Wat's the oldest film you've seen?

Wat's the oldest film you've seen?
Psycho (1960) for me

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Pygmalion (1938)

The Third Man
Pretty good, I'm more a pleb than a kino connoisseur but I enjoyed it

Jurassic Park (1993)
I only like modern movies

Nosferatu, probably

I saw the first film ever, made by the fags who invented cinema or something, it's just a train, really. Pretty cool though.

mon oncle (1958) then la jetée (1962)

ur moms original sex tape

L'inferno (1911)

My teacher made me watch this once, weirdest thing that ever happened to me. I guess he was expecting me to geek out and say how awesome it was but I just sat there with a dumb look on my face wondering what the hell was going on and trying not to sleep.

Neighbors (1920)

Battleship Potemkin

The Bishop's Wife (1947)

Haxan

Casablanca maybe
Snow White for cartoon

That's by far not the first one. The first one made by the Lumière brothers was the one where the workers are leaving the factory. This one was done in 1895. However, Edison was producing motion pictures as early as 1889, with the kinetoscope being made practical around 1892-93. Contrary to popular belief, the Lumière brothers didn't invented motion pictures, but film projection. Motion pictures go to Edison and Dickson.

Here's some of the oldest motion picture in existance, Monkeyshines 1 and 2, camera tests done by Dickson aroun 1889-90

youtube.com/watch?v=2tfs6WfbHyI

I watched an hour of Metropolis.

for sure night of the living dead

although there was a film adaptation of the most dangerous game from the 40s I think
and wasn't the wizard of oz from the 30s? if so that

To this day it still has the best backgrounds of any film I have ever watched.

Wizard of Oz is 1939, The Most Dangerous Game is 1932.

Modern Times

You all need to watch Un Chien andalou it's on youtube and it's 15 mins long go now

der golem

>>>/9gag/

>1953
Turns out Hogan's Heroes is just one massive parody of this movie.

kek. same here. it was when i was like 16 and i was trying to remember the rocketeer, but i hadnt seen it since i was like 5 or something. Metropolis reminded me of the poster, so i picked it up thinking i had found it. i was so bummed.

That silent film about the moon, I forget its name.

This. The best Dracula film adaption

A Trip to the Moon (1902)

that didn't take long

probably a steven seagal film

The Gay Divorcee (1934) most likely

trip to the moon or train robbery, not sure which is older.

I don't understand why this has acclaim

first surrealist film

it's quite good but Entr'acte is from the same period and better imo

Kill Bill

One of the oldest color films in the world, A Trip to the Moon (1902). It feels weird to think about how we're capable of watching people from so far away now, further away in time than most of us will ever live. I can only wonder what this feeling will be like for people thousands of years from now watching shitty old meme videos like Gundam Style and Le Internet Melody.

I'll give it a watch, thanks.

Inception

Probably Batman vs Superman

>One of the oldest color films in the world
colorized =! color

Suicide Squad

Some Like It Hot (1959)
It was good but far from kino tier

Roundhay Garden Scene (1888)

Every film after it is shitty, try-hard garbage, not true kino.

>a film that has colours in it isn't in colour

As far as I remember it's 1954 godzilla.

Not him but I believe colour is filmed in colour while colourised is filmed in black and white and the film is then treated in post production to add colours to it. Not really the same thing.

>I'm retarded

You realize you can add color to any film? Your point about being 'one of the oldest color films' kind of disappears if every film ever can be a color film.

End your life

Um, yes it is? Are you going to deny we have colored pictures of distant space objects just because scientists color them in?

Hey yeah, I watched that one. Pretty good.

kill yourselves

One time I watched this silent film where they go to the moon and shit and it was ancient, but very short.

Other than that, probably the wizard of oz

Citizen kane (1941)

had to watch it for a media class in High School

Just found out the moon movie was from 1902

this one.

Dracula, the use of lighting in it is still some of the best I have seen

Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon (1943)
I was on a Holmes kick after watching some of the Grenada series and found a movie for download for free.
It wasn't good. The Adventures series is much better, and Jeremy Brett is really hot.
Haven't seen any of the other Holmes movies either, are any good?

after that, 12 Angry Men (everyone's seen it) is probably the next oldest. Unless those Disney movies count, like Pinocchio (1940)

The Gold Rush (1925). I should watch more Chaplain, it was pretty good.

Lenin in 1918 (1936)

I don't like old movies, nobody knows how to act, the dialogue is awkward and usually the sound effects are much louder than people speaking so you turn it up to hear them, then have to turn it down for anything going on. Riding the remote is a chore.
but, I also don't like current movies, because women don't know how to act and there is always without fail a stupid forced romantic subplot.

La Sortie de l'Usine Lumière à Lyon (1895)

The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920)

You've never seen the wizard of oz? It's a wonderful life? Snow White?

Battleship potikem

Fucking dumbass

0/10 try again, this time with some content.

Metropolis

1960? Weak.

A Trip to the Moon (1902)

Seriously though, there are people here who haven't seen wartime films? That's embarrassing.

I guess either Metropolis or Nosferatu. I'm guessing the latter is the older? Can't remember

La guerre des boutons (1962)

its lovely, really

there are hundreds and hundreds of threads where you could have a nice discussion and you instead have to go to a thread where you have to shit on the topic and make everyone, including yourself, argue to have a bad time

truly baffling

Maltese Falcon (1931)

Edison's Frankenstein from like 1910 or whatever.

The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920)

Dracula
Frankenstein
Little Caesar

1931 for all three

This

TCM will probably play it some time in October, can't wait

It Happened One Night
1934

Roundhay Garden Scene (Louis Le Price 1888). In fact, many anons here may have seen it, it was posted a while ago as a gif.

Freaks, 1932

Ten commandments

saw this last week, it was truly amazing
did you watch it on arte too?

White Heat (1949)

probably the best heist/gangster movie ever made

1941

Oldest feature length is Terje Vigen (1917), but of course I've seen The Great Train Robbery and those Melies and Lumiere clips from the 1890.

>i share a board with people who haven't seen movies older than ones created in the 50s and 60s
jesus christ

The Lost World 1925

Would you?

Same.

It was 12 Angry Men before this.

I refuse to watch "It's a wonderful life".

Inception (2010)

star wars

Gone with the Wind (1939). I was in elementary school and I found it incredibly boring, but since I started watching, I decided to sit through it.

Sallie Gardner at a Gallop (1878)

Pretty much the only silent film I really loved.

Fantasia (1940)

pic related.

PLEB

Ok, so old movies aren't for everyone, but I can't believe people haven't seen at least one Disney classic from the 30s or 40s. You know, Dumbo, Bambi, Snow White, Pinocchio and Fantasia. How is it possible to go through childhood without watching one of these?

>one of Billy Wilder's best isn't kino
kill yourself

First film: L'arrivé d'un Train à la Ciotat
First narrative film: A Trip to the Moon
First full length movie: Intolerance