Original "Metropolis" Found After 80 Years
A Film Buff's Dream: Complete Version Of Visionary 1927 Film, With Scenes Long Lost, Uncovered In Argentina
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Alfred Abel, Rudolf Klein-Rogge and the robot in the 1927 classic "Metropolis." The original version of Fritz Lang's landmark film, cut drastically after its premiere, was recently discovered in an archive in Argentina, containing more than an hour of footage unseen in 80 years. (UFA/Paramount)
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Paula Felix Didier, curator of the Cinema Museum of Buenos Aires, talks to reporters during the showing of the "found" footage from "Metropolis" in Buenos Aires, Thursday, July 3, 2008. The footage comes from a copy of the movie made before distributors cut the original. (AP Photo/Eduardo Di Baia)
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Photo Essay Memorable Movie Robots They walk, they talk, they shoot lasers, they're lovable.
A long-lost original cut of the 1927 silent film sat for 80 years in a private collection and then in the Museum of Cinema in Buenos Aires, where it was discovered in April with scratched images that hadn't been seen before.
Museum director Paula Felix-Didier said theirs is the only copy of German director Fritz Lang's complete film.
"This is the version Fritz Lang intended," said Martin Koerber, a curator at the Deutsche Kinemathek film museum in Berlin, Germany.
"Metropolis," written by Lang and his actress wife Thea von Harbou, depicts a 21st century world divided between a class of underworld workers and the "thinkers" above who control them.
Soon after its initial release at the height of Germany's Weimar Republic, distributors cut Lang's three-and-a-half-hour masterpiece into the shorter version since viewed by millions worldwide.
But a private collector carried an original version to Argentina in 1928, where it has stayed, Felix-Didier said.
In the 1980s, Argentine film fanatic Fernando Pena heard about a man who had propped up a broken projector for "hours" to screen "Metropolis" in the 1960s. But the version of the film he knew was only one-and-a-half hours long. For years, he begged Buenos Aires' museum to check their archives for the man's longer version.
This year, museum researchers finally agreed and in April uncovered the reels in the museum's archive.
In June, Felix-Didier flew with a DVD to the Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau Foundation in Wiesbaden, Germany, which owns the rights to "Metropolis." Researchers there confirmed that the scenes were original.
News of the find excited film enthusiasts worldwide.
They didn't believe me because they have had lots of e-mails from people saying they had found 'Metropolis.' Why would people in Buenos Aires have found it?
Paula Felix-Didier, Director, Buenos Aires' Museum of Cinema"Metropolis" was reissued in the U.S. in 2002 by Kino International Corp., which owns the rights to distribute the film domestically, Kino's general manager Gary Palmucci said.
Kino may rerelease the new, complete version of the film.
Meanwhile, Buenos Aires' Museum of Cinema is holding its treasure tight.
"The film hasn't left the museum and it won't leave until the city government and the Murnau Foundation decide what to do," Felix-Didier said.
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- good movie -- never thought it sci-fi though.
does longer make it better?
good editing is a valuable skill
catch it on TV if you can - Reply to this comment
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