The Top 10 Hit Films of 1925
I’m happy to say that this is my 100th column for Classic Movie Hub! It’s hard to believe I’ve been a columnist here for several years now, covering this niche era that fascinates me to no end. I’ve enjoyed covering a wide variety of silent film topics for you all and hope you continue checking out my columns in the future!
1925 was a very important year in cinema history, a year when multiple silent classics hit the theaters: The Gold Rush! The Lost World! The Phantom of the Opera! Stars like Rudolph Valentino, Clara Bow and Harold Lloyd were in their prime, and Hollywood had an impressive roster of directors such as Clarence Brown, Ernest Lubitch, and King Vidor. 1925 was right in the thick of the golden age of moviegoing: in the U.S. alone, tens of millions of Americans flocked to the theaters each and every week.
Is it possible to figure out the top ten films of this seminal year? As I cautioned in my columns about the biggest box office successes of 1923 and 1924, silent era box office statistics are tough to decipher since many theaters didn’t keep exact records. The following figures should be considered “generally agreed-upon estimates” rather than “absolute facts”–although it’s almost undeniable that the biggest box office hit of the silent era came out in 1925. Almost!
10. East Lynne–$1,100,00

This drama seems to have narrowly beat out Eric von Stroheim’s The Merry Widow for a spot on this list. Based on an older play that was so well-known it was basically a synonym for “melodrama,” it starred Alma Rubens, Edmund Lowe, Lou Tellegen and a host of other respected actors. Lavishly made, it was a serious adaptation of a work that had sometimes been dismissed as a “hoary old chestnut” from Victorian times.
9. Little Annie Rooney–$1,100,000

An icon of American cinema since the 1910s, Mary Pickford was known for playing “little girl” characters but in the early 1920s had attempted to branch out into more mature roles. Audiences clamored for her to play young characters again, so she–at age 33–obligingly starred as the spunky Irish girl “Annie Rooney.” Her performance was as convincing as ever and the film was loved by audiences and critics alike.
8. The Lost World–$1,300,000

This adaptation of Arthur Conan Doyle’s beloved fantasy adventure marked a milestone in visual effects. While there were a few dinosaur-themed films predating The Lost World, such as Gertie the Dinosaur (1914) and The Ghost of Slumber Mountain (1918), this was the first full-length feature where they were front and center. The stop motion effects by Willis O’Brien were very impressive at the time and still have a lot of personality today.
7. Stella Dallas–$1,500,000

Actress Belle Bennett was handpicked by Samuel Goldwyn to play the titular character of this drama, made for the lofty sum of $700,000. Based on a novel, it was about the unlikely marriage of the wealthy Stephen Dallas and the lower class Stella. Mocked by the uppercrust for her tacky tastes and inability to assimilate to high society, Stella eventually agrees to divorce Stephen. In time Stella’s faced with the choice to set aside pride to give her only daughter a brighter future. Beautifully directed by Henry King, it was a heartfelt film and a major hit in its day.
6. Don Q, Son of Zorro–$1,600,000

The sequel to his megahit The Mark of Zorro (1920), Don Q was Douglas Fairbanks’s return to swashbuckling form after his ambitiously lavish, big-budget fantasy The Thief of Bagdad (1924). Fairbanks played dual roles of both the dashing university student Cesar and his father Don Diego de la Vega, a.k.a. Zorro. Well-crafted with some high stakes twists and Fairbanks’s signature physical stunts, it was yet another blockbuster under his belt.
5. The Phantom of the Opera–$2,000,000

With its astonishing performance by Lon Chaney, this Gothic horror classic was a huge success. Today this film is legendary for the sudden, shocking reveal of the Phantom’s disfigured face, which reportedly caused some audience members to faint. Chaney used makeup, putty, wire and an old set of false teeth for his radical transformation, and to this day his creation was certainly the most faithful to the original novel’s description.
4. The Freshman–$2,600,000

It wouldn’t be a “top ten films of the 1920s” list without Harold Lloyd. With its story of a cheerfully naive freshman determined to become a football star, The Freshman was Lloyd’s twist on the college-themed comedies that were so popular at the time. It remains a timeless, breezy mood-brightener that can appeal to young and old alike.
3. The Gold Rush–$4,000,000

Chaplin’s The Gold Rush was as beloved in its time as it still is today. An impeccable blend of comedy and tragedy set during the Klondike gold rush, its budget of nearly $1,000,000 made it the most expensive silent era comedy. It features some of Chaplin’s finest gags, such as the famous sequence of his starving character dining lavishly on a boiled shoe.
2. Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ–$9,000,000

Today the Charleton Heston version is more familiar, but the 1925 Ben-Hur was a cinematic milestone and the silent era’s most expensive film. Re-castings, accidents, and other mishaps dragged out production over two years, with both actors and animals frequently being put in harm’s way during the action scenes. Heavy promotion helped rocket the film to the top of the box office, but production costs ironically kept it from turning a profit.
1. The Big Parade–$15,000,000-$20,000,000

Action, romance, humor, tragedy, heart–The Big Parade had it all, and it also dared to critique the horrors of the war that had so profoundly changed the world. An MGM feature, it starred John Gilbert and Renee Adoree and was directed by King Vidor, who wanted to do “all that was humanly possible to ensure accuracy on this picture.” A runaway success, it grossed over $6 million domestically when it was first released and would be reshown frequently in the following years. Its worldwide box office gross would eventually top $15 million, with some sources reporting a gross in excess of $20 million, a record for MGM until Gone With the Wind.
…
–Lea Stans for Classic Movie Hub
You can read all of Lea’s Silents are Golden articles here.
Lea Stans is a born-and-raised Minnesotan with a degree in English and an obsessive interest in the silent film era (which she largely blames on Buster Keaton). In addition to blogging about her passion at her site Silent-ology, she is a columnist for the Silent Film Quarterly and has also written for The Keaton Chronicle.






















































