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Top 1930’s Movies (see all)

  1. Bringing up Baby (1938)
  2. It Happened One Night (1934)
  3. Top Hat (1935)
  4. After the Thin Man (1936)
  5. The Gay Divorcee (1934)
  6. Gone with the Wind (1939)
  7. The Thin Man (1934)
  8. Swing Time (1936)
  9. The Awful Truth (1937)
  10. The Wizard of Oz (1939)


Fan Top Lost Films (see all)

  1. The Gold Diggers (1923)
  2. The Romance of Tarzan (1918)
  3. Adam's Rib (1923)
  4. The Rogue Song (1930)
  5. The Awful Truth (1929)
  6. Growing Pains (1928)
  7. Heart and Soul (1917)
  8. Hold Everything (1930)
  9. Hats Off (1927)
  10. Her Double Life (1916)

Fan Top Sequels Movies (see all)

  1. The Thin Man Goes Home (1945)
  2. The Curse of the Cat People (1944)
  3. Gold Diggers of 1935 (1935)
  4. Blondie Hits the Jackpot (1949)
  5. Blondie's Big Deal (1949)
  6. Son of Frankenstein (1939)
  7. Ziegfeld Girl (1941)
  8. Topper Returns (1941)
  9. Tarzan's New York Adventure (1942)
  10. Son of the Sheik (1926)




Western RoundUp

Final Resting Places It?s time for another of my periodic tributes to Western filmmakers through sharing visits to their final resting places. This is one of the ways I reflect on what each person?s work has contributed to the Western genre, giving all of us many happy hours of entertainment. ......
Read Laura’s article

Silents are Golden

A Closer Look At The Wind (1928) Lillian Gish, The Wind In 1927, cinema was famously experiencing a time of transition from the silent to talkies, kickstarted by the popularity of Al Jolson?s The Jazz Singer (1927). Directors and stars would soon be faced with a decision, whether deliberate or......
Read Lea’s article

Monsters and Matinees

Oh, the horrors of 1950s B-movies. And I?m not talking scary good, but scary bad. So many of the creative ideas for monsters were never realized because of low budgets and ridiculously short shooting schedules. Viewers accept that the creatures in these films might look cheap and even laughable, ......
Read Toni’s article

Noir Nook

Veda?s Villainy ? Mildred?s Fault? One of my many favorite podcasts is Front Row Classics ? the host, Brandon Davis, covers a wide variety of classic films, with a spate of first-rate guests, and in such interesting ways. An episode I heard recently centered on villains in classic films, and one ......
Read Karen’s article

Classic Movie Travels

Classic Movie Travels: James Shigeta James Shigeta James Saburo Shigeta was born in Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii, on June 17, 1929, to Satoko Tamura Shigeta and Howard Koichi Shigeta. His father was a contractor who immigrated from Japan. Shigeta was a third-generation Japanese American, g......
Read Annette’s article

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

Legend Tribute: Katharine Hepburn

Happy Birthday to Classic Movie Legends, Katharine Hepburn, born May 12, 1907! The Great?Katharine Hepburn While growing up, pretty much every teenager looks for an idol – that unobtainable being that serves as both mentor and deity. For some people, it?s an actual deity. For others, it comes...  Read more...

Mini Tribute Adriana Caselotti

Born May 16, 1916 Adriana Caselotti! Adriana Caselotti is most famously known as the voice of Snow White in Walt Disney’s 1937 animated classic, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Caselotti received the 1994 Disney Legends Award for living up to the Disney principals of imagination, skill, discipline,...  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: Musical Films (see full chart)





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Classic Movie Travel Sites

Did you know that there is a Jack Benny Home (1910) in Waukegan, IL?

Designate a city landmark in 2006, the house at 518 Clayton Street in Waukegan, IL is where Jack Ben... ..  read more

National Film Registry

The Wedding March, starring the legendary Erich von Stroheim, was released in 1928. In 2003, 75 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

Gene Tierney's, Footprints & Handprints were "set in stone" in Grauman's famous forecourt in 1946. So were Irene Dunne, Rex Harrison, Margaret O'Brien, Humphrey Bogart...  see more