National Film Registry. Have You Seen These Titles?
Each year I read the press release list of the films admitted to the National Film Registry and promptly forget them. I guess I've never absorbed just what this does for the films beyond being an obviously prestigious honor. So this year rather than doing the usual read the titles and forget, I stopped, actually took a breath (a rarity on the web), wondered, and googled a bit. I stopped being lazy about it so you don't have to be either. I didn't just list titles below but actual information!
However I am still a bit confused as what the honor actually means beyond admittance into the Library of Congress. If this meant government funding to restore or preserve the films or if it meant an automatic transfer to each new medium that surfaces (VHS to DVD to Blu Ray to whatever is next) so that that film in question never disappears it would be a truly astounding honor. But it doesn't mean this. The National Film Preservation Board which is connected to the National Film Registry does not own the rights and can thus not distribute the films. The honor is also no guarantee of preservation. Film preservation is still a privately funded matter. Hollywood as a whole is fairly disinterested in its own history (except to mine it for remakes) and US politics has always been depressingly anti-arts funding. (Thank the Right Wing of the country for that.)
Here are the 25 new inductees in chronological order of creation. I am ashamed at how few of the I've seen. Should we watch them together?
- The Cry Of The Children (George Nichols, 1912) a short film about child labor
- A Cure for Pokeritis (Laurence Trimble, 1912) a short slapstick comedy
- The Kid (Charles Chaplin, 1921) another Chaplin film for the Registry
- The Iron Horse (1924) a long western starring George O'Brien of Sunrise fame.
- Nicholas Brothers Family Home Movies (1930s and 1940s) I assume this is the famous tap dancers?
Beloved orphan fawns, globally famous serial killers, and remarkable actress faces, and more after the jump... How many have you seen?