
From: Spotlight: Anna May Wong
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.

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





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





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





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



