[Competition Included - see first comment] I’m surprised there isn’t already a list like this! For nearly the first forty years of cinema, most movies were released completely silent. During this period, many techniques had to be invented completely from scratch, and the language of film-making was born. Here are some of the best and most influential silent films ever made.
An adaptation of Gaston Leroux’s famous novel. The film itself is most well-known for star Lon Chaney’s self-applied make-up. Chaney painted his eye sockets black, giving a skull-like impression to them. He also pulled the tip of his nose up and pinned that in place with wire, enlarging his nostrils with black paint, and putting a set of jagged false teeth into his mouth to complete the ghastly deformed look of the Phantom. The make-up was painful, but effectively horrific. From this Lon Chaney gained the reputation of being the “Man of 1,000 Faces.” His son, Lon Chaney, Jr., later became a horror legend in his own right by starring in “The Wolf Man” (1947).
A surrealist short film from the twisted minds of director Luis Buñuel and famous painter Salvador Dali. “Andalou” is a movie that must be seen to be fully understood: it is a short montage of dream-like images that include a famous scene of an eyeball being cut open, among other grisly images. It is the most famous of Buñuel’s films and helped put surreal and experimental film-making on the map.
An early comedy from the legendary Buster Keaton. It features Keaton as a movie projectionist and janitor who is studying to become a detective. It is among Keaton’s funniest films and helped to establish his unique style.
The most expensive picture of its time, “Greed” started out as a nearly 9 hour film before being cut down drastically. It exists today at just under 4 hours in length. The remaining footage is considered to be the most tragic loss in all of cinema. The plot follows a dentist whose wife wins a lottery ticket, only to become obsessed with money.
The movie that invented movies as we know them. Things like close-ups, camera pans, and eyeline matches were unheard of until D.W. Griffith’s 3 hour Civil War epic. It was incredibly successful upon release, which can be attributed to its well-known controversy regarding its racist depictions of slaves after the war. It is also credited as having inspired the reformation of the Ku Klux Klan in 1914. Overall, a fascinating and well-made film that has a very unfortunate background. Still a must-see for anybody interested in film.
An early German silent film, “Dr. Caligari” defined what would become the German Expressionism period. Full of twisted, asymmetrical sets and images, Dr. Caligari is an early horror film about a mad doctor and his sleepwalking servant that seem to be somehow connected to a string of ghastly murders. It features one of the earliest examples of a twist ending, which was employed for political reasons when it was felt the original ending was far too dark, as it cast authority figures in a negative light.
Like Caligari, Nosferatu was an early German Expressionist film that helped to define the horror genre. Intended as an adaptation of “Dracula,” numerous alterations had to be made as the producers could not properly secure the rights. The film is praised for director F. W. Murnau’s unique use of shadows and silhouettes to enhance the sheer terror of Max Schreck’s portrayal of the vampire.
One of Charlie Chaplin’s best films. Chaplin’s famous Tramp character heads to Alaska to participate in the gold rush, and finds more than he bargained for. This is the film Chaplin has said he would most like to be remembered for. It is also well-known for its poster, which depicts the Tramp cold and alone, sitting on top of a stove in the corner of a room. Hardly a poster for a comedy, “The Gold Rush” is nonetheless heartwarming and hilarious.
Another Buster Keaton comedy. This one stars Keaton as a young railroad engineer that aspires to become a soldier in the Civil War, he is unfortunately turned down. He returns home, downtrodden. A year later, his beloved train (the eponymous “The General”) is hijacked by Union soldiers, and he decides to stop them himself, single handedly. “The General” is best known for its humor and impressive action sequences, which utilize real, running steam trains. The climax of the film includes a spectacular moment where a bridge (sabotaged by Johnnie) collapses as a railroad train crosses it. This scene went on to inspire numerous other films, such as “The Bridge on the River Kwai” and “The Good, The Bad and the Ugly.”
D.W. Griffith’s response to the detractors of the “Birth of a Nation.” He was offended by their attacks on his films and decided to make a movie depicting how intolerance led to tragedy throughout history. Intolerance is a complex film that tells four separate stories about intolerance that are interwoven together. The movie constantly cuts back and forth between the four stories: a modern tale depicting the struggles of workers during the industrial revolution; the story of the Passion of the Christ; the fall of Babylon (which includes one of the biggest sets ever built); and the Bartholomew’s Day Massacre in France. As the movie reaches its climax, the cutting between stories becomes faster and more intense. A marked improvement over his previous film, this is the movie D.W. Griffith should be remembered for.
A Russian film by director Sergei Eisenstein. It presents a dramatized version of the mutiny that occurred in 1905 when the crew of the Russian battleship Potemkin rebelled against their officers of the Tsarist regime. It is without a doubt a Communist propaganda film, and remains the most influential of all such films. Its most well-known sequence, the Odessa Steps sequence has been referenced many times, most famously in Brian De Palma’s “The Untouchables.”
The first modern science-fiction film. It has influenced all subsequent SF movies from Star Wars to Blade Runner. Metropolis was one of the last German Expressionist films, and is to this date the most expensive silent film ever made. Metropolis is set in a futuristic urban dystopia and examines the social crisis between workers and owners in capitalism. The film was heavily edited upon release, and its cut footage was long considered lost. However, on July 1, 2008, a complete cut of the film was discovered in a film museum in Argentina. Some of the missing shots, however, remain beyond restoration.
This was Charlie Chaplin’s last silent film (“Modern Times”‘s status as a silent film is debatable, or else I would have included it on this list) In “City Lights,” the Little Tramp falls in love with a blind flower salesgirl who believes him to be a rich man. Desperate to maintain the illusion, he attempts to obtain enough money to pay for an expensive operation that can restore her eyesight. Its ending is often considered to be the greatest in film history.
Wow. When I first saw this movie, it was completely silent. No soundtrack, no anything. And it was perhaps the most haunting film experience of my life. The film depicts the final hours of French national hero and saint, Joan of Arc. The film was considered lost until a nearly complete print was found hidden in a mental institution. The movie is influential for its use of close-ups and complete lack of make-up (for realism). Renée Jeanne Falconetti’s performance as Joan is also considered one of the best in screen history.
Sunrise was made by F. W. Murnau, the director of Nosferatu. Murnau was invited by William Fox to make an Expressionist film in Hollywood. It tells the tale of a broken marriage; the husband is enamored by a beautiful, young tramp from the city that tries to persuades him to drown his wife. He is unable to go through with it, and he begins to realize how much he loves his wife. So they take a dreamy, mesmerizing romp through the big city and learn what they truly mean to each other. It is a wonderful, life-affirming film that still impresses and enthralls its viewers to this day.



















Great! That’s what all I need…Bucslime and Rant-all trolling their way to my stardom!
Thanks folks !! Without you two I would be nowhere…
Incase any1 has questions…
I have window 95 because it still works well for me, and i don’t need video’s and other famcy stuff to keep me entertaim
@Caliban (104)
I was going to mention “The Crowd” myself, and then I saw your post. An amazing film — one of the greats. I was surprised and disappointed to see it left off this list.
@bucslim (120):
This isn’t an argument; it’s simply contradiction.
I’ve been interested in silent movies since junior high. I carefully saved my allowance to join the Movie Book Club, and a history of the silents was the first thing I bought. PBS used to run silents once a week, and I never missed them. Plus I had a huge crush on Rudolph Valentino as The Sheik for awhile.
@Randall (125):
No it isn’t.
@bucslim (127):
It is!
thank the gods for sound. I am too stupid to enjoy the silence.
@bucslim (120): Say, that was great… doing my job! ( and speaking the truth for once in your life)
Love you!
mmmwuah!
@bucslim (127):
An argument isn’t just contradiction. An argument is a connected series of statements intended to establish a proposition.
It’s been 40+ days without a list about sports, I really hope there’s one soon.
Don’t worry bucslime and randy , you’ll get over it.
Even gay perverts have family problems.
Rant-all…yer 15 year old ***** would be ashamed of ya.
@El the erf (133):
Pathetic, badly-written, unoriginal and nonsensical attempt to elicit a response from me. I offer you one only out of the kindness of my heart, because I pity the slow-witted and socially awkward.
Dear Rant-all and bucslime, why don’t you keep your intellectual contradictory arguments to your own blogs and stop killing us each time you catch up with each other?
great list! bold albeit well handled inclusion of birth of a nation
@El the erf (135):
Take a look at post #84, clown. I contributed a thoughtful, well-composed opinion and offered up alternative choices to the list with support.
You, on the other hand, mumble and dither like a schizophrenic homeless person who wets himself.
The 1923 film, The Hunchback of Notre Dame should Definitely be on here.
Recommendation for the competition winner: DON”T select a DVD of Un Chien Andalou. I’m proud to say my appettite’s generally unaffected by edgy or disturbing films or tv shows, but after seeing the famous eyeball slicing in that film, I stayed away from grapes for days.
…after seeing the deerskin tanning episode of Dirty Jobs in HD, I stayed away from pudding for weeks.
Excellent selections, IceKeyHunter. I think I’ve seen half of these. I’d also recommend The Great Train Robbery. This one does pan and scan earlier than Birth of a Nation (GTR was made in 1903). I especially love the ending. I bet it scared the crap out of people when they first saw the film.
I have only seen Nosferatu and that was many years ago… at the time, I was not really impressed with it. Now that I am older and have an greater understanding of everything, I can really appreciate the film for what it is.
I think many people who are not interested or like me, who didn’t get it, are thinking in terms of modern movies. You have to watch these movies for what they represent in terms of the early 1900′s. There was no sound, no color and had to rely on the director, actors and imagery. To which Nosferatu had in abundance.
I wish today’s movies had the same dedication towards making a great film that would last 100 years!
IceKeyHunter – great list. I think you did a fine job here and I wholeheartedly agree with your choices. Some of these selections showed up on my list of great films made by directors under the age of 30 – Buster Keaton and Eisenstein. It’s not my intention to take away from your list with my buffoonery.
It’s just too bad the rest of us have to constantly be inundated with childish and insane posts from someone who came to this site using my name pretending to have an opinion and a sense of humor. I look at it the same way I look at bird***** hitting my windshield. No matter what I do to wash the filth off, it remains to remind me that avian fecal matter is a giant pain in the ass. Just like this twerp who rarely has anything of substance to say, yet continually returns to open his blathering pie hole.
So erf, I have repeatedly told you not to refer to me in anyway. I made the mistake of mentioning one of your posts this morning, I won’t be doing that again. And once again you’ve proven yourself to be the village idiot.
I’m not interested in anything you have to say and from now on your posts directed at me will again be met with stone cold silence.
@Randall (134): hey old man you just fed the troll. Mighty randall has fallen for it. You my friend wil suffer the fate of the mighty roman empire. Separated in two and at the mercy of the huns and goths. And as like the romans, thracians or scythians you will never see an iphone with a repleaceble battery. You can only boast the fact that you multi touched chuck norris. Pinch to zoom…
@Taylor (132): give us some interesting documentaries to watch dude. Something with probing if you please. I guess we will be considered a civilized society when we will replace colonoscopies with probing.
@El the erf (135): dude why dont you buy a skoda. It will you resolve your issues.
As a mime artist, I have a great respect for this list.
@Randall (137):
Take a look at post #109, buffoon. Okay. So I contributed a messed up , not-so-well-composed opinion,and offered up alternative choices to the list.
BUT atleast that was in concord to the theme of the list.
Not my fault that mangy cur of yours was all over me. Forces me to take out my whip on him.
Keep him muzzled.
Hi,
Silent movies are one of the few movie genres I know practically nothing about, so this list was quite a tonic. I’ve seen a few (repeated in the 1980′s) such a early Laurel and Hardy but I can’t seem to recall sitting through any Chaplins. One curio is Keatons -The Railrodder – a 1960′s silent and one of his last. It’s a lot like a road movie, only on rails.
Would like to see: Nosferatu, Metropolis and Joan of Arc (if only because of Randell’s profound advocation.)
Must admit i’m not to clued up on silent films other than the well known greats of course and there were a few here i would definatly like to watch. Good list.
i had no idea Phantom of the Opera was attempted before Andrew Lloyd Webber! Now I have a movie to add to my list!
@bucslim (141): Look what you have gone and done again. Your sole graspable comment in this list has 80% of the content dedicated to me.Not my fault!
p.s…Mighty pleased to hear that I still give you nightmares with my sinister entrance act in Listverse! Har! har!
@Lifeschool (145): Ooops, sorry Randall.
Great list, I’ve never seen any of these!
I’ve wanted to see Metropolis ever since the Radio Ga Ga video.
Since Hollywood wants to keep remaking movies, maybe they should mine a little deeper and update some from the silent era instead of remaking ones that aren’t even very old and leave no room for improvement. Just my two cents.
I wonder how the complete film of The Passion of Joan of Arc came to be in a mental institute…I’m about to do some research
Excellent list, made all the more enjoyable by the knowledge that some of these early cinematic gems have been (almost) completely restored.
@Arsnl (142):
Careful, don’t be calling those films “documentaries”. Last time I did bucslim ***** a chicken haha.
List was too good. Now I’m spending the rest of the day watching silent films.
@El the erf (148): I hate you.
i like the Nosferatu
Pick me JFrater!! Pick me!!!
Nice list!
As a huge fan of all film, I’m amazed at the amount of people who have commented that they’ve not seen a silent film…ever! What is wrong with you people?? Some of the most creative and inventive work was done by these early pioneers of film. Many of today’s films owe their very soul to the masterworks of these silent film makers. You simply cannot claim to be a film fan without having seen anything pre-sound.
I grew up watching silents, especially Chaplin, Keaton, Harold Lloyd, and Fatty Arbuckle. The mix of comedy and pathos has never been equalled in film, silent or sound.
I also agree with Randall. Joan of Arc is absolutely astounding. And I love “The Cat and the Canary”.
I haven’t seen many silent films myself, and only one on this list. Nosferatu remains one of the scariest vampire movies ever made, and it’s style heavily influenced the Universal monster movie run.
That sounds like a perplexing conundrum…I like the movie lists btw keep em up
JF another well done list!!! ur the best!!!
@Arsnl (142): I’m managing fine with the windshield of ol’ Buc’s hooptie as my *****pot. Waste not Want not! (I am a man of simple terms…why waste a skoda when you have a clunker??)
I think this is the first movie list where I’ve seen most of them. Personal fave is The General of course. Interesting that you had Sherlock Jr as the secondary Keaton film. I might have picked The Playhouse, also for its advanced special effects.
I have only seen Un Chien Andalou. It was on another list on the site so I looked around the internet to watch it. Its quite disturbing. But its still good.
I feel like I’m the only person in the world who hasn’t seen Phantom of the Opera. I should get on that.
Nosferatu is such a great film. For some reason most people I know either don’t think much of it, or don’t really care to even watch it. It’s quite sad.
I miss Trip to the Moon (or whatever the title of the Melies’ groundbreaking film is in English) and anything with Louise Brooks for the sheer gorgeousness of aforementioned Louise Brooks. Just for fun, I’ll write her name again: LOUISE BROOKS! Pandora’s Box comes to mind first but there’s lots of stuff she’s been in. And I think I developed a little crush on El the Erf. I became aware of that as I noticed that I always scroll down the comments list to first find his comments and only then I skim through the rest. Truth be told, I have no idea what he writes about, is he left, right, center, up or down or simply high but he kind of puts a smile on my face for whatever reason. There, I said it.
I love lists like this. This should keep me busy for the next couple of hours :/
@El the erf (162): erf thats you. Making friends wherever you go. You are a man of the world.
Btw great list seen a couple blah blah blah.
Two words: Broken Blossoms.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broken_Blossoms
Ah, yes, I forgot to mention that every time I hear the word Nosferatu I immediately remember an old episode of “Friends” when Phoebe Buffay’s twin sister Ursula starts a career in ***** and stars in such classics as “Buffay the Vampire Layer” and “Nosferatool”.
“Are You Afraid of the Dark?” had a great episode that used “Nosferatu” as the inspiration called “The Tale of the Midnight Madness”. Loved that show.
Brilliant list! I wondered when a silent movie list would appear – and here it is! Charlie Chapman is hilarious.
Arbuckle was innocent.
If there is a God, his name was Buster Keaton.
7/15 isn’t too bad.
The Passion of Joan of Arc is a great film. The expressiveness that Falconetti is able to convey is truly amazing.
I’m amazed that I didn’t see the name “Harold Lloyd” until comment 158: His clock-climbing stunt in “Safety Last” is iconic, and he’s often forgotten as one of the Big Three of Silent Comedy with Chaplin and Keaton! However, major, major points for “Sunrise” being at #1: I started reading this list thinking that only the “big name” movies would be mentioned, and that a classic like “Sunrise” would be referenced only in the comments section. Aside: Brad Pitt watches a clip of this movie in “Interview with the Vampire.”
“Nosferatu” is easily a must-see, but I’d also suggest following it up with the more recent “Shadow of the Vampire,” a — shall we say — loose “making of” Murnau’s classic.
My thoughts on “Joan of Arc” are similar to other comments: One viewing of this movie absolutely pulled me in as a fan. It’s a stunning film by itself, but what I saw on TCM featured the “Voices of Light” soundtrack, which adds to one’s emotional experience. Related, Carl Theodor Dreyer also did “Vampyr,” another silent I’d suggest when you sit down with “Nosferatu.”
Saw a comment about the omission of Lang’s “M.” That’s a talkie, but definitely worth seeing. I’m looking forward to seeing the restoration work they’ve done on that “Metropolis” print they found in 2008, as we’ve long seen a version that Lang DIDN’T have in mind (Best we’ve got thus far is the 2003 Kino release, which fills in the gaps with title cards).
Disagree about the inclusion of “Phantom of the Opera.” I know, some would consider that to be blasphemy, but Chaney SHOULD be represented, and he certainly did better movies. He WAS stellar in “Phantom,” and I saw someone mention “Hunchback of Notre Dame,” but IMHO, Chaney is oftentimes identified as a horror movie actor because of these appearances (I think many of us would love to see “London After Midnight”: resurface, if only to see Chaney’s vampire performance in an otherwise ordinary whodunit film that was later remade as “Mark of the Vampire” with Bela Lugosi.). Check out his work in “Tell It to the Marines” — no fancy makeup! — or “The Unholy Three” (both the silent and the talkie, the latter of which was the only talkie that Chaney did before he died), and while the film no longer exists, search YouTube for a surviving clip from “The Miracle Man.” Chaney’s charlatan character is “healed,” but then the REAL miracle happens. Great scene!
Given Chaney’s makeup work, while I wouldn’t put the movie in this list, take a look at Conrad Veidt in “The Man Who Laughs,” for a face that, well, you’ve all seen on a rather popular villain from comics and movies.
If you want a spoiler, try here: http://www.sunrisesilents.com/TMWL_des.html
@DoubleT (165):
Yo, trick films are so damn awesome. Throw in a Jules Verne script and you have a gem of a movie on your hands. Trip to moon sounds fabulous.Thanks.
“Truth be told, I have no idea what he writes about, is he left, right, center, up or down or simply high”
Amen to that.
@Arsnl (167): So true.
i think it would be great if someone made a lient movie with modern techniques
Well done IceSkiHunter well written and good choices.
Randell nice to see you back, a couple of weeks ago a list was posted about crabs and insects and you asked if someone could explain how come some of the different species gets bigger than others.
Ihave a couple of lines I can post in about an hour if you are still interested, just let me know.
I am surprised that Metropolis is not higher on the list. The amount of influence that it had in Hollywood is extremely important in the sci-fi genre. I have seen most of these films in school, but I will need to check out the others. Great list.
@thebarrelabisca (151):
Here’s how it *might* have ended up in an asylum:
One of the actors in the film is the artist/poet Antonin Artaud, friend and lover of Anais Nin. Artaud, sadly, gradually went off his nut, and even at the time this film was made was already showing signs of it. Soon after he ended up in an asylum.
He was tended to, at one time or another, by two other friends (and lovers–she got around) of Nin’s: Otto Rank, and a French *****yst whose name inescapably escapes me now.
It’s possible, then—in fact likely—that Artaud’s commitment to an asylum had some connection to a copy of the film ending up in one.
I have a buddy,who’s about 50 years old from PHILEDELPHIA,U.S.A., who says his grandfather was a silent film camera man ,said he used to film CHARLIE CHAPLIN and other stars of that era…He also said his grandfather had tons of footage from those movies that was never used,but sadly when his grandfather died noone in the family knew what happened to all those old reels of silent film.
This is a really good list, I’ve seen the General and I’ve wanted to see Nosferatu, but this list has opened my eyes to a whole new range of silent films