Lost Films
- myrnaloyisdope
- Joined: Mon Jan 07, 2008 11:41 pm
- Contact:
-
lady wakasa
- Joined: Fri Apr 28, 2006 2:26 am
- Location: Over Yonder
- Contact:
- MichaelB
- Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2006 10:20 pm
- Location: Worthing
- Contact:
Poland's pre-1939 film heritage...
...well, you can fill in the blank: they're having to!
In many ways, 1945 was Year Zero for Polish cinema: the industry more or less shut down when the Nazis and Soviets pincered the country in September 1939, and by the time the smoke cleared a colossal proportion of the pre-1939 output had been destroyed along with much of Warsaw. Marek Haltof's history of Polish cinema keeps apologising for having to guess what many of these films were like, but in many cases all that survives are reviews and other verbal accounts.
This year, the main Polish national film archive is marking the centenary of Polish cinema by writing to every international archive it can think of in search of any pre-1945 Polish films that might have been spirited abroad prior to the destruction and which are currently sitting unloved and neglected on their shelves. To say I wish them well is a major understatement.
...well, you can fill in the blank: they're having to!
In many ways, 1945 was Year Zero for Polish cinema: the industry more or less shut down when the Nazis and Soviets pincered the country in September 1939, and by the time the smoke cleared a colossal proportion of the pre-1939 output had been destroyed along with much of Warsaw. Marek Haltof's history of Polish cinema keeps apologising for having to guess what many of these films were like, but in many cases all that survives are reviews and other verbal accounts.
This year, the main Polish national film archive is marking the centenary of Polish cinema by writing to every international archive it can think of in search of any pre-1945 Polish films that might have been spirited abroad prior to the destruction and which are currently sitting unloved and neglected on their shelves. To say I wish them well is a major understatement.
- Danny Burk
- Joined: Wed Oct 03, 2007 2:38 pm
- Location: South Bend, IN
- Contact:
It's a shame that Raymond Griffith isn't well known today, and it's certainly not for lack of making good films. Instead, 1) most of his films are lost; 2) the survivors are owned by Paramount, and we all know how much they love their silents; 3) his starring career ended with sound since he couldn't speak above a whisper. Luckily for him, he had a second career as a producer at Fox in the 30s.HerrSchreck wrote:A loss, to be sure. I was lucky enough to lose a bet about the "official" aspect ratio of Vampyr, and wound up having to pay off in tix (at MoMa) to see Griffith's "Hands Up", an absolutely riproaring silent comedy taking place during the civil war. If all lost bets paid off that hilariously, betting'd be a hell of a lot more fun.Danny Burk wrote:Paramount is one of the worst; they simply didn't care and let 'em rot. ... The lost include ..most of Raymond Griffith...
HANDS UP is great; interestingly, reviewers at the time panned THE GENERAL and mentioned its inferiority to the previous year's HANDS UP! It's one of the few surviving RG films; PATHS TO PARADISE is even better, although its last reel is lost. (Fortunately, reel 6 ends at a place that "could" be the ending, but it's sad to know that it actually continued for another reel.) His only other surviving starring roles are in MISS BLUEBEARD (only as a 5-reel Kodascope cutdown in 16mm), YOU'D BE SURPRISED, which I haven't seen, and TRENT'S LAST CASE, which has a bad reputation but I also haven't seen it. He pops up in supporting roles in some earlier films, including Paramount's wonderful CHANGING HUSBANDS and OPEN ALL NIGHT, and even in Tod Browning's WHITE TIGER.
- HerrSchreck
- Joined: Sun Sep 04, 2005 3:46 pm
-
Jonathan S
- Joined: Sat Jun 07, 2008 7:31 am
- Location: Somerset, England
THE NIGHT CLUB - which I like a lot - is another extant starring role for Griffith.Danny Burk wrote: His only other surviving starring roles are in MISS BLUEBEARD (only as a 5-reel Kodascope cutdown in 16mm), YOU'D BE SURPRISED, which I haven't seen, and TRENT'S LAST CASE, which has a bad reputation but I also haven't seen it. He pops up in supporting roles in some earlier films, including Paramount's wonderful CHANGING HUSBANDS and OPEN ALL NIGHT, and even in Tod Browning's WHITE TIGER.
-
Adam
- Joined: Mon Dec 10, 2007 12:29 am
- Location: Los Angeles CA
- Contact:
I still get amazed by the story of the discovery of Keaton's films by James Mason in a vault in Mason's home, which had been Keaton's home (er, huge mansion). Wouldn't much of Keaton's output been lost without that? What if Mason had just torn down the wall with the vault in it?Danny Burk wrote:Independent stars/producers tend to have a much better rate because they did their own archiving. Chaplin, Lloyd, Pickford, de Mille, Fairbanks, etc. have very high survival rates after they started to produce their own films; usually most or all of these have survived.
- Antoine Doinel
- Joined: Sat Mar 04, 2006 5:22 pm
- Location: Montreal, Quebec
- Contact:
A very interesting story on the ongoing difficulties of extracting Georgian films from Russia's archives. One wonders at what is currently sitting waiting to be discovered in those vaults.....
- Danny Burk
- Joined: Wed Oct 03, 2007 2:38 pm
- Location: South Bend, IN
- Contact:
You're right, I forgot about that one...it survives as another 5-reel Kodascope cutdown in 16mm.Jonathan S wrote:THE NIGHT CLUB - which I like a lot - is another extant starring role for Griffith.
Probably so, although I've never seen an actual list of the titles that were found. Keaton was interviewed in 1948 and commented that he didn't believe THE THREE AGES existed at that time...rather surprising given that it was only 25 years old in 1948. I believe it was rediscovered more recently than the Mason cache, i.e. 60s or 70s era.Adam wrote:I still get amazed by the story of the discovery of Keaton's films by James Mason in a vault in Mason's home, which had been Keaton's home (er, huge mansion). Wouldn't much of Keaton's output been lost without that? What if Mason had just torn down the wall with the vault in it?
- MichaelB
- Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2006 10:20 pm
- Location: Worthing
- Contact:
- HerrSchreck
- Joined: Sun Sep 04, 2005 3:46 pm
SO much of film history is recaptured and established out of thin air by these combinations of diligence and/or good luck. So many crucial (re)discoveries happened exactly along the lines of, say, David Shepard's recovery of the previously lost Traffic In Souls. He'd always had his ears to the ground for news of the imminent knock-down destruction of old commercial buildings. In this case, he if I remember correct received a tip that there were boxes of what might be metal film cans sitting down in the cellar of the abandoned bldg. He beat the wrecking ball in there are grabbed what turned out to be a treasure trove.
Incidentally, over on Silver Screen Oasis (btw when did they get so cool? David Shepard, Kevin Brownlow, Scott Eymann, Alan Rode, and others there are members.. who post) there's a thread about the London After Mid thingy, and the consensus seems to be "bullshit!"--
she also posted
Incidentally, over on Silver Screen Oasis (btw when did they get so cool? David Shepard, Kevin Brownlow, Scott Eymann, Alan Rode, and others there are members.. who post) there's a thread about the London After Mid thingy, and the consensus seems to be "bullshit!"--
an admin there named lzcutter wrote:I belong to an archivist list serve and we have been talking all morning about it.
I contacted an archivist who used to work at the Jefferson vault back in the 1980s at the time the writer says he found the lost print.
According to the archivist I contacted, there was never any nitrate film stored at the Jefferson vault nor did the MGM nitrate films go to UCLA Film and TV Archive as the writer purports.
The surviving MGM nitrate films have been stored at Eastman House since the 1970s.
If I get any more info I will keep you posted!
she also posted
Many people want to believe Sid Terror's story but posting his story on a new website and then going out of town seems a strange way to get your story out.
And to have the web-master ban legit posters for being sceptical about Terror's story is not inspiring any confidence in this claim.
- Antoine Doinel
- Joined: Sat Mar 04, 2006 5:22 pm
- Location: Montreal, Quebec
- Contact:
So until there is some further investigation/confirmation, I'll put this here, but apparently, an uncut version of A Night At The Opera has been discovered in the Hungarian Film Archives.
I have my doubts about the story as it claims the archive is concerned about the costs of restoration and aren't particularly motivated to restore the film (that would seem to be an odd position for a film archive to take). But wouldn't that responsibility/cost fall to the rights holder anyway? I guess we'll see how this unfolds.
I have my doubts about the story as it claims the archive is concerned about the costs of restoration and aren't particularly motivated to restore the film (that would seem to be an odd position for a film archive to take). But wouldn't that responsibility/cost fall to the rights holder anyway? I guess we'll see how this unfolds.
- MichaelB
- Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2006 10:20 pm
- Location: Worthing
- Contact:
It's a perfectly reasonable position - indeed, arguably the only truly sane position - if there's little chance of them recouping the cost of restoration. Film archives are expensive enough to run purely in terms of day-to-day storage (if the films are kept under suitably climate-controlled conditions), so there's rarely much spare cash floating around to take advantage of any unexpected discoveries.Antoine Doinel wrote:I have my doubts about the story as it claims the archive is concerned about the costs of restoration and aren't particularly motivated to restore the film (that would seem to be an odd position for a film archive to take).
In general, as you acknowledge, the rightsholder is expected to stump up at least some of the cost, as they'll be the ones benefiting from any subsequent reissue. For instance, I doubt the funding for the Metropolis restoration is coming from Argentina!
- Antoine Doinel
- Joined: Sat Mar 04, 2006 5:22 pm
- Location: Montreal, Quebec
- Contact:
Good point, Michael. Well, I guess my question is: Do film archives receive any kind of payment etc from the rights holders in these sorts of cases in order to hand over the prints? While, the archive in Argentina that has housed Metropolis won't be receiving any cut of DVD sales, is it unreasonable to assume they received some kind of financial payment? It just seems odd there is no movement to get this into the proper hands. In any case, I hope someone gets in touch with Warner's (if they're not on this already) to see what the full extent of the found footage is.
Last edited by Antoine Doinel on Mon Aug 04, 2008 1:12 pm, edited 1 time in total.
-
Jonathan S
- Joined: Sat Jun 07, 2008 7:31 am
- Location: Somerset, England
This report has been discussed on other forums for the past month or two. I'm inclined to believe it because if you examine Mr Tamas' actual words he claims only to have found "two additional shots, two additional sentences, and different angles of already known shots" in that first reel.Antoine Doinel wrote:So until there is some further investigation/confirmation, I'll put this here, but apparently, an uncut version of A Night At The Opera has been discovered in the Hungarian Film Archives.
He specifically states, "it still does not contain the 4 minute street singing intro." So I don't understand why Scott Marks is so excited on the page you linked to; like everyone else he really wants "a print of A Night at the Opera that doesn’t have that huge, hairy splice after the director’s credit" - in other words, the street singing intro that Mr Tamas has not found!
This is still an important find - but it's not an "uncut print", merely a print with uncut scenes. Of course, we don't even know yet what the remaining reels contain!
- MichaelB
- Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2006 10:20 pm
- Location: Worthing
- Contact:
This depends on individual circumstances, though the archive will want to ensure that it isn't left out of pocket if they've incurred any expenses, even if it's something as simple as storage or telecine costs.Antoine Doinel wrote:Good point, Michael. Well, I guess my question is: Do film archives receive any kind of payment etc from the rights holders in these sorts of cases in order to hand over the prints?
The only people who can answer that are the people privy to the relevant contract.While, the archive in Argentina that has housed Metropolis won't be receiving any cut of DVD sales, is it unreasonable to assume they received some kind of financial payment?
-
Mysterypez
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 9:12 pm
Having worked with rights owners... mainly studios... who want access to material for the creation of new preservation masters, the thing most archives want is a brand new projection print. From an archive position this is the cheapest option available. We want something to show in our archive/theater or loan to other theaters. Paying for storage... if such thing could be calculated... is not something we turn our noses up at... money is money...but a new print is gold.MichaelB wrote:This depends on individual circumstances, though the archive will want to ensure that it isn't left out of pocket if they've incurred any expenses, even if it's something as simple as storage or telecine costs.Antoine Doinel wrote:Good point, Michael. Well, I guess my question is: Do film archives receive any kind of payment etc from the rights holders in these sorts of cases in order to hand over the prints?
Well the Argentine archive is holding all the cards at this point. I don't want to get into a debate on physical property rights vs. intellectual rights law, but the Argentine archive could make it a clause within the access agreement with the German archive or German rights owner that any future exploitation... ie video... of METROPOLIS with the 'Argentine footage' requires a flat payment of 'X" amount of money or 'X' percentage of sales.MichaelB wrote:The only people who can answer that are the people privy to the relevant contract.Antoine Doinel wrote:While, the archive in Argentina that has housed Metropolis won't be receiving any cut of DVD sales, is it unreasonable to assume they received some kind of financial payment?
- jsteffe
- Joined: Sat Mar 31, 2007 1:00 pm
- Location: Atlanta, GA
Georgia never had a large output, and as far as I know their films are fairly well accounted for. On the other hand, Gosfilmofond has a lot of stuff, and they may yet turn up some real gems from other countries.Antoine Doinel wrote:A very interesting story on the ongoing difficulties of extracting Georgian films from Russia's archives. One wonders at what is currently sitting waiting to be discovered in those vaults.....
Thanks for the link, though. With your kind permission I'm going to post it in the Georgian cinema thread.
- GaryC
- Joined: Fri Mar 28, 2008 7:56 pm
- Location: Aldershot, Hampshire, UK
- Antoine Doinel
- Joined: Sat Mar 04, 2006 5:22 pm
- Location: Montreal, Quebec
- Contact:
Re: So, I've found a lost film...
Satyajit Ray's once banned and thought destroyed documentary Sikkim has been discovered and restored. And here is some more info on the slate of other Ray films that are in the process of being restored.
- stereo
- Joined: Wed Jun 28, 2006 4:06 pm
Re: So, I've found a lost film...
I believe the general consensus was yanked chain.
- Knappen
- Joined: Wed Jul 12, 2006 6:14 am
- Location: Oslo/Paris
Re: So, I've found a lost film...
I believe that he contacted Fox who included the print in their recent box as an easter egg, but that during transport the disc has slid into a false bottom present in only a limited number of copies.
Last edited by Knappen on Thu Jan 22, 2009 1:46 pm, edited 1 time in total.