Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Welcome to the 300 highest-rated best movies of all time, as reviewed and selected by Tomatometer-approved critics and Rotten Tomatoes users. 1. 99% L.A. Confidential (1997)

  2. All about Movie: directors and actors, reviews and ratings, trailers, stills, backstage. Mark Calaway, Scott Hall, Bret Hart, Earl Hebner, Curt Hennig...

    • "Raging Bull" (1980) Raging Bull is a boxing movie that feels like the audience is getting the rope-a-dope, because while the story follows Robert De Niro’s boxer trying to find love and glory, the real payoff for viewers is the inimitable performance from Joe Pesci.
    • "Rocky" (1976) Rocky will forever remain one of the best boxing movies of all time, partially because Sylvester Stallone and his character are going through similar struggles.
    • "Creed" (2015) Creed is more than another entry in the long-running Rocky franchise; this tale of an aging boxer (Sylvester Stallone) training his one-time foe’s brash, hotheaded kid (Michael B. Jordan) makes Rocky seem fresher than he has in most sequels.
    • "When We Were Kings" (1996) Part of boxing’s appeal rests in its neo-mythology: the “Rumble in the Jungle” between George Foreman and Muhammad Ali was our clash of titans.
  3. On this list of the greatest movie scenes ever filmed, though, the selections run the gamut, from action sequences so balletic they nearly count as dancing to brutal, sloppy brawls that...

  4. The Top Rated Movie list only includes feature films. Shorts, TV movies, and documentaries are not included. The list is ranked by a formula which includes the number of ratings each movie received from users, and value of ratings received from regular users.

  5. So when it comes to the best movies ever made about soccer, we’re looking at it top to bottom, from goal-scoring winners to movies that may have flopped before the critics but still managed...

  6. The Greatest Game Ever Played is a 2005 American biographical sports film based on the early life of amateur golf champion Francis Ouimet and his surprise winning of the 1913 U.S. Open. The film was directed by Bill Paxton, and was his last film as a director. Shia LaBeouf plays the role of Ouimet.