As in the event that they’d go away “Clueless” off the listing.
Cher Horowitz followers, rejoice: Amy Heckerling’s 1995 teen comedy is one in all 25 traditional motion pictures chosen this 12 months by the Library of Congress for its National Film Registry.
And if “Clueless” wasn’t your jam — no matter! — perhaps this can ship you deep into your desires: Christopher Nolan’s mind-bending “Inception” is within the combine. Other movies chosen for preservation embody “The Karate Kid,” “Glory,” “Philadelphia,” “Before Sunrise,” “The Incredibles” and “Frida.” There are 4 documentaries, together with “Brooklyn Bridge” by Ken Burns. From previous Hollywood, there’s the 1954 musical “White Christmas,” and the 1956 “High Society,” Grace Kelly’s final film earlier than marrying into royalty.
Since 1988, the Library of Congress has chosen 25 motion pictures annually for preservation as a result of their “cultural, historic or aesthetic importance.” The movies have to be a minimum of 10 years previous.
The oldest of the 2025 picks dates from 1896, filmmaker William Selig’s “The Tramp and the Dog.” The latest of the group is from 2014: Wes Anderson’s “The Grand Budapest Hotel,” which, the registry famous, concerned “meticulous historical research at the Library of Congress to create visually striking scenery.”
Turner Classic Movies will host a TV particular March 19 to display a number of the movies.
“The Tramp and the Dog” (1896): Once deemed misplaced, however found in 2021 on the National Library of Norway, Selig’s silent movie tells the story of a tramp who tries to steal a pie from a yard windowsill — and is foiled by a canine. The registry notes it is an early instance of “pants humor” — “where a character loses (or almost loses) its pants during an altercation.”
“The Maid of McMillan” (1916): This 15-minute silent movie, a “whimsical silent romance” shot by college students at a drama membership at Washington University in St. Louis, tells the story of the observe group captain, Jack, who’s in love with Myrtle, “a pretty coed,” in response to the college’s library. It is understood, the registry says, as the primary pupil movie on report.
“Ten Nights in a Barroom” (1926): A silent movie that includes an all-Black solid, it’s based mostly on a stage melodrama tailored from “Ten Nights in a Bar-room and What I Saw There,” an 1854 “temperance novel” written to discourage readers from ingesting alcohol.
“High Society” (1956): In what the registry calls “the last great musical of the Golden Age of Hollywood,” Bing Crosby appeared with Frank Sinatra and Grace Kelly, in her final film earlier than retiring and marrying Prince Rainier of Monaco. Louis Armstrong appeared along with his band. Kelly wore her Cartier engagement ring throughout filming, the registry notes.
“Brooklyn Bridge” (1981): Ken Burns’ first documentary broadcast on PBS, wherein the filmmaker recounted the constructing of the long-lasting landmark. “More than just a filmmaker, Burns has become a trusted public historian,” the registry says.
“The Big Chill” (1983): Lawrence Kasdan’s era-defining story of a gaggle of mates reuniting after a suicide options Glenn Close, William Hurt, JoBeth Williams, Kevin Kline, Jeff Goldblum and Meg Tilly in an ensemble that “portrays American stereotypes of the time — the yuppie, the drug dealer, the TV star — and deftly humanizes them.”
“The Karate Kid (1984): The first film in the franchise, starring Ralph Macchio and Pat Morita, is “as American as they come,” the registry says — “a hero’s journey, a sports movie and a teen movie — a feel-good movie, but not without grit.”
“Glory” (1989): Denzel Washington gained an Oscar as Private Trip on this story of the 54th Regiment, a unit of Black troopers who fought within the Civil War. The solid additionally included Morgan Freeman, Matthew Broderick, Cary Elwes and Andre Braugher.
“Philadelphia” (1993): Tom Hanks starred — and gained an Oscar — in one of many first massive studio motion pictures to confront the HIV/AIDS disaster. The movie can be identified for Bruce Springsteen’s Oscar-winning tune, “The Streets of Philadelphia.”
“Before Sunrise” (1995): The first movie of Richard Linklater’s deeply romantic “Before” trilogy, starring Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy. The registry notes Linklater’s “innovative use of time as a defining and recurring cinematic tool.”
“Clueless” (1995): Heckerling’s teen comedy, starring Alicia Silverstone, was a unfastened adaptation of Jane Austen’s “Emma” and perpetually enshrined the phrase “As if!” into common tradition. The registry hails “its peak-1990s colorful, high-energy, soundtrack-focused on-screen dynamism.”
“The Wrecking Crew” (2008): Danny Tedesco’s documentary — to not be confused with the 2026 buddy cop film of the identical title — appears to be like at a gaggle of Los Angeles studio musicians who performed on hit songs of the ‘60s and ’70s like “California Dreamin’” and “The Beat Goes On.”
“Inception” (2010): In a film that asks whether or not it is attainable to affect an individual’s ideas by manipulating their desires, Nolan “once again challenges audiences with multiple interconnected narrative layers while delivering thrilling action sequences and stunning visual effects.”
“The Tramp and the Dog” (1896)
“The Oath of the Sword” (1914)
“The Maid of McMillan” (1916)
“The Lady” (1925)
“Sparrows” (1926)
“Ten Nights in a Barroom” (1926)
“White Christmas” (1954)
“High Society” (1956)
“Brooklyn Bridge” (1981)
“Say Amen, Somebody” (1982)
“The Thing” (1982)
“The Big Chill” (1983)
“The Karate Kid” (1984)
“Glory” (1989)
“Philadelphia” (1993)
“Before Sunrise” (1995)
“Clueless” (1995)
“The Truman Show” (1998)
“Frida” (2002)
“The Hours” (2002)
“The Incredibles” (2004)
“The Wrecking Crew” (2008)
“Inception” (2010)
“The Loving Story” (2011)
“The Grand Budapest Hotel” (2014)
© Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This materials is probably not printed, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed with out permission.

