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Top 1910’s Movies (see all)

  1. The Birth of a Nation (1915)
  2. Shoulder Arms (1918)
  3. A Dog's Life (1918)
  4. Broadway Love (1918)
  5. The Immigrant (1917)
  6. His Wedding Night (1917)
  7. The Pawnshop (1916)
  8. The Flirt (1917)
  9. Broken Blossoms (1919)
  10. An Ozark Romance (1918)


Fan Top War Movies (see all)

  1. The African Queen (1951)
  2. All Quiet on the Western Front (1930)
  3. The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957)
  4. Father Goose (1964)
  5. Gunga Din (1939)
  6. Lawrence of Arabia (1962)
  7. To Have and Have Not (1944)
  8. The General (1926)
  9. The Snows of Kilimanjaro (1952)
  10. Captain Blood (1935)

Fan Top New York Movies (see all)

  1. Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961)
  2. Swing Time (1936)
  3. Rear Window (1954)
  4. Holiday Inn (1942)
  5. Shall We Dance (1937)
  6. An Affair to Remember (1957)
  7. Angels with Dirty Faces (1938)
  8. Miracle on 34th Street (1947)
  9. You Can't Take It With You (1938)
  10. The Seven Year Itch (1955)




Silver Screen Standards

Love and Language in Ball of Fire (1941) With a title like Ball of Fire, you expect real fireworks, and this 1941 screwball comedy delivers them with spectacular energy and skill. There?s so much to love about the film that it?s hard to know where to start, much less how to boil it down to a sing......
Read Jennifer’s article

Classic Movie Travels

Classic Movie Travels: Vera-Ellen Vera-Ellen Vera-Ellen was born Vera-Ellen Rohe on February 16, 1921, in Norwood, Ohio, to Alma Westemeier and Martin Rohe. Her father worked as a piano tuner. Both parents were of German descent. Her mother wished to one day have a girl named Vera-Ellen, i......
Read Annette’s article

Western Roundup

Cowboy Museums Over the last few months two prominent Southern California museums have featured exhibits on cowboys. To varying degrees, the exhibits included memorabilia about Western movies and movie cowboys.  In this month?s column I?ll be sharing photos from my visits. In Decem......
Read Laura’s article

Silents are Golden

Buster Keaton?s Motion Picture Debut: The First Five Films From our 21st century perspective, Buster Keaton?s upbringing was certainly unusual. Born to parents who made a modest living performing in travelling medicine shows, he became a performer himself at a very young age. Arguably a child......
Read Lea’s article

Noir Nook

Noir Nook: Ripped from the HeadlinesShadow of a Doubt (1943) If you know your Alfred Hitchcock, you might be aware that of all the movies he directed between 1925 and 1976, he considered his favorite to be Shadow of a Doubt (1943), starring Teresa Wright and Joseph Cotten. What you might not ......
Read Karen’s article

Silver Screen Standards

Silver Screen Standards: The Mirror Crack?d (1980) While it?s not actually a film from the Golden Age of Hollywood, the 1980 Miss Marple whodunnit, The Mirror Crack?d, is set in 1953 and boasts a cast of powerhouse classic stars from that era, including Angela Lansbury as Agatha Christie?s iconic......
Read Jennifer’s article

Monsters and Matinees

Just because we love classic horror ? especially low-budget B-movies ? doesn’t mean we have to watch bad prints of the films that we’re used to seeing online or in a public domain version. While searching for new video releases of old horror films to add to my collection, I was surpr......
Read Toni’s article

Legend Tribute: Gregory Peck

Happy Birthday to Classic Movie Legend, Gregory Peck, born April 5th, 1916! Sometimes I can?t help but wonder if Gregory Peck is actually human. I can?t help it. He is almost too perfect to be of this world. Is it really so crazy to think he is some short elaborate alien experiment to create the perfect...  Read more...

Mini Tribute Virginia Cherrill

Born April 12, 1908 Actress Virginia Cherrill! Virginia Cherrill appeared in only 15 films, retiring from acting in 1933 after her marriage to Cary Grant. Cherrill is undoubtedly best known for her role as the Blind Flower Girl in Charlie Chaplin’s silent masterpiece City Lights. Virginia Cherrill...  Read more...


Ahead of its time, John Carpenters ‘The Thing’ honored by the National Film Registry

At an isolated Antarctic research station, scientists battle a deadly alien with such extraordinary shape-shifting capabilities that the men don?t know if the person next to them is still human. The truth is only revealed when the alien is threatened and violently abandons its current inhabitant. ......Read more

Tracking Vera Miles – Exclusive Guest Post by Christopher McKittrick, author of Vera Miles: The Hitchcock Blonde Who Got Away

 I’m very happy to share this exclusive guest post by Christopher McKittrick, author of Very Miles: The Hitchcock Blonde Who Got Away. A Big Thank You to Christopher for this article! –Annmarie at Classic Movie Hub Tracking Vera Miles:Clarifying a Golden Age Hollywood Star?s ......Read more

It Came From Texas Film Festival: Classic Films and True Tales

So excited to announceThe Third Annual It Came From Texas Film Festival ...Read more

Fan Favorites: Film Adaptation (see full chart)





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Classic Movie Travel Sites

Did you know that there is a Museum of the American West in Los Angeles, CA?

The Museum of the American West was established in 1988 by Gene Autry (as "Gene Autry Western Herita... ..  read more

National Film Registry

Meet Me in St. Louis, directed by the legendary Vincente Minnelli, was released in 1944. In 1994, 50 years later, it was inducted into The National Film Registry. Thank you National Film Registry!
see more National Film Registry inductees

Grauman's Chinese Theater

Bob Hope's, Footprints & Handprints were "set in stone" in Grauman's famous forecourt in 1943. So were Dorothy Lamour, Betty Grable, Monty Woolley, Gary Cooper...  see more