Top 50 Movie Stars – An UMR Book

 

Introduction

            Who are the greatest actors and actresses of all-time?  Is Denzel Washington a greater actor than Paul Newman?  How does Meryl Streep compare to Katharine Hepburn?  Personal preferences would provide lots of different answers.  To see who has the best acting skills, we would need to see every thespian play the same role, in the same scene, on the same set, with the same cast and director.

It would be awesome to see the greatest actors and actresses doing their take on the same movie scene.  Who would not want to see acting legends such as John Wayne, Joan Crawford, Marlon Brando, or Doris Day playing Meg Ryan’s famous restaurant scene in When Harry Met Sally (1989)? Unfortunately, that cannot happen.  However, there is a way to compare movie stars.  We can use statistics.

No matter when a movie was made, the goals have always been the same.  Movies are made to make money for the producers while entertaining or educating audiences.  Impressing critics and winning awards is a welcome honor.  There are three main groups of movie statistics: Box office grosses, reviews, and award recognition.  When looking at all three groups together, you can see how well or poorly a movie performed.  Like a quarterback in football, the success or failure of a movie falls on the stars of the movie.

Using those three groups of statistics, we compared the careers of the greatest actors and actresses.  This Top 50 Movie Stars list is the end result of that comparison.   Is it a perfect list?  Of course not.  Will you agree with some of the rankings?  We hope so.  Are some notable people not on our list?  Definitely.  Will you think some of the rankings are horrible and question our thought process?  I am sure you will…..but……that is what lists are born to do…..make people argue.

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How We Got Here

 

As a child, I was very interested in baseball and movies.  As I got older, I was fascinated with baseball statistics and movie box office grosses.  This fascination led me to lots of very knowledgeable people.

On the baseball side, I read anything Bill James wrote.  James is the godfather of baseball stats.  He created mathematical formulas that changed how people viewed, played, and managed baseball.  On the movie side, I became a weekly Variety reader, a weekly viewer of Sneak Previews with Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert, a fan of Joel Hirschhorn’s Book Rating The Movie Stars , and a constant moviegoer.

Sometime in 2010, for the millionth time, I was looking at my Rating The Movie Stars book, when I wondered if Joel had updated his ratings lately. A quick Internet check provided the sad news that Mr. Hirschhorn had passed away in 2005.

About a month later, I thought, “I could update the ratings!”  Thinking about Bill James’ baseball formulas, I decided to come up with an algorithm to rate movies.  This decision would lead me to start my own movie website.  Ultimate Movie Rankings.com (UMR) has been ranking movies since 2011.

We have been collecting, categorizing, and storing movie stats for almost ten years.  Originally, all the stats collected were being written in notebooks.  Luckily, my better half, realized a database would be a better place to store the statistics.   She created a database that has now stored movie stats on over 36,000 movies.  Each movie, whether it was made in 1932 or made today, includes box office grosses, reviews, and awards.

Our UMR mathematical formula generates a score from 1 to 100 for each movie, allowing comparison between movies made decades apart.  Now my wife and I can argue over the merits of her favorite movie, The Sound of Music (1965), and one of my favorites, Pulp Fiction (1994), using the same scoring criteria.

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Factors Used in UMR Score

 

  1. Box office results. Receives the second highest percentage (31%) of the equation.  The ceiling is $200 million in adjusted for inflation dollars.  Any movie that crossed $200 million maxed out the points in the category.  We use adjusted box office, so it would be easier to compare a movie made years ago to movies made today.
  2. Critics and audience reception. Receives the highest percentage (47%) of the equation.  So where do I find critics/audience reception? We use many different sources: RottenTomatoes, IMDb, MetaCritic, Yahoo Movies, Roger Ebert, Leonard Maltin, and Fandango.  Put them all together and we get an average review rating,  100% being the highest score possible. You Tube video critic Chris Stuckmann, has replaced the late great Roger Ebert in our calculations when looking at current movies.
  3. Award Recognition. The final part of the equation is worth 22%.  A movie gets points for Golden Globe® and Oscar® nominations and wins.  The Golden Globes® get 3.75% while the Oscars® get 18.25% of the equation.

Box Office Results (31%) + Reviews (47%) + Awards (22%) = UMR Score.

These three factors were determined by figuring out what a movie’s producer is hoping their movie accomplishes.  The first goal that the producer would want would be for the movie to be successful at the box office and profitable at the end of the day.  Secondly, the producer would like both the professional critics and moviegoers to enjoy their movie.  And finally the producer would like the movie to receive award recognition through Golden Globe® and Oscar® awards.

For a movie to be rated well in our mathematical equation, it has to do well in all three categories.  Of the thousands of movies we have rated, only 8 have a perfect 100 score.


Top 10 UMR Movies
The Godfather (1972) 100.00 UMR Score
Lawrence of Arabia (1962) 100.00 UMR Score
Gone With The Wind (1939) 100.00 UMR Score
Schlinder’s List (1993) 100.00 UMR Score
On The Waterfront (1954) 100.00 UMR Score
Ben-Hur (1959) 100.00 UMR Score
Casablanca (1942) 100.00 UMR Score
The Return of the King (2003) 100.00 UMR Score
One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest (1975) 99.99 UMR Score
The Godfather Part II (1974) 99.99 UMR Score

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An Example of UMR Rating Formula

Let’s look at one of the best movies that featured one of my favorite actors: Bruce Willis’s The Sixth Sense (1999).

Figure 2 – UMR Database – Picture from UltimateMovieRankings.com

#1 Shows the original domestic box gross ($291 million) and its adjusted box office gross ($516 million) based on today’s average movie ticket price.  Those massive grosses easily max out the points (31% of equation) in the box office category.  Of a possible 31 points,  it earned the maximum of 31 points.

#2 Shows the different sources (IMDb, Rotten Tomatoes, Roger Ebert, Metacritics) we used to get a review percentage for The Sixth Sense (1999).  Put all of those reviews together and you end up with a 81.4% review rating.  Of a possible 47 points, it earned 37.60 points.

#3 Shows how well The Sixth Sense (1999) did with major awards.  Awards is the third and final part of the equation.  The Sixth Sense (1999) earned 6 Oscar® nominations, including a Best Picture nod.  It did not win any Oscars® and was ignored by the Golden Globes®.  Of a possible 22 points, it earned a total of 9.15 award points.

#4 Shows the end result of the equation.  When you add up the total points for #1, #2, and #3, you end up with 78.25 points.  When comparing that total with all the movies in the database you end up with a 98.82 percentile score.

So what does a 98.82 percentile mean? Well, let’s find out.  We have 36,123 movies in the database.  36,123 times 98.76% equals 35,675.  That means there are 35,675 movies that earned fewer points than The Sixth Sense.  Another way to look at it would be by saying the The Sixth Sense (1999) is the 448th best movie in our database.

This is not the picture in the book.

Figure 3 –  Bruce Willis – Drawing by DoC2

So let’s see if Bruce Willis has the stats to crack the Top 50.  Willis has 72 movies in the database. His Top 25 UMR movies (best combination of box office, reviews and awards) are listed on the next page.

If we add up all the UMR points, we see he earned 2,144 points.  When we divide that by 25, we get an average UMR score of 85.76.  Now we need to look at his acting honors.  His only major acting honor is a Golden Globe® nomination for In Country (1989).  That did nothing for his score, as In Country (1989) did not make his Top 25.  That leaves his UMR score at 85.76.

A 85.76 UMR average score would be 74th best average of all the stars that qualified.  A deecent finish for him, but not good enough to make our Top 50.

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Top 25 UMR Score Bruce Willis Movies

Movies with best box office, reviews and awards

 

Rank Movie (Year) UMR Score
1st Pulp Fiction (1994) 99.68
2nd  The Sixth Sense (1999) 98.82
3rd  Die Hard (1988) 97.51
4th Over the Hedge (2006) 94.68
5th Die Hard 2 (1990) 94.14
6th Live Free or Die Hard (2007) 94.01
7th Die Hard with a Vengeance (1995) 92.07
8th Twelve Monkeys (1995) 90.78
9th Unbreakable (2000) 90.10
10th Look Who’s Talking (1989) 90.02
11th  Armageddon (1998) 88.04
12th Sin City (2005) 87.92
13th Looper (2012) 86.98
14th  Nobody’s Fool (1994) 86.70
15th  Moonrise Kingdom (2012) 85.64
16th  The Fifth Element (1997) 85.63
17th  Red (2010) 84.06
18th The Expendables 2 (2012) 80.35
19th Death Becomes Her (1992) 79.82
20th The Last Boy Scout (1991) 77.44
21st G.I. Joe: Retaliation (2013) 74.71
22nd  Glass (2019) 74.01
23rd Disney’s The Kid (2000) 71.50
24th Bandits (2001) 70.13
25th The Whole Nine Yards (2000) 69.49

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Test Run

So it was time to find out the Top 50 Movie Stars Statistically Speaking.  The movie database calculated the UMR scores of over 36,000 movies and over 10,000 different actors and actresses.  Some of the results are listed below.

Rank Star
1st James Dean
2nd John Cazale
3rd Grace Kelly
4th Judy Holliday
5th Charlie Chaplin
13th Thelma Ritter
16th Sydney Greenstreet
23rd Thomas Mitchell
27th Walter Brennan
34th Claude Rains
38th Charles Laughton
49th Barry Fitzgerald
95th Jack Nicholson
102nd Clint Eastwood
136th John Wayne

 

Gotta say, I was pretty underwhelmed by this list.  A quick look at the rankings revealed some issues.  The top 5 is a solid list for sure, but with a combined total of 40 movies, it seemed that the low number of movies really helped their UMR averages.

Another issue with the initial rankings were the amount of supporting actors and actresses.  I love Thelma Ritter, Sydney Greenstreet, Thomas Mitchell, and all the others, but they are not movie stars.  If I was making a list of the greatest character actors of all-time, they would be some of the first people I would pick.

On even further review, many actors that are considered to be legends, such as John Wayne, were near the bottom of the rankings.  I noticed that if an actor or actress had over 40 movies, their UMR averages seemed to be very low.

We also realized that individual acting Oscar® and Golden Globe® nominations and wins should be factored into the UMR scores.

The final result of the first test run? It became clear we were going to have to include some guidelines in the rankings.

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The Guidelines

  1. Cameos, television roles, and movies not released in the United States were excluded from the rankings.  World-Wide box office figures were much harder to find and less reliable, so U.S. Domestic was used.  Sadly, movies that have unknown box office grosses were also excluded from the rankings, since a box office gross is needed to calculate the UMR score.
  2. We included a feature that we do not use on the website anymore.  That feature gives credit for individual nominations and awards such as Best Actor/Actress.  An actor can earn up to 10 additional points per movie.  Meryl Streep, Katharine Hepburn, and Jack Nicholson benefited the most from the inclusion of this feature.
  3.   An actor or actress had to have appeared in a minimum of 25 movies.  That left out some great stars like Daniel Day-Lewis, Montgomery Clift, Marie Dressler, Audrey Hepburn, Greta Garbo,  Barbra Streisand, and the Marx Brothers.
  4.   The Top 50 Movie Stars needed to be leading actors and actresses.  That excluded the supporting performers above and other favorites like Donald Crisp, Elsa Lanchester, Samuel L.  Jackson, and Roddy McDowall.
  5.   Only the performer’s top 25 highest rated UMR movies are used in the rankings.  This benefited John Wayne, Myrna Loy, and Robert Mitchum.

Once we had determined the guidelines to use, we queried the database to rank all of the actresses and actors that reached those criteria.  Overall, 647 different people qualified.  When we reviewed the top 50, the list finally looked like a winner.  We decided to roll with it.

Feel free to add your comments to the website on a page dedicated to this book. https://www.ultimatemovierankings.com/top-50-movie-stars

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Figure 4 – UMR TagLine – Picture from UltimateMovieRankings.com

Things to know about the upcoming countdown.

Before we start the countdown.

 

  • Our Honorable Mention section, shows in ranking order, the next 25 actors and actresses, who just missed our Top 50. Al Pacino, Laurence Olivier, Claudette Colbert & Jane Fonda were the first ones to miss our Top 50.
  • When looking at Golden Globe® tallies, we are only listing movie roles, no television roles.
  • When looking at Oscar® nominations and wins, we are only listing acting nominations.
  • “100” is the top score for Best Review Percentage and UMR Score.
  • Adjusted Domestic Box Office totals are calculated using ticket sold and average movie admission prices. Currently, the final 2018 ticket price has not been announced, so we are still using the average ticket price of 2017 in our calculations.

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Honorable Mentions

25 Actors and Actresses Who

Just Missed The Top 50

 

Actors Actresses
Al Pacino Claudette Colbert
Laurence Olivier Jane Fonda
Kirk Douglas Shirley MacLaine
Matt Damon Shirley Temple
Fredric March Susan Hayward
Wallace Beery Ingrid Bergman
Fred MacMurray Cate Blanchett
Robert Taylor Diane Keaton
Dean Martin Rosalind Russell
Ray Milland Jane Wyman
James Mason Deborah Kerr
Bruce Willis Mary Pickford
Dana Andrews Loretta Young
David Niven Marlene Dietrich
Anthony Quinn Maureen O’Sullivan
Robert Downey Jr. Betty Grable
Ronald Colman Natalie Wood
Robert Young Julia Roberts
Bill Murray Irene Dunne
Mel Gibson Maureen O’Hara
Eddie Murphy Lana Turner
Edward G.  Robinson Maggie Smith
Alan Ladd Marilyn Monroe
Johnny Depp Sandra Bullock
Tony Curtis Jean Arthur

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73 thoughts on “Top 50 Movie Stars – An UMR Book

  1. It is an e-book and not a hard or paper back book. I bought my mine through Kobo. That made it work with my desktop pretty well. If you follow the attached link, you can either get a preview which is the first 10 pages or buy the book from there. The top 50 is interesting, but I found the lists at the end the most interesting. Alec Guiness tops one of those lists. Hope that helps.

    1. Thanks R. Hinders for the specific details of the book being an ebook and how to buy the book. I am not too familiar with ebooks, so I appreciate the help.

    2. Hey R. Hinders….sounds like you are good at these e-books….glad you got the book to format for you….it is failing for me….and I suspect it is going to fail for other “newbies” like me. Alec Guinness topping that chart surprised me too. Thanks for the kind words…it is greatly appreciated.

  2. Congratulations, Bruce on your first book.

    I second Steve’s question. Is it an actual book that one buys and has sent to them in paperback or is it a digital book that can only be read on the computer?

    Edit – I see by your post of the day after I posted this comment that you have a link to go to to read the book.

    1. Hey Flora….thanks for the congrats….yep the link takes you there…..but….I have to admit….I am not currently happy with how it is looking….seems each book reader takes the book and does different things. I wrote a book that was 127 pages….when Bryan (SoC1) looked at on his iPhone it was over 240 pages long. Others are saying it is under 70 pages. I feel so out of my element here….lots to learn. Thanks again for the kind words.

  3. This is one of my favorite websites to visit, so I viewed buying the book as a good way to support the Cogersons, who I feel spend an enormous amount of time and energy on this website. Even better news, is that the book was very well done. I used my desktop computer to read the book, and had no issues with the pages being out of whack. Not saying I agree with all of the rankings; but, I would recommend reading this work. Job well done.

    1. Thanks for the support In The Shadows. I am surprised that you are not having issues with the pages being out of whack. I appreciate the support of buying this book…and for the review that you put out there too. Thank you again.

  4. HI STEVE

    I’ve been trying without success to get more information from The Work Horse.

    I see from some of what he has said one of its selling points will be a Joel connection. It’s just a pity The Master wasn’t around to write a forward introduction about how well his pupil has learned all the tricks of the trade.

    I will definitely be buying a copy of it if it’s available over here. It will complement the Hirsch book that WH kindly sent me but he must understand that it will have to reside on my book shelf UNDER The Master’s classic.

    Anyway I’ll catch up with you tomorrow about the “definitive Sheriff of Nottingham”. Meanwhile have a good weekend and take care.

    1. Hey Bob….currently it is only an e-book….we do not have any hard copies….and currently….not happy at all on how it is looking…..actually it is very very disappointing. I can tell you that Marlon Brando made the Top 50. As for Joel….he gets mentioned in the book….and we do rank 410 thespians….Chevy Chase barely got in. We might, in the future, get some books published. That however is a decision for later. Hope your weekend is a good one too.

      1. HI BRUCE

        Thanks for the explanation.

        I don’t like to sound patronising but you have a lot more to give regarding details of the movie scene as well as the bigger picture than many movie books that I’ve read and your genuine enthusiasm and friendly style shine through, so keep going.

        Take inspiration from the Greats of the past and remember King Gable was first unsuccessful because “his ears are too big”, Astaire didn’t click immediately because “can’t act, can’t sing, can dance a little” and remember Louis B Mayer’s put-down of the man who became known as “The Great Communicator in politics “Jimmy Stewart for President, Ronnie for friend.”

        Take care. .

  5. Wahey! Congrats on your first book Bruce!

    Let us know how it goes. I have mine standing by – ‘Myrna Loy, Hollywood’s Legendary Box Office Queen’. 😉

    Bob is still finishing his epic work – The Importance of Being Billed First. [wink wink]

    So, only the UMR chart was used for each actor? No critics average? Is it an actual book or digital e.g. pdf, epub.

    1. Hey Steve….it is an e-book only….though we are looking at getting a couple hundred printed out in the future. Currently….I have to say…..I am not happy on how the book looks when it goes through some of these e-book readers. Probably a rookie mistake…but currently do not know how to fix it. I like how it looked when I was putting it together……now…gotta say it is disappointing. I look forward to your Loy book and Bob’s First Billing Book. The UMR score incorporates the critic and audience rating. We do list the Top 100 Best Reviewed Actors and Actresses at the end of the book. Thanks for the nice words and the questions…they are appreciated.

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