Friday, May 2, 2014

Stash in the attic: the hunt for lost films

News that two of Peter Sellers' early comedies have been found in a skip reminds us of the thrill of rediscovery. Which other 'movie orphans' out there could plug the gaps in film history?

In the mid-1950s, Peter Sellers was young and ambitious and still largely unseen. He wanted to break out of his radio ghetto and achieve big-screen success, so he played a bumbling crook in The Ladykillers and a bumbling everyman in a series of comedy shorts for an independent production company called Park Lane Films. The Ladykillers endured and is cherished to this day. The shorts came and then went and were quickly forgotten. To all intents and purposes, they never existed at all.

I'm fascinated by the idea of the films that get lost; that vast, teeming netherworld where the obscure and the unloved rub shoulders, in the dark, with the misplaced and the mythic. Martin Scorsese's Film Foundation estimates that as many as 50% of the American movies made before 1950 are now gone for good, while the British film archive is similarly holed like Swiss cheese. Somewhere out there, languishing in limbo, are missing pictures from directors including Orson Welles, Michael Powell and Alfred Hitchcock. Most of these orphans will surely never be found. Yet sometimes, against the odds, one will abruptly surface.

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Source: http://www.theguardian.com/film/2014/may/01/lost-films-peter-sellers-comedies-movie-orphans

Alaura Eden Albania albanian Albert Brooks

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