
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


Cinema has been drawn to the supernatural since its very first frames. In 1896, Georges Méliès pointed a camera at a stage trick and conjured the Devil out of a puff of smoke. Within three decades, filmmakers across Europe and America had built an entire visual language for the uncanny: distorted shadows, double exposures, faces emerging from darkness, spaces that refused to obey the laws of physics. The films in this collection represent that language at its most powerful and inventive. What connects these works is not a single national tradition or artistic movement but a shared fascination with the boundary between the living and the dead, the natural and the impossible. German Expressionism gave us the angular nightmares of Caligari and the rat-like creeping of Nosferatu. Scandinavian cinema produced the spectral carriage rides of Sjöström and the pseudo-documentary witchcraft of Christensen. Hollywood contributed Lon Chaney's tortured transformations and the eerie tropical voodoo of White Zombie. And threading through all of it is the figure of the occultist, the alchemist, the sorcerer who seeks forbidden knowledge and pays the price. These films still unsettle because their techniques bypass rational comfort. Superimposition makes ghosts visible. Chiaroscuro lighting turns ordinary rooms into traps. Expressionist sets externalize inner terror. The supernatural was not just a genre for early cinema; it was an argument for what the medium could do that no other art form could match.
20 films


Lillian Gish is the greatest actress of the silent era, and a serious case can be made that she is the greatest screen actress of any era. She began performing on stage as a child to support her family, entered films in 1912 at the invitation of her friend Mary Pickford, and immediately became D.W. Griffith's most important collaborator — not merely his leading lady but his creative partner in developing the grammar of cinematic storytelling. She understood instinctively what the camera required: performances of radical interiority, stripped of theatrical exaggeration, built from the smallest gestures of the face and hands. Her range was extraordinary. She could play fragile innocence in True Heart Susie and ferocious maternal protectiveness in Way Down East, where she performed the famous ice-floe sequence herself in conditions that permanently damaged her hand. She brought aristocratic composure to La Bohème and The Scarlet Letter, and in The Wind she delivered what many consider the finest performance in all of silent cinema: a woman driven to madness by isolation, wind, and the violence of men, rendered with a psychological precision that anticipates the best work of the sound era by decades. Gish outlived nearly every other figure from the silent period, working steadily into her nineties, and she never stopped advocating for the art form that she had helped create. The twelve films collected here span her entire silent career, from the early Griffith one-reelers through the late MGM productions, and they constitute an unmatched record of screen acting at its highest level.
12 films











From: Spotlight: Anna May Wong
1924 · Directed by Herbert Brenon
The first film adaptation of J.M. Barrie's beloved play — and a remarkably faithful one, produced with Barrie's direct involvement. Betty Bronson is a sprightly, androgynous Peter Pan, leading the Darling children to Neverland for adventures with pirates, mermaids, and the villainous Captain Hook (Ernest Torrence, magnificent). Anna May Wong appears as the Native princess Tiger Lily, bringing her characteristic grace and screen presence to a role that, while confined by the period's racial conventions, she invests with genuine dignity. The film's special effects — flying scenes achieved with visible wires that somehow add to the theatrical charm — capture the play's magic with a sincerity that later, more technically polished adaptations often lack. A genuine enchantment.