Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated:
1
00:00:31,840 --> 00:00:34,232
There is nothing like
going to a theater,
2
00:00:34,999 --> 00:00:36,797
a communal atmosphere,
3
00:00:36,797 --> 00:00:39,726
watching something
that is bigger than life.
4
00:00:40,208 --> 00:00:41,550
It's dark...
5
00:00:42,300 --> 00:00:44,635
You don't look at anybody...
6
00:00:45,423 --> 00:00:48,640
And then the movie started
and it was really,
7
00:00:48,640 --> 00:00:50,339
really magical.
8
00:00:53,866 --> 00:00:56,043
I went to a movie at 10
in the morning,
9
00:00:56,127 --> 00:00:59,304
which to me was so odd, right?
Who goes to a movie at 10?
10
00:00:59,304 --> 00:01:03,075
But there was light, there was drama,
there was narrative
11
00:01:03,075 --> 00:01:07,702
and I think what I most loved was the way
the filmmaker was present,
12
00:01:07,947 --> 00:01:11,069
saying "Here, take a look at this,
think about that."
13
00:01:11,625 --> 00:01:15,036
We were all an eight-year-old boy.
We were all a 10-year-old girl.
14
00:01:15,036 --> 00:01:17,907
We were all sitting there in that audience
15
00:01:17,907 --> 00:01:20,489
watching whatever that movie was.
16
00:01:20,670 --> 00:01:23,380
It became a magical experience.
17
00:01:23,380 --> 00:01:24,639
You go into the dark
18
00:01:24,639 --> 00:01:27,207
and you learn something new
and you come out
19
00:01:27,207 --> 00:01:30,441
and it's almost
like a religious experience.
20
00:01:30,795 --> 00:01:33,990
If you want a window
into what was going on...
21
00:01:33,990 --> 00:01:37,573
in humankind at a given point in time,
you look at movies.
22
00:01:41,417 --> 00:01:43,506
It gave me the sense that...
23
00:01:43,506 --> 00:01:47,909
I was more
than just this little boy,
24
00:01:48,403 --> 00:01:52,003
and there was a lot of other things
out there that I could do.
25
00:01:52,003 --> 00:01:54,920
And if I just kept going
in the right direction,
26
00:01:55,146 --> 00:01:57,154
maybe the right thing would happen.
27
00:01:57,196 --> 00:01:59,432
Because that's what happened
in the movies.
28
00:02:16,601 --> 00:02:17,807
It's heavy.
29
00:02:18,810 --> 00:02:19,957
What is it?
30
00:02:23,875 --> 00:02:25,912
The, uh...
31
00:02:26,074 --> 00:02:28,014
Stuff that dreams are made of.
32
00:02:28,079 --> 00:02:29,752
Huh?
33
00:02:31,957 --> 00:02:35,113
Media giant Ted Turner
has upset a lot of people,
34
00:02:35,127 --> 00:02:39,106
because of what he's doing
to some of Hollywood's greatest old films.
35
00:02:39,129 --> 00:02:42,293
Turner recently
bought the M.G.M. film library.
36
00:02:42,450 --> 00:02:45,621
Now, he's adding color
to the black and white ones.
37
00:02:49,172 --> 00:02:51,232
To colorize or not to colorize,
38
00:02:51,232 --> 00:02:53,475
Ted Turner has said is his choice.
39
00:02:53,641 --> 00:02:58,606
Well, last time I checked,
they were my films.
You know, I'm working on my films.
40
00:03:04,529 --> 00:03:09,513
Let us just say that a very rich man
has purchased all the films
ever made in Hollywood.
41
00:03:09,513 --> 00:03:11,473
He calls together his staff and says,
42
00:03:11,473 --> 00:03:15,409
"take all the black and white ones
and turn them into color,
using our new computer."
43
00:03:15,409 --> 00:03:19,282
It was kind of an artists' rights issue
involving material alteration of films,
44
00:03:19,282 --> 00:03:22,543
such as colorization,
panning and scanning,
that sort of thing.
45
00:03:22,543 --> 00:03:26,113
It was a big controversy between directors
who don't like to see their films changed
46
00:03:26,113 --> 00:03:29,003
and studios who were looking to take, say,
black and white films
47
00:03:29,003 --> 00:03:30,802
and introduce them to a new generation
48
00:03:30,802 --> 00:03:34,135
by, they thought, colorizing them
would make them more appealing.
49
00:03:34,135 --> 00:03:37,133
Colorization
really was the combustible issue
50
00:03:37,133 --> 00:03:41,095
because a lot of film critics,
as well as the directors...
51
00:03:41,095 --> 00:03:45,856
and the cinematographers and the actors
were all so incensed at these changes,
52
00:03:45,856 --> 00:03:50,903
especially the possibility of changes to,
you know, classic films.
53
00:03:50,989 --> 00:03:54,282
Because the films are a part
of our cultural history,
54
00:03:54,316 --> 00:03:58,735
and like all accurate representations of
who and what we were,
55
00:03:58,735 --> 00:04:02,772
I think they deserve preservation
in their authentic form.
56
00:04:03,280 --> 00:04:05,007
The committee rooms were packed...
57
00:04:05,007 --> 00:04:07,653
and when you get Jimmy Stewart coming,
58
00:04:07,712 --> 00:04:10,669
you know, Mr. Smith literally
coming to Washington,
59
00:04:10,669 --> 00:04:14,369
you know, I was just sitting there,
sort of admiring the whole scene.
60
00:04:14,415 --> 00:04:18,108
I feel that they're being
tampered with...
61
00:04:18,108 --> 00:04:19,803
and I...
62
00:04:20,125 --> 00:04:23,631
I want to speak out against this.
63
00:04:24,362 --> 00:04:30,228
The Librarian of Congress got the idea
that if film was honored...
64
00:04:31,231 --> 00:04:34,142
in some way by the national government,
65
00:04:34,142 --> 00:04:39,653
that it would be recognized
as having cultural and artistic value.
66
00:04:39,710 --> 00:04:45,988
Today, the congress is taking up a bill
called the National Film Preservation Act.
67
00:04:46,342 --> 00:04:48,519
Congress finally stepped in
and we were kind of...
68
00:04:48,519 --> 00:04:50,911
the person brought in
to referee it if we could.
69
00:04:51,019 --> 00:04:55,396
And that was essentially
the creation of the National Film Registry.
70
00:04:58,982 --> 00:05:02,082
The National Film Registry
is a list of films...
71
00:05:02,082 --> 00:05:06,555
of enduring cultural, historical
and aesthetic importance,
72
00:05:06,555 --> 00:05:10,978
recommended to the Librarian of Congress
by a very distinguished board.
73
00:05:11,088 --> 00:05:14,088
25 films are announced each year
74
00:05:14,154 --> 00:05:16,619
as being added to that registry.
75
00:05:16,988 --> 00:05:21,888
1989, the first year of the board meeting,
76
00:05:21,975 --> 00:05:26,191
was very much focused
on the artists' rights issues.
77
00:05:26,205 --> 00:05:27,195
And then after that,
78
00:05:27,195 --> 00:05:29,632
it seemed very quickly to fade.
79
00:05:29,694 --> 00:05:32,961
The issue became preservation,
80
00:05:32,961 --> 00:05:38,053
and which films should be
awarded the seal
81
00:05:38,053 --> 00:05:40,749
of the national film preservation board.
82
00:05:40,959 --> 00:05:43,385
This process
serves as an invaluable means
83
00:05:43,385 --> 00:05:46,756
to advance public awareness
of the richness and variety
84
00:05:46,756 --> 00:05:48,615
of the American film heritage.
85
00:05:49,086 --> 00:05:52,216
This is not simply
just another list of great films.
86
00:05:52,216 --> 00:05:55,191
It is saying to America
and to the world,
87
00:05:55,284 --> 00:05:56,613
"These films matter."
88
00:05:56,613 --> 00:05:59,241
What the film registry says
is "Here are great works of art."
89
00:05:59,241 --> 00:06:02,640
They were created in a commercial context
but we need to preserve them the way...
90
00:06:02,640 --> 00:06:06,239
the metropolitan museum
preserves Leonardo da Vinci's.
91
00:06:09,400 --> 00:06:12,521
One of the nice things
about the National Film Registry...
92
00:06:12,521 --> 00:06:16,417
is that it's not only preserving our films,
but it's also, to a large extent,
93
00:06:16,417 --> 00:06:20,523
preserving our cultural heritage,
and all the things that film capture.
94
00:06:28,132 --> 00:06:31,107
If you look at the advent
of movies from the 1890s forward,
95
00:06:31,107 --> 00:06:34,338
they were in many ways
the most important force...
96
00:06:34,338 --> 00:06:37,005
for shaping a common sense
of American culture.
97
00:06:37,087 --> 00:06:39,435
There was a time
when people in Southern California
98
00:06:39,435 --> 00:06:41,245
didn't have much in common
with the people in Maine
99
00:06:41,245 --> 00:06:43,844
and the people in Florida had
virtually nothing in common
100
00:06:43,844 --> 00:06:46,219
with the people in the Pacific Northwest,
101
00:06:46,219 --> 00:06:48,027
and it's movies
that came along that began...
102
00:06:48,027 --> 00:06:50,009
to create the sense of nationhood.
103
00:06:52,459 --> 00:06:56,105
The American film was
a particular way in which a young nation...
104
00:06:56,887 --> 00:07:00,139
learned to express itself,
express its exuberance,
105
00:07:00,170 --> 00:07:03,192
expose its problems,
reflect its hopes.
106
00:07:03,254 --> 00:07:05,495
It was living history,
107
00:07:05,556 --> 00:07:08,259
audio-visual history
of the 20th century.
108
00:07:08,430 --> 00:07:12,235
Movies have been the document
of our history and culture.
109
00:07:12,235 --> 00:07:16,467
They tell us what we looked like,
what we wore, what we aspired to,
110
00:07:16,467 --> 00:07:19,303
our dreams,
the lies we told to one another...
111
00:07:19,477 --> 00:07:22,110
Because in those movies
are those little gestures
112
00:07:22,110 --> 00:07:25,536
and those little images
and the styles and the...
113
00:07:25,536 --> 00:07:28,104
ways of speaking to each other,
the way men spoke to women...
114
00:07:28,104 --> 00:07:30,077
and women to women
and men to men and...
115
00:07:30,145 --> 00:07:32,648
and the way they projected their
own dreams and desires...
116
00:07:32,648 --> 00:07:34,712
into narratives and fantasies.
117
00:07:34,712 --> 00:07:36,289
That is what the movies does,
118
00:07:36,289 --> 00:07:39,162
and it does it better than
anything else.
119
00:07:42,742 --> 00:07:46,837
American film really tells us
so much about this country.
120
00:07:51,595 --> 00:07:55,926
When it starts with
storytelling about individuals,
121
00:07:56,591 --> 00:07:57,712
underdogs,
122
00:07:58,129 --> 00:07:59,717
immigrants,
123
00:07:59,852 --> 00:08:03,355
people who don't have something.
124
00:08:05,257 --> 00:08:07,678
I saw that film
when I was still in Hong Kong
125
00:08:07,678 --> 00:08:09,504
when I was a teenager.
126
00:08:10,871 --> 00:08:15,230
I think it gave me
a sense of America.
127
00:08:15,988 --> 00:08:18,207
♪ Life can be bright in America ♪
128
00:08:18,207 --> 00:08:20,598
♪ if you can fight in America ♪
129
00:08:20,598 --> 00:08:22,913
♪ Life is all right in America ♪
130
00:08:22,991 --> 00:08:25,169
♪ if you're all white in America... ♪
131
00:08:25,195 --> 00:08:28,416
The lyrics to that song,
they're really quite sarcastic
132
00:08:28,416 --> 00:08:30,765
about being an immigrant in America.
133
00:08:31,114 --> 00:08:35,100
That movie was a huge influence on me
when I was a teenager.
134
00:08:35,100 --> 00:08:38,431
I mean, I probably saw it
five or six times in a row.
135
00:08:38,931 --> 00:08:41,832
I was also in love with Natalie Wood.
That helped.
136
00:08:43,984 --> 00:08:45,975
You never really understand a person
137
00:08:45,975 --> 00:08:49,143
until you consider things
from his point of view.
138
00:08:49,226 --> 00:08:50,725
Sir?
139
00:08:50,961 --> 00:08:53,165
Till you climb inside of his skin
140
00:08:53,640 --> 00:08:55,088
and walk around in it.
141
00:08:55,088 --> 00:08:57,726
Gregory Peck was kind of...
142
00:08:58,251 --> 00:09:01,851
what I thought America was
in many kind of respects.
143
00:09:01,851 --> 00:09:03,265
In this country,
144
00:09:04,033 --> 00:09:07,712
our courts
are the great levelers.
145
00:09:08,101 --> 00:09:09,931
In our courts...
146
00:09:10,299 --> 00:09:15,559
All men are...
created equal.
147
00:09:15,586 --> 00:09:19,574
That's the America that my father
respected most...
148
00:09:20,188 --> 00:09:24,852
in that kind of man that Gregory Peck
was always meant to play.
149
00:09:26,223 --> 00:09:29,679
We identified so strongly
with those kids somehow.
150
00:09:30,057 --> 00:09:33,958
Oh, it's just, like, instant tears.
It still gets me, still makes me cry now.
151
00:09:35,299 --> 00:09:37,574
He really portrayed
a father who was just...
152
00:09:37,608 --> 00:09:41,612
so understanding and had such a close
relationship with his kids.
153
00:09:42,670 --> 00:09:44,297
A lot of people...
154
00:09:44,297 --> 00:09:46,628
would love to have a father like that.
I mean, who wouldn't?
155
00:09:46,905 --> 00:09:48,760
I would love to have a father like that.
156
00:09:49,950 --> 00:09:54,385
Many of the characteristics that my dad
portrayed in that film are really him.
157
00:09:54,825 --> 00:09:56,486
Of all the films that he did,
158
00:09:56,486 --> 00:10:00,461
it was a film
that was closest to his true character,
159
00:10:00,461 --> 00:10:03,461
certainly the character he...
he would want to be.
160
00:10:07,330 --> 00:10:10,757
It's a different form of honor than
getting an academy award.
161
00:10:10,757 --> 00:10:14,737
It's a more cumulative
or retrospective kind of honor.
162
00:10:14,751 --> 00:10:17,234
It's saying your film
has stood the test of time.
163
00:10:17,234 --> 00:10:20,322
♪ There's never been a day so sunny ♪
164
00:10:20,322 --> 00:10:23,243
♪ it could not happen twice... ♪
165
00:10:23,243 --> 00:10:25,741
The Academy Awards preserve...
166
00:10:25,741 --> 00:10:29,324
the consensus within
the industry at the time.
167
00:10:30,027 --> 00:10:33,300
Sometimes history proves them right,
168
00:10:33,300 --> 00:10:35,697
but very often,
history proves them wrong.
169
00:10:40,729 --> 00:10:44,574
Most lists exist nowadays
for pop culture reasons.
170
00:10:44,608 --> 00:10:48,374
It's an excuse for a TV special.
It's to sell magazines.
171
00:10:48,374 --> 00:10:50,679
It's to get people arguing,
and that's what lists do.
172
00:10:50,679 --> 00:10:54,468
The congressional language
setting up the registry was done...
173
00:10:54,468 --> 00:10:57,060
by congressional staff back in
1988 and they used...
174
00:10:57,060 --> 00:10:59,999
"culturally, historically
or aesthetically significant,"
175
00:11:00,028 --> 00:11:03,337
which, we love that phrase because
it basically means almost anything.
176
00:11:03,337 --> 00:11:05,900
Whoever came up with it,
I forget the person's name, the staffer,
177
00:11:05,900 --> 00:11:08,538
but I'm forever thankful
because it does allow...
178
00:11:08,538 --> 00:11:12,019
a lot of leverage in terms of
the sort of films we're able to pick
179
00:11:12,019 --> 00:11:13,942
and put onto the registry and preserve.
180
00:11:16,732 --> 00:11:18,670
Because of the 10-year rule,
181
00:11:18,851 --> 00:11:22,110
we look at only films
that are 10 years old,
182
00:11:22,116 --> 00:11:26,672
and that gives us
some space and some time.
183
00:11:26,831 --> 00:11:28,099
And I tell ya what.
184
00:11:28,615 --> 00:11:31,198
From his footprint,
he looks like a big fella.
185
00:11:35,435 --> 00:11:37,220
You see something down there, chief?
186
00:11:37,863 --> 00:11:40,384
No, I just think I'm gonna barf.
187
00:11:40,384 --> 00:11:42,450
Why the 10 years?
Why not 50?
188
00:11:42,450 --> 00:11:44,983
Why not five?
Why not one that just opened?
189
00:11:44,983 --> 00:11:48,537
But I suppose it's to have
a little bit of a distance, which is proper.
190
00:11:48,537 --> 00:11:51,286
Does the film have a lasting benefit?
191
00:11:51,286 --> 00:11:52,878
Does it stand to history?
192
00:11:52,919 --> 00:11:56,160
The idea is that here
is an arm of the U.S. government
193
00:11:56,160 --> 00:11:59,018
saying that,
hey, some films are important.
194
00:11:59,083 --> 00:12:00,343
They're part of the picture.
195
00:12:00,343 --> 00:12:04,663
So you immediately confer upon them
a certain status and dignity.
196
00:12:04,759 --> 00:12:07,077
Each year we do try to fashion
an eclectic list,
197
00:12:07,077 --> 00:12:10,142
one that is also stand-alone
on its own merits.
198
00:12:10,204 --> 00:12:15,134
If we pick 25 famous films one year
or 25 films no one had ever heard of each year,
199
00:12:15,134 --> 00:12:17,462
then the list, to us,
would be a lot less useful.
200
00:12:18,309 --> 00:12:21,982
The way we pick the national film registry
each year is a multi-stage process.
201
00:12:21,982 --> 00:12:24,796
We start off by soliciting
public balloting.
202
00:12:25,904 --> 00:12:28,627
So we take very seriously
what the public recommends.
203
00:12:28,627 --> 00:12:31,845
They often recommend things
that nobody's even heard of.
204
00:12:31,845 --> 00:12:33,622
We tabulate those results...
205
00:12:33,622 --> 00:12:36,189
and send them to the members
of the film preservation board.
206
00:12:36,276 --> 00:12:38,409
Each year a group of people,
207
00:12:38,409 --> 00:12:41,980
representing all areas
of the industry and education
208
00:12:41,980 --> 00:12:45,440
come together and recommend
to the Librarian of Congress
209
00:12:45,627 --> 00:12:50,452
the films of enduring cultural, historical,
aesthetic importance.
210
00:12:50,522 --> 00:12:54,731
People have their personal
campaigns, their pet films,
211
00:12:54,731 --> 00:12:57,928
their pet causes,
and that's as it should be.
212
00:12:58,186 --> 00:13:01,731
Having gone through the obvious choices...
213
00:13:01,731 --> 00:13:04,550
Citizen Kane, Citizen Kane, Citizen Kane.
214
00:13:07,171 --> 00:13:08,787
Rosebud.
215
00:13:11,835 --> 00:13:15,189
Then the less obvious films
come up for discussion,
216
00:13:15,263 --> 00:13:17,432
and that's where
the discussions get interesting.
217
00:13:19,327 --> 00:13:21,074
This was really a good meeting,
218
00:13:21,074 --> 00:13:24,087
and I've been on this board
since its inception.
219
00:13:24,454 --> 00:13:27,375
In the early years, you knew
there were certain kinds of movies...
220
00:13:27,375 --> 00:13:31,025
that were the sprocket-worn classics,
the great films,
221
00:13:31,025 --> 00:13:34,421
they would be on the list,
and then you'd put in a couple more
222
00:13:34,536 --> 00:13:38,526
that you hoped you would expand people's
consciousness about.
223
00:13:38,582 --> 00:13:40,053
It's great to be on the board
224
00:13:40,053 --> 00:13:43,476
because there are so many people
from different aspects of film
225
00:13:43,476 --> 00:13:46,123
and scholarship
and everything related to film,
226
00:13:46,123 --> 00:13:48,615
and they bring up films, you know,
227
00:13:48,615 --> 00:13:49,861
that I always write them down
228
00:13:49,861 --> 00:13:52,683
because I go, "Oh, I haven't seen this.
I'll have to go see it."
229
00:13:54,247 --> 00:13:56,205
I'm a fairly new board member.
230
00:13:56,601 --> 00:13:58,879
In the beginning,
it is overwhelming.
231
00:13:58,936 --> 00:14:01,916
There are hundreds of films
that are talked about.
232
00:14:01,939 --> 00:14:03,403
The discussions can range...
233
00:14:03,403 --> 00:14:05,893
from being
very lighthearted to very serious.
234
00:14:05,893 --> 00:14:08,725
They have people talking
about home movies,
235
00:14:08,725 --> 00:14:10,862
people talking about newsreels,
236
00:14:11,034 --> 00:14:14,700
people talking about
short films of various kinds.
237
00:14:14,700 --> 00:14:17,429
And it's always
one of the most interesting moments
238
00:14:17,429 --> 00:14:20,086
to see what has been chosen.
239
00:14:20,336 --> 00:14:22,129
And as you go through, you think...
240
00:14:22,129 --> 00:14:25,215
"Well, of course that.
I can't believe it wasn't chosen before."
241
00:14:25,215 --> 00:14:28,684
And then you'll come to something
and say... "What?"
242
00:14:28,932 --> 00:14:31,475
♪ 'cause this is thriller ♪
243
00:14:31,769 --> 00:14:34,760
♪ thriller night,
and no one's gonna save you... ♪
244
00:14:34,760 --> 00:14:36,799
Now it really is American history.
245
00:14:36,799 --> 00:14:41,118
Michael Jackson's iconic video, Thriller,
was named today...
246
00:14:41,397 --> 00:14:44,722
to the National Film Registry
at the Library of Congress,
247
00:14:44,722 --> 00:14:48,552
the first music video ever
to receive that honor.
248
00:14:48,619 --> 00:14:50,030
♪ Thriller, ♪
249
00:14:50,087 --> 00:14:51,623
♪ thriller... ♪
250
00:14:51,688 --> 00:14:55,413
The nice thing about the list is
it's all over the place. It's democratic.
251
00:14:55,459 --> 00:14:58,286
You're tearing me apart!
252
00:14:58,286 --> 00:15:00,977
I vote for films
that I think are culturally significant,
253
00:15:00,977 --> 00:15:03,547
and sometimes I vote for films
that I think
254
00:15:04,014 --> 00:15:05,424
even films that...
255
00:15:06,003 --> 00:15:07,479
I don't particularly like,
256
00:15:07,479 --> 00:15:09,809
I will vote for it because I think
257
00:15:09,809 --> 00:15:12,703
they have a special place in film history.
258
00:15:13,030 --> 00:15:16,294
I certainly felt,
as a cultural historian myself,
259
00:15:16,595 --> 00:15:20,525
that this was an important part
of American culture
260
00:15:20,525 --> 00:15:26,906
and that it had to be preserved not simply
so that our grandkids could enjoy
the same films that we did,
261
00:15:26,906 --> 00:15:31,887
but also so that they could understand
what America was like at an earlier stage.
262
00:15:34,715 --> 00:15:36,051
Dr. Billington, the Librarian,
263
00:15:36,051 --> 00:15:38,219
said something very profound
a little while ago.
264
00:15:38,219 --> 00:15:42,596
He said that stories unite people.
Theories divide them.
265
00:15:43,171 --> 00:15:46,483
So that in itself is a wonderful reason
to preserve stories.
266
00:15:48,278 --> 00:15:52,090
Stories are profoundly important
to human beings.
267
00:15:53,191 --> 00:15:58,117
500 years from now,
people will look back and they'll say,
268
00:15:59,030 --> 00:16:03,313
"This was the beginning.
This was the first 100 years.
These were the origins.
269
00:16:04,545 --> 00:16:06,774
Why didn't they take better care of them?"
270
00:16:06,785 --> 00:16:10,118
And the "they" they're talking about...
is us.
271
00:16:10,567 --> 00:16:13,631
Film is the art form of the 20th century,
272
00:16:13,686 --> 00:16:15,698
and we have let it go?
273
00:16:15,932 --> 00:16:18,900
The studios stored the films badly
274
00:16:18,900 --> 00:16:21,114
and they deteriorated, they burned.
275
00:16:21,277 --> 00:16:23,913
They didn't think of them as an art form.
276
00:16:24,783 --> 00:16:28,260
Half of the movies made before 1950
277
00:16:28,260 --> 00:16:30,840
no longer exist in any form whatsoever.
278
00:16:31,488 --> 00:16:35,528
Maybe 80% or so of the silent era
is gone.
279
00:16:36,352 --> 00:16:38,762
So much of film history
has already been lost,
280
00:16:38,762 --> 00:16:42,969
but there's still a very great deal
which can be saved if we're willing to do it.
281
00:17:09,737 --> 00:17:12,819
It's really amazing
to pick up a roll of film
282
00:17:12,842 --> 00:17:16,175
and just to see this and realize
the age of this film
283
00:17:16,560 --> 00:17:19,069
and all the people who went into making it
284
00:17:19,069 --> 00:17:21,538
and just to look at the images on it.
285
00:17:21,627 --> 00:17:24,192
All these people who worked on these things
who are all gone now,
286
00:17:24,192 --> 00:17:26,789
but they've left behind
these amazing shadows...
287
00:17:26,789 --> 00:17:28,450
for us to enjoy.
288
00:17:34,644 --> 00:17:39,096
I always keep a little memento
of my beginning here at my desk.
289
00:17:40,562 --> 00:17:43,661
This is a Castle Films...
290
00:17:43,875 --> 00:17:46,383
headline edition, California bound.
291
00:17:46,383 --> 00:17:49,521
It's actually a three-minute clip
from the W.C. Fields film,
292
00:17:49,521 --> 00:17:52,147
it's a gift, where they go
to this rich man's estate
293
00:17:52,147 --> 00:17:55,022
and the family basically has a picnic
on the lawn and makes a mess.
294
00:17:55,022 --> 00:17:57,422
Look out where you're going!
295
00:17:57,672 --> 00:17:59,389
Oh! Look what you've done!
296
00:17:59,389 --> 00:18:01,280
She ran right in front of the car!
297
00:18:01,311 --> 00:18:04,795
When I first saw W.C. Fields in this film,
298
00:18:05,455 --> 00:18:11,518
his humor, his sort of laconic behavior
and kind of slovenliness,
299
00:18:11,655 --> 00:18:15,099
it spoke to me
as a man and as a human being.
300
00:18:15,103 --> 00:18:18,019
- Stop it!
- Oh, you idiot.
301
00:18:18,026 --> 00:18:20,312
Those were my mother's feathers.
302
00:18:21,246 --> 00:18:22,708
Stop it.
303
00:18:22,857 --> 00:18:24,807
Never knew your mother had feathers.
304
00:18:24,868 --> 00:18:29,075
Probably the most amazing
and unique thing about the Packard campus
305
00:18:29,100 --> 00:18:31,678
is that it is part of
the Library of Congress.
306
00:18:31,762 --> 00:18:36,508
We are fortunate
in that we get a part of a budget...
307
00:18:36,508 --> 00:18:38,524
from Congress every year
308
00:18:38,524 --> 00:18:40,882
and part of that budget,
and a fairly good-sized chunk,
309
00:18:40,882 --> 00:18:42,757
goes to preservation.
310
00:18:42,757 --> 00:18:44,232
In the late 1890s,
311
00:18:44,232 --> 00:18:47,223
the nitrocellulose film was developed.
312
00:18:47,924 --> 00:18:50,997
The... sort of uniqueness of...
313
00:18:50,997 --> 00:18:54,641
of the nitrate film
is why they actually have a manager
314
00:18:54,641 --> 00:18:56,675
for just the nitrate film collection.
315
00:18:56,675 --> 00:18:59,670
So much of the nitrate film collection
is unknown,
316
00:18:59,670 --> 00:19:04,527
so we are constantly working on the collection
to try and identify those little bits of film
317
00:19:04,527 --> 00:19:07,629
that might be something really important,
but we have no idea what they are.
318
00:19:07,664 --> 00:19:11,091
The major problem with nitrate
is that it is very flammable.
319
00:19:11,091 --> 00:19:14,249
And when I say "very flammable",
I mean it is very flammable.
320
00:19:14,249 --> 00:19:16,787
It is like setting a fuse
on a piece of dynamite.
321
00:19:20,714 --> 00:19:23,600
We continued using nitrate
up until the 1950s,
322
00:19:23,600 --> 00:19:25,456
when the triacetate safety came out
323
00:19:25,456 --> 00:19:29,726
and was deemed just or almost as good
as the nitrate film that preceded it.
324
00:19:32,045 --> 00:19:35,115
Well, this is my little world here.
We call this "nitrate land."
325
00:19:35,458 --> 00:19:38,305
These are the nitrate vaults
of the Library of Congress.
326
00:19:38,305 --> 00:19:40,681
We have 124 climate-controlled vaults.
327
00:19:40,681 --> 00:19:43,320
They're maintained
at about 39 degrees fahrenheit,
328
00:19:43,320 --> 00:19:45,298
about 30% relative humidity.
329
00:19:45,315 --> 00:19:47,268
Within these vaults, we have...
330
00:19:47,268 --> 00:19:51,272
130,000, approximately,
rolls of nitrate motion picture film
331
00:19:51,272 --> 00:19:54,816
dating from about 1894 to about 1952.
332
00:19:55,104 --> 00:19:58,349
It is a truly amazing collection
and one of a kind.
333
00:19:58,805 --> 00:20:00,948
See what else we got here.
334
00:20:03,166 --> 00:20:04,768
Nah...
335
00:20:05,635 --> 00:20:06,965
P-eww!
336
00:20:07,070 --> 00:20:10,327
this is our triage area of films that...
337
00:20:10,689 --> 00:20:13,976
the other staff find
that are questionable,
338
00:20:13,976 --> 00:20:17,373
and they're brought to me
to do inspection on. This is a can...
339
00:20:17,373 --> 00:20:19,052
of small fragments.
340
00:20:19,052 --> 00:20:22,549
Normally, with a film
you should be able to,
341
00:20:22,549 --> 00:20:26,407
like, it should give somewhat
and be somewhat loosely wound.
342
00:20:26,407 --> 00:20:28,687
This one is solid as a rock.
343
00:20:28,687 --> 00:20:31,967
This is what we refer to
as a hockey puck.
344
00:20:32,766 --> 00:20:34,625
It has been wet.
345
00:20:35,292 --> 00:20:37,597
It is probably very stuck together,
346
00:20:37,987 --> 00:20:41,764
so I'm going to see
if I can at least peel something off
347
00:20:42,713 --> 00:20:45,768
to tell what it was...
348
00:20:47,282 --> 00:20:51,052
ah!
Oh... darn.
349
00:20:51,114 --> 00:20:53,526
Look at that... wow.
350
00:20:53,583 --> 00:20:56,003
Through a variety of reasons, through...
351
00:20:56,003 --> 00:20:58,630
basic neglect or...
352
00:20:59,211 --> 00:21:00,760
deterioration especially,
353
00:21:00,760 --> 00:21:04,137
many of our early films, and actually
some more recent ones, are lost forever.
354
00:21:04,137 --> 00:21:05,872
I mean, there's nothing left.
355
00:21:07,097 --> 00:21:10,542
I know of one Academy Award winning film
called The Patriot
356
00:21:10,542 --> 00:21:14,090
and all that survives on it
are a few trailers and stills.
357
00:21:16,000 --> 00:21:18,384
The other reason a lot of them
don't survive, of course,
358
00:21:18,384 --> 00:21:21,742
is just because the studios
didn't really care about 'em.
359
00:21:21,742 --> 00:21:24,583
They were just product, and once
they were done and made their money,
360
00:21:24,583 --> 00:21:25,591
they went on the shelf.
361
00:21:25,591 --> 00:21:28,411
One studio destroyed all their
silent negatives in the '40s because
362
00:21:28,411 --> 00:21:30,870
they didn't think anyone was ever
going to want to see them again.
363
00:21:39,125 --> 00:21:42,938
I got involved in film archiving
'cause I saw Gone with the Wind when I was 12.
364
00:21:43,467 --> 00:21:48,062
And to think that I might have a part
in somebody, some other 12-year-old girl
365
00:21:48,062 --> 00:21:53,011
seeing a movie that changes their life
is really exciting to me.
366
00:21:56,492 --> 00:22:01,380
I volunteered at the library
for a month before I applied for a job
367
00:22:01,474 --> 00:22:04,221
and while I was volunteering,
368
00:22:04,221 --> 00:22:06,830
Warner Brothers was doing a restoration
of Gone with the Wind,
369
00:22:06,830 --> 00:22:09,975
and sure enough, I walked into
one of the back rooms one day
370
00:22:09,975 --> 00:22:12,740
to find a stack of negatives
and I got really excited
371
00:22:12,740 --> 00:22:14,437
and I remember running
into a couple people's offices,
372
00:22:14,498 --> 00:22:18,164
I mean, like, "Look at this! Look at this!"
And they knew exactly why I was excited
373
00:22:18,164 --> 00:22:21,613
'cause they'd found their favorite movies
and had the same feeling.
374
00:22:21,613 --> 00:22:26,132
My favorite part of the job
is spending a whole day saving a film,
375
00:22:26,132 --> 00:22:29,976
you know, a film that comes
in that's torn and no one can watch
376
00:22:29,976 --> 00:22:32,305
and it's up to me to make sure that
377
00:22:32,305 --> 00:22:35,759
it gets to a point where
it can be rescued.
378
00:22:35,762 --> 00:22:38,519
It's kind of like a lost puppy that...
379
00:22:38,579 --> 00:22:40,477
needs to be taken care of.
380
00:22:41,324 --> 00:22:42,997
Ah, nice.
381
00:22:43,059 --> 00:22:45,164
Nice splice job... oh...
382
00:22:45,228 --> 00:22:46,764
Is it a piece of...?
383
00:22:47,209 --> 00:22:48,104
Oh, that's great.
384
00:22:48,164 --> 00:22:50,745
So we have a piece of scotch tape
that someone just...
385
00:22:50,745 --> 00:22:52,805
stuck on the film to repair a rip.
386
00:22:52,805 --> 00:22:56,818
...that's my job and to know
that because of me spending hours
387
00:22:56,999 --> 00:23:00,956
staring at tiny frames and working with,
you know, small pieces of tape,
388
00:23:01,229 --> 00:23:04,260
that future generations are gonna see it,
is very exciting.
389
00:23:04,317 --> 00:23:07,150
A friend of mine had a 16-millimeter print.
390
00:23:07,748 --> 00:23:09,491
He said, "you have to see this film.
391
00:23:09,491 --> 00:23:12,443
I want you to see this film.
It's, like, this amazing film."
392
00:23:12,443 --> 00:23:16,153
There were no DVDs in those days,
no videotapes, nothing.
393
00:23:16,318 --> 00:23:20,365
I had a Bell & Howell projector,
I put the film on, I watched it and I went...
394
00:23:20,365 --> 00:23:21,945
"Oh, my God!"
395
00:23:22,132 --> 00:23:23,368
Yay!
396
00:23:23,368 --> 00:23:25,182
Hello, Bedford Falls!
397
00:23:28,117 --> 00:23:31,580
- Merry Christmas!
- Merry Christmas, George!
398
00:23:31,580 --> 00:23:33,128
Merry Christmas, George!
399
00:23:33,223 --> 00:23:37,301
What struck me more than anything
was the emotion of it. I cried.
400
00:23:38,000 --> 00:23:40,438
Is this the ear you can't hear on?
401
00:23:40,497 --> 00:23:44,179
George Bailey,
I'll love you till the day I die.
402
00:23:44,179 --> 00:23:47,115
I'm going out exploring someday...
you watch.
403
00:23:47,289 --> 00:23:51,827
I cried when Jimmy Stewart grabbed her
and they were listening to the phone together
404
00:23:51,827 --> 00:23:53,769
and he grabbed her and it was one take.
405
00:23:53,769 --> 00:23:56,241
No cutaways, one take, and said...
406
00:23:56,299 --> 00:23:57,671
Now, you listen to me.
407
00:23:57,864 --> 00:24:00,999
I don't want any plastics
and I don't want any ground floors
408
00:24:00,999 --> 00:24:04,302
and I don't want to get married ever
to anyone... you understand that?
409
00:24:04,704 --> 00:24:06,560
I wanna do what I wanna do,
410
00:24:06,739 --> 00:24:09,097
and you're... and you're...
411
00:24:09,961 --> 00:24:11,209
Oh, Mary... Mary...
412
00:24:11,209 --> 00:24:13,624
George, George, George...
413
00:24:13,624 --> 00:24:15,397
It is my favorite film
414
00:24:15,581 --> 00:24:17,659
because it's a film that
415
00:24:18,505 --> 00:24:21,005
celebrates the value of life,
416
00:24:21,005 --> 00:24:24,042
and there is nothing greater than us all
417
00:24:24,042 --> 00:24:26,646
appreciating the value of our lives
and other lives.
418
00:24:26,931 --> 00:24:28,907
♪ ...Auld Lang Syne ♪
419
00:24:28,965 --> 00:24:31,809
♪ We'll drink a cup ♪
420
00:24:31,868 --> 00:24:34,644
♪ of kindness yet ♪
421
00:24:34,704 --> 00:24:40,347
♪ for Auld Lang Syne. ♪
422
00:24:44,894 --> 00:24:47,270
Film should be an experience.
423
00:24:47,961 --> 00:24:51,783
Reality outside the frame
is your everyday life.
424
00:24:52,321 --> 00:24:56,638
The reality inside the frame
is whatever you want to create it to be.
425
00:25:06,503 --> 00:25:09,973
Some films definitely give you
access to a dream world.
426
00:25:09,973 --> 00:25:12,787
I think musicals probably do that
better than most.
427
00:25:13,109 --> 00:25:14,767
Follow the yellow brick road.
428
00:25:14,961 --> 00:25:16,622
Follow the yellow brick road.
429
00:25:16,622 --> 00:25:18,483
♪ Follow the yellow brick road, ♪
430
00:25:18,581 --> 00:25:20,206
♪ follow the yellow brick road ♪
431
00:25:20,283 --> 00:25:21,040
♪ follow, follow... ♪
432
00:25:21,040 --> 00:25:24,283
It immediately takes you out of reality.
433
00:25:24,283 --> 00:25:27,725
It's something that
could only happen in your dreams,
434
00:25:27,725 --> 00:25:30,360
but that doesn't make it less worthwhile.
435
00:25:30,427 --> 00:25:33,414
In fact, for me
it frequently makes it more worthwhile.
436
00:25:33,855 --> 00:25:37,626
It's not a place
you can get to by a boat or a train.
437
00:25:39,293 --> 00:25:42,048
It's far, far away.
438
00:25:42,105 --> 00:25:45,607
I would watch Wizard of Oz
every day when I was two.
439
00:25:45,607 --> 00:25:48,005
I had a really hard time understanding...
440
00:25:48,005 --> 00:25:50,952
that I couldn't go into the film,
441
00:25:50,952 --> 00:25:53,015
'cause it felt so real to me.
442
00:25:53,324 --> 00:25:56,223
♪ Somewhere ♪
443
00:25:56,223 --> 00:25:58,216
♪ over the rainbow... ♪
444
00:25:58,216 --> 00:26:00,063
It's a wonderful universal story.
445
00:26:00,063 --> 00:26:01,998
I mean, if you look at the Wizard of Oz,
446
00:26:01,998 --> 00:26:04,890
It takes a reality,
which is the beginning of the movie,
447
00:26:04,890 --> 00:26:06,831
and it turns it into a mythology.
448
00:26:06,831 --> 00:26:09,361
♪ ...dreams that you dare ♪
449
00:26:09,361 --> 00:26:13,385
♪ to dream really do come true. ♪
450
00:26:13,403 --> 00:26:16,351
You know,
all great storytelling is a form of myth.
451
00:26:16,351 --> 00:26:19,081
Tap your heels together three times...
452
00:26:20,844 --> 00:26:23,101
And think to yourself,
453
00:26:23,407 --> 00:26:26,272
"There's no place like home."
454
00:26:26,272 --> 00:26:29,389
The Wizard of Oz
is still my all-time favorite movie
probably for the wrong reasons.
455
00:26:29,419 --> 00:26:31,708
I never got why Dorothy
wanted to go home.
456
00:26:31,921 --> 00:26:33,162
Why would she want to go home,
457
00:26:33,162 --> 00:26:36,142
when she could live
with winged monkeys and witches?
458
00:26:36,142 --> 00:26:39,126
I don't know, I never understood it.
I was sobbing when she went home...
459
00:26:39,126 --> 00:26:40,776
to that dreary farm.
460
00:26:40,776 --> 00:26:43,361
This was a real, truly live place.
461
00:26:43,806 --> 00:26:46,706
And I remember that some of it
wasn't very nice,
462
00:26:46,750 --> 00:26:48,886
but most of it was beautiful.
463
00:26:49,726 --> 00:26:53,996
I've always been an aficionado
of science fiction, fantasy and horror.
464
00:26:54,515 --> 00:27:00,020
The truth is, speculative fiction
has always informed us about who we are.
465
00:27:00,116 --> 00:27:03,286
If you go back
to Invasion of the Body Snatchers,
466
00:27:03,407 --> 00:27:05,569
it was a parable about...
467
00:27:05,753 --> 00:27:08,089
about McCarthyism and the Red Scare.
468
00:27:09,507 --> 00:27:11,677
They have to be destroyed...
all of them!
469
00:27:11,677 --> 00:27:13,566
They will be,
every one of them.
470
00:27:13,566 --> 00:27:16,910
Listen, we're gonna have to search
every building, every house in town.
471
00:27:16,910 --> 00:27:19,610
Men, women and children
are gonna have to be examined.
We've got some phoning to do.
472
00:27:19,610 --> 00:27:23,510
Filmmakers were able to make
that film and send a message...
473
00:27:23,510 --> 00:27:25,806
without having it be a message movie.
474
00:27:25,806 --> 00:27:28,513
It's a malignant disease
spreading through the whole country.
475
00:27:28,558 --> 00:27:33,157
Initially those films were relegated
to B-movies or even Z-movies.
476
00:27:33,157 --> 00:27:36,117
They weren't given
any kind of critical acclaim.
477
00:27:36,152 --> 00:27:39,161
They generally
weren't big commercial successes.
478
00:27:41,024 --> 00:27:43,054
Are you crazy?!
Ya big idiot!
479
00:27:43,054 --> 00:27:46,938
They're here already!
You're next!
480
00:27:47,284 --> 00:27:51,605
I think I'm not
so much a fan of science fiction per se
481
00:27:51,923 --> 00:27:54,592
as I am a fan of cinema that creates worlds,
482
00:27:54,592 --> 00:27:57,788
that creates an entire alternate universe
483
00:27:57,788 --> 00:28:00,274
that you can escape into
for a couple of hours.
484
00:28:11,287 --> 00:28:14,733
The first time
that I saw 2001: A Space Odyssey,
485
00:28:14,791 --> 00:28:17,311
I was completely blown away.
486
00:28:34,965 --> 00:28:37,482
It made me think about mankind,
487
00:28:37,890 --> 00:28:42,551
the future of mankind even the past...
where we came from, where are we going?
488
00:28:42,551 --> 00:28:44,830
And the special effects
were absolutely magnificent,
489
00:28:44,830 --> 00:28:47,035
and it was a film to take seriously,
490
00:28:47,090 --> 00:28:50,537
not a film that was disposable.
491
00:28:50,836 --> 00:28:53,286
Open the pod bay doors, Hal.
492
00:28:54,421 --> 00:28:58,252
I'm sorry, Dave.
I'm afraid I can't do that.
493
00:28:58,342 --> 00:29:01,380
You could truly lose yourself
in that cinematic experience,
494
00:29:01,404 --> 00:29:06,316
really opening up a way of
looking at reality completely differently.
495
00:29:08,478 --> 00:29:11,595
I've always enjoyed films
that reward multiple viewings,
496
00:29:11,595 --> 00:29:15,645
films that if you chose to come back
and look at them again,
497
00:29:15,645 --> 00:29:17,714
you might see something else in them.
498
00:29:23,559 --> 00:29:28,117
It does transport you
to an entirely different time and space,
499
00:29:28,117 --> 00:29:32,109
and to me it does it so well
that I lose myself entirely.
500
00:29:32,109 --> 00:29:34,342
I'm in a dream world
when I'm watching Blade Runner.
501
00:29:35,872 --> 00:29:39,096
Each frame, each shot is full of
the most extraordinary detail.
502
00:29:39,108 --> 00:29:42,450
It's really too much to take in
on a first viewing,
503
00:29:42,813 --> 00:29:45,015
and it requires subsequent viewings to...
504
00:29:45,015 --> 00:29:46,915
to sort of orient yourself in...
505
00:29:46,915 --> 00:29:49,596
in the world of that film
and see all of the different layers
506
00:29:49,596 --> 00:29:52,738
that went into the fulfillment
of that grand design.
507
00:30:00,469 --> 00:30:02,365
I think for my generation,
508
00:30:02,365 --> 00:30:05,234
there isn't a filmmaker
working in Hollywood,
509
00:30:05,234 --> 00:30:07,704
certainly... who can deny
510
00:30:07,704 --> 00:30:09,548
the influence of the Star Wars films.
511
00:30:09,692 --> 00:30:12,586
The first experience
that I had with Star Wars was...
512
00:30:12,586 --> 00:30:13,912
the summer that it came out.
513
00:30:13,912 --> 00:30:17,446
We went to the Coronet theater
in San Francisco and there was a line...
514
00:30:17,446 --> 00:30:20,191
the biggest line I'd ever seen
as a kid around the block.
515
00:30:20,191 --> 00:30:24,096
The lights go down and I didn't really know
what to expect whatsoever.
516
00:30:26,628 --> 00:30:31,148
Huge musical hit
and the Star Wars logo goes back and then
517
00:30:31,148 --> 00:30:33,763
the scrolling of the text happens and...
518
00:30:34,379 --> 00:30:37,229
and I began
to sort of just become mesmerized.
519
00:30:42,305 --> 00:30:45,793
And then the moment that
Star Destroyer comes overhead,
520
00:30:45,793 --> 00:30:48,272
that just seemed like
a forever moment.
521
00:30:48,272 --> 00:30:50,503
I just kept watching
and watching and watching, thinking...
522
00:30:50,503 --> 00:30:53,444
"this is the biggest spaceship
I've ever seen."
523
00:30:55,574 --> 00:30:59,539
To top it all off, by the time
Darth Vader makes his appearance,
524
00:30:59,539 --> 00:31:02,449
people started to boo
and started to hiss at Darth Vader,
525
00:31:02,449 --> 00:31:05,497
and I just thought,
"This is... what is going on here?"
526
00:31:05,497 --> 00:31:09,030
There's something more that
this movie in particular has to offer.
527
00:31:11,434 --> 00:31:15,476
It simply opened up
a feeling of reality in science fiction.
528
00:31:19,065 --> 00:31:22,839
The feeling of a completely
thought-through world...
529
00:31:22,839 --> 00:31:25,256
that existed outside the frame.
530
00:31:26,115 --> 00:31:28,127
I think when you look
at the history of movies,
531
00:31:28,127 --> 00:31:31,191
I don't believe there's been as dominant
532
00:31:31,191 --> 00:31:35,804
a cultural milestone in cinema
as that first Star Wars film.
533
00:31:42,054 --> 00:31:46,114
Now, as opposed to being
on the outside watching,
534
00:31:46,135 --> 00:31:49,123
now, I sort of feel like I'm
part of that now.
535
00:31:50,316 --> 00:31:53,075
Remember,
the Force will be with you...
536
00:31:53,109 --> 00:31:54,144
Always.
537
00:31:55,591 --> 00:31:59,268
The world that he created
is something you had never seen before
538
00:31:59,268 --> 00:32:02,197
and you just wanted to be
with those characters in that world.
539
00:32:02,197 --> 00:32:04,546
I was so blown away,
but I always felt like,
540
00:32:04,546 --> 00:32:07,200
I wanna do that in animation.
541
00:32:07,256 --> 00:32:09,734
- Halt, who goes there?
- Don't shoot! It's ok!
542
00:32:09,792 --> 00:32:10,770
Friends.
543
00:32:10,827 --> 00:32:14,565
- Do you know these life forms?
- Yes! They're Andy's toys.
544
00:32:14,565 --> 00:32:16,566
All right, everyone.
You're clear to come up.
545
00:32:16,804 --> 00:32:19,755
I am Buzz Lightyear.
I come in peace.
546
00:32:19,755 --> 00:32:23,349
Oh, I'm so glad you're not a dinosaur!
547
00:32:23,419 --> 00:32:25,516
It's all I ever wanted to do, you know?
548
00:32:25,516 --> 00:32:28,909
My true love was cartoons,
even when it was uncool, right?
549
00:32:28,909 --> 00:32:33,814
When you're supposed to be into girls
or cars or sports or things like that,
550
00:32:33,814 --> 00:32:37,455
I would run home after school
to watch Bugs Bunny cartoons
551
00:32:37,455 --> 00:32:40,306
and always pray that
it would be a Chuck Jones cartoon.
552
00:32:40,590 --> 00:32:42,431
Kill the wabbit?
553
00:32:43,341 --> 00:32:46,885
The films that have been
the most influential on my career,
554
00:32:46,885 --> 00:32:49,168
are the films of Walt Disney...
555
00:32:49,826 --> 00:32:51,210
Snow White,
556
00:32:52,669 --> 00:32:53,830
Pinocchio,
557
00:32:53,830 --> 00:32:55,381
I can walk!
558
00:32:58,641 --> 00:32:59,941
Fantasia,
559
00:32:59,941 --> 00:33:02,711
["Waltz of the Flowers" playing...]
560
00:33:04,486 --> 00:33:07,900
I think that Fantasia does represent
561
00:33:08,063 --> 00:33:11,745
sort of the pinnacle of animation
of its time.
562
00:33:11,745 --> 00:33:14,438
["Night on Bald Mountain" playing...]
563
00:33:18,494 --> 00:33:22,066
...and I was actually just looking at
"Night on Bald Mountain" the other day
564
00:33:22,066 --> 00:33:25,106
because there's beautiful,
beautiful fire animation.
565
00:33:25,168 --> 00:33:27,608
Animating fire is not easy, and...
566
00:33:28,063 --> 00:33:30,610
I don't even know
how the animators did it.
567
00:33:41,076 --> 00:33:44,053
In animation, you can do anything...
568
00:33:45,561 --> 00:33:49,400
and then the first time you see something
that you drew come to life,
569
00:33:49,400 --> 00:33:53,669
you are addicted
because it's like magic.
570
00:33:53,714 --> 00:33:56,066
When you see something
that you drew move,
571
00:33:56,835 --> 00:33:58,886
that is a mind-blowing experience.
572
00:33:58,886 --> 00:34:01,313
I remember when I was 12 or 13,
573
00:34:01,313 --> 00:34:04,883
and I saw my first super-8 animation move
and it was like...
574
00:34:04,987 --> 00:34:08,072
I wanna say it's better than sex, but
I'd never had sex when I was 12, right?
575
00:34:08,072 --> 00:34:09,648
But it was just incredible.
576
00:34:09,842 --> 00:34:13,277
We knew we were making
the first computer-animated feature film,
577
00:34:13,649 --> 00:34:17,065
but the main focus
was the story and the characters.
578
00:34:20,860 --> 00:34:23,722
Walt Disney always said for every laugh,
there should be a tear,
579
00:34:23,969 --> 00:34:28,947
and it's something that is so important
to me in my filmmaking, is that heart,
580
00:34:28,947 --> 00:34:32,867
'cause I believe that's something
that stays with an audience
581
00:34:32,867 --> 00:34:35,580
much longer than the jokes
have gotten old,
582
00:34:35,580 --> 00:34:37,512
but that heart will always stay there.
583
00:34:37,512 --> 00:34:41,661
You know how you feel
when you first watched these movies
584
00:34:41,661 --> 00:34:44,465
and it brings a tear to your eye.
585
00:34:44,746 --> 00:34:47,554
Absolutely, animation belongs...
586
00:34:47,761 --> 00:34:51,792
on any list of culturally significant works.
587
00:34:52,262 --> 00:34:55,063
Animation... is art.
588
00:34:55,591 --> 00:34:59,030
When one looks through the list of films
that have been selected over time,
589
00:34:59,030 --> 00:35:01,285
what one is struck by most of all...
590
00:35:01,285 --> 00:35:04,304
is the extraordinary diversity
of the kinds of movies.
591
00:35:04,333 --> 00:35:06,192
It isn't just Hollywood films.
592
00:35:06,770 --> 00:35:10,236
It's films that
document America's life and...
593
00:35:10,236 --> 00:35:11,603
America's heritage.
594
00:35:13,776 --> 00:35:16,957
There's a wonderful film that was named
to the Registry a few years ago.
595
00:35:16,957 --> 00:35:19,275
It's a piece of amateur filmmaking
596
00:35:19,275 --> 00:35:26,013
made by the wife of a doctor in a sort of
agricultural town in Minnesota in the '30s,
597
00:35:26,013 --> 00:35:29,643
and she went around photographing
what the place looked like.
598
00:35:33,629 --> 00:35:40,575
Well, this is wonderful. It's like watching
a bunch of live Edward Hopper and Charles
Sheeler canvases come to life, you know?
599
00:35:40,636 --> 00:35:41,434
Who knew?
600
00:35:41,434 --> 00:35:42,913
So there's a film that...
601
00:35:42,913 --> 00:35:46,418
very specifically preserves
a niche in a corner of American life.
602
00:35:53,555 --> 00:35:57,251
There is some sense of sadness
and poignancy.
603
00:35:58,254 --> 00:36:01,091
It's part of our history,
it's part of our family history.
604
00:36:01,293 --> 00:36:04,738
It's the history of a people,
history of our country.
605
00:36:05,061 --> 00:36:08,101
One of the most tragic,
606
00:36:08,301 --> 00:36:11,484
yet fascinating
moments in our country's history
607
00:36:11,484 --> 00:36:13,283
was the mass internment...
608
00:36:13,360 --> 00:36:17,372
of 120,000 Japanese-Americans.
609
00:36:17,707 --> 00:36:18,999
Overnight,
610
00:36:19,263 --> 00:36:21,780
American citizens of Japanese ancestry
611
00:36:21,780 --> 00:36:25,073
were looked at with fear and suspicion,
612
00:36:25,164 --> 00:36:28,803
simply because we looked like the people
who bombed Pearl Harbor.
613
00:36:29,175 --> 00:36:32,178
Mass hysteria took over the country,
614
00:36:32,501 --> 00:36:34,736
and President Roosevelt ordered...
615
00:36:34,736 --> 00:36:37,406
120,000 people taken from their homes,
616
00:36:37,644 --> 00:36:40,458
moved within three days
617
00:36:40,458 --> 00:36:43,608
and put in internment camps
throughout the country.
618
00:36:43,766 --> 00:36:47,936
I still remember that day
when two American soldiers
619
00:36:47,936 --> 00:36:50,803
with bayonets on their rifles
came stomping up...
620
00:36:51,485 --> 00:36:55,353
to the front door of that house
and ordered our family out.
621
00:36:55,773 --> 00:36:59,962
And I remember my mother had tears
streaming down her cheek...
622
00:36:59,962 --> 00:37:02,155
as we moved out.
623
00:37:04,286 --> 00:37:07,452
It became normal for me
to begin the school day
624
00:37:07,452 --> 00:37:10,555
in a black tar paper barrack
625
00:37:10,555 --> 00:37:12,795
with a Pledge of Allegiance to the flag.
626
00:37:12,795 --> 00:37:15,727
I could see the barbed wire fence
and the sentry towers
627
00:37:15,727 --> 00:37:19,664
right outside my schoolhouse window
as I recited the words...
628
00:37:19,664 --> 00:37:22,489
"with liberty and justice for all."
629
00:37:26,351 --> 00:37:31,200
I have a nine-year-old daughter
and I want her to be able to experience
630
00:37:31,200 --> 00:37:34,202
and see what these camps looked like.
631
00:37:35,718 --> 00:37:38,412
I think when you talk about
the history of an experience,
632
00:37:38,672 --> 00:37:40,429
you can't really feel it
633
00:37:40,933 --> 00:37:43,743
unless you can see it and visualize it.
634
00:37:44,660 --> 00:37:46,932
My father is Dave Masaharu Tatsuno
635
00:37:47,632 --> 00:37:52,381
and he was responsible for the film Topaz,
636
00:37:52,753 --> 00:37:56,967
which documents life in an internment camp
during World War II.
637
00:37:58,340 --> 00:38:01,869
That's my mother holding me in the desert.
638
00:38:02,344 --> 00:38:05,221
It wasn't meant to be a documentary.
639
00:38:05,692 --> 00:38:10,023
He was just trying
to do a family film for us.
640
00:38:10,618 --> 00:38:15,290
What has come to be known as his film,
641
00:38:15,789 --> 00:38:20,543
was really just a portrayal
of life in the camps,
642
00:38:21,061 --> 00:38:24,262
of the daily struggles
that people experienced
643
00:38:24,591 --> 00:38:28,015
and it captured for all time
644
00:38:28,169 --> 00:38:32,026
something that America
didn't want anyone to see.
645
00:38:32,684 --> 00:38:35,144
Home movies are so important.
646
00:38:35,294 --> 00:38:36,442
They show our history
647
00:38:36,442 --> 00:38:39,767
of our family, of our community,
of our country.
648
00:38:40,240 --> 00:38:42,929
That's important,
that's very important.
649
00:38:47,790 --> 00:38:50,785
The addition of the Zapruder film,
650
00:38:51,598 --> 00:38:55,082
the home movie that captured
the assassination of John Kennedy,
651
00:38:55,082 --> 00:38:58,882
demonstrates, I think,
at its farthest extent...
652
00:38:58,963 --> 00:39:02,653
that America's film heritage,
its movie heritage...
653
00:39:02,653 --> 00:39:05,945
embraces much, much more
than just a Hollywood feature film.
654
00:39:06,769 --> 00:39:11,154
I think, "This film is real
and it happened during my lifetime."
655
00:39:11,510 --> 00:39:17,211
I saw it, it's ugly, it's sudden,
it's shocking and it's inexplicable,
656
00:39:17,211 --> 00:39:22,260
and the only way that you can recreate
the experience of it, is showing it.
657
00:39:36,753 --> 00:39:38,554
Hey you, come on out of there.
658
00:39:39,341 --> 00:39:40,291
Come on!
659
00:39:43,579 --> 00:39:48,000
Well, I'm a... too many of you
dames gettin' away with it these days.
660
00:39:48,000 --> 00:39:51,058
- The cops in the yards'll take care of you!
- Oh, wait a minute.
661
00:39:51,458 --> 00:39:53,523
You wouldn't throw us
off the train, would you?
662
00:39:53,622 --> 00:39:56,272
- Yeah, and you're gonna get 30 days for it.
- In jail?
663
00:39:56,272 --> 00:39:57,512
Yes, in jail!
664
00:40:00,237 --> 00:40:03,427
Now why don't we sit down
and talk this thing over?
665
00:40:07,379 --> 00:40:13,800
Almost always, the things that people
wanted to cut out of movies... were ideas.
666
00:40:14,376 --> 00:40:20,053
And so you have ideas
being cut out of the original Baby Face
by the New York censors.
667
00:40:20,883 --> 00:40:24,048
♪ That man of mine... ♪
668
00:40:24,095 --> 00:40:25,482
Baby face was really interesting 'cause...
669
00:40:25,482 --> 00:40:29,275
I'd known the film for a long time and
actually, I had a copy of it on laserdisc...
670
00:40:29,574 --> 00:40:31,615
for those who remember
what laserdiscs were.
671
00:40:33,232 --> 00:40:37,242
They asked me to go and check the negative
to see what condition it was in,
672
00:40:37,242 --> 00:40:40,126
and that's when I noticed
that we actually had two negatives.
673
00:40:40,126 --> 00:40:43,576
So I get 'em out,
and I start looking at the two reel ones
674
00:40:43,576 --> 00:40:46,633
and I notice
that there's something strange about them,
675
00:40:46,633 --> 00:40:50,850
so I put the two reel ones down on a table
and set one of top of the other one
676
00:40:50,850 --> 00:40:54,861
and that's when I noticed that, you know,
like the one reel one was this big...
677
00:40:54,917 --> 00:40:57,130
And the other reel one was like this big,
678
00:40:57,130 --> 00:40:59,702
and I'm like,
"There's something going on here."
679
00:40:59,957 --> 00:41:02,111
Say, I like it here.
How about a job?
680
00:41:02,111 --> 00:41:03,616
- Oh, we...
- Oh, now don't tell me
681
00:41:03,616 --> 00:41:06,496
in this great big building
there ain't some place for me.
682
00:41:09,077 --> 00:41:11,391
Have you had any experience?
683
00:41:11,967 --> 00:41:12,843
Plenty.
684
00:41:12,843 --> 00:41:18,959
And I started going through the two negatives
and also listening to the soundtracks
and began finding these differences,
685
00:41:18,959 --> 00:41:21,249
great differences between the two films.
686
00:41:21,276 --> 00:41:23,726
And then he has the Eureka moment
687
00:41:23,726 --> 00:41:26,105
and he realizes that what he has...
688
00:41:26,105 --> 00:41:28,222
is the film before it was edited!
689
00:41:29,318 --> 00:41:34,342
That the five minutes with Barbara Stanwyck
going to the city to use what she has,
690
00:41:34,502 --> 00:41:38,042
you know, to get what she wants
is in there,
691
00:41:38,152 --> 00:41:39,783
and they thought it was lost.
692
00:41:41,632 --> 00:41:44,076
The boss won't be back for an hour.
693
00:41:44,600 --> 00:41:47,768
Well then, why don't we go in
and talk this over?
694
00:42:12,327 --> 00:42:15,137
The original negative was cut
to the censorship version.
695
00:42:15,164 --> 00:42:19,023
The duplicate negative
was the original pre-censored version
696
00:42:19,178 --> 00:42:21,488
that had all the naughty bits still in it,
697
00:42:21,488 --> 00:42:25,294
and that was just... I mean that was just
the find of a lifetime.
698
00:42:25,294 --> 00:42:27,053
Look, here.
699
00:42:27,332 --> 00:42:31,968
Nietzsche says "All life,
no matter how we idealize it,
700
00:42:31,968 --> 00:42:35,226
is nothing more nor less
than exploitation."
701
00:42:36,151 --> 00:42:38,017
That's what I'm telling you.
702
00:42:38,220 --> 00:42:40,131
Exploit yourself!
703
00:42:40,189 --> 00:42:43,597
Go to some big city
where you will find opportunities.
704
00:42:43,659 --> 00:42:44,933
Use men!
705
00:42:44,993 --> 00:42:47,735
Be strong!
Defiant!
706
00:42:47,796 --> 00:42:52,203
Use men
to get the things you want!
707
00:42:52,352 --> 00:42:55,510
The version that was discovered...
708
00:42:55,510 --> 00:42:57,304
puts some of the sex back,
709
00:42:57,718 --> 00:43:00,351
but it puts a lot of the philosophy back.
710
00:43:00,377 --> 00:43:01,393
Yeah.
711
00:43:01,877 --> 00:43:05,888
The New York censors altered
the sharpness of the philosophical thrust
712
00:43:05,888 --> 00:43:09,887
for the release version because they
were afraid that it would offend people.
713
00:43:10,043 --> 00:43:11,766
What chance has a woman got?
714
00:43:11,766 --> 00:43:13,544
More chance than men.
715
00:43:14,022 --> 00:43:18,635
A woman... young, beautiful like you are...
could get anything she wants in the world
716
00:43:18,635 --> 00:43:20,835
But there is a right and a wrong way.
717
00:43:21,307 --> 00:43:24,222
Remember the price of the wrong way
is too great.
718
00:43:24,646 --> 00:43:27,737
Go to some big city
where you will find opportunities.
719
00:43:27,803 --> 00:43:29,496
Don't let people mislead you.
720
00:43:29,505 --> 00:43:32,667
You must be a master,
not a slave.
721
00:43:32,667 --> 00:43:35,678
Be clean, be strong, defiant.
722
00:43:35,830 --> 00:43:38,690
And you will be a success.
723
00:43:42,431 --> 00:43:46,275
You always hear about these things
but they never survive.
724
00:43:46,388 --> 00:43:47,364
Yeah.
725
00:43:47,364 --> 00:43:50,824
And to this day, I don't think
we've found out exactly why...
726
00:43:50,824 --> 00:43:52,644
this negative survives
727
00:43:52,644 --> 00:43:54,597
and why on this particular film,
728
00:43:54,960 --> 00:43:57,278
they actually made this duplicate negative
729
00:43:57,278 --> 00:43:58,651
before they cut the film.
730
00:44:01,003 --> 00:44:02,306
You can make a movie, by the way,
731
00:44:02,306 --> 00:44:06,001
that endorses conventional morality,
that's not the problem.
732
00:44:06,001 --> 00:44:08,746
The problem is that
it was not sincere, it's not real.
733
00:44:08,811 --> 00:44:10,705
And in the case of Baby Face,
734
00:44:10,705 --> 00:44:13,755
when it really said what it wanted to say,
of course, it's better.
735
00:44:15,717 --> 00:44:19,192
That is why censorship is so horrible.
736
00:44:19,471 --> 00:44:21,048
Because censorship
737
00:44:21,129 --> 00:44:24,699
blocks the free expression of an era
738
00:44:24,699 --> 00:44:26,280
talking to another era.
739
00:44:26,873 --> 00:44:30,628
For the most part, most films that are made
are entertainment
740
00:44:30,628 --> 00:44:33,017
and that's all they're meant to be
741
00:44:33,150 --> 00:44:34,822
and I think there's a, an...
742
00:44:34,822 --> 00:44:37,015
unfortunate sense people have that
743
00:44:37,015 --> 00:44:39,845
all films are just films.
744
00:44:40,202 --> 00:44:42,506
Well, I think the shining example
745
00:44:42,506 --> 00:44:43,979
of something that
746
00:44:43,979 --> 00:44:46,245
is a folk fantasy and commercial
747
00:44:46,245 --> 00:44:48,825
and art is probably Godfather.
748
00:44:53,455 --> 00:44:55,265
I used to live in Bayside, Queens,
749
00:44:55,265 --> 00:44:58,140
and there's
a local theater there, R.K.O. Keith's,
750
00:44:58,140 --> 00:45:00,795
which was an old,
kind of ornate theater,
751
00:45:00,795 --> 00:45:03,989
that had the skylights
and the stars and had the balcony...
752
00:45:03,989 --> 00:45:06,969
and that's where I had first seen
The Godfather played in that theater.
753
00:45:06,969 --> 00:45:09,657
And it played great,
it sounded great, it looked great.
754
00:45:09,657 --> 00:45:13,036
Eh... now you come to me and you say,
755
00:45:13,036 --> 00:45:15,464
"Don Corleone, give me justice."
756
00:45:17,466 --> 00:45:19,518
But you don't ask with respect.
757
00:45:20,549 --> 00:45:22,370
You don't offer friendship.
758
00:45:23,252 --> 00:45:25,152
You don't even think
to call me Godfather.
759
00:45:25,152 --> 00:45:28,664
Somehow, with the performances of
all the actors, especially Brando,
760
00:45:28,664 --> 00:45:32,194
hit that neural cord that we all have
and there was a visceral reaction
761
00:45:32,194 --> 00:45:33,608
from almost anyone who saw it.
762
00:45:33,608 --> 00:45:36,231
The cinematographer
on The Godfather, Gordon Willis,
763
00:45:36,231 --> 00:45:38,732
one of the great
cinematographers of our time,
764
00:45:38,896 --> 00:45:43,641
did a very, very daring thing
when he photographed those pictures.
765
00:45:43,705 --> 00:45:45,076
Gordon decided...
766
00:45:45,798 --> 00:45:49,069
that he didn't want people
messing about with his image
767
00:45:49,069 --> 00:45:51,982
and he shot it in a way
that you couldn't print it
768
00:45:52,550 --> 00:45:55,987
in any other way
than the way that he shot it.
769
00:45:56,051 --> 00:45:59,445
You can get the color wrong,
you can make skin green if you want to,
770
00:45:59,890 --> 00:46:01,848
but it's gotta be printed dark.
771
00:46:06,218 --> 00:46:07,748
I'm glad you came, Mike.
772
00:46:08,328 --> 00:46:09,932
I hope we can straighten everything out.
773
00:46:09,932 --> 00:46:15,267
The original negatives of Godfather I
and Godfather II were not in good condition,
774
00:46:15,648 --> 00:46:20,518
were not capable of making new copies,
and they really needed a restoration.
775
00:46:20,575 --> 00:46:22,565
The negative of that film was in tatters.
776
00:46:22,731 --> 00:46:25,734
And this is The Godfather,
this is... this is The Godfather.
777
00:46:26,081 --> 00:46:28,484
This is a film, you know,
I think people consider...
778
00:46:28,723 --> 00:46:31,432
if not maybe the greatest film of all time,
one of them.
779
00:46:31,432 --> 00:46:33,905
A lot of prints were made
from that original negative,
780
00:46:33,905 --> 00:46:35,886
more so than
probably should have been made.
781
00:46:35,924 --> 00:46:39,737
The negative sustained some injury,
as any negative that gets overused will.
782
00:46:39,768 --> 00:46:41,050
The more popular the film,
783
00:46:41,050 --> 00:46:43,927
the worse condition
the original negative is going to be in.
784
00:46:44,333 --> 00:46:45,909
It's been loved to death.
785
00:46:46,141 --> 00:46:48,752
It's not until the past 15,
786
00:46:48,752 --> 00:46:51,743
maybe as far as 20 years,
that the studios have realized
787
00:46:51,743 --> 00:46:54,004
what they have stacked away in their vaults.
788
00:46:54,092 --> 00:46:56,598
They really didn't realize
that these golden treasures that
789
00:46:56,598 --> 00:46:58,436
they had in their vaults and hence,
790
00:46:58,645 --> 00:47:00,831
they weren't looked after very well.
791
00:47:04,386 --> 00:47:06,912
The beauty of this job is that
once you start working on these films
792
00:47:06,912 --> 00:47:11,295
and you start getting to explore them
scene by scene, shot by shot, frame by frame,
793
00:47:11,979 --> 00:47:16,444
you get to see little things,
little nuances, little pieces of the puzzle...
794
00:47:16,444 --> 00:47:20,410
and your appreciation for the film
just explodes.
795
00:47:20,469 --> 00:47:22,809
We're not creating anything.
796
00:47:22,871 --> 00:47:26,191
What we're doing is to try
and take what people made
797
00:47:26,701 --> 00:47:31,465
and just preserve it and make it look like
what it was supposed to look like.
798
00:47:31,741 --> 00:47:33,766
The trick is not to change it.
799
00:47:38,947 --> 00:47:40,289
Don Corleone.
800
00:47:40,355 --> 00:47:42,987
The thing about movies,
it's about storytelling.
801
00:47:44,469 --> 00:47:46,029
And the story that it tells
802
00:47:46,029 --> 00:47:48,504
still today stands up very strong.
803
00:47:52,614 --> 00:47:56,110
At first, you think, "Oh, God,
this is gonna be the same 20 movies.
804
00:47:56,110 --> 00:48:00,193
We're gonna have on here Casablanca,
we're gonna have the obvious ones, right'?"
805
00:48:00,269 --> 00:48:01,479
You do have them.
806
00:48:01,610 --> 00:48:03,739
But then you have some that are surprising.
807
00:48:04,106 --> 00:48:05,756
I said...
808
00:48:06,346 --> 00:48:08,333
"Relax and don't say anything,
809
00:48:08,417 --> 00:48:10,535
I just want to talk about a film
810
00:48:10,535 --> 00:48:13,565
which I'm sure has never been
brought up at the board."
811
00:48:14,956 --> 00:48:16,710
♪ How do you do-ah? ♪
812
00:48:17,125 --> 00:48:19,104
♪ See you've met my ♪
813
00:48:19,494 --> 00:48:22,356
♪ faithful handyman... ♪
814
00:48:22,356 --> 00:48:24,742
People are gonna say,
"You must be, you must be crazy.
815
00:48:24,800 --> 00:48:27,943
The film's lacking in taste,
it's this, it's that."
816
00:48:28,003 --> 00:48:30,609
But at the same time,
here's a film that's played at midnight
817
00:48:30,957 --> 00:48:33,984
in theaters across the country for 30 years.
818
00:48:34,042 --> 00:48:37,888
There's a reason why The Rocky Horror Show
is a popular film.
819
00:48:37,888 --> 00:48:42,411
Well, if it's that popular,
it must be speaking somehow to this country.
820
00:48:42,411 --> 00:48:46,999
There must be something woven
into what makes that film work.
821
00:48:47,055 --> 00:48:50,149
♪ ...one hell of a lover ♪
822
00:48:50,149 --> 00:48:53,490
♪ I'm just a sweet transvestite ♪
823
00:48:54,796 --> 00:48:55,582
♪ from... ♪
824
00:48:55,582 --> 00:48:59,269
And I have to sympathize with Dr. Billington
because he has to go...
825
00:48:59,269 --> 00:49:03,443
to the halls of Congress
and tell everyone one...
826
00:49:03,443 --> 00:49:06,542
"one of the 25 films
is The Rocky Horror Show.
827
00:49:06,542 --> 00:49:07,821
It's this great film!
828
00:49:07,821 --> 00:49:10,522
It's about transvestites
and men from Mars
829
00:49:10,522 --> 00:49:12,161
and dancing hunchbacks."
830
00:49:12,646 --> 00:49:14,658
I don't know how he does it.
831
00:49:14,716 --> 00:49:16,448
Well, it...
832
00:49:16,448 --> 00:49:18,345
It certainly widened my horizon.
833
00:49:18,384 --> 00:49:20,028
♪ With your hands on your hips ♪
834
00:49:21,256 --> 00:49:23,569
♪ Bring your knees in tight... ♪
835
00:49:23,866 --> 00:49:26,519
Honestly, when you're dealing
with a wide variety,
836
00:49:26,519 --> 00:49:29,905
you have to be open to a wide variety.
837
00:49:29,965 --> 00:49:31,859
Rocky Horror Picture Show is the...
838
00:49:31,859 --> 00:49:33,850
the most successful midnight movie ever,
839
00:49:33,850 --> 00:49:35,811
way more than Pink Flamingos ever was.
840
00:49:35,871 --> 00:49:38,374
♪ Let's do the time warp ♪
841
00:49:38,440 --> 00:49:40,477
♪ again. ♪
842
00:49:44,346 --> 00:49:47,888
I'll tell you a story about it.
A woman came up to me
843
00:49:47,888 --> 00:49:51,464
and she said, "I saw you sitting here,
and I just had to tell you
844
00:49:51,464 --> 00:49:53,090
that Spinal Tap...
845
00:49:54,512 --> 00:49:56,004
saved my life."
846
00:49:56,050 --> 00:49:59,996
Coming live, direct from hell, Spinal Tap!
847
00:50:01,062 --> 00:50:05,475
♪ You're hot, you take all we've got
Not a dry seat in the house... ♪
848
00:50:06,438 --> 00:50:07,874
No, I'm not gonna tell that story.
849
00:50:07,874 --> 00:50:10,439
No, it was The Princess Bride
that saved her life, so...
850
00:50:10,439 --> 00:50:12,475
Spinal Tap didn't save her life at all.
851
00:50:12,797 --> 00:50:14,866
It was Princess Bride
that saved her life
852
00:50:14,866 --> 00:50:17,329
and I don't think that's on the registry,
but it should be.
853
00:50:17,329 --> 00:50:18,318
♪ ...on our way, but tonight ♪
854
00:50:18,318 --> 00:50:20,952
♪ we're gonna rock ya
Tonight I'm gonna rock... ♪
855
00:50:20,952 --> 00:50:24,273
When we first showed it
in a preview in Dallas,
856
00:50:24,273 --> 00:50:27,453
the people came up to me and said,
"Why would you make a movie about a band
857
00:50:27,453 --> 00:50:31,454
that nobody's heard of
and a band that's so bad?
858
00:50:31,454 --> 00:50:34,345
Why don't you make a movie
about the Rolling Stones?"
859
00:50:38,166 --> 00:50:41,175
So it took a while for people
to catch up to it, but once they did,
860
00:50:41,327 --> 00:50:43,486
it became this kind of...
861
00:50:43,834 --> 00:50:48,515
iconic representation
of the world of rock and roll.
862
00:50:48,577 --> 00:50:50,734
What we do is if we need that
863
00:50:50,734 --> 00:50:53,624
extra push over the cliff,
you know what we do?
864
00:50:53,682 --> 00:50:55,755
- Put it up to 11.
- 11, exactly.
865
00:50:55,755 --> 00:51:00,566
I love This Is Spinal Tap.
It takes the things that are...
866
00:51:00,655 --> 00:51:04,362
naturally humorous about that lifestyle
and exaggerates them.
867
00:51:04,426 --> 00:51:08,170
- One louder.
- Why don't you just make 10 louder,
and make 10 be the top...
868
00:51:08,170 --> 00:51:10,439
number and make that a little louder?
869
00:51:13,268 --> 00:51:14,742
These go to 11.
870
00:51:14,803 --> 00:51:16,659
♪ Oh, Ma ♪
871
00:51:23,011 --> 00:51:23,921
♪ Oh,... ♪
872
00:51:23,979 --> 00:51:25,783
I never would have heard of this...
873
00:51:25,783 --> 00:51:29,558
a very early sound film demonstration
874
00:51:29,661 --> 00:51:31,920
which is a quacking duck.
875
00:51:34,422 --> 00:51:35,696
♪ Oh, Ma! ♪
876
00:51:35,757 --> 00:51:37,889
One can look at Gus Visser
and you can think...
877
00:51:37,889 --> 00:51:41,056
"What is the aesthetic value?
That might be hard to justify."
878
00:51:41,515 --> 00:51:44,992
It's there because it demonstrates
an important breakthrough...
879
00:51:44,992 --> 00:51:48,572
in the technology of the history
of motion pictures.
880
00:51:48,572 --> 00:51:51,103
It was brought to our attention
and we watched it and said...
881
00:51:51,103 --> 00:51:53,460
"We have to have this,
it's a sound film demonstration.
882
00:51:53,460 --> 00:51:54,831
And it's hysterical."
883
00:51:54,831 --> 00:51:57,884
It's a film you can't really describe...
884
00:51:57,884 --> 00:52:00,023
How he makes the duck quack.
885
00:52:02,751 --> 00:52:04,890
♪ He's kissing me. ♪
886
00:52:06,288 --> 00:52:09,534
I will say that
when I was looking at the movies
that are on the National Film Registry,
887
00:52:09,591 --> 00:52:13,236
I was pleasantly surprised
that Blazing Saddles was on there.
888
00:52:15,131 --> 00:52:17,821
Blazing Saddles
was basically nominated by a reporter
889
00:52:17,821 --> 00:52:21,102
who has done a lot of articles
on the Registry and preservation.
890
00:52:23,240 --> 00:52:25,949
Blazing Saddles
has a special place in my heart.
891
00:52:25,950 --> 00:52:28,446
I love the myth of the American West.
892
00:52:28,523 --> 00:52:31,670
I like cowboys, I like cowboy stories,
I like cowboy poetry.
893
00:52:31,670 --> 00:52:32,797
I like Roy Rogers,
894
00:52:32,797 --> 00:52:34,858
- I like dances with wolves.
- ...Two...
895
00:52:36,087 --> 00:52:37,112
...Three!
896
00:52:41,652 --> 00:52:44,929
That myth of the American West
is the myth of America.
897
00:52:44,993 --> 00:52:48,897
But Blazing Saddles takes that myth
and twists it and turns it on its head.
898
00:52:48,974 --> 00:52:52,851
It also takes the moviemaking myth
and twists it and turns it on its head.
899
00:52:53,437 --> 00:52:54,578
Raisinets!
900
00:52:56,088 --> 00:52:59,376
And finally, the Board said,
"Well, he may have a point."
901
00:52:59,908 --> 00:53:02,047
And the rest is history.
902
00:53:06,484 --> 00:53:08,778
To see Blazing Saddles on there was...
903
00:53:08,800 --> 00:53:10,999
was a little bit of vindication for me,
904
00:53:11,603 --> 00:53:15,092
that I didn't waste my time in college
watching that movie so many times.
905
00:53:16,624 --> 00:53:18,119
I wasn't wasting my time.
906
00:53:18,417 --> 00:53:21,541
I was enriching myself with film history.
907
00:53:27,035 --> 00:53:29,785
- Why don't you let him go by?
- Well, he wants the whole road.
908
00:53:29,785 --> 00:53:33,181
Now, look, all I'm trying to say is
there are lots of things that a man can do
909
00:53:33,181 --> 00:53:35,880
and in society's eyes it's all hunky dory.
910
00:53:35,934 --> 00:53:39,956
A woman does the same thing the same,
mind you-- and she's an outcast.
911
00:53:40,014 --> 00:53:42,187
- Finished?
- No.
912
00:53:42,692 --> 00:53:46,066
One of the most important things
that I can do
913
00:53:46,227 --> 00:53:48,701
with my role on the Board
is to keep
914
00:53:48,701 --> 00:53:52,427
the contribution of women to film history
915
00:53:52,427 --> 00:53:55,146
in the center of our discussions.
916
00:53:55,146 --> 00:53:57,313
We had to write reports
on what we wanted to be
917
00:53:57,937 --> 00:54:02,136
and the boy next to me wrote a composition
on how he was gonna be a movie director.
918
00:54:02,737 --> 00:54:04,821
And I got so angry at him,
919
00:54:04,821 --> 00:54:07,477
because movies seemed too good for us,
920
00:54:07,477 --> 00:54:10,586
like they came
from magical people in Hollywood and...
921
00:54:10,956 --> 00:54:14,375
here he was, the guy that cheated off
of me during the tests and...
922
00:54:14,375 --> 00:54:16,558
how could he be a movie director?
923
00:54:16,818 --> 00:54:19,814
And then I thought,
"Well, I must be this angry...
924
00:54:19,814 --> 00:54:22,107
because that's what really,
what I want to do."
925
00:54:22,107 --> 00:54:25,205
Awesome!
Totally awesome!
926
00:54:25,205 --> 00:54:27,686
Fast Times at Ridgemont High
is one of my favorite films.
927
00:54:27,686 --> 00:54:28,983
Not the favorite, you know,
928
00:54:28,983 --> 00:54:31,810
but when Sean Penn
ordered the pizza into the classroom...
929
00:54:31,866 --> 00:54:35,895
- Who ordered the double cheese and sausage?
- Right here, dude.
930
00:54:35,895 --> 00:54:39,590
...I thought, "This is the best moment
in American film history," actually.
931
00:54:44,746 --> 00:54:46,194
Very few people know
932
00:54:46,194 --> 00:54:49,507
about the extent
of the involvement of women...
933
00:54:49,507 --> 00:54:52,094
in early film culture
in the United States.
934
00:54:52,164 --> 00:54:55,229
Half of all films in the silent era
were written by women.
935
00:54:55,290 --> 00:54:57,801
All of the top screenwriters
were women.
936
00:54:57,859 --> 00:55:00,011
The highest paid screenwriters
were all women.
937
00:55:00,328 --> 00:55:03,276
And many of the top directors
were women.
938
00:55:03,431 --> 00:55:06,780
It was a growing industry.
It was the popular mass medium.
939
00:55:06,780 --> 00:55:08,913
People were going to the film
every single day.
940
00:55:09,195 --> 00:55:12,285
So, there were incredible opportunities
for women in Hollywood.
941
00:55:16,511 --> 00:55:20,496
Lois Weber is an extraordinary figure
in American film history
942
00:55:20,496 --> 00:55:23,854
and she's somebody who
very few people know about.
943
00:55:23,918 --> 00:55:27,707
Everybody's heard of D.W. Griffith,
everybody's heard of Cecil B. Demille
944
00:55:27,889 --> 00:55:29,528
and in the 1910s,
945
00:55:29,630 --> 00:55:33,731
Weber was often mentioned
alongside Griffith and Demille...
946
00:55:33,731 --> 00:55:36,284
as the three great minds of filmmaking.
947
00:55:36,284 --> 00:55:39,079
She was Universal's top director.
948
00:55:39,079 --> 00:55:44,394
And she was a top director
who made socially engaged films
949
00:55:44,394 --> 00:55:46,535
about the key problems of the day.
950
00:55:48,795 --> 00:55:51,390
The film that's in the film registry,
951
00:55:51,641 --> 00:55:55,115
"Where Are My Children?",
is a film about birth control and abortion
952
00:55:55,115 --> 00:55:58,718
and it was Universal's top moneymaker
of 1916.
953
00:55:58,718 --> 00:56:00,646
It traveled all around the world.
954
00:56:01,363 --> 00:56:05,653
Not only did she make these films
about really difficult...
955
00:56:06,070 --> 00:56:08,682
issues that we're still grappling with
as a culture,
956
00:56:08,687 --> 00:56:12,147
she made popular, box office successes.
957
00:56:16,438 --> 00:56:19,356
When you start looking at the studio era,
958
00:56:19,356 --> 00:56:23,257
the '30s and '40s and beyond,
then you really do see gender bias.
959
00:56:23,257 --> 00:56:27,202
Then it really becomes
nearly impossible for women to direct.
960
00:56:27,389 --> 00:56:31,119
When I was in graduate school
at U.S.C. Cinema,
961
00:56:31,227 --> 00:56:35,656
a group of us organized
a small screening series called...
962
00:56:35,656 --> 00:56:37,446
Films by Great Women Directors
963
00:56:37,446 --> 00:56:40,953
and somebody wrote
across the sign "There are none."
964
00:56:41,095 --> 00:56:43,569
Often when you're working with the studios,
965
00:56:43,569 --> 00:56:45,503
they'll give you a list
of pre-approved directors
966
00:56:45,503 --> 00:56:47,923
and you'll find that there
are very few, if,
967
00:56:48,257 --> 00:56:50,980
in many cases,
no women directors on the list.
968
00:56:55,603 --> 00:56:58,314
Dorothy Arzner is the only woman...
969
00:56:58,314 --> 00:57:01,975
to work as a director in the studio era
in the '30s and '40s.
970
00:57:01,975 --> 00:57:04,307
That's an extraordinary accomplishment.
971
00:57:04,307 --> 00:57:06,939
She would also joke
that she was one of the guys.
972
00:57:06,939 --> 00:57:10,217
She used to dress like a man,
she used to hang about with the guys,
973
00:57:10,217 --> 00:57:12,360
she used to behave like the guys,
and she always said,
974
00:57:12,360 --> 00:57:15,302
"that's how I got on in the industry,
'cause I was just one of the guys.
975
00:57:15,302 --> 00:57:19,985
They didn't think about me as being a woman,
I was just a guy directing films."
976
00:57:20,955 --> 00:57:24,385
Dance, Girl, Dance
is a film that takes on,
977
00:57:24,385 --> 00:57:26,016
in an allegorical way,
978
00:57:26,016 --> 00:57:28,152
Hollywood's representation of women.
979
00:57:28,158 --> 00:57:30,551
It's about a dancer who
980
00:57:30,551 --> 00:57:33,269
aspires to be a serious ballet dancer.
981
00:57:34,724 --> 00:57:37,818
She's sort of stuck as the comic act
982
00:57:37,818 --> 00:57:40,880
amidst all this
sexual exploitation of women and...
983
00:57:41,233 --> 00:57:42,665
the climax of the film
984
00:57:42,665 --> 00:57:45,935
occurs when she stops
in the middle of her performance...
985
00:57:53,868 --> 00:57:57,280
and looks straight at the audience,
which means she looks straight at the camera
986
00:57:57,280 --> 00:57:58,332
and she says...
987
00:57:58,332 --> 00:58:02,172
I know you want me to tear my clothes off
so you can look your 50 cents' worth.
988
00:58:02,172 --> 00:58:06,336
50 cents for the privilege of staring
at a girl the way your wives won't let you.
989
00:58:06,748 --> 00:58:09,914
I'm sure they see through you
just like we do.
990
00:58:10,006 --> 00:58:14,377
It's an extraordinary moment, in which
we, as the audience, are confronted
991
00:58:15,002 --> 00:58:18,537
and asked to think about
what we routinely see...
992
00:58:18,651 --> 00:58:21,504
in movies which is
the sexual objectification of women.
993
00:58:23,665 --> 00:58:26,255
Weber and Arzner
were very different women...
994
00:58:26,255 --> 00:58:29,818
who made very different kinds of films
in very different contexts,
995
00:58:29,981 --> 00:58:32,771
but if I think about it,
what maybe unites them is that...
996
00:58:33,121 --> 00:58:37,314
they had a unique and singular vision
of what they could do
997
00:58:37,314 --> 00:58:40,582
that just allowed them to persevere.
998
00:58:40,815 --> 00:58:43,799
It's really important to have
female filmmakers because
999
00:58:43,952 --> 00:58:48,951
women have a different perspective
on the world, on our culture, on life.
1000
00:58:49,464 --> 00:58:53,135
Women filmmakers,
we have an awful lot to bring
1001
00:58:53,491 --> 00:58:55,238
to the screen.
1002
00:58:55,238 --> 00:58:59,918
There are not a whole lot of us
and we have this nurturing quality
1003
00:58:59,918 --> 00:59:03,659
and we have often a different point of view,
a way of seeing the world,
1004
00:59:03,659 --> 00:59:07,252
a different way of placing characters
or placing the camera,
1005
00:59:07,308 --> 00:59:10,518
so let's play around with that,
let's experiment and that's...
1006
00:59:10,518 --> 00:59:12,411
and I did that with
Daughters of the Dust.
1007
00:59:12,411 --> 00:59:15,181
And for a lot of people, it worked
And for a lot of people, they said...
1008
00:59:15,181 --> 00:59:18,523
"Whoa, what is this?"
"What are you doing?"
1009
00:59:18,737 --> 00:59:23,935
And it was like, "I'm exploring
and I'm telling a story... my way."
1010
00:59:38,506 --> 00:59:41,809
I was involved
in getting Back to the Future
put on the Film Registry.
1011
00:59:42,410 --> 00:59:44,147
What did I tell you'?!
1012
00:59:44,545 --> 00:59:47,967
88 Miles per hour!
1013
00:59:47,967 --> 00:59:49,606
I went to the fans.
1014
00:59:49,606 --> 00:59:52,024
Back to the future
is one of my favorite movies.
1015
00:59:52,024 --> 00:59:55,852
I had used a wonderful website,
BTTF.com,
1016
00:59:55,852 --> 00:59:58,707
that was
hosted by a man named Stephen Clark
1017
00:59:58,769 --> 01:00:00,312
and I wrote to him and said...
1018
01:00:00,388 --> 01:00:03,748
"Look, fan response
is an incredible factor
1019
01:00:03,748 --> 01:00:05,790
in getting something
on the Registry
1020
01:00:05,790 --> 01:00:07,880
and make your fans write in."
1021
01:00:07,964 --> 01:00:10,056
And the response was amazing.
1022
01:00:10,136 --> 01:00:11,996
Steve Leggett, who works
with the Film Registry,
1023
01:00:11,996 --> 01:00:14,256
said that he had
so many e-mails every day,
1024
01:00:14,256 --> 01:00:16,687
hundreds of e-mails coming in,
and it was...
1025
01:00:16,687 --> 01:00:19,808
the first time that there had been
such an overwhelming response...
1026
01:00:19,808 --> 01:00:23,916
to getting one film on from people
outside of the Library of Congress.
1027
01:00:24,619 --> 01:00:27,381
It's found its way
into the popular culture so much,
1028
01:00:27,381 --> 01:00:30,482
and the fact that you can now buy
a flux capacitor online...
1029
01:00:30,591 --> 01:00:34,533
and people will buy them... is saying
something about the impact of the movie.
1030
01:00:38,376 --> 01:00:41,844
My moment of triumph as far as
the National Film Registry is concerned...
1031
01:00:42,003 --> 01:00:44,403
I had a couple of different ones
that I put on there.
1032
01:00:44,403 --> 01:00:47,583
The one film that I actually got chosen
1033
01:00:47,883 --> 01:00:49,004
is a little film called...
1034
01:00:49,004 --> 01:00:51,846
♪ Let's all go to the lobby, ♪
1035
01:00:51,846 --> 01:00:54,561
♪ let's all go to the lobby ♪
1036
01:00:54,561 --> 01:00:57,415
♪ let's all go to the lobby ♪
1037
01:00:57,415 --> 01:00:58,494
♪ to get ourselves a treat... ♪
1038
01:00:58,494 --> 01:01:01,958
A little film made by
the Filmack company up in Chicago.
1039
01:01:01,989 --> 01:01:05,027
And it's a bumper
that goes in between the movies
1040
01:01:05,027 --> 01:01:07,622
to get you
to go to the candy counter.
1041
01:01:08,208 --> 01:01:11,268
♪ The sparkling drinks are just dandy ♪
1042
01:01:11,332 --> 01:01:13,773
♪ The chocolate bars and the candy ♪
1043
01:01:13,773 --> 01:01:15,604
♪ So let's all go to the... ♪
1044
01:01:15,604 --> 01:01:17,882
♪ lobby,
duh, duh, duddiluh, duh, duh. ♪
1045
01:01:17,882 --> 01:01:19,757
But I looked at it and was like...
1046
01:01:19,757 --> 01:01:21,717
"This is such an
important little piece of film."
1047
01:01:21,717 --> 01:01:24,446
Everybody knows it,
everybody's seen it.
1048
01:01:24,512 --> 01:01:28,198
It's the perfect example
of this kind of cinematic advertising
1049
01:01:28,198 --> 01:01:29,338
that they were doing.
1050
01:01:29,951 --> 01:01:31,101
And it's fun.
1051
01:01:31,101 --> 01:01:34,095
So I put it in
and sure enough it got chosen that year.
1052
01:01:34,095 --> 01:01:35,311
I was totally blown away.
1053
01:01:35,311 --> 01:01:39,340
♪ Let's all go to the lobby ♪
1054
01:01:39,340 --> 01:01:43,852
- ♪ to get ourselves a treat... ♪
- Thank you, thank you.
1055
01:01:44,999 --> 01:01:48,133
When I was younger,
I was interested in films about power.
1056
01:01:53,013 --> 01:01:55,681
People with invincible skills.
1057
01:01:55,918 --> 01:01:58,536
They could shoot a gun
out of someone's hand,
1058
01:01:58,536 --> 01:02:01,515
they could snap
a bullwhip around your neck.
1059
01:02:03,562 --> 01:02:06,437
This will remind you
that I have been here once and can return.
1060
01:02:06,437 --> 01:02:09,946
And so from around six to 10,
1061
01:02:09,946 --> 01:02:13,999
those were the staple of my imagination
and you'd leave the movie
1062
01:02:14,027 --> 01:02:17,138
and you'd be acting out
all the parts with your friends.
1063
01:02:26,007 --> 01:02:28,998
And as a matter of fact,
on the first Western I ever did,
1064
01:02:28,998 --> 01:02:33,837
I ruined my first take on horseback
where I'm shooting somebody with my pistol
1065
01:02:33,837 --> 01:02:36,470
because on the finished film,
you can see me...
1066
01:02:36,470 --> 01:02:39,762
looking at the guy steely-eyed
and pulling the trigger and going...
1067
01:02:43,557 --> 01:02:45,230
Really stupid.
1068
01:02:45,293 --> 01:02:48,969
But, you know, it shows you the grip
that these things have on you.
1069
01:02:55,136 --> 01:02:57,527
When I was young, when I was little,
that was all I used to think about...
1070
01:02:57,527 --> 01:02:58,892
the N.B.A.
1071
01:02:59,240 --> 01:03:01,616
There's nothing more powerful
than a true story,
1072
01:03:02,209 --> 01:03:04,773
because it makes you feel like...
1073
01:03:04,773 --> 01:03:07,956
you don't have that escape valve...
1074
01:03:07,956 --> 01:03:10,029
that I have when I watch fiction.
1075
01:03:10,177 --> 01:03:12,247
When it gets too tough...
1076
01:03:12,247 --> 01:03:14,562
or too close or too emotional,
1077
01:03:14,562 --> 01:03:18,003
I can always kind of back out of it
just a little bit by saying...
1078
01:03:18,003 --> 01:03:19,771
"Eh, this isn't true."
1079
01:03:20,161 --> 01:03:22,416
And when you're seeing
a powerful documentary,
1080
01:03:22,881 --> 01:03:24,639
and you believe what you're seeing,
1081
01:03:24,699 --> 01:03:26,844
you don't have that
and that's a good thing.
1082
01:03:26,901 --> 01:03:31,077
My mother, she's like mother
and father to me.
1083
01:03:31,607 --> 01:03:35,411
She don't want me really
hanging around over here that much,
1084
01:03:36,211 --> 01:03:37,711
'cause of the gangs.
1085
01:03:38,151 --> 01:03:40,786
I always wanted to make stories.
1086
01:03:41,000 --> 01:03:45,219
This was a chance, an opportunity,
to hopefully tell a great story,
1087
01:03:45,618 --> 01:03:49,166
but a story that was true
and a story that,
1088
01:03:49,295 --> 01:03:51,988
in focusing on these two kids
and their families,
1089
01:03:51,988 --> 01:03:55,783
what their lives had to say
about the American dream,
1090
01:03:55,929 --> 01:03:58,469
about race in America,
1091
01:03:58,790 --> 01:04:01,340
about poverty in America.
1092
01:04:01,769 --> 01:04:03,864
It's something I think
that needed to be said,
1093
01:04:03,864 --> 01:04:05,344
and needs to always be said,
1094
01:04:05,344 --> 01:04:08,205
and unfortunately continues
to need to be said.
1095
01:04:08,342 --> 01:04:10,379
Arthur agee.
1096
01:04:11,449 --> 01:04:16,569
I would say an influence for me
early on was Barbara Kopple's work,
1097
01:04:16,858 --> 01:04:19,429
in particular, Harlan County.
1098
01:04:19,487 --> 01:04:23,613
♪ Come, all you young fellers, ♪
1099
01:04:23,613 --> 01:04:28,534
♪ so brave and so fine... ♪
1100
01:04:28,534 --> 01:04:31,534
♪ Seek not your fortune ♪
1101
01:04:31,534 --> 01:04:35,652
♪ way down in the mine... ♪
1102
01:04:35,652 --> 01:04:39,854
The beauty of documentaries is that
it only happens once.
1103
01:04:39,854 --> 01:04:42,381
It can't happen another time.
1104
01:04:42,443 --> 01:04:45,497
I remember
when I was with the widows...
1105
01:04:45,497 --> 01:04:49,775
from the Farmington Mine disaster
in Harlan County.
1106
01:04:49,846 --> 01:04:52,497
They had never gotten together
1107
01:04:52,553 --> 01:04:55,500
to speak about what it meant
1108
01:04:55,556 --> 01:04:57,335
to lose their husbands.
1109
01:04:57,335 --> 01:05:00,639
This was the first time
and they sat in a circle
1110
01:05:00,639 --> 01:05:03,757
and they talked about
the most intimate details...
1111
01:05:03,757 --> 01:05:06,345
of their husbands, of their lives,
1112
01:05:06,345 --> 01:05:09,514
of what it meant to be a coal miner,
what it meant to work
1113
01:05:09,514 --> 01:05:13,178
in one of the most dangerous industries
in this country.
1114
01:05:13,607 --> 01:05:17,233
And one or two of them
just burst into tears.
1115
01:05:17,311 --> 01:05:19,945
Another one got really angry.
1116
01:05:19,976 --> 01:05:24,276
I live right almost on the seat of
the main explosion, right there,
1117
01:05:24,276 --> 01:05:26,779
and they said,
"You get out of your house!"
1118
01:05:26,779 --> 01:05:29,285
And the police told me to get out.
Do you know why?
1119
01:05:29,285 --> 01:05:31,302
Because they didn't want me to see
what was going on...
1120
01:05:31,302 --> 01:05:33,532
up that damn, dirty, filthy mines!
1121
01:05:33,532 --> 01:05:35,423
It's about communication.
1122
01:05:35,550 --> 01:05:37,076
It's about connection.
1123
01:05:37,076 --> 01:05:40,259
It's about stepping in
to somebody's world
1124
01:05:40,259 --> 01:05:43,144
that you would never be privy to...
1125
01:05:43,437 --> 01:05:46,143
And being able to be there...
1126
01:05:46,143 --> 01:05:49,086
and understand
what's going on with them...
1127
01:05:49,086 --> 01:05:51,838
and who they are
and what they're about.
1128
01:05:52,100 --> 01:05:54,912
I mean,
nothing could be finer than that.
1129
01:05:54,912 --> 01:05:57,693
And nothing else will do that.
1130
01:06:02,625 --> 01:06:05,114
And if we don't save those films
1131
01:06:05,114 --> 01:06:07,087
and preserve those films,
1132
01:06:07,166 --> 01:06:09,102
we won't have a history.
1133
01:06:12,902 --> 01:06:15,752
Film reconnects us to the world
1134
01:06:15,752 --> 01:06:18,553
and to our experience of our lives
1135
01:06:18,553 --> 01:06:21,311
in this space, in this time.
1136
01:06:26,990 --> 01:06:29,427
...1929's H2O.
1137
01:06:29,427 --> 01:06:33,000
It is a short film about water,
1138
01:06:33,556 --> 01:06:36,888
where the filmmaker
starts from a distance
1139
01:06:37,139 --> 01:06:38,603
and looks at water.
1140
01:06:38,603 --> 01:06:41,746
Little trickles of water,
little waterfalls,
1141
01:06:41,746 --> 01:06:45,283
streams with the rocks visible.
1142
01:06:45,531 --> 01:06:48,268
And he moves ever closer
to the water
1143
01:06:48,268 --> 01:06:51,609
and the light playing on water
to the degree that
1144
01:06:51,718 --> 01:06:54,429
you no longer recognize it
as water.
1145
01:06:55,471 --> 01:06:57,751
Then I guarantee,
once you see this film,
1146
01:06:57,751 --> 01:07:00,238
you never look at water
the same way again.
1147
01:07:01,240 --> 01:07:03,678
It's not meant to make sense.
1148
01:07:03,702 --> 01:07:06,239
It's not meant to tell a story.
1149
01:07:06,643 --> 01:07:10,515
But in many ways, it's meant to
touch us the way poetry does.
1150
01:07:13,445 --> 01:07:16,289
It is not always easy to engage
1151
01:07:16,348 --> 01:07:17,827
the experimental film.
1152
01:07:22,093 --> 01:07:25,395
And one has to simply open one's self
1153
01:07:25,539 --> 01:07:27,264
to the language of film.
1154
01:07:33,232 --> 01:07:34,805
That's where the beauty lies.
1155
01:07:34,805 --> 01:07:36,672
We, through the medium,
1156
01:07:36,672 --> 01:07:39,256
we see the world anew.
1157
01:07:42,396 --> 01:07:46,363
You know, the great thing about the Registry
is that it's grown to be pretty diverse.
1158
01:07:46,363 --> 01:07:48,328
It's gotten a lot more inclusive, you know.
1159
01:07:48,328 --> 01:07:51,953
There's a lot of experimental,
avant-garde and independent films.
1160
01:07:51,953 --> 01:07:53,434
There's lots of documentary films.
1161
01:07:53,434 --> 01:07:54,594
There's home movies.
1162
01:07:54,620 --> 01:07:58,346
There even are a few industrial
and educational films.
1163
01:07:58,346 --> 01:08:01,638
♪ There was a turtle
by the name of Bert ♪
1164
01:08:01,660 --> 01:08:04,839
♪ And Bert the turtle
was very alert ♪
1165
01:08:04,985 --> 01:08:08,203
♪ When danger threatened him
he never got hurt ♪
1166
01:08:08,342 --> 01:08:10,988
♪ He knew just what to do ♪
1167
01:08:11,403 --> 01:08:14,045
♪ He'd duck
and cover... ♪
1168
01:08:14,106 --> 01:08:16,921
This country has always
been about persuasion.
1169
01:08:16,921 --> 01:08:18,747
Really most societies are.
1170
01:08:18,747 --> 01:08:21,032
And these films
really illuminate that...
1171
01:08:21,032 --> 01:08:23,754
kind of the changing history
of what we were told.
1172
01:08:24,080 --> 01:08:27,273
We must be ready every day,
all the time,
1173
01:08:27,273 --> 01:08:30,895
to do the right thing
if the atomic bomb explodes.
1174
01:08:31,220 --> 01:08:33,095
Duck and cover!
1175
01:08:33,709 --> 01:08:37,362
This family knows what to do,
just as your own family should.
1176
01:08:40,332 --> 01:08:44,113
The House in the Middle is a
goofy and rather marvelous film
1177
01:08:44,113 --> 01:08:48,542
made in about 1953, '54 by...
let me see if I can get it right...
1178
01:08:48,542 --> 01:08:51,904
the National Clean Up- Paint Up-
Fix Up Committee,
1179
01:08:51,944 --> 01:08:55,058
in association with
the Federal CML Defense Administration.
1180
01:08:55,058 --> 01:08:58,381
And it puts forth a really,
really odd message.
1181
01:08:58,930 --> 01:09:01,354
Three identical miniature frame houses.
1182
01:09:01,432 --> 01:09:04,024
The house on the right,
an eyesore.
1183
01:09:04,116 --> 01:09:07,774
But you've seen these same conditions
in your own hometown.
1184
01:09:08,426 --> 01:09:10,904
This house is
the product of years of neglect.
1185
01:09:10,962 --> 01:09:13,359
It has not been painted regularly.
1186
01:09:14,533 --> 01:09:16,872
The house in the middle,
in good condition,
1187
01:09:16,872 --> 01:09:18,814
with a clean, unlittered yard.
1188
01:09:18,904 --> 01:09:23,189
What it says is this...
If your house is freshly painted and clean
1189
01:09:23,191 --> 01:09:26,520
and doesn't have a lot of crap
sitting around in the front yard,
1190
01:09:26,542 --> 01:09:29,856
you're a lot more likely
to survive a nuclear attack!
1191
01:09:38,742 --> 01:09:41,291
So it really makes kind of
you know, a moral argument...
1192
01:09:41,291 --> 01:09:45,100
a behavioral argument
for surviving nuclear attack.
1193
01:09:45,162 --> 01:09:47,192
Two houses are a total loss,
1194
01:09:47,192 --> 01:09:50,845
but the well-kept and the painted house
in the middle still stands.
1195
01:09:50,904 --> 01:09:53,301
Of course it's funded by
the paint industry,
1196
01:09:53,301 --> 01:09:55,759
so they're trying to sell
house paint and saying...
1197
01:09:55,759 --> 01:09:58,050
"Hey, it's gonna help
you survive nuclear attack."
1198
01:09:58,238 --> 01:10:01,177
I mean, this is, you know...
This is a little weird.
1199
01:10:02,415 --> 01:10:04,239
The dingy house on the left,
1200
01:10:04,890 --> 01:10:07,205
the dirty and littered house on the right,
1201
01:10:07,383 --> 01:10:09,948
or the clean white house in the middle.
1202
01:10:09,956 --> 01:10:15,131
It is your choice.
The reward may be survival.
1203
01:10:17,030 --> 01:10:18,941
Every movie that is popular,
1204
01:10:19,398 --> 01:10:21,703
every movie that is popular,
1205
01:10:21,948 --> 01:10:23,386
captures...
1206
01:10:24,031 --> 01:10:27,220
something of the ideas
that were alive at the time.
1207
01:10:27,873 --> 01:10:31,114
And very often,
the ideas that they capture...
1208
01:10:31,870 --> 01:10:36,359
and that make them so acceptable
to the public are lies.
1209
01:10:40,120 --> 01:10:42,396
This is D.W. Griffith's film.
1210
01:10:42,455 --> 01:10:44,369
Essentially, Griffith,
1211
01:10:44,803 --> 01:10:47,896
right then and there,
invented a lot of the grammar of film.
1212
01:10:47,961 --> 01:10:52,446
Its aesthetic and historical significance
from the point of view of film
1213
01:10:52,446 --> 01:10:54,245
is beyond debate.
1214
01:10:54,499 --> 01:10:57,637
Its value as a portrayal
of American history...
1215
01:10:57,637 --> 01:10:59,137
is not at all beyond debate.
1216
01:10:59,247 --> 01:11:03,046
It is basically
a pro Ku Klux Klan view...
1217
01:11:03,046 --> 01:11:04,893
of what happened in the South.
1218
01:11:14,651 --> 01:11:17,591
I think The Birth of a Nation
really legitimized
1219
01:11:17,591 --> 01:11:19,120
the motion picture industry.
1220
01:11:19,120 --> 01:11:22,790
It was the first film to be shown
at legitimate Broadway theaters.
1221
01:11:22,790 --> 01:11:25,142
I think for the first time,
people realized almost
1222
01:11:25,142 --> 01:11:27,025
not only the power of the motion picture,
1223
01:11:27,025 --> 01:11:29,157
but also almost
the danger of the motion picture.
1224
01:11:29,157 --> 01:11:30,684
What it could accomplish.
1225
01:11:31,104 --> 01:11:32,655
Unfortunately...
1226
01:11:33,365 --> 01:11:35,763
all these innovative ideas...
1227
01:11:35,789 --> 01:11:38,291
were used to advance the notion...
1228
01:11:38,291 --> 01:11:41,883
of segregation, Jim Crow,
racism and racial bias.
1229
01:11:42,515 --> 01:11:45,362
It was a dangerous film and it caused...
1230
01:11:45,362 --> 01:11:49,202
a lot of personal harm to people...
1231
01:11:49,202 --> 01:11:51,463
after it came out during that time.
1232
01:11:51,524 --> 01:11:54,325
Birth of a Nation was propaganda,
you know, and it was slander,
1233
01:11:54,325 --> 01:11:55,507
but it's important to recognize.
1234
01:11:55,507 --> 01:11:57,553
I think by ignoring it
or by denying,
1235
01:11:57,553 --> 01:11:59,297
you know,
the existence of Birth of a Nation,
1236
01:11:59,297 --> 01:12:01,937
you're almost losing
a piece of cinema history.
1237
01:12:03,703 --> 01:12:06,327
So we'll find them in the end,
I promise you,
1238
01:12:07,076 --> 01:12:08,371
we'll find them.
1239
01:12:09,275 --> 01:12:10,589
Just as sure as the...
1240
01:12:11,306 --> 01:12:12,893
turning of the earth.
1241
01:12:13,008 --> 01:12:17,979
I know the generation of people
that saw The Searchers
1242
01:12:17,984 --> 01:12:21,196
when they were young
will never forget it.
1243
01:12:21,585 --> 01:12:24,550
It was essentially about a man,
1244
01:12:24,550 --> 01:12:26,163
played by John Wayne,
1245
01:12:26,163 --> 01:12:29,858
who comes to save a little girl
1246
01:12:29,929 --> 01:12:32,483
who has been kidnapped...
1247
01:12:32,483 --> 01:12:34,682
by an Indian tribe.
1248
01:12:39,072 --> 01:12:41,123
It's always the menacing music,
1249
01:12:41,123 --> 01:12:44,057
the menacing war paint...
1250
01:12:44,438 --> 01:12:48,302
that was assigned
to these characters.
1251
01:12:53,153 --> 01:12:55,131
Growing up,
if you look back at all the cowboy
1252
01:12:55,131 --> 01:12:56,802
and Indian stuff I watched as a kid,
1253
01:12:57,106 --> 01:13:00,035
why were we the heroes?
I didn't quite get that.
1254
01:13:00,035 --> 01:13:01,774
Took me a long time to realize that,
1255
01:13:01,774 --> 01:13:03,799
even when you played
cowboys and Indians with your friends.
1256
01:13:03,799 --> 01:13:06,140
Today, I'd want to be the Indian,
they're the rebels.
1257
01:13:06,140 --> 01:13:08,820
And I would be for the Indians
against the cowboys.
1258
01:13:10,050 --> 01:13:13,651
I saw The Searchers
with an American Indian
1259
01:13:13,859 --> 01:13:17,973
and I was unaware of the racism in the film
until I was sitting next to her and she...
1260
01:13:17,973 --> 01:13:20,419
just stormed out
at a certain scene in the movie.
1261
01:13:20,589 --> 01:13:22,522
And I went out to follow her,
I said, "What's going on'?"
1262
01:13:22,522 --> 01:13:25,213
She said, "Did you see the movie'?"
I said, "Yeah, I saw it."
1263
01:13:25,213 --> 01:13:26,689
"Well, did you see what happened?"
1264
01:13:26,689 --> 01:13:28,695
These are my people...
1265
01:13:30,156 --> 01:13:31,396
Go!
1266
01:13:31,458 --> 01:13:33,557
Go, Martin, please!
1267
01:13:34,562 --> 01:13:36,238
Stand aside, Martin.
1268
01:13:36,407 --> 01:13:39,140
So he was searching for her
so he could kill her,
1269
01:13:39,974 --> 01:13:42,162
so she
wouldn't have to live with them.
1270
01:13:42,162 --> 01:13:45,297
Because she was living a fate
worse than death.
1271
01:13:47,907 --> 01:13:49,621
It was very disturbing.
1272
01:13:49,621 --> 01:13:51,410
Ethan, no, you don't!
1273
01:13:53,413 --> 01:13:55,146
Stand aside.
1274
01:13:55,248 --> 01:13:56,830
I thought that was really...
1275
01:13:56,830 --> 01:14:00,601
something that I really
wouldn't want my daughter to look at.
1276
01:14:02,455 --> 01:14:04,519
It really helped...
1277
01:14:04,932 --> 01:14:07,510
create a persona...
1278
01:14:07,567 --> 01:14:12,238
about Indian people that
continues to this day.
1279
01:14:16,236 --> 01:14:20,398
The Exiles was made
about Native Americans...
1280
01:14:20,398 --> 01:14:23,013
living in Los Angeles in the 1950s,
1281
01:14:23,076 --> 01:14:24,818
in other words, Native Americans,
1282
01:14:24,818 --> 01:14:26,980
not out in the desert
or in the mountains,
1283
01:14:26,980 --> 01:14:30,198
in the kind of environment
that most people,
1284
01:14:30,198 --> 01:14:32,250
in cliched terms think of,
1285
01:14:32,250 --> 01:14:36,992
but trying to survive
in a brutal urban environment.
1286
01:14:38,625 --> 01:14:41,622
The Exiles really put kind of a face...
1287
01:14:41,895 --> 01:14:45,032
on Indian people at the time.
1288
01:14:45,098 --> 01:14:47,933
During that time period,
it was either relocation
1289
01:14:47,933 --> 01:14:51,842
or maybe the serving
in the armed services.
1290
01:14:51,905 --> 01:14:55,555
Where a lot of Indian people
left the reservations and...
1291
01:14:55,786 --> 01:14:59,777
came to cities
and met other Indian people.
1292
01:15:00,246 --> 01:15:03,048
It showed kind of the truth of living...
1293
01:15:03,142 --> 01:15:07,033
in an urban area
as far as the isolation,
1294
01:15:07,218 --> 01:15:09,035
depicted in the young woman.
1295
01:15:09,035 --> 01:15:11,693
She's always seen to be alone...
1296
01:15:11,768 --> 01:15:14,342
and longing for a better life.
1297
01:15:14,761 --> 01:15:17,640
Film very much is important
1298
01:15:17,697 --> 01:15:20,473
in depiction of a people.
1299
01:15:20,533 --> 01:15:23,970
Yo, what's your problem, man?
Y'all are brothers, you ain't
supposed to be fighting each other.
1300
01:15:23,970 --> 01:15:26,742
Little punk.
Get off my porch, mama's boy.
1301
01:15:27,962 --> 01:15:30,925
When Boyz in the Hood
as a document of its time,
1302
01:15:30,925 --> 01:15:33,963
it's a document of
what was going on in that time period.
1303
01:15:34,202 --> 01:15:37,053
You have to think, young brother,
about your future.
1304
01:15:37,116 --> 01:15:40,256
It gave a voice to...
to the voiceless.
1305
01:15:40,256 --> 01:15:42,628
Listen,
I want to do something with my life,
all right?
1306
01:15:42,689 --> 01:15:43,901
I want to be somebody.
1307
01:15:43,923 --> 01:15:46,590
The film, for me,
it's like my diary.
1308
01:15:47,287 --> 01:15:48,725
Ricky!
1309
01:15:48,962 --> 01:15:51,673
It was a cathartic thing for me to show
1310
01:15:51,764 --> 01:15:54,714
where I was from
and what I'd gone through.
1311
01:15:56,369 --> 01:15:57,993
Film is a reflection of...
1312
01:15:57,993 --> 01:16:01,197
the times of which we live in,
good or bad.
1313
01:16:06,112 --> 01:16:10,042
I was responsible
for pushing forward Birth of a Nation
1314
01:16:10,042 --> 01:16:12,057
into the Film Preservation Board.
1315
01:16:12,118 --> 01:16:15,675
That movie led to the deaths of
many, many black people...
1316
01:16:15,675 --> 01:16:19,360
through lynching,
through enacting laws, segregation,
1317
01:16:19,360 --> 01:16:20,876
through Jim Crow and everything.
1318
01:16:20,876 --> 01:16:25,740
But it really shows the power of film
and for evil as well as good.
1319
01:16:30,870 --> 01:16:34,948
When you watch a movie from the past,
you're involved in a dialogue.
1320
01:16:35,008 --> 01:16:37,716
A dialogue between past and present.
1321
01:16:38,111 --> 01:16:41,136
There's what's up on the screen
and then there's the person looking at it
1322
01:16:41,136 --> 01:16:43,913
and every person who looks at it
brings their own history
1323
01:16:43,913 --> 01:16:45,801
and finds their own value in it.
1324
01:16:56,987 --> 01:16:59,208
You look at every war
that we've been through
1325
01:16:59,208 --> 01:17:01,384
and whether it's a war that we won,
1326
01:17:01,384 --> 01:17:03,930
like the good war, World War II,
1327
01:17:03,930 --> 01:17:05,620
or a war we lost, like Vietnam,
1328
01:17:05,890 --> 01:17:09,529
a war like what's going on now
in Iraq and Afghanistan,
1329
01:17:09,529 --> 01:17:12,062
where we don't know
what the result is going to be...
1330
01:17:12,263 --> 01:17:15,600
the result is the same
on the people who fought it and...
1331
01:17:15,600 --> 01:17:19,070
I think that's
important for people to understand.
1332
01:17:23,205 --> 01:17:26,628
The best years of our lives
is about three G.L.S
1333
01:17:26,628 --> 01:17:29,471
returning from service to their hometown.
1334
01:17:31,297 --> 01:17:35,573
I enlisted in the Army Air Corps,
I was a bombardier in a B-17.
1335
01:17:35,835 --> 01:17:38,676
I was no hero,
but I was there, I did the job.
1336
01:17:38,838 --> 01:17:41,090
Naturally, it hit me particularly hard
1337
01:17:41,090 --> 01:17:44,488
when Dana Andrews
playing the bombardier goes out to...
1338
01:17:44,587 --> 01:17:48,514
a field where they're cocooning
old B-17 bombers,
1339
01:17:49,348 --> 01:17:53,340
and he approaches one
and climbs back up into it.
1340
01:17:57,256 --> 01:18:00,804
And the sound comes up
and the filmmaking
1341
01:18:01,391 --> 01:18:05,361
makes him experience a bombing raid.
1342
01:18:05,531 --> 01:18:07,670
And the sound is extraordinary.
1343
01:18:15,742 --> 01:18:18,721
That had a particular meaning
1344
01:18:18,721 --> 01:18:21,344
for anybody who was in a bomber.
1345
01:18:23,249 --> 01:18:24,406
Hey, you!
1346
01:18:26,319 --> 01:18:28,318
What're you doing in that airplane?
1347
01:18:28,621 --> 01:18:30,259
It had a great effect on me.
1348
01:18:33,259 --> 01:18:37,084
The movies create order
out of the chaos of our lives
1349
01:18:37,084 --> 01:18:39,054
and that's what this was.
1350
01:18:48,666 --> 01:18:51,553
I was the last person
that I ever would have thought...
1351
01:18:51,553 --> 01:18:52,801
would have gone to war.
1352
01:18:52,801 --> 01:18:55,348
I War scared me when I was young.
1353
01:18:58,084 --> 01:19:00,796
After I came back from Vietnam,
1354
01:19:00,796 --> 01:19:05,772
I gave away my uniforms,
I really put the whole thing behind me.
1355
01:19:05,772 --> 01:19:08,975
I just thought I could shut the door
and move on with my life.
1356
01:19:08,975 --> 01:19:12,481
I don't guess I spoke with another veteran
and or about my experience
1357
01:19:12,481 --> 01:19:15,259
for eight or nine years.
1358
01:19:15,603 --> 01:19:20,516
By chance
I was put in touch with a guy...
1359
01:19:20,516 --> 01:19:24,783
who worked with veterans and he invited me
to a screening of The Deer Hunter.
1360
01:19:25,283 --> 01:19:28,479
[Chopin Nocturne playing...]
1361
01:19:34,887 --> 01:19:38,827
...really discovered that the issues
that they were dealing with in that film,
1362
01:19:38,827 --> 01:19:41,714
how frightened those guys
were once they got over there.
1363
01:19:41,714 --> 01:19:44,569
They went over there
with such enthusiasm and such honest,
1364
01:19:44,569 --> 01:19:47,573
just sincere patriotism
and discovered themselves
1365
01:19:47,573 --> 01:19:51,000
just in this chaotic world.
1366
01:20:01,681 --> 01:20:05,295
...it really, to me,
emotionally hit home.
1367
01:20:05,334 --> 01:20:08,485
How that stays with you.
Once you've been through that.
1368
01:20:08,485 --> 01:20:09,315
...Mike?
1369
01:20:10,523 --> 01:20:13,642
It's... it's like something that...
1370
01:20:15,952 --> 01:20:19,108
A human shouldn't have to experience.
1371
01:20:19,198 --> 01:20:22,924
That... that loss of control.
1372
01:20:22,924 --> 01:20:27,176
That having...
really having to give up on life,
1373
01:20:27,176 --> 01:20:32,365
because you don't know
that you're gonna be alive in an hour...
1374
01:20:32,728 --> 01:20:35,611
in a day...
And that's...
1375
01:20:35,978 --> 01:20:39,792
it's just something that doesn't...
That doesn't go away.
1376
01:20:41,193 --> 01:20:45,856
It's a good thing that films
like Deer Hunter were made because
1377
01:20:45,856 --> 01:20:50,019
it's an honest representation
of the emotion of war,
1378
01:20:50,114 --> 01:20:52,563
and I think people need to know that.
1379
01:20:52,632 --> 01:20:55,441
We should not go to war easily
1380
01:20:57,004 --> 01:21:01,604
because the impact on people's lives
is permanent.
1381
01:21:07,446 --> 01:21:10,727
Film captured me,
as it does so many people,
1382
01:21:10,727 --> 01:21:12,095
when I was a kid.
1383
01:21:15,721 --> 01:21:18,955
As a child,
there were no good movies or bad movies.
1384
01:21:18,955 --> 01:21:20,485
There were just movies.
1385
01:21:27,667 --> 01:21:29,958
I grew up in a very poor family
1386
01:21:29,958 --> 01:21:32,263
and I think going to the movie theater,
1387
01:21:32,263 --> 01:21:35,527
the old walk-in theater
that cost maybe 20 cents...
1388
01:21:36,691 --> 01:21:38,650
It was the window to the world.
1389
01:21:38,711 --> 01:21:42,250
It largely took me, I think,
took me out of my own life.
1390
01:21:43,516 --> 01:21:46,649
So for a dime,
I could go and stay there all day...
1391
01:21:46,649 --> 01:21:51,820
and watch Three Pictures
and Pathé News and Mickey Mouse.
1392
01:21:51,958 --> 01:21:54,830
So my outlook was to watch film,
any film,
1393
01:21:55,019 --> 01:21:56,501
and I did.
1394
01:21:56,580 --> 01:21:59,704
I loved them all
and I still do today.
1395
01:21:59,999 --> 01:22:03,389
I just loved the glamour of life in film...
1396
01:22:03,389 --> 01:22:05,062
from the '30s and '40s,
1397
01:22:05,062 --> 01:22:08,887
like I wanted to have
all those glittering costumes
1398
01:22:08,887 --> 01:22:12,271
and I wanted Cary Grant
to take me out to dinner and...
1399
01:22:12,456 --> 01:22:16,759
but the closest thing I have is... is film.
1400
01:22:17,140 --> 01:22:19,487
This is an art.
It's not just how to make money,
1401
01:22:19,487 --> 01:22:21,975
it's not just what we can sell it as,
1402
01:22:22,110 --> 01:22:25,461
but it's something valuable
that we should save.
1403
01:22:25,524 --> 01:22:28,915
This is part of who we are as a culture
and we need to preserve it.
1404
01:22:28,915 --> 01:22:31,585
It's not... It's not a matter of,
like, "Should we?"
1405
01:22:31,585 --> 01:22:34,603
It's... It's "How are we going to?"
1406
01:22:34,667 --> 01:22:38,175
We've got a job to preserve
the aspirations and the images
1407
01:22:38,237 --> 01:22:41,211
and the ideals and dreams
of millions and millions of people.
1408
01:22:41,273 --> 01:22:44,677
I think one thing we can say
is that 500 or a thousand years from now,
1409
01:22:44,677 --> 01:22:47,604
when people want to know
what life was like, they will go to movies.
1410
01:22:47,604 --> 01:22:50,660
They will go to the moving image materials
that we created first,
1411
01:22:50,716 --> 01:22:53,895
because those are
the time capsules of our era.
1412
01:22:54,120 --> 01:22:56,831
They are now being preserved and restored
1413
01:22:56,831 --> 01:22:58,726
so that when we're all long gone,
1414
01:22:58,726 --> 01:23:02,654
as long as there's something to watch films
with, they'll be able to see these things.
1415
01:23:03,162 --> 01:23:05,618
The beauty of film
is that it's everybody's.
1416
01:23:05,698 --> 01:23:09,580
It's not just the socially elite,
it's everybody's.
1417
01:23:13,706 --> 01:23:16,743
Somebody says...
"Why would you save movies?"
1418
01:23:16,942 --> 01:23:19,011
Well, I'd ask those people back...
1419
01:23:19,011 --> 01:23:21,667
"Why do you save your family pictures?"
1420
01:23:26,519 --> 01:23:29,666
As a society,
we want to do the same thing.
1421
01:23:29,722 --> 01:23:31,991
We want to say who were we...
1422
01:23:31,991 --> 01:23:33,883
where are we now...
1423
01:23:33,883 --> 01:23:37,197
and what do we want people in the future
to think about us?
1424
01:23:37,296 --> 01:23:39,235
It's our family album.
1425
01:24:13,933 --> 01:24:16,868
It is absolutely imperative...
1426
01:24:16,868 --> 01:24:20,668
that we save the art form
of the 20th century.
1427
01:24:21,273 --> 01:24:23,161
I mean, how can we not?
1428
01:24:33,038 --> 01:24:34,939
Here's looking at you, kid.
1429
01:24:36,322 --> 01:24:38,126
Elaine!
1430
01:25:10,322 --> 01:25:14,582
Subtitles been completely
resynced & edited by JohnCoffey_09
1431
01:27:40,406 --> 01:27:43,244
♪ Let's all go to the lobby, ♪
1432
01:27:43,244 --> 01:27:46,052
♪ let's all go to the lobby. ♪
1433
01:27:46,052 --> 01:27:48,781
♪ Let's all go to the lobby, ♪
1434
01:27:48,781 --> 01:27:51,261
♪ to get ourselves a treat. ♪
1435
01:27:51,625 --> 01:27:54,064
♪ Delicious things to eat ♪
1436
01:27:54,472 --> 01:27:57,057
♪ The popcorn can't be beat ♪
1437
01:27:57,251 --> 01:28:00,259
♪ The sparkling drinks are just dandy ♪
1438
01:28:00,259 --> 01:28:02,695
♪ The chocolate bars and the candy ♪
1439
01:28:02,695 --> 01:28:06,109
♪ So, let's all go to the lobby, ♪
1440
01:28:06,109 --> 01:28:08,416
♪ to get ourselves a treat. ♪
1441
01:28:09,001 --> 01:28:13,174
♪ Let's all go to the lobby... ♪
1442
01:28:13,236 --> 01:28:17,510
♪ to get ourselves a treat... ♪
125487
Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.