Douglas Fairbanks
12 titles
Filmography
12 results

The Thief of Bagdad
(1924)Seeking a princess' hand in marriage, a thief embarks on a quest to retrieve a rare treasure while facing competition from another wily suitor.

The Mark of Zorro
(1920)Although the world thinks Don is just a foolish son of a California aristocrat, he is in fact a courageous swordsman who fights for justice.
The Private Life of Don Juan
(1934)
Wild and Woolly
(1917)A rich Easterner plans to move to a Wild West town but discovers it's now civilized. The town's "wild" days are over, surprising him.

Don Q Son of Zorro
(1925)Don Cesar, the son of the legendary Zorro, is forced on the lam in Spain when he’s framed for murder and becomes the whip-wielding outlaw Don Q.

The Black Pirate
(1926)Douglas Fairbanks created a new breed of onscreen hero in this 1926 silent film classic about a man infiltrating a pirate ship for personal revenge.

Days of Thrills and Laughter
(1961)An affectionate and appreciative look back at silent film comedies and thrillers from early the 20th century up through the 1920s.

Mr. Robinson Crusoe
(1932)A yachtsman bets his friends that he can swim ashore on a remote south-seas island with nothing but a toothbrush and live comfortably.

I, Douglas Fairbanks
(2018)This doc, told in first-person narration, draws on film clips and newsreels to show that he invented a style that actors would emulate for decades.

American Aristocracy
(1916)A young entomologist tries to ingratiate himself with a clique of moneyed entrepreneurs and fight off an arms smuggler to win an inventor’s daughter.

The Taming of the Shrew
(1929)In 16th-century Italy, a strict patriarch will not allow his daughter to marry the man she loves until her headstrong older sister gets married.

The Image Book
(2018)Presenting the final masterwork by Jean-Luc Godard, the French New Wave titan whose inventive brilliance will be impossible to replace. Winner of the first-ever Special Palme d’Or at Cannes, The Image Book is a riotous whirlwind of images and sounds from the father of modern cinema. Forever JLG.