Hi, I'd like to know if there is any app or website that allows me to get the full details of all movies from a list created by me.
I recently found a website (mooviestats.com) that does more or less what I want, but the displayed fields are few and not allow me to export the data to a .csv file.
The idea is to compile the data from all the movies I see in a certain period of time and then process the data in my own way. Examples: Director X: 5 movies; Average runtime: 96 minutes; Director of Photography Y: 3 movies.
Não consegue encontrar um certo Filme ou Série? Inicie Sessão e adicione-o.
Deseja classificar ou adicionar este item a uma lista?
Ainda não é um membro?
Resposta de Devin Bayer
em 17 maio 2015 às 4:36 AM
An export feature for themoviedb would make me much more comfortable using it.
Resposta de nefycee
em 8 janeiro 2016 às 7:24 AM
+1
Resposta de Travis Bell
em 8 janeiro 2016 às 11:12 AM
My plan is to get to this sometime this year. I have a lot of things on my plate currently ;)
Resposta de harlanchen
em 13 julho 2016 às 7:08 AM
+1
Resposta de blizeH
em 8 fevereiro 2018 às 9:59 AM
Hi, is there any update on this please? :) I've just imported my information from IMDB and love the site, but I'm also a little worried that if I start adding more things to my watchlist/rated etc I won't be able to move them again if I have to :(
Resposta de pwhinson
em 21 maio 2018 às 2:41 PM
Ditto to blizeH
Resposta de gilllance
em 12 janeiro 2019 às 5:07 PM
I'm actually interested in this as well.
Resposta de Travis Bell
em 12 janeiro 2019 às 5:20 PM
Being able to export your watchlist, rated and favourite lists was added back at the end of August. Just click the options link on any of your lists. Example here.
Resposta de gilllance
em 12 janeiro 2019 às 5:39 PM
Thank you for the quick response Travis. Maybe I'm overlooking an aspect, or perhaps I'm just confused how APIs work. I tried the way you suggested, but am not getting the level of data I'm hoping for. The first comment on tfhis thread asked, "The idea is to compile the data from all the movies I see in a certain period of time and then process the data in my own way. Examples: Director X: 5 movies; Average runtime: 96 minutes; Director of Photography Y: 3 movies." Is this available to do with a list I've created? Would be great if it saved the Trailer and poster links as well.
Resposta de Travis Bell
em 12 janeiro 2019 às 5:53 PM
I don’t have any current plans to offer an export with that kind of information. That’s more of a personal data aggregation feature than it is a list export.
As it stands right now the only thing you can export is your 3 accounts lists.
Having said all that, someone could certainly build this personal aggregation with the list of items found in the export. So you’re kind of half way there.
Resposta de PT 100
em 12 janeiro 2019 às 8:41 PM
There are many software solutions that will aggregate data exported from TMDb. Some are expensive and intended to manage very large data sets (such as the package I own). But there are free, open-source tools that will aggregate exported data as well. And Microsoft Excel has a built-in aggregate function. If you have access to Excel, you can import a .csv file and aggregate whatever fields you wish.
Resposta de gilllance
em 12 janeiro 2019 às 11:11 PM
That’s extremely helpful. Thank you. I actually have a large set of movies. Mind me asking what program you use?
Resposta de PT 100
em 12 janeiro 2019 às 11:25 PM
Among other things, I'm a professional data-mining consultant, so I usually use a statistical software package called SPSS (now owned by IBM) for data preparation/aggregation and advanced multivariate statistical modeling/analysis on very large "big data" databases (thousands or millions of cases). I tend to use Excel not for data aggregation but for operations research analyses, such as linear programming/process optimization, etc.
SQL, a database management language (e.g., Oracle, MySQL, PostgreSQL, etc.), can also be used to aggregate data from databases. Usually it is used on relational databases, not "flat files" (simple two-dimensional databases or single data tables such as .csv files).