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The Panda

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  1. Number 41 Mononoke-hime (1997) Studio Ghibli, Hayao Miyazaki (69 Points, 15 Votes) "Life is suffering. It is hard. The world is cursed. But still, you find reasons to keep living." Number 1 Placements: 1 Top 10 Placements: 3 Top 25 Placements: 7 Previous Rankings: 2016 (Unranked), 2014 (Unranked), 2013 (Unranked), 2012 (Unranked) Awards Count: 1 Annie Nomination Tomatometer: 92% (8.0 Avg Rating) Box Office: 2.4m (4.3m Adjusted) Synopsis: On a journey to find the cure for a Tatarigami's curse, Ashitaka finds himself in the middle of a war between the forest gods and Tatara, a mining colony. In this quest he also meets San, the Mononoke Hime. Critic Opinion: "I go to the movies for many reasons. Here is one of them. I want to see wondrous sights not available in the real world, in stories where myth and dreams are set free to play. Animation opens that possibility, because it is freed from gravity and the chains of the possible. Realistic films show the physical world; animation shows its essence. Animated films are not copies of "real movies," are not shadows of reality, but create a new existence in their own right. True, a lot of animation is insipid, and insulting even to the children it is made for. But great animation can make the mind sing. Hayao Miyazaki is a great animator, and his "Princess Mononoke" is a great film. Do not allow conventional thoughts about animation to prevent you from seeing it. It tells an epic story set in medieval Japan, at the dawn of the Iron Age, when some men still lived in harmony with nature and others were trying to tame and defeat it. It is not a simplistic tale of good and evil, but the story of how humans, forest animals and nature gods all fight for their share of the new emerging order. It is one of the most visually inventive films I have ever seen." - Roger Ebert User Opinion: "Holy mother of fuck is this good." - @cookie "The film does a great job showing themes Shinto. The characters are brilliant each character has important characteristic. No character is absolute good or evil in the film. The score is great and beautiful animation." - @Dexter Commentary: Studio Ghibli makes its way onto our list again with another first timer for one of these countdowns, as well as the first Miyazaki film to make it onto the list. Princess Mononoke is an animated fantasy epic, it's a film that displays a classic sense of heroism, and one that is not afraid to paint shades of grey in varying aspects. There's some elements of naturalism vs industrialism, and how hatred can drive much of the violence and evil in the world. The journey that's painted manages to go beyond what you'd expect to be possible in an animation. The film truly transports you to a vivid new world, and you can see the heart that went into the hand painted animation. The score is also gorgeous, with many flowing themes that have left their slight impact into popular culture. Princess Mononoke had plenty of passion votes, as it managed a mean score of 4.6, indicating each person who voted for it on average placed it around their top 25. Decade Count: 10s (12), 90s (12), '00s (9), 80s (9), 70s (6), 60s (5), 50s (4), 40s (2), 30s (1) Tomatometer Count: Over 90% (49), 80%-90% (11) Adjusted Box Office Count: 1b+ (1), 900m (2), 800m (1), 600m (1), 500m (1), 400m (7), 300m (3), 200m (8), 100m (13), Under 100m (21) Director Count: Alfred Hitchcock (3), James Cameron (2), Damien Chazelle (2), Stanley Kubrick (2), Richard Linklater (2), John McTiernan (2), Martin Scorsese (2), Lee Unkrich (2), J.J. Abrams (1), Paul Thomas Anderson (1), John Avildsen (1), Ash Brannon (1), Frank Capra (1), Ron Clements (1), Joel and Ethan Coen (1), Francis Ford Copolla (1), Alfonso Cuaron (1), Stanley Donen (1), Clint Eastwood (1), David Fincher (1), Victor Fleming (1), Milos Forman (1), Terry Gillam (1), Rian Johnson (1), Terry Jones (1), Gene Kelly (1), Akira Kurosawa (1), John Lasseter (1), David Lean (1), Ang Lee (1), Spike Lee (1), Sergio Leone (1), Katia Lund (1), James Mangold (1), Michael Mann (1), Fernando Meirelles (1), Hayao Miyazaki (1), John Musker (1), Christopher Nolan (1), Jordan Peele (1), Roman Polanski (1), Harold Ramis (1), Rob Reiner (1), Russo Brothers (1), Gus van Sant (1), Ridley Scott (1), Steven Spielberg (1) Bryan Singer (1), Andrew Stanton (1), Isao Takahata (1), Quentin Tarantino (1), Guillermo Del Torro (1), King Vidor (1), Orson Welles (1), Peter Weir (1), Robert Wise (1), David Yates (1) Franchise Count: Best Picture Winner (6), Pixar (3), Star Wars (2), James Cameron (2), Marvel (2), Toy Story (2), Studio Ghibli (2), 'Before' (1), Blade Runner (1), Monty Python (1), Alien and Predator (1), X-Men (1), MCU (1), Captain America (1), Terminator (1), Die Hard (1), Harry Potter (1), Rocky (1), Oz (1), WDAS (1), Indiana Jones (1), Steven Spielberg (1) Genre Count: Drama (19), Adventure (18), Thriller (15), VFX Driven (15), Fantasy (14), Sci-Fi (13), Comedy (11), Action (11), Epic (11), Romance (10), Novel Adaption (9), Crime/Noir (9), Family/Children (9), Period Piece (8), Indie (8), Sequel (7), War (7), Tragedy (6), Horror (6), Animation (6), Musical (5), Cult Classic (5), Western (4), Foreign Language (5), Christmas (3), Melodrama (3), Spy/Detective (3), Superhero (2), Comic Book (2), Bio-Pic (2), Satire (2), Remake (2), Romantic Comedy (2), Sports (1)
  2. We'll end tonight's films with a movie I was not expecting to show up, but am pleasantly surprised that it did (and got very high as well)!
  3. Number 42 Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989) Paramount Pictures, Directed by Steven Spielberg (68 Points, 21 Votes) "He chose... poorly." Top 10 Placements: 1 Top 25 Placements: 5 Previous Rankings: 2016 (76, +34), 2014 (77, +35), 2013 (86, +44), 2012 (78, +36) Awards Count: Won 1 Oscar Tomatometer: 88% (7.9 Avg Rating) Box Office: 197.2m (452.7m Adjusted) Synopsis: When Dr. Henry Jones, Sr. suddenly goes missing while pursuing the Holy Grail, eminent archaeologist Dr. Henry "Indiana" Jones, Jr. must follow in his father's footsteps to stop the Nazis from getting their hands on the Holy Grail first. Critic Opinion: "If you had to invent a screen superhero, a middle-aged, bespectacled archaeologist in a trilby would not be the sort of chap who instantly sprang to mind. Other mild-mannered men find it necessary to nip into a telephone kiosk and change into a cape and swimsuit, or don rippling latex muscles in the Batcave, before they can be heroes; but Dr Indiana Jones just leaves his university study via the window to start a new adventure. And his name is not really Indiana – it’s plain Henry, and his Dad calls him Junior. What director Steven Spielberg and producer George Lucas have created with the Jones character is an ordinary old-fashioned guy. In the age of Bond gadgetry, Rambotics and spectacular sci-fi hardware (which Lucas patented in the Star Wars series), Spielberg and Lucas, the giants of American commercial cinema, have returned to an essentially British concept – the inspired amateur." - Victoria Mather User Opinion: "Amazing movie. Everybody involved is at the top of their games here. It has great performances by Ford and Connery. Their chemistry is fabulous. The action scenes are outstanding. Spielberg just came up with a fantastic movie that is very close to Raiders in quality. It is immensely rewatchable. Must have watched it over 100 times." - @jb007 "Honestly, this is my favorite of the Indy films. The puzzles, the locations, the action, the quotes, and Sean Connery make this a really fun movie and its aged pretty well." - @Master Scottb Commentary: Indiana Jones and Steven Spielberg swing onto the list, and this time much further up than it ever had before. The Last Crusade is the third installment of the Indiana Jones series, and there are quite a few who view this one as the greatest of the bunch. The film is an excellent time, from the impeccably crafted action sequences that give you full scope of everything going on in each shot, to Williams' great score and the iconic performance as Indy by Harrison Ford. The Last Crusade boasts a fun father-son dynamic, and some iconic sequences to go with the adventure. When it comes to the adventure genre, there's nothing more iconic than Indiana Jones. The Last Crusade is seen on 34% of the lists that were submitted, which is the most of any movie we've looked at so far. Decade Count: 10s (12), 90s (11), '00s (9), 80s (9), 70s (6), 60s (5), 50s (4), 40s (2), 30s (1) Tomatometer Count: Over 90% (48), 80%-90% (11) Adjusted Box Office Count: 1b+ (1), 900m (2), 800m (1), 600m (1), 500m (1), 400m (7), 300m (3), 200m (8), 100m (13), Under 100m (20) Director Count: Alfred Hitchcock (3), James Cameron (2), Damien Chazelle (2), Stanley Kubrick (2), Richard Linklater (2), John McTiernan (2), Martin Scorsese (2), Lee Unkrich (2), J.J. Abrams (1), Paul Thomas Anderson (1), John Avildsen (1), Ash Brannon (1), Frank Capra (1), Ron Clements (1), Joel and Ethan Coen (1), Francis Ford Copolla (1), Alfonso Cuaron (1), Stanley Donen (1), Clint Eastwood (1), David Fincher (1), Victor Fleming (1), Milos Forman (1), Terry Gillam (1), Rian Johnson (1), Terry Jones (1), Gene Kelly (1), Akira Kurosawa (1), John Lasseter (1), David Lean (1), Ang Lee (1), Spike Lee (1), Sergio Leone (1), Katia Lund (1), James Mangold (1), Michael Mann (1), Fernando Meirelles (1), John Musker (1), Christopher Nolan (1), Jordan Peele (1), Roman Polanski (1), Harold Ramis (1), Rob Reiner (1), Russo Brothers (1), Gus van Sant (1), Ridley Scott (1), Steven Spielberg (1) Bryan Singer (1), Andrew Stanton (1), Isao Takahata (1), Quentin Tarantino (1), Guillermo Del Torro (1), King Vidor (1), Orson Welles (1), Peter Weir (1), Robert Wise (1), David Yates (1) Franchise Count: Best Picture Winner (6), Pixar (3), Star Wars (2), James Cameron (2), Marvel (2), Toy Story (2) 'Before' (1), Blade Runner (1), Monty Python (1), Studio Ghibli (1), Alien and Predator (1), X-Men (1), MCU (1), Captain America (1), Terminator (1), Die Hard (1), Harry Potter (1), Rocky (1), Oz (1), WDAS (1), Indiana Jones (1), Steven Spielberg (1) Genre Count: Drama (19), Adventure (17), Thriller (15), VFX Driven (15), Sci-Fi (13), Fantasy (13), Comedy (11), Action (11), Epic (10), Novel Adaption (9), Crime/Noir (9), Romance (9), Family/Children (9), Period Piece (8), Indie (7), Sequel (7), War (6), Tragedy (6), Horror (6), Musical (5), Cult Classic (5), Animation (5), Western (4), Foreign Language (4), Christmas (3), Melodrama (3), Spy/Detective (3), Superhero (2), Comic Book (2), Bio-Pic (2), Satire (2), Remake (2), Romantic Comedy (2), Sports (1)
  4. Hopefully you won't be waiting forever Also, I'm about to eat and go see Deadpool 2, so the final two films for the night will be after that!
  5. It's our second Romatic Comedy film! Number 43 Aladdin (1992) Walt Disney Animation Studios, Directed by John Musker and Ron Clements (68 Points, 19 Votes) "A whole new world!" Top 5 Placements: 1 Top 10 Placements: 4 Top 25 Placements: 6 Previous Rankings: 2016 (84, +41), 2014 (73, +30), 2013 (78, +35), 2012 (56, +13) Awards Count: Won 2 Oscars Tomatometer: 94% (8.1 Avg Rating) Box Office: 217.4m (480.4m Adjusted) Synopsis: When a street urchin vies for the love of a beautiful princess, he uses a genie's magic power to make himself off as a prince in order to marry her. Critic Opinion: "Based on familiar Arabian Nights episodes, Aladdin is set in the mythical kingdom of Agrabah. The title character is a street kid who - with the help of a genie from a magic lamp - wins the hand of the sultan's daughter. The classic parts of Aladdin aren't musty-classic, as certain sections of Beauty and the Beast were. Visually, they're exotic-classic, with such marvelous sights as the wind-swept Arabian sandscape, the sultan's opulent castle and the scary, tiger-mouthed Cave of Wonders. Some sequences are painted in rich, supersaturated colors, which contrast splendidly with the mysteriously dark nighttime scenes. As for the movie's hip side, it's not so different from those Warner Bros. cartoons featuring Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, etc. In an especially brilliant stroke, some of the tale's traditional, serious characters have been paired with modern-seeming, comical ones." - Jay Boyar User Opinions: "Robin Williams is incredible in the Genie role, one of my most favorite works of his for sure. I grew up with this movie among other Disney classics. I don't think I can count the times I have watched Aladdin, I still watched it every time it's on TV. It's fun, entertaining, great music, good animation, and also got lots of heart. One of the cutest, probably top 5, romances in a Disney movie. And Jafar is definitely up there in my best Disney villains list, alongside Ursula, Maleficent, Gaston, and a few others." - @Sam "One of my fav animated movies ever. Great soundtrack and a lot of fun." - @Michael Gary Scott Commentary: Walt Disney finally makes a showing on our list with their 90s Arabian classic, Aladdin! Aladdin made quite a jump from previous years, possibly because there's the live action remake coming soon, or maybe simply because the movie is an all-time animated classic. Every song in the film is instantly memorable, even the lesser songs like Arabian Nights and Prince Ali really pop compared to some other Disney musicals where the lesser songs aren't all that remembered. The film is compact and tightly paced, keeping even the youngest entertained and excited the entire way through. This is a film that you'll be hard pressed to find somebody who actively dislikes it. Aladdin also had broad appeal on our forums, making into 31% of the lists that were submitted. Decade Count: 10s (12), 90s (11), '00s (9), 80s (8), 70s (6), 60s (5), 50s (4), 40s (2), 30s (1) Tomatometer Count: Over 90% (48), 80%-90% (10) Adjusted Box Office Count: 1b+ (1), 900m (2), 800m (1), 600m (1), 500m (1), 400m (6), 300m (3), 200m (8), 100m (13), Under 100m (20) Director Count: Alfred Hitchcock (3), James Cameron (2), Damien Chazelle (2), Stanley Kubrick (2), Richard Linklater (2), John McTiernan (2), Martin Scorsese (2), Lee Unkrich (2), J.J. Abrams (1), Paul Thomas Anderson (1), John Avildsen (1), Ash Brannon (1), Frank Capra (1), Ron Clements (1), Joel and Ethan Coen (1), Francis Ford Copolla (1), Alfonso Cuaron (1), Stanley Donen (1), Clint Eastwood (1), David Fincher (1), Victor Fleming (1), Milos Forman (1), Terry Gillam (1), Rian Johnson (1), Terry Jones (1), Gene Kelly (1), Akira Kurosawa (1), John Lasseter (1), David Lean (1), Ang Lee (1), Spike Lee (1), Sergio Leone (1), Katia Lund (1), James Mangold (1), Michael Mann (1), Fernando Meirelles (1), John Musker (1), Christopher Nolan (1), Jordan Peele (1), Roman Polanski (1), Harold Ramis (1), Rob Reiner (1), Russo Brothers (1), Gus van Sant (1), Ridley Scott (1), Bryan Singer (1), Andrew Stanton (1), Isao Takahata (1), Quentin Tarantino (1), Guillermo Del Torro (1), King Vidor (1), Orson Welles (1), Peter Weir (1), Robert Wise (1), David Yates (1) Franchise Count: Best Picture Winner (6), Pixar (3), Star Wars (2), James Cameron (2), Marvel (2), Toy Story (2) 'Before' (1), Blade Runner (1), Monty Python (1), Studio Ghibli (1), Alien and Predator (1), X-Men (1), MCU (1), Captain America (1), Terminator (1), Die Hard (1), Harry Potter (1), Rocky (1), Oz (1), WDAS 1) Genre Count: Drama (19), Adventure (16), Thriller (15), VFX Driven (14), Sci-Fi (13), Fantasy (13), Comedy (11), Action (10), Epic (10), Novel Adaption (9), Crime/Noir (9), Romance (9), Family/Children (9), Period Piece (8), Indie (7), War (6), Tragedy (6), Horror (6), Sequel (6), Musical (5), Cult Classic (5), Animation (5), Western (4), Foreign Language (4), Christmas (3), Melodrama (3), Spy/Detective (3), Superhero (2), Comic Book (2), Bio-Pic (2), Satire (2), Remake (2), Romantic Comedy (2), Sports (1)
  6. Number 44 Toy Story 3 (2010) Pixar, Directed by Lee Unkrich (68 Points, 19 Votes) "So long... partner." Top 5 Placements: 1 Top 10 Placements: 2 Top 25 Placements: 6 Previous Rankings: 2016 (30, -14), 2014 (13, -31), 2013 (33, -11), 2012 (67, +23) Awards Rankings: Won 2 Oscars, Nominated for Best Picture Tomatometer: 99% (8.9 Avg Rating0 Box Office: 415m (488.6m Adjusted) Synopis: The toys are mistakenly delivered to a day-care center instead of the attic right before Andy leaves for college, and it's up to Woody to convince the other toys that they weren't abandoned and to return home. Critic Opinion: "TS3, like its predecessors, is a clever, engrossing adventure, and, like any sequel, it tries to balance continuity with novelty, the latter provided by a cadre of shiny new characters (led by a plush-toy improv troupe) in superfluous 3-D. Pixar has always wedded technological innovation to classic storytelling, and despite some unwelcome steps toward snarky Shrekification, this latest film still manages to bull’s-eye the primal emotions that resonate with children of all ages. When teenaged Andy plops down on the grass to share his old toys with a shy little girl, the film spikes with sadness and layered pleasure—a concise, deeply wise expression of the ephemeral that feels real and yet utterly transporting." - Eric Hynes User Opinion: "TS3 could be my all-time favorite animated movie. It really has everything you'd wish for in a movie. The last scene is a tearjerker because it's about letting go of your childhood. But the movie doesn't forget to excite you with the "prison escape" scenes and to also make you laugh. I don't want to give it an A+ because too many movies get that rating. TS3 is something special; it deserves better." - @lolifofo "Beautiful animation, beautiful characters, beautiful ending to what could, argubably, be considered the best trilogy of all time, by some. This movie's last 20 minutes are some of the most incredible scenes put to film in cinema history.. no exaggeration. The hand holding scene was gut wrenching, beautiful, powerful, sad, and epic, all at once. And just when you thought Pixar couldn't go for more, they create the last scene with Andy saying goodbye to his friends by giving them away in a heartfelt closing scene. Love love love this movie." - @Letsuseournoggin Commentary: The Toy Story saga makes it onto our list again, this time with the closing chapter (or what should have been) of the series. Toy Story 3 takes the same characters you've grown to love, places them in a prison break adventure, and then rips your heart out with a final twenty minutes that is the reason this installment has gotten so much acclaim, including being one of the only animated films nominated for Best Picture. Lee Unkrich has shown himself to be one of Pixar's finest directors, and Toy Story 3 might be the crown achievement from his repertoire. The film landed on 31% of the lists submitted with an average score of 3.6. Decade Count: 10s (12), 90s (10), '00s (9), 80s (8), 70s (6), 60s (5), 50s (4), 40s (2), 30s (1) Tomatometer Count: Over 90% (47), 80%-90% (10) Adjusted Box Office Count: 1b+ (1), 900m (2), 800m (1), 600m (1), 500m (1), 400m (5), 300m (3), 200m (8), 100m (13), Under 100m (20) Director Count: Alfred Hitchcock (3), James Cameron (2), Damien Chazelle (2), Stanley Kubrick (2), Richard Linklater (2), John McTiernan (2), Martin Scorsese (2), Lee Unkrich (2), J.J. Abrams (1), Paul Thomas Anderson (1), John Avildsen (1), Ash Brannon (1), Frank Capra (1), Joel and Ethan Coen (1), Francis Ford Copolla (1), Alfonso Cuaron (1), Stanley Donen (1), Clint Eastwood (1), David Fincher (1), Victor Fleming (1), Milos Forman (1), Terry Gillam (1), Rian Johnson (1), Terry Jones (1), Gene Kelly (1), Akira Kurosawa (1), John Lasseter (1), David Lean (1), Ang Lee (1), Spike Lee (1), Sergio Leone (1), Katia Lund (1), James Mangold (1), Michael Mann (1), Fernando Meirelles (1), Christopher Nolan (1), Jordan Peele (1), Roman Polanski (1), Harold Ramis (1), Rob Reiner (1), Russo Brothers (1), Gus van Sant (1), Ridley Scott (1), Bryan Singer (1), Andrew Stanton (1), Isao Takahata (1), Quentin Tarantino (1), Guillermo Del Torro (1), King Vidor (1), Orson Welles (1), Peter Weir (1), Robert Wise (1), David Yates (1) Franchise Count: Best Picture Winner (6), Pixar (3), Star Wars (2), James Cameron (2), Marvel (2), Toy Story (2) 'Before' (1), Blade Runner (1), Monty Python (1), Studio Ghibli (1), Alien and Predator (1), X-Men (1), MCU (1), Captain America (1), Terminator (1), Die Hard (1), Harry Potter (1), Rocky (1), Oz (1) Genre Count: Drama (19), Thriller (15), Adventure (15), Sci-Fi (13), VFX Driven (13), Fantasy (12), Comedy (11), Action (10), Epic (10), Novel Adaption (9), Crime/Noir (9), Romance (8), Family/Children (8), Indie (7), Period Piece (7), War (6), Tragedy (6), Horror (6), Sequel (6), Musical (5), Cult Classic (5), Western (4), Foreign Language (4), Animation (4), Christmas (3), Melodrama (3), Spy/Detective (3), Superhero (2), Comic Book (2), Bio-Pic (2), Satire (2), Remake (2), Sports (1), Romantic Comedy (1)
  7. That hasn’t stopped a lot of movies this go round, plus there’s still a few movies or so that have always made it that definitely missed this time Ill start being less cryptic in a few hours when I’m back home and can actually post some more write ups
  8. Later tonight I talked about a genre coming in full force, we’ve seen at least one movie from that said genre already today and we’ll see three more out of the next four movies!
  9. Number 45 El Laberinto del Fauno (2006) Picturehouse, Directed by Guillermo Del Torro (65 Points, 17 Votes) "A long time ago, in the underground realm, where there are no lies or pain, there lived a Princess who dreamed of the human world." Top 10 Placements: 3 Top 25 Placements: 6 Previous Rankings: 2016 (Unranked), 2014 (79, +34), 2013 (50, +5), 2012 (63, +18) Awards Count: Won 3 Oscars Tomatometer: 95% (8.6 Avg Rating) Box Office: 37.6m (50.1m Adjusted) Synopsis: In the falangist Spain of 1944, the bookish young stepdaughter of a sadistic army officer escapes into an eerie but captivating fantasy world. Critic Opinion: "Pan's Labyrinth, the extraordinary film from Mexican fabulist Guillermo del Toro, is as poetic as a ballad and as primal as a myth - imagine The Chronicles of Narnia painted by a tag team of Goya and Dalí. Del Toro is a conjurer who employs realism to intensify his fantasy - and vice versa. This is the breakthrough work of one of world cinema's most visionary artists. The film's resolution is as ambiguous and rich as its narrative. I leave it to others to debate whether Pan's Labyrinth ends on a note of triumph or tragedy - or both. What I do know for certain is that del Toro has created a timeless story. Finally, Pan's Labyrinth suggests that fairy-tale violence helps the vulnerable process and overcome real-life conflicts and that real-life violence permanently smashes the soul and the heart. By the end, I rode the emotional waves of elation and elegy, and thought once again of Donne, of "Death Be Not Proud," of the poet's hope that death shall be no more. "Death, thou shalt die."" - Carrie Rickey User Opinions: "I cold purchased the Blu Ray over a year ago and tonight I finally decided to watch it. Now I'm wondering why I waited so long. It's fantastic, beautiful and gruesome film. A real fairy tale of old without the saccharine syrup of Hollywood." - @DeeCee "Absolutely love this movie to death.... and that music!" - @Jay Hollywood Commentary: Guillermo Del Torro get his Shape of Water bump as Pan's Labyrinth finishes notably higher than it ever has before, and deservedly so. Pan's Labyrinth is a gorgeous and heartbreaking fairytale about a dark fantasy world being a little girl's escape from an even grimmer and harsher reality. There are many spanish movies about the Spanish Civil War, Del Torro actually has two fantasy films about it, this one and the slightly lesser known, The Devil's Backbone. The world Del Torro crafts in Labyrinth is rich, beautiful and poetic, unlike any of his many other gorgeous and innovative worlds he's crafted in the past. Pan's Labyrinth was on 28% of the lists that were submitted and averaged a score of around 3.8 from each of those users. Decade Count: 10s (11), 90s (10), '00s (9), 80s (8), 70s (6), 60s (5), 50s (4), 40s (2), 30s (1) Tomatometer Count: Over 90% (46), 80%-90% (10) Adjusted Box Office Count: 1b+ (1), 900m (2), 800m (1), 600m (1), 500m (1), 400m (4), 300m (3), 200m (8), 100m (13), Under 100m (20) Director Count: Alfred Hitchcock (3), James Cameron (2), Damien Chazelle (2), Stanley Kubrick (2), Richard Linklater (2), John McTiernan (2), Martin Scorsese (2), J.J. Abrams (1), Paul Thomas Anderson (1), John Avildsen (1), Ash Brannon (1), Frank Capra (1), Joel and Ethan Coen (1), Francis Ford Copolla (1), Alfonso Cuaron (1), Stanley Donen (1), Clint Eastwood (1), David Fincher (1), Victor Fleming (1), Milos Forman (1), Terry Gillam (1), Rian Johnson (1), Terry Jones (1), Gene Kelly (1), Akira Kurosawa (1), John Lasseter (1), David Lean (1), Ang Lee (1), Spike Lee (1), Sergio Leone (1), Katia Lund (1), James Mangold (1), Michael Mann (1), Fernando Meirelles (1), Christopher Nolan (1), Jordan Peele (1), Roman Polanski (1), Harold Ramis (1), Rob Reiner (1), Russo Brothers (1), Gus van Sant (1), Ridley Scott (1), Bryan Singer (1), Andrew Stanton (1), Isao Takahata (1), Quentin Tarantino (1), Guillermo Del Torro (1), Lee Unkrich (1), King Vidor (1), Orson Welles (1), Peter Weir (1), Robert Wise (1), David Yates (1) Franchise Count: Best Picture Winner (6), Star Wars (2), James Cameron (2), Marvel (2), Pixar (2), 'Before' (1), Blade Runner (1), Monty Python (1), Studio Ghibli (1), Alien and Predator (1), X-Men (1), MCU (1), Captain America (1), Terminator (1), Die Hard (1), Harry Potter (1), Rocky (1), Oz (1), Toy Story (1) Genre Count: Drama (18), Thriller (15), Sci-Fi (13), Adventure (14), VFX Driven (11), Fantasy (11), Action (10), Comedy (10), Epic (10), Novel Adaption (9), Crime/Noir (9), Romance (8), Family/Children (7), Indie (7), Period Piece (7), War (6), Tragedy (6), Horror (6), Musical (5), Cult Classic (5), Sequel (5), Western (4), Foreign Language (4), Christmas (3), Melodrama (3), Animation (3), Spy/Detective (3), Superhero (2), Comic Book (2), Bio-Pic (2), Satire (2), Remake (2), Sports (1), Romantic Comedy (1)
  10. Number 46 Se7en (1995) New Line Cinema, Directed by David Fincher (64 Points, 17 Votes) "Wanting people to listen, you can't just tap them on the shoulder anymore. You have to hit them with a sledgehammer, and then you'll notice you've got their strict attention." Top 5 Placements: 2 Top 25 Placements: 7 Previous Rankings: 2016 (48, +2), 2014 (55, +9), 2013 (74, +28), 2012 (37, -9) Awards Count: Nominated for 1 Oscar Tomatometer: 80% (7.8 Avg Rating) Box Office: 100.1m (210.3m Adjusted) Synopsis: Two detectives, a rookie and a veteran, hunt a serial killer who uses the seven deadly sins as his motives. Critic Opinion: "Se7en is also what formed my preference for a long drive with just my thoughts after a movie — ideal in that first job when I had to drive 90 minutes back after reviewing one of them. Going to movies alone is one of my favorite things. I watch Se7en now and look back on that drive home in my older brother’s first car, handed down to me. A red Camaro. Coche del Amor, as a friend of mine called it. There was never any love made in it, at least not by me. The two things I remember most about that car were its uselessness in snow and sitting in it driving home from Se7en — the teenage realization of the magnitude of corruptibility, fallibility and the grace not all of us are fortunate enough to find in falling prey to them. For we all fall prey to them and yet we press on. To watch it then was the fear of what could test me. To watch it now is the fear that I’ve not yet been tested and wonder how much harder it could be after 23 additional years of frailty. Today, I watch it from my large couch, complemented by the glow of Christmas lights we haven’t yet taken down because my wife and I like to keep them up on nights like tonight where it’s a new year but the same old snow and chilliness. She is not here. I rarely watch movies like this when she’s around. She may have seen it at some point before we knew each other. She’d have just turned 15. Did she sneak off with friends to see it? Did it rattle her in the same way it did me? I’ve never asked. I probably should. Again, as I always do, I watch it alone, as I did all those years ago — and I’m thrown back into the mindspace of that kid in the Lindo Theatre and thrown flat all over again." - Nick Rogers User Opinions: "the ending is creepier knowing that Kevin Spacey wasn't acting. He was just being himself" - @John Marston "Still my favourite Fincher film, it's technically flawless and one of the few police procedurals that genuinely warrants a cinematic release." - @Hatebox Commentary: Se7en is a movie that I really don't remember all that well, so it's a bit hard to talk about. The movie got fairly decent reception upon its release, and it has definitely been something that's been looked at more fondly with time. David Fincher, as a director, is an internet favorite, almost like a Christopher Nolan minus the Batman movie releases. Se7en is bloody, eerie and an intense crime thriller that leaves audiences pondering it well after the ending credits of the movie. A unique premise and superb execution has kept this film well on the radar of internet cinephiles. Se7en was on around 28% of the lists that were submitted and had an average 3.8 score from those users. Decade Count: 10s (11), 90s (10), '00s (8), 80s (8), 70s (6), 60s (5), 50s (4), 40s (2), 30s (1) Tomatometer Count: Over 90% (45), 80%-90% (10) Adjusted Box Office Count: 1b+ (1), 900m (2), 800m (1), 600m (1), 500m (1), 400m (4), 300m (3), 200m (8), 100m (13), Under 100m (19) Director Count: Alfred Hitchcock (3), James Cameron (2), Damien Chazelle (2), Stanley Kubrick (2), Richard Linklater (2), John McTiernan (2), Martin Scorsese (2), J.J. Abrams (1), Paul Thomas Anderson (1), John Avildsen (1), Ash Brannon (1), Frank Capra (1), Joel and Ethan Coen (1), Francis Ford Copolla (1), Alfonso Cuaron (1), Stanley Donen (1), Clint Eastwood (1), David Fincher (1), Victor Fleming (1), Milos Forman (1), Terry Gillam (1), Rian Johnson (1), Terry Jones (1), Gene Kelly (1), Akira Kurosawa (1), John Lasseter (1), David Lean (1), Ang Lee (1), Spike Lee (1), Sergio Leone (1), Katia Lund (1), James Mangold (1), Michael Mann (1), Fernando Meirelles (1), Christopher Nolan (1), Jordan Peele (1), Roman Polanski (1), Harold Ramis (1), Rob Reiner (1), Russo Brothers (1), Gus van Sant (1), Ridley Scott (1), Bryan Singer (1), Andrew Stanton (1), Isao Takahata (1), Quentin Tarantino (1), Lee Unkrich (1), King Vidor (1), Orson Welles (1), Peter Weir (1), Robert Wise (1), David Yates (1) Franchise Count: Best Picture Winner (6), Star Wars (2), James Cameron (2), Marvel (2), Pixar (2), 'Before' (1), Blade Runner (1), Monty Python (1), Studio Ghibli (1), Alien and Predator (1), X-Men (1), MCU (1), Captain America (1), Terminator (1), Die Hard (1), Harry Potter (1), Rocky (1), Oz (1), Toy Story (1) Genre Count: Drama (18), Thriller (15), Sci-Fi (13), Adventure (13), VFX Driven (11), Action (10), Fantasy (10), Comedy (10), Epic (9), Novel Adaption (9), Crime/Noir (9), Romance (8), Family/Children (7), Indie (6), Period Piece (6), War (5), Tragedy (5), Musical (5), Cult Classic (5), Horror (5), Sequel (5), Western (4), Christmas (3), Foreign Language (3), Melodrama (3), Animation (3), Spy/Detective (3), Superhero (2), Comic Book (2), Bio-Pic (2), Satire (2), Remake (2), Sports (1), Romantic Comedy (1)
  11. I’m pulling the quotes from the review threads unless somebody sent me a blurb about the movie (you can still pm blurbs if you want)
  12. Number 47 Toy Story 2 (1999) Pixar, Directed by Ash Brannon, John Lasseter and Lee Unkrich (63 Points, 19 Votes) "You never forget kids like Emily, or Andy, but they forget you." Top 5 Placements: 1 Top 25 Placements: 4 Previous Rankings: 2016 (42, -5), 2014 (30, -17), 2013 (71, +24), 2012 (73, +26) Awards Count: Nominated for 1 Oscar Tomatometer: 100% (8.6 Avg Rating) Box Office: 245.9m (438.2m Adjusted) Synopsis: When Woody is stolen by a toy collector, Buzz and his friends vow to rescue him, but Woody finds the idea of immortality in a museum tempting. Critic Opinion: ""Toy Story 2" dares to make fun of toys, the very objects it celebrates. One of the most clever scenes takes place in a toy emporium where even as self-assured a guy as Buzz Lightyear gets lost among the endless replications of himself on the shelf. He feels as confused and overwhelmed as most consumers do, trying heroically to face the onslaught of holiday plastic in toy barns across the land. Reflections on popular culture are laced brilliantly throughout this film. Even as it delves into the '50s beginnings of Woody, as a character created for a rickety, Golden Age of television puppet show, it rings co gently with a '90s sensibility. That's a neat trick that will keep kids glued to the fast- paced story and older viewers feeling as if somebody had rummaged through their old bedrooms to come up the scuffed remnants of their youth. "Toy Story 2" shines with characters that are vital, vulnerable and lovable. And even though computer animation may seem like the coldest, least organic art form, the characters pulse with more humanity than most live actors can muster in a dozen mainstream movies. Skin texture, gestures, glances -- the Pixar folks flesh them out with extraordinary realism but never break the hyperrealism of the animated world." - Peter Stack User Opinions: "Fuck you, Pixar." - @Ranger Tree (I believe this was in a positive way) "I love it the same as everyone else. I think this was the movie where Pixar finally found their visual identity. The first TS and A Bug's Life are marked by a bunch of visual inconsistencies in retrospect, whereas this movie remains pretty fluid throughout. Pretty amazing that they did this all in a year." - @tribefan695 Commentary: The Toy Story Trilogy is often seen as a pinnacle achievement from Pixar, however Toy Story 2 can often be left out of conversations when everyone's discussing the Toy Story 4 cash grab, Toy Story 3's ending and the original's historical relevance for kicking off the CGI animation genre. Toy Story 2 may actually be the most consistent and well-crafted of the trilogy, as the entire film is a focused sequel that manages to really expand the things the first film did right. It also features some emotional beats as painful as the notorious ending to Toy Story 3. Toy Story 2 wound up on 31% of the lists that were submitted and had an average score of 3.3 from each of those users. Decade Count: 10s (11), 90s (9), '00s (8), 80s (8), 70s (6), 60s (5), 50s (4), 40s (2), 30s (1) Tomatometer Count: Over 90% (45), 80%-90% (9) Adjusted Box Office Count: 1b+ (1), 900m (2), 800m (1), 600m (1), 500m (1), 400m (4), 300m (3), 200m (7), 100m (13), Under 100m (19) Director Count: Alfred Hitchcock (3), James Cameron (2), Damien Chazelle (2), Stanley Kubrick (2), Richard Linklater (2), John McTiernan (2), Martin Scorsese (2), J.J. Abrams (1), Paul Thomas Anderson (1), John Avildsen (1), Ash Brannon (1), Frank Capra (1), Joel and Ethan Coen (1), Francis Ford Copolla (1), Alfonso Cuaron (1), Stanley Donen (1), Clint Eastwood (1), Victor Fleming (1), Milos Forman (1), Terry Gillam (1), Rian Johnson (1), Terry Jones (1), Gene Kelly (1), Akira Kurosawa (1), John Lasseter (1), David Lean (1), Ang Lee (1), Spike Lee (1), Sergio Leone (1), Katia Lund (1), James Mangold (1), Michael Mann (1), Fernando Meirelles (1), Christopher Nolan (1), Jordan Peele (1), Roman Polanski (1), Harold Ramis (1), Rob Reiner (1), Russo Brothers (1), Gus van Sant (1), Ridley Scott (1), Bryan Singer (1), Andrew Stanton (1), Isao Takahata (1), Quentin Tarantino (1), Lee Unkrich (1), King Vidor (1), Orson Welles (1), Peter Weir (1), Robert Wise (1), David Yates (1) Franchise Count: Best Picture Winner (6), Star Wars (2), James Cameron (2), Marvel (2), Pixar (2), 'Before' (1), Blade Runner (1), Monty Python (1), Studio Ghibli (1), Alien and Predator (1), X-Men (1), MCU (1), Captain America (1), Terminator (1), Die Hard (1), Harry Potter (1), Rocky (1), Oz (1), Toy Story (1) Genre Count: Drama (18), Thriller (14), Sci-Fi (13), Adventure (13), VFX Driven (11), Action (10), Fantasy (10), Comedy (10), Epic (9), Novel Adaption (9), Crime/Noir (8), Romance (8), Family/Children (7), Indie (6), Period Piece (6), War (5), Tragedy (5), Musical (5), Cult Classic (5), Horror (5), Sequel (5), Western (4), Christmas (3), Foreign Language (3), Melodrama (3), Animation (3), Superhero (2), Comic Book (2), Bio-Pic (2), Spy/Detective (2), Satire (2), Remake (2), Sports (1), Romantic Comedy (1)
  13. Stanley Kubrick was in fact nominated for Worst Director at the Razzies because of the Shining. It's one of their biggest WTF noms looking back in retrospect.
  14. Number 48 The Shining (1980) Warner Brothers, Directed by Stanley Kubrick (63 Points, 15 Votes) "Heeeeeeere's Johhny!" Top 5 Placements: 1 Top 10 Placements: 2 Top 25 Placements: 6 Previous Rankings: 2016 (89, +41), 2014 (Unranked), 2013 (46, -3), 2012 (70, +22) Awards Count: Some Razzie Nominations Tomatometer: 86% (8.4 Avg Rating) Box Office: 44m (149.9m Adjusted) Synopsis: A family heads to an isolated hotel for the winter where an evil spiritual presence influences the father into violence, while his psychic son sees horrific forebodings from the past and of the future. Critic Opinion: "All of Stanley Kubrick’s films – be it ‘The Killing’ or ‘Eyes Wide Shut’ – demand to be seen on a big screen. They’re about people trapped in huge, indifferent machines gone wrong, from a heist plot to a spaceship, and only the huge indifference of the cinema does them justice. In ‘The Shining’, the machine is a haunted house: the Overlook Hotel, created by Stephen King and turned by Kubrick into an awry environment in which mental stability, supernatural malignance and the sense of space and time shimmer and warp to terrible effect. The story sees Jack Torrance (Jack Nicholson) drag his wife Wendy (Shelley Duvall) and psychic son Danny (Danny Lloyd) up a mountain to be the hotel’s winter caretaker. Things go badly. This is the original 1980 US version, 24 minutes longer than the one familiar to UK audiences. On the upside, it fleshes out the family’s city life and includes an intriguing TV-watching motif; on the downside, there are some daft scare shots and it didn’t ever exactly feel short at two hours. Still, a masterpiece." - Ben Walters User Opinions: "A masterclass. The camerawork and soundtrack are incredible. You could take a still from any point in this movie and frame it - it is astonishingly beautiful. There really is nothing else like this film out there - it truly stands alone." - @solaris "Another Kubrick masterpiece. " - @Ozymandias Commentary: Kubrick makes another appearance on our lists with one of his most controversial films, The Shining. The Shining was not originally received with critical acclaim, in fact it actually received some Razzie nominations. It has since then, however, garnered a large following and re-visiting and most now would likely regard this film as a classic. A classic that was originally rather overlooked, nonetheless. The film is filled with elements of horror that modern horror films have copied now for decades, and few have been able to accomplish it as effectively as The Shining does. The film appeared on around 25% of the lists submitted, and was ranked rather highly as the average user who voted for it gave it a 4.2 score, indicating they placed it just above their 35 mark. Decade Count: 10s (11), 90s (8), '00s (8), 80s (8), 70s (6), 60s (5), 50s (4), 40s (2), 30s (1) Tomatometer Count: Over 90% (44), 80%-90% (9) Adjusted Box Office Count: 1b+ (1), 900m (2), 800m (1), 600m (1), 500m (1), 400m (3), 300m (3), 200m (7), 100m (13), Under 100m (19) Director Count: Alfred Hitchcock (3), James Cameron (2), Damien Chazelle (2), Stanley Kubrick (2), Richard Linklater (2), John McTiernan (2), Martin Scorsese (2), J.J. Abrams (1), Paul Thomas Anderson (1), John Avildsen (1), Frank Capra (1), Joel and Ethan Coen (1), Francis Ford Copolla (1), Alfonso Cuaron (1), Stanley Donen (1), Clint Eastwood (1), Victor Fleming (1), Milos Forman (1), Terry Gillam (1), Rian Johnson (1), Terry Jones (1), Gene Kelly (1), Akira Kurosawa (1), David Lean (1), Ang Lee (1), Spike Lee (1), Sergio Leone (1), Katia Lund (1), James Mangold (1), Michael Mann (1), Fernando Meirelles (1), Christopher Nolan (1), Jordan Peele (1), Roman Polanski (1), Harold Ramis (1), Rob Reiner (1), Russo Brothers (1), Gus van Sant (1), Ridley Scott (1), Bryan Singer (1), Andrew Stanton (1), Isao Takahata (1), Quentin Tarantino (1), King Vidor (1), Orson Welles (1), Peter Weir (1), Robert Wise (1), David Yates (1) Franchise Count: Best Picture Winner (6), Star Wars (2), James Cameron (2), Marvel (2), 'Before' (1), Blade Runner (1), Monty Python (1), Studio Ghibli (1), Alien and Predator (1), X-Men (1), MCU (1), Captain America (1), Terminator (1), Die Hard (1), Pixar (1), Harry Potter (1), Rocky (1), Oz (1) Genre Count: Drama (18), Thriller (14), Sci-Fi (13), Adventure (12), VFX Driven (11), Action (10), Fantasy (9), Epic (9), Comedy (9), Novel Adaption (9), Crime/Noir (8), Romance (8), Indie (6), Period Piece (6), Family/Children (6), War (5), Tragedy (5), Musical (5), Cult Classic (5), Horror (5), Sequel (4), Western (4), Christmas (3), Foreign Language (3), Melodrama (3), Superhero (2), Comic Book (2), Bio-Pic (2), Animation (2), Spy/Detective (2), Satire (2), Remake (2), Sports (1), Romantic Comedy (1)
  15. Number 49 The Wizard of Oz (1939) Warner Brothers, Directed by King Vidor and Victor Fleming (62 Points, 17 Votes) "Toto, I've a feeling we're not in Kansas any more." Top 5 Placements: 1 Top 10 Placements: 2 Top 25 Placements: 7 Previous Rankings: 2016 (51, +2), 2015 (54, +5), 2013 (63, +14), 2012 (39, -10) Awards Count: Won 2 Oscars, Nominated for Best Picture Tomatometer: 99% (9.4 Avg Rating) Box Office: 22.3m (Adjusts somewhere around 900m or so I believe) Synopsis: Dorothy Gale is swept away from a farm in Kansas to a magical land of Oz in a tornado and embarks on a quest with her new friends to see the Wizard who can help her return home in Kansas and help her friends as well. Critic Opinion: "The special edition of The Wizard of Oz (same film, fantastic new print and sound) offers the rare opportunity to see the movie on a big screen, and for that reason alone I urge you to go. But it also offers a chance, yet again, to see why The Wizard of Oz remains the weirdest, scariest, kookiest, most haunting and indelible kid-flick-that’s-really-for-adults ever made in Hollywood. What’s singular about Margaret Hamilton’s performance is that with her thick pointy eyebrows and fearsome chin, her terrifying Drano rasp of homicidal aggression, she expresses a male vision of ultimate violence bursting through the glass ceiling of ”feminine” rage. The Wizard of Oz is our most indelible fairy tale because it prophesies, with mythic surrealism, a society in which the patriarchal brain (i.e., the Wizard) is about to be torn down, in which women (i.e., the Witch) have matched the male will to destruction and power, but where there also appears a benevolent new breed of valiant softy-man (i.e., the Scarecrow et al.), who can make the world safe again. In 1939, this was but a dream somewhere over the rainbow of tomorrow." - Owen Gleiberman User Opinion: "I watched The Wizard of Oz once again last night, and I have to say its one of those movies where you totally understand why it has reached the iconic status it has. The whole movie is just pleasure from start to finish, leaving no dead scenes or awkward, useless moments. Its the real deal. As far as kids movies go it doesn't get much better than The Wizard of Oz: there are likable characters, colorful, detailed environments, fun songs that stay in your head, scary bits and menacing villains and there's always something going on. I bet even the most ADD kid wouldn't be bored watching Oz. The effect Wizard of Oz has had on popular culture can't probably be measured. Every scene in the movie has been referenced at least once in some tv show, movie, podcast or cartoon. All the characters have become iconic images of cinematic history, and the songs still hold up and are well remembered by everyone who has seen the film. Wizard of Oz is actually a movie I'd consider perfect. I cant find a single flaw in it." - @Jack Nevada "A classic. The witch scared me when I was little." - @CaptainJackSparrow Commentary: You definitely know you have an oddity when there's old classic film that Baumer finds to be an all-time classic and Tele is meh on. Everyone knows The Wizard of Oz, and almost everyone had some exposure to it as a child, at least if you lived within the U.S.. Baum's novel is filled with political allegory, and while some of it gets lost in this magical adaption, there's still quite a bit of that Gilded Age critique present within the film. Beyond that, you have the iconic music, one-liners that have been referenced from modern blockbuster hits like The Avengers or Avatar, and an adventure mold that really set the standard for so many other fantasy journeys to come. The Wizard of Oz is a colorful journey that has cemented its place in pop culture as an all-time, iconic classic not to be forgotten. The film was on 28% of the lists submitted and had an average scoring of 3.6 from those lists. Decade Count: 10s (11), 90s (8), '00s (8), 80s (7), 70s (6), 60s (5), 50s (4), 40s (2), 30s (1) Tomatometer Count: Over 90% (44), 80%-90% (8) Adjusted Box Office Count: 1b+ (1), 900m (2), 800m (1), 600m (1), 500m (1), 400m (3), 300m (3), 200m (7), 100m (12), Under 100m (19) Director Count: Alfred Hitchcock (3), James Cameron (2), Damien Chazelle (2), Richard Linklater (2), John McTiernan (2), Martin Scorsese (2), J.J. Abrams (1), Paul Thomas Anderson (1), John Avildsen (1), Frank Capra (1), Joel and Ethan Coen (1), Francis Ford Copolla (1), Alfonso Cuaron (1), Stanley Donen (1), Clint Eastwood (1), Victor Fleming (1), Milos Forman (1), Terry Gillam (1), Rian Johnson (1), Terry Jones (1), Gene Kelly (1), Stanley Kubrick (1), Akira Kurosawa (1), David Lean (1), Ang Lee (1), Spike Lee (1), Sergio Leone (1), Katia Lund (1), James Mangold (1), Michael Mann (1), Fernando Meirelles (1), Christopher Nolan (1), Jordan Peele (1), Roman Polanski (1), Harold Ramis (1), Rob Reiner (1), Russo Brothers (1), Gus van Sant (1), Ridley Scott (1), Bryan Singer (1), Andrew Stanton (1), Isao Takahata (1), Quentin Tarantino (1), King Vidor (1), Orson Welles (1), Peter Weir (1), Robert Wise (1), David Yates (1) Franchise Count: Best Picture Winner (6), Star Wars (2), James Cameron (2), Marvel (2), 'Before' (1), Blade Runner (1), Monty Python (1), Studio Ghibli (1), Alien and Predator (1), X-Men (1), MCU (1), Captain America (1), Terminator (1), Die Hard (1), Pixar (1), Harry Potter (1), Rocky (1), Oz (1) Genre Count: Drama (18), Thriller (14), Sci-Fi (13), Adventure (12), VFX Driven (11), Action (10), Epic (9), Fantasy (9), Comedy (9), Crime/Noir (8), Romance (8), Novel Adaption (8), Indie (6), Period Piece (6), Family/Children (6), War (5), Tragedy (5), Musical (5), Horror (4), Sequel (4), Western (4), Christmas (3), Foreign Language (3), Melodrama (3), Superhero (2), Comic Book (2), Bio-Pic (2), Animation (2), Spy/Detective (2), Satire (2), Remake (2), Sports (1), Romantic Comedy (1)
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