Top 250 Movies

Matt Damon's latest movie, The Martian, has been added to the page.
Matt Damon’s latest movie, The Martian, is the most recent member of our Top 100 UMR movies.

This is the Top 100 Movies in our database. Several years back, we came up with an idea to create a mathematical equation that would create a numerical score for each movie. The first thing we had to come up with were factors for the equation. So we thought….if we were producing a movie what would we like to see our movie accomplish. The first thing we would want, would be for the movie to be successful at the box office. Secondly, we would like the critics and movie goers to enjoy our movie. And finally we would like our movie to receive award recognition through Golden Globe® and Oscar® ceremonies. So let’s look at the breakdown of the variables in the equation.

1. Box office results. We figure that box office is the most important factor, so it received the highest percentage (30%) of the equation. The ceiling was $200 million in adjusted box office dollars. Any movie that crossed $200 million maxed out the points in the category.

2. Critics and audience reception. We felt that critical reception was the second most important factor so it received the second highest percentage 45%) of the equation. So where do I find critics/audience reception? We use at least 6 different sources: RottenTomatoes, IMDB, Yahoo Movies, Roger Ebert, Leonard Maltin and Fandango. Put them all together and I get an average with 100% being the highest score possible.

3. Award Recognition. The final part of the equation is worth 25%. A movie gets points for Golden Globe® and Oscar® nominations and wins. The Golden Globes get 5% while the Oscars® get 13% of the equation. The last 7% goes to amount of Oscar® nominations and amount of Oscar® wins.

So far we have done Ultimate Movie Ranking Scores on 26,478 movies. Granted that is only a small percentage of films that were ever made but we have done all the big blockbusters and Oscar® winners. So the following table lists the current Top 100 movies that PERFORMED the best in ALL THREE CATEGORIES.  In other words we are not saying these are the best movies just the ones that STATISTICALLY PERFORMED THE BEST.

With over 22,000 movies ranked...1972's The Godfather sits on top the list.
With over 22,000 movies ranked…1972’s The Godfather sits on top the list.

Top 100 Movies Can Be Ranked 6 Ways In This Table

The really cool thing about this table is that it is “user-sortable”. Rank the movies anyway you want.

  • Sort Top 100 Movies by co-stars of the movies
  • Sort Top 100 Movies by director or directors of the movies
  • Sort Top 100 Movies by adjusted domestic box office grosses using current movie ticket cost
  • Sort Top 100 Movies how they were received by critics and audiences.  60% rating or higher should indicate a good movie
  • Sort by how many Oscar® nominations and how many Oscar® wins each Top 100 movie received.
  • Sort Top 100 Movies by Ultimate Movie Rankings (UMR) Score.  UMR Score puts box office, reviews and awards into a mathematical equation and gives each movie a score.
  • Use the sort and search buttons to make this table very interactive.  For example if you want to see the 4 Marlon Brando movies to make the list…just type in Brando in the search box and up they pop.
RankMovie (Year)Star of MovieDirector of MovieDomestic B.O. Adjusted (mils.)Critic Audience RatingOscar Nom / WinUMR Score
The Godfather (1972)Marlon Brando & Al Pacino & James Caan Francis Ford Coppola$686.3094.5%11 / 0396.22
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975)Jack NicholsonMilos Forman$448.2092.5%09 / 0596.07
Lawrence of Arabia (1962)Peter O''Toole & Anthony QuinnDavid Lean$482.0091.5%10 / 0796.00
Schindler's List (1993)Liam Neeson & Steven SpielbergSteven Spielberg$195.6094.3%12 / 0795.85
The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003)Orlando BloomPeter Jackson$527.1091.0%11 / 1195.77
The Godfather: Part II (1974)Al Pacino & Robert DeNiro & Robert DuvallFrancis Ford Coppola$214.3094.0%11 / 0695.31
Casablanca (1942)Humphrey Bogart & Ingrid BergmanMichael Curtiz$344.3094.3%08 / 0395.30
Gone with the Wind (1939)Vivien Leigh & Clark GableVictor Fleming$1758.3090.0%13 / 0895.30
The Best Years of Our Lives (1946)Myrna Loy & William WylerWilliam Wyler$569.6086.0%08 / 0795.28
Ben-Hur (1959)Charlton HestonWilliam Wyler$852.0088.7%12 / 1194.67
On the Waterfront (1954)Marlon BrandoElia Kazan$219.9088.0%12 / 0894.36
Rebecca (1940)Laurence Olivier & Joan FontaineAlfred Hitchcock$258.1087.0%11 / 0294.13
The Apartment (1960)Jack Lemmon & Shirley MacLaine Billy Wilder$232.1087.5%10 / 0594.12
The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957)William HoldenDavid Lean$473.4088.0%08 / 0793.56
It Happened One Night (1934)Clark Gable & Claudette ColbertFrank Capra$190.7091.0%05 / 0592.33
Unforgiven (1992)Clint Eastwood & Gene Hackman Clint Eastwood$205.5089.5%09 / 0492.19
My Fair Lady (1964)Audrey HepburnGeorge Cukor$521.2083.0%12 / 0892.01
Patton (1970)George C. ScotttFrancis Ford Coppola$335.8086.5%10 / 0791.79
The Silence of the Lambs (1991)Anthony Hopkins & Jodie FosterJonathan Demme$261.8089.0%07 / 0591.76
Gladiator (2000)Russell CroweRidley Scott$293.6082.0%12 / 0591.70
The Sound of Music (1965)Julie AndrewsRobert Wise$1235.6082.3%10 / 0591.70
The French Connection (1971)Gene Hackman & Roy ScheiderWilliam Friedkin$264.1084.0%08 / 0591.68
Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope (1977)Harrison FordGeorge Lucas$1549.9091.7%10 / 0691.58
American Beauty (1999)Kevin SpaceySam Mendes$216.7085.0%08 / 0591.48
The Lost Weekend (1945)Ray MillandBilly Wilder$234.6085.5%07 / 0491.38
How Green Was My Valley (1941)Maureen O'Hara John Ford$291.4081.5%10 / 0591.30
Platoon (1986)Charlie SheenOliver Stone$314.8084.0%08 / 0491.08
Mrs. Miniver (1942)William WylerWilliam Wyler$344.7081.0%12 / 0691.07
Terms of Endearment (1983)Jack Nicholson & Shirley MacLaineJames L. Brooks$290.2081.7%11 / 0590.88
Kramer vs. Kramer (1979)Dustin Hoffman & Meryl StreepRobert Benton$356.9081.0%09 / 0590.67
West Side Story (1961)Natalie WoodRobert Wise$486.3080.0%11 / 1090.60
Rain Man (1988)Dustin Hoffman & Tom CruiseBarry Levinson$354.5084.0%08 / 0490.58
A Man for All Seasons (1966)Orson WellesFred Zinnemann$244.3081.5%08 / 0690.50
Mutiny on the Bounty (1935)Charles Laughton & Clark GableFrank Lloyd$286.5086.0%08 / 0190.22
A Beautiful Mind (2001)Russell Crowe & Ron HowardRon Howard$254.8082.7%08 / 0489.95
Dances with Wolves (1990)Kevin CostnerKevin Costner$367.1080.0%12 / 0789.93
Saving Private Ryan (1998)Tom Hanks & Matt Damon & Steven SpielbergSteven Spielberg$389.2088.0%11 / 0589.86
Forrest Gump (1994)Tom HanksRobert Zemeckis$681.2078.0%13 / 0689.66
Going My Way (1944)Bing CrosbyLeo McCarey$552.4077.0%10 / 0789.19
Titanic (1997)Kate Winslet & Leonardo DiCaprio & JaJames Cameron & Steven Spielberg$1103.4077.0%14 / 1189.19
The Sting (1973)Robert Redford & Paul Newman & George RoGeorge Roy Hill$776.4087.5%10 / 0389.17
Rocky (1976)Sylvester StalloneJohn G. Avildsen$478.2079.3%10 / 0389.09
Amadeus (1984)F. Murray AbrahamMilos Forman$173.5086.5%11 / 0888.85
Oliver! (1968)Oliver ReedCarol Reed$308.9076.0%11 / 0588.72
Slumdog Millionaire (2008)Dev PatelDanny Boyle$165.9088.5%10 / 0888.68
An American in Paris (1951)Gene KellyVincente Minnelli$202.9077.5%08 / 0688.62
The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001)Orlando BloomPeter Jackson$467.6090.0%13 / 0488.33
Driving Miss Daisy (1989)Morgan FreemanBruce Beresford$226.3076.5%09 / 0487.96
Chicago (2002)Richard GereRob Marshall$248.1076.0%13 / 0687.84
All About Eve (1950)Bette Davis & Marilyn MonroeJoseph L. Mankiewicz$155.6092.7%14 / 0687.80
Toy Story 3 (2010)Tom HanksLee Unkrich$443.4091.7%05 / 0287.78
All Quiet on the Western Front (1930)Lew AyresLewis Milestone$194.5084.5%04 / 0287.66
From Here to Eternity (1953)Burt Lancaster & Montgomery Clift Fred Zinnemann$519.4081.5%13 / 0887.55
Midnight Cowboy (1969)Dustin HoffmanJohn Schlesinger$347.7082.5%07 / 0387.51
Apocalypse Now (1979)Martin Sheen & Marlon BrandoFrancis Ford Coppola$335.5092.3%08 / 0287.43
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939)James StewartFrank Capra$289.0091.0%11 / 0187.37
Doctor Zhivago (1965)Omar SharifDavid Lean$1079.0082.5%10 / 0587.28
The Deer Hunter (1978)Robert DeNiro & Christopher Walken & Michael Cimino$176.5085.5%09 / 0587.27
To Kill a Mockingbird (1962)Gregory Peck & Robert DuvallRobert Mulligan$256.9090.3%08 / 0387.09
Inception (2010)Leonardo DiCaprio & Michael Caine Christopher Nolan$312.6088.5%08 / 0486.83
Pulp Fiction (1994)Bruce Willis & Samuel L. Jackson Quentin Tarantino$223.0093.0%07 / 0186.74
The Departed (2006)Jack Nicholson & Leonardo DiCaprio Martin Scorsese$169.6087.0%05 / 0486.73
Annie Hall (1977)Woody Allen & Christopher WalkenWoody Allen$184.9086.0%05 / 0486.61
The Philadelphia Story (1940)James Stewart & Katharine Hepburn George Cukor$215.1091.0%06 / 0286.37
E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial (1982)Drew BarrymoreSteven Spielberg$1220.6082.7%09 / 0486.35
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966)Richard Burton & Elizabeth TaylorMike Nichols$214.6084.5%13 / 0586.34
Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)Harrison FordSteven Spielberg$770.7091.3%08 / 0486.28
Gentleman's Agreement (1947)Gregory Peck & John GarfieldElia Kazan$240.2075.0%08 / 0386.25
In the Heat of the Night (1967)Sidney Poitier & Warren OatesNorman Jewison$167.2084.0%07 / 0586.20
Ordinary People (1980)Robert RedfordRobert Redford$177.6082.5%06 / 0486.11
Wings (1928)Gary CooperWilliam A. Weldman$314.1081.0%02 / 0286.07
Jaws (1975)Roy ScheiderSteven Spielberg$1114.4091.5%04 / 0386.03
A Streetcar Named Desire (1951)Marlon Brando & Vivien LeighElia Kazan$231.2085.0%12 / 0485.98
Avatar (2009)Zoe SaldanaJames Cameron & Steven Spielberg$842.7082.3%09 / 0385.60
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969)Paul Newman & Robert RedfordGeorge Roy Hill$613.5086.5%07 / 0485.49
The Exorcist (1973)Linda BlairWilliam Friedkin$919.2082.5%10 / 0285.48
The Martian (2015)Matt Damon & Jessica ChastainRidley Scott$228.3087.5%07 / 0085.42
Cabaret (1972)Liza MinnelliBob Fosse$304.3082.5%10 / 0885.41
Around the World in 80 Days (1956)Shirley MacLaine & David NivenMichael Anderson$561.9070.5%08 / 0585.34
Gravity (2013)George Clooney & Sandra BullockAlfonso Cuarón$284.2082.0%10 / 0785.17
The Last Picture Show (1971)Jeff BridgesPeter Bogdanovich$203.0087.5%08 / 0285.15
The Grapes of Wrath (1940)Henry Fonda & John FordJohn Ford$215.1087.5%07 / 0285.12
The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (2002)Orlando BloomPeter Jackson$493.9089.0%06 / 0285.06
Tom Jones (1963)Albert FinneyTony Richardson$478.1069.5%10 / 0485.06
The Lion in Winter (1968)Peter O''Toole & Katharine Hepburn Anthony Harvey$184.0088.0%07 / 0384.98
Shakespeare in Lovie (1998)Gwyneth Paltrow & Ben AffleckJohn Madden$180.3076.0%13 / 0784.88
Fiddler on the Roof (1971)TopolNorman Jewison$414.9081.5%08 / 0384.80
Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942)James CagneyMichael Curtiz$392.0084.5%08 / 0384.71
Mary Poppins (1964)Julie AndrewsRobert Stevenson$887.8081.0%13 / 0584.70
On Golden Pond (1981)Henry Fonda & Katharine Hepburn Mark Rydell$361.7079.5%10 / 0384.66
Giant (1956)James Dean & Rock Hudson & Elizabeth TayloGeorge Stevens$481.7086.0%10 / 0184.65
Beauty and the Beast (1991)Robbie BensonKirk Wise$396.2085.5%06 / 0284.61
The Graduate (1967)Dustin HoffmanMike Nichols$767.9084.5%07 / 0184.61
The Great Dictator (1940)Charles ChaplinCharles Chaplin$301.1090.7%05 / 0084.61
Gigi (1958)Leslie CaronVincente Minnelli$293.9068.0%09 / 0984.56
Apollo 13 (1995)Tom HanksRon Howard$333.5085.3%09 / 0284.54
Bonnie and Clyde (1967)Gene HackmanArthur Penn$397.1084.5%10 / 0284.54
All the President's Men (1976)Dustin Hoffman & Robert RedfordAlan J. Pakula$359.8083.5%08 / 0484.47
The Wizard of Oz (1939)Judy GarlandVictor Fleming$225.4086.5%06 / 0284.26
Tootsie (1982)Dustin Hoffman & Bill MurraySydney Pollack$496.6081.0%10 / 0184.17
The elephant in the room....every year Sight and Sound says Vertigo and Citizen Kane are the best movies of all time....yet they do not crack my Top 250?
The elephant in the room….every year Sight and Sound says Vertigo and Citizen Kane are the best movies of all time….yet they do not crack my Top 100?

Our Top 100 Movie Snubs?

To make our Top 100 Movies list….a movie had to do well in three categories…box office glory, critical acclaim and award recognition.  Let’s look at some movies that did do well in all three categories.1941’s Citizen Kane is considered one of the greatest films of all time. Citizen Kane got great reviews and picked up some major Oscar® nominations but was a flop at the box office.  It’s poor showing at the box office puts Citizen Kane as the 898th best movie in our database.

1958’s Vertigo has great reviews….did below average for a Hitchcock movie at the box office and only picked up 2 minor Oscar® nominations…winning none…..that puts Vertigo in 877th place in our database.  That is better than 20,000 movies in our database which is pretty good….just not good enough to crack the Top 250.  If you want to see a movie page that gives these movies some love…check out our Top 100 Best Reviewed Movies.

Just making a boat load of money at the box office does not give you a spot in the Top 100.  Let’s look at the biggest worldwide hit of 2014.  Transformers: Age of Extinction (2014) made almost a quarter of a billion in North America and crossed the billion dollar mark in worldwide gross.  Yet critics destroyed the movie and nobody older than 12 liked the movie.  It’s critical rating is so low that it keeps Transformers: Age of Extinction from even cracking the Top 1000.

And finally let’s quickly look at the other end of our database.  26,478 movies ranked….some movie has to be at the bottom of the rankings.  For awhile Nicolas Cage and his Deadfall (1993) movie held that honor.  Well 2014 gave us a new worst ranked movie.  Coming in with less 3 million in box office gross, some of the worst reviews of all time and the winner of the 2014 Razzie® Award as worst movie of the year….Kirk Cameron’s Saving Christmas. With a UMR Score of 5.56 Kirk’s movie is ranked as the 26,478th movie in my database.

For comments….all you need is a name and a comment….please ignore the rest.

Academy Award® and Oscar® are the registered trademarks of the Academy of Motion Arts and Sciences.  Golden Globes® are the registered trademark and service mark of the Hollywood Foreign Press. Razzies® are a registered trademark.
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192 thoughts on “Top 250 Movies

  1. Apocapolise Won is one of the best war films out there and IMO the best Vietnam war movie yet made, sorry Kubrick fans. Good to see it in your top 100 Bruce.

    So what’s number one than? Larry Brown? 😉

    1. Hey Steve…for some reason I have a very difficult time spelling….Apocalypse Now….I always have to check or paste to make sure I spell it correctly….for some reason we never seemed to spell Apocalypse in school…lol. As for Larry Crowne you will happy to know it’s current ranking is 3051st…..only 3,050 away from the top spot.

      1. Hey Bruce, I mispelled Acopalypse Now because you and Flora had mispelled it and I just wanted to join in, just having some fun. On the HT forum one of the droogs was always mispelling Spartacus, I think Sparatacis was my favourite variant spelling. 🙂

  2. Hi Bruce, Congrats on being on HP for a year! A very interesting page. Interesting to see ‘Cabaret’ and ‘Chicago’ at 74 & 75 together. Surprised ‘Pulp Fiction’ didn’t appear higher up the list. ‘Jaws’ at No. 54 was a shock, thought that might be in the top 20 or 30.

    1. Hey Jools99….Jaws at 54 is still pretty high….it means roughly 4,946 movies are behind it…and I think I could do another 5,000 movies and it probably will still be in the 50s in its ranking. As for Pulp Fiction another of my favorites…so I was glad it made the Top 100….another Bruce Willis movie I love did not make it…The Sixth Sense. Thanks for the compliment and the comment they are both greatly appreciated

  3. 60-51:

    Ouch! My lowest group of 51-100.

    I have only seen 5 of these. It is possible that this will be my lowest amount or tie for my lowest amount. I might as well tell you which films I have seen rather than those I haven’t.

    I think people who know me know which ones I am missing…

    I have seen:

    how Green Was My Valley..multiple times

    Ordinary People

    Gigi (ooh, another musical I have seen. wow. What a surprise)

    Apcolypse Now – I have seen the redux version on the big screen. Not the original release, only at home. This is one of those examples which don’t fit unless you know that I am a Martin sheen fan

    From Here to Eternity -multiple times

    1. Hey Flora…60 to 51. I think you should see Jaws….it is Spielberg at his best…sure there are couple of scenes that scary….but mainly it is great because of the trilogy of characters in the movie….Dreyfuss, Robert Shaw and Roy Scheider make a great team and work well with each other. Glad to see you like Gigi being on the list…it’s most impressive stat is it was 9 for 9 in Oscars….9 nominations 9 wins….that does not happen to often. Apocolpyse Now is awesome…if you survived that movie you can easily handle Jaws. Thanks for all your comments and contributions into this page…and by the way I decided to just do another hub rather than adding to this one…so movies 50 to 1 should be out soon.

  4. 70-61:

    I have seen 8. I am missing, as you will expect:

    The Exorcist (never, not if you paid me)

    Inception

    I have seen Mary Poppins multiple times. It is the only one of this group where it does not matter what mood I am in. There are others here I admire greatly and have seen more than once, but they are not the first films I would choose.

    1. Hey Flora…70 to 61….well Julie Andrews is not done yet she has one more movie on the list. I know what you mean about the Exorcist….I avoided that one myself until about 3 years ago….and even then I made sure I watched it during a nap so the sun would be shining very bright. As for Inception…I was actually disappointed in that movie…I saw it at the theater and even though I own it on Blu-Ray…I have only watched it that one time at the theater….not a good sign in my book.

  5. Time for me to look at 80-71.

    Again I have seen 7 of them.

    (I wonder if I will have seen all ten of a grouping. likely not. I think 9 will be my top. I think there will always be at least one I haven’t seen. I *know* this will be true of the top ten. )

    What I have read of The Deer Hunter suggests that I will find it way too disturbing.I refuse to see that film.

    The other two I am missing I just haven’t seen yet. The are The Greatest Show on Earth (oh, another epic…) and a film I fully expect to see eventually: Pulp Fiction

    Some of my all time favourites are in this grouping.

    1. Hey Flora…80 to 71….Pulp Fiction is a classic, and it changed the way movies got made. As for The Deer Hunter…the scenes in Vietnam are pretty intense the rest of the movie is on the slow side…not a fun movie to watch at all. I am shocked that you have not seen The Greatest Show On Earth…James Stewart does his whole role dressed as a clown….a clown with a secret no less. Unless you changed your mind about some movies I think you are correct that you will not have seen all of the Top Ten movies.

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