What about The Big Short?
Film fans have named
Drive their favourite Ryan Gosling film, ahead of blockbusters such as
The Notebook,
La La Land and
Crazy, Stupid, Love.
The neo-noir, atmospheric, and occasionally incredibly violent action drama
Drive currently sits atop of
Ranker's list of Gosling films, ahead of 2006 film
Half Nelson in second place.
In third place, it's
Moonlight. Oh wait, no, it's
La La Land.
Then in fourth it's the tear jerking classic,
The Notebook, followed closely by the star-studded rom-com,
Crazy, Stupid, Love.
Meanwhile, right at the bottom of the Canadian heartthrobs' cinematic appearances are
The United States of Leland,
Weightless and I
'm Still Here: Real Diaries of Young People Who Lived During the Holocaust.
If you ask us, the real travesty of this list is that Director Adam McKay's housing market drama
The Big Short only just makes the top 10 - but let's not get into that debate.
Ranker uses votes and re-rankings from users to work out its list and says that it looks at four primary factors to decide an item's ranking on a list: the number of up-votes, the ratio of up-votes to down-votes, how often it's ranked and where it's ranked.
This explains what appear to be anomalies in the Gosling list, such as
Half Nelson getting more upvotes and less down votes than
Drive but
Drive still coming out on top.
This is because re-ranks of entire lists carry more weight than simple votes on an item in a list
Ranker ensures users: "When you look at a list and feel that an item’s ranking doesn’t seem to make sense based on the vote counts, it could be because of the impact that re-ranks have on rankings.
"Yeah, it’s complicated, but trust us: we’ve done a lot of testing and data-science wonkery over the years to tweak how we weight results, and we're confident that a list on Ranker is about as accurate a picture of voter behavior as anyone can get."
So there you have it - the greatest Gosling film is
Drive. The question is, has he got one in him that can take the crown?
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