Personal Lists featuring...

The Big Sick 2017

3

Movies with 40 or more critic reviews vie for their place in history at Rotten Tomatoes. Eligible movies are ranked based on their Adjusted Scores.

UPDATED: 12 April 2020

List: https://www.rottentomatoes.com/top/bestofrt/

2

Problematic tropes are not excluded from the list because society has not made it that far yet. If I removed them, there wouldn't be much on here. Hopefully in time

La vie en rose. (French film about edif piaf - arthritis)
brain on fire
5 feet apart (cf)
The Big Sick
love and other drugs (Parkinson's)
Fundementals of caring (muscular dystrophy)
me before you
everything everything (scids)
midnight sun (xp)
YOU'RE NOT YOU  (als)
caught by wave (muscular dystrophy)
out of my league (Mucoviscidosis/CF)
still out of my league (Mucoviscidosis/CF)
Forever out of my league (Mucoviscidosis/CF)
Cake (chronic pain bad representation)

White as milk red as blood (leukemia)
50/50 (cancer)
I miss you already (cancer)
Earl and the dying girl (cancer)
Keith (cancer)
a walk to remember (cancer)
now is good (cancer)
my sister’s keeper (cancer)
the bucket list (cancer)
changing hearts (cancer, depression)
the fault in our stars (cancer)
a little bit of heaven (cancer)
babyteeth(cancer)
here on earth (cancer)
then came you (cancer)

Kelly and cal (wheelchair user)
soul surfer (loses arm)

still alice (dementia)
please stand by (autism)

adam (aspergers)

if I stay
barefoot /the wedding guest (anxiety)
benny and joon
girl interrupted

a long way down (depression)

K-PAX
The Theory of Everything
Unbreakable
A Beautiful Mind
Hush
all I see is you
Sweet November
The Vow
Wonder
All the Bright Places
The Elephant Man
 

11

Movies, Series, Anime, K-Dramas

31

Can you remember a time without Rotten Tomatoes? Those sightless days of people reaching out and bumping into movies at random, like wandering through a Blockbuster with all the lights off. Those were dark and undirected times. Since the launch of RT in August of 1998, though – the site went live on August 18 of that year – movie fans have had immediate access to the largest accumulation of film reviews ever, distilled for one purpose: to get you watching the best kind of movies you want to see. (Or if you only want to watch bad movies, the site can help you find those more quickly, too.)

As we mark our 20th birthday, we’re looking back on the past two decades with this guide to the 200 best-reviewed movies released since that fateful day in August of 1998. To keep the competition tight, we only included movies that had at least 80 reviews, the number at which wide-release movies qualify for Certified Fresh status; applying that rule, and limiting the total list to 200 titles, the lowest Tomatometer score you’ll find is 95%. The criteria also meant that no films from 1998 made the cut (Shakespeare in Love did come awfully close).

The list, which we’ve ordered chronologically, runs the gamut of movies, ranging from popular blockbusters (Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part II, The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers) to indies (The Wrestler, Nightcrawler) and the still underseen (Step, Gloria). Some 14 movies come from this very year made the list, among them Mission: Impossible – Fallout and BlacKkKlansman. There are seven Best Picture Oscar winners and 24 animated movies in there – 10 of which are Pixar products, and three of which come from the UK’s Aardman Animations. Documentaries make up a whopping quarter of the movies listed, and include landmark films like Bowling For Columbine and Man On Wire, while 53 of the movies listed are foreign-language, including Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, and the first film on the list, Pedro Almodóvar‘s All About My Mother.

A number of directors show up twice on the list – Ava DuVernay, Taika Waititi, Ryan Coogler, and Sean Baker among them – and a handful show up even more than that: Lee Unkrich, Pete Docter, Brad Bird, and Richard Linklater. Meanwhile, series like the Paddington, Before, and Toy Story films appear more than once, along with both films in The Act of Killing/The Look of Silence documentary pairing feature.

So: 200 movies, 20 years. How many have you seen after all this time? And how many are you adding to your watchlist?
Link: https://editorial.rottentomatoes.com/guide/freshest-movies-past-20-years/

16

Practically the whole of your childhood is dead (including the Powerpuff Girls), bigotry has entered the White House, we are about to face similar problems for the same reason, and Pokémon have taken people out of reality and off of cliffs. It's no wonder I go to the cinema so many goddamn times. However, with all these disinteresting sequels and "original" concepts, I don't see that happening nearly as much as 2016.

As far as I know, there's no farting corpses, very little hot dogs, hardly any seagulls, no chance of cute 3D redheads and a bunch of gems I've already witnessed first at a festival. Until another festival can surprise me, be it Flare, Sundance, LFF or even the LIAF, the most notable experience I can think of as of yet is seeing who else will attend the My Little Pony movie.

One thing's for sure - there will be less to see than last year, and the rising interest in digital releases doesn't help (especially with the region cheats). Will there be another Carol like there was twice last year, not counting their UK releases this year? Or is 2017 just going to be the weakest year for film by far? Unless we act soon, it won't just be democracy that's dead.

Anyway, movies!

13

This list is just to keep the movies appart from TV shows. So it's going to be a mess of movies.

424

Sororité, feminist messages, art history, love stories, the bonds that form between women, memories, ghost stories, the art of looking, Cinéma français, mythology reworkings, tender period dramas, female gayze

4

Best movies of 2017 according to Chris Stuckmann from youtube.

33

Todo el mejor cine de la historia

Loading...