search
Get Started
search

Best Lloyd

Updated Daily
Filter by Tags

Rankings use category fit, feature coverage, pricing signals, public reception, and recency. Affiliate relationships do not affect scores.

0.0 - 10.0
Best 1 Why Worry?
Why Worry?

Why Worry? is a 1923 American Harold Lloyd comedy set amid a fictional revolution, notable for pairing Lloyd with giant actor John Aasen.

2 La Malinche (Limón)

Okay, here's the text formatted for clarity and without any extraneous marketing elements: **La Malinche (Limón), a Ballet** (110-180 characters) describing La Malinche (Limón), a ballet. No marketing fluff, no quotes.

3 For Heaven's Sake

For Heaven's Sake is a 1926 American Harold Lloyd comedy about a millionaire and a mission worker, notable as one of Lloyd's major mid-1920s hits.

4 Never Weaken

Never Weaken is a 1921 Harold Lloyd short comedy, notable as his last short before features and a trial run for his skyscraper thrill gags.

5 Hot Water
Hot Water

Hot Water is a 1924 American Harold Lloyd comedy, notable for structuring its domestic farce around a new car, in-laws, and an overstuffed turkey dinner.

6 High and Dizzy

High and Dizzy is a 1920 Harold Lloyd short comedy, notable for a sleepwalking ledge climax that anticipates Safety Last!'s height comedy.

7 Dr. Jack
Dr. Jack

Dr. Jack is a 1922 Harold Lloyd silent comedy directed by Fred C. Newmeyer, notable as a top-profit release between Grandma's Boy and Safety Last!

8 I Do
I Do

I Do is a 1921 Harold Lloyd short comedy, notable for opening with a cartoon wedding and turning married babysitting into slapstick.

9 Bumping Into Broadway

Bumping Into Broadway is a 1919 Harold Lloyd short comedy, notable as his first two-reeler featuring the glasses character.

10 Haunted Spooks

Haunted Spooks is a 1920 Harold Lloyd comedy-horror short, notable as the film resumed after Lloyd's 1919 prop-bomb injury.

11 Among Those Present

Among Those Present is a 1921 Harold Lloyd three-reel comedy, notable for its fox-hunt plot with Lloyd posing as an English lord.

12 Number, Please?

Number, Please? is a 1920 Harold Lloyd short comedy set at an amusement park, built around phone-booth gags and a balloon-ride contest.

13 An Eastern Westerner

An Eastern Westerner is a 1920 Harold Lloyd silent Western comedy, notable for sending his eastern city character into a lawless frontier town.

14 Now or Never

Now or Never is a 1921 Harold Lloyd short comedy, notable for its train setting and gags involving a child, a conductor, and a ticketless hero.

15 Ask Father
Ask Father

Ask Father is a 1919 Harold Lloyd one-reel comedy, notable for its office-access chase and an early wall-climbing gag by Lloyd's glasses character.

You've reached the end — 15 items

Save to your list

Save your favorites and follow how their scores change over time.

Save favorites
Get updates
Compare scores

Already have an account? Sign in

Compare Items

See how they stack up against each other

Comparing
VS
Select 1 more item to compare