Premium Only Content

Racehorse (First Film Ever Made) 1878

Buffalo Running (1883 Short Silent film)

Annie Oakley in Action (1894) Filmed by Thomas Edison Studios

Men Boxing (1891 American short silent film) Thomas Edison Film

Sherlock Holmes Baffled (1900 Very Short American Silent film)

Bluebeard (1901 French silent film)

Jack And The Beanstalk (1902 American Silent Trick film)

A Frontier Flirtation (1903 Very Short Comedy film)

Stealing a Dinner (1903 Very Short Silent film)

Excursion To the Moon (1908 Color Silent Sci-Fi film)

Long Distance Wireless Photography (1908 French Silent Comedy film)

Legend of a Ghost (1908 Silent Fright film)

A Trip to Jupiter (1909 Short Sci-Fi film)

The Little Darling (1909 Comedy Silent Short film)

Those Awful Hats (1909 American Silent Short Comedy film)

The Country Doctor (1909 American Short Silent Drama film)

Edgar Allan Poe (1909 American Silent Drama film)

A Strange Meeting (1909 Short Drama film)

The Hasher's Delirium (1910 Silent Animation Comedy Short film

Ramona (1910 Short Silent Drama film)

Frankenstein (1910 American Short Silent Horror film)

Max Is Stuck Up (1910 Silent Comedy film)

Frankenstein (1910 American Short Silent Horror film)

The Unchanging Sea (1910 American Drama film)

As It Is in Life (1910 Silent Short film)

Little Nemo (1911 Silent Animated Short film)

The Fall of Troy (1911 Silent Short War film)

Cinderella (1911 Short Fantasy Silent film)

The Female of the Species (1912 Short Drama film)

Max Juggles for Love (1912 Silent Comedy film)

The Lesser Evil (1912 American Short Silent Drama film)

The Musketeers of Pig Alley (1912 Silent Short Crime Drama film)

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1912 Silent Horror film)

Ingeborg Holm (1913 Silent Swedish Social Drama film)

Tannhauser (1913 Silent Fantasy Drama film)

L'enfant de Paris (1913 Crime Drama Silent film)

An Old Man's Love Story (1913 Short Drama film)

His Majesty, the Scarecrow of Oz (1914 Silent Fantasy Adv. film)

Judith of Bethulia (1914 American Silent Drama film)

Gertie the Dinosaur (1914 Partially Animated Short film)

Tillie's Punctured Romance (1914 American Silent Comedy film)

The Kid Auto Race in Venice (1914 American Silent Comedy)

The Avenging Conscience (1914 Silent Horror film)

Hypocrites (1915 Silent Drama film) (Contains Nudity)

Burlesque on Carmen (1915 Chaplin Silent Comedy film)

In the Park (1915 Silent Comedy film)

A Woman (1915 Silent Comedy film)

By the Sea (1915 American Silent Comedy film)

A Night in the Show (1915 Restored Charlie Chaplin Comedy film)

Work (1915 Charlie Chaplin silent film)

The Dinosaur and the Baboon (1915 Edison Animated Comedy Silent film)

The Tramp (1915 Silent Comedy film)

The Bank (1915 silent slapstick comedy)

The Pawnshop (1916 Silent Comedy film)

The Fireman (1916 Charlie Chaplin film)

The End of the World (1916 Danish Sci-Fi Drama film)

Intolerance (1916 Epic Drama Silent film)

The Floorwalker (1916 American Silent Comedy film)

The Count (1916 Charlie Chaplin film)

The Vagabond (1916 Charlie Chaplin Silent Romantic Comedy film)

Behind the Screen (1916 American silent short comedy film)

One Too Many (1916 American Silent film) Oliver Hardy

A Natural Born Gambler (1916 Silent Short film)

Sherlock Holmes (1916 Restored Version Silent film)

Charlie Chaplin's: Police (1916 Silent Comedy film)

Down to Earth, (aka The Optimist) (1917 Silent Comedy Romance film)

The Rough House (1917 American Silent Comedy film)

The Immigrant (1917 Silent Romantic Comedy Short film)

The Dying Swan (English Subtitles) (Russian) (1917 Drama film)

His Wedding Night (1917 American Silent Comedy film)

Are Crooks Dishonest? (1918 Silent Short Comedy film)

Back to God's Country (1919 Canadian Silent Drama film)

Male and Female (1919 American Silent Adventure/Drama film)

A Day's Pleasure (1919 Silent Charlie Chaplin film)

The Marathon (1919 American Short Comedy film)

Broken Blossoms (1919 American Silent Drama film)

Lightning Bryce (1919 Adv, Western, Silent film serial)

The Mark of Zorro (1920 American Silent Western Romance film)

Something New (1920 Drama, Western Silent film)

The Last of the Mohicans (1920 American Silent Adventure Drama film)

The Penalty (1920 Lon Chaney Psychological Thriller Crime film)

The Flapper (1920 American Silent Comedy film)

The Golem: How He Came into the World (1920 German Silent Horror film)

The Nut (1921 American Silent Comedy film)

A Tale of Two Worlds (1921 American Silent Drama film)

Forbidden Fruit (1921 American Color Silent Drama film)

Sherlock Holmes (1922 Restored Silent Mystery Drama film)

Monte Cristo (1922 American Silent Drama film)

One Exciting Night (1922 American Gothic Silent Mystery film)

Robin Hood (1922 Silent Adventure film)

Phantom (1922 German Romantic Fantasy film)

The Prisoner of Zenda (1922 American Silent Adventure film)

Tess of the Storm Country (1922 Silent Drama film)

The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1923 Silent Drama film)

Aelita: Queen of Mars (1924 Russian Silent Sci-Fi film)

The Big Parade (1925 American Silent War Drama film)

A Woman of the World (1925 American Silent Comedy-Drama film)

Phantom of the Opera (1925) Silent Film with Music

Dr. Pyckle and Mr. Pryde (1925 Silent Comedy film) Stan Laurel

The Lucky Devil (1925 American Silent Comedy-Drama film)

Somewhere in Wrong (1925 Silent film) starring Stan Laurel

Metropolis (1925 Sci-Fi German Silent film)

The Leatherneck (1929 Color Silent Drama film) (Alan Hale, William Boyd)

His Majesty, the Scarecrow of Oz (1914 Silent Fantasy Adv. film)
His Majesty, the Scarecrow of Oz is a 1914 American silent fantasy adventure film directed by J. Farrell MacDonald and written and produced by L. Frank Baum. It stars Violet MacMillan, Frank Moore, Vivian Reed, Todd Wright, Pierre Couderc, Raymond Russell, and Fred Woodward.
The film had a troubled distribution history; it opened on September 28, 1914, to little success, though it was received as well above average fare by critics of the time. Early in 1915, it was reissued under the title The New Wizard of Oz and was slightly more successful.
The film is loosely based on Baum's 1900 book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, but in the screenplay, Baum introduced many new characters and a large new story that later became the basis for the 1915 book The Scarecrow of Oz. Similar to The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, the Scarecrow's origin is revealed, although his life is now attributed to "the Spirit of the Corn", who appears as a conventional Hollywood depiction of a Native American.[citation needed]
Plot
King Krewl (Raymond Russell) is a cruel dictator in the Emerald City in the Land of Oz. He wishes to marry his daughter, Princess Gloria (Vivian Reed), to an old courtier named Googly-Goo (Arthur Smollett), but she is in love with Pon, the Gardener's boy (Todd Wright). Krewl employs the Wicked Witch named Mombi (Mai Wells), to freeze the heart of Gloria so she will not love Pon any longer.
This she does by pulling out her heart (which looks somewhere between a valentine and a bland representation of a heart without any vessels) and coating it with ice. Meanwhile, a lost little girl from Kansas named Dorothy Gale (Violet MacMillan), is captured by Mombi and imprisoned in her castle. However, Dorothy runs away with the now heartless Gloria, accompanied by Pon and eventually meet the Scarecrow (Frank Moore).
Mombi catches up with the travelers and removes the Scarecrow's stuffing, but Dorothy and Pon are able to re-stuff him; Gloria abandons them and wanders off.
Cast
Violet MacMillan as Dorothy Gale
Frank Moore as The Scarecrow
Pierre Couderc as The Tin Woodman
Fred Woodward as The Cowardly Lion / The Kangaroo / The Crow / The Cow / The Mule
Raymond Russell as King Krewl
Arthur Smollet as Googly-Goo
J. Charles Haydon as The Wizard of Oz (credited as J. Charles Hayden)
Todd Wright as Pon
Vivian Reed as Princess Gloria
Mai Wells as Old Mombi (credited as Mae Wells)
Mildred Harris as Button-Bright
Louise Emmons
Damage history
The opening reel was lost for many years. While it was eventually recovered in the 1990s for the American Home Entertainment VHS release, it did not contain the opening titles; Dick Martin's titles, designed in the 1960s, continued to be used, which falsely stated that Baum was the director of the film, misspelled Mai Wells' name, and left out Smollett's credit entirely.
The film is currently in need of restoration, including framing. Film prints are notoriously bright, particularly for Mombi's decapitation sequence. The framing may no longer be correctable, because the area used for the soundtrack in contemporary films was part of the picture area at the time, though it is a noticeable defect in contemporary presentations of the film. Prints that have not been re-struck in this cropping manner may no longer exist.
-
12:58
NinjaGamblers
10 hours ago $11.59 earnedIs This The BEST Way to Win At Roulette? 😲
91.9K11 -
1:01:54
CharLee Simons Presents Do Not Talk
2 days agoCALIFORNIA'S DONE!
61K27 -
7:33
MudandMunitions
1 day agoUnboxing My FIRST Revolver! Smith & Wesson 442 .38 Special and What’s Coming Next for the Channel
82.5K12 -
1:01:05
Trumpet Daily
1 day ago $10.04 earnedGermany Started Two World Wars and Now Wants Nuclear Weapons - Trumpet Daily | Mar. 7, 2025
69.1K78 -
57:07
Stephen Gardner
1 day ago🚨BREAKING: Musk STUNS even Trump with LATEST FRAUD DISCOVERY!!
196K439 -
2:26:47
FreshandFit
20 hours agoRatchet Chick Gets Kicked Out "Gracefully" For THIS...
190K200 -
2:05:17
TimcastIRL
23 hours agoDemocrat ACTBLUE In CHAOS, Theories Over DOGE Cutting SLUSH FUND Go Wild w/Hotep Jesus | Timcast IRL
324K284 -
1:11:43
Roseanne Barr
1 day ago $76.00 earned"They are all Monsters" | The Roseanne Barr Podcast #89
167K197 -
9:26:16
Dr Disrespect
1 day ago🔴LIVE - DR DISRESPECT - WARZONE - PR ATTEMPTS
193K35 -
3:48:30
Akademiks
23 hours agoDay 1/30. Lebron checks stephen a Smith. TOry Lanez talking CRAZY asf. Lil Ronnie K*Ilers Caught
126K14