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.

  1. Akira Kurosawa Filmography's icon

    Akira Kurosawa Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. A list of all feature films directed by Akira Kurosawa
  2. Alan Clarke Filmography's icon

    Alan Clarke Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. "It is a rare director who is at once one of the foremost stylists and pioneering realists of cinema, but Alan Clarke falls into both categories. His relentless and innovative examination of contemporary British society, paired with the integrity of his approach, makes him an exemplar for socially conscious filmmaking[...] Clarke’s ability to direct so often and his low critical profile today stem from the same reason: his films were for television, where a weekly feature slot meant numerous directing opportunities and instant ubiquity during transmission[...]" (Nicholas Rapold, Senses of Cinema)
  3. Alan Tudyk Filmography's icon

    Alan Tudyk Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. Films starring funny-man Alan Tudyk... and if you haven't heard of him, look him up.
  4. Albert Brooks filmography's icon

    Albert Brooks filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0.
  5. Albert Finney Filmography's icon

    Albert Finney Filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. All films starring the great Albert Finney (no TV-movies or voice-over-work)
  6. Alberto Sordi filmography's icon

    Alberto Sordi filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. The list features movies directed or interpreted by Alberto Sordi
  7. Alejandro González Iñárritu movies's icon

    Alejandro González Iñárritu movies

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. Every feature-length movie directed by Alejandro González Iñárritu.
  8. 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.....
  9. Alien and Predator's icon

    Alien and Predator

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. All feature films in the Alien and Predator film series, linked together by the AVP movies. Ordered by release date.
  10. Alien / Predator Universe in Chronological Order's icon

    Alien / Predator Universe in Chronological Order

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. This is a chronological list of the movies in the Alien and Predator universe. Last confirmed 3/19/2023.
  11. All Disney Movies's icon

    All Disney Movies

    Favs/dislikes: 3:1. List of all the Disney Movies ever made.
  12. All films from "Go Into The Story"'s icon

    All films from "Go Into The Story"

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0.
  13. All The Haunts Be Ours: A Compendium of Folk Horror's icon

    All The Haunts Be Ours: A Compendium of Folk Horror

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0.
  14. Alternate Oscars (Danny Peary) - Best Actor's icon

    Alternate Oscars (Danny Peary) - Best Actor

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. These are the movies with performances that film critic Danny Peary picked as his “best actor” choices from 1927-28 to 1991 in his book “Alternate Oscars” from 1993. Note that Peary selected two “best actors” for 1951.
  15. Alternate Oscars (Danny Peary) - Best Actress's icon

    Alternate Oscars (Danny Peary) - Best Actress

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. These are the movies with performances that film critic Danny Peary picked as his “best actress” choices from 1927-28 to 1991 in his book “Alternate Oscars” from 1993. Note that Peary selected two “best actresses” for 1942.
  16. American Cinema Editors Award Winners's icon

    American Cinema Editors Award Winners

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. All the feature film winners of the American Cinema Editors Awards, from 1961 to the present.
  17. American Genre Film Archive's icon

    American Genre Film Archive

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. Home video releases from the AGFA, including their collaborations with Vinegar Syndrome and Bleeding Skull (and Something Weird, of course.) Supplemental shorts from the Effects Bluray, [i]Ubu[/i] and [i]Beastie[/i], do not have imdb entries.
  18. Amos Vogel's Film as a Subversive Art (1974)'s icon

    Amos Vogel's Film as a Subversive Art (1974)

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. Original 1974 version. This presentation of the book is very similar to the official iCM-list version. The main difference (and basically the only difference) is that this version include an additional 22 entries (examples of non-subversive films) which the official list version excludes (also, the order of the entries is slightly different). In other words, this list includes ALL films mentioned regardless if they are subversive or not. However, some films (or "entries" to be more precise) are not on IMDb yet, or appear in the book with unidentifiable stills (see bottom of list description). Films are sorted by the order they appear in the book. In some cases, the same film is discussed several times in different sections throughout the book (Blowup, 2001: A Space Odyssey, L'âge d'or, W.R. etc. They are listed here by their FIRST appearance in the book regardless if the film is discussed more thoroughly at a later stage in the book. #1-24: Acknowledgements, Preface and "The World View of Subversive Cinema" #1-2: Front cover and Back cover (and also mentioned in Acknowledgements). #25-193 :Part One - The Subversion of Form #25-37: Revolutionary Film Avant-garde in Soviet Russia #38-98: Aesthetic Rebels and Rebellious Clowns #99-117: The Destruction of Time and Space #118-131: The Destruction of Plot and Narrative #132-141: The Assault of Montage #142-160: The Triumph and Death of the Moving Camera #161-162: The Devaluation of Language #163-193: Straining towards the Limits #194-386: Part Two - The Subversion of Content #194: International Left and Revolutionary Cinema #195-257: Left and Revolutionary Cinema: the West #258-307: Left and Revolutionary Cinema: the East #308-332: Left and Revolutionary Cinema: Third World #333-338: East Germany: Against the West #339-352: Nazi Cinema #353-386: Secrets and Revelations #387-599: Part Three - Forbidden Subjects of the Cinema #387-403: The Visual Taboo #404-423: Nudity #424-468: Erotic and Pornographic Cinema #469-508: Homosexuality and Other Variants #509-514: The First Mystery: Birth #515-547: The Ultimate Secret: Death #548-575: The Attack on God #576-599: Trance and Witchcraft #600-621: Part Four - Towards a New Consciousness #600-619: Counterculture and Avant-garde #620-621: The Subversion of Subversion -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Films mentioned in the original version but not included in the revised version and/or iCM version: Staroye i novoye (Old and New) Alexander Nevsky Battleship Potemkin Ivan the Terrible Part 1 Ivan the Terrible Part 2 The Great Train Robbery Das blaue Licht Intolerance Cleopatra Der blaue Engel Gone with the Wind The Sound of Music Journal d'un curé de campagne If... O Lucky Man! The Graduate Romeo and Juliet Lebenszeichen Love Story Tout va bien ¡Que viva México! The Second in Command (The Second Coming) ...for a total of 22 additional entries compared to the iCM-version. "Nachts, wenn Dracula erwacht" page 87; never explicitly mentioned but referred to when discussing Pere Portabella's "Cuadecuc, vampir". It IS mentioned in the revised version however. "Der geile Wotan" is included here as it is mentioned and referred to, but is in fact a faulty entry (correctly replaced by the correct film "SS und Judenstern" in the revised iCM-version), page 254. Unidentifiable Keystone Film circa 1915 (page 50-51, featured still) is in fact "In the Clutches of the Gang". Unknown films/entries: UFA Newsreel, 1940 (page 194) Unidentified Nazi documentary footage (page 278) Unidentified Nazi documentary footage (page 280) Entries that aren't on IMDb: Beaver Films (Stag, 1970, USA), page 221; revised version list the years as 1967-72. The None Story (Stag, 1950s, USA), page 225; titled "The Nun's Story" in the revised version.
  19. AMP's 30 Impressively Colored Movies from Asia's icon

    AMP's 30 Impressively Colored Movies from Asia

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. "Since we dealt with the monochrome ones somea few weeks before, the most impressively colored films were a path we had to take. Essentially, a number of directors considered masters (Akira Kurosawa, Wong Kar-wai, Zhang Yimou, Hou Hsiao-hsen etc) have always invested on intense coloring for their films, resulting in audiovisual poems. As usually, with a focus on diversity, we present 30 of those films, in alphabetical order."
  20. AMP's The 40 Best Japanese Movies of the Decade (2011-2020)'s icon

    AMP's The 40 Best Japanese Movies of the Decade (2011-2020)

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. National cinemas come and go from the top, which is currently dominated by Korea, as it did by Hong Kong some decades ago, but the truth remains that the only one who has stayed on top since its beginning (maybe with the exception of the 80s) is the Japanese one. Either through the festival favorites like Koreeda, Kawase, Kiyoshi Kurosawa or through the more cult like Miike, Sono, Toyoda, or through a number of newcomers, Japanese cinema continues to make an impact, proving both its current quality and its potential for the years to come. The decade that just passed is another testament to the fact, and the movies that you will find in this list, the most distinct proof. In an effort to winnow some of the best Japanese movies of the decade (2011-2020), we came up with 40 we felt were the ones that truly stand out in terms of quality, impact and sheer entertainment they offered. The order of this list could be different of course and the number much bigger, but our effort was towards presenting great films and not cataloguing all of them, always with a focus on diversity in style, themes and filmmaker.
  21. AMP's The 50 Best Chinese Language Films of the Decade (2011-2020)'s icon

    AMP's The 50 Best Chinese Language Films of the Decade (2011-2020)

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. The 50 Best Chinese Language (China, Hong Kong, Tibet, Bhutan, Taiwan) Films of the Decade (2011-2020) March 1, 2021 Panos Kotzathanasis Considering the political issues that torment the whole Sinophone world, and the ways all these countries (even this term is under consideration) are connected and clashing at the same time, coming up with a title and which films to include in that list is at least as difficult as winnowing the films in the list. Despite all the turmoil, however, films of utmost quality continue to come out from this region, if even the “Hollywood of the East” (aka Hong Kong) is definitely not in the place it used to be during the 90s, with the fact that Chinese “Better Days” and Taiwanese “A Sun” are shortlisted for the Oscar for Foreign Movie, highlighting the fact in the most eloquent fashion. In an effort to select some of the best Sinophone movies of the decade (2011-2020), we came up with 50 we felt were the ones that truly stand out in terms of quality, impact and sheer entertainment they offered. The order of this list could be different of course and the number much bigger, but our effort was towards presenting great films and not cataloguing all of them, always with a focus on diversity in style, themes, origin, and filmmaker
  22. An Army of Phantoms's icon

    An Army of Phantoms

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. All movies scrutinized or designedly mentioned in Jim Hoberman's book : "An Army of Phantoms : American Movies and the Making of the Cold War". The book mainly focuses on the 1943-1957 period. (titles briefly cited for reasons irrelevant to the main purpose have been excluded)
  23. Andy Garcia filmography's icon

    Andy Garcia filmography

    Favs/dislikes: 3:0. Filmography of actor Andy Garcia
  24. Animated Children's Films's icon

    Animated Children's Films

    Favs/dislikes: 3:1.
  25. Anime Films's icon

    Anime Films

    Favs/dislikes: 3:3. Favorite Anime Films.
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