Florinaldo wrote:
Don't we sometimes have a certain fetishistic prejudice in favour of more footage, as if longer is always better? Wasn't the shorter edit of La Ronde the final preferred version of Max's? And isn't Marcel just being mindful of the author's wishes?
I certainly wouldn't say "longer is always better". I do say "longer is always interesting" if it's a worthwhile film.
Few people would argue that the original cut of
The Big Sleep is better with the extra reel of plot explanation etc. but I should think every serious admirer of the film welcomes the opportunity to see that version on DVD and compare it with the released edit. If anything it increases our appreciation of the latter (and not only because of the added footage).
If Ophuls cut
La Ronde because it went down badly with preview audiences (according to the DVD review on this site, it "was met with boo") he was at least partly responding to the wishes of others nearly 60 years ago. Maybe the original cut would get a better reaction today and he'd feel differently. Maybe he wouldn't. But for many people one of the main reasons to buy DVDs - especially on a label like Criterion - is to gain a fuller understanding of how a particular film was created. Often this can only be assisted through commentaries and interviews that can be tenuous in the extreme. A film of this vintage seldom survives in any kind of preview version, and to deny access to it - alongside the final one - seems to me very misguided.
As for Marcel being "mindful of the author's wishes," it's surely just as possible that Max wouldn't have approved of his film having the option of being viewed with a commentary replacing the original soundtrack. I think it highly unlikely he'd have wished
Madame de... to be released with an interview from the source author opining that he'd made a "boring" film! Perhaps he'd only ever have wanted his films to be seen in 35mm theatrical projection. But we live in a different world now, and I think all the available materials should be allowed entry to that world, so that all of us (not just a privileged few scholars) can - as you say - judge for ourselves.