Greatest Films of the 1920s
1920 | 1921 | 1922 | 1923 | 1924 | 1925 | 1926 | 1927 | 1928 | 1929
Title Screen Film Genre(s), Title, Year, (Country), Length, Director, Description
The Cameraman (1928), 69 minutes, D: Edward Sedgwick, Buster Keaton
The Circus (1928), 72 minutes, D: Charles Chaplin
Writer-director Charlie Chaplin's classic slapstick comedy, with numerous pratfalls and gags. Chaplin starred as The Tramp (in the third-to-last Tramp film, and the last one during the silent era) - falsely accused of pickpocketing. His escape from police brought him into the big-top circus ring - and the audience thought he was one of the hilarious show-acts. Without realizing it, The Tramp became the star of the show. The brutish circus owner Ringmaster (Al Ernest Garcia) hired him as a props man instead of as a clown, but paid him low wages. A love triangle developed between the Tramp, the owner's stepdaughter Merna (Merna Kennedy) - a trick-riding equestrienne, and the handsome, new high-wire tight-rope walker Rex (Harry Crocker). Set-pieces included the opening pickpocket sequence, the hall of mirrors chase, the encounter with a sleeping lion in a cage, and the concluding tight-rope scene with the Tramp's pants falling down while monkeys climbed on him.
The Crowd (1928), 90-104 minutes, D: King Vidor
One of the greatest silent films about 'average Joe' or "Everyman" characters who struggled to attain the American dream. The bleak, poignant, and realistic tale was the story of two young people, John Sims (James Murray) and Mary (director Vidor's wife Eleanor Boardman) who met, fell in love after a blind date (and fun trip to Coney Island), married, and honeymooned at Niagara Falls. It began with John's birth on the Fourth of July, 1900, his tough childhood, and his eager and desperate-to-please struggle to make it in New York City. As a lowly city clerk in a dead-end job, he and his wife (and family) struggled. A low point came when their young daughter was tragically killed in a truck accident in front of their tenement. Depressed and without a job, he considered suicide as an option, but ended up as a sandwich-board advertiser. In the final scene, he was reunited with Mary and they found happy, mundane anonymity and laughter amidst a huge crowd in a vaudeville theatre.
The Docks of New York (1928), 76 minutes, D: Josef von Sternberg
A silent film melodrama of love and redemption from von Sternberg with shadowy black and white visuals, pathos, genuine squalor, and an amoral tone. Blue-collar, salty, tattooed New York waterfront dock worker and steamship stoker Bill Roberts (George Bancroft) was given one night of shore-leave. He was on his way to a night of drinking at the Sandbar, a rough-and-tumble bar near the New York wharf on the East River. Next came a life-changing event - he saved the life of suicidal, depressed, hard-living, yet sassy dance-hall girl Mae (Betty Compson) who had thrown herself into the river. After stealing replacement clothes for her, he promised to be her savior and protector, and drunkenly and hastily proposed to her on a lark. After a makeshift, farcical marital ceremony held in the bar in front of leering patrons, the question remained - would the well-meaning intentions of Bill last? His major obstacle was Andy (Mitchell Lewis), the ship's third engineer who was unhappily married to Mae's best friend, Lou (Olga Baclanova). Andy was competing for Mae's affection, and fired Bill from his job the next morning - followed by ominous gunshots.
In Old Arizona (1928), 95 minutes, D: Irving Cummings
Advertised as an "100% All -Talking Fox Movietone Feature" - and historically important as the first talkie Western film produced by a major studio. It was also the first full-length talkie film to be shot outdoors (on location) and not in a studio. The story was suggested by The Caballero's Way, a 1904 short story by William Sidney Porter (O. Henry). Silent screen star Warner Baxter won a Best Actor Academy Award as the dashing, guitar-playing western troubadour and outlaw hero Cisco Kid ("the Robin Hood of the Old West") in Fox-Movietone's primitive film. [Note: This was the film during which co-director Raoul Walsh lost an eye.] The Cisco Kid's love interest in the western was poor, feisty Mexican girlfriend Tonia Maria (Dorothy Burgess), while he wasn't being pursued by tough US Army Sergeant Mickey Dunn (Edmund Lowe) who was also womanizing Tonia on the side- creating a love triangle when she was tempted to collect reward money to turn in the Kid. The western had stereotypical elements, including a gunfight, a stagecoach robbery, a cattle roundup - and a twist ending.
The Last Command (1928), 80 minutes, D: Josef von Sternberg
A silent film classic. After the great Russian Revolution of 1917, arrogant Imperialist Russian General Dolgorucki/Sergius Alexander (Best Actor-winning Emil Jannings), commander of Czarist troops, was forced to flee Russia, and came to America. He found his way to Hollywood, working on a Hollywood movie lot as a Hollywood extra, making only $7.50/day. He was cast as a Russian general in a film about the Russian Revolution, interestingly, and was humiliated under the direction of another ex-Russian Lev Andreyev (William Powell), a former impoverished actor/revolutionary who suffered under the general's whip. In acting out the role of the Russian general, the elderly man relived his past, but it was too much for him and he fell dead.
Lonesome (1928), 69 minutes, D: Paul Fejos
October (Ten Days that Shook the World) (1928, Soviet Union) (aka Oktyabr, or Октябрь), 95 minutes, D: Grigori Aleksandrov, Sergei M. Eisenstein
A brisk documentary-styled historical film (with Eisenstein's characteristic montages) that was commissioned to be made in 1927 as a propagandistic film to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the 1917 October Revolution. Notable for its cross-cutting, spectacular crowd scenes and startling close-ups, and authentic look (often mistaken for actual historical newsreel footage of the revolution). It opened with events in St. Petersburg, beginning with the overthrow of the Romanov (Alexander III) monarchy in February of 1917. It also re-enacted the historic week-and-a-half in October 1918, when Kerensky's provisional regime was toppled by the Bolsheviks. The film was based on John Reed's Ten Days That Shook the World, recreated in Warren Beatty's Reds (1981).
La Passion De Jeanne D'Arc (1928, Fr.) (aka The Passion of Joan of Arc), 110 minutes, D: Carl Theodor Dreyer
This silent film masterpiece featured French theatre star Renée Maria Falconetti (in her final fllm role) as the martyred title character in an authentic retelling of the story of the martyrdom of Joan of Arc. She had closely-cropped hair and was forced to endure imprisonment, an inquisition trial, torture, and execution at the stake by fire in the year 1431. The startling, ground-breaking and influential film used minimal sets, extremely oblique and other unusual camera angles, and excruciatingly huge close-ups to create a virtually new visual language soulfully expressive of the martyr's suffering psychology.Lost Film The Patriot (1928), D: Ernst Lubitsch
A presumed lost film. An historical melodrama, and considered sexually-suggestive in its day. Promotional materials advertised the film's plot: These Characters Will Fascinate You! EMIL JANNINGS - Cruel, brutal, but also pathetic. The mad Czar who holds all Russia in his tyrannical grasp. FLORENCE VIDOR - An exotic beauty of the court. The Czar's favorite! Betrayed by her lover, she becomes a thorn in the hands of the conspirators! LEWIS STONE - Prime Minister and trusted friend of the mad Czar, who conspires against the monster ruler of Russia. NEIL HAMILTON - Heir to the throne. Worshipped by the Russians. The only man who can hold the government from self-destruction. In the story, the Czar's chief advisor (Prime Minister) and friend Count Pahlen (Lewis Stone), plotted to assassinate the cruel, lascivious and brutal despot Czar Paul I (Emil Jannings) - for the good of the country.
The Racket (1928), 84 minutes, D: Lewis Milestone
A difficult film to view - a long-lost but rediscovered film, and a forerunner of a rash of gangster films in the 1930s. A Best Picture nominee and solid crime-gangster silent film (produced by Howard Hughes), that was remade in 1951 (with Robert Ryan and Robert Mitchum). Well-connected (eluding capture with protection from politicians and city officials), influential and powerful Chicago bootlegger Nick Scarsi (Louis Wolheim) was the major rival-enemy of determined, and honest local Police Captain McQuigg (Thomas Meighan) and later, district attorney Welch (Sam De Grasse). In a subplot, Nick was opposed to the romantic involvement of his younger brother Joe (George E. Stone) with gold-digging, cynical blonde moll-singer Helen Hayes (Marie Prevost), but was unable to prevent their relationship. To get even, eye-witness Helen threatened to inform the police that Joe (arrested for killing a pedestrian in a hit-and-run car accident) was Nick's brother. At the same time, Nick was in hot-water for killing a police officer.
Spies (1928, Germany) (aka Spione), 90 minutes, D: Fritz Lang
Steamboat Bill, Jr. (1928), 71 minutes, D: Buster Keaton, Charles "Chuck" Reisner
This movie was used as a model for Steamboat Willie (1928), Mickey Mouse's first animated cartoon with sound. Buster Keaton (in his second-to-last silent feature film) played William Canfield, Jr. - an effeminate college boy (with beret, ukulele, and thin mustache), who returned home to River Junction, to his tough, burly Mississippi riverboat captain father William "Steamboat Bill" (Ernest Torrence) who had a rickety steamboat named Stonewall Jackson. He fell in love with Kitty King (Marion Byron), the daughter of his father's rival steamboat owner J.J. King (Tom McGuire) with a more modern steamboat. The film included the dangerous stunt sequence of a three-story building facade falling over on Keaton, and a tremendous cyclone. Steamboat Bill, Jr. saved the day by the finale and won the girl.
Storm Over Asia (1928, Soviet Union) (aka Potomok Chingis-Khana, or Потомок Чингисхана, or The Heir to Genghis Khan), 74 minutes, D: Vsevolod I. Pudovkin
A classic example of Soviet silent cinema with action, propaganda, elements of ethnographic documentary and stunning visuals. This was the last film in a trilogy of great epic revolutionary films made by one of the Soviet Union's greatest filmmakers. In its fictional story set at the time of the Russian Civil War, the mistaken 'Heir" was a simple Mongolian (or Siberian) herdsman named Bair (Valeri Inkizhinov) who was cheated during a fur-trading incident with Europeans, causing him to flee to the hills. In early 1920, he became a rebel leader and led the fight for the partisan Bolshevik Soviets against the British army interlopers. When captured by the British, the evil occupying colonial (capitalistic) powers wanted to groom him to become their puppet king of Siberia - after they mistakenly believed he was a direct descendant of Genghis Khan. [Note: the British, who re-edited the film, replaced their identity as "White Russians"]. However, he turned against them and took the guise of the ancestral, sword-wielding leader of a sweeping horde of warriors.
The Wind (1928), 74 minutes, D: Victor Sjostrom (Seastrom)
One of Lillian Gish's greatest achievements in a powerfully dramatic silent film - her fourth and last MGM film and the last of her silent films. Swedish director Victor Sjostrom's visually poetic, melodramatic silent western film, from Frances Marion's adapted screenplay, was based on the 1925 novel by Dorothy Scarborough. Sjostrom (billed as Victor Seastrom in his American films) was a longtime Swedish film director whom MGM signed to do films, such as He Who Gets Slapped (1924) with Lon Chaney, The Scarlet Letter (1926) with Gish, and The Divine Woman (1928) with Greta Garbo. This was his final American film. He later returned to Sweden to act, most notably in Bergman's classic Wild Strawberries (1957) as lead character Professor Isak Borg, an elderly professor facing his mortality and revisiting his past. This is the dust bowl tale of a vulnerable young woman's plight in an alien and fearful environment (of ever-present sexual advances and the wind) - it was therefore the progenitor of all 'women's pictures'. A "proper," fragile, sheltered, naive and young Southern belle, Letty Mason (Lillian Gish) traveled from Virginia to live with her male cousin Beverly (Edward Earle) in a dust-bowl town in the frontier West, where the howling, inhospitable Texas prairie wind relentlessly blew severe sandstorms. While taking care of the three children, Beverly's suspicious, hardened pioneer wife Cora (Dorothy Cumming) became intensely jealous of the young, pretty, and demure Eastern lady. The delicate Letty was immediately courted for marriage by two ranch cowboys: the uncouth Lige (Lars Hanson), and his dim-witted, comic buffoon sidekick Sourdough (William Orlamond). Also, an amoral, smooth-talking, flirtatious, already-married cattle salesman from Fort Worth named Roddy Wirt (Montagu Love) who first met her on the train journey, arrived in town and wanted her to be his mistress. Desperate because she had received an ultimatum to leave Cora's household when regarded as a sexual threat, Letty had no choice when she found out that Roddy was married. She was forced to accept a marriage proposal from Lige, but because she had no love for him, rebuffed consummation of her marriage with him on their wedding night. In the electrifying conclusion (real or hallucinatory?), one night when Roddy found the still-virginal Letty alone and half-crazy in her isolated cabin due to the constantly howling, remorseless wind, he attempted a brutal attack and rape (off-screen). He insisted on taking her away with him, but she resiliently resisted and shot him dead, in self-defense, and guiltily attempted to bury his body in the uncooperative, shifting sand. She watched in horror as the wind kept exposing his face and hand. At first, she curled up in a fetal position, shook and cried and was desperate to block out the wind. When Lige arrived home, she was ultimately able to reconcile with him - she confessed the killing to him and he explained how the sand had justly covered up the corpse. She also reaffirmed her love and they lovingly embraced in the doorway of their cabin. The film was a box-office failure, due to the advent of the "talkies" a year before, but its indelible images yet remain. John Arnold's impressive cinematography was taken under difficult circumstances - the temperature during the shoot in the Mojave Desert (near Bakersfield) was often over 100 degrees F.