@@chrisfinch8637 don't forget Billy Wilder, Victor Fleming, William A Wellman Sr, William Wyler, Peter Weir, Sidney Lumet, Robert Altman, Clint Eastwood, Delbert Mann, James Cameron, Fred Zinnemann, Blake Edwards, David Lean, Stanley Kramer, Stanley Kubrick & George A Romero
We're fortunate he directed during both the film and digital age, and had the vision to see the potential for film restoration. He should receive an Oscar for his archival work.
I had a tiny, tiny part in all this. I was working at Columbia Pictures in the 1980s and in 1981-2 I started a once a month screening of classic Columbia films for the employees and their friends. The top brass saw 2 things re: these screenings: 1) how popular they were with audiences, and 2) what bad shape they were in. I'm sure many other studios and industry people noted the same things as restoration and films on tape for home consumption really took off in the years after that time.
Was that at TBS (The Burbank Studios)? I was in the Camera Dept and later worked as a Camera Assistant. The incredible amount of work that goes into making a movie and then to have it vanish? From all of our brothers and sisters in the past to those that work for preservation and restoration today - Thank You!
Kind of ironic that George Lucas was such an important figure in this movement, and yet his Star Wars trilogy is nearly impossible to watch in its original, unedited form.
I mean they could make more money with a restored theatrical cut as it was seen in 1977. E.g. “Star Trek: The Motion Picture” has both a theatrical release and a director’s edition as not everything got done in t8me for the premiere. At least we both versions fully available for those who want to see them.
The current restoration of film has been incredible! True art! It’s a marvel how beautiful older productions look when restored. The whole process of restoration intrigues me tremendously. The way I show support/the art of saving these films is to purchase the 4k disc when they are released to the public. It’s not cheap to work on decades old films so we need to get out there and support the work by adding these gems to our home collection
Martin Scorsese really does care for cinema. And I am happy to see studios from Paramount to the Criterion Collection/Janus Films doing their work to restore cinema. I hope that we get to see amazing movie being restored to their glory.
This effort with Martin Scorsese along with Ted Turner's love for these films is really admirable. Many of TCM's films capture a whole other world from the 40s and 50s. It's such a privilege to have access to these films.
@@barrymoore4470 But not just cinema animation, TV animation. Some of the most popular cartoons from the 1980's for example only exist right now on SD master tapes. More needs to be done. Worth pointing out some companies carry vaults and aren't aware what they own.
Though I'm not a fan of Scorsese movies, I am a huge fan of him. His love of film, storytelling and movie-making is second to none. His passion is going to save cinematic gems for generations to come. I'm surprised that there was no direct mention of the fire at Universal Studios that destroyed thousands of movie reels and music reels with no copies to draw from...that news got swept aside. Best wishes to all that contribute to this effort!!! Thank you Marty! And, he acted, too!
It's unfortunate that this only includes half of the story, especially since Scorsese is involved with both halves. Yes, the Film Foundation is a good thing, but it's focused on commercial films. There is also the National Film Preservation Foundation, which focuses more on non-commercial, but still important, films. The Film Foundation works primarily with studios; the NFPF works primarily with archives, and has preserved over 2700 films.
Thank you gentlemen for doing this. These old films need to be preserved and kept for future generations- no matter how great or mundane. Thank you thank you thank you
2:07 The other reason many silent films are gone is because the studios threw them in the garbage. Luckily people who worked in the industry fished them out of the dumpsters
Carl Laemmle co-founded Universal Studios and ran it until 1934. When his college-aged son asked if he could cart away outdated, flammable silent films for a campus bonfire, Dad let him. No problem. 😳
If I may quote my now 35 year old son: "They made some pretty good movies in your day Dad!" My then 19 year old son, who had always loved movies, had just enrolled in college course of film appreciation and history. He had just seen "High Noon (1952)," "The man who shot Liberty Valance (1962)," and "Seven Samurai (1954).' To this day, he's my film critic of choice.
Scorsese made restoration a big theme of his movie Hugo and it's a great recruiting tool for the cause. It's hard to watch Hugo and not come away thinking we should do more to restore old movies
You can’t go wrong with the original colors of movies every once in a while, but seeing your favorite movies restored into something much more clearer and broader, really speaks a lot about its quality. You see those space movies, in its original setting, like 2001: A Space Odyssey, Star Wars, Star Trek, The Black Hole, the next you’d see it in an HD/Blu-Ray quality, which has a lot more color and clear images.
Ben Hur (Original or Remake Version), Spartacus, Gandhi, Sargeant Hassan, Battle of Moscow, G30S, Mann, Death Of A Salesman & It's a Wonderful Life also become the restore successful complete
The original colors of movies were vibrant. The chemistry of old color film fades over time. Temperature, moisture, dust, etc., can ruin film stock. If they don't preserve it, it fades to nothing, breaks apart. The entire process of film (the physical rolls), creation, development, processing is one reason why digital came to be. The chemicals were magic, so to speak, considering the end product, but highly toxic. The history of film is fascinating.
As someone who was obsessed by film from a very early age and then spent a good part of her adult life in the Industry, I'm so ecstatic that this work is being done. All great film makers have learned from what has gone before them and if that history has been lost, we are all the losers for it.
I have a BFA in Graphic Design from the University of Illinois and worked at the University of Illinois Press. I wrote to Roger Ebert, whose hometown is mine. Urbana, Illinois. His Film Festival is in Champaign. I wrote to him late 80s or early 90s about creating an organization called Silver Screen Savers. I was coming up with products to sell to raise money to get the classics restored. Roger didn't respond. I guess I had to send the ideas to various directors to finally find Scorsese. Thank you so much for saving them.
I love seeing the work that goes into restoring, not only some of our favourite films, but obscure titles - some of which are being shown for the first time on Blu Ray. The Warner Archive restorations of DOCTOR X and MYSTERY OF THE WAX MUSEUM are real standouts for me.
I am so psyched to see that all those Mary Pickford movies were at the top of his list (I saw listed Poor Little Rich Girl, Rebecca Of Sunnybrook Farms, The Pride Of The Clan and The Little American - all from 1917. And he also has Douglas Fairbanks' "A Modern Musketeer" listed from the same year. He's absolutely correct and I'm psyched (though not surprised!) he is aware of all those titles.
Martin Scorsese is a genius, glad he's preserving the Colonel Blimp film and other classics. I saw first saw Blimp over 40 years ago after it came out of the vaults.
Now that’s what I call. Classic movie restoration because back on television when I was a young boy, they were air in these movies back on TV but the problem was the pictures in the movies weren’t clean to be seen until a breakthrough and technology allowed us to fully restore any old classic films, no matter if they are silent or audio but these movies are now better than ever when they were first shot many decades ago.
On Hollywood's biggest night, 🌃 the Oscars,this is an important story to tell about the preservation of deteriorating film 🎥 stock . It looks like they've done 👍 exceptional work in rescuing these old films from being eternally lost 🥺
Im glad theyre doing this bc those movies are classics!! They make so much movies today and most you forget about them the next day but classics are timeless
I agree. I remember seeing "Excalibur" in the theater in 1981and the color popped off the screen. The greens in the forest shots were really green. When it came out on VHS, I remember being disappointed with the way it looked, like it had been bleached.
Ivan Walters: Same experience as I had with 1968's Ukrainian classic, Shadows of Our Forgotten Ancestors by Parajanov, who spent 5 years in a Gulag for creating it. I saw it 18 times in 1968 and while I could not get into Ukraine at the time, I spent time in the Balkans. I recall the color was amazing in 1968, but when PBS ran it many years later, the color had faded dramatically. There is a scene where Polagna puts her apron which is bright red in a winter window and takes down a bright blue one backed by spring blossoms. Now the red is brown and the blue is very faded. Maybe Scorsese could work on that one.
"East of Eden" is one of my favorite films. I vividly remember seeing it for the first time on TV when I was a teen in the late 60s and it was a gorgeous print I saw then. I'll never forget the red of Julie Harris' hair contrasted with that field of flowers.
In 1996 I saw the restored "Vertigo" at the Uptown Theater in Washington, DC. Cineplex Odeon had just refurbished the space and reopened it with “Vertigo”. Kim Novak was seated just two rows in front of me. Tickets included a reception after the movie at the French Embassy. It was a wonderful night!
Thanks Mr. Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project. Your team brought Indonesia's "Lewat Djam Malam" (a.k.a. "After The Curfew" - 1954) and restored it, brought it into The Criterion Collection. It was the first and perhaps the only neo-noir film that Indonesia ever made. Mr. Scorsese saved the film, considering it captured perfectly how 1950s Indonesia's social life looked like & its moral message is still relevant until today. I also love Louis Malle's "Au Revoir Les Enfants", India's "Apu Trilogy", and Taiwan's "A Brighter Summer Day"
Super proud of this effort from some of the greatest directors to keep the history and art of cinema vibrant so it can be enjoyed as it was originally showed, decades later.
Thank you Mr. Scorsese. I really appreciate all your hard work and from everyone else involved with the restoration of the films from present time to yesteryear.
Casino and the Last Waltz are his gems. Good job championing restoration of these classic films. They've influenced him tremendously (Somebody Up There Likes Me on Raging Bull, etc.).
One personal note: the UCLA Archive restored one of my favorite animated classics, "Mr. Bug Goes to Town" (1941) a few years back. Paramount still holds the copyright and has not negotiated to get the restored version to Blu-Ray or 4K (there are some messed-up prints on VHS and DVD). Get it done, please.
I tell you what a good restoration can make all the difference in upping the enjoyment factor of a film. I use to have an old copy of 1932s Old Dark House and couldn't sit through it with how bad the picture quality was until the recent restoration and now it's one of my favorite horror films from that era.
I'm honestly more astonished that Scorsese even included silent films in his long important list of films to save! Those are literally the backbone of Hollywood's founding!
Our Dad went to a hospital from asphyxiation from rescuing film archives during a fire in Paris, France at SHAPE Headquarters outside Paris. I was only 8 years old then. So I don't have any knowledge of what the content was in those vaults. This was in the early 1960's.
Film restorationists are doing great work. I couldn’t imagine our collected works of poetry painting and print just turning into dust because of the weakness of their physical mediums.
Are they allowed to keep the gorgeous black and white films black and white? We went to the Berkeley Film Archives showing a a restored film,Charles Laughton's only direction of Robert Mitchum, Shelly Winters, Night of the Hunter. All copies were destroyed. They finally found one copy in Elsa Lancaster's garage, but it was in bad shape. Eventually they were able to restore stand they made a documentary showing how they made the original. It was wonderful. I don't know who did it, but anyone restoring these great old films is gratefully appreciated.
I love shooting still film time to time..film is a very beautiful archival power and also visually beautiful ...glad to see in 4k HD world films getting remastered and colour graded ..
I worked in film restoration from 1999 to 2004 there abouts at Pacific Title in Hollywood CA. And restoring those films in comparison to doing Visual Effects on marvel movies and the likes that Ive worked on, is much more rewarding and entertaining from my point of view in my career. Its something I would love to get back into to be honest. The battle of the bulge was one that I worked on as well as many other classics. Its something that really needs to be done consistently,
Interesting question about the future of film is whether there is a future for films as we currently know them. It's possible a new medium will arise, perhaps some sort of holographic / 3D projection that will take the place of commercial films, making the flat, 2D theater screen a relic of the past. The real concern is whether future audiences will still be interested in watching 20th / 21st century films or whether they'll come to consider them passe, rather like the way audiences now regard silent films, which though available, are rarely watched by mainstream audiences anymore. At some point, just as we see "Clara Bow" as distant and antique, all of what we presently take for granted culturally will also inevitably become "Clara Bow" - distant and antique - to future audiences.
Every person in America needs to see this clip this video to let us all know that film doesn't last ...there's got to be better ways for quality film..... And even for our family films.... And even for family pictures etc.....
I wonder if any of the Films of Oscar Micheaux… Where on that list. This first African American Man to write, Produce , Direct , Distribute his own films as well as own his own studio. Long before there was a Tyler Perry and Spike Lee.
There’s a building in my hometown of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania that actually still has the Paramount logo on it. I’ve always been curious about what it was.
I had that experience a couple of years ago. I recall seeing "The Good the Bad and the Ugly. on VHS in the 1980's, and it would also air on broadcast TV, the colors were saturated, the image was all grainy. I always thought it was an ugly film and I didn't care for it, then on Netflix they had a cleaned up version that wasn't cropped, and it was a totally different experience. I think it was simply a bad transfer to video.
People love to dump on the Star Wars special editions but if they hadn't pulled the original reels out of storage to work on them when they did they would've been lost forever.
Easily the best and most important thing Scorsese has ever done. Unfortunately some do not follow his lead with the same intensive care in archival practices and when the video cuts to the modern Paramount division who has ruined many film presentations and restorations in the past few years it really stings.
From the beginnings of Hollywood, the studios saw no real reason to maintain or preserve films after their first, or maybe second run. So they rotted in warehouses. Only with the advent of television's reuse of old films, and later, home video, did they realize the value of their catalog movies. Some 95% of film made before 1950 is already lost; hopefully what's left can be saved.
This should necessarily just be about film but TV animation as well. There's tons of cartoon series I grew up with that only exist on master tapes. The original negatives need to be found for them, some companies aren't even aware of what they own! 😆
Wonderful work! Meanwhile, here in Brazil our Cinemateca (like a "Film Foundation") need to struggle year after year to not burn to the ground. Cultural preservation in Brazil it's always walking on a tightrope.
Films from all the over the world deserve preservation. Scorsese fortunately is very sensitive to the international nature of cinema, and works to preserve and fund movies globally.
Martin Scorsese, keeping the art of cinema alive throughout the decades with his film restoring/preserving and film directing. What a legend.
You can never go wrong with Scorsese, Spielberg, Dante, or Lucas.
@@chrisfinch8637 don't forget Billy Wilder, Victor Fleming, William A Wellman Sr, William Wyler, Peter Weir, Sidney Lumet, Robert Altman, Clint Eastwood, Delbert Mann, James Cameron, Fred Zinnemann, Blake Edwards, David Lean, Stanley Kramer, Stanley Kubrick & George A Romero
@@azimisyauqieabdulwahab9401 You are forgetting so many more, why only including English speaking directors?
@@nerijusvilcinskas7851 Michel Curtiz, too.
Academically, maybe because foreign directors are not well known. Think about it.
@@MeMeDaVinci George Stevens too
We're fortunate he directed during both the film and digital age, and had the vision to see the potential for film restoration. He should receive an Oscar for his archival work.
Yes he should. People don't respect his contribution.
He will. That's a given
You mean like a Special Achievement Oscar?
I had a tiny, tiny part in all this. I was working at Columbia Pictures in the 1980s and in 1981-2 I started a once a month screening of classic Columbia films for the employees and their friends. The top brass saw 2 things re: these screenings: 1) how popular they were with audiences, and 2) what bad shape they were in. I'm sure many other studios and industry people noted the same things as restoration and films on tape for home consumption really took off in the years after that time.
Was that at TBS (The Burbank Studios)? I was in the Camera Dept and later worked as a Camera Assistant. The incredible amount of work that goes into making a movie and then to have it vanish? From all of our brothers and sisters in the past to those that work for preservation and restoration today - Thank You!
🌟
Director Frank Capra and former TCM host Robert Osbourne would be so proud of this project in preserving what’s basically history.
Kind of ironic that George Lucas was such an important figure in this movement, and yet his Star Wars trilogy is nearly impossible to watch in its original, unedited form.
Hopefully, that will change in time for the original film’s 50th anniversary in 2027.
I mean they could make more money with a restored theatrical cut as it was seen in 1977.
E.g. “Star Trek: The Motion Picture” has both a theatrical release and a director’s edition as not everything got done in t8me for the premiere. At least we both versions fully available for those who want to see them.
The current restoration of film has been incredible! True art! It’s a marvel how beautiful older productions look when restored. The whole process of restoration intrigues me tremendously. The way I show support/the art of saving these films is to purchase the 4k disc when they are released to the public. It’s not cheap to work on decades old films so we need to get out there and support the work by adding these gems to our home collection
Martin Scorsese really does care for cinema. And I am happy to see studios from Paramount to the Criterion Collection/Janus Films doing their work to restore cinema. I hope that we get to see amazing movie being restored to their glory.
This effort with Martin Scorsese along with Ted Turner's love for these films is really admirable. Many of TCM's films capture a whole other world from the 40s and 50s. It's such a privilege to have access to these films.
The Film Foundation want to join The Criterion Collection & Kino Lober
We need this done to cartoons from cinemas as well! Animation is just as important!
th-cam.com/video/rIOgaMnwRrQ/w-d-xo.html
I keep saying this definitely. A lot of cartoons only seem to exist on master tapes.
@@pferreira1983 Cinema animation, especially in short films, has been consistently neglected in film criticism and histories.
@@barrymoore4470 But not just cinema animation, TV animation. Some of the most popular cartoons from the 1980's for example only exist right now on SD master tapes. More needs to be done. Worth pointing out some companies carry vaults and aren't aware what they own.
Absolutely.
Though I'm not a fan of Scorsese movies, I am a huge fan of him. His love of film, storytelling and movie-making is second to none. His passion is going to save cinematic gems for generations to come. I'm surprised that there was no direct mention of the fire at Universal Studios that destroyed thousands of movie reels and music reels with no copies to draw from...that news got swept aside. Best wishes to all that contribute to this effort!!! Thank you Marty!
And, he acted, too!
I feel the same way, although I do really like "The Age Of Innocence" and "Hugo". He's a total hero for his film preservation efforts.
Fox and MGM also had major fires that destroyed major parts of their original stocks.
It's unfortunate that this only includes half of the story, especially since Scorsese is involved with both halves. Yes, the Film Foundation is a good thing, but it's focused on commercial films. There is also the National Film Preservation Foundation, which focuses more on non-commercial, but still important, films. The Film Foundation works primarily with studios; the NFPF works primarily with archives, and has preserved over 2700 films.
Thank you gentlemen for doing this. These old films need to be preserved and kept for future generations- no matter how great or mundane. Thank you thank you thank you
They literally interviewed a woman in this piece. It's not just gentlemen who are preserving film
2:07 The other reason many silent films are gone is because the studios threw them in the garbage. Luckily people who worked in the industry fished them out of the dumpsters
Carl Laemmle co-founded Universal Studios and ran it until 1934. When his college-aged son asked if he could cart away outdated, flammable silent films for a campus bonfire, Dad let him. No problem. 😳
If I may quote my now 35 year old son: "They made some pretty good movies in your day Dad!" My then 19 year old son, who had always loved movies, had just enrolled in college course of film appreciation and history. He had just seen "High Noon (1952)," "The man who shot Liberty Valance (1962)," and "Seven Samurai (1954).' To this day, he's my film critic of choice.
Scorsese made restoration a big theme of his movie Hugo and it's a great recruiting tool for the cause. It's hard to watch Hugo and not come away thinking we should do more to restore old movies
Great movie.
I've read both the book and seen the movie the movie and love both greatly
Film Restorations is so huge it's needs hard work, care, and love pored into it. That's why I loved Shout Factory or Criterion releases a lot.
“This is why we’re here, to enrich each other’s lives through art.” Indeed maestro, indeed. 🤸🏽♂️ 🥂 🤸🏽♂️ Thank you.
So glad that future generations of people will be able to experience these classics. So important.
I love watching restored silent films.
You can’t go wrong with the original colors of movies every once in a while, but seeing your favorite movies restored into something much more clearer and broader, really speaks a lot about its quality.
You see those space movies, in its original setting, like 2001: A Space Odyssey, Star Wars, Star Trek, The Black Hole, the next you’d see it in an HD/Blu-Ray quality, which has a lot more color and clear images.
Ben Hur (Original or Remake Version), Spartacus, Gandhi, Sargeant Hassan, Battle of Moscow, G30S, Mann, Death Of A Salesman & It's a Wonderful Life also become the restore successful complete
The original colors of movies were vibrant. The chemistry of old color film fades over time. Temperature, moisture, dust, etc., can ruin film stock. If they don't preserve it, it fades to nothing, breaks apart. The entire process of film (the physical rolls), creation, development, processing is one reason why digital came to be. The chemicals were magic, so to speak, considering the end product, but highly toxic. The history of film is fascinating.
As someone who was obsessed by film from a very early age and then spent a good part of her adult life in the Industry, I'm so ecstatic that this work is being done. All great film makers have learned from what has gone before them and if that history has been lost, we are all the losers for it.
This was wonderful. There are so many antique motion pictures that I want to view; glad to know that I and generations to come can do so.
I have a BFA in Graphic Design from the University of Illinois and worked at the University of Illinois Press. I wrote to Roger Ebert, whose hometown is mine. Urbana, Illinois. His Film Festival is in Champaign. I wrote to him late 80s or early 90s about creating an organization called Silver Screen Savers. I was coming up with products to sell to raise money to get the classics restored. Roger didn't respond. I guess I had to send the ideas to various directors to finally find Scorsese. Thank you so much for saving them.
I remember when Scorsese and Spielberg helped David Lean restore the original version of Lawrence of Arabia in 1989.
Almost 4 hours including cut version
I have the 4K restoration of it, and it’s spectacular.
Don’t forget about Robert A. Harris, who actually found the missing pieces .
I love seeing the work that goes into restoring, not only some of our favourite films, but obscure titles - some of which are being shown for the first time on Blu Ray. The Warner Archive restorations of DOCTOR X and MYSTERY OF THE WAX MUSEUM are real standouts for me.
Love this. I’m currently trying to do this with just my mum and dads cine film from 1967. Precious memories to keep on living ❤
I support preserving film for future generations. I never saw East Of Eden or The Misfits. I hope the films of Sidney Poitier will be preserved too.
Bless this man. He will forever be remembered.
I am so psyched to see that all those Mary Pickford movies were at the top of his list (I saw listed Poor Little Rich Girl, Rebecca Of Sunnybrook Farms, The Pride Of The Clan and The Little American - all from 1917. And he also has Douglas Fairbanks' "A Modern Musketeer" listed from the same year. He's absolutely correct and I'm psyched (though not surprised!) he is aware of all those titles.
Martin Scorsese is a genius, glad he's preserving the Colonel Blimp film and other classics. I saw first saw Blimp over 40 years ago after it came out of the vaults.
Now that’s what I call. Classic movie restoration because back on television when I was a young boy, they were air in these movies back on TV but the problem was the pictures in the movies weren’t clean to be seen until a breakthrough and technology allowed us to fully restore any old classic films, no matter if they are silent or audio but these movies are now better than ever when they were first shot many decades ago.
On Hollywood's biggest night, 🌃 the Oscars,this is an important story to tell about the preservation of deteriorating film 🎥 stock . It looks like they've done 👍 exceptional work in rescuing these old films from being eternally lost 🥺
Im glad theyre doing this bc those movies are classics!! They make so much movies today and most you forget about them the next day but classics are timeless
I agree. I remember seeing "Excalibur" in the theater in 1981and the color popped off the screen. The greens in the forest shots were really green. When it came out on VHS, I remember being disappointed with the way it looked, like it had been bleached.
Ivan Walters: Same experience as I had with 1968's Ukrainian classic, Shadows of Our Forgotten Ancestors by Parajanov, who spent 5 years in a Gulag for creating it. I saw it 18 times in 1968 and while I could not get into Ukraine at the time, I spent time in the Balkans. I recall the color was amazing in 1968, but when PBS ran it many years later, the color had faded dramatically. There is a scene where Polagna puts her apron which is bright red in a winter window and takes down a bright blue one backed by spring blossoms. Now the red is brown and the blue is very faded. Maybe Scorsese could work on that one.
This is a beautiful labor. Happy to see people working on preserving things from the past that are worth it.
The last comment on his legacy just shows much deep of a thinker he is when it comes to art, cinema, and life in general.
"East of Eden" is one of my favorite films. I vividly remember seeing it for the first time on TV when I was a teen in the late 60s and it was a gorgeous print I saw then. I'll never forget the red of Julie Harris' hair contrasted with that field of flowers.
In 1996 I saw the restored "Vertigo" at the Uptown Theater in Washington, DC. Cineplex Odeon had just refurbished the space and reopened it with “Vertigo”. Kim Novak was seated just two rows in front of me. Tickets included a reception after the movie at the French Embassy. It was a wonderful night!
Just curious. Was James Stewart well enough to attend one of those re-release screenings?
Color of money, casino, goodfellas I can go on his style of direction is so beautiful and crated..he a legend amongst us
One of my favorite lines is in The Sopranos when a wiseguy yells to the famous director Martin Scorsese, "Hey Marty, I loved Kundun!"
I always wondered who started the restoration process back in the 90's. I'm so glad they did.
Thank You for all you do both in making great films but more importantly for saving them as well! God Bless You!
If we don’t remember our past we won’t know ourselves anymore thanks Martin.
Thanks Mr. Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project. Your team brought Indonesia's "Lewat Djam Malam" (a.k.a. "After The Curfew" - 1954) and restored it, brought it into The Criterion Collection. It was the first and perhaps the only neo-noir film that Indonesia ever made. Mr. Scorsese saved the film, considering it captured perfectly how 1950s Indonesia's social life looked like & its moral message is still relevant until today.
I also love Louis Malle's "Au Revoir Les Enfants", India's "Apu Trilogy", and Taiwan's "A Brighter Summer Day"
Marty Scorsese's THE patron saint of film. All film. Period.
Nice video package - one of the reasons I still collect physical media to help support restoration and preservation of film!
Depending on the disc, DVDs only last about 5-10 years.
Super proud of this effort from some of the greatest directors to keep the history and art of cinema vibrant so it can be enjoyed as it was originally showed, decades later.
Martin thanks for all you do. This is truly great.
Thank you Mr. Scorsese. I really appreciate all your hard work and from everyone else involved with the restoration of the films from present time to yesteryear.
Thank you for preserving history. Film is about the human experience.
Casino and the Last Waltz are his gems. Good job championing restoration of these classic films. They've influenced him tremendously (Somebody Up There Likes Me on Raging Bull, etc.).
People say "he saved cinema, this saved cinema "and stuff, scorsese is the one who really saved cinema.
Yep
One personal note: the UCLA Archive restored one of my favorite animated classics, "Mr. Bug Goes to Town" (1941) a few years back. Paramount still holds the copyright and has not negotiated to get the restored version to Blu-Ray or 4K (there are some messed-up prints on VHS and DVD). Get it done, please.
What a dream it would be to work at the paramount archives!
I tell you what a good restoration can make all the difference in upping the enjoyment factor of a film. I use to have an old copy of 1932s Old Dark House and couldn't sit through it with how bad the picture quality was until the recent restoration and now it's one of my favorite horror films from that era.
Same case with Morocco. Had to watch it in a film class and the sound quality in particular on the dvd was so mushy that I could barely understand it.
Yes. The Cohen restoration of "The Old Dark House" is fantastic. Literally, I never dreamed the film could look this good.
my favorite movie is Clue, and it’s been in need of restoration for a while
Brilliant, very important work. Thanks for sharing!
I'm honestly more astonished that Scorsese even included silent films in his long important list of films to save! Those are literally the backbone of Hollywood's founding!
Our Dad went to a hospital from asphyxiation from rescuing film archives during a fire in Paris, France at SHAPE Headquarters outside Paris. I was only 8 years old then. So I don't have any knowledge of what the content was in those vaults. This was in the early 1960's.
Film restorationists are doing great work. I couldn’t imagine our collected works of poetry painting and print just turning into dust because of the weakness of their physical mediums.
Marty is the best of the best. Want to buy a watch ⌚
Wow!! Let’s not loose this beautiful art!
It's great to see this get some mainstream attention, hopefully it will bring more people to it that didn't know about it before.
The children need to remember this time. Scorcese is a a multigenerational figure and it's a time to be alive in his time ❤
Keep it alive, young people. 15 and a lover of truly good cinema.
Marty is such a wonderful guy. He truly cares about the movies and isn't just in it for the money and fame.
Seeing movies in theaters, seeing bands live in concert, going to an art gallery. That’s my church!
Are they allowed to keep the gorgeous black and white films black and white? We went to the Berkeley Film Archives showing a a restored film,Charles Laughton's only direction of Robert Mitchum, Shelly Winters, Night of the Hunter. All copies were destroyed. They finally found one copy in Elsa Lancaster's garage, but it was in bad shape. Eventually they were able to restore stand they made a documentary showing how they made the original. It was wonderful. I don't know who did it, but anyone restoring these great old films is gratefully appreciated.
7:30- Italian poster for "Duel in the Sun" (1946).
Thank you for your work, Mr. Scorsese. We will not let you down.
I wish there was less remakes, more restorations. I would glady pay to see these classics and more re-released in theaters
Gosh Marty and the gang is really getting up there everybody. Legends need to be protected and preserved
This is truly important work.
We’re not just preserving random stock. It’s our culture, it’s memories, education, etc. If we just gut our formative years, what else do we have?
Thank you Mr Scorsese for allowing some of you private film to be used in the 4k scanning+ restoration of Invaders from Mars 👍
Jane thank you for all the episodes. You are still as beautiful
Thankfully that Martin Scorsese has helped save the cinemas of the past.
I love shooting still film time to time..film is a very beautiful archival power and also visually beautiful ...glad to see in 4k HD world films getting remastered and colour graded ..
What a great man Scorsese is! I love that man!
I will pray for America. Please pray for me.
God Bless you.
I worked in film restoration from 1999 to 2004 there abouts at Pacific Title in Hollywood CA. And restoring those films in comparison to doing Visual Effects on marvel movies and the likes that Ive worked on, is much more rewarding and entertaining from my point of view in my career. Its something I would love to get back into to be honest. The battle of the bulge was one that I worked on as well as many other classics. Its something that really needs to be done consistently,
I wana do this for a living. After being in film school I find this more interesting than directing kinda
Thank god we've got digital now and no longer have to worry about image quality.
Interesting question about the future of film is whether there is a future for films as we currently know them. It's possible a new medium will arise, perhaps some sort of holographic / 3D projection that will take the place of commercial films, making the flat, 2D theater screen a relic of the past. The real concern is whether future audiences will still be interested in watching 20th / 21st century films or whether they'll come to consider them passe, rather like the way audiences now regard silent films, which though available, are rarely watched by mainstream audiences anymore. At some point, just as we see "Clara Bow" as distant and antique, all of what we presently take for granted culturally will also inevitably become "Clara Bow" - distant and antique - to future audiences.
Every person in America needs to see this clip this video to let us all know that film doesn't last ...there's got to be better ways for quality film..... And even for our family films.... And even for family pictures etc.....
Film restoration is vital to the future.
I wonder if any of the Films of Oscar Micheaux… Where on that list. This first African American Man to write, Produce , Direct , Distribute his own films as well as own his own studio. Long before there was a Tyler Perry and Spike Lee.
Martin Scorsese's company restored two of my country's iconic films! THANK YOU!
There’s a building in my hometown of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania that actually still has the Paramount logo on it. I’ve always been curious about what it was.
I had that experience a couple of years ago. I recall seeing "The Good the Bad and the Ugly. on VHS in the 1980's, and it would also air on broadcast TV, the colors were saturated, the image was all grainy. I always thought it was an ugly film and I didn't care for it, then on Netflix they had a cleaned up version that wasn't cropped, and it was a totally different experience. I think it was simply a bad transfer to video.
Wow he made a Paramount list! He needs to order Universal to work with him too as they have the Paramount pre 1950s library!
He has and Universal is performing fantastic Preservation work in 4K from the earliest generation of film possible.
People love to dump on the Star Wars special editions but if they hadn't pulled the original reels out of storage to work on them when they did they would've been lost forever.
Never knew this about the guy. Amazing!
Easily the best and most important thing Scorsese has ever done.
Unfortunately some do not follow his lead with the same intensive care in archival practices and when the video cuts to the modern Paramount division who has ruined many film presentations and restorations in the past few years it really stings.
"....to enrich each others' lives through art."
Amazing 😍🤩🤩🤩🤩
From the beginnings of Hollywood, the studios saw no real reason to maintain or preserve films after their first, or maybe second run. So they rotted in warehouses. Only with the advent of television's reuse of old films, and later, home video, did they realize the value of their catalog movies. Some 95% of film made before 1950 is already lost; hopefully what's left can be saved.
I absolutely love the film east of eden I own it on DVD 💖
This should necessarily just be about film but TV animation as well. There's tons of cartoon series I grew up with that only exist on master tapes. The original negatives need to be found for them, some companies aren't even aware of what they own! 😆
Christopher Nolan’s films need to be preserved for all future cinephiles.
Thank You Martin Scorsese. 🎥👨🏻
Wonderful work! Meanwhile, here in Brazil our Cinemateca (like a "Film Foundation") need to struggle year after year to not burn to the ground. Cultural preservation in Brazil it's always walking on a tightrope.
Films from all the over the world deserve preservation. Scorsese fortunately is very sensitive to the international nature of cinema, and works to preserve and fund movies globally.
love that endingggg