Updated On November 25th, 2024
Looking for the best Drama Movies? You aren't short of choices in 2022. The difficult bit is deciding the best Drama Movies for you, but luckily that's where we can help. Based on testing out in the field with reviews, sells etc, we've created this ranked list of the finest Drama Movies.
Rank | Product Name | Score | |
---|---|---|---|
1 |
|
WWE: Drama Double Feature - Legendary/That's What I Am [2 Discs] [DVD]
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100%
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2 |
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British Cinema, Vol. 3: Dramas [2 Discs]
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96%
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3 |
|
Scenic Walks Around the World: Our Dramatic Planet [2 Discs] [Includes Digital Copy] [Blu-ray/DVD] [2010]
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92%
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4 |
|
Drama [LP] - VINYL
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88%
|
5 |
|
4-Film Collection: Inspirational Drama [DVD]
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84%
|
6 |
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Jean Arthur Drama Collection DVD [4 Discs] [DVD]
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50%
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7 |
|
Drama [LP] - VINYL
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0%
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8 |
|
Gangsta Grillz: The Album, Vol. 2 [LP] - VINYL
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0%
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9 |
|
Quality Street Music [LP] - VINYL
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0%
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10 |
|
I'm Really Like That [LP] - VINYL
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0%
|
Our Score
The Monitor XT90 Height Speaker features a 4" Dynamically Balanced Woofer that delivers dramatic 3D sound for your music, movies, and games. Sold as pairs, the MXT90 height speakers can be easily placed on Monitor MXT20 bookshelf speakers, MXT60 and MXT70 floor-standing speakers or wall mounted using their sturdy keyhole slot. Works with any Dolby Atmos, or DTS:X AVRs (minimum of 7-channels)
This two-pack for fans of drama movies starring wrestlers from the WWE includes Legendary and That's What I Am.
Our Score
The ES35 slim center channel speaker features a 1” Terylene Tweeter and six 3” Polypropylene Woofers to deliver ultra-clear highs and detailed midrange for your music, movies, and games. Polk's Dual Power Port Technology delivers louder, lower, and cleaner bass from a smaller speaker for a full range sound and a dramatic frontal impact. It is Hi-Res Certified, and Dolby Atmos & DTS:X compatible.
This release from the VCI Entertainment label compiles into a single collection four beloved features from Britain: Robert Siodmak's The Rough and the Smooth (1952, 102 min.), Wolf Rilla's The Scamp (1957, 86 min), Terence Fisher's Kill Me Tomorrow (1957, 74 min.), and Phil C. Samuel's Grand National Night (1953, 80 min.). The films arrive in a 1.33:1 aspect ratio, NTSC format, all in their original black-and-white with a Dolby digital soundtrack. No additional supplements are included.
Our Score
The Monitor XT90 Height Speaker features a 4" Dynamically Balanced Woofer that delivers dramatic 3D sound for your music, movies, and games. Sold as pairs, the MXT90 height speakers can be easily placed on Monitor MXT20 bookshelf speakers, MXT60 and MXT70 floor-standing speakers or wall mounted using their sturdy keyhole slot. Works with any Dolby Atmos, or DTS:X AVRs (minimum of 7-channels)
This two-pack for fans of drama movies starring wrestlers from the WWE includes Legendary and That's What I Am.
Our Score
As one of the most historically vital and yet least-known documentarians to emerge after the Second World War, Canadian filmmaker Allan King pioneered the form of cinema direct - standing at a distance from his subjects, camera-in-hand, and unobtrusively shooting raw, unrehearsed human interaction. This resulted in a body of work known for being as emotionally uncomfortable and shocking as it was candid and genuine. King peaked as a craftsperson in the late 1960s and early 1970s, but remained prolific for several decades, right up through his death in June 2009; appropriately enough, then, the five documentaries in this Criterion Eclipse package span 38 years - 1967 through 2005. The set begins with the legendary Warrendale (1967), King's tour of an experimental home for disturbed youths, then includes the director's A Married Couple (1969), a no-holds-barred chronicle of a Toronto couple (Antoinette and Billy Edwards) whose marriage is violently splitting at the seams. The package then moves ahead to 1971, for King's Come on Children, which finds the director inviting a clique of disaffected, alienated teenagers to live on a farm (independently of their parents) for ten weeks. The last two films in the package examine various issues surrounding the end of life: Dying at Grace (2003) observes the final days of five terminally ill patients, while Memory for Max, Claire, Ida and Company (2005) studies several nursing home residents afflicted by various forms of dementia.
Our Score
The Monitor XT90 Height Speaker features a 4" Dynamically Balanced Woofer that delivers dramatic 3D sound for your music, movies, and games. Sold as pairs, the MXT90 height speakers can be easily placed on Monitor MXT20 bookshelf speakers, MXT60 and MXT70 floor-standing speakers or wall mounted using their sturdy keyhole slot. Works with any Dolby Atmos, or DTS:X AVRs (minimum of 7-channels)
This set features four inspirational drama films. Included here are The Way; Masterless; Safelight, and Ring the Bell.
Our Score
The Monitor XT90 Height Speaker features a 4" Dynamically Balanced Woofer that delivers dramatic 3D sound for your music, movies, and games. Sold as pairs, the MXT90 height speakers can be easily placed on Monitor MXT20 bookshelf speakers, MXT60 and MXT70 floor-standing speakers or wall mounted using their sturdy keyhole slot. Works with any Dolby Atmos, or DTS:X AVRs (minimum of 7-channels)
Lindsay Lohan stars in Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen, which debuts on DVD with a pair of transfers. The widescreen anamorphic transfer preserves the original theatrical aspect ratio of 1.85:1 and is preferable to the standard full-frame image. An English soundtrack is rendered in Dolby Digital 5.1, and a French soundtrack has been recorded in Dolby Digital Stereo. French subtitles are accessible. Supplemental materials include a commentary track recorded by the film's director, writer, and producers. A making-of featurette, a deleted scene, and a music video round out this THX-certified release from Disney/Buena Vista.
Our Score
As one of the most historically vital and yet least-known documentarians to emerge after the Second World War, Canadian filmmaker Allan King pioneered the form of cinema direct - standing at a distance from his subjects, camera-in-hand, and unobtrusively shooting raw, unrehearsed human interaction. This resulted in a body of work known for being as emotionally uncomfortable and shocking as it was candid and genuine. King peaked as a craftsperson in the late 1960s and early 1970s, but remained prolific for several decades, right up through his death in June 2009; appropriately enough, then, the five documentaries in this Criterion Eclipse package span 38 years - 1967 through 2005. The set begins with the legendary Warrendale (1967), King's tour of an experimental home for disturbed youths, then includes the director's A Married Couple (1969), a no-holds-barred chronicle of a Toronto couple (Antoinette and Billy Edwards) whose marriage is violently splitting at the seams. The package then moves ahead to 1971, for King's Come on Children, which finds the director inviting a clique of disaffected, alienated teenagers to live on a farm (independently of their parents) for ten weeks. The last two films in the package examine various issues surrounding the end of life: Dying at Grace (2003) observes the final days of five terminally ill patients, while Memory for Max, Claire, Ida and Company (2005) studies several nursing home residents afflicted by various forms of dementia.
Our Score
Our Score
As one of the most historically vital and yet least-known documentarians to emerge after the Second World War, Canadian filmmaker Allan King pioneered the form of cinema direct - standing at a distance from his subjects, camera-in-hand, and unobtrusively shooting raw, unrehearsed human interaction. This resulted in a body of work known for being as emotionally uncomfortable and shocking as it was candid and genuine. King peaked as a craftsperson in the late 1960s and early 1970s, but remained prolific for several decades, right up through his death in June 2009; appropriately enough, then, the five documentaries in this Criterion Eclipse package span 38 years - 1967 through 2005. The set begins with the legendary Warrendale (1967), King's tour of an experimental home for disturbed youths, then includes the director's A Married Couple (1969), a no-holds-barred chronicle of a Toronto couple (Antoinette and Billy Edwards) whose marriage is violently splitting at the seams. The package then moves ahead to 1971, for King's Come on Children, which finds the director inviting a clique of disaffected, alienated teenagers to live on a farm (independently of their parents) for ten weeks. The last two films in the package examine various issues surrounding the end of life: Dying at Grace (2003) observes the final days of five terminally ill patients, while Memory for Max, Claire, Ida and Company (2005) studies several nursing home residents afflicted by various forms of dementia.
Our Score