The 50 best documentaries of all time

Get back to reality with our ranked list of nonfiction triumphs.

  • Best documentaries: Click to the next image to see our 50 best documentaries of all time

  • Best documentaries: Fahrenheit 9/11 (2004)

  • Best documentaries: The Last Waltz (1978)

  • Best documentaries: An Inconvenient Truth (2006)

  • Best documentaries: When We Were Kings (1996)

  • Best documentaries: A Grin Without a Cat (1977)

  • Best documentaries: Profit Motive and the Whispering Wind (2007)

  • Best documentaries: F for Fake (1973)

  • Best documentaries: The Battle of Chile (1975–79)

  • Best documentaries: Monterey Pop (1968)

  • Best documentaries: Man on Wire (2008)

Best documentaries: Click to the next image to see our 50 best documentaries of all time

As long as there is fantasy and wish fulfillment onscreen, audiences will also yearn for the truth—or something close to it. In arriving at TONY's favorite documentaries (from all eras and countries), we bumped up against some thorny questions: What makes a documentary essential? Is it the political or social import? Its popularity? Can we allow for staged scenes? Or must we insist on pure vérité? How "real" is reality? We invite your own thoughts in response to our ranked list.


50
FAHRENHEIT 9/11 (2004)

Fahrenheit 9/11 (2004)

America braced itself for Michael Moore's rage—during a presidential election year, no less. But no one expected the emotional gut punch of interviewee Lila Lipscomb, a patriotic army mother turned disbeliever. Moore's defiant success (it's still the highest-grossing doc of all time) had a massive impact, if not quite the intended result.—Joshua Rothkopf

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49
THE LAST WALTZ (1978)

The Last Waltz (1978)

Grabbing the brass ring of technical wizardry, Martin Scorsese took the Band's final concert, an intimate San Francisco event tinged with bitterness, and turned it into myth. In many ways, the musicians come off like downbeat characters in a Scorsese picture, one as potent as Taxi Driver.—Joshua Rothkopf

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48
AN INCONVENIENT TRUTH (2006)

An Inconvenient Truth (2006)

A politician using facts instead of fabrications—imagine that! Former Vice President Al Gore (working with director Davis Guggenheim) lays out the causes, effects and potential solutions to global warming in an entertainingly persuasive doc that made PowerPoint presentations exciting and spoke strongly to environmentalists.—Keith Uhlich

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47
WHEN WE WERE KINGS (1996)

When We Were Kings (1996)

Leon Gast's definitive look at the Ali-Foreman "Rumble in the Jungle" is more than just a great-moments-in-sports doc. It's an insightful portrait of Ali as a 20th-century icon transformed into a symbol of tenacity for a beleaguered continent—and proof that the charismatic champ was indeed "the greatest."—David Fear

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46
A GRIN WITHOUT A CAT (1977)

A Grin Without a Cat (1977)

A towering, decade-spanning political chronicle summing up nothing less than an international spirit of change, Chris Marker's epic journey takes on Che and Fidel, Vietnam and Chile, Parisian riots and California flower children. The result, beautifully resigned, is a difficult but essential work.—Joshua Rothkopf

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45
PROFIT MOTIVE AND THE WHISPERING WIND (2007)

Profit Motive and the Whispering Wind (2007)

Stones do the speaking in John Gianvito's stirring experimental doc, composed entirely of images of marked and unmarked grave sites across the United States. Tracing a quietly bracing history of the American Left (we visit the resting places of, among others, Eugene V. Debs and Elizabeth Cady Stanton), the film is an ode to the power of protest.—Keith Uhlich

44
F FOR FAKE (1973)

F for Fake (1973)

Here's yet more evidence that Orson Welles didn't just disappoint after Citizen Kane. Toward the end of his working career, the feisty director mounted this sly, quietly groundbreaking study of the art of lying, one that flits from hoaxer Clifford Irving to Welles's own fake alien invasion, The War of the Worlds.—Joshua Rothkopf

 Watch now on iTunes    Watch now at Amazon Instant Video

43
THE BATTLE OF CHILE (1975--79)

The Battle of Chile (1975–79)

Patricio Guzmn's three-part doc offers a comprehensive, 360-degree view of Augusto Pinochet's rise to power, as seen through the eyes of everybody from Marxist peasants to the military brass who staged the coup. The combination of big-picture history lessons and newsreel immediacy continues to inspire lefty documentarians and frontline filmmakers.—David Fear

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42
MONTEREY POP (1968)

Monterey Pop (1968)

The first major rock festival of the '60s gave birth to the first major concert film of the era, with D.A Pennebaker paying as much attention to a burgeoning sense of a counterculture as he does to the music itself (though the footage of the Who, Otis Redding and Jimi Hendrix setting his guitar on fire, to name three, is epochal). Something was indeed brewing; Pennebaker lets us see the pot being stirred.—David Fear

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41
MAN ON WIRE (2008)

Man on Wire (2008)

On an early, gray morning in August 1974, tightrope-walker Philippe Petit stepped out into an impossible void, the space between the Twin Towers, and danced for an hour. No other film, fictional or otherwise, more fully restores—poetically, with antic humor—our city's loss as does James Marsh's stunner.—Joshua Rothkopf

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  1. 50–41
  2. 40–31
  3. 30–21
  4. 20–11
  5. 10–1
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Comments & ratings

Rated as: 4/5 (6 ratings)
  • Sigur Ros' "Heima" should be on that list

    Omar Khairy Fri Nov 16 2012
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  • The Sorrow and the Pity number 34? Koyaanisqatsi a documentary? What were you doing before this gig, my sir -- restaurants? Politics in Suffolk County? Dog shows?

    Mark Woldin Thu Nov 15 2012
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  • There are some good films on this Top 100 Documentaries list... However to leave out the "The Cove" is criminal. What is actually worse is the complete lack of any of the big budget BBC Wildlife documentaries like "The Blue Planet", "Life in cold blood" etc. How can you not include at least one of these amazing documentaries about life on our planet. Your list is riddled with Jewish propaganda documentaries about the Holocaust and other pro-Jewish productions, whilst I am not against these in any way, shape or form, I am disgusted to see that they inundate the list, whilst much more professional, quality and meaningful work is done, that covers life in it's totality. Shameful list.

    James Thu Nov 1 2012
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  • If you have not seen "Dear Zachary," it is a must. Best documentary I have ever seen and it didn't even make the list. I at least thought it would be in your top ten. Must see.

    John Murphy Sun Oct 28 2012
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  • Yes, someone listed "Paradise Lost" - I forgot to mention that one (as well as many others). Great one.

    Erik Thu Oct 18 2012
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  • Wow..Michael Moore much? What a lousy list..

    Fox Wed Oct 17 2012
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  • Theres no business like shoah business.

    pob threbbingill Wed Oct 17 2012
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    ideornteept Tue Oct 16 2012
    Rated as: 4/5
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  • For sw7704

    Ardith Sun Sep 30 2012
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  • Dear Zachary Paradise Lost I & II Dig! American Movie Hated Any of David Attenborough's documentary series

    Heidi Wed Sep 26 2012
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