With
videos and DVDs available from so many sources nowadays, we take for
granted our ability to find and see any movie anytime from anywhere.
Thank goodness for that! And thank Henri Langlois (1914-77), who in 1936
founded the
Cinémathèque Française,
a Paris-based film preservation theater and museum whose inventory grew
from 10 films to more than 60,000 films by the early '70s, thus
creating both French film heritage and a model for film preservation for
the U.S. and entire world. Operating with a minuscule budget, staff and
government support, Langlois located saved, restored, showed and
lectured on countless films that otherise would have been destroyed by
men and nature - including Marlene Dietrich's THE BLUE ANGEL. How he
did it – and was undone doing it – is the subject of the fascinating,
English-subtitled documentary
HENRI LANGLOIS: CINEMATHEQUE. If you've never heard of the godfather to modern film preservation, this is an absolute must-see for cinema lovers.
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