
So there’s this website called WikiFlix and I can’t believe that most people don’t know about it.
It’s basically the Netflix for old movies, except for the fact that everything is free and you don’t even need an account. Nobody is going to pester you with annoying emails about the next price increase. This streaming platform features public domain films, which are movies that are old enough that their copyrights have already expired. Think “It’s a Wonderful Life,” the original “Nosferatu,” and silent films from the 1920s. That kind of stuff.
The site gained instant fame after Annie Rauwerda (of “Depths of Wikipedia” fame) posted about it on TikTok. She mused, “Sometimes, I really like watching things that I know nobody else is watching, because what if I discover something crazy?”
Apparently, lots of people wanted to discover something crazy as well. Now everyone’s talking about WikiFlix.
How WikiFlix Actually Works
WikiFlix grabs movies from a bunch of places such as Wikimedia Commons, the Internet Archive, YouTube, and some third-party websites. It doesn’t host the videos itself; it simply provides a sleek and modern interface to browse and watch films that are legally free to share.
A developer by the name of Magnus Manske built the first prototype in about a week. Imagine that! Streaming platforms normally take many years and billions of dollars to launch, but not WikiFlix. The idea came from another Wikipedia volunteer named Sandra Fauconnier, and the name was obviously a play on words of Netflix.
At the moment, WikiFlix hosts over 4,000 movies, ranging from silent comedies to old horror films to weird stuff from Japan and the Soviet Union. There’s something for everyone there.
People Are Really Into It
On Hacker News, a user named VikingCoder had a crazy idea: to download every film, break them into scenes, and use the footage to recreate modern blockbusters frame-by-frame. Like, remake “The Matrix” using only clips from 1930s movies. Wild idea that in all likelihood won’t happen. But that’s the kind of creative weirdness that this stuff inspires.
Lydia Pintscher, who works on Wikidata (the database powering WikiFlix), puts it more simply: the platform offers films without paywalls or subscriptions, and anyone can just search and watch.
And Rauwerda – whose TikTok started all of this – revealed an interesting factoid that stuck with me. There’s a Japanese post-apocalyptic movie starring a guy who played for both the Boston Celtics AND the Chicago Cubs. I looked it up. He’s real and his name is Chuck Connors.
That’s the stuff you’ll never find by scrolling through Netflix’s “Recommended For You” section.
Why This Matters (A Little)
Every year on January 1st, more movies enter the public domain as their copyrights expire. In the United States, most pre-1978 films become free to share after 95 years. This means that WikiFlix’s library just keeps growing without any licensing deals or negotiations.
It’s also a reminder that not everything online needs a subscription model. WikiFlix works because unpaid volunteers built it, the archives already had the content, and nobody is trying to make money off it. Simple as that.
Will WikiFlix Replace Netflix?
Look, I’m not going to pretend that WikiFlix will replace your streaming subscriptions. You’re not watching new Marvel shows here.
But here’s what bothers me about modern streaming: it’s kinda boring. The algorithms show you stuff that’s similar to what you already watched. Let’s be honest, when was the last time Netflix actually surprised you?
WikiFlix is the exact opposite of Netflix. It’s messy, weird and full of stuff that you’ve never heard of. You might click on a random 1927 German film and hate it. Or you might find something genuinely great that nobody talks about anymore.
That’s what watching movies used to be like before the algorithms took over. You’d wander into a video store, pick a CD with a cool cover, and take a chance on it. WikiFlix brings back that nostalgia.
Is it going to change your life? Probably not. But it’s free, it’s legal, and it’s more interesting than scrolling through the same 50 titles on Netflix for 20 minutes before giving up and rewatching “Stranger Things.”
Just go try it. You don’t even need to make an account.
WikiFlix is at wikiflix.toolforge.org.
