Movies should be less than 100 minutes long

A movie's runtime indicates how long it takes to watch the movie. A good movie runtime is easy-to-find, displayed as prominently as the title, and doesn't require you to tap or click into some additional screen or webpage to learn how long the movie is. A great movie runtime is 100 minutes or less.

How did we get to the point where it's so hard to find out how long a movie is, and when you do, it's regularly 2+ hours long?

For several years, I've been riffing with friends about the mythical "tight 90" movie runtime. I'd assumed that our intuitive sense that movies are longer now was just that: an assumption not really backed up by data. But I dumped the Wikidata dataset, which powers the structured movie data you see on Wikipedia, and the trend could not be clearer...

The average runtime starting dipping into the above-100-minute red zone somwhere around 1970:
By volume of movies released per year, many movies still clock in at less than 100 minutes, but in the past five years there have been more movies over 100 minutes than under:
And this is the distribution of movie runtimes over time, where you can see a distinct thickening above the 100 minute mark around 2000 or so:

What can we do about about bloated runtimes?

To that end, this website creates a permalink for all movies, presenting only the movie's title, release date, and its runtime, as an experiment in SEO farming. If people seeking runtime information discover this website and find themselves nodding along with the goal of more "tight 90" movies being made, we may be able to spread consciousness about this sensible constraint, and encourage more filmmakers to try to edit their movies to fall under 100 minute runtimes.

List of all movies and their runtimes (from Wikidata):

Show movies between: and minutes

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