• [NEWS] Film Restoration Summit - trying to preserve old movies

    From Your Name@1:229/2 to All on Monday, March 11, 2019 10:54:27
    XPost: rec.arts.movies.past-films
    From: YourName@YourISP.com

    From Variety.com ...


    Jane Fonda, Thierry Fremaux, Alexander Payne
    Advocate to Save Classic Films at HFPA Restoration Summit
    ---------------------------------------------------------
    The Hollywood Foreign Press Association rallied a roster of film
    world heavy-hitters Saturday at the Ace Hotel's United Artists
    theater in downtown Los Angeles for the organization's first
    Film Restoration Summit devoted to celebrating classic films and
    the urgent need to put more resources into saving them.

    Naturally, the importance of preserving the big-screen
    experience was a major theme, but the event was mainly dedicated
    to celebrating films that have been brought back to life through
    the efforts of organizations such as Martin Scorsese's Film
    Foundation and the UCLA Film Archive.

    The HFPA has donated $6.5 million to such efforts since 1996,
    going toward 125 restoration projects.

    Panelists Jane Fonda, Thierry Fremaux, Alexander Payne, Sony's
    Grover Crisp and UCLA's Jan-Christopher Horak came together to
    discuss the necessity of stepping up preservation efforts,
    particularly for silent, independent and international films.
    A restored print of "A Fistful of Dollars"  screened after the
    presentation.

    HFPA president Meher Tatna pointed out that as many as half of
    all films made before 1950 have been lost, and recalled that
    the organization has supported restorations such as Ida Lupino's
    "The Bigamist" and Satjayit Ray's "Apu" trilogy. The panel was
    moderated by Sandra Schulberg, whose IndieCollect organization
    works to preserve independent films.

    Fremaux took the stage saying it felt bizarre for him to talk
    about the history of cinema at this moment because he's in the
    middle of selecting films for Cannes. "I hope I won't get
    confused and give you the Cannes opening night film," he joked,
    "which by the way we don't have, which is a problem." The Cannes
    director also heads Lyon's Institut Lumiere, devoted to
    preserving and screening historic films.

    He gave audiences a quick refresher on the beginnings of cinema,
    throwing a bit of shade at Thomas Edison, whose early works were
    viewed on the small Kinetoscope viewer, as opposed to Louis
    Lumiere, who was the first to champion projection on a big
    screen.

    "It's still what we love, being together to watch images on a
    big screen. Maybe the revenge of Thomas Edison is called
    Netflix," he quipped. Fremaux screened a number of fascinating
    location-shot films from the Lumiere brothers, shot in the late
    1800s and early 1900s, some restored with help from the HFPA.

    Fonda, who was honored at the Lumiere film festival last year,
    admitted that she's no expert on the issue of preservation. She
    joked that being asked to be on the panel might be "to punish me
    because my favorite ex-husband colorized much of MGM's film
    library." Ted Turner was a pariah for the colorization debacle,
    she recalled, yet she pointed out that he actually preserved the
    MGM library, which led to the creation of Turner Classic Movies.

    "We can't know where we're going if we don't know where we've
    been," she proclaimed. "Perhaps we ought to put as much into
    saving film as we do into making it." Later, as panelists called
    out the need for her Oscar-winning "Coming Home" to be restored,
    she almost looked like she was on the verge of pulling out her
    checkbook.

    Crisp, who is executive VP of asset management, film restoration
    and digital mastery at Sony, explained how the advent of
    increasingly sophisticated digital techniques means that some
    films are restored repeatedly - "Easy Rider," for example, is on
    its third restoration. Fonda quipped that the filmmakers may have
    been "too stoned" to properly care for the original film
    elements.

    To provide a visual example of the huge difference restoration
    can make, Horak screened faded, murky scenes from Westerns that
    were brought back to vibrant color in the restoration process.

    Payne described himself as a "Bologna geek," not because he's
    fond of processed meats but because he's a regular at the Italian
    preservation-oriented fest, which he encouraged everyone to
    attend. The HFPA asked Payne to select a film he wanted to see
    restored, and he recalled a mentor's words, "Always save the
    silents." So he chose the 1926 Douglas Fairbanks movie "The Black
    Pirate" as the organization's next restoration project.

    "There aren't a lot of contemporary directors who are film buffs,
    who go out to see old films," Payne said.

    Payne later reflected on the small screen vs. big screen debate.
    "I think if there's no theatrical experience at all, then it's TV.
    I'm kind of with Thierry Fremaux on that. But the flipside is,
    Netflix has opened up such an ocean of creativity to filmmakers."

    Fremaux said it's also important to save cinemas, not just films,
    and gave a shout-out to Quentin Tarantino and his New Beverly
    Cinema. "We are here in this wonderful theater," he said,
    gesturing at the gilded detail of the 1927 auditorium. "Cinemas
    are in danger - in Rome, there are no theaters in the city
    anymore." He recalled Tarantino's insistence that "Pulp Fiction"
    be shown at the festival's anniversary screening with a 35mm
    print.

    Fremaux said later that it's his generation's responsibility to
    preserve the culture, and then teach it to younger people, the way
    filmmakers like Scorsese and Tarantino are doing. "Then it will be
    their role to pay attention."

    "You have to be sure that the great classic films can be seen
    anytime, anywhere," Fremaux said. "With DVD, but also in a movie
    theater."

    Even people who are great chefs at home love to go to restaurants,
    and sports fans flock to stadiums even though they watch sports on
    TV, he pointed out.

    "The next great adventure," Fremaux said, "is silent cinema. It's
    full of treasures, all over the world."


    <https://variety.com/2019/film/events/hfpa-restoration-summit-jane-fonda-thierry-fremaux-alexander-payne-1203159610/>

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