FYI

--
deg farrelly, Associate Librarian
Arizona State University at the West campus
PO Box 37100
Phoenix, Arizona  85069-7100
Phone:  602.543.8522
Email:  [email protected]



To see this story with its related links on the guardian.co.uk site, go to 
http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2010/feb/11/metropolis-fritz-lang-berlin

Metropolis, mother of sci-fi movies, reborn in Berlin

Fritz Lang's futuristic 1927 masterpiece to be shown in full for first time 
after lost scenes are restored

Kate Connolly in Berlin
Friday February 12 2010
guardian.co.uk


http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2010/feb/11/metropolis-fritz-lang-berlin


Film buffs from around the world have gathered in Berlin to catch the first 
glimpse of a restored, full-length "director's cut" of the sci-fi epic 
Metropolis that has not been seen for 83 years.

The resurrection of Fritz Lang's 1927 silent futuristic thriller follows the 
discovery in Buenos Aires two years ago of key scenes that were thought lost 
forever on the cutting room floor. The homecoming is being celebrated with 
simultaneous, orchestra-accompanied screenings tomorrow evening across Germany.

Evoking the glamour and decadence of the Weimar era in which the film 
celebrated its original premiere, a gala screening will be held at Berlin's 
Friedrichstadtpalast, a revue theatre best known for its 1930s style female 
chorus lines and cabaret. Berlin's Radio Symphony Orchestra will play Gottfried 
Huppertz's original score and several Hollywood stars, including Leonardo 
DiCaprio, are expected to be among the guests at the premiere, which critics 
have hailed the highlight of this year's Berlin film festival, the Berlinale.

In keeping with the festival's ethos, that it is not the reserve of VIPs, 
Metropolis will be beamed onto a huge screen at the Brandenburg Gate. Thousands 
are expected to brave the cold for a chance to see the historic 150-minute 
screening.

Film historians say the restored version gives more depth and new meaning to 
the cult movie, set in a futuristic city-state where the ruling class amuse 
themselves in pleasure parlours while the poor slave away underground.

The film cost 5m Reichsmarks, making it the most expensive picture of its day. 
It had a cast of 36,000 and was shot over 17 months. But it flopped in Germany 
after both audiences and critics panned it. The science fiction writer HG Wells 
said "in one eddying concentration" it gave "almost every possible foolishness, 
clich?, platitude and muddlement about mechanical progress ... served up with a 
sauce of sentimentality that is all its own".

But Metropolis is now seen as the mother of sci-fi movies, an inspiration for 
film-makers like George Lucas and Ridley Scott.

Key scenes were cut from the original picture because its distributor, 
Paramount, considered it too unwieldy for the American market. Protagonists 
were given new, American names, the insert titles were rewritten and scenes 
re-edited to keep the action comprehensible after the 30-minute cuts.

The tampering appalled Fritz Lang, who described Paramount's intervention as 
"mindless and dictatorial".

The cut footage was thought to have been lost, until 2008 when an Argentinian 
film historian began to search for it. In the archives of the Museo del Cine, 
Fernando Martin Pena tracked down a 16mm dupe negative copy of the original 
35mm export version. It had been sent to Buenos Aires before Paramount made the 
chop.

Today's cinephiles will be able to see the version that experts have spent 
months restoring. But it still shows the cuts and mutiliations the missing 
parts have suffered over the past eight decades.

"We cleaned the film so that you can recognise the pictures but you can't get 
rid of all the scratches and marks," said Martin Koerber, the lead restorer.

Metropolis aficionados will be concentrating less on the streaky screen that in 
parts resembles a heavy downpour and more on the unfamiliar way the film now 
unfolds as Lang intended. The new version restores characters who had been 
sidelined or removed and elucidates parts of the hitherto dizzying plot, such 
as why Maria, the workers' insurrectionist leader. is mistaken for a female 
robot. A spy has been reintroduced, a character who helps the idealistic Freder 
gain access to the underworld has been expanded, and a scene in which children 
are saved from slavery is much more violent and dramatic.


If you have any questions about this email, please contact the guardian.co.uk 
user help desk: [email protected].

VIDEOLIB is intended to encourage the broad and lively discussion of issues 
relating to the selection, evaluation, acquisition,bibliographic control, 
preservation, and use of current and evolving video formats in libraries and 
related institutions. It is hoped that the list will serve as an effective 
working tool for video librarians, as well as a channel of communication 
between libraries,educational institutions, and video producers and 
distributors.

Reply via email to