In the United States, a "short film" usually means a movie between 20 and 40 minutes, while anything shorter than 20 minutes is supposedly called "short subject". The two terms are sometimes used interchangeably, though, and either can get shortened to just "shorts". The universal maximum length is 40 minutes; anything longer is a "feature film". Minimum lengths vary by region and organization.
Live-action shorts were very common in the days when cinemas ran all day and people would often come and leave at any point. The types could be included in a regular program were Newsreels, comedy shorts like The Three Stooges and Laurel and Hardy, musicals that are a de facto Concert Film focusing on some particular music act, and cartoons such as Walt Disney's primary output until Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs was shorts. In certain home video editions of vintage Disney and Warner Bros.-owned films, you can watch a bonus feature collection of film shorts that are assembled like a typical theatrical short film line up of the appropriate decade.
Unfortunately, shorts were paid with a set fee regardless of the audience response and were of course overshadowed by the feature films, which got the advertising. That's why Walt Disney took a chance with Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs as a feature, which could allow him to see real profits as well as to pay for the high production standards he strove for. With the rise of the double feature the shorts were gradually squeezed out, leaving only the cartoons and newsreels until television killed them off.
Short films nowadays tend to be student, independent projects, or from public institutions like the National Film Board of Canada, often short in time and budget. It's a challenging medium in which to work, given the constraints, but like all media, it has its perks. Short films are great training projects for beginners since they are easier to make than a feature film, and can be very personally rewarding, considering the filmmakers can go wild with crazy ideas that they don't have to sustain for a feature film or a series. Major studios like Walt Disney Pictures in the past with their Silly Symphonies and Pixar now also use them as a good way to try out new film techniques before using them in features. Most Web Original projects could easily be called short films; so could some entries in Le Film Artistique.
Most films made specifically for novelty/large-screen formats such as IMAX — nature and science documentaries, performance art showcases, animated shorts/compilations, etc. — and screened in museums or amusement/theme parks, rather than given mainstream theatrical releases, are short films. With IMAX, this was partially due to the logistics of changing the giant reels of film it required until digital filmmaking/projection came along and made it much easier for mainstream films to be released in the format, but the short film format persists for other productions.
However, the short film has had a bit of a semi-revival as mainstream fare, such as the aforementioned Web Original films on sites like YouTube. In addition, Pixar, DreamWorks Animation, and Warner Bros. have regularly produced animated shorts for both theatrical release, as TV special material, and as DVD Bonus Content. In Canada, there is Moviola, a cable TV channel that features only film shorts. In Japan, studios will publish several Anime shorts together, each running 30 minutes or more, as double or even triple features.
The term comes from the number of reels it took to play the film on a projector. Shorts were typically two reels (hence 20-40 minutes), and features were usually four to six reels (when these terms were coined, features were usually 60-90 minutes).
Examples:
- The Admiral and the Princess, a 30-minute short film that aired on TV in a few channels.
- Agni's Philosophy is only 4 minutes long.
- An Almost Christmas Story is 25 minutes long.
- The Soreike! Anpanman theatrical features are consistently 51 minutes long, but they are shown together with a 20-minute-long short film. This was not always the case - the film from 1990, Baikinman no gyakushuu, ran at least 80 minutes.
- "The Very Short Azumanga Daioh Movie" features big-budget animation (much of the cast looked Off-Model, though, since the film was made before the series premiered, serving as something of a preview, never mind the fact it takes place during second year, as revealed by the hairstyle Tomo was wearing at the time, yet mashed together plots from all around the series), but is the length of a single segment in a regular episode, making it a shade under six minutes long.
- Bâan: The Boundary of Adulthood is only 15 minutes long.
- The 1977 Japanese animated short Bara no Hana to Joe (The Rose Flower and Joe) is only 20 minutes long.
- Blood: The Last Vampire is a rare example that actually got shown in American theatres, likely due to very high production values.
- Brambletown clocks in at just 35 minutes. TV airings expand the timeslot by pairing it with a behind the scenes documentary and Wild Kratts: Our Blue and Green World.
- The 1978 film adaptation of Takashi Yanase's children's book Chirin no Suzu (known as Ringing Bell in anglophone regions) is 46 minutes long. While not a feature length movie, the film does a great job at showcasing some heartbreaking and disturbing imagery for a movie that's almost 50 minutes long.
- Cutey Honey Flash got a 38-minute film as part of the Toei Summer Anime Fair.
- Di Gi Charat: A Trip to the Planet was logically about four times as long as a typical episode... making it just short of half an hour. It was typically shown as a triple feature alongside The Slayers Premium (itself only about 7 minutes longer than a typical Slayers episode) and Sakura Wars: The Movie.
- The Digimon franchise has nine movies in this vein - two each for Digimon Adventure (the first of which was a Pilot Movie), Digimon Adventure 02 and Digimon Tamers, one each for Digimon Frontier and Digimon Data Squad, and the standalone Digimon X-Evolution; Digimon Fusion has no films. All of them save the Adventure movies and the first Tamers movie note are non serial movies. The American release known as Digimon: The Movie is just a rather odd edit and splice of the first three.
- This results in some weird plot changes. In the original Japanese, the films had no real link between them. In the dub version, all the segments are linked together flimsily by saying that the computer virus that created Diaboramon was also responsible for the events in the other segments. Within the Digimon universe this makes practically no sense.
- While Disney has screened shorts before their movies before, sometimes they fall under this trope because they are the length of a typical Short Anime Movie (around a half hour). Two examples of this are the Winnie the Pooh (2011) featurettes and Olaf's Frozen Adventure.
- Out of 11 Dr. Slump movies, only one (the second) was a full length feature. The rest had running times from five(!) to 60 minutes.
- Dragon Ball:
- The movies are probably the most famous examples. All 3 original Dragon Ball movies are 45-60 minutes and 12 of the 13 original Dragon Ball Z movies are the same length.
- There are currently only 4 exceptions. The first Broly movie was 70 minutes, the 10th Anniversary Dragon Ball film (The Path to Power) was 80 minutes, and the recent Dragon Ball Z movie, Battle Of Gods, was 85 minutes in theaters, with an extended 105-minute version on TV and home video. Resurrection ‘F’ was 95 minutes.
- A 20-30 minute Gekiganger 3 movie was included in supplemental material to Martian Successor Nadesico, on top of the Original Video Animation release of the Gekiganger 3 "series".
- Hetalia: Paint It, White would be just under an hour long, about the length of two regular half-hour episodes, without the clips from the series thrown in. Given the source material, they didn't have a lot to work with, but wanted a feature-length film. The move proved controversial in Japan and the Japanese DVD release removed the clip show parts, but the American release includes them.
- Inukami! had one. The movie was the length of an average TV episode, except with a little more at stake than your average TV episode and a slightly bigger budget. Namely, the Censor Box elephant was CG and chrome.
- i☆Ris the Movie - Full Energy!!, an anime movie based on the idol group i☆Ris, clocks in at just 60 minutes.
- Kino's Journey has two 30-minute movies.
- The Macross 7 movie was the length of a single 30-minute episode, and was taken from a script idea that there hadn't been time or budget to include in the main run of the series. It's set in the middle of the action, before the big Grand Finale fight.
- Little Witch Academia (2013) is only 26 minutes long and had a limited two week engagement in Japanese theaters. It's sequel, Little Witch Academia: The Enchanted Parade, is a bit longer, but it still only clocks in at 53 minutes.
- Toei Animation produced masses of very short original movies for their popular TV shows. One of the shortest might be the Mahou Shojo Lalabel movie, clocking in at 15 minutes.
- Negima! Magister Negi Magi appeared as two very short "introductory" films before it actually began broadcasting.
- The New Maple Town Story: Palm Town Chapter "movie" is actually the series' first episode padded out with scenes from Maple Town Story's final two episodes in place of the original flashback sequence. That was common practice up to (probably) the late '80s/early '90s.
- The Lady Lady movie is similar to the above example, the four (!) Attack No. 1 movies were slight re-edits of two to three episodes each, while the Tongari Boushi no Memol movie is actually just a summary episode.
- Noiseman Sound Insect is an actual short movie the length of a normal anime episode, but with all the values and the budget of a full feature film.
- Sometimes this will happen with non-Japanese franchises aimed at children that are screened in theaters.
- In 2024 in the United Kingdom, eight episodes of Bluey were screened in theaters as a compliation movie.
- Disney Junior Party is a 60-minute film released in Italy and Spain which complies episodes of three of its most popular shows and has filler featuring Mickey Mouse. The US distributor Fathom Events also has a similar series called Disney Junior At The Movies.
- Fathom Events also did a Zula Patrol event which lasted only 70 minutes long.
- Each My Little Pony: Equestria Girls film runs 70 minutes and the first two were given a run in theaters a month before the video release.
- If it wasn't for the padding by the Milkshake! hosts and the additional older episodes of the show that round it to 70 minutes in total, Peppa Pig: The Golden Boots could have been 15 minutes long.
- There was also Peppa Pig: My First Cinema Experience (known as Peppa's Australian Holiday in Australia), which was basically 7 5-minute shorts which were each followed by segments involving Daisynote playing and singing with puppet versions of Peppa and George.
- The Thomas & Friends films after Thomas and the Magic Railroad round out at an hour, and would be shown in theaters as part of the program Kidtoon Films
in North America, or as two-day limited engagements
in the United Kingdom. There was also a Fathom Events screening
that was an hour long and was made up of a episodes that were then new to North American audiences.
- Many movies screened by Kidtoon Films, not just the Thomas ones, fall under this trope as well. They were padded out with shorts that were either related or unrelated to the film, while some, such as the Barbie films (up until The Princess and the Popstar), just ran by themselves due to the films each running around 70 minutes or more (The Pearl Princess would later be released alone by Screenvision). Two of the shortest films were Friendship and Adventures, being the first two episodes of each show combined, and Kidtoons Comics, a 65-minute collection of short films, which could as well be the American counterpart to the Toei Animation fairs.
- A few movie theaters across the USA sometimes screen the new VeggieTales episodes before they hit DVD, each of which last up to 45 minutes long.
- Ojamajo Doremi had two of these during the Sharp and Motto seasons. The first one was screened with Digimon Hurricane Touchdown!! and Supreme Evolution!! The Golden Digimentals, while the second was screened between the Digimon Tamers and Kinnikuman movies. The Sharp movie was 27 minutes long while the Motto movie was 26.
- The first three One Piece movies were all similar in length to Digimon movies, because the first three One Piece movies were double features with the first three Digimon movies (from the fourth One Piece movie on, they were pretty much full length, while Digimon movies pretty much remained half length).
- However, after a 115 minute epic written by the manga's author, Eiichiro Oda, One Piece 3D: Straw Hat Chase is only 30 minutes long, reverting back to the double feature format (this time with Toriko), albeit in 3-D.
- PAW Patrol: Mighty Pups, a 45-minute special of PAW Patrol did get a limited cinema releases in many countries, even going far as the DVD release referring it as a "movie".
- Many PBS Kids specials are billed as movies despite running for 55 minutes long at most. Some of them, like The Daniel Tiger Movie: Won't You Be Our Neighbor? and the Nature Cat specials, were screened as part of PBS Kids at the Alamo Drafthouse with bonus episodes attached to stretch it out to the length of a theatrical film.
- The first six Pokémon movies were rather short, padded out by the Pokémon-centric shorts before each one.
- The two Pretty Cure Max Heart movies clock in at 70 minutes apiece; the Splash Star movie doesn't even break an hour.
- Most movies from the Pretty Cure franchise last 70 minutes, but at least two of the Pretty Cure All-Stars films (the second and third) last 74 minutes.
- The third Ranma ½ movie, Team Ranma vs. The Legendary Phoenix. It's about a half hour long, and in the US it was sold as an OAV and packaged with other OAVs, even changing the opening and closing sequences.
- Regular Show: The Movie, a 60-minute film, was shown as a limited release in select US cities.
- Sailor Moon: The first 3 movies clock in at just an hour and were shown as part of the Winter Toei Animation Fair series. The first and third have 10-minute shorts before the movies to pad out the run-times some.
- Some of Sanrio's theatrical films fall into this. The Cinnamoroll movie was 45 minutes and was screened with Nezumi Monogatari (Nezumi Monogatari: Jôji to Jerarudo no bouken). The Jewelpet movie was this too, as it was screened with Onegai My Melody: Yu and Ai.
- Sea Cat (1988) is a 21 minute anime film meant to be used in schools to educate about the dangers of nuclear warfare.
- In-universe example: In The Simpsons episode "The Ziff Who Came to Dinner", The Wild Dingleberries Movie is shown to have
◊ a runtime of 47 minutes, qualifying it for this trope.
- The Slayers franchise has several of these. The Motion Picture itself is only 70 minutes long. The three other Slayers movies – Return, Great, and Gorgeous – all clock in at around an hour apiece. Slayers Premium is only a half hour long, being shown as a part of a festival, with the DVD cut being 8 minutes longer.
- Averted with the Tamagotchi films except for Tamagotchi Honto no Hanashi (which was shown with the Cutie Honey Flash film mentioned above) and Eiga Tamagotchi: Himitsu no Otodoke Dai Sakusen!, which is an actual short film about 10 minutes in length and was screened with the Himitsu no Cocotama movie. Other than those, all Tamagotchi films run 90 minutes.
- Tenchi Muyo! had two movies of normal length and one (Daughter Of Darkness) that was only an hour (shown as a double feature with Slayers Great).
- Also applies to Toku movies, since the genre has a lot in common with anime. Traditionally both the Super Sentai and Kamen Rider franchises have movies released in the summer and released as a double feature with Super Sentai getting the short end of the stick with run-times clocking at roughly 30 minutes (without commercials, regular episodes clock in around 21-22 minutes) while the Kamen Rider feature runs between 45 minutes to about an hour.
- Early Super Sentai movies (before the Ohranger Vs Kakuranger movie became the standard for Sentai crossover films) were essentially regular episodes played on the big screen with little to no changes. Goranger had this the worst with four "movies" which were just episodes of the TV show.
- Kamen Rider has been moving away from this somewhat starting with Kamen Rider Decade and Kamen Rider Double. In addition to their summer movies, Decade's finale was incorporated a part of a standalone Kamen Rider movie that crossed over with W, but even that didn't completely escape this, running as three distinct segments (one for Decade, one for W and team-up) that run about half an hour each. This soon became the Movie War series, each coming out in the winter and would feature an Early-Bird Cameo of the current season's Secondary Rider.
- This dates back to the original Ultraman - while there weren't any original stories made for theaters, there were theatrical screenings of television episodes so that viewers had a chance to watch them on the big screen and in color, which was a draw when most Japanese households still had black-and-white televisions. Toho distributed many to accompany Godzilla films.
- The Tsubasa -RESERVoir CHRoNiCLE- movie lasted barely over 30 minutes. Why, one can only wonder, since it seemed to move a tad bit too fast.
- Made worse if you see the interviews with the original cast and director: whey asked to state their favorite parts, most of them respond that it's hard to choose, because the movie had to pack so much into a short time frame. The obvious question of "why not make it longer?" is never asked.
- Simple answer: many studios screened this film alongside the ×××HOLiC movie, another CLAMP title, which was also noticeably short, only an hour long. The two movies share a scene between them. Maybe they were supposed to be a package deal.
- Made worse if you see the interviews with the original cast and director: whey asked to state their favorite parts, most of them respond that it's hard to choose, because the movie had to pack so much into a short time frame. The obvious question of "why not make it longer?" is never asked.
- The 1979 Pilot Movie Unico: Black Cloud and White Feather (Unico's animation debut) is 26 minutes long.
- Voices of a Distant Star, at 25 minutes. Notable for having been done by just one guy and his Mac, except for (obviously) the soundtrack and the voice acting on the DVD release. His 2007 film 5 Centimeters per Second also counts, with a runtime of just over an hour, divided into three "episodes." The Garden of Words is a mere 46 minutes long, and, indeed, the short length was the one aspect of it that Western reviewers consistently disliked. (Ironically, he made this one relatively short partly due to complaints that his longer movies were lower-quality.)
- The 1970 Japanese animated short Yasashii Lion (The Kindly Lion aka The Gentle Lion) by Mushi Productions is 27 minutes long.
- The very first Yu-Gi-Oh! film, produced by Toei following their short-lived "Season 0" series (as opposed to Studio Gallop's later, more popular take on the franchise), clocks in at about half an hour.
- YuYu Hakusho had both a short movie and a second movie whose length is normal by Western standards. The short movie resembled a TV episode in length, but had a standalone movie-style plot. This movie was a double feature even when released in America, being packaged with the Ninku movie.
- 64,000,000 Years Ago
- Achilles
- Affairs of the Art
- Agamemnon Counterpart
- Allegretto
- Alleycats
- All Nothing
- Alma
- Animal Behaviour
- Anna & Bella
- Antediluvian
- Assassin's Creed: Embers
- "The Very Short Azumanga Daioh Movie": Big-budget animation for a six-minute project that previewed the anime series.
- The Backwater Gospel
- Balance
- Barking Island
- The Bears Who Saved Christmas
- Big Bang
- The Big Dad Wolf
- The Bigger Picture
- The Big Snit
- Big Time
- Blackfly
- Blackford Manor
- Blender Foundation shorts:
- Elephant's Dream
- Big Buck Bunny
- Sintel
- Cosmos Laundromat: First Cycle
- Sprite Fright
- Bleuets
- The Blue Umbrella
- Borrowed Time
- Boxballet
- Boys Night Out
- The Boy Who Saw The Iceberg
- Brain Divided
- The Brave Locomotive
- Broken Lance
- Brown Bear's Wedding
- Bunny
- Call Me Tonight
- The Canterville Ghost (1970)
- The Canterville Ghost (1988)
- Carlton Your Doorman
- The Cat Came Back (1988)
- The Cat Piano
- Cat Soup
- The Cat with Hands
- Cheap Rate Gravity
- Le Cheval de fer
- A Christmas Carol (1971)
- The Chronicles of Rebecca (2020)
- Classic Disney Shorts
- Clinic
- Club of the Discarded
- Color Classics
- Contact (1978)
- The Cow
- Cows With Guns
- The Crabs
- Crac
- The Creation
- Creation Of The World ("Stworzenie świata", a Polish retelling of a Romani fairy tale)
- Creature Discomforts: Life In Lockdown
- The Crunch Bird
- Cutey Honey Flash got a 38-minute film as part of the Toei Summer Anime Fair.
- Cybernetic Grandma
- Daicon III & IV: The two shorts are around 5-6 minutes long apiece.
- DC Super Friends
- DC Universe Animated Original Movies
- DC Showcase – Constantine: The House of Mystery
- DC Showcase: The Spectre
- DC Showcase: Jonah Hex
- DC Showcase: Green Arrow
- Superman/Shazam!: The Return of Black Adam
- DC Showcase: Catwoman
- DC Showcase: Death
- DC Showcase: The Phantom Stranger
- DC Showcase – Batman: Death in the Family
- DC Showcase: Kamandi
- DC Showcase: Blue Beetle
- DC Showcase: Adam Strange
- Diamond Jack
- Di Gi Charat: A Trip to the Planet: Just short of half an hour. It was typically shown as a triple feature alongside The Slayers Premium (itself only about 7 minutes longer than a typical Slayers episode) and Sakura Wars: The Movie.
- Digimon Adventure: The first film was a Pilot Movie, and only 20 minutes long.
- The Dingles
- The Dirdy Birdy
- Doctor DeSoto
- Dr. Slump: Out of 11 movies, seven were 40 minutes or less.
- Don't Croak
- Dream Come True
- Dreaming Of Good Times: A Chinese short movie produced for the Chinese new year showing several characters trying to get to a New Years celebration in the world of Pokémon.
- E (1981)
- Éiru
- Emily and the Baba Yaga
- Face Like a Frog
- Fairy Tale Sits on the Doorstep
- The Family That Dwelt Apart
- Feast
- Felix the Cat
- Firing Range
- Flatworld (1997)
- The Fly (1980)
- The Flying Sailor
- Follow the Sun!
- Fresh Guacamole
- Friendship is Magic Bitch
- The Frog, the Dog, and the Devil
- Frozen Fever
- Fuelled
- The Garden of Words: 46 minutes long. Ironically, Makoto Shinkai made this one as short as it is because of complaints that his longer movies were lower-quality, but Western reviewers consistently disliked the short timeframe.
- Gekiganger 3: A 20-30 minute Gekiganger 3 movie was included in supplemental material to Martian Successor Nadesico, on top of the Original Video Animation release of the Gekiganger 3 "series".
- A Gentlemen's Duel
- Gobelins shorts:
- Godzilla vs. Gigan Rex
- Godzilla vs. Megalon (2023)
- Get a Horse!
- Grasshoppers
- A Greek Tragedy
- Hair Love
- Hair Piece
- Harvie Krumpet
- Head over Heels
- Hedgehog in the Fog
- Hell-Bent for Election
- Here's the Plan
- Heron and Crane
- The Hill Farm
- His Wife Is a Hen
- Holidaze (2019)
- Home on the Rails
- Hot Stuff
- Hunger (1974)
- Icarus and Wisemen
- Ice Merchants
- If Anything Happens I Love You
- Igra
- I'll Return as the Rain
- Inner Workings
- Intolerance
- Inukami!: The Movie was the length of an average TV episode, except with a little more at stake than your average TV episode and a slightly bigger budget. Namely, the Censor Box elephant was CG and chrome.
- I, Pet Goat II
- Iron Within
- It's Oppo
- Jelly
- Jenitba
- Jinxy Jenkins & Lucky Lou
- John Henry and the Inky-Poo
- Juro Que Vi (collection of five ten to thirteen shorts about Brazilian Folklore)
- Julia Donaldson adaptations by The BBC:
- Kakurenbo
- Kara (Quantic Dream)
- Kihachirō Kawamoto Shorts
- Kigeki
- Kino's Journey has two 30-minute movies.
- Kiwi!
- KV-314 Symphony Dreams
- La Salla
- Le Mans 1955
- Lift You Up
- The Little Mermaid (1968)
- Logorama
- The Lonely Dodo
- Looney Tunes
- The Lost Thing
- A Love Story
- Lupin Family All-Stars
- Lupin III <Pilot Film>
- Lupo the Butcher
- Macross 7: The movie was the length of a single 30-minute episode.
- Mahou Shojo Lalabel: 15 minutes.
- La Maison en Petits Cubes
- The Mandrake
- Manivald
- The Man Who Planted Trees
- Mei and the Kittenbus: A 13-minute short-form sequel to My Neighbor Totoro. It is exclusive to the Ghibli Museum in Mitaka, Japan.
- Memorable
- Mermaid
- Mickey's Christmas Carol
- Milky☆Highway
- Mimi and the Mountain Dragon, a 25-minute adaptation of a children's book by Michael Morpurgo.
- Miss Daizi
- Modest Heroes, a Studio Ponoc film comprised of 3/15-minute shorts.
- Mona Lisa Descending a Staircase
- Monsterbox
- Moon Breath Beat
- More
- Mortal Kombat: The Journey Begins
- The Most Magnificent Thing
- Mother for a Little Mammoth
- Moto Perpetuo
- Mount Head
- Mr. Frog Went A-Courting
- Mr. Hublot
- Mr. Plastimime
- Murder Drones: Intermission
- Musophobia: A 45-second-long short by The Animation Workshop students.
- Mutya
- My Little Goat
- My Moon
- The Mysterious Geographic Explorations of Jasper Morello
- My Year of Dicks
- Negima! Magister Negi Magi: Two very short "introductory" films before the series began broadcasting.
- Nick's Thanksgiving Fest
- Ninety-Five Senses
- Noiseman Sound Insect: A short movie the length of a normal anime episode, but with all the values and the budget of a full feature film.
- Not Without My Handbag
- The Nut (1967): A Polish short about a walnut rolling around surviving numerous obstacles.
- Ojamajo Doremi:
- During the "Sharp" season, there is a movie 27 minutes long. It was part of a triple feature with Digimon Hurricane Touchdown!! and Supreme Evolution!! The Golden Digimentals.
- During the "Motto" season, there is a movie 26 minutes long. It was part of a triple feature with Digimon Tamers and Kinnikuman movies.
- Oktapodi
- Old Fangs
- The Old Lady and the Pigeons
- Once Upon a Dog
- Once Upon Australia
- One Small Step
- OPAL
- The Origin of Stitch: Included on the Lilo & Stitch 2: Stitch Has a Glitch DVD, serving as a bridge between that film and Lilo & Stitch: The Series pilot Stitch! The Movie.
- An Ostrich Told Me the World Is Fake and I Think I Believe It
- Ostrov
- Outside In
- Pachyderme
- Pale Cocoon
- Paperman
- Paradise (1984)
- Peanuts
- A Boy Named Charlie Brown (1963)
- A Charlie Brown Christmas
- Charlie Brown's All-Stars!
- It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown
- You're in Love, Charlie Brown
- He's Your Dog, Charlie Brown!
- It Was a Short Summer, Charlie Brown
- Play It Again, Charlie Brown
- You're (Not) Elected, Charlie Brown
- There's No Time for Love, Charlie Brown
- A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving
- It's a Mystery, Charlie Brown
- It's the Easter Beagle, Charlie Brown
- Be My Valentine, Charlie Brown
- You're a Good Sport, Charlie Brown
- It's Arbor Day, Charlie Brown
- It's Your First Kiss, Charlie Brown
- What a Nightmare, Charlie Brown!
- You're the Greatest, Charlie Brown
- She's a Good Skate, Charlie Brown
- Life Is a Circus, Charlie Brown
- It's Magic, Charlie Brown
- Someday You'll Find Her, Charlie Brown
- A Charlie Brown Celebration
- Is This Goodbye, Charlie Brown?
- It's an Adventure, Charlie Brown
- What Have We Learned, Charlie Brown?
- It's Flashbeagle, Charlie Brown
- Snoopy's Getting Married, Charlie Brown
- You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown
- Happy New Year, Charlie Brown
- Snoopy: The Musical
- It's the Girl in the Red Truck, Charlie Brown
- Why, Charlie Brown, Why?
- Snoopy's Reunion
- It’s Spring Training, Charlie Brown
- It's Christmastime Again, Charlie Brown
- You're in the Super Bowl, Charlie Brown
- It Was My Best Birthday Ever, Charlie Brown!
- It's the Piped Piper, Charlie Brown
- A Charlie Brown Valentine
- Charlie Brown's Christmas Tales
- Lucy Must Be Traded, Charlie Brown
- I Want a Dog for Christmas, Charlie Brown
- He's a Bully, Charlie Brown
- Happiness Is a Warm Blanket, Charlie Brown
- Snoopy Presents: For Auld Lang Syne
- Snoopy Presents: It's the Small Things, Charlie Brown
- Snoopy Presents: To Mom (and Dad), With Love
- Snoopy Presents: Lucy's School
- Snoopy Presents: One-of-a-Kind Marcie
- Snoopy Presents: Welcome Home Franklin
- Snoopy Presents: A Summer Musical
- Pictures at an Exhibition (1966)
- Pigtail Rag
- Pikmin Short Movies
- Pixar Shorts
- 22 vs. Earth
- The Adventures of André & Wally B.
- Auntie Edna
- Bao
- Boundin'
- Burrow
- Carl's Date
- Cars Toons
- Ciao Alberto
- For the Birds
- Geri's Game
- Jack-Jack Attack
- Kitbull
- Knick Knack
- Lamp Life
- Lava
- Lifted
- Lou (2017)
- La Luna
- Luxo Jr.
- Mike's New Car
- Mr. Incredible and Pals
- One-Man Band
- Out (2020)
- Partly Cloudy
- Party Central
- Piper
- Presto (2008)
- Purl
- Red's Dream
- Riley's First Date?
- Sanjay's Super Team
- Tin Toy
- Toy Story of Terror
- Toy Story That Time Forgot
- Toy Story Toons
- Toy Story Treats
- Your Friend the Rat
- Plasticine Crow
- Poet Anderson: The Dream Walker
- Prehistoric Beast
- Pretty Kitty
- Propaganda Message
- Puppetoons
- Pythagasaurus
- Quest
- Rabbit and Deer
- Rabbit Habit
- Ranma ½: The third movie, Team Ranma vs. The Legendary Phoenix, is about a half hour long, and in the US it was packaged as a set with OAVs, even changing the opening and closing sequences.
- Red Ash: Gearworld
- The Red Book
- Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer (1948)
- Robo-san and Wan-chan
- Robot Rumpus
- Roger Rabbit Shorts
- Ruby Rocket, Private Detective
- Runaway
- Sakura Wars: The Movie: Typically shown as a triple feature alongside Di Gi Charat and The Slayers Premium.
- The Sand Castle
- The Sandman (1991)
- Santa's Christmas Crash
- Santa vs. the Snowman
- Say Hi to Pencil!: This Vietnamese short film runs for almost five minutes. It was later made into a TV show.
- Scratch and Crow
- Screen Play
- Sea Monsters: A Prehistoric Adventure
- Second Class Mail
- Shelter (2016)
- Sh-h-h-h-h-h
- Shiawasette Naani
- A Short Vision
- The Slayers Premium: Between 30 minutes and 40 minutes (depending on the cut). It was shown as a triple feature alongside the Di Gi Charat movie and Sakura Wars: The Movie.
- Smile HD
- The Smurfs
- The Snowman: Adapted to a 26-minute animated film.
- Soreike! Anpanman: The theatrical features are frequently shown together with a 20-minute-long short film.
- Sound of Sunshine - Sound of Rain
- Star Wars: Squadrons - Hunted
- Stanley and Stella in: Breaking the Ice
- "Stitch Meets High School Musical": An under three-minute anime short broadcast on TV and included as a DVD bonus feature on a deluxe edition of High School Musical 2.
- A Story
- Sundae in New York
- Superman Theatrical Cartoons
- Suur Toll
- Tales of Alethrion
- Tamagotchi:
- Tamagotchi Honto no Hanashi (1997): About nine minutes long; was screened with a Cutie Honey Flash film at a Toei Summer Anime Fair.
- Eiga Tamagotchi: Himitsu no Otodoke Dai Sakusen! (2017): About 10 minutes in length and was screened with the Himitsu no Cocotama movie.
- Tangled Ever After
- Tango
- Technological Threat
- The Tender Tale of Cinderella Penguin
- Tex Avery MGM Cartoons
- The Three Robbers (1972)
- Tom and Jerry
- Train Trouble
- The Travels of Priscilla the Proton
- Trolls:
- Tsubasa -RESERVoir CHRoNiCLE-: The movie lasted barely over 30 minutes, and was originally shown with a feature-length film, the ×××HOLiC movie.
- Tup Tup
- The Twins (2022)
- The Vanished World of Gloves
- Velma Meets the Original Velma
- Verwitterte Melodie
- Vincent by Tim Burton
- Voices of a Distant Star
- Voyage to Next
- Vykrutasy
- Wallace & Gromit:
- War Is Over!
- Wasurenagumo
- Wat's Pig
- Welcome to Hellnote
- The Werepig
- What on Earth!
- The Wingfeather Saga
- World of Tomorrow
- Your Face
- Yu-Gi-Oh!: The first film, produced by Toei following "Season 0", clocks in at about half an hour.
- YuYu Hakusho: One short film that resembled a TV episode in length, but had a standalone movie-style plot. In America, this film is published as a double feature, with Ninku.
- 4: Clean Island
- 5 Men and a Limo
- 17 Seconds (2010)note
- Aaron
- L'Accordeur
- Accordion Player
- The Adventures of Nicholas the Super Trainnote
- Aftermath (1994)
- After the Ball (1897)
- The Albino Code
- A Lien (2024)
- Alien 40th Anniversary Shorts, 6 films produced for the 40th Anniversary of Alien
- Alive In Joburg
- Alligator Pie
- All the Troubles of the World: Runtime is under 23 minutes.
- Always Crashing in the Same Car
- Annabelle Butterfly Dance
- Antopia
- Aquaman: The Cast of the Angler, a 20-minute 1984 Aquaman Fan Film
- Aquatic Wizards
- Aquaphobe
- Fatty Arbuckle:
- Assassin's Creed: Lineage
- August in the City
- The Bag Witch Project, a parody of The Blair Witch Project
- Ball Grill Police
- The Barbershop
- The Battle of Midway
- The Beaning
- Being Homer Simpson
- Being Human (2023)
- Better than You
- Betty Tells Her Story
- The Bewitched Inn
- Big Breaks
- Blacksmith Scene
- Blade Runner Shorts
- Blood Over Waternote
- The Bloody Olive
- Body Swap Workout
- Born in the Maelstrom
- The Box (2018)
- Boxed In
- Boxing Cats
- Broomshakalaka
- Brotherhood (2018)
- Bunky Blum and the Talking Train
- Call Casting
- Camp Shakespeare
- The Candy Shop (2010)
- Cargo (2013)
- Carved (2018)
- A Case of Spring Fever
- Castro Street
- Catching Trouble
- The Centrifuge Brain Project
- Century 21 Calling
- A Chairy Tale
- Charlie Chaplin:
- Cheating
- Un Chien Andalou
- The Child and the Saw
- Children in the Nursery
- Chucky's Vacation Slides
- Cirque du Soleil: Journey of Man, a 2000 IMAX 3D short (39 minutes).
- Class (2021)
- Connie
- Contact (1992) (30 minutes)
- The Country Doctor
- The Crown of Bogg (30 minutes)
- Crude Set Drama
- The Crush (2010)
- A Curious Conjunction of Coincidences
- Curse Of The Cat Lovers Grave
- Cynara: Poetry in Motion
- A Date with Your Family
- Day of the Kaiju
- The Days of Our Years
- Deadpool: No Good Deed
- Dear Diary (1996), a TV Sitcom Pilot that nobody had picked up (38 minutes). Won the 1996 Oscar for best short film.
- Design for Dreaming
- De Tierra
- Dickson Greeting
- Dirty Laundry
- The Discarded
- Disciples of the Crow
- Don't Be a Sucker
- Don't Talk
- Doodlebug
- Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde: The Game - The Movie
- The Duck
- Dust
- Earn Twenty K Every Month By Being Your Own Boss
- East of Kensington
- Election Night (1998) - won the 1998 Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film
- Elevated
- Erin's Guide to Kissing Girls
- Evan
- The Execution of Mary Stuart
- The Facts in the Case of Mister Hollow
- The Famous Box Trick
- Far Cry 5: Inside Eden's Gate
- Farm Sluts
- Fauve
- The Fighting Generation
- Final Deployment 4: Queen Battle Walkthrough
- Finley
- The Flying Man
- Footpads
- Forbidden Passage
- The Four Troublesome Heads
- Frankenstein (1910)
- The Frolic
- Fry Day
- Gandhi at the Bat
- The German
- The Gillymuck
- God of Love
- Godzilla vs. Hedorah (2021)
- Gold Standard
- Gotcha
- The Grean Teem
- Great Choice
- The Great Train Robbery (1903)
- A Gun for George
- A Gun in His Hand
- Hardware Wars
- The Hatchling
- Haunted Horrifying Sounds From Beyond The Grave
- High and Tight
- Hired!
- Hiss and Yell
- Hit It
- Hitmen for Hire
- The House I Live In
- The House Is Black
- The Hug
- I Am Easy to Find
- I Am Joaquin
- I'm Here (2010)
- Incest! The Musical
- Inseparable
- Interception
- Jasper Morello
- Johanne Sacreblu
- John Duffy's Brother
- Judge Minty
- Judy (2014)
- Jurassic World: Battle at Big Rock
- Just Saying
- Kamen Rider G
- Kalley's Last Review
- Buster Keaton:
- The Kid And The Camera
- The Kiss
- Kung Fury
- La Cabina
- Last Clear Chance
- Late Bloomer
- Laurel and Hardy:
- The Letter Room
- The Life and Death of 9413: a Hollywood Extra
- Lights, Camera, Action! Moviemaking Mania
- Lippy
- The Little Rascals series, 220 short films, 1922-1944
- Little Tug's Big Adventure
- Live Forever As You Are Now with Alan Resnick
- The Lobo Paramilitary Christmas Special
- Long Shot (2017)
- Los Bandoleros
- Love/Hate (2009)
- The Luckiest Guy in the World
- Luis Martinetti, Contortionist
- The Lunch Date
- The Making Of
- Manhatta
- Marvel One-Shots
- May I Please Enter?
- McKinley at Home, Canton, Ohio
- The Mechanical Butcher
- Megan
- Men Boxing
- Meshes of the Afternoon
- The Messenger (2017)
- Michael Jackson's Ghosts
- The Midnight Coterie Of Sinister Intruders
- The Miller and the Sweep
- The Mirror of Amun-Ra
- Modesta
- Monsters Crash the Pajama Party
- Mood Boobs
- Mr. B Natural
- Munchausen (2013)
- My Name Is Oona
- My Sister And The Prince
- Neighbours (1952)
- The Neighbors' Window
- Newark Athlete
- New Pillow Fight
- Nightfall
- Nights Noontime
- The Norah Zone
- Oats Studios
- An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge
- Old Man Drinking a Glass of Beer
- Once Upon a Honeymoon
- One Got Fat
- One on One (2012)
- "On the Lot" was a short-lived filmmaker talent competition where competitors made shorts each week. They include Die Hardly Working
, Worldly Possession
, and Sweet
.
- On the Roofs
- The Outsider (1951)
- Pete Smith Specialties
- Pig Heart
- Pirates of the Caribbean: Tales of the Code: Wedlocked
- Pitch (2009)
- PMO
- Poison (2023)
- Possibly in Michigan
- Post No Bills (1896)
- Power/Rangers (Bootleg Universe)
- Precious Images
- The Present
- Princess Nicotine
- Progress Island U.S.A.
- Project S.E.R.A.
- Pruning
- Pumzi
- The Rat Catcher
- A Recipe for Seduction
- Recorded Live
- The Red Balloon — won an Oscar for Original Screenplay, the only short to ever win any of the big Oscars (Picture, Director, Actor, Actress, Original/Adapted Screenplay)
- Red Nightmare
- Requiem (2021)
- The Rizzle
- Robbery (1897)
- Rock, Paper, Scissors (2024)
- Rolling Bomber Special
- Roundhay Garden Scene - at 2.11 seconds, this is probably the shortest entry in this list.
- Revolution (1967)
- RiffTrax Shorts
- Roller Samurai Vampire Slayers
- Rose Hobart
- Schwarzfahrer
- Scorpio Rising
- A Sense of History
- Should Wives Work?
- Sight Unseen (2018)
- The Silent Alarm
- The Silent Child
- Skin (2018 Short)
- Snix
- Snow Fight (1897)
- Snow Steam Iron
- A Soldier's Courtship (1896)
- Sons of Liberty
- So You Think You're Not Guilty
- So You Want to Be a Detective
- So You Want to Be in Pictures
- So You Want to Be on the Radio
- Spell My Name with an S: Runtime is under 9 minutes.
- Splatter
- Star in the Night
- Sticky My Fingers...Fleet My Feet
- Stolz der Nation
- The Strange Thing About the Johnsons
- Strange Way of Life
- Stuck Home Syndrome
- A Study In Reds
- Stutterer
- Sunspring
- Super Filete: En Busca de la Beca
- Suzanne, Suzanne
- The Swan (2023)
- Tears of Steel (partially animation)
- The Temptation of Saint Anthony (1898)
- Terminus
- They/Them (2020)
- This House Has People in It, excluding supplementary content.
- The Three Stooges
- Too Many Cooks
- Trafic (2004)
- The Tramp and the Dog
- Tricky & The Cereal Killers
- Two A.M.; or, the Husband's Return
- Two Bellmen
- Unedited Footage of a Bear
- Urn
- Validation (2007)
- The Vanishing Lady
- Vertical Cinema
- We All Die Alone
- West Bank Story — won the 2006 Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film
- What About Juvenile Delinquency?
- What Did Jack Do?
- Why Man Creates — mixture of live-action and animated content.
- The Wild Life
- The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar
- "X" Marks the Spot
- The X-Rays
- Young Man's Fancy
- 9: This was a short before it was a feature.
- Battle for Terra: This was a short before it was a feature.
- Cargo (2013): An Australian post-apocalyptic short film that was remade into a 2017 feature film released by Netflix starring Martin Freeman.
- Cashback: 2004 short extended into 2006 feature.
- Code 8: 2016 short extended into 2019 feature.
- District 9: As Alive in Johannesburg
- Frankenweenie: A live-action short from 1984 before being remade as a 2012 stop-motion animated feature.
- Heck: 2020 short expanded into Skinamarink.
- Johnny Lingo: 1969 short expanded into a 2003 feature.
- Kids
- Laura Hasn't Slept: 2020 short turned into Smile (2022).
- Night Swim: 2014 short film by Bryce McGuire and Rod Blackhurst that was turned into a feature film due for release in January 2024, with McGuire writing and directing again
- Obvious Child: The 2014 feature film was expanded from a 2009 short which also had Jenny Slate in the lead.
- Pixels: 2010 live-action/CG short film that was turned into a 2015 feature film by Adam Sandler.
- Saw: This series began as a short film, with the Reverse Bear Trap that was later incorporated into the first Saw I feature.
- Thunder Road: A 2016 short by Jim Cummings that he would turn into a feature two years later.
- Electronic Labyrinth: THX 1138 4EB: 1967 George Lucas student film, later adapted into feature THX 1138
- Within the Woods: 1978 Sam Raimi short film that would later be expanded into the first Evil Dead movie.
- The Wizard of Speed and Time: Both produced/directed/animated by and staring Mike Jittlov, but separated by nearly a decade.
