Registration

Top 100 Short Film movies

You are now browsing page 37, where we continue to showcase even more compelling content linked to "Short Film". If you’ve already sampled a few highlights on previous pages, now is the perfect time to delve deeper into this fascinating keyword. Keep exploring and enrich your understanding!

Black and White Sylva (1962)

  • 0
9.0 587914
9.0 337215

A character from a musical film falls into the real world in this short, predating similar films by Woody Allen (The Purple Rose of Cairo) and Wojciech Marczewski (Escape from the 'Liberty' Cinema).

The Forgotten Faces (1961)

  • 0
5.7 587914
5.7 337215

“The Forgotten Faces (1961), a film reconstruction of the Hungarian revolution of 1956, won Watkins another amateur Oscar, and to this day, the film is praised in England as "one of the most memorable amateur films ever made".

The Poet of the Castle (1959)

  • 0
6.9 587914
6.9 337215

A 10-minute portrait of modernist poet and de Andrade’s godfather, Manuel Bandeira, is clear in its affection for it subject, though like many New-Waveish films of the time, depicts the modern urban landscape as an ominous and alienating force.

Cars Without a Home (1959)

  • 0
6.3 587914
6.3 337215

Jan Schmidt and Pavel Juráček turn their attention to the problem of Czechoslovakia's unloved cars in this whimsical documentary short.

The Astronauts (1959)

  • 0
6.2 587914
6.2 337215

An inventor builds a homemade spacecraft, and uses it to have various adventures, including peeping at women, visiting ‘human’ planets, and becoming involved in intergalactic warfare.

Véronique and Her Dunce (1959)

  • 0
6.0 587914
6.0 337215

Véronique gives a mathematics lesson to a dunce who answers the prepared questions with disconcertingly sound answers.

Night and Fog (1959)

  • 0
8.22 587914
8.22 337215

Filmmaker Alain Resnais documents the atrocities behind the walls of Hitler's concentration camps.

Charlotte and Her Boyfriend (1958)

  • 0
6.4 587914
6.4 337215

This short features a man who is visited by his ex-lover. The moment she arrives, the man starts his constant barrage of speech; the woman doesn't say much. She just mocks the man and pretends she isn't listening. She pulls faces at him and larks about; while the man is trying his best to get her back in his life, then in the next sentence he says he hates her.

Diary of a Pregnant Woman (1958)

  • 0
6.5 587914
6.5 337215

Impressions of the rue Mouffetard, Paris 5, through the eyes of a pregnant woman.

Oil's Well That Ends Well (1958)

  • 0
5.2 587914
5.2 337215

The stooges need money for their father's operation, so they head for the country to prospect for uranium. Instead of uranium, they discover oil on their father's property and all their troubles are solved.

The Song of Styrene (1957)

  • 0
6.2 587914
6.2 337215

Le chant du Styrène is a 1958 French documentary film directed by Alain Resnais. The film was an order by French industrial group Pechiney to highlight the merits of plastics.

Break Up the Dance (1957)

  • 0
5.2 587914
5.2 337215

Youths get ready for a party, decorating the dance floor, cleaning out the fountain of a pond. That evening, the party starts and guests arrive: everyone has a ticket, and a guy at the gate, wearing a formal shirt, tails, and shorts, makes sure only those with tickets gain entrance.

A Toothful Smile (1957)

  • 0
5.1 587914
5.1 337215

A man walks down the exterior staircase of building of flats; he's dressed to go out, taking care to wrap a scarf around his neck. He pauses as he passes a small window that's about eye high. He ventures to look in, and there a young woman stands at a washbasin, drying her hair,

Not One Shall Die (1957)

  • 0
587914
337215

A short film by the United Jewish Appeal, directed by David Lowell Rich and starring Guy Madison, Felicia Farr and Agnes Moorehead, made by the core crew of many Columbia noirs, including cinematographer Burnett Guffey, art director Cary Odell, editor Al Clark, set decorator Frank Tuttle, and composer Morris Stoloff.

Fool’s Mate (1956)

  • 0
6.6 587914
6.6 337215

Claire is a chic young Parisian woman married to a somewhat older husband, Jean As the story opens, she leaves her husband playing baroque music at the piano, telling him she is off to see her sister, Solange. In reality she meets her lover, Claude at his apartment; After some idle chatter and love-making he tells her a story of the shriveled heads that the Jivaro Indians used to give their lovers as tokens of affection but, as she shivers in disgust, he gives her a mink instead. How will they hide it from her husband?

Bearly Asleep (1955)

  • 0
6.5 587914
6.5 337215

Park ranger Donald sends his bears off to hibernate, but Humphrey would rather stay in his hammock, run out for a glass of water, etc., than sleep; when he does get to sleep, his snoring gets him thrown out. His search for a new bed leads him right into the ranger's house.

Beezy Bear (1955)

  • 0
6.7 587914
6.7 337215

Beekeeper Donald catches Humphrey the bear raiding his hives. He complains to Ranger Woodlore, who assembles his bears and lectures them. Donald puts up a barbed wire fence, which slows Humphrey down a bit, but doesn't stop him.

Touché, Pussy Cat! (1954)

  • 0
6.7 587914
6.7 337215

A young mouse arrives at the Parisian headquarters of the King's Mouseketeers with a letter from his father, François Mouse, asking Jerry to teach the lad to be a Mouseketeer. Lessons begin for the French-speaking boy, but although he's charming, he's hopeless and when he gets into a scrape with Tom, Jerry sends the garçon packing. As the boy is leaving Paris, he hears the noise of fighting, and he returns to find Jerry in a fight for his life with Tom. Champagne corks, a paint brush, and a barrel of wine are props in the lad's attack. But has he lost all his clumsiness?