“The silent film […] was a universal language - Esperanto for the eyes.” - Kevin Brownlow
The 2024 Pittsburgh Silent Film Festival September 29 - October 6, 2024
Preliminary Schedule (Subject to Change)
This year's Pittsburgh Silent Film Festival (PSFF) features 1924 centennial films - all films marking their 100th anniversary in 2024. At least eight venues and ten films, all featuring live musical accompaniment - from comedy to horror to documentary - we hope you find one or several that you'd like to attend. Our thanks to all our festival partners and musicians. We'll see you soon!
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HOT WATER (1924)
Sunday, September 29, 2024 at PATOS / Keystone Oaks High School: HOT WATER (1924) w/ Harold Lloyd, featuring live Wurlitzer theater organ accompaniment by Peter Krasinski
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He Who Gets Slapped (1924)
Monday, September 30, 2024 at the Mt. Lebanon Public Library/ The Denis Theatre: HE WHO GETS SLAPPED (1924) w/ Lon Chaney
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WAXWORKS (1924)
Tuesday, October 1, 2024 at The Parkway Theater / Jump Cut Theater: WAXWORKS (1924), w/ live accompaniment by Zombo
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Michael (1924)
Wednesday, October 2, 2024 at The Harris Theater / Reel Q: MICHAEL (1924), directed by Carl Theodore Dryer
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The Hands of Orlac (1924)
Thursday, October 3, 2024 at The Lindsay Theater: THE HANDS OF ORLAC (1924), with Conrad Veidt, with live accompaniment by Ben Opie & others
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TBA
Friday, October 4, 2024 - Pittsburgh Sound & Image: TBA
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Grass: A Nation's Battle for Life (1924-25)
Saturday, October 4, 2024 at The Frick Pittsburgh: GRASS (1924-25), directed by Marien C. Cooper
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Peter Pan (1924)
Saturday, October 5, 2024 at Row House Cinema: PETER PAN (1924) with Betty Bronson and Anna May Wong
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THE NAVIGATOR (1924)
Sunday, October 6, 2024 at The Harris Theater: THE NAVIGATOR (1924) with Buster Keaton
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Sherlock Jr. (1924)
Sunday, October 6, 2024 at The Harris Theater: SHERLOCK JR. (1924) with Buster Keaton, featuring live accompaniment by Tom Roberts
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Silent Fest & Silent Movie Day Happy Hour
Sunday, September 29, 2024 (after the Hot Water show): join other silent film enthusiasts in celebrating Silent Movie Day (Sept. 29 around the country!) and the PSFF kickoff for an informal drink at a local establishment TBA.
Interested in becoming a 2024 Pittsburgh Silent Film Festival Sponsor? Visit https://pittsburghsilentfilmsociety.org/sponsors
We’re thrilled to have David Newell “aka Mr. McFeely” from the Mister Rogers Neighborhood television program as our 2024 Honorary Festival Chair!
Thank you to Jump Cut Theater for both partnering and sponsoring this year’s festival! Check them out at www.jumpcuttheater.org.
Our thanks to Pittsburgh artist Loran Skinkis for great poster artwork! See his work at skinkis.com.
LEGENDARY FILMMAKER MARTIN SCORSESE, PITTSBURGH AND CINEMAS ACROSS COUNTRY, EMBRACE INNAUGURAL NATIONAL SILENT MOVIE DAY
Sept. 4, 2021 – In April of this year, Mt. Lebanon resident Chad Hunter announced a new project called National Silent Movie Day—an annual event celebrating silent film history and raising awareness about the race to preserve surviving silent films.
Since then, more than 30 theaters and institutions around the country have signed on to host their own events, including Film Forum in New York City, the National Museum of Asian Art in Washington DC, the Gene Siskel Film Center in Chicago, the Berkeley Art Museum in Berkeley, CA, and the American Cinematheque in Los Angeles.
Writing on his Turner Classic Movies blog, legendary filmmaker Martin Scorsese also took note, stating that “September 29th is the very first National Silent Movie Day, a great initiative launched by three dedicated film archivists and/or activists: Brandee B. Cox from the Academy Archive, Chad Hunter from Video Trust and the Pittsburgh Silent Film Society and Steven K. Hill from UCLA […] this is exactly the kind of activist spirit we need right now in the world of cinema.”
Turner Classic Movies will celebrate the day with an all-silent film line-up, showing 15 movie titles from 6:00am to midnight, including Trip to the Moon (1902) by film pioneer Georges Méliès; Within Our Gates (1920) by Oscar Micheaux, considered the first feature-length motion picture produced by a Black filmmaker; Rudolph Valentino in The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (1921); Harold Lloyd’s The Freshman (1925); Charlie Chaplin’s City Lights (1931), and Buster Keaton’s Sherlock, Jr. (1924).
Locally in Pittsburgh, Hunter has partnered with Row House Cinema in Lawrenceville to present Alfred Hitchcock’s silent masterwork Blackmail (1929), with live piano accompaniment provided by musician Tom Roberts, former piano player for Leon Redbone and scorer of Martin Scorsese’s 2004 film The Aviator. Dr. Adam Hart, film scholar and author of Monstrous Forms, will provide a short introduction.
Blackmail is scheduled for 7:00pm on Wednesday, September 29, tickets are $16 and available at https://rowhousecinema.com/movies/blackmail/. Proof of COVID-19 vaccination or a negative COVID test taken within 72 hours is currently required to enter the theater. Guests under 12 may enter, but must be masked.
To find out more about National Silent Movie Day and see a full list of events, visit www.nationalsilentmovieday.org.
Press materials including the national press release and images are located at :NSMD Press Materials