About

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UltimateMovieRankings (UMR) has been ranking movies since 2011.  Movies are ranked by using a combination of box office grosses, reviews, and awards.  So far we have ranked 36,000 movies, written over 10,500 pages, been viewed over 50 million times, won three website awards, and have received over 50,000 comments on our pages.

Our vital links: Site Index, Newest Pages & Request Hotline.  The Trending Now Sidebar lists our most popular pages in the last 24 hours.

Our Site Index lets you see what movie subjects we have already written about.  The index lists the movie subjects alphabetically.  Subjects go from classic performers like Clark Gable and Charlie Chaplin to the stars of the 1960s like Marlon Brando, Elizabeth Taylor and Paul Newman to today’s most popular stars like Sandra Bullock, Channing Tatum and Chris Pratt.

We like ranking movies…and that is what this website is all about.  And we are not talking about a Top Ten list…we are talking about ranking all the movies in somebody’s career from Best to Worst.   The criteria used for the rankings is box office grosses, critic reviews, audience voting, and award recognition.  Every day the amount of movies ranked by Ultimate Movie Rankings increases ….our tally is now over 25,000 movies.  The number one ranked movie is The Godfather ….coming in last is Kirk Cameron’s Saving Christmas.  Thankfully our pages have been well received.  Recently we crossed the 15 million view mark and are now read in over 230 different countries.

How we got here.

Sometime in 2010, for the millionth time I was looking at Joel Hirschhorn’s book Rating The Movie Stars (1983) when I wondered had he updated his ratings lately? A quick internet check provided the sad news that Mr. Hirchhorn had passed away in 2005.  About a month later, I thought I could update the ratings.  I then came up with an idea to create a mathematical equation that would create a numerical score for each movie. The first thing I had to come up with were factors for the equation.

The book that got me thinking.
The book that got me thinking.

So I thought….if I were producing a movie, what would I like to see my movie accomplish. The first thing I would want would be for the movie to be successful at the box office. Secondly, I would like the critics and moviegoers to enjoy my movie. And finally, I would like my movie to receive award recognition through Golden Globe® and Oscar® ceremonies.

There are all kinds of ways to determine if you want to see or skip a movie. You can depend on your favorite critic.  My favorites are the late great Roger Ebert and Leonard Maltin. You might go to Rotten Tomatoes to get the consensus of all the critics. You might watch the viewer ratings at Yahoo Movies and IMDB. You might depend on which movies are doing the best at the box office. You might wait for the end of the year awards.

Ultimate Movie Rankings (UMR) Score takes all of these options and creates a mathematical equation that generates a score from 1 to 100. The higher the score the better the movie.  A “good ” movie score = 60 or above.  So anything above 60 should be a good movie to check out.  This gives a good comparison number between centuries and now my wife and I can argue over the merits of her favorite, The Sound of Music and one of my favorites, Pulp Fiction using the same scoring criteria.

So far, I’ve generated scores for 36,000+ movies.  With these scores, I’ve written 1,000+ web pages with a focus on actors/actresses and similar groups (Star Trek vs Star Wars, Top 100 Sports Movies are examples).

So let’s look at the breakdown of the variables in the equation.

1. Box office results.  Receives the second-highest percentage (30%) of the equation. The ceiling was 200 million in adjusted for inflation dollars. Any movie that crossed 200 million maxed out the points in the category.

2. Critics and audience reception.  Receives the highest percentage (46%) of the equation. So where do I find critics/audience reception? I use many different sources: RottenTomatoes, IMDb, MetaCritic, Yahoo Movies, Roger Ebert, Leonard Maltin, and Fandango. Put them all together and I get an average with 100% being the highest score possible.  Sadly with the passing of my all-time favorite critic, Roger Ebert, I needed a new source….after much research…..our latest movie critic and taking Mr. Ebert’s spot is YouTube movie reviewer Chris Stuckmann.

3. Award Recognition. The final part of the equation is worth 24%. A movie gets points for Golden Globe® and Oscar® nominations and wins. The Golden Globes get 5% while the Oscars® get 13% of the equation. The last 6% goes to the amount of Oscar® nominations and the amount of Oscar® wins.

One way to see how the scores are calculated: 

Top 200 Box Office Hits with Inflation + Top 100 Best Reviewed Movies + 88 Best Picture Oscar Winners = Top 100 UMR Score Movies

In January of 2011, we published our first Ultimate Movie Ranking (UMR) Score table on HubPages.com…we picked one of our favorite actors, Bruce Willis, to be the guinea pig.  We have updated his page countless times over the years.

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637 thoughts on “About

  1. Seems like I am spending all day trying to figure out a way to add “moderators” to the page….so people can approve their own comments if the get stuck.

    Leaderboard of Comments stuck in the approval folder

    1. Bob
    2. Steve
    3. Cogerson…yep it has been sending some of my comments there too.
    4. Flora
    5. Phil

  2. Possibly some of the delayed comment issues were due to my website provider resetting our “cache” settings……hopefully now that we have reset those settings the delays in the comments to the page and the forum will get better….fingers crossed.

    1. Hey Laurent…..I understand that life can easily get in the way when it comes to free time….hope it all works out well……thanks for another wonderful link….my next yearly review will be 1930…so we are almost merging….great information….thanks for sharing.

  3. Bruce, I noticed there was a captcha after I submitted one of my replies requiring me to enter a word? Is this your latest spam repellent? I think it’s a great idea and it should work unless the bastards take their time to enter each word. Hopefully it’s just randomly generated spam, captchas should deter them. My post still failed to get thru to the page.

    1. Hey Steve…..I have no idea where that is coming from…we toyed with doing something like that….but decided to give Spam Busters a try….so far your one comment is the only one that got stopped….and the spam is nowhere to be found…….I would like to know where Spam Busters is storing the spam it is catching….I sound like Walter Peck of Ghostbusters fame…..wanted to see the Ghostbusters’ ghost containment system.

  4. Bob, those spammers are still at it, bastards have nothing better to do. I think my posts have finally appeared on the James Stewart page.

    Bruce, not sure how forums or the comments box works but if there was a way of changing the ‘address’ or link destination to the comments it might confuse the spammers. My movie forum still gets spam, but not as much as here, usually with links to illegal downloads.

    1. Hey Steve….I appreciate the suggestions….but not thinking there is anyway to change the address links….with the wedding over…and Girl Scout cookie drive over…and Bern1960 doing so well…..thinking we will get the UMR brains (WoC) to crack this comment, spam issue.

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