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+ "page_name": "The 100+ Best Movies From 1994, Ranked By Fans",
+ "page_url": "https://www.ranker.com/crowdranked-list/best-movies-of-1994",
+ "page_snippet": "These are the best movies of 1994, from instant classics like Pulp Fiction to hilarious PG-13 Comedies like Dumb and Dumber. Hollywood thrived in 1994 with top critically acclaimed movies like Forrest Gump. Some the best movies from this year are some of the best teen, coming of age, adventure,...Only movies released in theaters in 1994. These are the best movies of 1994, from instant classics like Pulp Fiction to hilarious PG-13 Comedies like Dumb and Dumber. Hollywood thrived in 1994 with top critically acclaimed movies like Forrest Gump. Some the best movies from this year are some of the best teen, coming of age, adventure, comedies, and dramas in history. Over 2K filmgoers have voted on the 80+ films on Best Movies Of 1994. Current Top 3: The Shawshank Redemption, Pulp Fiction, The Lion King Be sure to vote up your favorite movies from 1994 to help them reach the top of the list. You can vote down any that you think other fans should skip. The films on here are very memorable and had audiences on the edges of their seats, and still pack a punch so many years after they were first released. You shouldn't be too surprised by the movies listed on this list of the top films of 1994. Be sure to vote up your favorite movies from 1994 to help them reach the top of the list. You can vote down any that you think other fans should skip. The films on here are very memorable and had audiences on the edges of their seats, and still pack a punch so many years after they were first released.",
+ "page_result": "
\r\n \r\n \r\n Year\r\n | \r\n Event and Significance | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n Turner Broadcasting Systems merged with\r\n New Line Cinema and soon was successful with two blockbusters. Both\r\n starred popular comedian Jim Carrey: The Mask (1994) and the\r\n slapstick Dumb\r\n and Dumber \r\n (1994). [Note: Coincidentally, The Mask launched the career\r\n of then-unknown Cameron Diaz.]\r\n Carrey had started his career as a stand-up comic in Canadian clubs, after\r\n which he brought his act to the Wayan Brothers' TV show In\r\n Living Color in the early to mid-1990s as the wacky masochistic,\r\n accident-prone Fire Marshal Bill. His irrepressible, extroverted rubber-faced\r\n character headlined in a trio of films in 1994. Superstar\r\n Carrey had also appeared in an earlier third popular hit in the same\r\n calendar year - his breakout film: Warners' Ace\r\n Ventura: Pet Detective (1994). | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n The R-rated biopic-documentary Crumb (1994) sympathetically\r\n portrayed counter-cultural, sex-obsessed cartoonist R. Crumb, known for\r\n 1960s-era underground comic books, the character of Mr. Natural, the\r\n phrase: "Keep on Truckin'", Fritz the Cat (the character was\r\n the inspiration for the first X-rated animated feature in Hollywood history\r\n by writer/director Ralph Bakshi in 1972), and the cover art for Janis\r\n Joplin's best-selling record Cheap Thrills. | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n Disney's hit Christmas movie The Santa Clause (1994) was\r\n the cross-over breakthrough film for TV star Tim Allen. Although Allen\r\n had a criminal record and Disney was known for not hiring felons\r\n or ex-cons, an exception was made. He continued\r\n to work with Disney/Pixar as the voice of Buzz Lightyear in the Toy\r\n Story films,\r\n and starred in two Santa Clause sequels in 2002 and 2006. | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n Turner Classic Movies (TCM), a 24-hour commercial-free \r\n network for programming classic films (mostly from the combined Turner and \r\n Warner Bros. library of film greats), was launched. | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n Darnell Martin became the first female African-American\r\n director to helm (and write) a major studio production, for directing\r\n Columbia Pictures' comedy drama I Like It Like That (1994) (her\r\n debut picture). | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n Writer/director \r\n James Cameron's True Lies (1994), starring Arnold Schwarzenegger\r\n as a Bond-like secret agent, was a spy-adventure packed with special\r\n effects, thrills, co-star Jamie Lee Curtis (at age 35) doing a sexy striptease,\r\n and an exciting jet and car chase over the Florida Keys. Its production\r\n budget eventually totaled $115 million, but it was able to gross $146\r\n million (domestic) and $379 million (worldwide). It was the first film\r\n with a budget to cross over $100 million. Later, Cameron's Titanic\r\n (1997) \r\n was also noteworthy for breaking the $200 million budget barrier. A sequel\r\n was planned for 2002, but cancelled in the wake of the 9/11 attacks. | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n One of the first major video game theatrical adaptations,\r\n the action film Street\r\n Fighter (1994), with Jean-Claude Van Damme, was dedicated to co-star\r\n Raul Julia, who died after the film was completed - it was his last theatrical\r\n release. Van Damme had turned down the role of Johnny Cage in the more successful Mortal\r\n Kombat (1995), to star in this film. It turned out to be negatively-criticized\r\n and rated as one of the worst films ever made, although it was financially\r\n successful - returning nearly three times its\r\n $35 million budget with its worldwide box office tally ($99.4 million). It\r\n was followed by the reboot: Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li\r\n (2009). | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n Director Jan de Bont's action-thriller\r\n hit Speed (1994) starring Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock became\r\n one of the most exhilarating and successful films of its kind. It won\r\n two Academy Awards, Best Sound and Best Sound Effects Editing, and was\r\n the 8th highest-grossing (domestic) film of the year, at $121 million.\r\n The spectacular heart-pounding film helped to boost Reeves’ critical\r\n rise in the 1990s, leading to later acclaimed roles in The Devil’s\r\n Advocate (1997) and The\r\n Matrix (1999). Reeves declined to appear in de Bont's sequel, Speed\r\n 2: Cruise Control (1997), to go on tour with\r\n his band Dogstar. Jason Patrick was reteamed with Sandra Bullock - and\r\n it was rated as one of the worst sequels of all time. | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n Three of the most powerful, influential and \r\n successful individuals in modern Hollywood -- director/producer Steven Spielberg, \r\n the recently-departed Disney executive Jeffrey Katzenberg, and film and \r\n music industry mogul David Geffen -- formed the film studio DreamWorks SKG. \r\n (The SKG stood for the first letter of their last names.) It was the first new major studio in more than 50 years. | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n The almost three-hour documentary Hoop Dreams (1994) followed\r\n the aspirations of two hopeful, hard-working African-American high school\r\n student athletes (from Chicago, Illinois) who dreamed to be professional\r\n basketball players. Because the exceptional film was not nominated in\r\n the category of Best Documentary Feature by the Academy, changes were\r\n made in the nominating procedure for future years. It was also the all-time\r\n top-grossing documentary film (until Michael Moore's Bowling for \r\n Columbine (2002)). | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n The erotic thriller Color of Night (1994) won five\r\n Golden Raspberry Awards (from its nine nominations): Worst Picture, Worst\r\n Actor (Bruce Willis), Worst Actress (Jane March), Worst Screen Couple,\r\n and Worst Supporting Actor (Jane March as Richie). | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n Disney's first Broadway musical was Beauty and the Beast, based on its film version of Beauty and the Beast (1991). | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n Disney became the first studio to gross more than $1 billion at the box office domestically in a single year, mostly due to the release of The Lion King (1994), although Pulp Fiction (1994) and November's The Santa Clause (1994) were also hits. The Lion King was the highest-grossing traditionally (hand-drawn) animated feature film in the US at the time - and in history. It was later surpassed at the box-office by Disney/Pixar's computer-animated Finding Nemo (2003). The Lion King was Disney's first film based upon an in-house original story, rather than upon a well-known \r\n children's narrative. Its Hamlet-like story was beautifully animated, enhanced by a Hans Zimmer score, and contained songs by composer Elton John and lyricist Tim Rice. | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n Disney's successful animated The Lion King (1994),\r\n the # 2 highest-grossing (domestic) hit of the year, was\r\n among the first feature-length film animations featuring many major stars'\r\n voices for its characters. (Previously, there was only one big voice-name,\r\n such as Robin Williams as the Genie in Aladdin (1992), or there\r\n were unknowns who lent their voices to the characters.) With box-office\r\n receipts of over $312 million, this film spurred a boom in animation\r\n production and merchandising, and other animation production studios\r\n besides Disney entered the picture. | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937) had eight theatrical re-releases (1944, 1952, 1958, 1967, 1975, 1983, 1987, and 1993), and then in late 1994, it was finally released on VHS home video (and laser disc) and sold 10 million copies in its first week of sale. After three weeks of availability, it sold over 17 million copies, and would soon surpass the all-time champ, Disney's Aladdin (with 24 million copies sold since its late-1993 release). It eventually sold 50 million copies worldwide, the best-selling cassette of all time. It was the last of the early Disney animated films released for home video, following Pinocchio\r\n (1940), Sleeping Beauty (1959), and Cinderella (1950). [Snow White was later released for the first time on DVD, in late 2001.] | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994 \r\n | \r\n Disney's live-action film The Jungle Book (1994) was\r\n the first Disney remake of an earlier animated feature film, The\r\n Jungle Book (1967).. | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n Best Picture winner Forrest Gump (1994) was the\r\n top-grossing (domestic) film of the year, at almost $330 million. It\r\n used revolutionary digital photo tricks (digital compositing) to insert\r\n the film's main character into archival historical footage with three\r\n past Presidents (John F. Kennedy, LBJ and Nixon), and celebrities like\r\n Elvis Presley and John Lennon. It would encourage\r\n the trend of physically inserting actors into old existing footage, making\r\n it appear like the characters were interacting with each other. Shortly\r\n afterwards, this technique - which expanded to advertising commercials\r\n - controversially presented dead stars hawking products (i.e., James\r\n Cagney and Louis Armstrong appeared in Diet Coke ads, and John Wayne\r\n was in a Coors Light commercial). Forrest Gump's most impressive and\r\n surprising effect was the digitally amputated legs of actor Gary Sinise,\r\n playing a war vet. | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n Tom Hanks won two consecutive Best Actor awards \r\n (presented in ceremonies in 1994 and 1995) for Philadelphia (1993) and\r\n for Forrest Gump (1994). He became the fifth performer \r\n to win back-to-back acting Oscars, and only the second performer\r\n to win consecutive Best Actor Oscars (the first was Spencer Tracy\r\n in 1937-1938). Oscar-winning Hanks took a cut of Forrest Gump's profits\r\n - reportedly 8% of the gross, which on top of his $20 million salary netted\r\n him about $60 million. | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n The theme of director Oliver\r\n Stone's visually-riveting, controversial work Natural Born Killers\r\n (1994) was the media's exploitative\r\n and sensationalized precoccupation with violence. It was immediately\r\n lambasted and criticized as "evil" and "loathsome" for its\r\n graphic, violence-soaked satire. Presidential contender\r\n Senator Robert Dole singled out the film as a "nightmare of depravity."\r\n Its provocative story followed the murder-spree path of two serial\r\n killer-lovers and white-trash outlaws (Woody Harrelson and Juliette\r\n Lewis as Mickey and Mallory). Along with two similar films (Kalifornia\r\n (1993) and The Basketball Diaries (1995)), it was accused\r\n of allegedly inspiring copycat shooting sprees throughout the U.S.,\r\n including the 1999 Columbine High School Massacre. | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n Roland Emmerich's Stargate (1994), a mixed critical\r\n success, was\r\n the first movie to ever have an official website. It told about a distant\r\n world whose ruler was the powerful Egyptian god Ra (Jaye Davidson), and\r\n whose alien slave people were the descendants of the ancient Egyptians.\r\n It became an even greater hit on television, spawning the popular TV\r\n series\r\n Stargate SG-1 (1997-2007), the animated Stargate: \r\n Infinity (2002-2003), two further live-action spin-offs (Stargate\r\n Atlantis (2004-2009) and\r\n SGU: Stargate Universe (2009-2011)), and two Stargate made-for-TV\r\n movies. | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n Kevin Smith's low-budget (about $30,000) comedy Clerks (1994), about two clerks/workers, went into general release after its successes at the Cannes and the Sundance Film Festivals. The cost of obtaining the rights to the soundtrack for the film was greater than the production costs for the entire film - a first in modern cinematic history. Although originally rated NC-17 (mostly because of its raunchy dialogue), it was re-rated as an R after Miramax appealed to the MPAA, and went on to become one of the most popular and successful comedy independent films of all time. | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n Two years earlier, brash auteur writer/director and\r\n B-movie fanatic Quentin Tarantino's \r\n gangster flick Reservoir Dogs (1992) raised its own firestorm of\r\n protest. The notorious director was known for messy screen\r\n violence and a sadistic sense of humor. Now, Tarantino delivered another\r\n non-formulaic and inventive hit Pulp\r\n Fiction (1994) - an 'independent' film distributed \r\n by Miramax, that featured guns, femmes fatales, deadly \r\n hit-men, and drugs. The seminal, non-linear film upped the ante and made\r\n hyper-real violence its main centerpiece. (There was sadomasochistic\r\n behavior, random shootings, a homosexual rape and a drug overdose.)\r\n Its two main talkative, anti-hero characters (John Travolta and Samuel\r\n L. Jackson) were professional assassins who joked and swore while carrying\r\n out ruthless executions. It brought new fame to star John Travolta (in\r\n the ensemble cast) and a revolutionary script structure with its three\r\n interwoven (and fragmented) stories told in non-linear order. In addition\r\n to revitalizing the failing career of John Travolta, it kick-started\r\n the career of Samuel L. Jackson as a lead actor. The unpredictably time-shuffled,\r\n post-modern film with hip pop references, winner of Cannes' prestigious\r\n Palme d'Or, shocked with its combination of violence, sex, drugs, and\r\n profanity (including 269 F-words). | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n A Harvard School of Public Health study showed that violence occurred just as frequently in PG, PG-13, and R-rated films. The study was repeated a decade later, illustrating the existence of "ratings-creep", meaning that more risqué and violent scenes were being allowed in films rated G, PG, PG-13 and R than in the past. For example, The Santa Clause (1994) was rated PG, yet it had less sex and nudity, violence, gore and profanity than The Santa Clause 2 (2002), which was rated G. | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n Ex-wife of former football player\r\n and actor/sportscaster O. J. Simpson, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend\r\n Ron Goldman were stabbed to death in June of 1994 outside Nicole's home\r\n in Brentwood, California. Subsequently, Simpson was charged with two\r\n counts of murder, but eventually acquitted in November 1995. | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n The theatrical run of Il Postino (1994) in \r\n New York City stretched for almost two years -- it was still in theaters \r\n after the video release and its premium cable run. | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n The $8.1 million judgment against actress Kim Basinger\r\n \r\n for dropping out of the film Boxing Helena (1993) was overturned\r\n by an appeals court that ruled the jury received improper and ambiguous\r\n instructions. In March 1993, a Superior Court jury awarded that sum to\r\n Main Line Pictures, the film's producers, which had sued Ms. Basinger.\r\n She claimed that she objected to the script and nude scenes. The\r\n film, about a surgeon who cut off the limbs of the woman he loved, was\r\n released with Sherilyn Fenn replacing Basinger in the title role. | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n SDDS (Sony Dynamic Digital Sound), a digital \r\n sound-on-film format in which the digital information was optically printed\r\n in two continuous strips along both edges of the 35 mm. film, was introduced\r\n by Sony. The revolutionary system avoided the need for separate CD-ROM\r\n soundtracks and synchronization codes. SDDS supported increased surround-sound\r\n options by offering eight channels of sound. | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994 \r\n | \r\n Now that the Internet (with increased bandwidth) was\r\n available to home users, the streaming of audio and video content (via\r\n the Internet) began to become more widespread and available. At Xerox\r\n PARC in mid-1993, the rock 'n' roll "garage" band Severe Tire Damage\r\n from Palo Alto, CA was the first group to perform live video and audio\r\n on the Internet, and their play was broadcast live throughout the world.\r\n Their show was sent out on the Internet Multicast Backbone,\r\n or Mbone, using about half of the available bandwidth of the entire\r\n Internet. With more technological developments in the next few years\r\n (new streaming formats such as RealPlayer, ActiveMovie, and Windows\r\n Media, QuickTime (QT), smaller frames and compressed file formats such\r\n as .mpg and .avi, Adobe Flash, and PTP video sharing), streaming media\r\n became more practical and affordable. | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n John Waters' crime spoof and dark satire on suburbia,\r\n the R-rated Serial\r\n Mom (1994) starred\r\n Kathleen Turner as Beverly R. Sutphin, a caring and loving but serial-killing\r\n suburbanite mother living in Baltimore. The homicidal yet virtuous homemaker\r\n defended her family by killing those who offended or bothered her.\r\n The body count reached a total of seven, with various unlikely lethal\r\n methods involving a car, a fire poker, a pair of scissors, an\r\n air conditioner, a telephone and even a leg of lamb. | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n The TV series Insektors (1994) was the first completely computer-animated cartoon series to be broadcast on television. It told about two warring anthropomorphic tribes of insects (the Joyces vs. the Yuks). It first aired in France, and was then dubbed into English for US and UK television. Its appearance was only a few months before another completely-CG animated cartoon series was aired - the full-length Canadian action-adventure series called ReBoot. | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n Director Jonathan Kaplan's feminist western Bad Girls\r\n (1994) was the story of four prostitutes turned outlaws in the Old\r\n West. The film's original director Tamra Davis was replaced a few weeks\r\n into filming, and a completely new script was written with a new plot\r\n and characters. | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n Viacom Inc. won the lengthy bidding war and sealed\r\n the purchase of the NY-based Paramount Communications Inc. for $9.75\r\n billion - after its five-month battle with QVC Network Inc. Paramount's\r\n holdings included Paramount Pictures, the Simon & Schuster\r\n publishing house, Madison Square Garden, the New York Rangers hockey\r\n team and the Knicks basketball team. | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n Legendary animator/cartoonist Walter Lantz died at the age of 94. The founder of Walter Lantz Productions, he had created the character of Woody Woodpecker (known for his staccato "huh hah hah HA ha" laugh) in the 1940s, and others including Oswald Rabbit, penguin Chilly Willy and Andy Panda. Lantz received an Honorary Academy Award in 1979 (at the ceremony honoring films of 1978) for "bringing joy and laughter to every part of the world through his unique animated motion pictures." The award was "presented" by Lantz's most famous creation, Woody Woodpecker, using combined live-action and animation. | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n Iconic film-actor Burt Lancaster, one of the best American\r\n actors of all time, died at the age of 80 from a heart attack. He had\r\n appeared in every conceivable genre, including adventure films, swashbucklers,\r\n comedies, and serious dramas. His sole Best Actor Academy Award Oscar\r\n was for Elmer\r\n Gantry (1960), although he was also nominated for From\r\n Here to Eternity (1953), Birdman of Alcatraz (1962),\r\n and Atlantic City (1981). As an independent film producer, he\r\n was responsible for films such as Best Picture-winning Marty\r\n (1955) and Sweet Smell of Success (1957).\r\n His screen debut was in the film noir classic The\r\n Killers (1946). | \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n 1994\r\n | \r\n By the year 1994, actor Mark Hamill had become the first\r\n Hollywood star to top both film and videogame charts. He topped film charts\r\n with his appearances in the Star Wars trilogy\r\n (1977-1983), and then in 1994, he took the role of\r\n Colonel Christopher Blair in the PC video-game Wing Commander\r\n III: Heart of the Tiger (1994), the # 1 best-selling videogame,\r\n and then resumed his role in the two follow-up Wing Commander franchise\r\n sequels in a second trilogy of # 1 videogame hits: Wing\r\n Commander IV: The Price of Freedom (1996) and Wing\r\n Commander: Prophecy (1997). | \r\n
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