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The 25 greatest short films
Walt Disney Pictures

The 25 greatest short films

"The length of a movie should be directly related to the endurance of a human bladder." While we don't need to use the restroom every 20 minutes, the famous Hitchcock quote applies more to shorts than to features. Sure, it's great to turn off your brain for two hours and immerse yourself in a feature film. But sometimes, you just want to watch a movie without using the restroom. These 25 titles are the best of your options. 

 
1 of 25

'Bao' (2018)

'Bao' (2018)
Walt Disney Pictures

The audience was crying so loudly at the end of Bao that I couldn't even hear the dialogue when the feature began to play. The Pixar short was shown before a couple of movies, but no one left remembering the one they had paid for. The story of a mother raising her "bao son" is the definition of a tearjerker. 

 
2 of 25

'Bob's Birthday' (1993)

'Bob's Birthday' (1993)
National Film Board Canada

Anyone who has turned 40 knows the feeling. Do I continue with what I'm doing? Have I made the right choices? Should I buy that red corvette I saw at the dealership? Turning 40 comes with all sorts of questions, which David Fine pokes fun at in this indie comedy. 

 
3 of 25

'The Snowman' (1982)

'The Snowman' (1982)
TVC London

A children's book comes to life. Raymond Briggs' short has been a staple of Christmas for decades, ever since it premiered in 1982. The Snowman has been capturing the imagination of children who see snow as a coloring book waiting to be filled in. 

 
4 of 25

'The Big Shave' (1967)

'The Big Shave' (1967)
The Criterion Collection

A little-known filmmaker named Martin Scorsese made this horror flick about a guy who cuts himself with a razor. Testing the audience's patience (and stomach), this short could have easily been played at an Andy Warhol party. And probably was... 

 
5 of 25

'Pas de Deux' (1968)

'Pas de Deux' (1968)
National Board of Canada

The first ever movie was of a horse galloping across a track. The concept of watching a single image on repeat has been around for decades, but Norman McLaren took the concept to new levels in Pas de Deux. A video of two ballet dancers spinning on repeat, the movie casts a spell that is never broken.

 
6 of 25

'Daisies' (1966)

'Daisies' (1966)
The Criterion Collection

A longer movie than most on our list. Daisies is a movie that is more experimental, playful, and meta than anything else on here. Its story of two girls rebelling against Czech laws is more fun than most, but the way that Chytilova breaks every law in the cinematic rulebook makes this a classic. 

 
7 of 25

'La Jetee' (1962)

'La Jetee' (1962)
The Criterion Collection

Even at its 30-minute runtime, Chris Marker's science-fiction masterpiece blows all other remakes out of the water. Brazil, 12 Monkeys, and Blade Runner have tried to update this movie to feature length, but none can touch what Marker does here. His ability to play with time through image is one of the most timeless marvels in cinema.

 
8 of 25

'Steamboat Willie' (1927)

'Steamboat Willie' (1927)
Walt Disney Pictures

PETA is not going to like this. But hey, the folks at PETA didn't like Tom and Jerry either. Steamboat Willie is the movie that introduced Mickey Mouse to the world, making him the captain of a steamboat ship. Since then, he's worked his way up to a clubhouse owner. 

 
9 of 25

'Un Chien Andalou' (1929)

'Un Chien Andalou' (1929)
Les Grand Films

The premiere was attended by Salvador Dali, the crowd walked out, and those who stayed were there to "boo." In the very first experimental film, a collection of images are presented like a cat gifting its owner a corpse. A woman's eye is sliced open, ants devour a body, and a man is chained to a pole. It's going to shock you, but those shocks are genuinely impressive.  

 
10 of 25

'The House is Black' (1962)

'The House is Black' (1962)
The Criterion Collection

One of India's most famous poets made a movie about a leprosy convent, which has been shown in schools worldwide. As an example of how to make documentaries and how to start movements, The House is Black is one of those movies that works on multiple levels. It's a movie that causes change, as well as a movie that causes changes in the medium. 

 
11 of 25

'The Wrong Trousers' (1993)

'The Wrong Trousers' (1993)
Aaardman Studios

The movie that made Wallace and Gromit famous. The Wrong Trousers has all the pieces of a great Aardman production, from the slapstick to the adventure to the bromance. This is what movies are all about. 

 
12 of 25

'The Kid' (1921)

'The Kid' (1921)
The Criterion Collection

Short enough to enthrall children but long enough to thrill adults, Charlie Chaplin's short is more than just slapstick. It's a movie that makes you laugh and cry simultaneously.  

 
13 of 25

'Tale of Tales' (1979)

'Tale of Tales' (1979)
Soyuzmultifilm

How does one even describe Tale of Tales? It doesn't look like a movie, act like a movie, or sound like a movie. It's a movie that doesn't make sense logically but makes sense emotionally. The scene where a wolf steals a baby is haunting, while the scene where soldiers march off to war is chilling. 

 
14 of 25

'Mizugumo Monmon' (2006)

'Mizugumo Monmon' (2006)
Studio Ghibli

Two words: Hayao Miyazaki. The director behind such animated classics as Spirited Away and My Neighbor Totoro, Miyazaki delivers more of the same in this short film.

 
15 of 25

'World of Tomorrow' (2017)

'World of Tomorrow' (2017)
Bitter Films

World of Tomorrow is one of those rare memes that has something to say. Lots of people made this movie big on Twitter, thanks to all the scenes that are hilarious out of context. But the story of a woman showing her past self the future is quite profound. 

 
16 of 25

'Scorpio Rising' (1963)

'Scorpio Rising' (1963)
Puck Film Productions

This might be the most influential movie on our list. Every time you hear a pop song over images of torture, violence, and mutilation, you can thank Kenneth Anger. Every time you see Scorsese, Tarantino, Wright, and Coppola play a pop song over death, you can thank Kenneth Anger. The director who placed violence over music first, Anger made a statement about how we turn horror into entertainment.

 
17 of 25

'Hotel Chevalier' (2007)

'Hotel Chevalier' (2007)
Fox Serchlight Pictures

Have you ever seen the movie By the Sea ? The one with Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie breaking up at a beach house? This short from Wes Anderson is a better version, with Natalie Portman and her husband breaking up at a resort. There are all the pieces of a Wes Anderson joint, just with a little less color. 

 
18 of 25

'Trevor' (1994)

'Trevor' (1994)
Prime Video

One of two movies to tie at the Academy Awards (the other being Franz Kafka's It's a Wonderful Life), Trevor is a coming-of-age tale. In the coming years, his journey has been told on a Broadway show and a show called The Trevor Project. But the short is your best option. 

 
19 of 25

'Trip to the Moon' (1902)

'Trip to the Moon' (1902)
Star Film Company

In Trip to the Moon, cinema was taken to space! For the first time ever, audiences got to explore the moon from their seats — experiencing alien invasions, spaceships, and space pirates through images instead of books. 

 
20 of 25

'Sherlock Jr.' (1924)

'Sherlock Jr.' (1924)
MGM

You can debate whether this is Buster Keaton's best movie, but you can't debate whether it's a blast. Sherlock Jr. is one of the most fun and inventive movies ever made, a whodunnit with chases, stunts, and a scene where Keaton passes through a movie screen to enter the actual movie. 

 
21 of 25

'Rain' (1929)

'Rain' (1929)
Amstredam Filmliga

Those who don't like rain might want to skip out on Rain, a movie devoted to...well, rain. For 11 minutes, we watch people walk around with umbrellas, trying to dodge the water coming from above. It's a hypnotic look at those days when the streets fill with puddles — or for those in Seattle, everyday life. 

 
22 of 25

'Meshes of an Afternoon'

'Meshes of an Afternoon'
MOMA

Like La Jatee, Alexander Hammid's short has inspired many feature-length films. His wife helped him come up with the idea for this dreamy, black-and-white science-fiction, which is told almost entirely without sound. It's supposed to capture the feeling of being trapped in a nightmare, with images repeating. You can find the film's technique in hundreds of movies like it. 

 
23 of 25

'Lights Out' (2013)

'Lights Out' (2013)
Vimeo

Speaking of nightmares, is there anything scarier than Lights Out? The short was so terrifying that teenagers were watching it as a dare. It's hard to think of a movie that plays with our fear of the dark more than this one. 

 
24 of 25

'Night and Fog' (1956)

'Night and Fog' (1956)
The Criterion Collection

It took French director Alain Resnais a whole year to put together this 30-minute film, which chronicles the Holocaust only 10 years after it happened. It's one of the most daring acts of cinema, as even today, we are hesitant to talk about the events on screen. 

 
25 of 25

'The Red Balloon' (1956)

'The Red Balloon' (1956)
The Criterion Collection

My favorite short film. This story of a boy and his magical balloon is one of the cutest, most inventive, and buoyant movies ever made. It brings a smile to my face every time I see it.   

Asher Luberto is a film critic for L.A. Weekly, The Playlist, The Progressive and The Village Voice.

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