This Best of Decades list is inspired by the recent Decades Countdown at Wonders in the Dark. Also, the idea of looking back at Cinema made 100 years ago was appealing. Silent Cinema through the 1910s produced many worthy gems but the 1920s saw a jump in film production both in terms of quantity and quality. The “Roaring 20s” meant that Hollywood studio system was properly established along with the current star system. Notable directors also made their first films such as Alfred Hitchcock, Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton and Sergei Eisenstein. In the case of Chaplin and Keaton, their style and notable signature was established in the 1920s including the releasing of many iconic films. Half of this top 10 could easily be filled with films from Chaplin and Keaton. Films of many genres were released not only in US but across Europe as well. Many of the films that have become part of the Essential Cinema canon came out in this decade as well, such as Sunrise (1927, F.W. Murnau), The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920, Robert Wiene), Metropolis (1927, Fritz Lang), Battleship Potemkin (1925, Sergei Eisenstein), Nosferatu (1922, F.W. Murnau), Greed (1924, Erich von Stroheim), The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928, Carl Theodor Dreyer) plus a handful of Chaplin (The Kid, The Gold Rush) and Keaton (Sherlock Jr., The General) titles.
Top 10 films of the 1920s:
1. Metropolis (1927, Germany, Fritz Lang)
2. The Gold Rush (1925, USA, Charles Chaplin)
3. The Crowd (1928, USA, King Vidor)
4. Battleship Potemkin (1925, Soviet Union,
Sergei Eisenstein)
5. The General (1926, USA, Clyde
Bruckman / Buster Keaton)
6. Man with a Movie Camera (1929, Soviet
Union, Dziga Vertov)
7. Nosferatu (1922, Germany, F.W. Murnau)
8. Pandora’s Box (1929, Germany, G. W.
Pabst)
9. The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928, France,
Carl Theodor Dreyer)
10. Napolean
(1927, France, Abel Gance)
Honourable mentions:
The Kid (1921, USA, Charles Chaplin)
The Cameraman (1928, USA, Edward Sedgwick / Buster Keaton)
The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari
(1920, Germany, Robert Wiene)
Un chein Andalou (1929, France, Luis Buñuel)
Top 10 by Country
Germany and US are tied with 3
films each in the top 10. France and Soviet Union have 2 films each. The top 10
ended up being more spread-out than I had anticipated. Of course, there are
still a lot of films from many international nations that are either lost or
not widely available, which means this list will change over the years.
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