If Ever you need to know men and women think differently, then take along this list of screen goddesses to settle the argument.
Because one sex chose lots of strong female roles, and the other plumped for bikinis and lingerie-clad heroines.
For men, the top choice was the character of Honey Ryder in 1962 Bond film Dr No, as played by Ursula Andress.
Her emergence from the surf in a white bikini was one of the great iconic screen moments of the '60s.
Second was Sigourney Weaver as Ripley in the Alien saga, who was a strong woman, admittedly, but spent some of the time running about in her underpants.
Carrie Fisher as Princess Leia came third for the men, perhaps thanks to the infamous gold bikini she donned in 1983 movie Return of the Jedi.
Their fourth was the highly sexed Barbarella, as played by Jane Fonda in 1968, and fifth was good-time girl Holly Golightly played by Audrey Hepburn in Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961).
Golightly actually topped the women's list, but this was perhaps more to do with her elegant wardrobe than her behaviour.
The women's list was much more wholesome overall, with places two and three taken by characters played by Julie Andrews: Maria in 1965's The Sound of Music and Mary Poppins in the 1964 Disney film of the same name.
Fourth was Judy Garland's Dorothy from 1939's The Wizard of Oz. The only really racy performance in the women's list was Julia Roberts as prostitute Vivian Ward in 1990 romantic comedy Pretty Woman – the "tart with a heart" who ended up finding true love.
The poll conducted by the British television and radio guide, Radio Times, questioned 2000 film fans.
Radio Times film editor Andrew Collins told the Daily Mail newspaper of the results: "It comes as little surprise that male voters put Ursula Andress's definitive Bond girl Honey Ryder in Dr No at No.1, while she failed to make the female voters' top 10."