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Lost film

A lost film is a feature or short film that no longer exists in any studio archive, private collection or public archive.[1]

Lon Chaney in London After Midnight (1927), one of the most sought-after lost films. The last known print was destroyed in the 1965 MGM vault fire, leaving only a set of production stills as a visual record.

Conditions

During most of the 20th century, U.S. copyright law required at least one copy of every American film to be deposited at the Library of Congress at the time of copyright registration, but the Librarian of Congress was not required to retain those copies: "Under the provisions of the act of March 4, 1909, authority is granted for the return to the claimant of copyright of such copyright deposits as are not required by the Library."[2]

A report created by Library of Congress film historian and archivist David Pierce claims:

  • 75% of original silent-era films have perished.
  • Only 14% of the 10,919 silent films released by major studios exist in their original 35 mm or other formats.
  • 11% survive only in full-length foreign versions or film formats of lesser image quality.[1][3]

Of the American sound films made from 1927 to 1950, an estimated half have been lost.[4]

The phrase "lost film" can also be used in a literal sense for instances where footage of deleted scenes, unedited, and alternative versions of feature films are known to have been created but can no longer be accounted for. Sometimes, a copy of a lost film is rediscovered. A film that has not been recovered in its entirety is called a partially lost film. For example, the 1922 film Sherlock Holmes was eventually discovered with some of the original footage missing.

Stills

Many film studios hire a still photographer to take pictures during production for potential publicity use.[5] Some are produced in quantity for display use by theaters, others in smaller numbers for distribution to newspapers and magazines, and have subsequently preserved imagery from otherwise lost films.

In some cases, such as London After Midnight, the surviving coverage is so extensive that an entire lost film can be reconstructed scene by scene from still photographs. Stills have been used to stand in for missing footage when making new preservation prints of partially lost films: for example, with the Gloria Swanson picture Sadie Thompson.

Stills can furthermore tell the future viewer of today how the film was like during those early days. Stills can also give viewers the example and an idea of how and what the film of early cinema would have looked like if it would have survived from the obscurity of the poorly handled conditions they were in. Today many archives of different studios or universities and libraries, most notably The Library of Congress now preserve the photo and production stills of many lost films.

Reasons for film loss

 
Theda Bara in Cleopatra (1917). Four hundred stills, twenty seconds of the film itself, and the intro are known to have survived. Because a small loop of the film exists, Cleopatra in the loose sense could be considered a partially lost film.
 
The First Men in the Moon (1919), a lost British film, reputedly "the first movie to ever be based entirely on a famous science fiction novel"[6]

Most lost films are from the silent film and early talkie era, from about 1894 to 1930.[7] Martin Scorsese's Film Foundation estimates that more than 90% of American films made before 1929 are lost,[8] and the Library of Congress estimates that 75% of all silent films are lost forever.[9]

The largest cause of silent film loss was intentional destruction. Before the era of television (and home video), films were viewed as having little future value when their theatrical runs ended. Similarly, silent films were perceived as worthless after the end of the silent era. Film preservationist Robert A. Harris has said, "Most of the early films did not survive because of wholesale junking by the studios. There was no thought of ever saving these films. They simply needed vault space and the materials were expensive to house."[10]

Meanwhile, the studios could earn money by recycling the film for their silver content. Many Technicolor two-color negatives from the 1920s and 1930s were thrown out when studios simply refused to reclaim their films, still being held by Technicolor in its vaults. Some used prints were sold to scrap dealers and ultimately cut up into short segments for use with small, hand-cranked 35 mm movie projectors, which were sold as a toy for showing brief excerpts from Hollywood movies at home.

 
Tenderloin (1928), starring Dolores Costello, was the second Vitaphone feature to have talking sequences. It is considered a lost film because only its soundtrack is known to have survived.

Sometimes, the destruction was deliberate. In 1921, actor Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle was charged with the rape and murder of actress Virginia Rappe. Following a series of trials, he was ultimately acquitted; however, by this time, his name had become so toxic that studios engaged in the systematic destruction of all films in which he had a starring role.[11]

 
Production still of those involved with Humor Risk (1921), now long-lost, the first Marx Brothers film.

Many other early motion pictures are lost because of how it is carefully conditioned and handled, the nitrate film used for nearly all 35 mm negatives and prints made before 1952 is highly flammable. When in very badly deteriorated condition and improperly stored (e.g. in a sun-baked shed), nitrate film can spontaneously combust. Fires have destroyed entire archives of films. For example, a storage vault fire in 1937 destroyed all the original negatives of pre-1935 films made by Fox Pictures.[12] The 1965 MGM vault fire resulted in the loss of hundreds of more silent films and early talkies, including the aforementioned London After Midnight, which is now considered as cinema's greatest holy grail

Nitrate film is chemically unstable and over time can decay into a sticky mass or a powder akin to gunpowder. This process can be very unpredictable: some nitrate film from the 1890s is still in good condition today, while some much later nitrate had to be scrapped as unsalvageable when it was barely 20 years old. Much depends on the environment in which it is stored. Ideal conditions of low temperature, low humidity, and adequate ventilation can preserve nitrate film for centuries, but in practice, the storage conditions were usually far from ideal. When a film on nitrate base is said to have been "preserved", this almost always means simply that it has been copied onto safety film or, more recently, digitized; both methods result in some loss of quality.[citation needed]

Eastman Kodak introduced a nonflammable 35 mm film stock in spring 1909. However, the plasticizers used to make the film flexible evaporated too quickly, making the film dry and brittle, causing splices to part and perforations to tear. By 1911, the major American film studios were back to using nitrate stock.[13] "Safety film" was relegated to sub-35 mm formats such as 16 mm and 8 mm until improvements were made in the late 1940s.

 

Some pre-1931 sound films made by Warner Bros. and First National have been lost because they used a sound-on-disc system with a separate soundtrack on special phonograph records. If some of a film's soundtrack discs could not be found in the 1950s when 16 mm sound-on-film reduction prints of early "talkies" were being made for inclusion in television syndication packages, that film's chances of survival plummeted: many sound-on-disc films have survived only by way of those 16 mm prints.

As a consequence of this widespread lack of care, the work of many early filmmakers and performers has made its way to the present only in fragmentary form. A high-profile example is a case of Theda Bara: one of the best-known actresses of the early silent era, she made 40 films, but only six are now known to exist. Clara Bow was equally celebrated in her heyday, but 20 of her 57 films are completely lost, and another five are incomplete.[14] Once-popular stage actresses who made the jump to silent films, such as Pauline Frederick and Elsie Ferguson, are now largely forgotten, with little left of their film performances; fewer than 10 movies exist from Frederick's work from 1915–28, and Ferguson has just two surviving films: one from 1919, and her only talkie from 1930.

 
John Wayne in the lost Western The Oregon Trail (1936)

All of the film performances of the stage actress and Bara rival Valeska Suratt have been lost. William Farnum, a Fox player like Bara and Suratt, was one of the early screen's big Western actors, rivaling the likes of William S. Hart, Tom Mix, and Harry Carey. However, today only three of his Fox films are extant. Others, such as Francis X. Bushman and William Desmond, had numerous film credits, but films made in their heyday are missing due to junking, neglect, warfare, or studios becoming defunct. Nevertheless, unlike Suratt and Bara, these men continued working into the sound era and even on television, so their later performances can be viewed.

Almost all of the films made by Charlie Chaplin have survived, as well as extensive amounts of unused footage dating back to 1916. The exceptions are A Woman of the Sea (which he destroyed himself as a tax write-off) and one of his early Keystone films, Her Friend the Bandit (see Unknown Chaplin). The filmography of D. W. Griffith is nearly complete, as many of his early Biograph films were deposited by the company in paper print form at the Library of Congress.

Many of Griffith's feature-film works of the 1910s and 1920s found their way to the film collection at the Museum of Modern Art in the 1930s, and were preserved under the auspices of curator Iris Barry. Mary Pickford's filmography is nearly complete; her early years were spent with Griffith, and she gained control of her own productions in the late 1910s and early 1920s. She also backtracked[clarification needed] to as many of her Zukor-controlled early Famous Players films as were salvageable.

Stars such as Chaplin and Douglas Fairbanks enjoyed stupendous popularity, and their films were reissued over and over throughout the silent era, meaning prints of their films were likely to surface decades later. Mary Pickford at one point intended to destroy her films, which she had acquired the rights to after her death, but later relented. Pickford, Charlie Chaplin, Harold Lloyd, and Cecil B. DeMille were early champions of film preservation, although Lloyd lost a good number of his silent works in a vault fire in the early 1940s.

In March 2019, the National Film Archive of India reported that 31,000 of its film reels had been lost or destroyed.[15]

Later lost films

An improved 35 mm safety film was introduced in 1949. Since safety film is much more stable than nitrate film, comparatively few films were lost after about 1950. However, color fading of certain color stocks and vinegar syndrome threaten the preservation of films made since about this time.

Most mainstream movies from the 1950s onwards survive today, but several early pornographic films and some B movies are lost. In most cases, these obscure films go unnoticed and unknown, but some films by noted cult directors have been lost, as well:

  • Several films by Kenneth Anger from throughout his career have been lost for a variety of reasons.
  • The 1972 film The Undergraduate, directed by Ed Wood, has been lost. His 1971 film Necromania was believed lost for years, until an edited version resurfaced at a yard sale in 1992, followed by a complete unedited print in 2001.[16] A complete print of the previously lost Wood pornographic film The Young Marrieds was discovered in 2004. His 1970 film Take It Out in Trade was thought to exist only in fragments without sound, released on home video in 1995 as Take It Out in Trade: The Outtakes, until the release of a scanned 16mm theatrical print on Blu-ray Disc in 2018.
  • The Noble Experiment (1955), the first feature film from director/writer Tom Graeff (in which he played a misunderstood genius scientist), was considered lost for many years until it was found by Elle Schneider during the production of The Boy from Out of This World, a documentary about Graeff.
  • Most of the early films of Andy Milligan are considered lost.
  • Many short sponsored films—films made for educational, training, or religious purposes—from the 1940s through the 1970s are also lost, as they were thought of as disposable or upgradable.
  • Some of the first roles of Jackie Chan and Sammo Hung, including Big and Little Wong Tin Bar, were considered lost until their discovery and re-release in 2016.
  • The first three films of noted Finnish melodrama actor and director Teuvo Tulio were lost, along with several other films that were of interest at least for historians of Finnish cinema, when the film depository of the company Adams Filmi burned down in Helsinki in 1959.
  • Sometimes, only certain aspects of films may be lost. Early color films such as The Show of Shows (John G. Adolfi, 1929) exist only partially or not at all in color because the copies that were made of the film which still exist were created on black-and-white stock. (See List of early color feature films.)
  • Two three-dimensional films from 1954, Top Banana and Southwest Passage, exist only in their flat form because only one print, made for either the left or right eye, exists.
  • Golden Dawn was an early Technicolor musical with lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II. All surviving prints are in black and white, which is how it was released on DVD by Warner Archive Collection.

This does not include films that underwent revision, "director's cuts", etc., resulting in the original versions being taken out of general circulation, as in rare cases have the original versions been destroyed. Notable examples of revised films replacing the originals in circulation are the "Special Edition" versions of the George Lucas-produced Star Wars films from 1977 to 1983, which are now circulated with revisions primarily made in the 1990s (though further revisions were made in later releases, and the original versions were available for a short time on DVD). Another Lucas revision, to his film THX-1138, also replaced the original print in circulation.

Lost film soundtracks

Some films produced from 1926–31 using the Vitaphone sound-on-disc system, in which the soundtrack is separate from the film, are now considered lost because the soundtrack discs were lost or destroyed, while the picture elements survive. Conversely, and more commonly, some early sound films survive only assets of soundtrack discs, with the picture elements completely missing (e.g. The Man from Blankley's (1930), starring John Barrymore) or surviving only in fragmentary form (e.g. Gold Diggers of Broadway (1929) and The Rogue Song (1930), two highly popular and profitable early musicals in two-color Technicolor).

Many stereophonic soundtracks from the early to mid-1950s that were either played in interlock on a 35 mm full coat magnetic reel or single-strip magnetic film (such as Fox's four-track magnetic, which became the standard of mag stereophonic sound) are now lost. Films such as House of Wax, The Caddy, The War of the Worlds, War and Peace, The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T, and From Here to Eternity that were initially available with 3-track, magnetic sound are now available only with a monophonic optical soundtrack. The chemistry behind adhering magnetic particles to the tri-acetate film base eventually caused the autocatalytic breakdown of the film (vinegar syndrome). As long as studios had a monaural optical negative that could be printed, studio executives felt no need to preserve the stereophonic versions of the soundtracks.

List of lost films

List of incomplete or partially lost films

This list consists of films for which any footage survives, including trailers and clips reused in other films.

Rediscovered films

Occasionally, prints of films considered lost have been rediscovered. An example is the 1910 version of Frankenstein which was believed lost for decades until the existence of a print (which had been in the hands of an unwitting collector for years) was discovered in the 1970s. A print of Richard III (1912) was found in 1996 and restored by the American Film Institute. In 2013, an early Mary Pickford film, Their First Misunderstanding, notable for being the first film in which she was credited by name, was found in a New Hampshire barn and donated to Keene State College.[17]

Beyond the Rocks (1922), with Gloria Swanson and Rudolph Valentino, was considered a lost film for several decades. Swanson lamented the loss of this and other films in her 1980 memoirs but optimistically concluded: "I do not believe these films are gone forever." In 2000, a print was found in the Netherlands and restored by the Nederlands Filmmuseum and the Haghefilm Conservation. It turned up among about two thousand rusty film canisters donated by Haarlem's eccentric Dutch collector, Joop van Liempd. It was given its first modern screening in 2005 and has since been aired on Turner Classic Movies.

In the early 2000s, the German film Metropolis—which had been distributed in many different edits over the years—was restored to as close to the original version as possible by reinstating edited footage and using computer technology to repair damaged footage. However, at that point, approximately a quarter of the original film footage was considered lost, according to the Kino Video DVD release of the restored film. On July 1, 2008, Berlin film experts announced that a copy of the film had been discovered in the archives of the film museum Museo del Cine in Buenos Aires, Argentina, which contained almost all of the scenes still missing from the 2002 restoration.[18][19] The film now has been restored very close to its premiere version. The restoration process is featured in the documentary Metropolis Refundada.

In 2010, digital copies of ten early American films were presented to the Library of Congress by the Boris Yeltsin Presidential Library, the first film installment from the Russian state archives to be repatriated.[20]

In 2018, the rediscovered 1898 film Something Good – Negro Kiss was inducted into the National Film Registry. Its portrayal of a warm, loving Black couple stands in stark contrast to the typically racist portrayals of that era.[21]

Sometimes, a film believed lost in its original state has been restored, either through the process of colorization or other restoration methods. "The Cage," the original 1964 pilot film for Star Trek, survived only in a black-and-white print until 1987, when a film archivist found an unmarked (mute) 35 mm reel in a Hollywood film laboratory with the negative trims of the unused scenes.[22]

Stock footage

Several films that would otherwise be entirely lost partially survive as stock footage used for later films.

For example, the Universal Pictures short Boo! (1932) contains the only remaining footage of the Universal feature film The Cat Creeps (1930). However, UCLA still has a copy of the soundtrack. The James Cagney film Winner Take All (1932) used scenes from the early talkie Queen of the Night Clubs (1929), starring Texas Guinan; that footage is all that remains of the earlier film.

Actress-turned-gossip columnist Hedda Hopper made her screen debut in the Fox Film The Battle of Hearts (1916). Twenty-six years later, in 1942, Hopper produced her short series "Hedda Hopper's Hollywood #2". In the short, Hopper, William Farnum (the film's star), her son William Hopper, and William Hopper's wife Jane Gilbert view brief portions of The Battle of Hearts. More than likely, Hopper had an entire print of the movie in 1942. However, like many early Fox films, The Battle of Hearts is now lost or missing.

One of the best-known of Charlie Chaplin's works, the silent film The Gold Rush (1925), was re-released in 1942 to include a musical track and narration by Chaplin himself. The reissue would end up having the unintentional result of preserving the film, as the original film (though generally not considered a lost film) shows noticeable degradation of image and missing frames, damage not evident in the 1942 version.

The Polish film O czym się nie mówi [pl] (1939) contains three short fragments of Arabella (1917), one of the early films of Pola Negri which were later lost.

In film and television

Several films have been made with lost film fragments incorporated into the work. Decasia (2002) used nothing but decaying film footage as an abstract tone poem of light and darkness, much like the more historical Lyrical Nitrate (Peter Delpeut, 1991) which contained only footage from canisters found stored in an Amsterdam cinema. In 1993, Delpeut released The Forbidden Quest, combining early film footage and archival photographs with new material to tell the fictional story of an ill-fated Antarctic expedition.

The 2016 documentary Dawson City: Frozen Time, about the history of Dawson City, Canada, and the 1978 discovery of previously lost silent films there, incorporates parts of many of those films.

The mockumentary Forgotten Silver, made by Peter Jackson, purports to show recovered footage of early films. Instead, the filmmakers used newly shot film sequences to look like lost films.

In the double feature Grindhouse (2007), both segments—Planet Terror (directed by Robert Rodriguez) and Death Proof (directed by Quentin Tarantino)—have references to missing reels, used as plot devices.

"Cigarette Burns", an episode of the horror anthology series Masters of Horror directed by John Carpenter, deals with the search for a fictional lost film, "La Fin Absolue Du Monde" ("The Absolute End of The World").

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Pierce, David. "The Survival of American Silent Films: 1912-1929" (PDF). Library Of Congress. Council on Library and Information Resources and the Library of Congress. Retrieved November 18, 2020.
  2. ^ "Report of the Register of Copyrights for the Fiscal Year 1912–1913" (PDF). Library of Congress. p. 141. Retrieved November 20, 2021.
  3. ^ Slide, Anthony (2000). Nitrate Won't Wait: History of Film Preservation in the United States. McFarland. p. 5. ISBN 978-0786408368. Retrieved November 20, 2021. It is often claimed that 75 percent of all American silent films are gone and 50 percent of all films made prior to 1950 are lost; such figures, as archivists admit in private, were thought up on the spur of the moment, without statistical information to back them up.
  4. ^ Dave Kehr (October 14, 2010). "Film Riches, Cleaned Up for Posterity". New York Times. Retrieved November 20, 2021. It's bad enough, to cite a common estimate, that 90 percent of all American silent films and 50 percent of American sound films made before 1950 appear to have vanished forever.
  5. ^ Brian Dzyak (2010). What I Really Want to Do on Set in Hollywood: A Guide to Real Jobs in the Film Industry. Crown Publishing Group. pp. 303–. ISBN 978-0-307-87516-7.
  6. ^ Robert Godwin, "H.G. Wells The First Men in the Moon: the Story of the 1919 Film," Apogee Space Books, ISBN 978-1926837-31-4- see web page at Apogee books (retrieved May 5, 2014).
  7. ^ "Silent Era : Presumed Lost". www.silentera.com.
  8. ^ Film Preservation March 12, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, The Film Foundation.
  9. ^ Ohlheiser, Abby (December 4, 2013). . The Wire. Archived from the original on November 5, 2014. Retrieved November 4, 2014.
  10. ^ Robert A. Harris, public hearing statement to the National Film Preservation Board of the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C., February 1993.
  11. ^ Humphreys, Sally; Humphreys, Geraint (February 1, 2011). Century of Scandal. Haynes Publishing. ISBN 978-1-844259-50-2.
  12. ^ "$45,000 Fire Drives Families From Homes in Little Ferry", Bergen Evening Record, July 9, 1937, p. 1. Quoted by Richard Koszarski in "Fort Lee: The Film Town", Indiana University Press, 2005, pp. 339–341. ISBN 978-0-86196-652-3.
  13. ^ Eileen Bowser, "The Transformation of Cinema 1907–1915", Charles Scribner's Sons 1990, p. 74–75. ISBN 0-684-18414-1.
  14. ^ . The Clara Bow Page. Archived from the original on November 28, 1999.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  15. ^ "Over 31,000 film reels 'lost or destroyed' at National Films Archives of India: CAG report". indianexpress.com. March 18, 2019.
  16. ^ Paumgarten, Nick (October 18, 2004). "Weird Love". In the Vault. New Yorker.
  17. ^ Mason, Anthony (September 24, 2013). "Lost Mary Pickford movie discovered in N.H. barn". CBS News. Retrieved June 24, 2014.
  18. ^ Faraci, Devin (July 3, 2008). . CHUD. p. 1. Archived from the original on July 5, 2008.
  19. ^ . The Local. July 2, 2008. Archived from the original on August 20, 2008.
  20. ^ "'Lost' silent movies found in Russia, returned to U.S." cnn.com. October 21, 2010. Retrieved February 11, 2011.
  21. ^ "Silent film of black couple's kiss added to National Film Registry - University of Chicago News". news.uchicago.edu. Retrieved June 7, 2022.
  22. ^ Bob Furmanek, post to Classic Horror Film Board, April 21, 2008. The reconstruction used the soundtrack of Roddenberry's 16mm print for those scenes otherwise without sound.

Further reading

  • Hansen, Kathleen A.; Paul, Nora (2017). Future-proofing the news : preserving the first draft of history. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-4422-6712-1. OCLC 961007777.

External links

  • List of Lost Films article category section on the Lost Media Wiki
  • Presumed Lost list at SilentEra
  • International Lost Films Database
  • Historic Fires at Universal Studios essay
  • A Lost Film blog about lost films, outtakes, etc.
  • "How Do Silent Films Become "Lost"?" essay at Silent-ology
  • list of 1970s titles at the Wayback Machine
  • Film Threat's Top 50 Lost Films of All Time and Version 2.0
  • Lost Forever: The Art of Film Preservation (2013) documentary
  • American Silent Feature Film Database at the Library of Congress
  • List of 7200 Lost U.S. Silent Feature Films 1912-29 at the Library of Congress
  • Vitaphone Project finds and restores Vitaphone films and their soundtrack discs

lost, film, confused, with, lost, television, broadcast, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, plea. Not to be confused with Lost television broadcast This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Lost film news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message A lost film is a feature or short film that no longer exists in any studio archive private collection or public archive 1 Lon Chaney in London After Midnight 1927 one of the most sought after lost films The last known print was destroyed in the 1965 MGM vault fire leaving only a set of production stills as a visual record Contents 1 Conditions 2 Stills 3 Reasons for film loss 4 Later lost films 5 Lost film soundtracks 6 List of lost films 7 List of incomplete or partially lost films 8 Rediscovered films 9 Stock footage 10 In film and television 11 See also 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksConditions EditDuring most of the 20th century U S copyright law required at least one copy of every American film to be deposited at the Library of Congress at the time of copyright registration but the Librarian of Congress was not required to retain those copies Under the provisions of the act of March 4 1909 authority is granted for the return to the claimant of copyright of such copyright deposits as are not required by the Library 2 A report created by Library of Congress film historian and archivist David Pierce claims 75 of original silent era films have perished Only 14 of the 10 919 silent films released by major studios exist in their original 35 mm or other formats 11 survive only in full length foreign versions or film formats of lesser image quality 1 3 Of the American sound films made from 1927 to 1950 an estimated half have been lost 4 The phrase lost film can also be used in a literal sense for instances where footage of deleted scenes unedited and alternative versions of feature films are known to have been created but can no longer be accounted for Sometimes a copy of a lost film is rediscovered A film that has not been recovered in its entirety is called a partially lost film For example the 1922 film Sherlock Holmes was eventually discovered with some of the original footage missing Stills EditMany film studios hire a still photographer to take pictures during production for potential publicity use 5 Some are produced in quantity for display use by theaters others in smaller numbers for distribution to newspapers and magazines and have subsequently preserved imagery from otherwise lost films In some cases such as London After Midnight the surviving coverage is so extensive that an entire lost film can be reconstructed scene by scene from still photographs Stills have been used to stand in for missing footage when making new preservation prints of partially lost films for example with the Gloria Swanson picture Sadie Thompson Stills can furthermore tell the future viewer of today how the film was like during those early days Stills can also give viewers the example and an idea of how and what the film of early cinema would have looked like if it would have survived from the obscurity of the poorly handled conditions they were in Today many archives of different studios or universities and libraries most notably The Library of Congress now preserve the photo and production stills of many lost films Reasons for film loss Edit Theda Bara in Cleopatra 1917 Four hundred stills twenty seconds of the film itself and the intro are known to have survived Because a small loop of the film exists Cleopatra in the loose sense could be considered a partially lost film The First Men in the Moon 1919 a lost British film reputedly the first movie to ever be based entirely on a famous science fiction novel 6 Most lost films are from the silent film and early talkie era from about 1894 to 1930 7 Martin Scorsese s Film Foundation estimates that more than 90 of American films made before 1929 are lost 8 and the Library of Congress estimates that 75 of all silent films are lost forever 9 The largest cause of silent film loss was intentional destruction Before the era of television and home video films were viewed as having little future value when their theatrical runs ended Similarly silent films were perceived as worthless after the end of the silent era Film preservationist Robert A Harris has said Most of the early films did not survive because of wholesale junking by the studios There was no thought of ever saving these films They simply needed vault space and the materials were expensive to house 10 Meanwhile the studios could earn money by recycling the film for their silver content Many Technicolor two color negatives from the 1920s and 1930s were thrown out when studios simply refused to reclaim their films still being held by Technicolor in its vaults Some used prints were sold to scrap dealers and ultimately cut up into short segments for use with small hand cranked 35 mm movie projectors which were sold as a toy for showing brief excerpts from Hollywood movies at home Tenderloin 1928 starring Dolores Costello was the second Vitaphone feature to have talking sequences It is considered a lost film because only its soundtrack is known to have survived Sometimes the destruction was deliberate In 1921 actor Roscoe Fatty Arbuckle was charged with the rape and murder of actress Virginia Rappe Following a series of trials he was ultimately acquitted however by this time his name had become so toxic that studios engaged in the systematic destruction of all films in which he had a starring role 11 Production still of those involved with Humor Risk 1921 now long lost the first Marx Brothers film Many other early motion pictures are lost because of how it is carefully conditioned and handled the nitrate film used for nearly all 35 mm negatives and prints made before 1952 is highly flammable When in very badly deteriorated condition and improperly stored e g in a sun baked shed nitrate film can spontaneously combust Fires have destroyed entire archives of films For example a storage vault fire in 1937 destroyed all the original negatives of pre 1935 films made by Fox Pictures 12 The 1965 MGM vault fire resulted in the loss of hundreds of more silent films and early talkies including the aforementioned London After Midnight which is now considered as cinema s greatest holy grailNitrate film is chemically unstable and over time can decay into a sticky mass or a powder akin to gunpowder This process can be very unpredictable some nitrate film from the 1890s is still in good condition today while some much later nitrate had to be scrapped as unsalvageable when it was barely 20 years old Much depends on the environment in which it is stored Ideal conditions of low temperature low humidity and adequate ventilation can preserve nitrate film for centuries but in practice the storage conditions were usually far from ideal When a film on nitrate base is said to have been preserved this almost always means simply that it has been copied onto safety film or more recently digitized both methods result in some loss of quality citation needed Eastman Kodak introduced a nonflammable 35 mm film stock in spring 1909 However the plasticizers used to make the film flexible evaporated too quickly making the film dry and brittle causing splices to part and perforations to tear By 1911 the major American film studios were back to using nitrate stock 13 Safety film was relegated to sub 35 mm formats such as 16 mm and 8 mm until improvements were made in the late 1940s Gold Diggers of Broadway 1929 the third Warner Bros film shot in Technicolor is a partially lost film Some pre 1931 sound films made by Warner Bros and First National have been lost because they used a sound on disc system with a separate soundtrack on special phonograph records If some of a film s soundtrack discs could not be found in the 1950s when 16 mm sound on film reduction prints of early talkies were being made for inclusion in television syndication packages that film s chances of survival plummeted many sound on disc films have survived only by way of those 16 mm prints As a consequence of this widespread lack of care the work of many early filmmakers and performers has made its way to the present only in fragmentary form A high profile example is a case of Theda Bara one of the best known actresses of the early silent era she made 40 films but only six are now known to exist Clara Bow was equally celebrated in her heyday but 20 of her 57 films are completely lost and another five are incomplete 14 Once popular stage actresses who made the jump to silent films such as Pauline Frederick and Elsie Ferguson are now largely forgotten with little left of their film performances fewer than 10 movies exist from Frederick s work from 1915 28 and Ferguson has just two surviving films one from 1919 and her only talkie from 1930 John Wayne in the lost Western The Oregon Trail 1936 All of the film performances of the stage actress and Bara rival Valeska Suratt have been lost William Farnum a Fox player like Bara and Suratt was one of the early screen s big Western actors rivaling the likes of William S Hart Tom Mix and Harry Carey However today only three of his Fox films are extant Others such as Francis X Bushman and William Desmond had numerous film credits but films made in their heyday are missing due to junking neglect warfare or studios becoming defunct Nevertheless unlike Suratt and Bara these men continued working into the sound era and even on television so their later performances can be viewed Almost all of the films made by Charlie Chaplin have survived as well as extensive amounts of unused footage dating back to 1916 The exceptions are A Woman of the Sea which he destroyed himself as a tax write off and one of his early Keystone films Her Friend the Bandit see Unknown Chaplin The filmography of D W Griffith is nearly complete as many of his early Biograph films were deposited by the company in paper print form at the Library of Congress Many of Griffith s feature film works of the 1910s and 1920s found their way to the film collection at the Museum of Modern Art in the 1930s and were preserved under the auspices of curator Iris Barry Mary Pickford s filmography is nearly complete her early years were spent with Griffith and she gained control of her own productions in the late 1910s and early 1920s She also backtracked clarification needed to as many of her Zukor controlled early Famous Players films as were salvageable Stars such as Chaplin and Douglas Fairbanks enjoyed stupendous popularity and their films were reissued over and over throughout the silent era meaning prints of their films were likely to surface decades later Mary Pickford at one point intended to destroy her films which she had acquired the rights to after her death but later relented Pickford Charlie Chaplin Harold Lloyd and Cecil B DeMille were early champions of film preservation although Lloyd lost a good number of his silent works in a vault fire in the early 1940s In March 2019 the National Film Archive of India reported that 31 000 of its film reels had been lost or destroyed 15 Later lost films EditAn improved 35 mm safety film was introduced in 1949 Since safety film is much more stable than nitrate film comparatively few films were lost after about 1950 However color fading of certain color stocks and vinegar syndrome threaten the preservation of films made since about this time Most mainstream movies from the 1950s onwards survive today but several early pornographic films and some B movies are lost In most cases these obscure films go unnoticed and unknown but some films by noted cult directors have been lost as well Several films by Kenneth Anger from throughout his career have been lost for a variety of reasons The 1972 film The Undergraduate directed by Ed Wood has been lost His 1971 film Necromania was believed lost for years until an edited version resurfaced at a yard sale in 1992 followed by a complete unedited print in 2001 16 A complete print of the previously lost Wood pornographic film The Young Marrieds was discovered in 2004 His 1970 film Take It Out in Trade was thought to exist only in fragments without sound released on home video in 1995 as Take It Out in Trade The Outtakes until the release of a scanned 16mm theatrical print on Blu ray Disc in 2018 The Noble Experiment 1955 the first feature film from director writer Tom Graeff in which he played a misunderstood genius scientist was considered lost for many years until it was found by Elle Schneider during the production of The Boy from Out of This World a documentary about Graeff Most of the early films of Andy Milligan are considered lost Many short sponsored films films made for educational training or religious purposes from the 1940s through the 1970s are also lost as they were thought of as disposable or upgradable Some of the first roles of Jackie Chan and Sammo Hung including Big and Little Wong Tin Bar were considered lost until their discovery and re release in 2016 The first three films of noted Finnish melodrama actor and director Teuvo Tulio were lost along with several other films that were of interest at least for historians of Finnish cinema when the film depository of the company Adams Filmi burned down in Helsinki in 1959 Sometimes only certain aspects of films may be lost Early color films such as The Show of Shows John G Adolfi 1929 exist only partially or not at all in color because the copies that were made of the film which still exist were created on black and white stock See List of early color feature films Two three dimensional films from 1954 Top Banana and Southwest Passage exist only in their flat form because only one print made for either the left or right eye exists Golden Dawn was an early Technicolor musical with lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II All surviving prints are in black and white which is how it was released on DVD by Warner Archive Collection This does not include films that underwent revision director s cuts etc resulting in the original versions being taken out of general circulation as in rare cases have the original versions been destroyed Notable examples of revised films replacing the originals in circulation are the Special Edition versions of the George Lucas produced Star Wars films from 1977 to 1983 which are now circulated with revisions primarily made in the 1990s though further revisions were made in later releases and the original versions were available for a short time on DVD Another Lucas revision to his film THX 1138 also replaced the original print in circulation Lost film soundtracks EditSome films produced from 1926 31 using the Vitaphone sound on disc system in which the soundtrack is separate from the film are now considered lost because the soundtrack discs were lost or destroyed while the picture elements survive Conversely and more commonly some early sound films survive only assets of soundtrack discs with the picture elements completely missing e g The Man from Blankley s 1930 starring John Barrymore or surviving only in fragmentary form e g Gold Diggers of Broadway 1929 and The Rogue Song 1930 two highly popular and profitable early musicals in two color Technicolor Many stereophonic soundtracks from the early to mid 1950s that were either played in interlock on a 35 mm full coat magnetic reel or single strip magnetic film such as Fox s four track magnetic which became the standard of mag stereophonic sound are now lost Films such as House of Wax The Caddy The War of the Worlds War and Peace The 5 000 Fingers of Dr T and From Here to Eternity that were initially available with 3 track magnetic sound are now available only with a monophonic optical soundtrack The chemistry behind adhering magnetic particles to the tri acetate film base eventually caused the autocatalytic breakdown of the film vinegar syndrome As long as studios had a monaural optical negative that could be printed studio executives felt no need to preserve the stereophonic versions of the soundtracks List of lost films EditMain article List of lost filmsList of incomplete or partially lost films EditMain article List of incomplete or partially lost films This list consists of films for which any footage survives including trailers and clips reused in other films Rediscovered films EditMain article List of rediscovered films Occasionally prints of films considered lost have been rediscovered An example is the 1910 version of Frankenstein which was believed lost for decades until the existence of a print which had been in the hands of an unwitting collector for years was discovered in the 1970s A print of Richard III 1912 was found in 1996 and restored by the American Film Institute In 2013 an early Mary Pickford film Their First Misunderstanding notable for being the first film in which she was credited by name was found in a New Hampshire barn and donated to Keene State College 17 Beyond the Rocks 1922 with Gloria Swanson and Rudolph Valentino was considered a lost film for several decades Swanson lamented the loss of this and other films in her 1980 memoirs but optimistically concluded I do not believe these films are gone forever In 2000 a print was found in the Netherlands and restored by the Nederlands Filmmuseum and the Haghefilm Conservation It turned up among about two thousand rusty film canisters donated by Haarlem s eccentric Dutch collector Joop van Liempd It was given its first modern screening in 2005 and has since been aired on Turner Classic Movies In the early 2000s the German film Metropolis which had been distributed in many different edits over the years was restored to as close to the original version as possible by reinstating edited footage and using computer technology to repair damaged footage However at that point approximately a quarter of the original film footage was considered lost according to the Kino Video DVD release of the restored film On July 1 2008 Berlin film experts announced that a copy of the film had been discovered in the archives of the film museum Museo del Cine in Buenos Aires Argentina which contained almost all of the scenes still missing from the 2002 restoration 18 19 The film now has been restored very close to its premiere version The restoration process is featured in the documentary Metropolis Refundada In 2010 digital copies of ten early American films were presented to the Library of Congress by the Boris Yeltsin Presidential Library the first film installment from the Russian state archives to be repatriated 20 In 2018 the rediscovered 1898 film Something Good Negro Kiss was inducted into the National Film Registry Its portrayal of a warm loving Black couple stands in stark contrast to the typically racist portrayals of that era 21 Sometimes a film believed lost in its original state has been restored either through the process of colorization or other restoration methods The Cage the original 1964 pilot film for Star Trek survived only in a black and white print until 1987 when a film archivist found an unmarked mute 35 mm reel in a Hollywood film laboratory with the negative trims of the unused scenes 22 Stock footage EditSeveral films that would otherwise be entirely lost partially survive as stock footage used for later films For example the Universal Pictures short Boo 1932 contains the only remaining footage of the Universal feature film The Cat Creeps 1930 However UCLA still has a copy of the soundtrack The James Cagney film Winner Take All 1932 used scenes from the early talkie Queen of the Night Clubs 1929 starring Texas Guinan that footage is all that remains of the earlier film Actress turned gossip columnist Hedda Hopper made her screen debut in the Fox Film The Battle of Hearts 1916 Twenty six years later in 1942 Hopper produced her short series Hedda Hopper s Hollywood 2 In the short Hopper William Farnum the film s star her son William Hopper and William Hopper s wife Jane Gilbert view brief portions of The Battle of Hearts More than likely Hopper had an entire print of the movie in 1942 However like many early Fox films The Battle of Hearts is now lost or missing One of the best known of Charlie Chaplin s works the silent film The Gold Rush 1925 was re released in 1942 to include a musical track and narration by Chaplin himself The reissue would end up having the unintentional result of preserving the film as the original film though generally not considered a lost film shows noticeable degradation of image and missing frames damage not evident in the 1942 version The Polish film O czym sie nie mowi pl 1939 contains three short fragments of Arabella 1917 one of the early films of Pola Negri which were later lost In film and television EditSeveral films have been made with lost film fragments incorporated into the work Decasia 2002 used nothing but decaying film footage as an abstract tone poem of light and darkness much like the more historical Lyrical Nitrate Peter Delpeut 1991 which contained only footage from canisters found stored in an Amsterdam cinema In 1993 Delpeut released The Forbidden Quest combining early film footage and archival photographs with new material to tell the fictional story of an ill fated Antarctic expedition The 2016 documentary Dawson City Frozen Time about the history of Dawson City Canada and the 1978 discovery of previously lost silent films there incorporates parts of many of those films The mockumentary Forgotten Silver made by Peter Jackson purports to show recovered footage of early films Instead the filmmakers used newly shot film sequences to look like lost films In the double feature Grindhouse 2007 both segments Planet Terror directed by Robert Rodriguez and Death Proof directed by Quentin Tarantino have references to missing reels used as plot devices Cigarette Burns an episode of the horror anthology series Masters of Horror directed by John Carpenter deals with the search for a fictional lost film La Fin Absolue Du Monde The Absolute End of The World See also Edit Film portalArchive Treasure Hunt Digital permanence Found film List of missing treasures List of rediscovered films List of unpublished books Lost media Preservation library and archival science References Edit a b Pierce David The Survival of American Silent Films 1912 1929 PDF Library Of Congress Council on Library and Information Resources and the Library of Congress Retrieved November 18 2020 Report of the Register of Copyrights for the Fiscal Year 1912 1913 PDF Library of Congress p 141 Retrieved November 20 2021 Slide Anthony 2000 Nitrate Won t Wait History of Film Preservation in the United States McFarland p 5 ISBN 978 0786408368 Retrieved November 20 2021 It is often claimed that 75 percent of all American silent films are gone and 50 percent of all films made prior to 1950 are lost such figures as archivists admit in private were thought up on the spur of the moment without statistical information to back them up Dave Kehr October 14 2010 Film Riches Cleaned Up for Posterity New York Times Retrieved November 20 2021 It s bad enough to cite a common estimate that 90 percent of all American silent films and 50 percent of American sound films made before 1950 appear to have vanished forever Brian Dzyak 2010 What I Really Want to Do on Set in Hollywood A Guide to Real Jobs in the Film Industry Crown Publishing Group pp 303 ISBN 978 0 307 87516 7 Robert Godwin H G Wells The First Men in the Moon the Story of the 1919 Film Apogee Space Books ISBN 978 1926837 31 4 see web page at Apogee books retrieved May 5 2014 Silent Era Presumed Lost www silentera com Film Preservation Archived March 12 2013 at the Wayback Machine The Film Foundation Ohlheiser Abby December 4 2013 Most of America s Silent Films Are Lost Forever The Wire Archived from the original on November 5 2014 Retrieved November 4 2014 Robert A Harris public hearing statement to the National Film Preservation Board of the Library of Congress Washington D C February 1993 Humphreys Sally Humphreys Geraint February 1 2011 Century of Scandal Haynes Publishing ISBN 978 1 844259 50 2 45 000 Fire Drives Families From Homes in Little Ferry Bergen Evening Record July 9 1937 p 1 Quoted by Richard Koszarski in Fort Lee The Film Town Indiana University Press 2005 pp 339 341 ISBN 978 0 86196 652 3 Eileen Bowser The Transformation of Cinema 1907 1915 Charles Scribner s Sons 1990 p 74 75 ISBN 0 684 18414 1 Clara Bow The Clara Bow Page Archived from the original on November 28 1999 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Over 31 000 film reels lost or destroyed at National Films Archives of India CAG report indianexpress com March 18 2019 Paumgarten Nick October 18 2004 Weird Love In the Vault New Yorker Mason Anthony September 24 2013 Lost Mary Pickford movie discovered in N H barn CBS News Retrieved June 24 2014 Faraci Devin July 3 2008 METROPOLIS REBORN CHUD p 1 Archived from the original on July 5 2008 Lost scenes of Metropolis discovered in Argentina The Local July 2 2008 Archived from the original on August 20 2008 Lost silent movies found in Russia returned to U S cnn com October 21 2010 Retrieved February 11 2011 Silent film of black couple s kiss added to National Film Registry University of Chicago News news uchicago edu Retrieved June 7 2022 Bob Furmanek post to Classic Horror Film Board April 21 2008 The reconstruction used the soundtrack of Roddenberry s 16mm print for those scenes otherwise without sound Further reading EditHansen Kathleen A Paul Nora 2017 Future proofing the news preserving the first draft of history Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4422 6712 1 OCLC 961007777 External links EditList of Lost Films article category section on the Lost Media Wiki Presumed Lost list at SilentEra International Lost Films Database Historic Fires at Universal Studios essay A Lost Film blog about lost films outtakes etc How Do Silent Films Become Lost essay at Silent ology The Lost Movies list of 1970s titles at the Wayback Machine Film Threat s Top 50 Lost Films of All Time and Version 2 0 Lost Forever The Art of Film Preservation 2013 documentary American Silent Feature Film Database at the Library of Congress List of 7200 Lost U S Silent Feature Films 1912 29 at the Library of Congress Vitaphone Project finds and restores Vitaphone films and their soundtrack discs Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lost film amp oldid 1159071206, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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