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Regina, Saskatchewan
/Regina is a place for thoughtful discussion and events in our little city on the prairie.
In Zootopia (2016) "Jerry Vole" is a parody of famous Italian-American crooner Jerry Vale who cameoed in Scorsese's mob movies Goodfellas and Casino. In the very next scene, the protagonists meet the local mafia boss / godfather "Mr Big".
What kind of playing cards do they use in Spanish/Italian/German/Swiss casinos?
submitted by bigcoinpage to AskReddit [link] [comments]
What kind of playing cards do they use in Spanish/Italian/German/Swiss casinos?
submitted by urlradar3 to askweb [link] [comments]
Would anyone else enjoy playing U.S. vs Germans in some lesser played comabt arenas? Such as Battle of the Bulge or maybe Italian theatre like Monte Casino
submitted by Sgt-Pumpernickel to BattlefieldV [link] [comments]
TIL: The two Issi Classics used for the Casino Heist are painted in red and blue, both have white roof, because the 3 Mini Coopers featured in the tube chase in The Italian Job were red, blue and white.
submitted by tienlp to gtaonline [link] [comments]
TIL An Italian enclave within Switzerland called Campione d'Italia used to live entirely from the proceeds of the local casino, which was Europe's largest, without the need for any other taxes or revenues - until it went bankrupt in 2018. Now the entire village is in debt & may become a ghost town.
In the film The Irishman (2019), a lot of the individual members of the Northeast Pennsylvania (Italian) Mafia and others wanted JFK to win in '60, thinking he would overthrow Castro and thus 'get them back their casinos'. Did mafias in the US own much property in pre-revolution Cuba?
submitted by PleasantBoot to AskHistorians [link] [comments]
In the film The Irishman (2019), a lot of the individual members of the Northeast Pennsylvania (Italian) Mafia and others wanted JFK to win in '60, thinking he would overthrow Castro and thus 'get them back their casinos'. Did mafias in the US own much property in pre-revolution Cuba?
submitted by HistAnsweredBot to HistoriansAnswered [link] [comments]
A rabbit, who isn’t currently residing on the roof of a casino in a small Michigan Township, has his fur tangled - related by a person with a slightly stereotypical Italian accent.
A hair is in a knot on a hare, who is a-not on a Harrahs in Onota.
submitted by BlueScreenDeath to WordAvalanches [link] [comments]
Hey can any Italians more specifically in Milan tell me which casino/poker venues I could join? I will be there durning Monday to Friday, and will there be cash games and so on?
submitted by ZukZ to poker [link] [comments]
Currently on a commercial shoot for a casino in the midwest. Saw this hanging up in an Italian reaturant.
JoJo's Bizarre OC Tournament #5 - Round 3 Match 11 - Tiger "Glitch" Ricky and Effie Linder vs Bucket and Alexis Williams
The results are in for Match 9. The winner is… William Eyelash, with a score of 68 to Jacob Brown’s 68, tie broken by a higher ‘categories taken’ count! Category | Winner | Point Totals | Comments |
Popularity | The Graveyard Shift | 16-13 | |
Quality | The Graveyard Shift | 22-20 | Reasoning |
JoJolity | Masters of Funky Action | 20-25 | Reasoning |
Conduct | Tie | 10-10 | |
William Eyelash had taken the lead in this match, and though as a leader, he hadn’t done the best job, getting Jack visibly injured, as a combatant, he had managed to withstand the aggressive and area-painting onslaughts of himself from not so long ago, and of a much more experienced version of the partner he’d once had.
It had made him catch his breath, reflect on all that had come to this point, to recall that moment where Ocean Eyes had been the one to embrace and protect him.
“Yes… I understand now,” William answered, walking carefully through the snow, “you had something good going there, Jacob Brown, but… Y-you didn’t seriously think I would fall for tricks like those coming from my own Stand, did you?”
Didn’t even know it could do all that, though… Even now, I can still grow, huh? That put a smile on his face, then, as he approached the injured Jack, helping him up. “You still with us?”
“Hee hee, I’ll peachy keen as peachy cream in a little while… But right now I’m very much hurting yes.” Jack chuckled, resting his eyes and looking things over. “In the end, though… I called that other me in the hoodie an impostor, but he knew my Stand better than I did. He was even more
me than me… What does that mean?” He looked down. “Am… Am
I the lie?”
“I, uh… I don’t know how to answer that,” William said, “but… You’re one of the most genuine people I’ve ever met. And, uh… You helped me out a ton. Sorry for getting you hurt, uh, not that used to leading, but you really seemed to trust in me…”
“We all make mistakes!” Jack said, not minding that at all, “but… I suppose you’re right. I won’t let some stranger get in my head… But I guess that all of us were telling the truth in our hearts, then.” He looked to the defeated ‘Billy’ and the slightly-older Jacob, both bleeding and unconscious, the latter falling much faster. Already, a strange white blob was moving through the snowfield towards them, examining them. “So I guess we spare them today... if they survive what we’ve given already!”
Neither would realize it for another few minutes, but for Jacob Brown, those words had proven prophetic.
“S-still though… If you’ve really lived a full life here, become the same person with the same Stand, same memories,” William said, “does that mean that can just… Happen? But how, wh-when really, by probability and stuff…”
“So is the unusual burden of ‘Fate,’ felt strongest upon this city,” a familiar, altered voice spoke, and sitting on a park bench, William and Jack spied none other than the Institute’s head, still heavily layered as he always was.
“Oh No…” William muttered.
“‘Oh no?’ Is this a problem of a person?” Jack asked, then giggled. “Heeheh, just a little joke. I know about the Institute, of course!”
“The ‘Fortuna Double’ might exist at any point in time, for any Stand User from outside its walls, and no matter how irreconcilable the circumstances, how ‘impossible’ it should be for two people to have the same fated path, even for the slight differences of the city… The ‘Same Person’ can unquestionably exist. Wouldn’t be surprised if you, ‘Jack,’ and this ‘Billy’ here were simply the first you encountered who were close enough to your age that you immediately noticed.” No tilted his head.
“Why, even that cute creature who followed the elder Jacob Brown is, literally, the same being as the Bert that just died… Yet, unlike them, bound still by fate. I wonder, then, what will prove to be the same, to be indomitable ‘fate,’ and what will prove not so.” “I think sometimes about if I’ve ever had one here… Or will, in the future. That sounds utterly boring if so, though. I refuse to know my fate; it’s vexing enough of a limit on myself that I’m burdened by, knowing it’s predetermined to exist at all.” “Uh… Right.” This
was heavy, huh? William tried to figure out what it all meant. “Fortuna Doubles, huh… So they’re both real, completely and absolutely, then?”
“Precisely!” No remarked, cheerily.
“Would you like to speak more about this? Go on, sit with me.” Only a few hours remain still in your window of time to vote in a match between an Agnes and some Guy in a crowded concert hall brought down to size. Scenario:
Alexis Williams was sinking.
Every day, the myriad of matters which plagued the outwardly-cheerful woman’s mind seemed to be growing worse and worse. The unhealthy relationship she’d had with her Stand had turned into an even worse sort of tension, a fundamental disconnect with an aspect of herself which she literally could not be away from.
It hadn’t been uncommon for some time for her to wonder if a given day would be her last. Over the last several months, those feelings had only grown and grown in their intensity, in their power over her, and it had even begun to show outwardly.
It wouldn’t be long now, surely, before-
Alexis’ hotel room door was kicked so hard that one of the hinges flew off, and through it launched, not an attacker like she might have imagined, some hostile Stand User out to invade her home, but something arguably even worse.
“ALEXIS!”
Her friend and fellow Eighth Circle mainstay, Bucket.
She clutched her forehead and forced a smile, turning away from what she’d been using to get through the day and towards him. Already, she could tell that the chaos agent, formerly known for the octopus on his head, now sporting sick sarashi and a pompadour, was here with intentions ranging from ‘good’ to ‘no intentions whatsoever,’ and it wasn’t in her nature to tell someone like that to fuck off.
“Bucket! Hey!” She said, an edge to her chipper tone. “You, uh, surprised me there… You’re gonna fix that door, right?” She blinked. “Wait, weren’t you at that Metra show? I thought I’d heard everyone there was shrunk down to-”
“Forget about that!” He answered, earnestly drawing closer, grasping her by the wrists suddenly, yet at once gently. “Alexis, I don’t know what’s going on with your head or heart or anything else, but I know I can’t just stand around outside your door watching you get more and more miserable! Even I noticed, so it must be really really bad whatever’s hurting you inside! I’m an acolyte of the boogie now, the example of Rudolf Pavlova, so I can’t let a friend be in need!”
“Rudolf…” Alexis had heard of his passing, so soon after helping her put on such a wonderful show, and been unsurprised. Wait, though, since when did Bucket- Ah, never mind. She shook her head, looking him in the eye. The highly chaotic, unstable hellraiser of the Judecca Highrollers was giving her puppy-dog eyes. “Did… Did you want to do something?”
“Yes! I want to make you better!” Bucket exclaimed, pulling away and bouncing upwards. “So c’mon! Let’s head out… Make some trouble, follow no rules but our own and to be happy!” He stopped, then, pulling back a moment, as if reading the room once again, folding his arms over his chest. “I mean, if you want to.”
Alexis thought it over. He meant well, clearly, and wished dearly to cheer her up… A person didn’t need to understand the nuances of the soul to see when a person was hurting, and to reach out for them.
She doubted it would make things better for her, but who’s to say it needed to be?
“That sounds great,” she said, relaxing her forced cheer slightly and nodding. “Maybe it’s what I need right about now.”
The Woods at Aurelio - Midday - Near the Northern Bridge
“So you’re sure that he’s got a base out here?”
“Crystal clear!” Tiger ‘Glitch’ Ricky answered Effie Linder, tilting her head one way and then the other as she and her Stand attempted to scope out the sounds of the area. “There was only basically one cop left and then Ugo made them quit, took the place over, paid them off… So now he just sorta comes and goes around that little old ‘empty’ police station!”
“If he hangs out at the town’s police station,” Effie asked, confused at her coworker’s demeanor, “then why are we out this far away from it?”
“Because!” Glitch answered, huffing and folding her arms. “I said he comes and goes! And prrobably isn’t there right now. Mrr, you’re the one who wanted to come out here with me, so let’s keep searching!”
“…” Effie nodded. “You know what, fair enough. He never was the type to stay still long, so looking where the Watch is going would be a start…”
Since that day she fought that shithead twink Agnes and that Italian twink Arpeggi at Tigran Sins’ casino, Glitch had been gradually, increasingly mulling over the idea of becoming something not so much unlike the latter… A vigilante, out to not just cause problems on purpose, but sometimes even solve them on purpose, in the way a Stand User knew best: shenanigans and violence.
Hearing about the way that Ugo McBaise had sabotaged the capture of the very villains whose challenge had inspired her to act, had directly gotten people killed and responsible for dangerous people staying at large, that felt like reason plenty to break out ‘shenanigans and violence’ on him.
Effie caught her on the way out, and had said then, “what, am I gonna wait around for Fira to send me on some bullshit errand? If you’re turning that piece of shit’s head concave, I’m in too.”
And so, enthusiastically, Effie had joined, and the pair had been circling the outskirts of town atop Vida Loca ever since, Effie also using her murder of crows for further observations than what her eyes alone could tell her.
Glitch’s ears perked, as did her Stand. “…something’s up ahead. A bunch of people hanging out by the river…”
“Hm? Yeah, I think I see it!” Effie remarked, producing a pair of binoculars to look that way. “VALKYRIE guys… You know what that means up here, don’t you?”
Though most of the company fell in line with Rushen Smith’s new leadership, it was something of an open secret that Ugo McBaise had very specifically drilled the former Neighborhood Watch, which had become a new unit of the company, into being loyal to him, not to his rank. Fears being stoked about the potential of ANVIL going to war with the town was all that kept them from being disbanded outright, feeling that people familiar with the area were best-suited for watching it.
Glitch hissed. “Alright, then, you know what we’ve gotta do!”
“Wait, it looks like they’re being talked through something by…” Effie adjusted the binoculars, peered through the crowd, and recognized a very identifiable vest… and a bald head, shining in the midday sun. “Mr. Jones?”
Mr. Jones had been having a good few weeks himself, ever since his earlier, very successful outing with Dread. It had ended in him successfully acquiring not just any ‘Memento,’ but perhaps one of the city’s most dangerous, and the life-fearing compliance of the kidnapped alleged immortal who led it to him, taught him its secrets.
Apparently some kitty somewhere was sad about that, but eh, when you’re making an omelette, yeah?
“Wait wait wait,” he said affably to the crowd of VALKYRIE agents he’d once called a neighborhood watch, “you say a guy in a blue pomp and a dancer’ve been… Spray painting your cars? Throwin’ dead fish at ya? Sprayin’ ink to get away?” He snickered. “You’ve had a hell of a morning with this prankster pair, then, if they keep givin’ you the slip.”
“Please, Mr. Jones,” a young man said as he continued to wipe fish guts off of his helmet visor, “I… I know, technically, you aren’t our leader anymore, that the bosses don’t like you much, but.” He sniffled, earnestly. “But you’ve always been so good to us, even since then! You’ve been loyal to us, and we still love you for it, no matter what they say you did!”
“Heheh… Hearin’ you say that makes it worth it, y’know that?” Mr. Jones wiped a finger under the eye of his sunglasses, looking them over. “Think I know who might be the whodunnit-er here, actually. Just gimme a hot minute to track the guy down, and-”
“Got a lot of nerve talking to my men, Jones.”
Everyone went silent, then, at the sound of a hammer, for dramatic effect, being dragged along the pavement of the road, then swung in the air by an absolute cinderblock of a man.
“You got a problem, and you come running to him because he happened to be passing by? What happened to using your damn heads?” Ugo chewed his subordinates out, then, before looking to the neighborhood watch founder. “I think you’ve confused these people, Worm, by still keeping up that paternal reliable neighbor shit. They’ve all been taught well and good that they listen to me, not some replacement,” he pointed his hammer forward, then, threateningly, “and sure as hell not some serial killing scum!”
“Now now now, Ugo, c’mon, it’s clear they like us both, yeah? So let’s just… Clear the confusion up, if y’care that much!” Mr. Jones reached for the sabre sheathed at his side, then, drawing it with a golden sheen; he’d fished it out of the wreckage of Capital Island one day after it wasn’t destroyed in Jack’s ritual. He, too, pointed it forward. “I know the language you speak, so let’s talk in that.”
Ugo grunted, then, swinging his hammer back over his shoulder as a very feminine form appeared behind him, looking like something of a curvy, thickset cowgirl. “Aw, Ugo and I concur, y’all know we’re down t’bash some heads and take a name or two! Why, sugar, we’re about to put you down like a sick dog!”
Mr. Jones got a snicker out of the odd word choices of ‘She’s a Big Boy,’ finding the contrast between Stand and User in all but their brutal aggression amusing; sometimes he’d tried in the past to talk to him and unpack what the Stand actually said about Ugo’s soul, but it was a conversation the very straightforward, taciturn former football star never quite liked to have.
Jones gestured with his head, then. “Watch, get back to HQ, yeah? Whoever you see walk through that door, few hours from now, respect that, yeah?”
“Uh… S-sure?” The ex-Watch member who’d been speaking said, turning around. “C’mon, guys, let’s get pizza or something… I guess.”
Alexis had been sitting by the bank of the Wormwood River, mulling over the shenanigans Bucket had encouraged her to join in with, ever since she’d happened to spot all the Watch members they’d been harassing seemingly surround somebody; it was an action which led Bucket to say ‘just gimme a minute’ before diving into the water.
It was a shame, honestly. This harmless problem causing had actually been kind of fun, in a way.
Bucket splashed up soon after. “I knew it!”
“Knew what?”
“There was this bald guy talking to all the VALKYRIE guys about all our awesome pranks, and then that no-good bastard Ugo showed up and they started slugging it out and moving towards a sewer grate. And then, you wouldn’t believe it… The bald guy turned into Conqueror Worm!”
That gave Alexis pause, then. He was here? “We… We should probably go somewhere else, then! If people out there are fighting, I want no part in it whatsoever… And you probably shouldn’t anger guys like that either.”
“I can’t just turn away from this, Alexis! I’m here to cheer you up, and that guy… When he helped kidnap you, that’s when you started to feel even worse! So, I’m going to roll up there, give him my fiercest look possible, and make him apologize for being mean to you.”
That… Wasn’t where Alexis was expecting Bucket to end that sentence, but it made her sigh, momentarily. Her mood was good and ruined now anyway by these revelations, and Bucket was suggesting something dangerous nonetheless. “Look, Bucket, not everybody is good-natured, okay? You can’t just walk up to somebody and-”
“But I will!” Bucket insisted, flexing. “Because I have the power of ‘the boogie’ on my side, don’t you get it? This will cheer you so far up! You don’t even need to come along if you don’t want, because I dunno I might punch Ugo a bit if he hits first! But either way, you will get your apology, I swear it!”
Then, Bucket ran off. To confront two very dangerous brick shithouses of men. In a sewer.
“He’s going to get himself killed…” Alexis felt awful now, standing and looking Southward. She could just leave, couldn’t she? Bucket even said he wasn’t expecting her to follow when it could turn into a fight… In the end, were humans not all fated to fall victim to their own mistakes, their own vices and eccentricities?
…I can’t just leave a friend like that, even if I’m feeling bad.
“Bucket!” Alexis called, beginning to run after him. “Wait up for me! I’m coming along too! Let’s… Get that apology!”
She was having to babysit the guy who came to help her out, now, was that it?
“Ghhgh, it’s a two-for-one special on the worst in the city, isn’t it?” Glitch complained, trailing Effie down a ladder into the sewers. “First we’re tailing Ugo, and then Mr. Jones, and now they’re fighting… I don’t even know who’s worse!”
“One’s a serial killer, and yeah super dangerous,” Effie pointed out, “and the other keeps getting a lot of other people killed with his own dangerous stupidity… Keeps causing us problems, and helped escalate that warzone. I don’t like being an enemy of ANVIL, Glitch… I really don’t.”
“Mmrhh… They’re gonna get a piece of our best attacks.”
The pair, then, touched ground, and Effie saw around them the signs of battle, of pieces of the ground seemingly terraformed, nicked, busted-up, and the sounds of clashing in the distance. Undoubtedly them.
Then, though, as they stepped forward, soon after, a pair literally dropped down behind them, one after the other, first a scarred, pompadoured idiot doing a cool roll, then a redheaded gymnast landing coolly not far behind.
“Wait a minute… Bucket? And, uh, that performer from that thing everyone liked… Alexis Williams?” Effie remarked, backing away a bit, trying to figure out the pair’s intentions. “What are you doing here?”
“Oh, you know!” Alexis tilted her head, very blatant in how forced the chipper tone had become, especially by the nature of what she’d said next. “Losing control of my life, letting weird things get out of hand… But I’m here now. I’ve committed to my choice, and I hear sounds further back. So, Bucket! Let’s get a move-on, yeah? I don’t particularly care much for being in a sewer…”
Bucket, however, had been unmoving since he had begun to stand. Glitch, too, faced directly his way, allowing him to look her in the eye as a strange expression came over them both.
Effie and Alexis, then, were deeply confused, until Vida Loca appeared, and the sounds of beatboxing seemed to fill the air.
“Wh-” Effie was taken aback. “Glitch, we’ve got something going on here. You’re not seriously going to-”
“Hey fishman, the cat’s here to catch ya / Tiger ‘Glitch’ Ricky on the mic comin’ atcha / In a hotel or a diner or even a sewer / My rhymes gonna run you through like a skewer!”
This was physically painful for Alexis to watch. She covered her mouth as she prepared for Bucket to open his, well aware that half of their social circle was probably going to slap him for whatever came out.
“Name’s Bucket, B-U-C-K-E-T / Got beat but came back now with the Boogie! / Was chasin’ a killer but this fish can still school you / With my friend Alexis here, my rhymes’ll hit true!”
“…hit true?” Alexis couldn’t help but find that groan-inducingly hilarious, though her momentary joy, then, was cut short by the fact that Effie, meanwhile, was absolutely seething.
“C’mon, do this literally any other time!” She exasperatedly proclaimed, tugging at Glitch’s arm, “we can’t let those assholes get away, c’mon, you know we need to cut this out and-”
Bucket threw a fish at Effie’s face.
Everyone went silent, then, as it slid off and hit the ground, her own expression dry with displeasure.
“Did… Did you just throw a fish at me?”
“Yeah! Because you keep ruining the vibes!” Bucket huffed. “So cut it the hell out, or I will do it again!”
“Really now,” Effie said, keeping her hand by her slingshot and beginning to walk further Southward. “If you keep distracting us, I’ll have to get you out of our way.”
One of Bucket’s massive knives, then, was drawn, blade resting centimeters from Effie’s face. “Don’t threaten me, alright? That’s completely against the spirit of this.”
Glitch hissed, then, her own mood ruined, “hey! You can’t just pull a weapon on my friend like that, even if she’s being a spoilsport! That’s way over-the-line!”
As both sides fell back, not losing sight of the other as they attempted to pull away and regroup, it was clear that three-fourths of the quartet had been angered enough at one another in an instant that a fight was about to brew.
Alexis had been deliberately trying not to send out her Stand this entire time, wanting some semblance of mental distance from it after their disagreements had turned increasingly mean, her literal fighting with herself and grappling with her demons leaving her wanting absolutely none of this.
Bucket was about to get himself killed over, easily, the stupidest thing she had ever seen a fight start over.
This day has gone from sad to fun to the most frustrating I have ever seen… I tried to make a good day out of it, but here I am now. I can’t just abandon Bucket after he tried for me… But boy is he trying me.
OPEN THE GAME!
(Credit to CaptainSpooky27 for yet more awesome match art!)
Location: One of Los Fortuna’s sewer pathways, specifically far on the Northwestern outskirts of the town of Aurelio. These are one of the many entrances to the elaborate and interconnected underground networks of the city, though you’re in a pretty straightforward section of it that doesn’t branch off all that many surprising ways.
Not far South from here, but distant enough that it won’t ever affect this match, you can hear the sounds of a simultaneous battle between Mr. Jones and Ugo McBaise.
The area here is 63 meters by 33 meters with each tile being 3 by 3 meters. With TGS on the left and JHR on the right, represented by their character tokens.
The light grey tiles are the concrete paths, the darker grey tiles are the walls, and the blue tiles are sewer water. The walls are solid all the way through.
The sewer itself is actually relatively clean here, as clean as underground sewer water can be really. The water level is about 1 foot below the walkways and the water is 3 meters deep.
The ceiling is 4 meters above the walkways and the walkways have cheap metal guardrails between themselves and the water, as represented by the bolded outlines. The orange rectangles are the metal bridges between the walkways and the yellow circles are open manhole covers with light streaming through. The grey triangles are strange stalagmite-like protrusions, likely somehow created by Ugo and Jones’ fight. They match the same material as the stone walls, take up most of the walkway in width, and reach up to the ceiling.
Goal: RETIRE your opponents!
Additional Information: Logic is allowed to kill me(Kak) and both of the players who made me write this.
Team | Combatant | JoJolity |
Judecca Highrollers | Bucket | "Are you mocking me? You went into the ground with your zipper? Are you copying me?" This whole thing has gotten so absolutely lame, that it’s killed your attempts to cheer your friend up and to have an awesome rap battle. So these guys are lame, and need to feel it! Make sure to find creative ways for your strategy to humiliate your opponents! |
Judecca Highrollers | Alexis Williams | “You think that you can escape my punches when you're surrounded by walls of dirt?” Bucket’s gotten people into another frustrating situation by not thinking, huh? Well, you’ll get him out of this in one piece by using your head. Use this underground sewer environment to your advantage! |
The Graveyard Shift | Effie Linder | “They say that sound reverberates better in liquids than in solids.” Seriously, Glitch? Seriously? Well, at least as long as you’re in this gnarly sewer, you can get something out of it by using your head. Use this underground sewer environment to your advantage! |
The Graveyard Shift | Tiger “Glitch” Ricky | "Do you think you stand a chance against me by going underground?!" So now you and your opponents are going to be trying to one-up each other, huh? Bucket is an immensely clownable guy, dammit, and you were so hyped to do so verbally… Make sure to find creative ways for your strategy to humiliate your opponents! |
Link to the Official Player Spreadsheet
Link to Match Schedule
As always, if you would like to interact with the tournament community and be among the first to get updates for the tournament, please feel free to PM a member of our Judge staff for an invite to our Official Discord Server!
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@TelegraphWorld: RT @NickSquires1: Italian prince who appeared in 007 movie Casino Royale mobilises campaign against construction of a rubbish dump near Roman emperor's villa. @TelegraphWorld https://t.co/aVsApG1MVP
Black Nobility and the Vatican.
The black nobility is the base of the global crime syndicate that controls this planet. The black nobility or black aristocracy are the aristocratic families that sided with the papacy under Pope Pius IX after the army of the Kingdom of Italy led by the Savoy family entered Rome on September 20, 1870, overthrew the pope . and the Papal States, and took over the Quirinal Palace, and the nobles later ennobled by the Pope prior to the Lateran Treaty of 1929. Any family that produced popes for the Vatican is royalty. Most of the black nobility are Vatican royalty. The black nobility consider themselves sovereign princes. These families earned the title of "black" nobility for their relentless unscrupulousness. They used murder, rape, kidnapping, robbery and all kinds of deception on a large scale, without resisting the achievement of their objectives. The black nobility were the families that financed and created the holy corporation of the Vatican with the aim of imposing world slavery as a necessary institution, with the sole belief that some are born to rule and others to be ruled. The idea that certain families were born to rule as an arbitrary elite, while the vast majority of a given population is condemned to oppression, servitude, or slavery became the theological position of this elite. The "New World Order" is an attempt to take control of society by these fascist families with the purpose of the total slavery of humanity.
The Vatican is an imperial nation and is the largest empire in this world. The Vatican City, or the Holy Vatican Corporation, officially the Vatican City State, is a nation that operates as the largest intelligence network in the world. The Holy See is the "All-Seeing Eye" in society and a corporate entity connected to many other corporations and governments through papal and royal statutes. Archbishops and high-level bishops are the overseers of society within their districts and oversee politics, police, business, and organized crime. The same year that the professor of ecclesiastical law and practical philosophy at the University of Ingolstadt, Adam Weishaupt, created the Order of the Illuminati, was the same year that they created the United States as a corporation to run it as their private army and lead I dig the agenda of a "New World Order" for the elites, mainly, thanks to the infiltrated Freemasonry and directed by the Jesuits.
The New World Order is a conspiracy of lineage at the top. They are ancient and evil bloodlines that build and destroy empires for control through an order out of chaos. Royal and noble houses are corporate entities and claim to rule and own land, resources, and people. Landlords have always been the dominant owners of gold and precious metals. They empower and finance bankers and entrepreneurs to work for them through their corporate homes. They authorize and issue the creation of laws, agencies, the military, companies, and universities. They create and run religions and secret societies. They also finance and organize organized crime syndicates as if they were commercial enterprises. Some of the major royal bloodlines include Savoy, Bourbon, Medici, Glücksburg, Wittelsbach, Nassau-Weilberg, Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, Romanov, Grimaldi, Orleans, Braganza, Habsburg, Hannover, Windsor, Saud, Thani, Khalifa, Alouwite , Zogu, Hohenzollern, Orange-Nassau, Bonaparte and Bernadotte. Many royal bloodlines still rule their nations as heads of state such as the United Kingdom, Belgium, the Netherlands, Denmark, Monaco, Spain, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Morocco, Sweden, Norway, and Luxembourg. The Vatican City State is also a kingdom with the Pope of Rome as its monarch. The Black Nobility are the ancient bloodlines of the Papal States and they own the Holy See and the Vatican. They produced the first popes of Rome and held leadership positions in the Vatican from its inception. The Colonna and Torlonia still hold the hereditary positions of the Assistant Princes to the Papal Throne. The black nobility consider themselves sovereign princes. The Vatican is used as a central point of control and the Holy See is one of the oldest and most criminal corporate entities in existence. The Spanish Catholic Church is immensely rich, it has not suffered the crisis and also enjoys a true tax haven, being free to pay taxes, such as the IBI, works, companies, etc. The vast majority of the assets in their possession and on their accounts are completely opaque. This situation is illegitimate, unfair and presumably illegal, and this occurs with the complicity and consent of the public powers.
The Erlach and Brandi families are Swiss tax advisers who enable corruption, bribery, criminal financing, and money laundering. The Swiss Guard is the one that protects the Vatican City State. The Swiss cantons have been in contract with the Vatican for centuries and Switzerland is basically a papal state with the noble Roman saints claiming partial ownership. The German house of Baden-Zahringen founded Bern, in Switzerland. The House of Savoy ruled the regions of Switzerland for hundreds of years. Some of the most important bloodlines of the Black Nobility are: Massimo, Colonna, Pallavicini, Odescalchi, Ruspoli, Orsini, Aldobrandini, Sforza-Cesarini, Boncompagni-Ludovisi, Chigi-Albani-Della Rovere, Doria-Pamphilj, Rospigliosi, Giustiniani , Torlonia, Corsini, Borghese, Del Drago, Lucchesi-Palli, and Gaetani. The Pecci and Pacelli families are more recent bloodlines of the Black Nobility. The black nobility share ownership over the Holy See, which is a corporate entity based in the Vatican City State that was established as a nation in 1929 under Benito Mussolini, who was put in power by the House of Savoy. The Mussolini and Franco families became nobles after their fascist regimes. The Black Nobility also owns the Knights of Malta, the Jesuits, and the Cosa Nostra. The Black Nobility established branches in southern Italy and married Sicilian-Campanian nobles such as the Lanza di Scalea, Adragna, Sanseverino, Tomasi di Lampedusa, Paterno, Cattaneo, Serena di Lapigio and Rocco di Torrepadula families. Many Italian crime families were Sicilian nobles like the Bonanno and Bellomo families. Both the mafia bosses and the Italian and Spanish nobles call themselves Dons, which is the equivalent of Boos (boss) of crime. The Savoy, Savoy-Aosta, Medici, Borbon-Dos Sicilias, and Borbon-Parma families are members of Italian royalty and are married to various European royal bloodlines and Black Nobility. Most of the monarchs are members of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta. Prince Carlo Massimo has been overseeing the Sovereign Military Order of Malta as President of the Italian Association of SMOM. The Knights of Malta have an undercover operation at the Jesuit School of Foreign Service in Georgetown, run by Joel Hellman. The Jesuits and the Knights of Malta basically run the Defense Department alongside British Crown agents and high-level Freemasons. Prince Carlo de Borbón-Dos Sicilias is a high commander of the Society of Jesus through his Sacred Constantinian Military Order of Saint George. The Jesuits were authorized by Pope Paul III of the Farnese family. The Bourbon-Dos Sicilias and Borbon-Parma families are the continuation of the Farnese family, the name Farnesivs is engraved in the Jesuit headquarters called the Church of Gesu in Rome. The Farnese family lived in a pentagonal fortress called Farnese Villa Caprarola, which is the basis for the design of the American Pentagon. Jesuits are involved in education, politics, banking, science, law, and especially military intelligence. The Italian Bourbons have established residences all over the world, including Florida. Jesuits need to be investigated and banned, they have rightly been expelled from almost every country in the world, but they always end up coming back. In Spain three times, his last return was at the hands of General Franco.
The Holy See is a corporate body that issues laws and bills, such as the Golden Bull, which claims ownership of the Kingdom of England and identifies the emperor as the sovereign of the only legitimate universal empire, directly chosen by God. The Pope claims temporal power or ownership over the Earth and also claims Papal Supremacy or Papal Rule and Papal Infallibility. Infallibility means incapable of being wrong. The Roman Curia or Papal Court is the highest organized council in society and is directly supervised by the two “Assistants of the Prince to the Pontifical Throne”, these two positions are held by the princes of the Colonna and Torlonia families. They work with a higher level princely council of the Italian nobility that works with another council made up of the Roman nobility. The Italian and Austrian nobility are married to each other and work closely together leading the Sovereign Military Order of Malta, which is a sovereign entity equivalent to that of a sovereign nation. The Italian Nobility, La Cosa Nostra and the German and Austrian Nobles, run the Jewish Mafia. Royalty and nobles have massive amounts of wealth in private bank accounts in Switzerland. They use the Nazi-founded Bank for International Settlements to steal wealth from central banks through fraudulent tax contracts and then launder and hide the wealth in private bank accounts in Switzerland. The main Italian lineages still active include the Massimo, Colonna, Pallavicini, Torlonia, Aldobrandini, Ruspoli, Orsini, Gaetani-D'Aragona, Borbón-Parma, Odescalchi, Borghese, Adragni, Chigi, Medici, Borromeo, Doria-Pamphilj, Sacchetti, Savoy, Grimaldi and Bourbon. These bloodlines oversee the various specters of society. Outside of this power structure is the Committee of 300 with an inner circle made up of the leading monarchs and princes of Europe and the former Holy Roman Empire with members from Windsor, Spencer, Cecil, Percy, Hohenlohe-Langenburg, Habsburg, Bonaparte, Orleans, Bernadotte, Lagergren, Glucksburg, Hannover, Furstenberg, Austria-East, Hohenberg, Hesse, Nassau-Weilberg, Habsburg-Lorraine, Saxe Coburg and Gotha, Saxony-Weimar-Eisenach, Saxony-Meiningen, Braganza, Orange-Nassau, Hohenzollern , Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, Liechtenstein, Rothschild, FitzJames, Lobkowicz, Ligne, Merode, Romanov, Thurn and Taxis, Schwarzenberg, Orsini-Rosenberg, Windisch-Graetz, Esterhazy and other families. Many members who do not have noble status on the Committee of 300 are representatives of the royal families.
These families are all enemies of humanity and have conspired to enslave the world for centuries. They authorize and create corporations and billionaires, run religions, states, secret societies, the mafia, and organized crime syndicates. Royal families in Europe are mainly divided into two factions, and this dates back to the Guelph merchants and Ghibelline landowners. All other groups like Bilderberg, CFR, and the Trilateral Commission are lower-level organizations. All roads lead to Rome, which is the basis of its control system. The European Constitutional Monarchies are branches of the corporate empire of Rome. Constitutional Monarchies are ruled by blood-appointed heads of state and serve Rome through the Sovereign Military Order of Malta. The Pope claims temporary or physical ownership of the Earth. The Pope claims to be infallible of error. The Pope claims ownership over all souls through the papal doctrine of "Papal Supremacy." The Pope is a leader for the Black Nobility of Italy.
The Jesuits are a military priesthood officially established by Pope Paul III A.K. to Alessandro Farnese of the Farnese family. The Jesuits were officially established under the Papal Bull called Regimini Militantis Ecclesiae, which means Military Regiment of the Church as the continuation of the Templars. The Black Nobles are the true owners and controllers of the Vatican and maintain their control throughout the centuries by installing their relatives as high-level popes and bishops. At present the Torlonia and Colonna families who have the hereditary positions of Prince Assistants to the Papal Throne are those who supervise the pope. In turn Pope Francis supervises all members of the Catholic Church and also supervises the various secret societies that are connected with the Church.
The Jesuits are also a Masonic order and were the continuation of the Templar orders when they were banned. The Roman Catholic Church mocks Christians by performing rituals where they pretend to drink blood and eat human flesh known as the Eucharist, also called Holy Sacrifice. The New Testament did not exist until about 1600 and the Old Testament is even more recent than the new. It was the Vatican and European monarchs who created both the New and the Old Testaments. The last official version of the bible was published in 1777.
The bishops and priests operate as supervisors and the Jesuits function as spies trained in deception and are infiltrated everywhere. The Pope claims temporal power or ownership over the Earth and also claims Papal Supremacy or Papal Rule and Papal Infallibility. Infallibility means incapable of being wrong. Archbishops are the overseers of society within their districts and oversee politics, police, business, and organized crime. The Latin phrase Novus Ordo Seclorum means New Order of Ages (or Ages), or also "New World Order", and is on the US dollar bill and Great Seal of the United States.
The Vatican uses Latin as an official language and for documents. America is named after the Italian Americo Vespucci who worked for the Medici family of Florence and Rome. Vespucci created the term New World for America. The Bank of America was originally called the Bank of Italy and was founded by Amadeo Giannini, who was financed by Italians. Nations were formed as companies or corporations to exploit their citizens as merchandise. Corporations are fraudulent constructions because they are considered a person with rights under the law, and because the owners and controllers of the corporations can disregard responsibility for crimes committed by the corporation. That is fraudulent. Corporations are not people and therefore cannot have rights. Corporations are also monopolies that use subsidiaries to hide their dominance over industry. Private companies cannot compete fairly with corporations. Citizens are also classified as legal persons (companies), robbing them of all their human rights. Corporations shouldn't exist.
Royalty and nobles issue charters establishing representative covert property agents controlled by corporate households or crowns of royalty and nobles. They claim to own foreign governments in this way. Royalty and nobles claim to own the United States as a continuation of the Virginia Company. Roman royalty such as the Hanover, Hesses, Wurttembergs, Hohenzollerns, Glucksburgs, Orange-Nassaus and Saxe-Coburg and Gothas claim a share of ownership over the British Crown. This is why the British royal family has so much German ancestry. The United States is defined as a federal corporation under US code 3002. Section 15. Most of the founding fathers were Freemasons and worked for the British Crown and German royalty. American political families, such as the Bushs, Clintons, Romneys, and Kennedys, take their names from European noble families that still exist. The Von Dem Bussche family are German nobles and relatives of the Bush family. The Clintons and Romneys are also British nobles. The Kennedys are Scottish-Irish nobles and an American political family involved with the Democratic Party. Mars, Walton, Rockefeller, Guggenheim, Getty, Hearst, Sackler, Lauder, Sachs, Busche, Johnson, McMahon, Forbes, and Cox are some of the billionaire American families that work with royalty and nobles in Europe. The Mars family is worth about 70 billion and works with the Windsor, Savoy, Thurn and Taxis families. The Waltons are worth around 130 billion and work with German nobles like the Württemberg, Baden, Hohenzollern and Isenberg families. The various Johnson families in the United States are collectively worth tens of billions and serve as agents for the House of Hannover. They own Johnson and Johnson and Fidelity Investments. The Hanovers are powerful royals and merchants who established the Hanseatic League. The Hearst family is worth more than 25 billion and several members were educated at Harvard University of the British Crown. The McMahon family is a billionaire and owner of the WWE and works under the Bonapartes and Savoys as their noble ancestors who were served militarily by the MacMahons during the Second Italian War of Independence. Today there are MacMahons in France with Italian and French titles of nobility. The Lauder family works for the House of Esterhazy in Austria and the House of East in Austria and Italy. The Guggenheims have assets worth hundreds of billions and are married to the House of Stuart. The Getty family are billionaire American oil merchants and are married to the Italian House of Ruspoli. The Forbes family are billionaires and American descendants of Scottish nobles who still exist.
All gang stalking and cult organizations are owned and controlled by members of royalty and nobility. Criminal organizations such as Royalty itself, Royal Institutions, The Company of Jesus, The Black Monks, The Hellfire Club, The Templar Orders, Freemasonry, The Grand Orient of France, The York Rite, The Scottish Rite, Prince Masonry of Prince Hall, Shriners International, The Royal Order of Jesters, The Cabal Society, Chabad, Scientology, Skull & Bones, The Boulé Society, The 5% Nation, The Nation of Islam, Black Israelites, The Ordo Templi Orientis ( OTO), The Temple of Set, The Church of Satan, Rosicrucian, Golden Dawn, Opus Dei, Mormons, Knights of Columbus, The Bohemian Club, Knights of Phintias, Ancient Order of Druids, Wicca, Santeria, Obeah, Voodoo, Sufism , Greek Fraternities and Brotherhoods, New Age and Gnostic Cults, Nazi Cults, KKK, Mafias, Prison Gangs, Biker Gangs and Street Gangs. The Rockefeller family uses their charitable foundations to fund harassment gangs and bribery in the United States, as well as globalization agendas and vaccination programs. The Rockefeller Foundation funded Almighty Vice Lord Nation, which is an organized crime group, and also funded the Tavistock Institute.
Hollywood, the Church of Scientology, and Silicon Valley are military operations like the US DARPA agency and run by European royalty and nobles like the Oettingen-Spielbergs, Schaumburg-Lippes, Anhalts, Hanovers, Windsors, Passi di Preposulos, Ruspolis, Torlonias and Odescalchis. The Ferragamo family is also involved in the management and financing of corruption in Hollywood. The House of Nassau-Weilberg, which is married to the Torlonias, funds human trafficking and human sacrifice in Hollywood. Idols in the entertainment industry are a dangerous cult with leaders who have access to electronic weapons. Most of modern electronics is being broadcast covertly with GENISIS and NEURON bio-piracy software controlled by Kabbalists and Scientologists. European monarchies function as extensions of Rome and run secret societies that infiltrate government agencies and run corporations for monarchs. The Sovereign Military Order of Malta is the main military council and works closely with the Orders of St. John administered by Protestant royalty such as the Windsors and the Hohenzollerns. The Order of Malta and the Order of Saint John are Masonic organizations with grand masters and titles for initiation. The royal and noble bloodlines are all working together as a global crime syndicate and part of a modernized Roman corporate empire. They also have several competing factions that create the illusion of division. The British crown and Scottish nobles such as the Bruce, Stewart, Sinclair, Campbell, Montagu, Scott, Hamilton, Percy, Boyle, Bowes-Lyon and Sutherland families administer a large part of Freemasonry. All of these families produced Grand Masters of the Grand Lodge of England. There are thousands of Masonic lodges in Europe and in the United States. Freemasonry must be investigated and outlawed. The Greek-German Royal House of Glucksburg directs the Greek fraternities and brotherhoods and uses initiates as its agents. Glucksburg nobles and Italians run the Boule Society, Boule is a Greek fraternal society for African Americans. Martin Luther King and Jesse Jackson have been members of Boule, among many other high-profile, successful, and wealthy blacks, including Barack Obama, Bill Cosby, Al Sharpton, and Thurgood Marshall. The Glucksburg family rules Denmark and Norway and recently ruled Greece. Among its members are the ex-queen Sofía of Spain and Duke Felipe de Edimburgo. Former Greek nobility and royal merchants such as the Mavroleon, Onassis, and Niarchos families are billionaires who have a monopoly in the shipping industry and work with British nobles. The Greek royal family currently lives in London from where many Greek consignment merchants operate. The British Crown authorized and controls universities such as Yale and Harvard which are used to recruit Crown agents through fraternal orders such as Skull & Bones and Book and Snake. Royal and noble families also do undercover business in the City of London Corporation, which dominates global markets. Some of the major London merchant families include the Goldsmith, Stuart, Rothschild, Grosvenor, Sassoon, Barclay, Sutherland, Montagu, Bailey and Guinness families. The Sutherland family created the HSBC bank that has a long history of financial scandals around the world (Emilio Botín, Fernando Alonso, Mohamed VI, Jorge Trías and Jordi Pujol Jr. had accounts at HSBC when it was chaired by Stephen Green, Baron Green of Hurstpierpoint). The Bailey family is co-founder of Janus Henderson through a merger. Janus Henderson manages around 190 billion in assets. The Stuart family owns the Hudson Bay Company and has an alliance with the Bavarian House of Wittelsbach, which is the covert owner of some of the Hudson's Bay Company subsidiaries, which were founded by Bavarian merchants. HBC has approximately $ 12 billion in assets and has had fiscal contracts with the United States through the Organic Law of the District of Columbia of 1871.
The Orange-Nassau family are influential traders through the Netherlands Trading Society and have a large number of shares in Royal Dutch Shell, Philips Electronics and ABN AMRO Bank. The Orange-Nassaus and their Dreyfus agents run the Rand Corporation, which has a contract with the US military. Rand's founder was a Dutch gentleman. The Orange-Nassau family also runs the Loyal Orange Institution in Ireland, which has infiltrated the police, justice and politics. The Luxembourg Nassau-Weilburg family are international bankers connected to the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. The royal families of Luxembourg, Belgium and the Netherlands have shares in the European Investment Bank and all of these royals are recently married to Italian nobles. The Ligne family from Belgium are wealthy diamond and gold merchants. The Belgian Crown and its nobles are stealing wealth from the United States through fraudulent tax contracts established through the Organic Law of the District of Columbia of 1871 and continue to do so through the Bank for International Settlements. The Barons Strange heads the Masonic Order of Oddfellow. The Russell family are the Marquesses of Tavistock and they run the Tavistock Institute, which is an organization involved in mass mind control. The Russell family also co-founded the Yale University and Russell Trust Association, which is named after the New Haven, Connecticut company based on the Skull & Bones secret society.
Skull & Bones is a death cult military complex run by the Bush family from the USA who are like a European royal family in the USA. The Furstenberg family runs the Royal Order of Jesters who wear a jester on their coat of arms. The Clintons work closely with the House of Furstenberg, who have residences in the United States. The Italian Orsini family and the Holy Roman Rosenberg family lead the Rosicrucian Order of alchemists who infiltrate food and drug companies for chemical warfare. The Medici family, who have a statue of Hermes (Mercury) in their palace in Rome, administer the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, an alchemical secret society. The Medici were architects of modern banking. The Pierleoni family of Rome and the Spanish House of Bourbon-Anjou run the Kabbalah Society, which uses the Spanish lion for its logo. The Pacelli family of Rome and the Crescenzi family of Italy administer the Wiccan witchcraft cults. The Bavarian Wittelsbach family from Bavaria created the Bavarian Illuminati and administers the Benedictine Monks and is also part of the Jewish Mafia in the United States who are white collar criminals. The Pecci family of Italy also owns the Jewish mafia in the United States through their marriage to the Blumenthal family. The House of Wittelsbach is involved with Zionism, Nazism, Freemasonry, and the Society of Jesus. The Jesuits function as Roman intelligence and infiltrators and use their universities to recruit and train agents for Rome. Jesuit agents dominate leadership positions in the United States military and intelligence and especially in the CIA. The Knights of Columbus are owned by the Casa de Colonna. Christopher Columbus was Pedro Madruga, the Count of Caminha, a relative of the Colonnas who settled in Pontevedra at the time of the Romans. Many Knights of Columbus are police officers, mayors, lawyers, and judges, protecting the Italian mob while targeting free-thinking people. The Knights of Columbus are heavily involved in gang harassment.
Court Jews such as the Rothschild, Warburg, Goldsmith, Oppenheimer, Walton, Sassoon, Kadoorie, Lewis, Javal, Lauder, Sackler and Dreyfus families work through the Roman Curia or royal courtrooms such as Buckingham Palace. The French Rothschilds work for the Black Nobility of Rome and the French House of Orleans. The British Rothschilds work for the British Crown. The Sassoon and Kadoorie families work for the British Crown and oversee banking and business in China and India. The Swiss Rothschilds work for the House of Habsburg and the House of Hesse. The Oppenheimers work for the German House of Wurttemberg and the Cologne Oppenheim branch. the Austrian House of Habsburg granted them titles of nobility. The Warburgs work for the Italian House of Borghese and the German House of Hesse and the House of Hannover. Warburg Pincus had a contract with Unicredit that merged with the Borghese Family's Bank of the Holy Spirit. The Warburgs were Venetian bankers and the Borghese family now hold Venetian titles of nobility. The Warburgs financed the Nazis. The Dreyfus family works for the Dutch House of Orange-Nassau and the French House of Bonaparte. Jewish banking families work for Christian nobles and royalty. These billionaire Jewish bloodlines run many rabbis who run a criminal intelligence network that works with Mossad. The French House of Bonaparte and the Swedish House of Bernadotte control many of the main European companies through their knights of the Order of Seraphim and the Legion of Honor, who are also members of the Round Table of Industrialists of Europe, which it has a great economic influence on the markets. The Wallenbergs run corporations worth hundreds of billions and work for the Swedish House of Bernadotte. The Wallenbergs and the Swedish Crown also work with the Jesuits and the Vatican. The Black Nobility and other royal families have been hiding billions in private banks in Luxembourg, Liechtenstein and Switzerland. The royal families of Luxembourg and Liechtenstein own and run their own national and private banks. Austrian and Eastern European royalty and nobles, such as the Habsburgs, Esterhazys and Schonberg, use private banks in Liechtenstein and also own Israeli and Jewish mafias. The Esterhazy family together with the Lucchesi-Palli family run a faction of the Russian mafia through the mob boss Semion Mogilevich from Budapest. The Torlonia family owns the Fucino Bank in Rome and functions as Vatican bankers and treasurers. The Torlonia family of Rome and the Hohenzollern family of Germany are the main owners and controllers of the Bank for International Settlements which was founded and administered by the Nazis during World War II. The Torlonias are architects of fascism and the Hohenzollerns are architects of Nazism.
The East, Rothschild and Hottinger families are some of the leading Swiss bankers. The Romanian Sturdza family also owns a private bank in Switzerland. The Casanova family of Italy and Spain is one of the leading political families in Switzerland. The East and Savoy families run the Bank for International Settlements, which has a contract with most of the major central banks and is embezzling the wealth of nations through fraudulent loans and contracts. The Savoys live in Switzerland and Prince Lorenz of Austria-Este works at the Gutzwiller bank. The Bank for International Settlements must be investigated and closed. The Gutzwiller family is one of the leading banking families in Switzerland, owning its own private bank and managing 35 other Swiss banks. The Swiss Guard is a military body in charge of the security of the Pope and the Holy See. The ceremonial head of the Swiss Guard is the Pope, sovereign of Vatican City. Italian mafias are Rome's enforcers involved in extortion, money laundering, murder and drug trafficking, and they pay their dues to the Sicilian mafia, which in turn pays them to the black nobility. The mafia channels its earnings and tributes to the Black Nobility through the Vatican charitable foundations and then from the Vatican bank they are transferred to the private accounts of the Swiss Bank. The Savoy’s Genovese crime family specializes in extorting Wall Street. The mafia is rigging professional sports for gambling and they also launder their criminal winnings through the casinos. The Torlonia family owns the Kansas City crime family and shares ownership of the Pittsburgh crime family with the Borghese family of Rome and the Rocco di Torrepadula family of Sicily. The French House of Orleans owns the New Orleans crime family and the Franco-British Beaufort family oversees and owns the Dixie Mafia factions along with other British peers who have French ancestry. Cox's billionaire family is involved in multimedia communications and is part of the owners of the Dixie mob, which is involved in tobacco and ginseng sales as well as arms, drug and human trafficking. The Goldsmith and Sassoon families own Pakistani and Hindu human trafficking networks operating in the United Kingdom. The Imperial House of Brazil, Orleans-Braganza and the Belgian House of Ligne are married and have shares in the Brazilian companies AmBev and Belgian Anheuser-Busch InBev. The House of Orleans-Braganza owns Brazilian drug cartels that are also involved in human trafficking. The Sforza family owns the Stidda Mafia clans operating in the Sforza-Visconti territory in Milan and the Sforza and Visconti families have greater control over the Italian Stock Exchange or the Milan Stock Exchange. Milanese billionaire Silvio Berlusconi works for the Sforza and Visconti families and has a monopoly on Italian media and politics. Berlusconi founded the Forza political party in Italy named after the Sforzas. Some northern Italian nobles such as the Visconti, Borromeo, Este, Gonzaga, Valenti, D’Adda, and Passi di Preposulo families are closely related to billionaire families such as the Rothschilds, Agnellis, Benettons, Armanis, and Ferreros. The Sforza and Visconti families own the Seattle crime family with the Gaetani family as partial owners. The Seattle crime family controls billionaires Bill Gates and Jeff Bezos through blackmail. In 2017, Microsoft and Amazon employees were caught in a sex trafficking scandal.
The Colonna family owns the Knights of Columbus and also owns the Colombo crime family and partially owns the Chicago Outfit along with the Capponi and Roselli families of the Florence Turk. Al Capone was an agent of the House of Capponi and John Roselli was an agent of the Roselli del Turco family. Roselli also worked for the CIA. Colonna means column like Colombo and Colón. The Knights of Columbus infiltrate police departments and work with the Italian mafia. The Massimo and Gaetani families own and run the Gambino crime family and the Philadelphia crime family. The Massimo-Brancaccio family also owns and runs the Magliana or Roman Mafia and the Armed Revolutionary Nuclei, as well as the Graviano de Brancaccio crime family in Palermo, Sicily, which is part of the Corleonisi mafia clan. The Massimo family receives tribute from most of the Italian crime families and even from the Russian mafia and Eastern European mafias. The Massimo de Roccasecca family, who live in London, own the Clerkenwell crime syndicate, also known as the Adams Family or the London A-team and are part owners of the Irish Mafia, including the Rathkeale Rovers. The Borghese family is also the main owner of the Sicilian Mafia and the Mafia Magliana. The Lucchesi-Palli and Pallavicini families own the Lucchese crime family to which the Russian mafia in Brighton Beach pays tribute. The Pallavicini family owns the Armenian mafia that operates in Hollywood and works closely with the Kardashian family. The Romanovs are partial owners of the Russian mafia and have established several residences in the United States. The Giustiniani family oversee the Philadelphia Greek Mafia along with some Greek merchants. Royal and noble families finance organized crime. The Jewish Mafia reorganized into a white collar crime and worked with the black hand of the Italian Mafia. The head of the Jewish mafia in the United States is billionaire Michael Bloomberg. Leon Black is another one of the leading Jewish mobsters in New York. The Jewish Mafia participates in professional sports with white-collar mobsters such as Daniel Gilbert, Robert Kraft, Joshua Harris, Tom Werner, Jerry Reinsdorf, George Kaiser, Peter Guber, Joe Lacob, Mark Cuban, and Micky Arison. The European Union is based on the Treaty of Rome that was signed at the Capitol in Rome. The president of the European Central Bank is Mario Draghi, born in Rome and educated by the Jesuits at the Massimo Institute. Mario Draghi is an undercover relative of the Borghese and Del Drago families. The Erba-Odescalchi family with ancestry from Cernobbio, Italy, runs CERN with the Roman Fabiola Gianotti as CERN Director General that is used to generate pressure in the lower atmosphere in order to oppress society. CERN, HAARP, The Church of Scientology, Chemtrails and electronic devices are being used to covertly oppress society. The US military administers a HAARP electronic harassment system in Puerto Rico that is controlled from Guantanamo Bay in Cuba, which is under the command of Captain David Culpepper. The CIA and the Italian Mafia have a large criminal operation in Cuba. The CIA and Cosa Nostra work closely to this day.
Islamic royal families were named after European royalty in the 19th and 20th centuries and especially after the First World War. Middle Eastern royalty run the oil industry and use their massive wealth to fund globalist agendas that allow them to rule their nations. The house of Saud is worth at least a billion. The House of Thani and the House of Al Khalifa work with the House of Saud and are also wealthy oil traders. Royals from the Middle East run the Muslim Brotherhood and the Five Percent and the Nation of Islam, which are violent mobs of cult and harassment. These organizations need to be investigated and banned. They also own an Arab mob that is based in New Jersey and Detroit. The royal family of Morocco are wealthy merchants and owners of the Abergil crime family of Israel and Morocco. The House of Bourbon and Spanish nobility such as the Osorio, Fitz James, Alvarez (Alba), Pignatelli, Arteaga, Borja, Zuniga, Ruspoli, and Aragon-Escobar families own the majority of the Mexican and South American drug cartels. The Osorio and Borja families own MS-13. The Borgia and Borja families are also partial owners of the Mongels motorcycle gang. The Bourbons own the Gulf Cartel and the Lating Kings. The Ruspolis are partial owners of the Sinaloa Cartel and the Primeiro Comando da Capital in Sao Paulo, where their Matarazzo cousins reside. The FitzJames and Alvarez families own the Los Zetas Cartel. The Álvarez and Osorio families also own the Bandidos motorcycle gang. The House of Bourbons are the founders and owners of Banco Santander. The King of Spain has the official right to the throne as King of Jerusalem.
submitted by zzliberated to conspiracy [link] [comments]
Is the Crying of Lot 49 Partially about Disneyland?
Ok, so, I was recently rereading The Crying of Lot 49 last night, specifically Chapter 3, and I do feel I have a strange hypothesis about sections of that chapter that may be a complete projection, but the more that I look into the content of the sections I will parse out in particular, and the more research that I do, the more evidence seems to fall in place that sort of freaks me out and confirms my theory. Being freaks yourselves, I thought this would be the place for me to project my world, so to speak, and see if what I’m seeing is in any way based in reality or if I’m instead way off base.
My hypothesis is that Chapter 3 of The Crying of Lot 49, and specifically the Lake Inverity/Bone charcoal/Tony JaguaFangoso Lagoon section might be subtextually about Disneyland. I have struggled to find much about these particular sections of this chapter related to Disney. I own J. Kerry Grant’s A Companion to Lot 49, have scoured the Pynchon Wiki, read the reddit post discussion for Chapter 3 of this book, and tried Googling as much about it as I could, and I haven’t found anything to suggest Disneyland, so this is either a relatively new idea or one that is inaccurate as hell. Oh, boy!
To begin, I will say, I am fascinated and obsessed with Disneyland and Disney World which is maybe why I found some of the information I found within Lot 49 to begin with. One could say I have a perverse fascination with the 2 theme parks which has led me to all manner of revelations. In the same way that Pynchon, being from what I can tell, a heretical Catholic, has a perverse fascination with the sacred through the filter of the profane, I am somehow deeply attracted to and obsessed with all things Disney even though I think they are essentially a fascist, culturally banal, destructive force. Similar to how I believe Oedipa may have with Disneyland in the novel, I “fell in love with it (41).” What can I say?
The first half of Chapter 3 which I will focus on, involves Oedipa’s continued revelations. She gets her first peek at WASTE, the Tristero, the posthorn, and the Boeing-esque Yoyodyne is introduced. The plot of the novel really starts to thicken, or to put it a different way, the tapestry, the maaswork, really starts to come together, narrative threads criss-crossing every which way in all directions at once. A resource that was helpful for much of my understanding of this chapter and even just in how I read much of Lot 49 in general is Charles Hollander’s article on the novel: “Pynchon, JFK, and the CIA.” I’ll post it below.
https://www.vheissu.net/articles/hollander_49.php Chapter 3, according to Hollander, is where some of the first hints of JFK’s assasination are placed. According to Hollander, this chapter uses allusion, parody, analogy, and enthymeme to encode its secret message about the JFK assassination. Mike Faloppian’s Peter Pinguid Society’s Dallas chapter certainly suggests this. I mention this, partially, to say that, in a way, I could maybe call what I’m trying to figure out here “Pynchon, Disney, and the CIA,” since in many ways what I’m wrestling with is what I perceive to be many hidden references to Disney's shaddy dealings throughout 40s and 50s Californian history. Disney World, in particular, does have a direct history of involvement with the CIA with regard to how it acquired its real estate holdings, for example, which interestingly enough is what a chunk of this chapter is about when it comes to its references to Inverarity (not Disney World, but real estate holdings in general, Inverarity's more specifically).
The first section of the chapter that gave me some strange vibes regarding Disneyland was the section where Metzger, Oedipa, and the Paranoids go to Fangoso Lagoon, “one of Inverarity’s last big projects (40).” I will quote some of these sections below where these vibes first made themselves known.
“Somewhere beyond the battering, urged sweep of three-bedroom houses rushing by their thousands across the dark beige hills, somehow implicit in an arrogance or bite to the smog the more inland somnolence of San Narciso did lack, lurked the sea, the unimaginable Pacific, the one to which all surfers, beach pads, sewage disposal schemes,
tourist incursions, sunned homosexuality, chartered fishing are irrelevant, the hole left by the moon’s tearing-free and monument to her exile; you could not hear or smell this but it was there, something tidel began to reach feelers in past eyes and eardrums, perhaps to arouse fractions of brain current your most gossamer microelectrode is yet too gross for finding (40-41).”
This first quote stood out to me because it reminded me of the printed circuit Oedipa sees in Chapter 2. At the beginning of Chapter 2, Oedpia looks out at the landscape and sees it as deeply controlled, planned, almost machine-like or circuit-like. I don’t think this is a wildly different passage from that one. It, like the previous seciton forces the reader to ask the question: how did America come to be how it is now? This is an important question Lot 49 is always forcing its reader to ask. How did the deep conservatism or fascism creep in? Would the answer not be the subject of this book? Communication systems. What company is in charge of some of the most monopolized forms of our communication systems to this day? Disney, of course! Is this an accident? Was it planned? The malignant, magic forces referenced in Chapter 1 may have made it so, may have “urged [the] sweep of three-bedroom houses rushing by their thousands across the dark beige hills (40).” Surely the Walt Disney Company has done as much as any to reinforce suburban 3-bedroom forms of existence that have had a stranglehold on our cultural existence for so many years, than just about any, right? But this was just where I started to get the first inkling of vibes about Disneyland. To continue with another quote:
“They came in among earth-moving machines, a total absence of trees, the usual hieratic geometry, and eventually, shimmying for the sand roads, down in a helix to a sculpted body of water named Lake Inverarity. Out in it, on a round island of fill among blue wavelets, squatted the social hall, a chunky ogived and verdigrised, Art Nouveau reconstruction of some European pleasure-casino. Oedpia fell in love with it (41).”
This is where my paranoia really got going. Much of the description of the passage above does not sound like a man-made lake or lagoon. Far from it. Lake Inverarity is described as “a round island of fill,” that contains a “social hall,” and as a “Art Nouveau reconstruction of some European pleasure-casino.” That sounds much more like Disneyland than just a man-made lake created by a real-estate developer? Also with Oedpia being a consistent parody of housewives in suburban America, it would make sense that she would fall in love with Lake Inverarity if it is, in fact, Disneyland. Plus, there might be another hint in the name Lake Inverarity itself, since it is the only holding named after Inverarity specifically, just as Disneyland is named after Disney himself. I don’t believe that Inverarity is a direct analogy for Disney specifically, but I do believe he is instead an analogy for any of the unseen hyper-capitalist forces that have come to dominate our culture, Disney clearly being one example.
And just a side note before I continue with some of my evidence. It would make complete sense, this being a novel about Southern California, its real-estate development, and history, that Pynchon would eventually have to get to Disneyland. It is a property in Southern California, that especially between 1955 and 1965 had to have HUGE influence. How could he not incorporate it even if it was only referred to passively or encoded into the references of the text (much in the same way Hollander argues that Pynchon does the same for JFK’s assassination). There is another passage that REALLY got me convinced about my above theory, the section where Manny DiPresso is discussing the bone charcoal “used in the R&D phase of the filter program. Back around the early 50’s.” Here it is:
“Presently the bodies sank and stayed where they were till the early ‘50s, when Tony Jaguar, who’d been a corporal in an Italian outfit attached to the German force at Lago diPieta and knew about what was at the bottom, decided among some colleagues to see what he could salvage. All they managed to come up with was bones. Out of some murky train of reasoning,
which may have included the observed fact that American tourists beginning then to be plentiful, would pay good dollars for almost anything; and stories about Forest Lawn and the American cult of the dead; possibly some dim hope that Senator McCarthy, and others of his persuasion, in those days having achieved a certain ascendancy over the rich cretini from across the sea, would somehow refocus attention on the fallen of WWII, especially ones whose corpses had never been found; out of such labyrinth of assumed motives, Tony Jaguar decided he could surely unload his harvest of bones on some American someplace through his contacts in the “family,” known these days as Costa Nostra. He was right. An import-export firm bought the bones, sold them to a fertilizer enterprise, which may have used one or two femurs for laboratory tests but eventually decided to phase entirely into menhaden instead and transferred the remaining several tons to a holding company, which stored them in a warehouse outside of Fort Wayne, Indiana, for maybe a year before Beaconsfield got interest (47).”
When I read “which may have included the observed fact that American tourists beginning then to be plentiful, would pay good dollars for almost anything,” I could not think of anything but Disneyland. In his historiographic metafictions, Pynchon often superimposes historical realities onto present ones in order to make political, social, and religious commentary that would otherwise be inexpressible. An easy example is the fact that Gravity’s Rainbow is a novel about 1960’s America set in Britain during World War II. In the above passage, if Pynchon is superimposing the strange, seemingly random history of “an Italian outfit attached to the German force at Lago diPieta.” and is using this as an analogy, to project a world that speaks to his present day, I don’t know how Pynchon couldn’t be referring to Disneyland. The novel is set in Southern California, the place where Pynchon lived in 1965. Wouldn’t Disneyland, the rise of tourism, how that was changing the landscape of America and hijacking the “family,” its communication systems, propaganda, and culture, wouldn't all that have been on his mind? I have a few more quotes and then a possibly even more major revelation before I feel I can finally feel I’ve made my point.
Later on in the Lagoon, the Paranoids start smoking pot, and the following happens:
“[B]y holding up the glowing roaches of their cigarettes like a flipcard section at a football game, to spell out alternative S’s and O’s, attracted the attention of the Fangoso Lagoons Security Force, a garrison against the night made up of
one-time cowboy actors and L.A. motorcycle cops (49).”
I believe this “one-time cowboy actor” reference to be a reference to Ronald Regan, a fixture of southern California and one-time cowboy actor, and yet another thread in the patchwork connections to Disney. On October 24, 1947, Walt Disney and Ronald Regan both testified against communism, naming particular individuals they found nefarious communists within the film industry (another communication industry, one could say) before the House of Un-American Activities Committee. Which got me thinking, with all the mob references in the above section about Lago diPeta and the bones, was Disney ever involved with the mafia or mob, with “Costa Nostra?” I didn’t find much, but I did find something extremely interesting, which also led to one final even more strange realization. Read the link below, it lays out the story of Willie Bioff, a mobster who attempted to but failed to help break up Disney’s Union Strike in the 1940’s.
https://babbittblog.com/2016/10/09/disney-and-the-mob-willie-bioff/ This may seem unrelated to Pynchon’s “parable of power,” but earlier in the chapter when Mike Fillopian is discussing Russia and America, clearly also, yet again using a historical detail as a historiographic metafiction, superimposing a historical reality onto a present one, in this case, that of the cold war, when Fillopian mentions “After the confrontation, appalled at what had to be some military alliance between Russia...and a Union that paid lip service to abolition while it kept its own industrial laborers in a kind of wage-slavery (36),” its fairly clear which side of the picket-isle Pynchon would have been during an animator strike of Disney in the 1940s, or any strike for better treatment, for that matter. In Lot 49, Pynchon has written a "parable of power" about the various ways the circuit board of American life has reinforced the indentured servitude of supposed abolitionists, which in our modern world, could easily be a stand in for the structures of neo-liberalism. And nothing on this earth is more an example of banal neoliberal capitalism than Disneyland, nothing (except for maybe Epcot, of course). This is a lot of information, and I may not have done a very good job of connecting it all or being as explicit as I could have at explaining how specific references hint at Disney throughout the chapter, and this has already become too long, HOWEVER, I have one final piece of information that blows my DAMN MIND that is likely coincidental, but which I still could not believe I found.
Inspired by the book and wanting to find more connections in the tapestry, I started doing research into Disney’s involvement with the FBI and found some public records about his direct involvement with them on the FBI's website. Walt Disney was a SAC (Special Agent in Charge) for the FBI, according to these documents, for a period of time, interestingly enough, in the late 50s. There are literal letters to Disney from J. Edgar Hoover himself to Disney in these documents. I’ll post them below along with a number of other links that discuss Disney’s connection to the FBI, the last one being particularly fascinating in its connections to the novel.
https://vault.fbi.gov/walter-elias-disney/walter-elias-disney-part-01-of-03/view http://www.schaakstukkenmuseum.nl/?p=2195&lang=en http://jfk.hood.edu/Collection/Weisberg%20Subject%20Index%20Files/F%20Disk/FBI/FBI%20Press%20Use%20Of/Item%2009.pdf https://www.mouseplanet.com/8987/The_Mickey_Mouse_Club_FBIs_Most_Wanted I very much suggest looking at the Mouse Planet link above. If you have read The Crying of Lot 49 and know who Baby Igor and Metzger is, I VERY MUCH SUGGEST IT. Upon reading this and looking at all the other material, I discovered that there was a child-star, mentioned specifically in these documents, that was to be the child used in a set of documentaries Disney was to make as propaganda films for the FBI specifically, promoting them to the public in 1958. This child’s name was Dirk Metzger. I shit you not. His name was METZGER and he was a child star whose father was in the military. READ THE ARTICLE. His daddy, his doggy, and HIM! And guess what, look at what his profession became after being a child actor in these films? Guess it was: he became a lawyer!!! Baby Igor himself! In the flesh!? Look at the article. It’s all there. I can’t fucking believe it!? Now, I admit, this is all probably just a coincidence. Being 14 in 1958 would put Metzger at being only 21 or so in 1965 when the Crying of Lot 49 came out, so it is unlikely that this is exactly what I think it is, a direct, real, historical correlation, but who knows? Pynchon lived in California at the time. Who knows whom or what he may have come across...
Maybe I’m seeing things that aren’t there. Maybe Disneyland is nowhere to be found in the California of The Crying of Lot 49. Maybe this is all, as Hilarius would say, a Rorsoch blot. Maybe I’m simply hallucinating. I will say though, either way, I do think the political exigence of The Crying of Lot 49 has done its work on me. Even if this is only an ink blot, a world I’m projecting rather than one that is actually there, I have certainly done more thinking about Disney, its union-busting, suburban-infused. McCarthy-ian underbelly than I have, maybe ever, and that power, and Pynchon's parable of power he wrote in reaction to it, is something that is very much alive and with us today, it is a power that is still creating indentured servitude and whose malignant, “formless magic” is igniting all around us. Hopefully I, like Oedpia, have gotten a little closer to understanding how it works and counting its line of force. Maybe,
“If the tower is everywhere and the knight of deliverance no proof against its magic, what else?”
submitted by frittata69 to ThomasPynchon [link] [comments]
I Absolutely Hate Living In Italy
I moved here three years ago. I speak Italian fluently. I never imagined that Italy and Italians would be so shit like this. Thankfully I have a flight to leave soon. It was originally set for May, but I just changed it to less than two months from now because waking up every day in this country gives me so much anxiety. It's like constantly waiting for the next big 'casino'. The only way being in Italy is remotely tolerable is if I don't deal with any Italians or if I don't need any services or interactions with any gov't institutions. I say this as I'm on the phone waiting for the stupid 'ASL' to answer the phone so I can make an appointment for my pets to get their export certificates so we can get the fuck out of here. Do they answer the phone? Fuck no. Instead of just playing some jazz or classical music while I wait on a line with apparently no operators for more than 30 minutes, they also keep repeating some bullshit 'advice' every thirty seconds with a grating automated robotic voice!
It's always like this in Italy when dealing with any public institution that should be relied upon to do any type of official business. I wrote in another post my experience dealing with this exact stuff in Italy:
'When you go and ask for service, they say go to point B. Go to point B, they say I can't do that. Go to point C. Go to point C and they say WHAT? I don't do that. Go to point A. Come one, come all, to the Inefficiency Hell Carousel. '
It's no wonder the Italian economy is in shambles. Italians don't like to work and don't understand hard work, punctuality, and doing what they said they'd do. Italians are some of the most dishonest, scamming, pathological liars, and untrustworthy people I've ever come across. It seems they hide behind the food- I'm sorry but over-processed flour in 100 shapes is hardly a spectacle- and the natural landscapes- which they litter with trash and poison the water at the beaches.
The fact that Italy is seen as some beautiful vacation spot is just another big LIE perpetuated by Italians because if foreigners didn't come here to get scammed every summer vacation here, Italy would be as poor as Albania. The amount of scams and lies I've experienced here is horrific. Living here made me appreciate my home country sooooo much more. I plan to actually write a book about what I experienced here in Italy because it's so fucked up that it must be known what it's actually like to live here.
submitted by CookiesandCreamYum to Vent [link] [comments]
These are the statistical top 500 movies of all time, according to 23 different websites
Hey everyone, great to be back again. Some of you might remember a similar title from a post I made back in April, where I made a
list of the top 250 movies with 13 sources, or a
preview of this list I made last month.
I want to emphasize that this is
NOT an official ranking nor my personal ranking; it is just a statistical and, personally, interesting look at 500 amazing movies. These rankings reflect the opinions of thousands of critics and millions of people around the world. And I am glad that this list is able to cover a wide range of genres, decades, and countries. So before I get bombarded with "Why isn't X on here?" or "How is X above Y?" comments, I wanted to clear that up.
I sourced my data from Sight & Sound (both critic and director lists), TSPDT, iCheckMovies,
11 domestic websites (Rotten Tomatoes, Metacritic, IMDb, Letterboxd, TMDb, Trakt, Blu-Ray, MovieLens, RateYourMusic, Criticker, and Critics Choice), and
9 international audience sites (FilmAffinity, Douban, Naver, MUBI, Filmweb, Kinopoisk, CSFD, Moviemeter, and Senscritique). This balance of domestic/international ratings made the list more well-rounded and internationally representative (sites from Spain, China, Korea, Poland, Russia, Czech Republic, Netherlands, and France).
As for my algorithm, I weighted websites according to both their Alexa ranking and their number of votes compared to other sites. For example, since
The Godfather has hundreds of thousands of votes on Letterboxd but only a couple thousand on Metacritic, Letterboxd would be weighted more heavily. After obtaining the weighted averages, I then added the movie's iCheckMovies' favs/checks ratio and TSPDT ranking, if applicable. Regarding TSPDT, I included the top 2000 movies; as an example of my calculations,
Rear Window's ranking of #41 would add (2000-41)/2000=0.9795 points to its weighted average. I removed movies that had <7-8K votes on IMDb, as these mostly had low ratings and numbers of votes across different sites as well. For both Sight & Sound lists, I added between 0.5 and 1 point to a movie's score based on its ranking, which I thought was an adequate reflection of how difficult it is to be included on these lists. As examples, a #21 movie would have 0.9 points added while a #63 would have 0.69 points.
So without further ado, the statistical top 500 movies ever made. I separated the scores into overall, critics, domestic, and international columns to make comparisons easier. This list on
Letterboxd.
Ranking | Title | Overall Score | Critics | Domestic | International | Year | Director |
1 | The Godfather | 93.89 | 97.73 | 90.50 | 89.36 | 1972 | Francis Ford Coppola |
2 | The Godfather: Part II | 91.93 | 93.30 | 89.04 | 88.06 | 1974 | Francis Ford Coppola |
3 | Seven Samurai | 91.05 | 97.38 | 87.63 | 85.90 | 1954 | Akira Kurosawa |
4 | 12 Angry Men | 90.45 | 95.45 | 88.74 | 88.62 | 1957 | Sidney Lumet |
5 | City Lights | 89.94 | 96.75 | 85.67 | 85.93 | 1931 | Charlie Chaplin |
6 | The Good, the Bad and the Ugly | 89.45 | 91.20 | 87.81 | 86.59 | 1966 | Sergio Leone |
7 | The Shawshank Redemption | 89.41 | 82.95 | 89.49 | 89.18 | 1994 | Frank Darabont |
8 | Psycho | 89.29 | 95.23 | 85.70 | 85.01 | 1960 | Alfred Hitchcock |
9 | Modern Times | 89.28 | 95.55 | 85.21 | 85.37 | 1936 | Charlie Chaplin |
10 | Schindler's List | 89.08 | 93.80 | 87.22 | 87.29 | 1993 | Steven Spielberg |
11 | Pulp Fiction | 88.85 | 92.60 | 87.69 | 86.42 | 1994 | Quentin Tarantino |
12 | Rear Window | 88.63 | 97.65 | 85.40 | 83.33 | 1954 | Alfred Hitchcock |
13 | One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest | 88.55 | 87.38 | 86.28 | 86.97 | 1975 | Miloš Forman |
14 | Apocalypse Now | 88.54 | 93.85 | 85.24 | 83.48 | 1979 | Francis Ford Coppola |
15 | Tokyo Story | 88.49 | 98.30 | 85.16 | 83.76 | 1953 | Yasujirō Ozu |
16 | Spirited Away | 88.34 | 93.78 | 86.80 | 85.91 | 2001 | Hayao Miyazaki |
17 | GoodFellas | 88.03 | 91.48 | 87.00 | 84.03 | 1990 | Martin Scorsese |
18 | Vertigo | 88.02 | 95.60 | 84.05 | 82.76 | 1958 | Alfred Hitchcock |
19 | Singin' in the Rain | 88.01 | 97.65 | 83.95 | 83.13 | 1952 | Gene Kelly, Stanley Donen |
20 | Sunset Boulevard | 88.00 | 95.45 | 85.44 | 84.22 | 1950 | Billy Wilder |
21 | Citizen Kane | 87.83 | 99.03 | 83.06 | 82.22 | 1941 | Orson Welles |
22 | Harakiri | 87.79 | 85.83 | 88.00 | 86.29 | 1962 | Masaki Kobayashi |
23 | Rashomon | 87.74 | 96.55 | 83.52 | 82.73 | 1950 | Akira Kurosawa |
24 | Once Upon a Time in the West | 87.71 | 86.65 | 85.48 | 84.62 | 1968 | Sergio Leone |
25 | Fanny and Alexander | 87.54 | 97.30 | 83.15 | 83.00 | 1982 | Ingmar Bergman |
26 | The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King | 87.40 | 92.59 | 86.06 | 85.38 | 2003 | Peter Jackson |
27 | Andrei Rublev | 87.39 | 91.90 | 83.80 | 83.94 | 1966 | Andrei Tarkovsky |
28 | The Passion of Joan of Arc | 87.39 | 94.65 | 83.88 | 83.57 | 1928 | Carl Theodor Dreyer |
29 | Sherlock Jr. | 87.36 | 96.45 | 83.64 | 85.60 | 1924 | Buster Keaton |
30 | Bicycle Thieves | 87.35 | 94.70 | 83.91 | 83.46 | 1948 | Vittorio De Sica |
31 | Casablanca | 87.35 | 98.00 | 85.25 | 82.62 | 1942 | Michael Curtiz |
32 | Some Like It Hot | 87.28 | 95.30 | 82.11 | 83.73 | 1959 | Billy Wilder |
33 | Persona | 87.22 | 88.20 | 84.28 | 83.07 | 1966 | Ingmar Bergman |
34 | Children of Paradise | 87.21 | 95.33 | 84.81 | 83.27 | 1945 | Marcel Carné |
35 | Taxi Driver | 87.14 | 93.88 | 83.60 | 82.06 | 1976 | Martin Scorsese |
36 | The Dark Knight | 87.08 | 88.81 | 86.96 | 84.80 | 2008 | Christopher Nolan |
37 | Metropolis | 87.03 | 96.00 | 82.92 | 84.01 | 1927 | Fritz Lang |
38 | Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans | 87.02 | 93.95 | 82.23 | 84.02 | 1927 | F. W. Murnau |
39 | Stalker | 87.02 | 92.30 | 83.86 | 83.29 | 1979 | Andrei Tarkovsky |
40 | Pather Panchali | 86.96 | 94.35 | 84.40 | 82.80 | 1955 | Satyajit Ray |
41 | Lawrence of Arabia | 86.95 | 97.65 | 83.76 | 81.49 | 1962 | David Lean |
42 | M | 86.91 | 96.20 | 84.34 | 82.92 | 1931 | Fritz Lang |
43 | Ordet | 86.82 | 98.10 | 83.08 | 82.55 | 1955 | Carl Theodor Dreyer |
44 | It's a Wonderful Life | 86.77 | 90.45 | 85.17 | 84.90 | 1946 | Frank Capra |
45 | Satantango | 86.76 | 90.45 | 84.58 | 84.21 | 1994 | Béla Tarr |
46 | Parasite | 86.72 | 96.34 | 86.55 | 83.15 | 2019 | Bong Joon-ho |
47 | The 400 Blows | 86.70 | 96.70 | 83.14 | 82.60 | 1959 | François Truffaut |
48 | Ikiru | 86.56 | 93.80 | 85.48 | 84.29 | 1952 | Akira Kurosawa |
49 | Mirror | 86.50 | 95.60 | 82.75 | 82.34 | 1975 | Andrei Tarkovsky |
50 | Come and See | 86.50 | 90.50 | 85.22 | 83.13 | 1985 | Elem Klimov |
51 | The Apartment | 86.48 | 92.00 | 84.09 | 82.99 | 1960 | Billy Wilder |
52 | The General | 86.45 | 91.45 | 82.59 | 83.87 | 1926 | Buster Keaton, Clyde Bruckman |
53 | Grave of the Fireflies | 86.43 | 95.13 | 85.85 | 82.97 | 1988 | Isao Takahata |
54 | Le Trou | 86.41 | 89.95 | 85.46 | 85.14 | 1960 | Jacques Becker |
55 | The Battle of Algiers | 86.37 | 95.40 | 82.64 | 81.24 | 1966 | Gillo Pontecorvo |
56 | A Man Escaped | 86.34 | 96.50 | 83.67 | 82.03 | 1956 | Robert Bresson |
57 | Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb | 86.34 | 95.85 | 84.37 | 83.03 | 1964 | Stanley Kubrick |
58 | Paths of Glory | 86.25 | 92.30 | 84.97 | 84.48 | 1957 | Stanley Kubrick |
59 | The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring | 86.24 | 88.75 | 85.61 | 84.31 | 2001 | Peter Jackson |
60 | All About Eve | 86.23 | 96.95 | 83.69 | 83.20 | 1950 | Joseph L. Mankiewicz |
61 | Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back | 86.21 | 86.93 | 87.05 | 83.29 | 1980 | Irvin Kershner |
62 | High and Low | 86.16 | 86.55 | 86.08 | 84.26 | 1963 | Akira Kurosawa |
63 | The Great Dictator | 86.15 | 91.10 | 84.25 | 85.03 | 1940 | Charlie Chaplin |
64 | The Silence of the Lambs | 86.12 | 88.68 | 85.29 | 84.17 | 1991 | Jonathan Demme |
65 | 2001: A Space Odyssey | 86.06 | 88.35 | 82.93 | 81.54 | 1968 | Stanley Kubrick |
66 | North by Northwest | 86.03 | 96.38 | 83.17 | 81.74 | 1959 | Alfred Hitchcock |
67 | Double Indemnity | 85.91 | 94.38 | 83.84 | 83.12 | 1944 | Billy Wilder |
68 | Ugetsu | 85.91 | 97.25 | 82.69 | 81.91 | 1953 | Kenji Mizoguchi |
69 | Woman in the Dunes | 85.91 | 93.95 | 84.71 | 83.77 | 1964 | Hiroshi Teshigahara |
70 | Sansho the Bailiff | 85.88 | 95.50 | 84.24 | 82.21 | 1954 | Kenji Mizoguchi |
71 | Once Upon a Time in America | 85.87 | 86.10 | 83.84 | 85.53 | 1984 | Sergio Leone |
72 | City of God | 85.86 | 84.08 | 86.39 | 84.00 | 2002 | Fernando Meirelles, Kátia Lund |
73 | Late Spring | 85.81 | 94.75 | 83.74 | 82.27 | 1949 | Yasujirō Ozu |
74 | Barry Lyndon | 85.80 | 87.95 | 82.44 | 82.30 | 1975 | Stanley Kubrick |
75 | The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers | 85.78 | 88.78 | 85.00 | 84.29 | 2002 | Peter Jackson |
76 | Raging Bull | 85.77 | 90.48 | 82.01 | 81.80 | 1980 | Martin Scorsese |
77 | Chinatown | 85.72 | 94.08 | 83.32 | 80.69 | 1974 | Roman Polanski |
78 | Alien | 85.69 | 91.73 | 84.76 | 82.62 | 1979 | Ridley Scott |
79 | Ran | 85.68 | 94.70 | 83.93 | 82.52 | 1985 | Akira Kurosawa |
80 | The Seventh Seal | 85.67 | 92.10 | 83.52 | 82.13 | 1957 | Ingmar Bergman |
81 | The Kid | 85.61 | 92.85 | 82.91 | 84.94 | 1921 | Charlie Chaplin |
82 | Wild Strawberries | 85.51 | 90.05 | 83.38 | 82.24 | 1957 | Ingmar Bergman |
83 | A Brighter Summer Day | 85.50 | 93.38 | 84.07 | 81.01 | 1991 | Edward Yang |
84 | 8½ | 85.48 | 91.20 | 82.59 | 81.09 | 1963 | Federico Fellini |
85 | The Pianist | 85.38 | 88.69 | 83.31 | 84.80 | 2002 | Roman Polanski |
86 | The World of Apu | 85.38 | 93.20 | 84.38 | 83.09 | 1959 | Satyajit Ray |
87 | La Dolce Vita | 85.37 | 94.38 | 81.40 | 80.48 | 1960 | Federico Fellini |
88 | Star Wars | 85.33 | 90.03 | 85.22 | 81.92 | 1977 | George Lucas |
89 | The Best of Youth | 85.31 | 88.78 | 85.31 | 83.64 | 2003 | Marco Tullio Giordana |
90 | The Gold Rush | 85.29 | 94.55 | 81.93 | 83.59 | 1925 | Charlie Chaplin |
91 | The Third Man | 85.26 | 96.50 | 82.91 | 80.21 | 1949 | Carol Reed |
92 | The Treasure of the Sierra Madre | 85.20 | 96.68 | 82.77 | 81.81 | 1948 | John Huston |
93 | I Am Cuba | 85.18 | 93.60 | 82.00 | 83.44 | 1964 | Mikhail Kalatozov |
94 | The Lives of Others | 85.14 | 89.03 | 84.12 | 82.73 | 2006 | Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck |
95 | Witness for the Prosecution | 85.13 | 92.65 | 83.67 | 84.99 | 1957 | Billy Wilder |
96 | Touch of Evil | 85.11 | 95.70 | 81.36 | 79.65 | 1958 | Orson Welles |
97 | WALL-E | 85.10 | 92.09 | 82.82 | 82.64 | 2008 | Andrew Stanton |
98 | Scenes from a Marriage | 85.02 | 86.85 | 84.80 | 83.06 | 1974 | Ingmar Bergman |
99 | To Be or Not to Be | 84.99 | 89.58 | 82.52 | 83.39 | 1942 | Ernst Lubitsch |
100 | A Separation | 84.92 | 94.24 | 83.34 | 80.90 | 2011 | Asghar Farhadi |
101 | The Night of the Hunter | 84.91 | 96.93 | 81.17 | 79.06 | 1955 | Charles Laughton |
102 | Three Colors: Red | 84.87 | 96.78 | 83.32 | 80.78 | 1994 | Krzysztof Kieślowski |
103 | Yojimbo | 84.87 | 91.55 | 83.85 | 82.99 | 1961 | Akira Kurosawa |
104 | Back to the Future | 84.85 | 89.38 | 84.47 | 81.94 | 1985 | Robert Zemeckis |
105 | My Neighbor Totoro | 84.84 | 87.53 | 83.44 | 83.17 | 1988 | Hayao Miyazaki |
106 | In the Mood for Love | 84.84 | 83.87 | 82.55 | 81.20 | 2000 | Wong Kar-wai |
107 | Princess Mononoke | 84.83 | 81.18 | 85.02 | 84.24 | 1999 | Hayao Miyazaki |
108 | Saving Private Ryan | 84.82 | 90.35 | 83.94 | 82.50 | 1998 | Steven Spielberg |
109 | Cinema Paradiso | 84.78 | 82.30 | 84.73 | 83.43 | 1988 | Giuseppe Tornatore |
110 | La Jetée | 84.75 | 89.25 | 83.27 | 81.80 | 1962 | Chris Marker |
111 | The Wages of Fear | 84.71 | 94.60 | 82.99 | 82.80 | 1953 | Henri-Georges Clouzot |
112 | Das Boot | 84.68 | 90.13 | 83.62 | 82.71 | 1981 | Wolfgang Petersen |
113 | Fight Club | 84.65 | 71.18 | 86.39 | 84.95 | 1999 | David Fincher |
114 | Nights of Cabiria | 84.64 | 92.25 | 82.72 | 83.13 | 1957 | Federico Fellini |
115 | La Strada | 84.61 | 92.60 | 80.79 | 82.78 | 1954 | Federico Fellini |
116 | Amadeus | 84.53 | 89.55 | 82.88 | 82.59 | 1984 | Miloš Forman |
117 | Forrest Gump | 84.50 | 76.90 | 83.06 | 86.12 | 1994 | Robert Zemeckis |
118 | Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse | 84.49 | 90.41 | 85.03 | 81.69 | 2018 | Peter Ramsey, Rodney Rothman, Bob Persichetti |
119 | The Lion King | 84.45 | 88.28 | 77.22 | 84.09 | 1994 | Rob Minkoff, Roger Allers |
120 | Inception | 84.43 | 82.07 | 84.18 | 84.17 | 2010 | Christopher Nolan |
121 | Whiplash | 84.42 | 89.53 | 84.87 | 81.96 | 2014 | Damien Chazelle |
122 | The Shop Around the Corner | 84.40 | 94.43 | 80.85 | 82.37 | 1940 | Ernst Lubitsch |
123 | Rififi | 84.38 | 92.00 | 83.03 | 81.58 | 1955 | Jules Dassin |
124 | Umberto D. | 84.38 | 92.63 | 82.20 | 81.75 | 1952 | Vittorio De Sica |
125 | Army of Shadows | 84.37 | 95.30 | 82.98 | 80.50 | 1969 | Jean-Pierre Melville |
126 | Blade Runner | 84.34 | 85.85 | 82.57 | 80.29 | 1982 | Ridley Scott |
127 | Samurai Rebellion | 84.33 | 89.05 | 82.85 | 83.84 | 1967 | Masaki Kobayashi |
128 | Close-Up | 84.31 | 85.70 | 81.99 | 80.69 | 1990 | Abbas Kiarostami |
129 | The Circus | 84.29 | 90.35 | 81.69 | 83.14 | 1928 | Charlie Chaplin |
130 | Raiders of the Lost Ark | 84.19 | 89.33 | 84.31 | 80.57 | 1981 | Steven Spielberg |
131 | Grand Illusion | 84.18 | 95.35 | 81.85 | 79.78 | 1937 | Jean Renoir |
132 | A Clockwork Orange | 84.18 | 82.78 | 82.37 | 82.51 | 1971 | Stanley Kubrick |
133 | Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind | 84.07 | 89.37 | 83.36 | 80.57 | 2004 | Michel Gondry |
134 | A Woman Under the Influence | 84.01 | 87.40 | 82.51 | 80.40 | 1974 | John Cassavetes |
135 | The Cranes Are Flying | 84.00 | 89.30 | 82.76 | 82.40 | 1957 | Mikhail Kalatozov |
136 | Yi Yi | 83.91 | 91.25 | 82.48 | 79.64 | 2000 | Edward Yang |
137 | To Kill a Mockingbird | 83.91 | 89.13 | 81.98 | 82.20 | 1962 | Robert Mulligan |
138 | The Matrix | 83.90 | 77.78 | 84.54 | 83.06 | 1999 | Wachowski Sisters |
139 | The Sting | 83.90 | 85.73 | 82.71 | 83.36 | 1973 | George Roy Hill |
140 | The Mother and the Whore | 83.87 | 94.55 | 81.24 | 79.82 | 1973 | Jean Eustache |
141 | Se7en | 83.86 | 72.15 | 84.91 | 84.48 | 1995 | David Fincher |
142 | Early Summer | 83.85 | 94.45 | 82.19 | 82.01 | 1951 | Yasujirō Ozu |
143 | Werckmeister Harmonies | 83.80 | 91.73 | 80.89 | 81.93 | 2000 | Béla Tarr, Ágnes Hranitzky |
144 | Coco | 83.80 | 86.21 | 82.73 | 83.66 | 2017 | Adrian Molina, Lee Unkrich |
145 | Toy Story | 83.76 | 95.03 | 82.30 | 80.15 | 1995 | John Lasseter |
146 | It Happened One Night | 83.76 | 90.83 | 81.46 | 81.76 | 1934 | Frank Capra |
147 | Reservoir Dogs | 83.74 | 84.68 | 83.12 | 81.99 | 1992 | Quentin Tarantino |
148 | Unforgiven | 83.73 | 88.55 | 82.24 | 81.59 | 1992 | Clint Eastwood |
149 | The Deer Hunter | 83.73 | 87.68 | 80.57 | 82.06 | 1978 | Michael Cimino |
150 | The Young and the Damned | 83.72 | 87.10 | 82.58 | 80.82 | 1950 | Luis Buñuel |
151 | The Best Years of Our Lives | 83.68 | 92.63 | 81.19 | 81.20 | 1946 | William Wyler |
152 | The Leopard | 83.66 | 97.30 | 79.56 | 79.57 | 1963 | Luchino Visconti |
153 | Time of the Gypsies | 83.65 | 86.05 | 83.31 | 82.29 | 1988 | Emir Kusturica |
154 | Ali: Fear Eats the Soul | 83.61 | 96.70 | 80.51 | 79.97 | 1974 | Rainer Werner Fassbinder |
155 | Raise the Red Lantern | 83.57 | 90.25 | 82.37 | 81.81 | 1991 | Zhang Yimou |
156 | Terminator 2: Judgment Day | 83.57 | 82.00 | 84.11 | 81.83 | 1991 | James Cameron |
157 | The Shining | 83.55 | 75.35 | 84.08 | 81.80 | 1980 | Stanley Kubrick |
158 | Viridiana | 83.54 | 92.95 | 80.68 | 80.81 | 1961 | Luis Buñuel |
159 | Portrait of a Lady on Fire | 83.52 | 93.59 | 83.08 | 80.02 | 2019 | Céline Sciamma |
160 | Greed | 83.51 | 97.05 | 80.65 | 80.64 | 1924 | Erich von Stroheim |
161 | Gone with the Wind | 83.48 | 92.90 | 80.01 | 81.68 | 1939 | Victor Fleming |
162 | There Will Be Blood | 83.48 | 89.65 | 81.91 | 79.02 | 2007 | Paul Thomas Anderson |
163 | L.A. Confidential | 83.46 | 91.63 | 82.08 | 80.81 | 1997 | Curtis Hanson |
164 | Paris, Texas | 83.46 | 83.95 | 82.89 | 81.66 | 1984 | Wim Wenders |
165 | Throne of Blood | 83.45 | 91.30 | 82.18 | 81.49 | 1957 | Akira Kurosawa |
166 | Toy Story 3 | 83.43 | 93.55 | 81.61 | 80.32 | 2010 | Lee Unkrich |
167 | Memento | 83.43 | 85.20 | 83.78 | 80.76 | 2000 | Christopher Nolan |
168 | On the Waterfront | 83.37 | 93.00 | 82.23 | 79.52 | 1954 | Elia Kazan |
169 | Trip to the Moon | 83.37 | 94.70 | 79.96 | 82.83 | 1902 | Georges Méliès |
170 | The Rules of the Game | 83.33 | 96.55 | 80.45 | 78.02 | 1939 | Jean Renoir |
171 | Red Beard | 83.32 | 74.15 | 83.41 | 83.27 | 1965 | Akira Kurosawa |
172 | The Grapes of Wrath | 83.32 | 95.45 | 80.42 | 80.34 | 1940 | John Ford |
173 | Au Hasard Balthazar | 83.29 | 98.08 | 77.93 | 77.54 | 1966 | Robert Bresson |
174 | Autumn Sonata | 83.29 | 84.85 | 83.09 | 82.66 | 1978 | Ingmar Bergman |
175 | Annie Hall | 83.28 | 93.18 | 80.58 | 80.58 | 1977 | Woody Allen |
176 | The Conformist | 83.27 | 96.68 | 79.92 | 78.58 | 1970 | Bernardo Bertolucci |
177 | Rocco and His Brothers | 83.24 | 84.73 | 81.95 | 81.68 | 1960 | Luchino Visconti |
178 | Dersu Uzala | 83.23 | 74.75 | 82.35 | 83.37 | 1975 | Akira Kurosawa |
179 | Cool Hand Luke | 83.21 | 93.05 | 82.22 | 79.83 | 1967 | Stuart Rosenberg |
180 | Monty Python and the Holy Grail | 83.18 | 91.98 | 82.96 | 79.30 | 1975 | Terry Gilliam, Terry Jones |
181 | Le Samouraï | 83.18 | 92.35 | 82.45 | 79.40 | 1967 | Jean-Pierre Melville |
182 | Aliens | 83.18 | 88.73 | 83.29 | 79.61 | 1986 | James Cameron |
183 | PlayTime | 83.16 | 93.50 | 80.22 | 78.80 | 1967 | Jacques Tati |
184 | The Bridge on the River Kwai | 83.14 | 90.58 | 81.93 | 80.24 | 1957 | David Lean |
185 | The Red Shoes | 83.13 | 93.15 | 82.82 | 79.96 | 1948 | Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger |
186 | American Beauty | 83.10 | 87.15 | 81.93 | 81.13 | 1999 | Sam Mendes |
187 | To Live | 83.10 | 84.00 | 82.16 | 82.46 | 1994 | Zhang Yimou |
188 | Battleship Potemkin | 83.10 | 95.85 | 77.81 | 80.41 | 1925 | Sergei Eisenstein |
189 | Day of Wrath | 83.09 | 93.40 | 81.07 | 81.29 | 1943 | Carl Theodor Dreyer |
190 | All Quiet on the Western Front | 83.07 | 92.85 | 80.05 | 81.48 | 1930 | Lewis Milestone |
191 | It's Such a Beautiful Day | 83.07 | 91.25 | 83.62 | 79.77 | 2012 | Don Hertzfeldt |
192 | Full Metal Jacket | 83.06 | 81.53 | 82.21 | 82.54 | 1987 | Stanley Kubrick |
193 | The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari | 83.05 | 96.40 | 79.84 | 81.83 | 1920 | Robert Wiene |
194 | Kes | 83.03 | 97.80 | 79.59 | 80.55 | 1969 | Ken Loach |
195 | The Usual Suspects | 83.02 | 80.23 | 84.08 | 81.48 | 1995 | Bryan Singer |
196 | The Cameraman | 83.00 | 93.90 | 80.77 | 81.57 | 1928 | Edward Segdwick, Buster Keaton |
197 | Aparajito | 83.00 | 90.90 | 81.81 | 81.20 | 1956 | Satyajit Ray |
198 | The Elephant Man | 83.00 | 83.00 | 82.10 | 81.87 | 1980 | David Lynch |
199 | Rebecca | 82.98 | 90.08 | 81.08 | 80.93 | 1940 | Alfred Hitchcock |
200 | Make Way for Tomorrow | 82.97 | 95.80 | 81.72 | 80.14 | 1937 | Leo McCarey |
201 | The Great Escape | 82.97 | 87.68 | 82.29 | 80.66 | 1963 | John Sturges |
202 | Your Name | 82.97 | 84.55 | 84.07 | 81.29 | 2016 | Makoto Shinkai |
203 | Limelight | 82.92 | 88.00 | 79.85 | 83.02 | 1952 | Charlie Chaplin |
204 | Breathless | 82.92 | 91.95 | 78.88 | 79.10 | 1960 | Jean-Luc Godard |
205 | Underground | 82.91 | 80.75 | 81.26 | 82.64 | 1995 | Emir Kusturica |
206 | The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance | 82.88 | 91.90 | 81.08 | 79.53 | 1962 | John Ford |
207 | Aguirre: The Wrath of God | 82.87 | 94.55 | 80.46 | 78.62 | 1972 | Werner Herzog |
208 | Oldboy | 82.86 | 78.98 | 84.00 | 81.27 | 2003 | Park Chan-wook |
209 | Up | 82.84 | 90.28 | 81.32 | 80.86 | 2009 | Pete Docter |
210 | Anatomy of a Murder | 82.84 | 94.00 | 80.57 | 80.02 | 1959 | Otto Preminger |
211 | The Wild Bunch | 82.84 | 90.35 | 79.45 | 80.12 | 1969 | Sam Peckinpah |
212 | The Hunt | 82.75 | 82.08 | 82.79 | 82.62 | 2012 | Thomas Vinterberg |
213 | Il Sorpasso | 82.74 | 95.75 | 82.84 | 79.57 | 1962 | Dino Risi |
214 | The Last Laugh | 82.74 | 95.25 | 79.47 | 81.61 | 1924 | F. W. Murnau |
215 | A Streetcar Named Desire | 82.73 | 94.60 | 79.89 | 80.26 | 1951 | Elia Kazan |
216 | Life Is Beautiful | 82.73 | 68.45 | 83.60 | 85.57 | 1997 | Roberto Benigni |
217 | A Short Film About Love | 82.71 | 87.10 | 81.90 | 81.89 | 1988 | Krzysztof Kieślowski |
218 | The Shop on Main Street | 82.71 | 94.45 | 82.15 | 80.43 | 1965 | Ján Kadár, Elmar Klos |
219 | Rio Bravo | 82.71 | 92.10 | 80.46 | 79.80 | 1959 | Howard Hawks |
220 | Roman Holiday | 82.70 | 84.55 | 80.74 | 82.42 | 1953 | William Wyler |
221 | Ivan's Childhood | 82.69 | 94.80 | 81.25 | 80.37 | 1962 | Andrei Tarkovsky |
222 | The Exterminating Angel | 82.68 | 91.10 | 81.66 | 80.17 | 1962 | Luis Buñuel |
223 | Trainspotting | 82.68 | 85.20 | 81.57 | 81.21 | 1996 | Danny Boyle |
224 | The Last Picture Show | 82.67 | 94.15 | 79.90 | 79.56 | 1971 | Peter Bogdanovich |
225 | The Truman Show | 82.64 | 89.63 | 79.70 | 82.15 | 1998 | Peter Weir |
226 | Memories of Murder | 82.64 | 82.88 | 82.68 | 80.94 | 2003 | Bong Joon-ho |
227 | Faust | 82.62 | 89.70 | 80.23 | 81.94 | 1926 | F. W. Murnau |
228 | Sans Soleil | 82.62 | 83.90 | 79.45 | 80.51 | 1983 | Chris Marker |
229 | Song of the Sea | 82.57 | 87.63 | 80.59 | 82.23 | 2014 | Tomm Moore |
230 | Léon: The Professional | 82.55 | 67.38 | 84.05 | 84.07 | 1994 | Luc Besson |
231 | Fargo | 82.54 | 87.45 | 82.36 | 79.19 | 1996 | Coen Brothers |
232 | Solaris | 82.54 | 89.95 | 80.91 | 79.69 | 1972 | Andrei Tarkovsky |
233 | Sweet Smell of Success | 82.52 | 96.53 | 80.81 | 77.62 | 1957 | Alexander Mackendrick |
234 | For a Few Dollars More | 82.52 | 79.28 | 82.38 | 83.15 | 1965 | Sergio Leone |
235 | White Heat | 82.51 | 90.65 | 80.77 | 81.24 | 1949 | Raoul Walsh |
236 | Brief Encounter | 82.50 | 88.35 | 80.81 | 81.03 | 1945 | David Lean |
237 | Wings of Desire | 82.49 | 85.70 | 81.30 | 80.42 | 1987 | Wim Wenders |
238 | Diabolique | 82.47 | 90.70 | 81.27 | 80.73 | 1955 | Henri-Georges Clouzot |
239 | An Autumn Afternoon | 82.45 | 91.95 | 81.68 | 79.85 | 1962 | Yasujirō Ozu |
240 | The Tale of the Princess Kaguya | 82.44 | 90.63 | 81.16 | 80.43 | 2013 | Isao Takahata |
241 | Amarcord | 82.41 | 85.95 | 79.26 | 80.73 | 1973 | Federico Fellini |
242 | Heat | 82.40 | 79.08 | 82.03 | 81.73 | 1995 | Michael Mann |
243 | L'Atalante | 82.40 | 95.60 | 78.32 | 78.10 | 1934 | Jean Vigo |
244 | Django Unchained | 82.39 | 83.44 | 82.23 | 81.94 | 2012 | Quentin Tarantino |
245 | Jeanne Dielman, 23 Commerce Quay, 1080 Brussels | 82.38 | 95.50 | 78.73 | 79.69 | 1975 | Chantal Akerman |
246 | Kind Hearts and Coronets | 82.38 | 95.60 | 80.80 | 79.72 | 1949 | Robert Hamer |
247 | Dog Day Afternoon | 82.37 | 88.40 | 81.11 | 79.80 | 1975 | Sidney Lumet |
248 | Forbidden Games | 82.37 | 93.75 | 80.36 | 80.99 | 1952 | René Clément |
249 | The Crowd | 82.35 | 93.35 | 79.21 | 81.23 | 1928 | King Vidor |
250 | Notorious | 82.35 | 96.78 | 79.96 | 78.21 | 1946 | Alfred Hitchcock |
251 | Mary and Max | 82.35 | 88.05 | 80.95 | 82.42 | 2009 | Adam Elliot |
252 | Persepolis | 82.34 | 88.95 | 80.09 | 80.77 | 2007 | Marjane Satrapi, Vincent Paronnaud |
253 | Howl's Moving Castle | 82.33 | 78.71 | 82.63 | 83.10 | 2004 | Hayao Miyazaki |
254 | Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind | 82.33 | 85.10 | 81.54 | 82.03 | 1984 | Hayao Miyazaki |
255 | Safety Last! | 82.33 | 92.25 | 80.95 | 81.10 | 1923 | Fred C. Newmeyer, Sam Taylor |
256 | Rosemary's Baby | 82.32 | 94.78 | 79.99 | 78.69 | 1968 | Roman Polanski |
257 | L'Avventura | 82.32 | 92.10 | 79.08 | 78.03 | 1960 | Michelangelo Antonioni |
258 | The Searchers | 82.32 | 93.90 | 78.16 | 76.66 | 1956 | John Ford |
259 | La Haine | 82.30 | 90.60 | 82.38 | 79.56 | 1995 | Mathieu Kassovitz |
260 | Three Colors: Blue | 82.30 | 88.28 | 81.55 | 79.23 | 1993 | Krzysztof Kieślowski |
261 | Chungking Express | 82.30 | 79.95 | 82.29 | 80.73 | 1994 | Wong Kar-wai |
262 | Inside Out | 82.29 | 93.66 | 80.27 | 79.85 | 2015 | Pete Docter |
263 | Where is the Friend's Home? | 82.28 | 89.25 | 81.22 | 80.21 | 1987 | Abbas Kiarostami |
264 | Cries and Whispers | 82.27 | 85.45 | 81.02 | 80.80 | 1972 | Ingmar Bergman |
265 | Napoleon | 82.22 | 93.25 | 81.89 | 78.99 | 1927 | Abel Gance |
266 | Paper Moon | 82.19 | 83.08 | 81.37 | 81.29 | 1973 | Peter Bogdanovich |
267 | The Spirit of the Beehive | 82.17 | 89.83 | 79.31 | 78.91 | 1973 | Víctor Erice |
268 | A Special Day | 82.16 | 90.20 | 81.11 | 81.25 | 1977 | Ettore Scola |
269 | Nostalghia | 82.15 | 83.00 | 80.91 | 81.23 | 1983 | Andrei Tarkovsky |
270 | Network | 82.13 | 85.45 | 82.36 | 79.08 | 1976 | Sidney Lumet |
271 | L'Eclisse | 82.11 | 84.70 | 79.78 | 78.81 | 1962 | Michelangelo Antonioni |
272 | Mr. Smith Goes to Washington | 82.09 | 80.83 | 81.78 | 81.15 | 1939 | Frank Capra |
273 | Sanjuro | 82.09 | 91.90 | 81.67 | 80.85 | 1962 | Akira Kurosawa |
274 | Badlands | 82.06 | 93.38 | 79.77 | 77.21 | 1973 | Terrence Malick |
275 | Vivre Sa Vie | 82.06 | 85.20 | 80.12 | 79.83 | 1962 | Jean-Luc Godard |
276 | Nobody Knows | 82.06 | 87.18 | 81.12 | 81.15 | 2004 | Hirokazu Koreeda |
277 | No Country for Old Men | 82.05 | 90.68 | 80.56 | 78.47 | 2007 | Coen Brothers |
278 | Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter... and Spring | 82.05 | 86.05 | 80.76 | 80.62 | 2003 | Kim Ki-duk |
279 | La Notte | 82.04 | 78.35 | 81.45 | 81.11 | 1961 | Michelangelo Antonioni |
280 | The Celebration | 82.04 | 84.23 | 81.34 | 80.08 | 1998 | Thomas Vinterberg |
281 | In the Name of the Father | 82.04 | 84.90 | 81.14 | 81.85 | 1993 | Jim Sheridan |
282 | I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang | 82.02 | 89.55 | 80.18 | 81.56 | 1932 | Mervyn LeRoy |
283 | Shoplifters | 82.01 | 92.39 | 80.60 | 79.31 | 2018 | Hirokazu Koreeda |
284 | Finding Nemo | 82.01 | 92.60 | 80.13 | 78.76 | 2003 | Andrew Stanton, Lee Unkrich |
285 | Z | 81.98 | 87.55 | 82.21 | 79.59 | 1969 | Costa-Gavras |
286 | The Phantom Carriage | 81.96 | 95.00 | 80.01 | 80.32 | 1921 | Victor Sjöström |
287 | Manhattan | 81.95 | 86.23 | 80.50 | 79.81 | 1979 | Woody Allen |
288 | Rome, Open City | 81.94 | 95.40 | 80.45 | 79.27 | 1945 | Robert Rossellini |
289 | Children of Heaven | 81.93 | 80.15 | 81.24 | 82.01 | 1997 | Majid Majidi |
290 | The Green Mile | 81.92 | 71.93 | 82.95 | 84.38 | 1999 | Frank Darabont |
291 | The Iron Giant | 81.91 | 86.61 | 80.88 | 79.95 | 1999 | Brad Bird |
292 | The Sacrifice | 81.90 | 80.30 | 80.47 | 81.37 | 1986 | Andrei Tarkovsky |
293 | The Philadelphia Story | 81.90 | 94.95 | 79.79 | 77.86 | 1940 | George Cukor |
294 | The Twilight Samurai | 81.90 | 86.10 | 81.07 | 81.13 | 2002 | Yôji Yamada |
295 | Before Sunset | 81.88 | 87.79 | 81.42 | 78.41 | 2004 | Richard Linklater |
296 | Before Sunrise | 81.86 | 84.40 | 82.24 | 79.44 | 1995 | Richard Linklater |
297 | Castle in the Sky | 81.85 | 81.63 | 81.49 | 82.06 | 1986 | Hayao Miyazaki |
298 | The Departed | 81.84 | 86.92 | 82.82 | 79.04 | 2006 | Martin Scorsese |
299 | Brazil | 81.83 | 90.23 | 80.61 | 78.37 | 1985 | Terry Gilliam |
300 | Incendies | 81.81 | 83.85 | 81.88 | 80.74 | 2011 | Denis Villenueve |
301 | The Maltese Falcon | 81.81 | 95.65 | 80.24 | 77.28 | 1941 | John Huston |
302 | The Wizard of Oz | 81.77 | 98.03 | 79.38 | 77.17 | 1939 | Victor Fleming |
303 | Le Cercle Rouge | 81.76 | 90.03 | 80.81 | 78.54 | 1970 | Jean-Pierre Melville |
304 | Monsieur Verdoux | 81.76 | 89.80 | 78.55 | 81.34 | 1947 | Charlie Chaplin |
305 | The Return | 81.72 | 84.85 | 80.02 | 80.96 | 2003 | Andrey Zvyagintsev |
306 | Secrets & Lies | 81.71 | 90.73 | 80.29 | 78.66 | 1996 | Mike Leigh |
307 | The Hidden Fortress | 81.70 | 91.25 | 80.79 | 80.72 | 1958 | Akira Kurosawa |
308 | Pan's Labyrinth | 81.69 | 92.59 | 81.60 | 76.08 | 2006 | Guillermo del Toro |
309 | Amélie | 81.69 | 79.64 | 81.96 | 80.27 | 2004 | Jean-Pierre Jeunet |
310 | Ben-Hur | 81.67 | 86.93 | 79.86 | 80.22 | 1959 | William Wyler |
311 | Fitzcarraldo | 81.67 | 75.80 | 81.06 | 81.21 | 1982 | Werner Herzog |
312 | American History X | 81.63 | 70.13 | 83.58 | 83.00 | 1998 | Tony Kaye |
313 | Ace in the Hole | 81.62 | 79.10 | 80.88 | 81.36 | 1951 | Billy Wilder |
314 | Capernaum | 81.62 | 81.83 | 80.52 | 82.18 | 2018 | Nadine Labaki |
315 | Still Walking | 81.61 | 90.30 | 80.92 | 79.48 | 2008 | Hirokazu Koreeda |
316 | All About My Mother | 81.61 | 88.77 | 79.56 | 78.80 | 1999 | Pedro Almodóvar |
317 | The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie | 81.60 | 92.28 | 78.82 | 78.83 | 1972 | Luis Buñuel |
318 | Platoon | 81.60 | 88.70 | 79.52 | 80.45 | 1986 | Oliver Stone |
319 | Farewell My Concubine | 81.60 | 80.50 | 80.49 | 81.04 | 1993 | Chen Kaige |
320 | Letter from an Unknown Woman | 81.59 | 93.10 | 79.84 | 79.31 | 1948 | Max Ophüls |
321 | The Grand Budapest Hotel | 81.58 | 87.64 | 80.72 | 79.19 | 2014 | Wes Anderson |
322 | The Virgin Spring | 81.58 | 82.45 | 80.70 | 80.66 | 1960 | Ingmar Bergman |
323 | The Red Balloon | 81.57 | 90.20 | 79.93 | 80.30 | 1956 | Albert Lamorisse |
324 | Stagecoach | 81.57 | 94.58 | 77.69 | 78.94 | 1939 | John Ford |
325 | Mulholland Drive | 81.56 | 80.61 | 79.60 | 77.87 | 2001 | David Lynch |
326 | A Matter of Life and Death | 81.49 | 92.60 | 81.91 | 76.27 | 1946 | Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger |
327 | High Noon | 81.48 | 90.58 | 79.27 | 78.94 | 1952 | Fred Zinnemann |
328 | Orpheus | 81.48 | 96.20 | 79.88 | 78.90 | 1950 | Jean Cocteau |
329 | Life of Brian | 81.47 | 82.98 | 80.78 | 79.81 | 1979 | Terry Jones |
330 | Casino | 81.46 | 74.23 | 81.54 | 81.75 | 1995 | Martin Scorsese |
331 | Kagemusha | 81.44 | 82.93 | 80.01 | 80.43 | 1980 | Akira Kurosawa |
332 | Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid | 81.43 | 76.08 | 80.53 | 81.85 | 1969 | George Roy Hill |
333 | In a Lonely Place | 81.43 | 92.45 | 80.42 | 78.77 | 1950 | Nicholas Ray |
334 | Scarface | 81.43 | 71.30 | 81.97 | 82.18 | 1983 | Brian De Palma |
335 | A Short Film About Killing | 81.42 | 87.35 | 79.89 | 80.38 | 1988 | Krzysztof Kieślowski |
336 | Beauty and the Beast | 81.41 | 92.05 | 79.28 | 78.32 | 1946 | Jean Cocteau |
337 | The Hustler | 81.39 | 92.45 | 80.43 | 78.97 | 1961 | Robert Rossen |
338 | Cléo from 5 to 7 | 81.38 | 91.65 | 80.03 | 79.11 | 1962 | Agnès Varda |
339 | Fireworks | 81.37 | 90.15 | 80.01 | 79.63 | 1997 | Takeshi Kitano |
340 | Room | 81.36 | 88.41 | 80.43 | 79.48 | 2015 | Lenny Abrahamson |
341 | Mad Max: Fury Road | 81.35 | 90.39 | 79.76 | 77.80 | 2015 | George Miller |
342 | Steamboat Bill, Jr. | 81.32 | 95.75 | 79.30 | 79.23 | 1928 | Charles Reisner, Buster Keaton |
343 | Judgment at Nuremberg | 81.31 | 71.58 | 82.24 | 83.03 | 1961 | Stanley Kramer |
344 | The Straight Story | 81.30 | 87.15 | 79.64 | 79.88 | 1999 | David Lynch |
345 | Meshes of the Afternoon | 81.29 | 96.25 | 77.91 | 79.99 | 1943 | Maya Deren, Alexandr Hackenschmied |
346 | Alice in the Cities | 81.28 | 86.70 | 79.60 | 80.20 | 1974 | Wim Wenders |
347 | Akira | 81.28 | 80.90 | 81.12 | 79.98 | 1988 | Katsuhiro Otomo |
348 | Good Will Hunting | 81.27 | 79.38 | 81.97 | 81.05 | 1997 | Gus Van Sant |
349 | The Miracle Worker | 81.25 | 85.15 | 78.88 | 81.55 | 1962 | Arthur Penn |
350 | Talk to Her | 81.25 | 87.48 | 79.33 | 78.71 | 2002 | Pedro Almodóvar |
351 | The Graduate | 81.24 | 85.58 | 78.91 | 79.97 | 1967 | Mike Nichols |
352 | Beauty and the Beast | 81.22 | 92.28 | 79.20 | 78.77 | 1991 | Gary Trousdale, Kirk Wise |
353 | The Heiress | 81.19 | 94.45 | 80.20 | 79.76 | 1949 | William Wyler |
354 | Fantasia | 81.18 | 93.03 | 76.76 | 79.95 | 1940 | Samuel Armstrong, James Algar |
355 | Au Revoir les Enfants | 81.18 | 94.25 | 80.14 | 78.92 | 1987 | Louis Malle |
356 | Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri | 81.18 | 88.62 | 79.36 | 79.90 | 2017 | Martin McDonagh |
357 | Inglourious Basterds | 81.17 | 79.05 | 81.06 | 80.51 | 2009 | Quentin Tarantino |
358 | Elevator to the Gallows | 81.16 | 90.45 | 79.31 | 78.56 | 1958 | Louis Malle |
359 | Gladiator | 81.16 | 75.39 | 81.69 | 81.52 | 2000 | Ridley Scott |
360 | Through a Glass Darkly | 81.15 | 93.60 | 81.11 | 78.86 | 1961 | Ingmar Bergman |
361 | Million Dollar Baby | 81.15 | 87.41 | 77.43 | 80.72 | 2004 | Clint Eastwood |
362 | Days of Heaven | 81.15 | 90.75 | 80.19 | 77.08 | 1978 | Terrence Malick |
363 | Do the Right Thing | 81.15 | 90.78 | 80.26 | 77.04 | 1989 | Spike Lee |
364 | Out of the Past | 81.14 | 91.40 | 80.73 | 77.92 | 1947 | Jacques Tourneur |
365 | Strangers on a Train | 81.11 | 93.30 | 80.01 | 78.68 | 1951 | Alfred Hitchcock |
366 | Blue Velvet | 81.11 | 83.48 | 78.98 | 77.09 | 1986 | David Lynch |
367 | That Obscure Object of Desire | 81.09 | 89.40 | 79.59 | 78.11 | 1977 | Luis Buñuel |
368 | What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? | 81.08 | 80.23 | 80.74 | 80.75 | 1962 | Robert Aldrich |
369 | My Night at Maud's | 81.07 | 88.15 | 79.51 | 79.42 | 1969 | Éric Rohmer |
370 | The Earrings of Madame de… | 81.07 | 92.15 | 80.36 | 77.05 | 1953 | Max Ophüls |
371 | The Conversation | 81.04 | 89.23 | 80.03 | 77.44 | 1974 | Francis Ford Coppola |
372 | The Killing | 81.03 | 91.50 | 79.51 | 79.21 | 1956 | Stanley Kubrick |
373 | The Servant | 81.03 | 87.83 | 79.45 | 78.57 | 1963 | Joseph Losey |
374 | The Intouchables | 81.03 | 67.15 | 82.13 | 84.70 | 2011 | Olivier Nakache, Éric Toledano |
375 | The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp | 81.01 | 94.15 | 81.57 | 75.44 | 1943 | Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger |
376 | Jaws | 81.01 | 90.98 | 79.91 | 75.70 | 1975 | Steven Spielberg |
377 | Winter Light | 81.01 | 73.55 | 81.51 | 79.95 | 1963 | Ingmar Bergman |
378 | Love Exposure | 81.01 | 80.88 | 82.23 | 79.55 | 2008 | Sion Sono |
379 | Hiroshima Mon Amour | 81.00 | 92.95 | 80.13 | 77.99 | 1959 | Alain Resnais |
380 | Day for Night | 80.98 | 92.55 | 80.21 | 78.27 | 1973 | François Truffaut |
381 | Ratatouille | 80.97 | 92.73 | 78.72 | 78.68 | 2007 | Brad Bird |
382 | Ghost in the Shell | 80.97 | 81.43 | 79.98 | 81.15 | 1995 | Mamoru Oshii |
383 | Germany Year Zero | 80.95 | 92.00 | 77.80 | 80.03 | 1948 | Roberto Rossellini |
384 | Spotlight | 80.93 | 93.00 | 79.75 | 77.55 | 2015 | Tom McCarthy |
385 | Die Hard | 80.93 | 79.58 | 81.11 | 79.43 | 1988 | John McTiernan |
386 | Laura | 80.93 | 93.80 | 79.70 | 78.47 | 1944 | Otto Preminger |
387 | Sleuth | 80.93 | 89.95 | 79.16 | 80.87 | 1972 | Joseph L. Mankiewicz |
388 | The Diving Bell and the Butterfly | 80.92 | 88.64 | 79.69 | 77.84 | 2007 | Julian Schnabel |
389 | The Handmaiden | 80.92 | 85.99 | 82.55 | 77.41 | 2016 | Park Chan-wook |
390 | Stand by Me | 80.90 | 80.20 | 81.28 | 79.54 | 1986 | Rob Reiner |
391 | Wolf Children | 80.90 | 80.15 | 80.40 | 81.27 | 2012 | Mamoru Hosoda |
392 | Marriage Story | 80.88 | 92.86 | 79.40 | 77.75 | 2019 | Noam Baumbach |
393 | Shoeshine | 80.87 | 93.75 | 79.02 | 79.38 | 1946 | Vittorio De Sica |
394 | Freaks | 80.85 | 84.70 | 77.66 | 80.31 | 1932 | Tod Browning |
395 | Nosferatu | 80.85 | 93.75 | 78.29 | 79.14 | 1922 | F. W. Murnau |
396 | Dial M for Murder | 80.84 | 77.60 | 81.17 | 81.31 | 1954 | Alfred Hitchcock |
397 | Amour | 80.81 | 90.90 | 77.74 | 78.19 | 2012 | Michael Haneke |
398 | 12 Years a Slave | 80.80 | 94.00 | 79.74 | 76.94 | 2013 | Steve McQueen |
399 | The Nightmare Before Christmas | 80.77 | 85.38 | 79.26 | 79.69 | 1993 | Henry Selick |
400 | Cabaret | 80.77 | 84.68 | 77.34 | 80.69 | 1972 | Bob Fosse |
401 | Central Station | 80.77 | 83.28 | 80.91 | 78.52 | 1998 | Walter Salles |
402 | Landscape in the Mist | 80.74 | 71.35 | 80.76 | 80.28 | 1988 | Theo Angelopoulos |
403 | 1917 | 80.73 | 84.37 | 80.65 | 79.33 | 2019 | Sam Mendes |
404 | Intolerance: Love's Struggle Throughout the Ages | 80.71 | 93.98 | 75.69 | 78.01 | 1916 | D. W. Griffith |
405 | Call Me by Your Name | 80.71 | 91.25 | 79.43 | 77.87 | 2017 | Luca Guadagnino |
406 | Midnight Cowboy | 80.71 | 82.98 | 79.10 | 79.50 | 1969 | John Schlesinger |
407 | Shadow of a Doubt | 80.70 | 94.38 | 79.31 | 76.04 | 1943 | Alfred Hitchcock |
408 | Interstellar | 80.70 | 74.16 | 81.30 | 82.25 | 2014 | Christopher Nolan |
409 | Hannah and Her Sisters | 80.69 | 88.95 | 79.15 | 77.98 | 1986 | Woody Allen |
410 | Monsters, Inc. | 80.68 | 85.29 | 79.37 | 80.08 | 2001 | Pete Docter, David Silverman |
411 | The Testament of Dr. Mabuse | 80.65 | 85.85 | 79.40 | 79.38 | 1933 | Fritz Lang |
412 | Downfall | 80.64 | 83.53 | 81.54 | 78.55 | 2004 | Oliver Hirschbiegel |
413 | Being There | 80.64 | 87.30 | 79.42 | 78.06 | 1979 | Hal Ashby |
414 | The Killer | 80.63 | 92.60 | 79.27 | 78.66 | 1989 | John Woo |
415 | My Left Foot: The Story of Christy Brown | 80.63 | 93.23 | 78.13 | 79.15 | 1989 | Jim Sheridan |
416 | Jean de Florette | 80.60 | 88.40 | 80.18 | 79.69 | 1986 | Claude Berri |
417 | The Big Lebowski | 80.57 | 74.80 | 82.28 | 78.57 | 1998 | Coen Brothers |
418 | The King's Speech | 80.57 | 90.86 | 78.50 | 78.59 | 2010 | Tom Hooper |
419 | Whisper of the Heart | 80.55 | 79.98 | 80.80 | 80.31 | 1995 | Yoshifumi Kondō |
420 | E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial | 80.54 | 93.08 | 77.22 | 77.82 | 1982 | Steven Spielberg |
421 | Infernal Affairs | 80.54 | 79.83 | 79.92 | 80.22 | 2002 | Andrew Lau, Alan Mak |
422 | The Prestige | 80.54 | 72.22 | 82.71 | 81.38 | 2006 | Christopher Nolan |
423 | Our Hospitality | 80.54 | 92.85 | 77.72 | 79.58 | 1923 | Buster Keaton, John G. Blystone |
424 | Zootopia | 80.53 | 85.22 | 78.84 | 80.18 | 2016 | Byron Howard, Rich Moore |
425 | Toy Story 2 | 80.49 | 92.59 | 78.51 | 77.05 | 1999 | John Lasseter, Ash Brannon, Lee Unkrich |
426 | Klaus | 80.48 | 75.00 | 81.07 | 81.41 | 2019 | Sergio Pablos |
427 | The Big Sleep | 80.45 | 92.10 | 79.74 | 77.58 | 1946 | Howard Hawks |
428 | Ford v Ferrari | 80.45 | 83.94 | 79.37 | 80.01 | 2019 | James Mangold |
429 | Dead Poets Society | 80.44 | 78.70 | 79.43 | 80.75 | 1989 | Peter Weir |
430 | The Terminator | 80.43 | 89.08 | 78.26 | 78.13 | 1984 | James Cameron |
431 | Naked | 80.43 | 84.48 | 80.39 | 77.34 | 1993 | Mike Leigh |
432 | Dangal | 80.41 | 83.00 | 79.68 | 80.56 | 2016 | Nitesh Tiwari |
433 | Kwaidan | 80.40 | 81.80 | 79.75 | 79.42 | 1964 | Masaki Kobayashi |
434 | The Man Who Would Be King | 80.40 | 90.55 | 78.24 | 77.79 | 1975 | John Huston |
435 | Wild Tales | 80.38 | 82.57 | 80.48 | 79.22 | 2014 | Damián Szifron |
436 | Groundhog Day | 80.38 | 80.08 | 79.31 | 79.35 | 1993 | Harold Ramis |
437 | Catch Me If You Can | 80.38 | 83.44 | 78.74 | 80.57 | 2002 | Steven Spielberg |
438 | I Vitelloni | 80.36 | 90.28 | 77.64 | 78.06 | 1953 | Federico Fellini |
439 | The Big Heat | 80.35 | 92.90 | 79.27 | 77.87 | 1953 | Fritz Lang |
440 | The Double Life of Véronique | 80.35 | 82.63 | 80.19 | 77.87 | 1991 | Krzysztof Kieślowski |
441 | Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? | 80.35 | 82.58 | 80.19 | 78.43 | 1966 | Mike Nichols |
442 | Requiem for a Dream | 80.33 | 71.39 | 81.39 | 80.93 | 2000 | Darren Aronofsky |
443 | Rope | 80.33 | 79.20 | 80.31 | 79.30 | 1948 | Alfred Hitchcock |
444 | Love and Death | 80.33 | 89.83 | 77.55 | 78.50 | 1975 | Woody Allen |
445 | The Remains of the Day | 80.29 | 86.88 | 78.75 | 78.80 | 1993 | James Ivory |
446 | Jules and Jim | 80.28 | 93.70 | 78.30 | 77.94 | 1962 | François Truffaut |
447 | The Gospel According to Matthew | 80.28 | 88.30 | 76.50 | 78.52 | 1964 | Pier Paolo Pasolini |
448 | How to Train Your Dragon | 80.27 | 81.97 | 79.45 | 80.24 | 2010 | Chris Sanders, Dean DeBlois |
449 | Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 | 80.27 | 88.50 | 78.81 | 78.53 | 2011 | David Yates |
450 | Cat on a Hot Tin Roof | 80.26 | 87.05 | 79.46 | 79.79 | 1958 | Richard Brooks |
451 | The French Connection | 80.26 | 93.35 | 78.04 | 76.89 | 1971 | William Friedkin |
452 | Opening Night | 80.25 | 78.05 | 80.50 | 79.25 | 1977 | John Cassavetes |
453 | Hotel Rwanda | 80.24 | 84.54 | 79.34 | 79.40 | 2004 | Terry George |
454 | 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days | 80.22 | 92.51 | 77.76 | 76.22 | 2007 | Cristian Mungiu |
455 | Tampopo | 80.22 | 92.40 | 81.20 | 77.01 | 1985 | Juzo Itami |
456 | Scarface | 80.22 | 93.50 | 76.43 | 79.55 | 1932 | Howard Hawks, Howard Hughes |
457 | The Face of Another | 80.21 | 87.50 | 79.61 | 79.34 | 1966 | Hiroshi Teshigahara |
458 | The Roaring Twenties | 80.21 | 86.20 | 77.79 | 80.68 | 1939 | Raoul Walsh |
459 | Pickpocket | 80.20 | 93.80 | 76.41 | 76.47 | 1959 | Robert Bresson |
460 | Kiki's Delivery Service | 80.20 | 85.45 | 79.87 | 78.84 | 1989 | Hayao Miyazaki |
461 | A Prophet | 80.19 | 89.61 | 79.53 | 76.14 | 2009 | Jacques Audiard |
462 | Zelig | 80.19 | 90.00 | 76.50 | 80.29 | 1983 | Woody Allen |
463 | Trouble in Paradise | 80.18 | 88.20 | 79.35 | 77.62 | 1932 | Ernst Lubitsch |
464 | Gran Torino | 80.17 | 76.27 | 78.57 | 82.36 | 2008 | Clint Eastwood |
465 | Last Year at Marienbad | 80.16 | 88.25 | 78.29 | 77.37 | 1961 | Alain Resnais |
466 | All the President's Men | 80.15 | 85.95 | 80.48 | 76.46 | 1976 | Alan J. Pakula |
467 | Breaking the Waves | 80.15 | 79.85 | 78.46 | 79.55 | 1996 | Lars von Trier |
468 | Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade | 80.14 | 74.28 | 81.44 | 80.57 | 1989 | Steven Spielberg |
469 | Divorce Italian Style | 80.12 | 91.00 | 79.28 | 78.26 | 1961 | Pietro Germi |
470 | Edward Scissorhands | 80.12 | 78.65 | 78.09 | 80.73 | 1990 | Tim Burton |
471 | The Thing | 80.12 | 67.98 | 82.60 | 79.34 | 1982 | John Carpenter |
472 | Perfect Blue | 80.11 | 74.05 | 80.91 | 80.09 | 1997 | Satoshi Kon |
473 | Down by Law | 80.10 | 79.03 | 78.98 | 79.61 | 1986 | Jim Jarmusch |
474 | Bringing Up Baby | 80.10 | 90.75 | 78.25 | 76.45 | 1938 | Howard Hawks |
475 | The Phantom of Liberty | 80.09 | 85.10 | 78.89 | 78.66 | 1974 | Luis Buñuel |
476 | Bonnie and Clyde | 80.07 | 85.38 | 78.16 | 78.23 | 1967 | Arthur Penn |
477 | The Incredibles | 80.07 | 89.69 | 79.77 | 75.78 | 2004 | Brad Bird |
478 | Rocky | 80.04 | 79.73 | 79.17 | 79.29 | 1976 | John G. Avildsen |
479 | His Girl Friday | 80.03 | 94.15 | 79.24 | 76.72 | 1940 | Howard Hawks |
480 | Mommy | 80.03 | 80.79 | 80.39 | 79.13 | 2014 | Xavier Dolan |
481 | Mon Oncle | 80.03 | 88.00 | 78.03 | 78.76 | 1958 | Jacques Tati |
482 | My Fair Lady | 79.99 | 91.85 | 77.53 | 78.00 | 1964 | George Cukor |
483 | Charade | 79.98 | 85.55 | 79.37 | 78.72 | 1963 | Stanley Donen |
484 | Stalag 17 | 79.95 | 87.13 | 79.62 | 77.79 | 1953 | Billy Wilder |
485 | Boyhood | 79.95 | 97.08 | 76.08 | 75.95 | 2014 | Richard Linklater |
486 | The Secret in Their Eyes | 79.95 | 82.49 | 81.27 | 77.67 | 2009 | Juan José Campanella |
487 | Ninotchka | 79.95 | 90.15 | 77.99 | 78.50 | 1939 | Ernst Lubitsch |
488 | Pierrot le Fou | 79.94 | 81.75 | 77.84 | 76.65 | 1965 | Jean-Luc Godard |
489 | The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser | 79.94 | 89.10 | 78.30 | 78.27 | 1974 | Werner Herzog |
490 | Stroszek | 79.94 | 88.40 | 79.50 | 77.77 | 1977 | Werner Herzog |
491 | A Hard Day's Night | 79.93 | 93.73 | 76.82 | 77.08 | 1964 | Richard Lester |
492 | Onibaba | 79.90 | 74.75 | 79.42 | 79.96 | 1964 | Kaneto Shindo |
493 | Repulsion | 79.85 | 92.68 | 77.29 | 76.57 | 1965 | Roman Polanski |
494 | Like Stars on Earth | 79.85 | 80.50 | 79.54 | 79.86 | 2007 | Aamir Khan, Amole Gupte |
495 | Duck Soup | 79.84 | 92.33 | 79.01 | 74.92 | 1933 | Leo McCarey |
496 | Carlito's Way | 79.83 | 70.28 | 79.16 | 82.01 | 1993 | Brian De Palma |
497 | Nashville | 79.82 | 93.23 | 76.89 | 74.92 | 1975 | Robert Altman |
498 | The Triplets of Belleville | 79.82 | 88.97 | 76.57 | 78.66 | 2003 | Sylvain Chomet |
499 | Dr. Mabuse the Gambler | 79.81 | 85.10 | 76.88 | 79.98 | 1922 | Fritz Lang |
500 | Gone Girl | 79.79 | 83.03 | 79.32 | 78.87 | 2014 | David Fincher |
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