The Fewest Movies in a 24-Hour Movie Marathon

Usually, the goal of a 24-hour movie marathon is to pack as many entertaining movies in as possible. However, you have to wonder: what is the fewest movies in a 24-hour movie marathon? Thanks to the AMC blog (which only counts American movies) and a little scheduling math, the correct answer is “six movies”.

That’s a pretty impressive 4 hours each, minus a little bit of time for breaks. If you want to take on this grueling challenge, the movie descriptions are below, along with a movie marathon schedule where the movies are sorted from from longest to “shortest”.

If you dare to take this one on, I can only wish you good luck and godspeed.

The Really, Really Long Movies

Hamlet

HamletLength: 242 min.

My take: Hamlet is sad and discusses this at length, then manages to kill pretty much everyone in the cast. The best play ever written in the English language.

The Iceman Cometh

The Iceman ComethLength: 239 min.

My take: Lee Marvin tries to cheer up depressed barflies by telling them to give up their foolish dreams. Amazingly, this does not go as well as Lee thought it would.

Gods and Generals

Gods And GeneralsLength: 231 min.

My take: Another civil war movie that goes on almost as long as the war itself.

Once Upon a Time in America

Once Upon A Time In AmericaLength: 229 min.

My take: Sergio Leone makes a sequel to his popular “Once Upon a Time in the West”. This time with gangsters instead of cowboys.

Lawrence of Arabia

Lawrence Of ArabiaLength: 227 min.

My take: One of the greatest movies ever, yada yada – hey – according to the plot synopsis, Lawrence organized guerrilla army “camel attacks”. I would really, really like to see a camel attack squad. Are they armored? Are they bred for their ferocity? I have so many questions.

Gone with the Wind

Gone With The WindLength: 226 min.

My take: Unrequited love plus the civil war equals comedy gold! At least, that’s what I’m guessing not having seen the movie.

The Movie Marathon Schedule with the Fewest Movies

Start TimeTitle
12:00 PMHamlet
04:15 PMThe Iceman Cometh
08:30 PMGods and Generals
12:30 AMOnce Upon a Time in America
04:30 AMLawrence of Arabia
08:30 AMGone with the Wind
12:30 PMFinish

Star Trek Movie Marathon

Space. The final frontier. These are the voyages of the starship, Enterprise, its…oh…50-or-so-year mission, to explore strange new worlds, to seek out new opportunities to make movies and TV shows, to boldly go to the couch and movie marathon like no one has before!

Ok. A little hokey I guess. But a Star Trek movie marathon? Beam me up! Of course, I say this since I’m mostly thinking of Star Trek II: The Wrath of Kahn and Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country. I might be forgetting little details like, oh, say Star Trek V: The Final Frontier or Star Trek: Generations.

Regardless, Star Trek has massive staying power, and its only being revitalized further by the rebooted movie series. You can catch up on almost all of them in a mere 24 hours. Only the latest release, Star Trek: Beyond, doesn’t quite fit in. May you watch long and prosper!

Star Trek Movie Marathon Movies

Star Trek: The Motion Picture

Star Trek: The Motion PictureMy take: Take Star Trek and 2001: A Space Odyssey and put them in a blender, and what do you get? A lot of looking out the window at spacey stuff. Also features a hot bald chick.

Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan

Star Trek: The Wrath Of KhanMy take: Captain Kirk expresses his disapproval of Kahn. Brain-eating worms also make an appearance.

Star Trek III: The Search for Spock

Star Trek: The Search For SpockMy take: This movie bucks standard utilitarian ethics theory and claims that “The needs of the one outweigh the needs of the many”. This is why this movie is shown in so many basic college ethics courses.

Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home

Star Trek: The Voyage HomeMy take: The crew of Star Trek goes back to the 80s! Look at all the wackiness! Why, there’s an annoying guy with a boom box! That Spock doesn’t take any crap! Har! Kill me.

Star Trek V: The Final Frontier

Star Trek: The Final FrontierMy take: The movie provides the definitive answer to the age-old question: “What does God need with a Starship?”

Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country

Star Trek: The Undiscovered CountryMy take: Klingons recite Shakespeare. Sadly, Star Trek VII, in which the Romulans do ballet, was never made.

Star Trek: Generations

Star Trek: GenerationsMy take: Captain Kirk and Captain Picard meet briefly thanks to some time ribbon or something. It almost had a point.

Star Trek: First Contact

Star Trek: First ContactMy take: The Borg assimilate earth by going back in time and messing with history. Only the crew of the Enterprise can stop it. Unless they tried the Borg did the same thing again a little later. Ah well.

Star Trek: Insurrection

Star Trek: InsurrectionMy take: Mean guys with bad skin complexion cause trouble on a paradise planet. It’s like “Revenge of the Nerds”, but the nerds are evil and it isn’t high school.

Star Trek: Nemesis

Star Trek: NemesisMy take: Captain Picard’s nemesis is revealed, and its himself: NEGA-PICARD. Or maybe I’m thinking of “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World”.

Star Trek

Star TrekMy take: Kirk and crew punch and karate chop their way to victory! Except for the planet Vulcan being destroyed. That was a bad day.

Star Trek: Into Darkness

Star Trek: Into DarknessMy take: Captain Kirk follows no regulations and nearly gets his crew killed a dozen times. Thankfully Starfleet is attacked and most of the captains are killed. Job security!

Star Trek Movie Marathon Schedule

Start TimeTitle
12:00 PMStar Trek: The Motion Picture
02:30 PMStar Trek II: The Wrath of Khan
04:30 PMStar Trek III: The Search for Spock
06:15 PMStar Trek IV: The Voyage Home
08:15 PMStar Trek V: The Final Frontier
10:15 PMStar Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country
12:15 AMStar Trek: Generations
02:15 AMStar Trek: First Contact
04:06 AMStar Trek: Insurrection
06:00 AMStar Trek: Nemesis
08:00 AMStar Trek
10:15 AMStar Trek Into Darkness
12:00 PMFinish

 

James Bond Movie Marathon: A License for Sleep Deprivation

James Bond has a respectable 24 movies to his name (although that can vary a bit by how you count). All of these movies add up to 50.6 hours of movie time. Sounds like perfect material for a James Bond movie marathon, right? Unfortunately, shaken or stirred, a James Bond movie marathon would be an awkward experience in the 24-hour format.

To start, if you add a standard 15 minute break between the 24 movies, that adds up to about 57 hours, or an awkward 2.3 24-hour movie marathons.

On top of that, there is no good breaking point between on series of actors and another. Sean Connery’s Bond films adds up to 14 hours (837 minutes). Roger Moore’s Bond films add up to 14.7 hours (882 minutes). So a Sean Connery marathon is too short, a Roger Moore marathon is too short, and both together is too long. All the other Bonds clock in at 19.4 hours, not quite enough either!

The Sean Connery series

The Roger Moore Series

The Timothy Dalton Series

The Pierce Brosnan Series

The Daniel Craig Series

On the plus side, you can buy almost all of them from Amazon.

 

Godzilla Movie Marathon

The current edition of my movie marathon book claims that box sets don’t make for good 24-hour movie marathons because, among other reasons, none of them have runtimes long enough to support a 24-hour movie marathon.

However, childhood memories of guys in rubber suits wrestling each other came bubbling up, and a quick internet search confirmed it – Godzilla is one of the longest running film franchises with an astounding 28 films. 15 were made between 1954 to 1975 (the “Shōwa” series), seven between 1984-1995 (“Heisei” series), and six between 1999 and 2004 (the “Millennium” series).

The Godzilla Movies

Here is the complete list with movie length in minutes (Your mileage may vary. These are the Japanese version times):

Godzilla

Godzilla 1954 PosterRuntime: 95 minutes

My take: The movie that started it all. Despite how hokey many of the entries in the franchise would get, this movie was filmed with utmost seriousness and gravity. To get the full effect, seek out the original Japanese version, not the splice-and-dice American version starring Raymond Burr.

Godzilla Raids Again

Runtime: Godzilla Raids Again82 minutes

My take: Godzilla is back and fighting Anguirus, a giant, prehistoric….hedgehog? Unusually spiky Armadillo? Spoiler alert: After this movie Godzilla and Anguirus are best friends who have lots of adventures fighting other monsters.

King Kong vs. Godzilla

King Kong Vs GodzillaRuntime: 97 minutes

My take: King Kong gets a 3x-5x size boost and lightning powers for some reason to take on the big G. Legend has it who wins depends on what release you are watching.

Mothra vs. Godzilla

Mothra Vs GodzillaRuntime: 88 minutes

My take: Mothra is a giant moth. Thus, is the lamest of the giant monsters. Sure, she’s got those two fairy girl sidekicks and an island full of worshippers. Plus, she’s got cocoon spinner powers and whatever that magic dust stuff is. But c’mon. That versus atomic fire breath? Please. Mothra would fly right into it. Its her nature!

Ghidorah, the Three-Headed Monster

Runtime: 92 minutes

My take: Godzilla takes on his coolest foe: a three-headed space dragon. Oh wait, did I say Godzilla? I meant a trio of monsters take him on: Rodan, Mothra, AND Godzilla. A sweet classic Godzilla smackdown.

Invasion of Astro-Monster

Invasion Of The Astro MonsterRuntime: 96 minutes

My take: Aliens control some of the giant monsters in a bid to take over earth. A highly non-memorable entry in the franchise.

Godzilla vs. the Sea Monster

Godzilla Vs Sea MonsterRuntime: 87 minutes

My take: Godzilla takes on a rogue island nation and its guard-crab. Oh, and Mothra is in it too. This movie was goofy enough to get the Mystery Science Theater 3000 treatment.

Son of Godzilla

Son Of GodzillaRuntime: 86 minutes

My take: Godzilla has a son! Which means Godzilla is a female, right? Who reproduces asexually? And how did an egg that size come out of Godzilla’s rear end anyway? Oh, and they battle giant preying mantises.  Because why not?

Destroy All Monsters

Destroy All MonstersRuntime: 88 minutes

My take: All monsters in the franchise get controlled by aliens (again) but this time they are all fighting!! Awesome!

All Monsters Attack

All Monsters AttackRuntime: 69 minutes

My take: Don’t get too excited by the title. This movie is all about a boy who is bullied and imagines how Godzilla and his son are strong and stuff and don’t let themselves get bullied in stock footage of earlier Godzilla movies. Also features “King Ceasar” – a furry lion-monkey monster thing.

Godzilla vs. Hedorah

Godzilla Vs HedorahRuntime: 87 minutes

My take:  Godzilla goes all Captain Planet on us and fights a monster made of pollution. Hands down the weirdest Godzilla movie I’ve ever seen.

Godzilla vs. Gigan

Godzilla Vs GiganRuntime: 89 minutes

My take:  King Ghidorah returns with a new space friend: Gigan! Gigan is…a cyborg with hooks for arms, a buzz saw for a front, flight powers, and a laser cyclops eye. And fins. Gotta have speed fins. Why? I guess this is our alien overlords’ ultimate weapon. They don’t stand a chance.

Godzilla vs. Megalon

Godzilla Vs MegalonRuntime: 81 minutes

My take: The most awesomely cheesy Godzilla movie of all time. This movie comes complete with heroic robot sidekick Jet Jaguar and villains Megalon (a giant cockroach with drill hands) and Gigan again – mostly because they could reuse stock footage of Gigan fighting Godzilla. Another Mystery Science Theater 3000 favorite!

Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla

Godzilla Vs MechagodzillaRuntime: 84 minutes

My take: Ape aliens with infinite resources construct a ridiculously inefficient weapon: Mechagodzilla. Godzilla has to team up with Angulus and King Seesar to defeat him.

Terror of Mechagodzilla

Terror Of MechagodzillaRuntime: 83 minutes

My take: The last of the Shōwa series returns somewhat to the darker roots of the original, but still has giant goofy monsters like the newly minted “Titanosaurus”.

The Return of Godzilla

The Return Of GodzillaRuntime: 103 minutes

My take: Godzilla is back with the same basic formula as the original, but updated with 1980s technology and geopolitics. Fun fact: the Russian launches the nuke in the American version but tries to stop the nuke from launching in the Japanese version.

Godzilla vs. Biollante

Godzilla Vs BiolanteRuntime: 105 minutes

My take: Godzilla vs….a very large and angry plant. Not just any plant mind you. It is a plant infused with the essence of Godzilla and the spirit of some dead girl or some nonsense.

Godzilla vs. King Ghidorah

Godzilla Vs King GhidorahRuntime: 103 minutes

My take: Sure its a retread of the original, but everyone knows reboots are better than the original right? Features a dude poetically killed by the very same monster that saved him decades ago. Ironic.

Godzilla vs. Mothra

Godzilla Vs MothraRuntime: 102 minutes

My take: At this point, I think you know about my feelings about Mothra.

Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla II

Godzilla Vs Mechagodzilla IIRuntime: 108 minutes

My take: I’m glad the United Nations is finally getting proactive about the whole Godzilla and Rodan thing and building some counter-measures. Sure, they built Mechagodzilla which seems to be about as effective as the Death Star in achieving goals, but at least they are trying.

Godzilla vs. SpaceGodzilla

Godzilla Vs Space GodzillaMy take: Godzilla cells go to space, get sucked into a black hole and become….wait for it….Space Godzilla for some reason! Why? Because space!

Also, baby Godzilla goes through a cute phase and the UN builds another giant robot about as effective as the first.

Godzilla vs. Destoroyah

Godzilla Vs DestoroyahRuntime: 103 minutes

My take: Sure, I’ve made a few snarky comments about the other movies in the Heisei series. But I loved this one. Godzilla…is melting down! Now the G-force has to focus not so much on defeating Godzilla, but getting him the heck out of town before he blows up! Novel concept, done well. Lots of fun.

Godzilla 2000: Millennium

Godzilla 2000Runtime: 107 minutes

My take: Godzilla series reboot of little note. Move along.

Godzilla vs. Megaguirus

Godzilla Vs MegaguriusRuntime: 105 minutes

My take: Novel solution to the Godzilla problem: trap him in an artificial black hole. Unfortunately, all lessons learned from Godzilla vs. Space Godzilla have been forgotten because the series rebooted (remember?). Out pops Meganuron bug monsters and the fight is on!

Godzilla, Mothra and King Ghidorah: Giant Monsters All-Out Attack

Giant Monsters All Out AttackRuntime: 105 minutes

My take: Role reversal! King Ghidorah and Baragon awaken to protect Japan against Godzilla, who is now less an impersonal force of nature and more of a personal, vengeful god.

Godzilla Against Mechagodzilla

Godzilla Against MechagodzillaRuntime: 88 minutes

My take: Mechagodzilla built to protect against Godzilla….blah blah blah – oh wait – Mechagodzilla is going crazy and turns on its masters! Will Godzilla be able to (more or less) save the day?

Godzilla: Tokyo S.O.S.

Godzilla: Tokyo S.O.S.Runtime: 91 minutes

My take: And Mechagodzilla and Mothra again. I’m hankering for some new kaiju to be added to the series at this point.

Godzilla: Final Wars

Godzilla Final WarsRuntime: 125 minutes

My take: Godzilla takes on a litany of monsters around the world dispatched by the evil Xillian alien race. Features Godzilla smacking down “Zilla” (Godzilla from American 1998 movie) in mere seconds.

The Godzilla Movie Marathon Schedules

That is a grand total of 2,657 minutes (44.3 hours) of Tokyo-stomping, atomic-breath firing, rubber monster action. If you assume a 15 minute break in between each movie, then you tack on 420 extra minutes (7 hours) of break time. So all told, a Godzilla movie marathon would be a crushing 51.3 hours long (heh – “crushing” – get it?).

However, with a little creativity, you could still make the Godzilla franchise fit into the 24-hour movie marathon format. The Shōwa series is 1,314 minutes (21.9 hours) long. If you squeezed the break time between the movies to an average of 9 minutes each, you would end up with a 24-hour movie marathon like so:

Start TimeTitle
12:00 PMGodzilla
02:00 PMGodzilla Raids Again
03:30 PMKing Kong vs. Godzilla
05:15 PMMothra vs. Godzilla
06:45 PMGhidorah, the Three-Headed Monster
08:30 PMInvasion of the Astro-Monster
10:30 PMGodzilla vs. the Sea Monster
12:00 AMSon of Godzilla
01:30 AMDestroy All Monsters
03:00 AMAll Monsters Attack
04:15 AMGodzilla vs. Hedorah
05:45 AMGodzilla vs. Gigan
07:30 AMGodzilla vs. Megalon
09:00 AMGodzilla vs. Mechagodzilla
10:30 AMTerror of Mechagodzilla
12:00 PMFinish

The same is true for the combination of the Heisei series (732 minutes) and Millenium series (621 minutes). With an average of eight minute breaks between these 13 movies, you have yourself 22.5 hours of movies, 1.7 hours of break, and a 24-hour movie marathon!

Start TimeTitle
12:00 PMThe Return of Godzilla
02:00 PMGodzilla vs. Biollante
04:00 PMGodzilla vs. King Ghidorah
05:45 PMGodzilla and Mothra: The Battle for Earth
07:30 PMGodzilla vs. Mechagodzilla II
09:30 PMGodzilla vs. SpaceGodzilla
11:30 PMGodzilla vs. Destoroyah
01:15 AMGodzilla 2000: Millennium
03:15 AMGodzilla vs. Megaguirus
05:00 AMGodzilla, Mothra and King Ghidorah: Giant Monsters All-Out Attack
06:45 AMGodzilla Against Mechagodzilla
08:15 AMGodzilla: Tokyo S.O.S.
10:00 AMGodzilla: Final Wars
12:05 PMFinish

One minor problem with this idea is getting all of the movies. I could not find a full box set of any of the 3 series on Amazon.com. The best I could find is this handy listmania list of Godzilla DVDs available on Amazon.com.

So now you know you can. But will you? Could you survive the relentless onslaught of Godzilla?

Any who have, or will, please comment and brag(?) appropriately.

UPDATE: 18 July 2017 – Added movie marathon schedule tables. Also, check out this report from The Flickering Myth – a group of people who completed a 15-movie Godzilla movie marathon. Go team!