1897

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





Japanese cinema developed along a path unlike any other national tradition. While the rest of the world embraced intertitles, Japan retained the benshi, live narrators who stood beside the screen and performed all the characters' voices, provided commentary, and shaped the audience's emotional response to the images. This practice, rooted in centuries of theatrical storytelling, meant that Japanese filmmakers thought about the relationship between image and voice differently from their Western counterparts, and it helps explain why the transition to sound happened later in Japan than almost anywhere else. The films in this collection span from 1921, when Minoru Murata made what is often cited as the first significant Japanese art film, to 1936, when Kenji Mizoguchi produced the work that announced him as one of cinema's great artists. Between those dates, Japanese filmmakers created a body of work that encompassed radical avant-garde experimentation, swashbuckling period adventure, and a tradition of quiet domestic observation that has no real equivalent in Western cinema. Yasujirō Ozu was already developing the understated family dramas that would eventually make him one of the most revered directors in film history. Teinosuke Kinugasa was pushing formal boundaries as aggressively as anything happening in Europe. And Sadao Yamanaka, killed in the war at twenty-eight, was reinventing the samurai genre with a humanist wit that anticipated decades of later filmmaking. What strikes a modern viewer about these films is how little they conform to Western assumptions about what early cinema looks like. The pacing, the compositions, the emotional register all reflect a distinct cultural sensibility. These are not imitations of European or American models; they are the products of a cinematic tradition that was, from the beginning, fully its own.
12 films





German Expressionism was never just an art style — it was a scream. Born in the wreckage of World War I, in a Germany reeling from defeat, revolution, hyperinflation, and the collapse of every certainty the old empire had promised, it took the internal states that realism couldn't touch — dread, madness, desire, despair — and made them visible. Sets buckled and leaned. Shadows moved with intentions of their own. The camera itself became untrustworthy. The movement proper runs from The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari in 1920 to roughly the mid-1920s, but its influence bled forward through the entire Weimar period and ultimately into Hollywood, carried there by the very filmmakers who'd invented it when they fled the Nazis in the 1930s. Film noir, horror cinema, science fiction — all descend from what these directors built in Berlin studios out of painted canvas, angled light, and a nation's collective anxiety. This collection traces the full arc: from Caligari's painted nightmares through the movement's peak in the mid-twenties to its late transformation into New Objectivity, ending with Fritz Lang's M — the film where Expressionism shed its stylized sets but kept its soul.
19 films





Anna May Wong was Hollywood's first Chinese American film star and one of the most consequential, and most wronged, figures in the history of cinema. Born Wong Liu Tsong in Los Angeles in 1905, she broke into films as a teenager and quickly demonstrated a screen presence that critics consistently singled out even when the films around her were mediocre. Her career is a study in paradox: she was internationally celebrated as a fashion icon and a major star in Europe, while American studios kept her trapped in stereotypical Dragon Lady and exotic villain roles, systematically denied her the leading parts she deserved. Anti-miscegenation laws literally prevented her from kissing a white co-star on screen, which effectively barred her from most romantic leads. She responded with remarkable resourcefulness, founding her own production company, traveling to Europe where she was treated as the star she was, mastering French and German to act in multiple language versions of films, and performing Shakespeare on stage opposite Laurence Olivier. She died in 1961 at fifty-six, just before the tide of history might finally have turned in her favor, but her legacy as a pathbreaker for Asian American representation in Hollywood is now rightly celebrated. The films collected here trace her career from a teenage extra to an international star, and they document both the brilliance of her talent and the constraints that prevented it from being fully realized.
13 films



