Recent Film Restorations

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beamish14
Joined: Fri May 18, 2018 7:07 pm

Re: Recent Film Restorations

#1976 Post by beamish14 »

Elmer Gantry is a very nice surprise. I keep hoping that Sony will restore Lord Jim
beamish14
Joined: Fri May 18, 2018 7:07 pm

Re: Recent Film Restorations

#1977 Post by beamish14 »

Stefan Andersson
Joined: Thu Nov 15, 2007 5:02 am

Re: Recent Film Restorations

#1978 Post by Stefan Andersson »

Manolescu (Tourjansky, 1929) w/Ivan Mosjoukine, Brigitte Helm; a Murnau Stiftung restoration begun in 2018:
https://www.giornatedelcinemamuto.it/an ... index.html
Stefan Andersson
Joined: Thu Nov 15, 2007 5:02 am

Re: Recent Film Restorations

#1979 Post by Stefan Andersson »

Anémic Cinéma:
https://ilcinemaritrovato.it/en/film/__trashed-4/

Rien que les heures:
https://ilcinemaritrovato.it/en/film/__trashed-5/

Time to Love, Erksan:
https://ilcinemaritrovato.it/en/film/sevmek-zamani/

The Long Memory, Hamer:
https://ilcinemaritrovato.it/en/film/the-long-memory/

Lemonade Joe:
https://ilcinemaritrovato.it/en/film/li ... ska-opera/

A Spring for the Thirsty, Illjenko:
https://ilcinemaritrovato.it/en/film/kr ... sprahlych/

Sans titre, Carax, is listed on the Recovered & Restored main page but not found in the catalogue or on site.
Stefan Andersson
Joined: Thu Nov 15, 2007 5:02 am

Re: Recent Film Restorations

#1980 Post by Stefan Andersson »

City of Hope, Sayles, 4K restoration:
https://tiff.net/events/city-of-hope-with-john-sayles
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qw0aszx
Joined: Thu Jul 13, 2017 5:02 pm

Re: Recent Film Restorations

#1981 Post by qw0aszx »

PEKING OPERA BLUES was restored again in 4K by Shanghai Film Festival, Ritrovata Asia handled the scanning and restoration from original camera negative. A Dolby Atmos remix was also produced. Ritrovato this year will also screen this restored version rather than the one done by Shout: https://ilcinemaritrovato.it/en/eventi/do-ma-daan/

Curious how this would turn out since all Shout restorations used a much inferior scanner to do the scanning.
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bad future
Joined: Sat Apr 14, 2018 10:16 pm

Re: Recent Film Restorations

#1982 Post by bad future »

5 years ago my blu-ray wishlist was topped by Peking Opera Blues and Typhoon Club, and both seemed like long shots for HD, let alone 4k. Now I'm looking at a not so distant potential future where I've bought both on UHD more than once... crazy how quickly these things can shift!
Stefan Andersson
Joined: Thu Nov 15, 2007 5:02 am

Re: Recent Film Restorations

#1983 Post by Stefan Andersson »

Sans titre, Carax, 2025 restoration:
https://www.cinematheque.fr/film/63219.html
Stefan Andersson
Joined: Thu Nov 15, 2007 5:02 am

Re: Recent Film Restorations

#1984 Post by Stefan Andersson »

Upcoming French restorations:
Marianne de ma jeunesse, Duvivier
Conte de la folie ordinaire, Ferreri
Prix de la beauté, Genina, silent version
El Dorado, L´Herbier
L´homme du large, L´Herbier
L´Epervier, L´Herbier
Les malheurs de Sophie, Jacqueline Audry
Immortel (Ad Vitam), Bilal
Les tribulations d´un Chinois en Chine, de Broca
Mina Tannenbaum, Dugowson
https://www.cnc.fr/professionnels/aides ... ine_190901
Stefan Andersson
Joined: Thu Nov 15, 2007 5:02 am

Re: Recent Film Restorations

#1985 Post by Stefan Andersson »

Some restored Hungarian films (format and year of restoration not mentioned):

Jutalomutazás, coloured Hungarian feature film, 1975, director, screenwriter: István Dárday, Györgyi Szalai
https://nfi.hu/en/core-films-1/films-3/ ... itain.html

Ismeri a szandi mandit?, coloured Hungarian feature film, 1969, director: Lívia Gyarmathy
https://nfi.hu/en/core-films-1/films-3/ ... onday.html

Cold Days/Hideg napok, black and white Hungarian feature film, 1966, director: András Kovács
https://nfi.hu/en/core-films-1/films-3/ ... ays-2.html

...hogy szaladnak a fák!, black and white Hungarian feature film, 1966, director: Pál Zolnay
https://nfi.hu/en/core-films-1/films-3/ ... -sack.html

20 Hours/Húsz óra, black and white Hungarian feature film, 1965, director: Zoltán Fábri
https://nfi.hu/en/core-films-1/films-3/ ... hours.html

Ház a sziklák alatt, black and white Hungarian feature film, 1958, director: Károly Makk
https://nfi.hu/en/core-films-1/films-3/ ... cks-3.html

Professor Hannibal/Hannibál tanár úr, black and white Hungarian feature film, 1956, director: Zoltán Fábri
https://nfi.hu/en/core-films-1/films-3/ ... bal-2.html

fekete-fehér, black and white Hungarian feature film, 1956 (released 1986), director: Zoltán Várkonyi
https://nfi.hu/en/core-films-1/films-3/ ... truth.html

Full list:
https://nfi.hu/en/core-films-1/core-fil ... otMenu=744
Stefan Andersson
Joined: Thu Nov 15, 2007 5:02 am

Re: Recent Film Restorations

#1986 Post by Stefan Andersson »

Virgina (Virdžina, 1991), Srđan Karanović, 2K restoration from a 35mm internegative, audio from the original 35mm mono sound negative:
https://thefilmstage.com/exclusive-alte ... l-release/

In the Soup, 4K
https://www.watershed.co.uk/whatson/140 ... n-the-soup

Trees Lounge, 4K
https://www.watershed.co.uk/whatson/140 ... ees-lounge

The Party – Nature Morte, w/ Tilda Swinton, 2K:
https://www.watershed.co.uk/whatson/140 ... ture-morte

Mirage (Assarab), Ahmed Bouanani, 4K
https://www.watershed.co.uk/whatson/140 ... ge-assarab

The Widow (Mimangin), Park Nam-ok, 1955, South Korea
https://www.watershed.co.uk/whatson/140 ... w-mimangin

La Paga, Ciro Durán, 1962, Colombia, Venezuela, 4K
https://www.watershed.co.uk/whatson/14046/la-paga
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jsteffe
Joined: Sat Mar 31, 2007 1:00 pm
Location: Atlanta, GA

Re: Recent Film Restorations

#1987 Post by jsteffe »

Regarding A Well for the Thirsty/A Spring for the Thirsty at Ritrovato: this is HUGE news, bigger than it appears on the surface. The restoration credits on the website indicate that it was restored from the camera negative, which makes it an outlier compared to many recently restored Ukrainian films--including Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors. My guess is that because the film was banned in the 1960s and not distributed, the negative remained in Ukraine and was not sent to Gosfilmofond in Moscow. (Maybe there is another reason why it is in Ukraine now.) In any case, we should be able to see the film in outstanding quality.

Although the film was banned, studio and cultural figures in Ukraine did see it when it was under discussion at the studio's Artistic Council, including Sergei Parajanov. I feel certain that it inspired Parajanov to further push the boundaries in his own poetic cinema, especially the sound editing in The Color of Pomegranates. I personally don't think that Illienko ever made a better film--not even The Eve of Ivan Kupalo or White Bird with Black Markings.

To this day I remember the phenomenal visual impact that it had when I saw an unsubtitled print screened in Las Vegas. Yuri Illienko was there with his friend Virko Baley on his way to screen it at the San Francisco Film Festival. Baley was a music professor at UNLV and the director of the Nevada Symphony Orchestra. At the time working with Illienko on the film Swan Lake: The Zone, for which he composed the score and served as a producer. At any rate, people who manage to see it at the festival should be in for a major treat!
jmj713
Joined: Sun Apr 24, 2005 2:47 am

Re: Recent Film Restorations

#1988 Post by jmj713 »

Does anyone know who if anyone owns the rights to Makhmalbaf Family films? I think some of Mohsen's films may be available in HD, but I haven't seen any signs of restorations of his daughter Samira's The Apple (1998), his wife Marzieh's The Day I Became a Woman (2000), and his younger daughter Hana's Buddha Collapsed Out of Shame (2007). A comprehensive restoration effort and boxed set would be amazing to have.
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spectre
Joined: Thu Dec 29, 2011 8:52 am

Re: Recent Film Restorations

#1989 Post by spectre »

Seconded, particularly re: The Day I Became a Woman (which at least exists on DVD via Artificial Eye and is still floating around on eBay and elsewhere)! Of equal urgency, his masterpiece A Moment of Innocence is OOP and only available to buy at triple-figure prices even on (ancient, I think non-anamorphic) DVD. Salaam Cinema – not to be confused with the execrable Once Upon a Time, Cinema – is another amazing Makhmalbaf film that desperately needs a release.

You can at least get his "poetic trilogy" (the equally masterful Gabbeh, as well as The Silence and The Gardener which I haven't seen even though I own the set) from Arrow. But fingers crossed that something happens with the rest of these films soon!
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TechnicolorAcid
Joined: Wed Oct 11, 2023 11:43 pm

Re: Recent Film Restorations

#1990 Post by TechnicolorAcid »

spectre wrote: Tue Jun 16, 2026 2:10 am Seconded, particularly re: The Day I Became a Woman (which at least exists on DVD via Artificial Eye and is still floating around on eBay and elsewhere)! Of equal urgency, his masterpiece A Moment of Innocence is OOP and only available to buy at triple-figure prices even on (ancient, I think non-anamorphic) DVD. Salaam Cinema – not to be confused with the execrable Once Upon a Time, Cinema – is another amazing Makhmalbaf film that desperately needs a release.
‘A Moment of Innocence’ is coming from Second Run sometime soon so that’s one Makhmalbaf film off your list. Curious to know why you think ‘Once Upon a Time, Cinema’ is execrable since I thought that was one of his most beloved films
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spectre
Joined: Thu Dec 29, 2011 8:52 am

Re: Recent Film Restorations

#1991 Post by spectre »

That's incredible news, re: A Moment of Innocence – I hadn't heard anything about this until now! Can't wait.

As for Once Upon a Time, Cinema, which I saw on the big screen last year with a mostly Persian audience (and there was at least something interesting in being able to observe what aspects of the film people were responding to), it's a really odd film that functions for the most part as a (very lax) pastiche of silent film and ends with a self-important "greatest-hits" sequence of Iranian cinema. The worst thing is that it's often trying to be funny but just … isn't, for the most part.

Here's the review I wrote on Letterboxd after seeing it:
Had high expectations based on the three wonderful Makhmalbaf films I saw at Cinémathèque last year; but this is, sadly, an ill-conceived “love letter to cinema” that’s every bit as dull and demoralising as Agnès Varda’s One Hundred and One Nights. It’s not hard to imagine a concept like this being employed at least tolerably – the premise certainly seemed appealing on paper – but perhaps there’s something in the enterprise of paying overt homage to one’s own artform in this way that is destined for solipsism.

That’s not to say cinema has to deny itself. Erice’s Close Your Eyes is a transcendent masterpiece that’s in part “about” cinema; this film and Varda’s are about cinema via references to other people’s films. Maybe there’s a lot more to it than that, but I suspect that’s the starting point.
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Captain Paranoia
Joined: Thu Dec 28, 2023 12:33 am

Re: Recent Film Restorations

#1992 Post by Captain Paranoia »

Some of Makhmalbaf's films are available on Vimeo, last I checked.

I recall A Moment of Innocence was anamorphic on DVD, but it was a improper PAL transfer (there was also a Japanese release (that also goes for astronomical prices) that I have no idea on the quality of the transfer).

I rented Salaam Cinema and A Moment of Innocence (there was no purchase option) and both looked great. I'm certain Second Run will utilize the transfer for their forthcoming release of the latter (one of my most anticipated upcoming releases, up there with the Carax films and Eureka).
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