Additional Info: Congo (1995); Jindabyne (2006); Driving Lessons (2006); The Savages (2007); The Exorcism of Emily Rose (2005); P.S. (2004); You Can Count on Me (2000); Annie Oakley (2006); Mary Pickford (2005); Primal Fear (1996); The Mothman Prophecies (2002); The Squid and the Whale (2005); Kinsey (2004); The Nanny Diaries (2007); The Truman Show (1998); Wild Iris (2001); Hyde Park on Hudson (2012); Class of '61 (1993); Maze (2001); Blind Spot (1993); Love Letters (1999); Mr. Holmes (2015); Running Mates (2000); The Dinner (2017); Assassins: A Film Concerning Rimbaud (1985); The Untold Tales of Armistead Maupin (2017); Olympia (2018); F. Scott Fitzgerald: Winter Dreams (2001); The Miracle Club (2023); A Farewell to Ozark (2022); Wildcat (2023); Breach (2007); The Life of David Gale (2003); Man of the Year (2006); The City of Your Final Destination (2009); A Simple Twist of Fate (1994); The Other Man (2008); Lush (1999); Sully (2016); Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows (2016); Morning (2013); TruTalk (1998); Creating a Character: The Moni Yakim Legacy (2020); The Great Work Begins: Scenes from Angels in America (2020); Falling - Q&A (2021); Absolute Power (1997); Genius (2016); The Roads Not Taken (2020); Sympathy for Delicious (2010); The Hottest State (2006); The Details (2012); The Laughter & Secrets of 'Love Actually': 20 Years Later (2022); Woodrow Wilson (2002); Mystic River (2003); Love Actually (2003); The House of Mirth (2000); Falling (2020); Lorenzo's Oil (1992); Red Nose Day Actually (2017); The Fifth Estate (2013); Arthur Christmas (2011); Dave (1993); Nocturnal Animals (2016); The Armenian Genocide (2006); We Are One With President-Elect Barack Obama (2009); Bonnie (2022); The Laramie Project (2002); Letters to Jackie: Remembering President Kennedy (2013); Searching for Bobby Fischer (1993); Mon Clown (2008)
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The number of movies Laura Linney appeared in 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.)