This is a list of films considered "the best ever", so voted in a notable national or international survey of either critics or the public.
Some surveys focus on all films, while others focus on a particular genre or country. Voting systems differ from poll to poll: some surveys suffer from biases such as self-selection or skewed demographics, while others may be susceptible to forms of interference such as vote-stacking.
Critics and filmmakers
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Sight & Sound
Every decade, starting in 1952, the British film magazine Sight & Sound asks an international group of film critics to vote for the greatest film of all time. Since 1992, they have invited directors to vote in a separate poll. 63 critics participated in 1952, 70 critics in 1962, 89 critics in 1972, 122 critics in 1982, 132 critics and 101 directors in 1992, 145 critics and 108 directors in 2002, and 846 critics and 358 directors in 2012.
This poll is regarded as one of the most important "greatest ever film" lists. American critic Roger Ebert described it as "by far the most respected of the countless polls of great moviesâ"the only one most serious movie people take seriously."
- Bicycle Thieves (1948) topped the first poll in 1952 with 25 votes.
- Citizen Kane (1941) topped five critics' polls, with 22 votes in 1962, 32 votes in 1972, 45 votes in 1982, 43 votes in 1992, and 46 votes in 2002. It also topped the first two directors' polls, with 30 votes in 1992 and 42 votes in 2002.
- Vertigo (1958) topped the critics' poll in 2012 with 191 votes, dethroning Citizen Kane.
- Tokyo Story (1953) topped the directors' poll in 2012 with 48 votes, dethroning Citizen Kane.
Other notable polls
- Battleship Potemkin (1925) was ranked number 1 with 32 votes when the Festival Mondial du Film et des Beaux-Arts de Belgique asked 63 film professionals around the world, mostly directors, to vote for the best films of the half-century in 1951. It was also ranked number 1 when the Brussels World's Fair polled 117 experts from 26 countries in 1958.
- Citizen Kane (1941) was ranked number 1 with 48 votes when French film magazine Cahiers du cinéma asked 78 French critics and historians to vote for the best films in 2007. It was also ranked number 1 with 48 votes when Chinese website Cinephilia.net asked 135 Chinese-speaking critics, scholars, curators, and cultural workers to vote for the best films in 2012. It was ranked number 1 with 49 votes when Spanish film magazine Nickel Odeon asked 150 Spanish film experts to vote for the best films in 1999.
- Vertigo (1958) was ranked number 1 with 39 votes when German film magazine Steadycam asked 174 critics and filmmakers to vote for their favorite films in 2007. It was also ranked number 1 with 25 votes when Iranian film magazine Film asked 92 Iranian critics to vote for the best films in 2009.
- 8½ (1963) was voted the best foreign (i.e. non-Swedish) sound film with 21 votes in a 1964 poll of 50 Swedish film professionals organized by Swedish film magazine Chaplin. It was also ranked number 1 when the Museum of Cinematography in Åódź asked 279 Polish film professionals (filmmakers, critics, and professors) to vote for the best films in 2015.
- The Godfather (1972) was ranked number 1 when Japanese film magazine Kinema Junpo asked 114 Japanese critics and film professionals to vote for the best foreign (i.e. non-Japanese) films in 2009. It was also voted the greatest film in a Hollywood Reporter poll of 2120 industry members, including every studio, agency, publicity firm and production house in Hollywood in 2014.
- Apocalypse Now (1979) was voted number 1 by a group of 3,760 film critics and personalities on the Channel 4 program 50 Films to See Before You Die.
Audience polls
- Gone with the Wind (1939) was voted the favorite film of Americans in a poll of 2,279 adults undertaken by Harris Interactive in 2008, and again in a follow-up poll of 2,276 adults in 2014.
- Roman Holiday (1953) was voted the best foreign (i.e. non-Japanese) film of all time in a 1990 poll of about a million people organized by Japanese public broadcaster NHK.
- The Godfather (1972) was voted number 1 by Entertainment Weekly's readers in 1999 and voted as number 1 in a Time Out readers' poll in 1998. The film was voted the "Greatest Movie of All Time" in September 2008 by 10,000 readers of Empire magazine, 150 people from the movie business, and 50 film critics.
- The Empire Strikes Back (1980) was voted the best film of all time by over 250,000 readers of the Empire film magazine in 2015.
- The Shawshank Redemption (1994) was voted the greatest film of all time by Empire magazine readers in "The 201 Greatest Movies of All Time" poll undertaken in March, 2006.
- Shiri (1999) was voted the favorite film of Koreans with 11,918 votes in a 2002 online poll of 54,013 people conducted by Korean movie channel Orion Cinema Network.
- The Lord of the Rings trilogy (2001â"2003) was voted the most popular film of all time by an audience poll for the Australian television special My Favourite Film in 2005 and by a poll cast by 120,000 German voters for the TV special Die besten Filme aller Zeiten ("The best films of all time") in 2004.
Genres or media
Action
- Mad Max 2 (1981) was voted the greatest action film of all time in a readers' poll by American magazine Rolling Stone in 2015.
- Die Hard (1988) was voted the best action film of all time with 21 votes in a 2014 poll of 50 directors, actors, critics, and experts conducted by Time Out New York.
Animation (shorts and features)
- What's Opera, Doc? (1957), a Bugs Bunny cartoon, was selected as the greatest animated short film of all time by 1,000 animation professionals in the book The 50 Greatest Cartoons.
- Hedgehog in the Fog (1975) was ranked number 1 in a poll at the 2003 Laputa Animation Festival where 140 animators from around the world voted for the best animated films of all time.
- Tale of Tales (1979) was ranked number 1 with 17 votes in a poll at the Olympiad of Animation in 1984 where an international panel of 35 journalists, scholars, festival directors, and animation programmers voted for the best animated films. It was also ranked number 1 in a poll organized by the Channel 4 animation magazine Dope Sheet in 1997, as well as a poll organized by the Zagreb International Animation Festival, which announced the results in 2002.
- Toy Story (1995) was voted number 1 on the "Top 100 Animated Features of All Time" list by the Online Film Critics Society (published March 2003). Voters chose from a reminder list of more than 350 films. It also topped a poll of 4000 film fans for "greatest animated film of all time" in 2009, when it was re-released in 3D.
Christmas
- Die Hard (1988) was voted the greatest Christmas movie by British film magazine Empire readers in 2015.
Comedy
- Some Like It Hot (1959) was voted the best comedy of all time in a poll of 253 film critics from 52 countries conducted by the BBC in 2017.
- Monty Python's Life of Brian (1979) was voted the greatest comedy of all time in a poll of over 22,000 people conducted by the British TV network Channel 4 in 2006. It was also voted the greatest comedy film in polls conducted by British film magazine Total Film in 2000, and British newspaper The Guardian in 2007.
Comic/Superhero
- The Dark Knight (2008) was voted the greatest superhero movie in a reader's poll conducted by American magazine Rolling Stone in 2014.
Disaster
- The Poseidon Adventure (1972) was voted best disaster movie in a poll of 500 members of the UCI Cinemas staff in May 2004.
Documentary
- Man with a Movie Camera (1929) was voted the greatest documentary of all time with 125 votes (100 critics and 25 filmmakers) in a 2014 Sight & Sound poll of 238 critics, curators, and academics (including many documentary specialists) and 103 filmmakers.
- Hoop Dreams (1994) was ranked as the greatest documentary of all time by the International Documentary Association (IDA) in 2007. Voters selected from a list of over 700 films.
- Bowling for Columbine (2002) heads the list of 20 all-time favorite non-fiction films selected by members of the IDA in 2002.
Horror
- The Exorcist (1973) was voted the best horror film of all time with 53 votes in a 2012 poll of 150 experts conducted by Time Out London.
- The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) ranked number 1 on British film magazine Total Film's 2005 list of the greatest horror films.
Musical
- West Side Story (1961) was chosen as the best screen musical by readers of British newspaper The Observer in a 2007 poll.
- The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975) was voted the best movie musical by readers of Rolling Stone in a 2017 poll.
Romance
- Casablanca (1942) was voted the best romance film of all time with 56 votes in a 1996 poll of 100 experts organized by Spanish film magazine Nickel Odeon.
- Brief Encounter (1945) was voted the best romance film of all time with 25 votes in a 2013 poll of 101 experts conducted by Time Out London.
Science fiction
- 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) was voted the best science fiction film of all time with 73 votes in a 2014 poll of 136 sci-fi experts, filmmakers, science fiction writers, film critics, and scientists conducted by Time Out London. It was voted the best science fiction film of all time by 115 members of the Online Film Critics Society in 2002. It is also the only science fiction film to make the Sight & Sound critics' poll for the ten best movies (number 10 in 1992, number 6 in 2002 and 2012).
- Blade Runner (1982) was voted the best science fiction film by a panel of 56 scientists assembled by the British newspaper The Guardian in 2004. In British magazine New Scientist, Blade Runner was voted "all-time favourite science fiction film" in the readers' poll in 2008, with 12 percent of thousands of votes.
Silent
- Battleship Potemkin (1925) was voted the best silent film with 32 votes in a 1964 poll of 50 Swedish film professionals organized by Swedish film magazine Chaplin.
Sports
- Rocky (1976) topped British website Digital Spy's "greatest ever sports movie" online poll in 2012, with 18.7% of the votes. Voters chose from a list of 25 films.
Western
- Stagecoach (1939) was voted the best western film of all time with 54 votes in a 1996 poll of 100 experts organized by Spanish film magazine Nickel Odeon.
- Johnny Guitar (1954) was the most cited film in the "Ten Best Westerns" lists of 27 French critics in Le Western.
National polls
Australia
- Picnic at Hanging Rock (1975) was voted the best Australian film of all time by members of the Australian Film Institute, industry guilds and unions, film critics and reviewers, academics and media teachers, and the NFSA's Kookaburra Card members, in a 1996 poll organized by the Victorian Centenary of Cinema Committee and the National Film & Sound Archive.
- The Castle (1997) was selected by the public as Australia's favourite film in a 2008 online poll conducted by the Australian Film Institute, in collaboration with Australia Post.
Bangladesh
- Titash Ekti Nadir Naam (1973) topped the list of 10 best Bangladeshi films in the audience and critics' polls conducted by the British Film Institute in 2002.
Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Do You Remember Dolly Bell? (1981) was voted the best Bosnian film of all time in a 2003 poll of 13 film professionals organized by The National Film Archive of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Brazil
- Limite (1931) is ranked number 1 on the Brazilian Film Critics Association's list of the top 100 Brazilian films, voted by its 100 members in 2015.
- Black God, White Devil (1964) was voted the best Brazilian film of all time in a 2001 poll of 108 critics and film professionals organized by Brazilian film magazine Contracampo.
- The Red Light Bandit (1968) was voted the best Brazilian film of all time in a 2011 poll of 102 critics, researchers, and professionals organized by Brazilian film magazine Filme Cultura.
Canada
- Mon oncle Antoine (1971) was named first in the Toronto International Film Festival's Top 10 Canadian Films of All Time in 1984, 1993 and 2004.
- The Sweet Hereafter (1997) was voted the best Canadian film by readers of Playback in 2002 in an online poll. More than 500 industry respondents participated in the poll.
- Atanarjuat: The Fast Runner (2001) was voted the best Canadian film of all time with 94 votes in a 2015 poll of 220 filmmakers, critics, programmers, and professors organized by the Toronto International Film Festival, dethroning Mon oncle Antoine which won the previous three polls.
Chile
- Jackal of Nahueltoro (1975) was voted the best Chilean film of all time with 57 votes in a 2016 poll of 77 directors, actors, programmers, scholars, journalists, and critics organized by CineChile.
- Julio comienza en julio (1979) was chosen in 1999 as the "Best Chilean Film of the Century" in a vote organized by the Municipality of Santiago.
China
- Spring in a Small Town (å°åä¹æ¥; 1948) was ranked number 1 on the Hong Kong Film Awards Association's Best 100 Chinese Motion Pictures list in 2005. It was also voted the best Chinese film of all time with 25 votes in a 2010 poll of 37 critics organized by the Hong Kong Film Critics Society.
- Farewell My Concubine (é¸çå«å§¬; 1993) was voted the best Mainland Chinese film of all time by 88 international film experts in a poll conducted by Time Out Shanghai and Time Out Beijing.
Colombia
- The Strategy of the Snail (1993) was voted the best Colombian film of all time with 38 votes in a 2015 poll of 65 critics and journalists organized by Colombian magazine Semana.
Croatia
- Tko pjeva zlo ne misli (One Who Sings Means No Harm, 1970) was voted the best Croatian film of all time by 44 Croatian film critics in 1999, in a poll organized by the Croatian magazine Hollywood. It was also voted the best Croatian film by Hollywood's readers.
Cuba
- Memories of Underdevelopment (1968) was voted the best Latin American film of all time with 30 votes in a 1999 poll of 36 critics and film specialists from 11 countries organized by critics Carlos Galiano and Rufo Caballero. It was also voted the best Ibero-American film of all time in a 2009 poll of more than 500 film professionals, critics, journalists, festival organizers, and fans around the world organized by Spanish magazine Noticine.
Czechoslovakia
See also Czech Republic and Slovakia, below.
- Marketa Lazarova (1967) was voted the best Czech-Slovak film of all-time in a 1998 poll of 55 Czech and Slovak film critics and publicists, receiving 41 votes.
- The Firemen's Ball (1967) was voted the best Czech-Slovak film of all time with 33 votes in a 2007 poll of 53 experts (mostly from the Czech Republic, but also from Slovakia and Poland) titled "Filmové dÄdictvà Äesko-slovenské kinematografie."
- The Elementary School (1991) was voted the best Czech-Slovak film with 192 votes in a 2007 public poll of "Filmové dÄdictvà Äesko-slovenské kinematografie."
Czech Republic
- Christian (1939) was voted best Czech film of all time in a poll held by Media Desk and Týden magazine in 2010.
- Marketa Lazarova (1967) was voted the best Czech film of all time by Czech journalists during the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival in 1994.
- Cosy Dens (1999) was voted the best Czech film with 622 votes in a readers' poll by Reflex magazine in 2011.
See also Czechoslovakia, above.
Egypt
- The Night of Counting the Years (1969) was voted the best Arab film of all time (i.e. the best film made in an Arab country) in a 2013 poll of 475 film critics, writers, novelists, academics, and other arts professionals organized by the Dubai International Film Festival.
Estonia
- Kevade (Spring, 1969) received first place in the Estonian feature films Top Ten Poll in 2002 held by Estonian film critics and journalists.
- Autumn Ball (2007) was voted the best Estonian film of all time with 29 votes in a 2011 poll of 33 film writers and film scholars organized by the Estonian Association of Film Journalists.
Finland
- The Unknown Soldier (1955) was voted the best Finnish movie by 1213 respondents in an Internet poll by Helsingin Sanomat in 2007.
- Komisario Palmun erehdys (1960) was chosen as the best Finnish fictional movie of all time in a poll of 48 critics by Yle in 2012.
France
- The Rules of the Game (1939) was voted the best French film of all time with 15 votes in a 2012 poll of 85 film professionals conducted by Time Out Paris. It was voted the best European film of all time with 56 votes (tied with the German film Nosferatu) in a 1994 poll of 70 critics and film historians organized by Cinemateca Portuguesa. It is also the only film that ranked in the top 10 of every Sight & Sound critics' poll.
Georgia
- Eliso (1928) was voted the best Georgian film of all time in a critic poll organized by Tbilisi Intermedia.
Germany
- Nosferatu (1922) was voted the best European film of all time with 56 votes (tied with the French film The Rules of the Game) in a 1994 poll of 70 critics and film historians organized by Cinemateca Portuguesa.
- M (1931) was voted the best German film of all time with 306 votes in a 1994 poll of 324 film journalists, film critics, filmmakers, and cineastes organized by the Association of German Cinémathèques.
Greece
- O Drakos (1956) was voted the best Greek film of all time by members of the Greek Film Critics Association in 2006.
- Evdokia (1971) was voted the best Greek film of all time by members of the Greek Film Critics Association in 1986.
Hong Kong
- A Better Tomorrow (è±éæ¬è²; 1986), filmed and produced in Hong Kong, was voted the second best Chinese film ever made by the Hong Kong Film Awards Association in 2005.
- Days of Being Wild (é¿é£æ£å³; 1990) was voted the best Hong Kong film of all time with 16 votes in a 2010 poll of 37 critics organized by the Hong Kong Film Critics Society.
Hungary
- The Round-Up (1965) was chosen as the best Hungarian film in a 2000 Hungarian film critics' poll.
- Satan's Tango (1994) is 36th, the highest rank for a Hungarian film, in the 2012 Sight & Sound critics' poll.
India
- Pather Panchali (1955) is the highest-ranking Indian film on any Sight & Sound poll at number 6 in the 1992 Critics' Poll. It also topped the British Film Institute's user poll of "Top 10 Indian Films" of all time in 2002.
- Mayabazar (1957) was chosen as the greatest Indian film of all time with 16,960 votes in an online poll conducted by IBN Live in 2013. Voters select from a list of 100 films from different Indian languages, and 70,926 votes were cast.
- Sholay (1975) topped the British Film Institute's critics' poll of "Top 10 Indian Films" of all time in 2002.
Iran
- The Deers (1974) was voted the best Iranian film of all time with 33 votes in a 2009 poll of 92 critics organized by Iranian film magazine Film.
- Bashu, the Little Stranger (1986) was voted "Best Iranian Film of all time" in November 1999 by a Persian movie magazine Picture World poll of 150 Iranian critics and professionals.
Ireland
- The Commitments (1991) was voted the best Irish film of all time in a 2005 Jameson Whiskey online poll of over 10,000 Irish people.
Israel
- Giv'at Halfon Eina Ona (1976) was voted "Favorite Israeli Film of All Time" in a 2004 poll by Ynet, the platform of the Israeli newspaper Yediot Ahronot. The film received votes from 25,000 web users.
- Avanti Popolo (1986) was voted "Greatest Israeli Film of All Time" in a 2013 poll of 20 Israeli film experts by NRG Ma'ariv.
Italy
- Bicycle Thieves (1948) topped the first Sight & Sound critics' poll in 1952.
- 8½ (1963) was voted the best foreign (i.e. non-Swedish) sound film with 21 votes in a 1964 poll of 50 Swedish film professionals organized by Swedish film magazine Chaplin. It was also ranked number 1 when the Museum of Cinematography in Åódź asked 279 Polish film professionals (filmmakers, critics, and professors) to vote for the best films in 2015. It also ranked in the top 10, and was the highest ranked Italian film, in the Sight & Sound critics' poll in 1972, 1982, 2002, and 2012, and the directors' poll in 1992, 2002, and 2012.
Japan
- Tokyo Story (æ±äº¬ç©èª; 1953) topped the Sight & Sound directors' poll with 48 votes and was number 3 in the critics' poll with 107 votes in 2012. It was also voted the best Japanese film of all time in a 2009 poll of 114 critics and film professionals organized by Japanese film magazine Kinema Junpo. It was voted the best Asian film of all time in a 2015 poll of 73 film critics, festival executives, programmers, and directors from around the world, organized by the Busan International Film Festival.
- Seven Samurai (1954) was voted the best Japanese film of all time in a 1989 poll of 372 celebrities for a book published by Bungeishunjū. It was voted the best Japanese film of all time in a 1990 poll of about a million people organized by NHK. It was also number 3 with 15 votes, the highest ranked Japanese film, in the 1982 Sight & Sound critics' poll. It was also ranked joint tenth on the Sight & Sound directors' poll in 1992, and joint ninth in 2002.
- Rashomon (1950) was ranked joint tenth in the 1992 Sight & Sound directors' poll, and joint ninth in 2002.
Netherlands
- Turkish Delight (1973) was voted the best Dutch film of all time in a 1999 poll.
- Zwartboek (Black Book, 2006) was voted the best Dutch film of all time at the 2008 Netherlands Film Festival by nearly 15,000 members of the public.
New Zealand
- Once Were Warriors (1994) was voted the best New Zealand film of all time in a 2014 online poll organized by Fairfax Media. More than 500 people voted, including about 100 film professionals and 15 critics.
Norway
- Ni Liv (Nine Lives, 1957) was the critics' choice for "Best Norwegian Film of All Time" during the 2005 Bergen International Film Festival.
- The Chasers (1959) was voted the best Norwegian film of all time with 23 votes in a 2011 poll of 32 critics and experts organized by Norwegian film magazine Rushprint.
- Flåklypa Grand Prix (Pinchcliffe Grand Prix, 1975) was the people's choice for "Best Norwegian Film of All Time" during the 2005 Bergen International Film Festival.
Pakistan
- Baji (1963) topped the British Film Institute's critics' poll of "Top 10 Pakistani Films" of all time in 2002.
- Aina (1977) topped the British Film Institute's user poll of "Top 10 Pakistani Films" of all time in 2002.
Philippines
- Manila in the Claws of Light (1975) was voted the best Philippine film of all time with 16 votes (tied with Ganito Kami Noon, Paano Kayo Ngayon) in a 1989 poll of 28 filmmakers and critics, organized by Joel David and his UP film criticism class, and published in Philippine magazine National Midweek. The article also included a list of the most common number-one choices (topped by Manila in the Claws of Light), as well as an alternate version of the top 10 (topped by Manila by Night) which was ordered by average rank.
- Himala (Miracle, 1982) won the 2008 CNN Asia Pacific Screen Awards Viewers Choice as "Best Asia-Pacific Film of All Time" (voted for by thousands of film fans around the world).
Poland
- The Promised Land (1975) was voted the best Polish film of all time in a 2015 poll of 279 Polish film professionals organized by the Museum of Cinematography in Åódź.
- Teddy Bear (1980) was voted by the public of 2013 Filmfest PL as the best movie of all time.
Romania
- Reconstituirea (The Reenactment, 1968) was selected as the best Romanian film by 40 film critics in 2008.
Russia
- My Friend Ivan Lapshin (1985) was voted the best Russian film of all time with 47 votes in a 2008 poll of 100 filmmakers and critics, organized by Russian film magazine Seance.
See also Soviet Union, below.
Serbia
- Who Sings Over There (1980) was voted by Serbian critics the best Serbian film of all time.
Slovakia
- Pictures of the Old World (1972) was voted the best Slovak film of all time by Slovak critics in 2000.
See also Czechoslovakia, above.
Slovenia
- Dancing in the Rain (1961) was voted the best Slovenian film of all time in a poll by Slovenian critics.
South Korea
- Obaltan (1961) was voted the best Korean film of all time with 48 votes in a 1999 poll of 140 filmmakers organized by Korean newspaper The Chosun Ilbo. It was also voted the best Korean film of all time (tied with The Housemaid and The March of Fools) in a 2014 poll of 62 film scholars, critics, film professionals, researchers, and programmers organized by the Korean Film Archive.
- Shiri (1999) was voted the favorite film of Koreans with 11,918 votes in a 2002 online poll of 54,013 people conducted by Korean movie channel Orion Cinema Network.
- Memories of Murder (2003) was voted the best Korean film of all time with 806 votes in a 2014 audience poll of 1462 people organized by the Korean Film Archive.
Soviet Union
- Battleship Potemkin (1925) was ranked number 1 with 32 votes when the Festival Mondial du Film et des Beaux-Arts de Belgique asked 63 film professionals around the world, mostly directors, to vote for the best films of the half-century in 1951. It was ranked number 1 when the Brussels World's Fair polled 117 experts from 26 countries in 1958. It also ranked in the top 10, and was the highest ranked Soviet/Russian film in every Sight & Sound critics' poll between 1952 and 2002.
- Man with a Movie Camera (1929) was voted the eighth greatest film ever made in the British Film Institute's 2012 Sight & Sound poll.
- The Mirror (1975) ranked 9th in the 2012 Sight & Sound directors' poll.
See also Russia, above.
Spain
- Viridiana (1961) was voted the best Spanish film of all time with 227 votes in a 2016 poll of 350 experts organized by Spanish film magazine Caimán Cuadernos de Cine.
- El verdugo (1963) was voted the best Spanish film of all time with 77 votes in a 1995 poll of 100 critics and film professionals organized by Spanish film magazine Nickel Odeon.
Sri Lanka
- Ananta Rathiriya (1995) topped the British Film Institute's user poll of "Top 10 Sri Lankan Films" of all time in 2002.
- Pura Handa Kaluwara (1997) topped the British Film Institute's critics' poll of "Top 10 Sri Lankan Films" of all time in 2002.
Sweden
- The Phantom Carriage (Körkarlen, 1921) was voted the best Swedish film of all time with 30 votes in a poll of 50 film critics and academics conducted by film magazine FLM in 2012.
- Persona (1966) reached the highest position (number 5 in 1972) of any Swedish film on any of Sight & Sound's lists of greatest films of all time.
Taiwan
- A City of Sadness (æ²æ åå¸; 1989) was voted the best Chinese-language film of all time with 73 votes in a 2010 poll of 122 film professionals organized by the Taipei Golden Horse Film Festival. It was also number 5, the highest ranked Taiwanese film, on the Hong Kong Film Awards' list of the Best 100 Chinese Motion Pictures, voted by 101 filmmakers, critics, and scholars.
Turkey
- Yol (1982) was voted the best Turkish film of all time in a 2016 poll of 383 experts organized by Turkish magazine Notos. It was also selected as the best Turkish film in a 2003 poll undertaken by Ankara Sinema DerneÄi (Ankara Association for Cinema Culture) of people interested in cinema professionally.
Ukraine
- Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors (1965) was voted the best Ukrainian film of all time with 30 votes in a 2012 poll of about 100 journalists organized by the Cinema Journalism Bureau of Ukraine and the National Union of Cinematographers of Ukraine.
United Kingdom
- The Third Man (1949) was voted the best British film ever by 1000 industry professionals, academics, and critics in a British Film Institute poll conducted in 1999.
- Lawrence of Arabia (1962) was voted the "best British film of all time" in August 2004 by over 200 respondents in a Sunday Telegraph poll of Britain's leading filmmakers.
- Get Carter (1971) was voted the best British film ever in a 2003 poll by Hotdog magazine. It also topped the 2004 poll of 25 film critics conducted by Total Film.
- Don't Look Now (1973) was named the best British film in a poll of 150 film industry experts conducted by Time Out London in 2011.
- Monty Python and the Holy Grail (1975) was voted the best British picture of all time by 7000 film fans in a 2004 poll by the UK arm of Amazon and Internet Movie Database.
- The Italian Job (1969) was voted the best British film in a poll of film fans conducted by Sky Movies HD in 2011 when it received 15% of votes. It also topped a 2017 survey by Vue Entertainment.
United States
- Gone with the Wind (1939) was voted the favorite film of Americans in a poll of 2,279 adults undertaken by Harris Interactive in 2008, and again in a follow-up poll of 2,276 adults in 2014. It was also voted the best American film of all time by 35,000 members of the American Film Institute in 1977. It was picked in 2011 as the best film for Best in Film: The Greatest Movies of Our Time, an online poll in which over 500,000 votes were cast. Voters chose from a list of 10 English-language films selected by film industry experts.
- Citizen Kane (1941) was selected as the greatest American film in 2015 by sixty-two international film critics surveyed by the BBC. It was also ranked top in every Sight & Sound critics' poll between 1962 and 2002, and the directors' poll in 1992 and 2002. The American Film Institute polled 1,500 film community leaders for the lists 100 Years...100 Movies and 100 Years...100 Movies (10th Anniversary Edition) in 1998 and 2007 respectively, asking voters to choose from a list of 400 nominations. Both polls identified Citizen Kane as the best American film ever. It was voted the best American film of all time with 156 votes in a 1977 poll of 203 experts from 22 countries (116 Americans and 87 non-Americans). The poll was organized by the Royal Belgian Film Archive of Belgium and titled "The most important and misappreciated American films", and they were looking for subjective choices.
- Vertigo (1958) topped the Sight & Sound critics' poll in 2012 with 191 votes.
- The Godfather (1972) was selected as the greatest film by 2,120 industry professionals in a Hollywood survey undertaken by The Hollywood Reporter in 2014.
Uruguay
- Whisky (2004) was voted the best Uruguayan film of all time by 22 members of the Uruguayan Film Critics Association in 2015.
Venezuela
- El Pez que Fuma (1977) was voted the best Venezuelan film of all time with 22 votes in a 1987 poll of 29 experts organized by Imagen magazine. It was also voted the best Venezuelan film of all time with 33 votes in a 2016 poll of 41 experts organized by the Fundación Cinemateca Nacional.
See also
- List of best picture awards
- List of film awards
- List of highest-grossing films
- List of film-related topics
- List of films with a 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes
- List of films considered the worst
- List of video games considered the best
References
External links
- "The 1,000 Greatest Films" at They Shoot Pictures, Don't They?
- The American Film Institute's 100 Years, 100 Movies
- Sight & Sound magazine: The 50 Greatest Films of All Time
- Top 250 as rated by IMDb Users
- The BFI 100: A selection of the favourite British films of the 20th century at the Wayback Machine (archived June 29, 2011)
- Village Voice 250 best films of the 20th century list at the Wayback Machine (archived February 9, 2008)