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A personal screening room for early cinema

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From: Spotlight: Anna May Wong

Outside the Law

1921 · Directed by Tod Browning

Tod Browning's crackling underworld thriller features Lon Chaney in a dual role as both a ruthless Chinatown crime boss and a kindly Confucian philosopher, with Priscilla Dean as the reformed crook's daughter caught between the straight life and the criminal world that won't let her go. Anna May Wong delivers a scene-stealing early performance as a cunning accomplice. The film moves with a propulsive energy unusual for its era, and Chaney — already demonstrating his extraordinary gift for physical transformation — gives two completely distinct performances that showcase his range. The Chinatown setting traffics in the exoticism typical of the period, but Browning's genuine affection for his outsider characters gives the film a rough vitality that transcends its conventions.

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From: Japanese Early Cinema

An Inn in Tokyo

1935 · Directed by Yasujirō Ozu

Yasujiro Ozu's deeply moving study of poverty and fatherhood — among the most quietly devastating films of his pre-war period. An unemployed man wanders the desolate industrial flatlands of Tokyo's outskirts with his two young sons, searching for work while barely able to feed them. When he encounters a woman in similar straits with her own sick child, the two form a fragile bond born of shared desperation. Ozu strips his filmmaking to its barest essentials: long static shots of empty lots, smokestacks, laundry lines, and the vast indifferent sky above the urban wasteland. The result is neo-realism avant la lettre — a decade before De Sica's Bicycle Thieves, Ozu was already finding in the daily struggle of ordinary people a beauty and tragedy that needs no embellishment. The final sequence is heartbreaking in its simplicity.

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From: Lon Chaney: The Man of a Thousand Faces

The Penalty

1920 · Directed by Wallace Worsley

Lon Chaney's first great physical transformation — and one of his most punishing. Chaney plays Blizzard, a criminal mastermind whose legs were needlessly amputated by a bungling surgeon when he was a boy. Now grown into a fearsome underworld king who rules San Francisco's criminal empire from a wheelchair, Blizzard plots elaborate revenge against the doctor who mutilated him. Chaney actually strapped his legs behind him using a painful leather harness, walking on his knees for the entire production — a commitment to physical realism that astonished audiences and defined his approach to acting. The performance is extraordinary: beneath the rage and the grotesque physicality, Chaney reveals unexpected wells of vulnerability, particularly in scenes with a young woman who becomes his unlikely confidante. The film that announced Chaney as the most daring actor in Hollywood.

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Film of the Day

It's the Old Army Game
Released 100 years ago today

It's the Old Army Game

1926 · A. Edward Sutherland

Druggist Elmer Prettywillie is sleeping. A woman rings the night bell only to buy a two-cent stamp. Then garbage collectors waken him. Next it's firemen on a false alarm. And then a real fire.

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Silent 101

The silent era spans roughly three decades — from the Lumière brothers' first public screening in 1895 to the arrival of synchronized sound in the late 1920s — and contains some of the most inventive, visually stunning, and emotionally powerful filmmaking ever produced. These twenty films offer an introduction to the period's essential works and movements: the trick films that first revealed cinema's capacity for magic, the rise of narrative storytelling, the explosive creativity of German Expressionism and Soviet montage, the golden age of screen comedy, and the artistic peaks that still define what the medium can achieve. If you're new to silent film, start anywhere — every one of these will change your understanding of what early cinema was.

20 films

A Trip to the Moon
The Great Train Robbery
Broken Blossoms
The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari

Early Hitchcock

Before Psycho, before Vertigo, before Rear Window, before any of the films that made him the most famous director in the world, Alfred Hitchcock spent a decade learning his craft in the British film industry. He started as a title card designer, graduated to assistant director, and in 1925, at the age of twenty-five, directed his first completed feature. Over the next five years he would make nine films that survive today, moving restlessly between genres and steadily developing the visual grammar of suspense, guilt, and psychological unease that would define his career. These early works are not warm-ups. The Lodger, only his third film, already contains the essential Hitchcockian situation: an innocent person under suspicion, unable to prove what we in the audience know to be true. Blackmail, made just four years later, is a technical landmark and a sophisticated moral thriller. Even the films that Hitchcock himself dismissed as minor commissions reveal a director thinking constantly about how to use the camera to create tension, misdirection, and dark comedy. Watching these films in sequence, you can see a master filmmaker assembling his toolkit in real time. The German Expressionist influences absorbed during his time at UFA studios. The emerging fascination with wrongful accusation. The dry wit. The precise visual storytelling that makes dialogue almost unnecessary. By 1930, Hitchcock was already the most important director in Britain. Everything that followed was built on the foundation laid here.

9 films

The Pleasure Garden
The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog
Downhill
The Ring

Pioneers: Buster Keaton

Buster Keaton never smiled on screen, and he made it mean more than anyone else's laughter. Born into a vaudeville family in 1895, he was literally thrown around the stage as a toddler — his father used him as a human prop — and he learned before he could read that the key to physical comedy was absolute commitment delivered with absolute calm. He brought that principle to cinema and became the most inventive filmmaker of the silent era, a director-star who thought in purely visual terms and built gags of such architectural complexity that they still provoke disbelief. His features from 1923 to 1928 represent the highest sustained achievement in screen comedy. Our Hospitality is a perfectly constructed chase film. Sherlock Jr. is a meditation on cinema itself, decades ahead of its time. The General is widely regarded as the greatest comedy ever made, a Civil War epic built around a single locomotive pursuit that manages to be simultaneously hilarious, thrilling, and genuinely beautiful. He did all his own stunts, including the famous falling house front in Steamboat Bill, Jr. — a two-ton wall dropping around him with inches of clearance — and he approached each one with the precision of an engineer and the fatalism of a philosopher. Keaton lost creative control when he signed with MGM in 1928, and his subsequent career is one of Hollywood's great tragedies. But the body of work he produced in less than a decade of independence is without peer. The ten films collected here trace his evolution from the anarchic brilliance of his early shorts to the feature-length masterpieces that define what cinema comedy can be.

10 films

One Week
The Goat
Cops
Our Hospitality

Spotlight: Louise Brooks

Louise Brooks made fewer than two dozen films and retired from Hollywood before she turned thirty, yet she remains one of the most magnetic screen presences in the history of cinema. Born in Cherryvale, Kansas in 1906, she was a Denishawn dancer turned Ziegfeld girl turned movie star, and she brought to her performances an intelligence and erotic candor that the American studio system had no idea what to do with. She was too modern for 1920s Hollywood, which preferred its ingenues pliant and unthreatening, and she knew it. Her two masterpieces were made not in Hollywood but in Berlin, for the Austrian-American director G.W. Pabst, who recognized what American producers could not: that Brooks was not merely beautiful but genuinely dangerous on screen. As Lulu in Pandora's Box and Thymian in Diary of a Lost Girl, she created characters of such unguarded sensuality and emotional directness that the films still feel radical nearly a century later. She did not act in the conventional sense. She simply existed on screen with a transparency that made everything around her look artificial. Brooks walked away from Hollywood on her own terms, refused to play the comeback game, and spent decades in obscurity before being rediscovered by film historians in the 1950s. Her memoir, Lulu in Hollywood, revealed a writer of startling precision and wit. The films collected here trace her trajectory from studio comedies to the Pabst collaborations that sealed her legend, and they document a talent that burned too brightly for the industry that produced it.

8 films

The Show Off
It's the Old Army Game
A Girl in Every Port
Beggars of Life

Recently Added

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The Blood Ship

The Blood Ship

1927
George B. Seitz
Where East Is East

Where East Is East

1929
Tod Browning
The Captive

The Captive

1915
Cecil B. DeMille
The Noon Whistle

The Noon Whistle

1923
George Jeske
Return to Reason

Return to Reason

1923
Man Ray
The Mysteries of the Chateau of Dice

The Mysteries of the Chateau of Dice

1929
Man Ray, Jacques-André Boiffard
Limite

Limite

1931
Mário Peixoto
East Side, West Side

East Side, West Side

1927
Allan Dwan
Hell's Heroes

Hell's Heroes

1929
William Wyler
Chicago

Chicago

1927
Frank Urson
A Story of Floating Weeds

A Story of Floating Weeds

1934
Yasujirō Ozu
The Trail of '98

The Trail of '98

1928
Clarence Brown

Pioneers of Cinema

Charlie Chaplin

Charlie Chaplin

1889–1977

Buster Keaton

Buster Keaton

1895–1966

Alice Guy-Blaché

Alice Guy-Blaché

1873–1968

Oscar Micheaux

Oscar Micheaux

1884–1951

Harold Lloyd

Harold Lloyd

1893–1971

Louise Brooks

Louise Brooks

1906–1985

Fritz Lang

Fritz Lang

1890–1976

Clara Bow

Clara Bow

1905–1965

F. W. Murnau

F. W. Murnau

1888–1931

Georges Méliès

Georges Méliès

1861–1938

D.W. Griffith

D.W. Griffith

1875–1948

Sergei Eisenstein

Sergei Eisenstein

1898–1948

Carl Theodor Dreyer

Carl Theodor Dreyer

1889–1968

Robert Wiene

Robert Wiene

1873–1938

Alfred Hitchcock

Alfred Hitchcock

1899–1980

Lon Chaney

Lon Chaney

1883–1930

Lillian Gish

Lillian Gish

1893–1993

Conrad Veidt

Conrad Veidt

1893–1943

Erich von Stroheim

Erich von Stroheim

1885–1957

Douglas Fairbanks

Douglas Fairbanks

1883–1939

Mary Pickford

Mary Pickford

1892–1979

Films Like “The Blood Ship”

Danger Lights

Danger Lights

1931
Juno and the Paycock

Juno and the Paycock

1930
The Late Mathias Pascal

The Late Mathias Pascal

1925
The Scar of Shame

The Scar of Shame

1929
Pandora's Box

Pandora's Box

1929
Asphalt

Asphalt

1929
Sinners in Paradise

Sinners in Paradise

1938
Male and Female

Male and Female

1919
Beggars of Life

Beggars of Life

1928
The Dawn Patrol

The Dawn Patrol

1930
Born Reckless

Born Reckless

1930
Dixiana

Dixiana

1930

Action

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The Three Must-Get-Theres

The Three Must-Get-Theres

1922
Zorro Rides Again

Zorro Rides Again

1937
Serpent

Serpent

1925
Tell It to the Marines

Tell It to the Marines

1926
By the Law

By the Law

1926
The Montana Kid

The Montana Kid

1931
The Trail of '98

The Trail of '98

1928
Life of an American Fireman

Life of an American Fireman

1903
Men Without Women

Men Without Women

1930
20,000 Leagues Under the Sea

20,000 Leagues Under the Sea

1916
The Dawn Patrol

The Dawn Patrol

1930
Easy Street

Easy Street

1917

Adventure

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Die Nibelungen: Kriemhild's Revenge

Die Nibelungen: Kriemhild's Revenge

1924
Chang: A Drama of the Wilderness

Chang: A Drama of the Wilderness

1927
Zorro Rides Again

Zorro Rides Again

1937
Ivanhoe

Ivanhoe

1913
Sumurun

Sumurun

1920
Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ

Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ

1925
Peter Pan

Peter Pan

1924
The Holy Mountain

The Holy Mountain

1926
The Magic Cloak of Oz

The Magic Cloak of Oz

1914
Robin Hood

Robin Hood

1922
East of Borneo

East of Borneo

1931
The Cave of the Silken Web

The Cave of the Silken Web

1927

Animation

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The New Gulliver

The New Gulliver

1935
The Enchanted Drawing

The Enchanted Drawing

1900
The Sinking of the Lusitania

The Sinking of the Lusitania

1918
Fantasmagorie

Fantasmagorie

1908
The Haunted Hotel

The Haunted Hotel

1907
Interplanetary Revolution

Interplanetary Revolution

1924
How a Mosquito Operates

How a Mosquito Operates

1912
Out of the Inkwell

Out of the Inkwell

1919
And the Villain Still Pursued Her; or, the Author's Dream

And the Villain Still Pursued Her; or, the Author's Dream

1906
Black and White

Black and White

1932
Victorious Destination

Victorious Destination

1939
The Adventures of Baron Munchausen

The Adventures of Baron Munchausen

1929

All Films

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13 Washington Square

13 Washington Square

1928
Melville W. Brown
20,000 Leagues Under the Sea

20,000 Leagues Under the Sea

1916
Stuart Paton
7th Heaven

7th Heaven

1927
Frank Borzage
A Christmas Carol

A Christmas Carol

1910
J. Searle Dawley, Ashley Miller, Charles Kent
A Corner in Wheat

A Corner in Wheat

1909
D.W. Griffith
A Cottage on Dartmoor

A Cottage on Dartmoor

1929
Anthony Asquith
A Daughter of Brahma

A Daughter of Brahma

1919
August Blom
A Daughter Of Destiny

A Daughter Of Destiny

1928
Henrik Galeen
A Dog's Life

A Dog's Life

1918
Charlie Chaplin
A Farewell to Arms

A Farewell to Arms

1932
Frank Borzage
A Film Johnnie

A Film Johnnie

1914
George Nichols
A Flirt's Mistake

A Flirt's Mistake

1914
George Nichols