Directed by Fritz Lang Position on the list (at time of viewing): 467 I will be incredibly happy if I never have to watch this “1922, April 27th – Dr. Mabuse, der Spieler [Dr. Mabuse the Gambler]”
Tag: 1000 Greatest Films
1922, March 4th – Nosferatu
Directed by F. W. Murnau Position on the list (at time of viewing): 125 This film is very much in the vein of Cabinet of “1922, March 4th – Nosferatu”
1922, January 11th – Foolish Wives
Directed by Erich von Stroheim Position on the list (at time of viewing): 648 This is another difficult film to rate. It’s got another completely “1922, January 11th – Foolish Wives”
1921, January 21st – The Kid
Directed by Charlie Chaplin Position on the list (at time of viewing): 342 This film explodes onto the scene like nothing that has ever come “1921, January 21st – The Kid”
1920, February 26th – The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari
Directed by Robert Wiene Position on the list (at time of viewing): 190 If A Trip to the Moon was a dream somehow committed to film, then “1920, February 26th – The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari”
1919, June 1st – True Heart Susie
Directed by D.W. Griffith Position on the list (at time of viewing): 848 Just a month after Broken Blossoms, Griffith returned with another small, intimate film “1919, June 1st – True Heart Susie”
1919, May 13th – Broken Blossoms
Directed by D.W. Griffith Position on the list (at time of viewing): 264 Jumping ahead almost three years from the previous entry on the list, “1919, May 13th – Broken Blossoms”
1916, September 5th – Intolerance
Directed by D.W. Griffith Position on the list (at time of viewing): 102 This is Griffith’s lesser-known, but arguably greater, epic that he made in “1916, September 5th – Intolerance”
1915, November 13th – Les Vampires
Directed by Louis Feuillade Position on the list (at time of viewing): 640 This is our first “film” which presents a significant hurdle to any “1915, November 13th – Les Vampires”
1915, February 8th – Birth of a Nation
Directed by D.W. Griffith Position on the list (at time of viewing): 242 Well, I feel like this movie’s reputation precedes it, to a degree. “1915, February 8th – Birth of a Nation”