ALL CMH Charts are Fan-Driven... Your Vote Counts!
Start Rating Films!

Top 1980’s Movies (see all)

  1. Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
  2. Nine to Five (1980)
  3. ¡Three Amigos! (1986)
  4. Superman II (1980)
  5. Flash Gordon (1980)
  6. Oh, God! Book II (1980)
  7. The Shining (1980)
  8. Caddyshack (1980)
  9. Airplane! (1980)
  10. Private Benjamin (1980)


Fan Top Romance Movies (see all)

  1. It's a Wonderful Life (1946)
  2. Gone with the Wind (1939)
  3. Casablanca (1942)
  4. The African Queen (1951)
  5. The Sound of Music (1965)
  6. The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938)
  7. Ben-Hur (1959)
  8. An Affair to Remember (1957)
  9. On the Waterfront (1954)
  10. Grand Hotel (1932)

Fan Top Royalty Movies (see all)

  1. Roman Holiday (1953)
  2. Hamlet (1948)
  3. The Private Life of Henry VIII (1933)
  4. The Merry Widow (1934)
  5. Anna and the King of Siam (1946)
  6. A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court (1949)
  7. Caesar and Cleopatra (1945)
  8. A Royal Scandal (1945)
  9. The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex (1939)
  10. Queen Christina (1933)




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

Western RoundUp

Walk the Proud Land (1956) Every year or so I like to review a new-to-me Audie Murphy film in my Western RoundUp column.  My previous Murphy review, Apache Rifles (1964), was published last April.  This year I?ve watched one of Murphy?s more unusual Western films, Walk the Proud Lan......
Read Laura’s article

Silents are Golden

Silent Superstars: Rudolph Valentino, The Ultimate Screen Idol Rudolph Valentino How fortunate it was that a young Italian movie actor christened Rodolfo Alfonso Raffaello Pierre Filibert Guglielmi di Valentina d?Antonguella settled on the elegant ?Rudolph Valentino? for his screen name. Not m......
Read Lea’s article

Noir Nook

75th Anniversary Noir ? 2026 Edition It?s about that time, y?all! February at the Noir Nook means our annual look at the noirs that are celebrating their 75th anniversary, and have I got four winners for you from 1951! Before I proceed, I?d like to toss a few honorable mentions your way ? if y......
Read Karen’s article

Silver Screen Standards

Two Silent Comedies from Ernst Lubitsch Ernst Lubitsch is celebrated as the director of many of Hollywood?s great comedies, including Ninotchka (1939), To Be or Not to Be (1942), and Heaven Can Wait (1943), but he directed films in his native Germany for nearly a decade before his transition to H......
Read Jennifer’s article

Legend Tribute: Joan Crawford

Happy Birthday to Classic Movie Legend, Joan Crawford, born March 23rd, 1905! So, I?m going to honest with you all ? my first impression of Joan Crawford was not actually Joan Crawford. Like many young children with a taste for flair and flamboyance, my first Joan Crawford experience was Faye Dunaway...  Read more...

Mini Tribute Paula Winslowe

Born March 23, 1910 Actress Paula Winslowe!? Paula Winslowe appeared in over 30 roles, mostly on TV — including Mrs. Martha Conklin in Our Miss Brooks (radio and TV), Mary Dunkle / Mrs. Peabody on? The Adventures of Ozzie & Harriet (TV) and Mrs. Netwick in My Mother the Car (TV). She was...  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: Detectives Films (see full chart)





Famous Classic Movie Quotes
Fun Classic Movie Facts
Classic Movie Events
Classic Movie Travel Sites
Visit the Classic Movie Hub Blog CMH

Classic Movie Events

The 7th Golden Boy Blogathon:...
Blogathon
Apr 16 To Apr 17
Marilyn Monroe - 100th Birthd...
Blogathon
May 29 To Jun 01

The Robert Duvall Tribute Blo...
Blogathon
Jun 05 To Jun 07

See Full Events Calendar
ADD Classic Movie Events: Movies, Exhibits, Festivals, Blogathons, Contests and More...

Now playing on TCM

See Full TCM Schedule

Also an Aries







See All >>

Classic Movie Travel Sites

Did you know that there is a Laurel & Hardy Statue in Ulverston, England?

A bronze statue of Laurel and Hardy was unveiled in 2009 in the Cumbrian birthplace of Stan Laurel. ... ..  read more

National Film Registry

In 1990, The Treasure of the Sierra Madre starring the legendary Humphrey Bogart, was inducted into The National Film Registry, 42 years after its initial release (1948).
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