Additional Info: A Little Romance (1979); King Lear (1983); A Voyage Round My Father (1984); The Betsy (1978); Inchon (1981); The Gentleman Tramp (1976); Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1976); The Ebony Tower (1984); Mr. Halpern and Mr. Johnson (1983); Larry & Vivien: The Oliviers in Love (2001); To Be Hamlet (1985); Marathon Man (1976); The Jigsaw Man (1984); Dracula (1979); The Jazz Singer (1980); The Boys from Brazil (1978); Love Among the Ruins (1975); A Talent for Murder (1984); Daphne Laureola (1978); Vivien Leigh, autant en emporte le vent (2020); The Bounty (1984); War Requiem (1989); At the Haunted End of the Day (1981); Wild Geese II (1985); The Collection (1976); Come Back, Little Sheba (1977); Mad About the Boy: The Noël Coward Story (2023); The Seven-Per-Cent Solution (1976); The Magic of Hollywood... Is the Magic of People (1976); Saturday, Sunday, Monday (1978); The South Bank Show: Noël Coward (1992); Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow (2004); Clash of the Titans (1981); Jornal Português (1938-1951) (2005); Directed by William Wyler (1986); A Bridge Too Far (1977); Hitchcock, Selznick and the End of Hollywood (1999); Nothing Like a Dame (2018); Discovering Hamlet (2011); Hannibal Hopkins et Sir Anthony (2021); Vivien Leigh: Scarlett and Beyond (1990); Sir John Mills' Moving Memories (2000); The Filth and the Fury (2000); Scotty and the Secret History of Hollywood (2018); The Kid Stays in the Picture (2002); The Making of a Legend: Gone with the Wind (1988); Revisiting Brideshead (2005); Marilyn Monroe: Beyond the Legend (1987); Cameraman: The Life and Work of Jack Cardiff (2010); Preminger: Anatomy of a Filmmaker (1991); Terror in the Aisles (1984); Hollywood Out-takes and Rare Footage (1983); Night of 100 Stars II (1985); And the Oscar Goes to... (2014)
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The number of movies Laurence Olivier appeared in correlates with...
Variable | Correlation | Years | Has img? |
Snowy days in New York | r=0.62 | 29yrs | No |
The number of movies Laurence Olivier appeared in also correlates with...
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You caught me! While it would be intuitive to sort only by "correlation," I have a big, weird database. If I sort only by correlation, often all the top results are from some one or two very large datasets (like the weather or labor statistics), and it overwhelms the page.
I can't show you *all* the correlations, because my database would get too large and this page would take a very long time to load. Instead I opt to show you a subset, and I sort them by a magic system score. It starts with the correlation, but penalizes variables that repeat from the same dataset. (It also gives a bonus to variables I happen to find interesting.)