a few short films from the silent period in Portugal, this list was commissioned by Instituto Camões. 1-37 - silent period 38-156 - feature films Instituto Camões (Camoes Institute) was created in 1992 for the promotion of the Portuguese language and culture world-wide. The list was organized by José de Matos-Cruz, a Portuguese writer, journalist, editor, high-school teacher, investigator, encyclopedist. Since 1980 he works at the Cinemateca Portuguesa (Portuguese Film Archive), in Lisbon. He is a prominent historian of the Portuguese cinema. -
St. Gloede's complementary silent selection
Favs/dislikes: 25:0. The Top 300 Silent Era Films list has a great selection of silents, and I hope it will help many explore deeper into this great and largely forgotten era. However, the list as it stands is highhly Americanized while several countries such as Germany, Sweden, Japan and more were going incredibly strong. So to broaden the perspective here's a selection great non-American silents I hope will leave an impression on you as well. It's ranked in reverse chronological order. -
Hollywood: A Celebration of the American Silent Film
Favs/dislikes: 23:0. A list of movies which appear in the 1980 series "Hollywood", written, directed & produced by Kevin Brownlow & David Gill -
Erich von Stroheim Filmography (Director)
Favs/dislikes: 21:0. Erich von Stroheim (September 22, 1885 – May 12, 1957) was an Austrian-born film star of the silent era, subsequently noted as an auteur for his directorial work. -
Leonard Maltin's Classic Movie Guide.
Favs/dislikes: 20:0. From the Silent Era Through 1965. All 3, 3.5 et 4 stars ratings. Second Edition -
Cinemacom's 200 Important Silent Films
Favs/dislikes: 19:0. -
Harold Lloyd Feature Filmography
Favs/dislikes: 16:0. All of the feature films that star Harold Lloyd. -
Mary Pickford Filmography
Favs/dislikes: 15:0. All feature films starring Mary Pickford plus some of her short films. - Lost films are excluded, although for some shorts I am not sure they exist. -
The Most Popular Movies From the 20s
Favs/dislikes: 13:0. The ten most voted movies on IMDb from the 1920's. These are the movies from the 20's that have been sought out, watched and rated by the most people. It is more a popularity list than a "highest rating" list. This far back one would expect that rating and votes should follow each other closely but it is not always the case. The list contains quite a number of short movies as it was the golden age of Chaplin and Keaton. -
Guardian Top 10...
Favs/dislikes: 12:0. Romance = 1-12 Action = 13-22 Comedy = 23-32 Horror = 33-42 Sci-fi = 43-53 Crime = 54-63 Arthouse = 64-73 Family = 74-82 (E.T. is #4) War = 83-92 Teen = 93-102 Superhero = 103-112 Western = 113-122 Documentary = 123-132 Adaptation = 133-142 Animation = 143-151 (Spirited Away is #4) Silent = 152-160 (Metropolis is #6) Sport = 161-171 Film noir = 172-178 (Chinatown is #2, Touch of Evil is #3, Double Indemnity is #4) Musical = 179-188 Martial arts = 189-196 (Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon is #2, The Matrix is #5) Biopic = 197-206 (Andrei Rublev is #1) Music = 207-216 -
Russian Silent Montage
Favs/dislikes: 10:0. The movies associated with the concept of Russian Montage as a distinct style/genre. -
TSPDT Top 25 Films per Year: 1920s
Favs/dislikes: 10:0. From They Shoot Pictures Don't They, 2015 edition. Top 25 films from each year 1920-29. Note that the years don't always correlate exactly with IMDB's years. 1920 and 1921 lists only have 21 films and 1922 only has 22. #51 Kino-Pravda 1 is actually an entry to represent Kino-Pravda 1-23 -
TSPDT Top Films per Year: 1890s-1910s
Favs/dislikes: 10:1. From They Shoot Pictures Don't They, 2015 edition. Note that the years don't always correlate exactly with IMDB's years and each year has varying amounts of films listed. Titles I cannot find on IMDB: -Bebe mange sa soupe (Lumiere, 1896) [possibly the same film as Repas de bebe & therefore a repeat on the TSPDT list?] -Balle traversant une bulle de savon (Bull, 1904) -Tartans of Scottish Clans (G.A. Smith, 1906) -The Little Tramp (Chaplin, 1916) [unknown film according to TSPDT list] -
Bordwell & Thompson's Top Films of 90 Years Ago
Favs/dislikes: 8:1. Each year film scholars Kristin Thompson and David Bordwell release a list of the greatest surviving films from 90 years prior. The project started in 2007 to celebrate "the birth of classical cinema" in 1917, when Hollywood filmmakers developed the shooting and editing techniques that have been the basis of narrative film ever since. -
DigitalDreamDoor 100 Greatest Silent Movies
Favs/dislikes: 8:0. Background: - Between 1860 and 1895 silent films were short novelty attractions at fairs, and in Kinetescope parlors. In 1895 the first public showing by the newly invented 'film projector' allowed an 'audience' to view films. The first 'feature-length' films came out in 1913, and in the new "Age of the Silver Screen" producers from the U.S.A, France, Russia, and Germany created the most successful silent movies. Recorded sound effects and music began to be added to feature films in 1926. 'The Jazz Singer' (1927) was the first mostly silent feature film to include some synchronized dialogue. 'The Lights of New York' (1928), was the first all-synchronized-sound feature length movie. Over the next few years, the number of silent movies decreased as more films used the new sound technology. Criteria: - These Greatest Silent Movies were chosen for their direction, acting, storyline, cinematography, originality, box office success and popularity. Plus their historical importance & innovativeness in the infancy of motion pictures. -
Georg Wilhelm Pabst filmography
Favs/dislikes: 7:0. All films directed by Georg Wilhelm Pabst. - lost films are excluded -
Start-1910s Watchlist
Favs/dislikes: 7:0. Metalist from different toplists, which observes the era of cinema's beginning -
FilmsRanked.com 100 Greatest Silent Films
Favs/dislikes: 6:0. The 100 most critically-acclaimed silent films of all-time, as compiled by FilmsRanked.com -
Silent Britain
Favs/dislikes: 6:0. All films mentioned by name in the 2006 documentary directed by David Thompson called _Silent Britain_, in the order in which they are mentioned. Not found on iCM or imdb: Train Entering Hove Station (1897), which the documentary describes as a response to the famous 1896 Lumiere film, L'arrivée d'un train à La Ciotat. I am guessing that this movie by George Albert Smith is the film imdb calls Passenger Train (1897): http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2316963/ Edit: I've now added the latter film to iCM and to this list. -
Aleksandr Dovzhenko filmography
Favs/dislikes: 5:0. All films directed by Aleksandr Dovzhenko. - lost films excluded
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