Old movies worth seeing

What is the oldest movie you have ever enjoyed watching?

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City Lights

Tora Tora Tora

The Ten Commandments (1956)

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mad max fury road

Metropolis, kinda. If not that, Dracula.

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This was so much exciting than the 40's movies where they just stand around and talk about shit that happened off-screen.

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I have literally never watched a movie

Avengers: Infinity Ward. My dad showed it to me. Pretty old, but we wouldn't have more modern films like Endgame without it.

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Pinocchio (1940)

Flight of the phoenix
Some like it hot

>silent film
I don't understand the point of a silent film. How can the viewer know what is going on without talking? Is there subtitles?

You can't figure out what's going on in a painting without talking?

One of my favorites since I saw it in my teens. btfo out of his "remake".
Also, seconding Some Like It Hot

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They Live By Night
or His Girl Friday

That’s gay. You’re gay.

It's crazy how many of these scenes have been copied in movies and shows.

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12 Angry Men (1957) is the oldest i can watch any time

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You lose.

I’m admittedly not the smartest man but can someone explain the appeal of this 3 hour pile of shit to me?

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dare i say... kino?

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K

osgood was basically Yea Forums: the character

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>What is the oldest movie you have ever enjoyed watching?
Edgar Allan Poe (1909) directed by DW Griffith

Cool hand luke

Bretty gud

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I wonder where these people are now.

This. It's so frickin' twisted I still can't believe they got away with it.
By the same guy who directed Freaks.

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Probably about to get #metood

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The oldest movies I rewatch are 50s monster and sci-fi flicks like Them, Forbidden Planet, The Monolith Monsters and so on.

this movie is mediocre at best

Probably the oldest movie I can enjoy

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Great movie. I love how the good guys win in the end. That's pretty rare for WWII movies.

Soilent Green probably

you can't be fucking serious

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i rarely watch films pre-40s but when I want to dab on plebs ill mention Battleship Potemkin

I cant dawg i just watched it and , eh so many kino actors yet so shit.

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watch pic rel.

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>Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964)
Not a favourite, per se, but something I've watched several times.

And Citizen Kane (1941) would probably be the easiest answer for most people.

Idk how old is Paths of Glory?

Probably Metropolis.

Nosferatu from 1922.
still one of the few vampire films that is actually creepy.

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i think this classic still olds up

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Probably Un Chien Andalou. There might be an older one I'm forgetting.

The day the earth stood still (1951)

based

Probably The Wizard of Oz 1939, but I know there's lots of good movies earlier than that.

the phantom carriage, 1921

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Passage de Vénus (1874)
Good flick

loooool

The bicycle thief

>oldest animated
snow white and the seven dwarves

>oldest live action live
Casablanca

i rate both pretty highly

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1957.

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A Trip to the Moon

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A Trip to the Moon

le voyage dans le lune

moon mind

Haxan
1922

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>Can't understand people's actions without them explicitly describing them

I'm afraid you're on the spectrum bud.

Svengali 1931, watched with this autistic black chick while i was in a fwb with her. later on i found out she killed animals for fun and had lied to me about her age.
very entertaining movie.

Was going to say Arsenic and Old Lace, but then I realized I did like Nosferatu, Eine Symphonie des Grauens.

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Zulu

segue esinstens Potemkin

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we've all been there user

Cherbourg Umbrellas (1964).

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I fucking love this movie.

Nosferatu

Ending always gets me.

I thought this movie was pretty rad. Considering it came out in 1958, the stop motion animation they used for the monsters was tits for its time

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the ones with this actual poetic genius right here

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Trip to the Moon is honestly pretty fucking good.

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Remember watching this with my Dad when I was 4 years old and being in total awe. It was like the Bible stories happening in front of me, truly marvelous

>spending quality time with a father who was there
Gay.

Oh yeah all 6 frames, pure kino.
Probably the oldest thing I really loved was "Show People" 1922, just seeing all the old Hollywood stuff was great, King Vidor and Charlie Chaplain make flooring nonchalant cameos. But I also laughed at and enjoyed some Fatty and Mabel skits from like 1914-1916, the way they'd hand paint in color in the cells was super cool.

Think this is the oldest one i've seen and enjoyed. The twist kinda took me by surprise. Didn't expect such an old movie to have such a twist at the end.

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Quality post about quality time, daring stuff

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Probably one of the most influential films of all time, from set design to plot device. Wonder what kind of weird shit Wiene saw in his childhood

King Kong.

It's just german expressionism + dark romanticism. Expressionism was around for 20 years before and dark romanticism for over 100 years. Actually the only revolutionary was the combination of these two art forms in film.

(1922) Nanook of the North
I might have seen Chaplin's The Kid from 1921, but it made no deep impression on me if I did.