Personal Lists featuring...

Ben-Hur 1959

38

Top 250 movies, as rated by regular IMDB voters. List updated daily.

1

/u/StopReadinMyUsername on reddit combined the average ratings (Critic's & Users) from IMDb, Rotten Tomatoes, Metacritic and Letterboxd, and then weighted and tweaked the results with general film data from iCheckMovies and IMDb to reveal the 1001 Greatest Movies of All Time.

source: http://redd.it/3hbiio

32

1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die is a film reference book edited by Steven Jay Schneider with original essays on each film contributed by over 70 film critics.

Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1001_Movies_You_Must_See_Before_You_Die

11

In its first film season, 1927–28, this award (like others such as the acting awards) was not tied to a specific film; all of the work by the nominated cinematographers during the qualifying period was listed after their names. The problem with this system became obvious the first year, since Karl Struss and Charles Rosher were nominated for their work together on Sunrise but three other films shot individually by either Rosher or Struss were also listed as part of the nomination. The second year, 1929, there were no nominations at all, although the Academy has a list of unofficial titles which were under consideration by the Board of Judges. In the third year, 1930, films, not cinematographers, were nominated, and the final award did not show the cinematographer's name.

Finally, for the 1931 awards, the modern system in which individuals are nominated for a single film each was adopted in all profession-related categories. From 1939 to 1967 with the exception of 1957, there were also separate awards for color and for black-and-white cinematography. Since then, the only black-and-white film to win is Schindler's List (1993).

Floyd Crosby won the award for Tabu in 1931, which was the last silent film to win in this category. Hal Mohr won the only write-in Academy Award ever, in 1935 for A Midsummer Night's Dream. Mohr was also the first person to win for both black-and-white and color cinematography.

No winners are lost, although some of the earliest nominees (and of the unofficial nominees of 1928–29) are lost, including The Devil Dancer (1927), The Magic Flame (1927), and Four Devils (1928). The Right to Love (1930) is incomplete, and Sadie Thompson (1927) is incomplete and partially reconstructed with stills.

The first nominees shot primarily on digital video were The Curious Case of Benjamin Button and Slumdog Millionaire in 2009, with Slumdog Millionaire the first winner.[1] The following year Avatar was the first nominee and winner to be shot entirely on digital video.[2]

In 2018, Rachel Morrison became the first woman to receive a nomination. Prior to that it had been the last Academy Award category to never nominate a woman.[3][4]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Academy_Award_for_Best_Cinematography#Winners_and_nominees

7

All the winners in the Best Picture category of the Oscars.

335

Well over a century has passed since the Lumière brothers frightened the life out of Parisians with The Arrival of a Train at a Station, and well over a million titles have since been recorded - if the Internet Movie Database is anything to go by.

Out of these million-plus movies, our team of experts has picked what we believe is the essential 1,000 - those that best sum up the dazzling achievement and variety of the movies.

Source: https://www.theguardian.com/film/series/1000-films-to-see-before-you-die

4

From https://letterboxd.com/reelstats/list/the-1001-greatest-movies-of-all-time-according/

2

Movies nominated for the Oscars since 1960.

326

The top films in the 2012 Sight and Sound Poll from the combined votes of 846 critics and 359 directors. Contains films with 3 or more votes. In order by number of votes.

The following is a list of positions and the number of corresponding votes. 21-22 (66 votes), 27-28 (55 votes), 29-30 (54 votes), 36-37 (46 votes), 39-42 (44 votes), 43-46 (43 votes), 47-50 (41 votes), 51-52 (40 votes), 53-55 (39 votes), 56-57 (38 votes), 59-60 (35 votes), 62-74 (33 votes), 75-77 (32 votes), 78-79 (31 votes), 82-88 (28 votes), 89-90 (27 votes), 91-93 (26 votes), 94-99 (25 votes), 100-103 (24 votes), 104-106 (23 votes), 107-110 (22 votes), 111-118 (21 votes), 119-127 (20 votes), 128-139 (19 votes), 140-146 (18 votes), 147-153 (17 votes), 154-166 (16 votes), 167-182 (15 votes), 183-193 (14 votes), 194-206 (13 votes), 207-228 (12 votes), 229-243 (11 votes), 244-271 (10 votes), 272-302 (9 votes), 303-330 (8 votes), 331-375 (7 votes), 376-423 (6 votes), 424-497 (5 votes), 498-624 (4 votes), 625-817 (3 votes)

Source: http://www.bfi.org.uk/films-tv-people/sightandsoundpoll2012

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The 500 movies in this list have been selected by a combination of 10,000 Empire readers, 50 critics and 150 of Hollywood's finest.

1

#BEST PICTURE MOVIES BY YEAR

  1. 1927/1928
    • Wings
  2. 1928/1929
    • The Broadway Melody
  3. 1929/1930
    • All Quiet on the Western Front
  4. 1930/1931
    • Cimarron
  5. 1931/1932
    • Grand Hotel
  6. 1932/1933
    • Calvalcade
  7. 1934
    • It Happened One Night
  8. 1935
    • Mutiny on the Bounty
  9. 1936
    • The Great Ziegfeld
  10. 1937
    • The Life of Emile Zola
  11. 1938
    • You Can't Take It With You
  12. 1939
    • Gone with the Wind
  13. 1940
    • Rebecca
  14. 1941
    • How Green Was My Valley
  15. 1942
    • Mrs. Miniver
  16. 1943
    • Casablanca
  17. 1944
    • Going My Way
  18. 1945
    • The Lost Weekend
  19. 1946
    • The Best Years of Our Lives
  20. 1947
    • Gentleman's Agreement
  21. 1948
    • Hamlet
  22. 1949
    • All The King's Men
  23. 1950
    • All About Eve
  24. 1951
    • An American in Paris
  25. 1952
    • The Greatest Show on Earth
  26. 1953
    • From Here to Eternity
  27. 1954
    • On the Waterfront
  28. 1955
    • Marty
  29. 1956
    • Around the World in 80 Days
  30. 1957
    • The Bridge on the River Kwai
  31. 1958
    • Gigi
  32. 1959
    • Ben-Hur
  33. 1960
    • The Apartment
  34. 1961
    • West Side Story
  35. 1962
    • Lawrence of Arabia
  36. 1963
    • Tom Jones
  37. 1964
    • My Fair Lady
  38. 1965
    • The Sound of Music
  39. 1966
    • A Man for All Seasons
  40. 1967
    • In the Heat of the Night
  41. 1968
    • Oliver!
  42. 1969
    • Midnight Cowboy
  43. 1970
    • Patton
  44. 1971
    • The French Connection
  45. 1972
    • The Godfather
  46. 1973
    • The Sting
  47. 1974
    • The Godfather Part II
  48. 1975
    • One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
  49. 1976
    • Rocky
  50. 1977
    • Annie Hall
  51. 1978
    • The Deer Hunter
  52. 1979
    • Kramer vs. Kramer
  53. 1980
    • Ordinary People
  54. 1981
    • Chariots of Fire
  55. 1982
    • Gandhi
  56. 1983
    • Terms of Endearment
  57. 1984
    • Amadeus
  58. 1985
    • Out of Africa
  59. 1986
    • Platoon
  60. 1987
    • The Last Emperor
  61. 1988
    • Rain Man
  62. 1989
    • Driving Miss Daisy
  63. 1990
    • Dances with Wolves
  64. 1991
    • The Silence of the Lambs
  65. 1992
    • Unforgiven
  66. 1993
    • Schindler's List
  67. 1994
    • Forrest Gump
  68. 1995
    • Braveheart
  69. 1996
    • The English Patient
  70. 1997
    • Titanic
  71. 1998
    • Shakespeare in Love
  72. 1999
    • American Beauty
  73. 2000
    • Gladiator
  74. 2001
    • A Beautiful Mind
  75. 2002
    • Chicago
  76. 2003
    • The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King
  77. 2004
    • Million Dollar Baby
  78. 2005
    • Crash
  79. 2006
    • The Departed
  80. 2007
    • No Country for Old Men
  81. 2008
    • Slumdog Millionaire
  82. 2009
    • The Hurt Locker
  83. 2010
    • The King's Speech
  84. 2011
    • The Artist
  85. 2012
    • Argo
  86. 2013
    • 12 Years a Slave
  87. 2014
    • Birdman or (the Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
  88. 2015
    • Spotlight
  89. 2016
    • Moonlight
  90. 2017
    • The Shape Of Water
  91. 2018
    • Green Book
  92. 2019
    • Parasite
  93. 2020
    • Nomadland
  94. 2021
    • CODA
  95. 2020
    • Everything Everywhere All at Once
5

Films I want to watch from Hollywood's golden era.

11

This is a list of every movie that has made an appearance on the Top 250 list since the beginning of the site in 1996 through 2024. I will maintain a changelog below for when new movies are added to list.

List made using data from IMDB Top 250 History - https://250.took.nl/

Changelog - https://bit.ly/2E0i6w4

Odd Entries Explained - https://bit.ly/38dS0Ul

15

Per blu-ray.com
http://www.blu-ray.com/movies/search.php?action=search&ultrahd=1&sortby=recentlyaddeddesc

UPDATED 4/23/24 (Page 171)

351

The They Shoot Pictures, Don't They? 1,000 greatest films list is primarily compiled by using over 6000 individual critics' and filmmakers' best-films-of-all-time lists/ballots. The resulting list is very diverse and spans virtually all movie-producing decades and countries.

Source: http://www.theyshootpictures.com/gf1000.htm

6

Excellent list! I'd like to go through all of these with my kids.

Link: https://www.artofmanliness.com/living/entertainment/100-must-see-movies/

Note: I didn't include all the movies in a few of the series (Star Wars, Lord of the Rings, Bourne, Indiana Jones, etc.)

8

List of movies that won the Academy Award for Best Cinematography from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

12

The Academy Award for Best Sound is an Academy Award that recognizes the finest or most euphonic sound mixing, recording, sound design and sound editing and is generally awarded to the production sound mixers, re-recording mixers and supervising sound editors of the winning film. In the lists below, the winner of the award for each year is shown first, followed by the other nominees. Prior to the 93rd Academy Awards, Best Sound Mixing and Best Sound Editing were separate categories.[1]

For the second and third years of this category (the 4th Academy Awards, 5th Academy Awards) only the names of the film companies were listed. Paramount Publix Studio Sound Department won both years.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Academy_Award_for_Best_Sound

336

This list is drawn from "The New York Times Book of Movies: The Essential 1,000 Films to See", published in 2019. It contains a selection of 1000 reviews that have been printed in The New York Times. The majority of movies in this book are among the "10 Best Films" chosen by New York Times critics at the end of each year.

Source: https://www.amazon.com/New-York-Times-Book-Movies/dp/078933657X

2

/u/StopReadinMyUsername on reddit created a list called "1001 'GREATEST' MOVIES OF ALL TIME" in 2015.

Since this list is still very popular, he posted an updated list on reddit in April 2020.

For this list he combined the average scores from IMDb, Letterboxd, Rotten Tomatoes & Metacritic, and tweaked the results with data from Letterboxd, iCheckMovies, TSPDT?, TMDb and IMDb.

source: https://www.reddit.com/r/movies/comments/fswg60/by_combining_the_average_scores_from_imdb/

209

This list contains all movies that have won the Best Cinematography prize in the Academy Awards.

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Academy_Award_for_Best_Cinematography

8

Source: IMDB
Filter: Votes >= 10000
Order: Votes Descending
Date: 2014-08-23

18

Source:
Years 1931-2018 come from:
The New York Times: Book of Movies
the essential 1,000 films to see
2019 ed

Years after 2018 come from NYT website.

work in progress
There are discrepancies between the website and the book, particular for years after 2003. Please leave a comment for any errors you find.

2

From https://letterboxd.com/reelstats/list/the-500-greatest-movies-of-all-time-according/

Hey everyone, great to be back again. Some of you might remember a similar title from a list I made back in April, where I made a list of the top 250 movies with 13 sources, or a preview of this list I made last month.

I want to emphasize that this is NOT an official ranking nor my personal ranking; it is just a statistical and, personally, interesting look at 500 amazing movies. These rankings reflect the opinions of thousands of critics and millions of people around the world. And I am glad that this list is able to cover a wide range of genres, decades, and countries. So before I get bombarded with "Why isn't X on here?" or "How is X above Y?" comments, I wanted to clear that up.

I sourced my data from Sight & Sound (both critic and director lists), TSPDT, iCheckMovies, 11 domestic websites (Rotten Tomatoes, Metacritic, IMDb, Letterboxd, TMDb, Trakt, Blu-Ray, MovieLens, RateYourMusic, Criticker, and Critics Choice), and 9 international audience sites (FilmAffinity, Douban, Naver, MUBI, Filmweb, Kinopoisk, CSFD, Moviemeter, and Senscritique). This balance of domestic/international ratings made the list more well-rounded and internationally representative (sites from Spain, China, Korea, Poland, Russia, Czech Republic, Netherlands, and France).

As for my algorithm, I weighted websites according to both their Alexa ranking and their number of votes compared to other sites. For example, since The Godfather has hundreds of thousands of votes on Letterboxd but only a couple thousand on Metacritic, Letterboxd would be weighted more heavily. After obtaining the weighted averages, I then added the movie's iCheckMovies' favs/checks ratio and TSPDT ranking, if applicable. Regarding TSPDT, I included the top 2000 movies; as an example of my calculations, Rear Window's ranking of #41 would add (2000-41)/2000=0.9795 points to its weighted average. I removed movies that had <7-8K votes on IMDb, as these mostly had low ratings and numbers of votes across different sites as well. For both Sight & Sound lists, I added between 0.5 and 1 point to a movie's score based on its ranking, which I thought was an adequate reflection of how difficult it is to be included on these lists. As examples, a #21 movie would have 0.9 points added while a #63 would have 0.69 points.

Any feedback is appreciated, especially other sites I may not have sourced. If you found this list interesting, I would really appreciate it if you can give my newish Youtube channel a subscribe. It really helps a lot. Thanks guys.

Some stats:

Decades:
1900s - 1 film
1910s - 1
1920s - 22
1930s - 22
1940s - 40
1950s - 65
1960s - 75
1970s - 58
1980s - 54
1990s - 64
2000s - 55
2010s - 43

Directors with multiple films:
12 films - Akira Kurosawa
10 - Alfred Hitchcock, Ingmar Bergman
8 - Charlie Chaplin, Stanley Kubrick
7 - Andrei Tarkovsky, Billy Wilder, Hayao Miyazaki, Steven Spielberg
6 - Federico Fellini, Luis Buñuel
5 - Christopher Nolan, Buster Keaton, Fritz Lang, Howard Hawks, Krzysztof Kieślowski, Martin Scorsese, Woody Allen
4 - David Lynch, Ernst Lubitsch, F. W. Murnau, Francis Ford Coppola, John Ford, Lee Unkrich, Quentin Tarantino, Roman Polanski, Sergio Leone, Werner Herzog, William Wyler, Yasujirō Ozu
3 - Brad Bird, Carl Theodor Dreyer, Clint Eastwood, Coen Brothers, David Fincher, David Lean, François Truffaut, Frank Capra, Hirokazu Koreeda, James Cameron, Jean-Luc Godard, Jean-Pierre Melville, John Huston, Masaki Kobayashi, Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger, Michelangelo Antonioni, Pete Docter, Peter Jackson, Richard Linklater, Ridley Scott, Robert Bresson, Satyajit Ray, Sidney Lumet, Vittorio De Sica, Wim Wenders
2 - Abbas Kiarostami, Alain Resnais, Andrew Stanton, Arthur Penn, Béla Tarr, Bong Joon-ho, Brian De Palma, Chris Marker, Edward Yang, Elia Kazan, Emir Kusturica, Frank Darabont, George Cukor, George Roy Hill, Henri-Georges Clouzot, Hiroshi Teshigahara, Isao Takahata, Jacques Tati, Jean Cocteau, Jean Renoir, Jim Sheridan, John Cassavetes, John Lasseter, Joseph L. Mankiewicz, Kenji Mizoguchi, Leo McCarey, Louis Malle, Luchino Visconti, Max Ophüls, Mike Leigh, Mike Nichols, Mikhail Kalatozov, Miloš Forman, Orson Welles, Otto Preminger, Park Chan-wook, Pedro Almodóvar, Peter Bogdanovich, Peter Weir, Raoul Walsh, Robert Zemeckis, Sam Mendes, Stanley Donen, Terrence Malick, Terry Gilliam, Thomas Vinterberg, Victor Fleming, Wong Kar-wai, Zhang Yimou

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