AuteursLists

Board moves

By December 28, 2011No Comments

The only-25-per-year lim­it of movies that can be added to the National Film Registry is an integ­ral part of the excitement/frustration cinephiles feel on the unveil­ing of the list at the end of the year. The all-too-human com­pul­sion to spec­u­late on the motives and polit­ics of the Registry’s board was par­tic­u­larly strong in this observ­er as he looked over this year’s selec­tions. Forrest Gump, huh?  Porgy and BessWell, score one for Dave Kehr, the board’s rep­res­ent­at­ive for the National Society of Film Critics, both an out­spoken Gump boost­er and gen­er­al Zemeckis defend­er. On the oth­er hand…here’s Silence of the Lambs, the film that I believe ruined Demme for Kehr (the crit­ic had once nursed hopes that the dir­ect­or could have become the American Renoir). I can just see the man­euv­er­ing going on around the table…well, no, actu­ally I can­’t. But still. In any event, one of the more excit­ing pic­tures on the list is Otto Preminger’s 1959 Porgy and Bess, a pic­ture that’s been almost impossible to see in any halfway decent present­a­tion for pretty much…well, for pretty much the length of my own movie-going life, some­thing a couple of hairs over four dec­ades. (A couple years back I sprung for some­thing along the lines of a bootleg German DVD of the film…I know, I’m com­pletely anti-bootleg, but for­give me Lord, I was weak. In any event, it’s com­pletely worth­less, unwatch­able.) I’m not near my ref­er­ence lib­rary at the moment, but from what I can recall the avail­ab­il­ity of the film for screen­ing or video release has been pretty much sat upon, since not very long after the film’s the­at­ric­al release, by the Gershwin estate. Now selec­tion into the Registry means some­thing more than just a sort of crit­ic­al seal of approv­al from a gov­ern­ment agency. No, it dic­tates that the film be “pre­served as [a] cul­tur­al, artist­ic and his­tor­ic­al [treas­ure] in the […] Registry of The Library of Congress.” In the case of a rel­at­ively recent and well-disseminated pic­ture such as, say, Gump and/or Lambs, that’s not such a huge deal to achieve. For some­thing like Porgy and Bess—not to men­tion oth­er obscure-to-the-general-public pic­tures such as A Cure For Pokeritis and The Cry of the Children, both made in 1912, George Kuchar’s 1977 I, An Actress, and even Cassavetes’ 1968 Faces—it’s a dif­fer­ent mat­ter, and “pre­ser­va­tion” might also entail res­tor­a­tion. Does this mean a rep-house reviv­al of Porgy and Bess, com­plete with an even­tu­al Blu-ray release? Not neces­sar­ily. But by nam­ing the film to the Registry, its board is, in a sense, for­cing the issue in a par­tic­u­lar way. It will be inter­est­ing and hope­fully grat­i­fy­ing to see what res­ults from this gambit. 

UPDATE: The always gra­cious and inform­at­ive Mr. Kehr clears up a bunch of things for us in the com­ments sec­tion, like so

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  • Oliver_C says:

    Wasn’t ‘Porgy and Bess’ 1954 not 1959, and was­n’t it Saul Bass’ first ever title sequence? (The new Bass bio­graphy, fully annot­ated and illus­trated, is both weighty and worthy.)
    Also, Thumper thumps the forest floor with glee at ‘Bambi’ being chosen for the Film Registry.

  • weatherspoon says:

    I guess The Iron Horse is the more “import­ant” film, but I would have far pre­ferred to see 3 Bad Men get the nod. It’s every bit Horse’s equal in terms of silent film craft, and it’s a wayyy bet­ter John Ford movie.
    Very pleased to see the Belson and Kuchar and Cassavetes. Still need to see Porgy and Bess.

  • I remem­ber chan­nel 11 in New York ran this one back in the 70s. It played at the Ziegfeld back in 2007 via spe­cial arrange­ment with Goldwyn and the Gershwin estate, so per­haps there’s a chance it will see the light of day again.

  • intheblanks says:

    @Oliver_C That’s Carmen Jones you’re think­ing of, also by Preminger, also with Dorothy Dandridge, and, for what it’s worth, also on the National Film Registry

  • jbryant says:

    Been awhile since I read any­thing on the sub­ject, but isn’t it the Gershwin estate that’s keep­ing PORGY AND BESS out of cir­cu­la­tion? It will be inter­est­ing to see if the Registry’s decision has any effect on this.
    Re GUMP, LAMBS, etc.: I nev­er quite get the reas­on­ing for includ­ing any­thing that recent, con­sid­er­ing the vast num­ber of older films more in need of res­tor­a­tion and atten­tion. I real­ize that all films are ulti­mately in danger of neg­lect, but I doubt that Best Picture Oscar win­ners from the ’90s have much to worry about.

  • Oliver_C says:

    Whoops, thanks intheblanks…

  • James Keepnews says:

    Right, jb? As I snark on my Facebook page, when is the LOC finally going to pre­serve those Twilight films, before the van­ish from our cul­tur­al radar once and for all? Meantime, a short list of works that might, just maybe, be con­sidered worthy of recog­ni­tion, to say noth­ing of res­tor­a­tion: Ganja & Hess (actu­ally, Mr. Gunn’s Stop! even moreso, but inas­much as polit­ics is the art of the pos­sible…), The World’s Greatest Sinner, Wavelength, Cocksucker Blues, Born in Flames, I dunno, Deathwatch, & cetera.
    What’s that? You say you have a list or two of your own?

  • edo says:

    Jeez. It’s not as if by not choos­ing, say WAVELENGTH, the Registry board is send­ing some sort of impli­cit mes­sage that they don’t find it worthy of recog­ni­tion. It’s not really up to them what’s in the pool in the first place.

  • James Keepnews says:

    Alternatively, by not select­ing Wavelength, the National Film Preservation Board is expli­citly sug­gest­ing Gump plainly deserves firsties.

  • Bruce Reid says:

    Fair enough com­plaint in gen­er­al, James Keepnews, but would­n’t Wavelength be the respons­ib­il­ity of the Canadian government?

  • James Keepnews says:

    BR – No more, I should­n’t think, than Cocksucker Blues. Or, for that mat­ter, New York Eye and Ear Control (“That’s anoth­er one for the fire…” – at least Night’s on there…).
    Which is to say, I reck­on: maybe, and point taken. As I hope mine is, as well.

  • edo says:

    JK, every year the board has to choose 25 films out of a couple thou­sand sug­ges­tions. I don’t think their choices sug­gest much of any­thing except the res­ult of work­ing under quite hefty con­straints. It seems really silly, let alone some­what pre­sump­tu­ous and pom­pous, to be fuss­ing over their selec­tions. It’s not as if they exclus­ively chose main­stream clas­sics (they chose, um, two), neg­lected exper­i­ment­al cinema alto­geth­er, or gave pride of place to a spe­cif­ic peri­od. I’d be right with you if they had.

  • jbryant says:

    Dave Kehr just men­tioned on his blog that the issues with the Gershwin estate have been resolved, the­or­et­ic­ally pav­ing the way for a PORGY AND BESS res­tor­a­tion and home vid release.
    edo: I don’t see what’s so silly about fuss­ing over cer­tain Registry selec­tions. I admit I haven’t checked the cri­ter­ia for their choices, but it seems to me that if they’re going to include films made in the last 20 years or so, they should choose those that seem to be in some danger of slip­ping through the cracks as time goes by (inde­pend­ent releases, acclaimed flops, unre­leased gems, etc.), rather than highly suc­cess­ful cor­por­ate product that is pre­sum­ably already being well preserved.

  • James Keepnews says:

    Silly, pre­sump­tu­ous and pom­pous as it may (or may not) seem to say so, recog­ni­tion of non-mainstream fare in National Film Registry selec­tions past hardly addresses their exclu­sion subsequently/year-to-year. More to my point, the press­ing need to recog­nize films like Silence or Gump over so much oth­er work that cry out for the sort of lit­er­ally res­tor­at­ive capa­city such recog­ni­tion con­fers – and esp. when you only have 25 select­able slots – com­pletely eludes me.

  • edo says:

    JK, in selec­tions past? How about in the present selec­tion? There’s plenty here that you can con­sider out of the main­stream. In fact, if you define main­stream in terms of what is or is not in the broad­er pub­lic con­scious­ness at present, most of it is non-mainstream. I think your self-professed snark is some­what pre­sump­tu­ous and pom­pous, because it comes off as if you’re ignor­ing the fact that a lot of delib­er­a­tion goes into mak­ing that list, and, moreover, that many of the people who have input in the pro­cess are people who care very deeply about the dire situ­ation of inde­pend­ent cinema just as much as you or I – people like Dave. Meanwhile, to hear you com­ment on it, it sounds as if the selec­tion were just an exer­cise in Hollywood kow­tow­ing. That’s just not the case. If you look back through the Registry selec­tions since its incep­tion in 1989, you’ll find that nearly every year they have selec­ted titles that are inar­gu­ably “non-mainstream”.

  • Michael Worrall says:

    Mr. Keepnews and jbryant:
    Do not both of you post on Dave Kehr’s blog? Why not ask the man him­self? If memory serves me right, in the past Dave asked the con­trib­ut­ors on a_film_by and on his own blog to list American avant-garde films so that he could com­pile a list to bring to the atten­tion of the National Film Registry. I sus­pect that Dave was being mod­est in play­ing down his know­ledge of American avant-garde film.
    jbry­ant: Maybe the major stu­di­os have changed their film pre­ser­va­tion policies, but the neg­at­ive of one of Universal’s cash cows, JAWS, was in pretty bad shape awhile back from what I read.

  • James Keepnews says:

    edo, I mis­read your com­ment, which is where my “subsequently/year-to-year” state­ment comes from, so my apo­lo­gies. And cer­tainly there’s a fair bit of “non-mainstream” fare on this year’s list (Zut! Allures!). However, much as you sug­gest non-selection need not be per­ceived as ulti­mate rejec­tion, it frankly seems, yes, silly and pre­pos­ter­ous if not pom­pous to insist that because so much delib­er­a­tion goes into the Registry choices, one should­n’t be cri­ti­ciz­ing them – excuse me, “fuss­ing over” them. Aren’t blog com­ments as much about such cri­tique as they are about +1‑ing?
    And Silence is an almost per­fect exem­pli gra­tia in this regard – does it really deserve the recognition/Registration that Citizen Band and Melvin and Howard do not?

  • edo says:

    JK, from my per­spect­ive, all films, as films, are deserving. As Michael has just poin­ted out, there are plenty of cases where even main­stream titles are in dire need of pre­ser­va­tion. Up until the mid-nineties the neg­at­ives of the STAR WARS films were in pretty awful con­di­tion for instance (hence the spe­cial edi­tions). Moreover, there are people out there who do value GUMP and LAMBS very much, as much as you or I value some­thing like WAVELENGTH. Trite as it may sound, I do actu­ally think that mat­ters a great deal.
    In any case, I did­n’t at all say, or mean to sug­gest, that one should­n’t cri­ti­cize the Registry selec­tions, simply *because* of the delib­er­a­tion that goes into them. I said that you speak with such cer­tainty about the mat­ter that it sounds as if you’re dis­count­ing that pro­cess of delib­er­a­tion entirely, and more spe­cific­ally dis­count­ing the very notion that some of the folks who par­ti­cip­ate in it, such as Dave or Martin Scorsese, might take into account all that’s at stake in the choices they make.
    I just don’t believe that choos­ing films for the registry is as simple a mat­ter as you seem to think it is…

  • intheblanks says:

    I think the cri­ti­cism of spe­cif­ic picks is fine, but the cri­ti­cism of the board includ­ing recent main­stream hits is mis­guided. It seems to assume that what the National Film Registry does exists in a vacu­um. This is a government-funded agency, and giv­en the polit­ic­al cul­ture we live in, there are going to be safe picks on it.
    From a cyn­ic­al per­spect­ive, I ima­gine includ­ing recent main­stream picks (a) brings good press and atten­tion to the National Film Registry, which puts it in a bet­ter pos­i­tion to ful­fill its mis­sion in the future; and (b) pre­vents it from becom­ing the sub­ject of anti-government demagoguery.
    From a far less cyn­ic­al per­spect­ive, like it or not, these films are a last­ing part of our nation­al film cul­ture, and there is prob­ably noth­ing wrong with recog­niz­ing them as such.

  • jbryant says:

    Micheal: I don’t feel like doing any home­work. 🙂 I do know that the list is only inten­ded to cel­eb­rate the diversity of American film and spread the good word for pre­ser­va­tion. It’s not a list of films deemed to be in actu­al need of pre­ser­va­tion. Inclusion is only con­tin­gent on the board find­ing a film to be “cul­tur­ally, his­tor­ic­ally, or aes­thet­ic­ally sig­ni­fic­ant.” So of course there are bound to be many dis­agree­ments about wheth­er indi­vidu­al films meet those criteris.
    I sus­pect much of what intheb­lanks says above is on the mark. A list made entirely of obscur­it­ies, oldies and eso­ter­ica would have lim­ited value in pro­mot­ing the over­all mis­sion. If includ­ing films from the last ten to twenty years makes someone real­ize that pre­ser­va­tion is an ongo­ing issue, then cool. Within that time range, just about any choice would be con­tro­ver­sial, for one reas­on or anoth­er, so I’m not going to write my con­gress­man or any­thing. But I still see no prob­lem with fuss­ing over the choices. That comes with the ter­rit­ory of listmaking. 🙂

  • jbryant says:

    Oof. This English major wishes there were an edit func­tion here. I wish I were more like David Ehrenstein, who accepts that typos are a part of life and just moves on. 🙂

  • Dave Kehr says:

    Actually, Glenn, no man­euv­er­ing at all was involved – I was as sur­prised to see “Forrest Gump” on the list as you were, though it is a film that I (and many oth­er people) have sug­ges­ted in the past. There are a couple of mis­con­cep­tions at work in the com­ments above that I should prob­ably try to clear up: James L. Billington, the Librarian of Congress, makes the choices for the list on his own; the mem­bers of the board (a full list can be found at http://www.loc.gov/film/index.html) are only advisors, who pro­pose and dis­cuss films at an annu­al meet­ing, usu­ally in the fall. There are always a few titles on the list that are com­pletely new to me, pre­sum­ably hav­ing been pro­posed by mem­bers of Dr. Billington’s staff, such as this year’s selec­tion of the John Bunny film (“A Cure for Pokeritis”) and the 1912 “social prob­lem” film “The Cry of the Children.”
    I hope you’ll agree that neither of those silent films are exactly highly com­mer­cial, pop­u­lar choices – and neither are the avant-garde films “Allures” by Jordan Belson, “Fake Fruit Factory” by Chick Strand, and “I, an Actress” by George Kuchar, all of which were pro­posed by the avant-garde sub­com­mit­tee, of which I am a mem­ber. “Wavelength,” being a Canadian film, isn’t eli­gible for inclu­sion, but you will find “Dog Star Man,” “Eaux d’Artifice,” “Fuji,” “Meshes of the Afternoon,” “Our Lady of the Sphere,” “Reminiscences of a Journey to Lithuania,” “Serene Velocity” and sev­er­al oth­er equally “dif­fi­cult” films on the list.
    If any­thing, the sense we’ve been get­ting from the Librarian is that he wants more non-mainstream, non-fictional, non-Hollywood films, and there are quite a few of those on the list this year, includ­ing Robert Drew’s “Crisis,” Julia Reichert and Jim Klein’s “Growing Up Female,” and the Nicholas Brothers’ home movies (an amaz­ing col­lec­tion of foot­age, brought to the Librarian’s atten­tion by Bruce Goldstein of Film Forum). There is still a lot of work out­side of Hollywood to be taken note of, as well as quite a bit of non-Oscar, non-star Hollywood to be recog­nized, but not everything can go on at once. There is, of course, a need to offer the occa­sion­al title that will be recog­nized by the gen­er­al pub­lic – oth­er­wise, I doubt that the list would receive the pub­li­city that it does, which is very help­ful in main­tain­ing pub­lic con­scious­ness of the need for film pre­ser­va­tion. Even you, Glenn, decided to lead your cov­er­age with “Gump” and “Lambs” rather than “A Computer Animated Hand.” That’s just good, sens­ible journalism.
    The oth­er mis­con­cep­tion is that actu­al pre­ser­va­tion work is involved. Alas, this is not true: although the Librarian is author­ized to request archiv­al cop­ies of the films from their own­ers, there is no money or lab work involved. The hon­or, I’m afraid, is strictly hon­or­ary, though the board’s public-private rel­at­ive, the National Film Preservation Foundation (http://www.filmpreservation.org) does dis­trib­ute fed­er­al funds gathered by the Library of Congress and pre­ser­va­tion ser­vices donated by public-spirited labs and post houses.
    In any case, almost all of the films named to the list have already been pre­served, and I can per­son­ally assure James Keepnews that there is no danger of the “Twilight” films drain­ing fund­ing from inde­pend­ent and pub­lic domain titles. If you’ll look at the list of films pre­served annu­ally through the NFPF (last year’s report can be down­loaded at http://www.filmpreservation.org/userfiles/image/PDFs/nfpf_ar2010.pdf), you’ll find very little fund­ing going toward sound nar­rat­ive fea­tures, and quite a bit going to avant-garde films, region­al doc­u­ment­ar­ies, edu­ca­tion­al films, home movies and suchlike.
    If any­one has any oth­er ques­tions, please drop me a line at my blog, http://www.davekehr.com, and I’ll do my best to answer them.

  • James Keepnews says:

    Color my face snark red…
    Yes, well, just passing along that one Facebook com­ment in one reply to one blog com­ment cer­tainly took this dis­cus­sion in a dir­ec­tion I nev­er inten­ded – a sober­ing les­son for us all, or me. But I greatly appre­ci­ate Mr. Kehr’s gen­er­ous and reveal­ing detail­ing of what goes on behind the scenes with­in this insti­tu­tion, quite apart from the work involved in put­ting togeth­er the annu­al list of 25 films alone. It’s dis­pir­it­ing if not so sur­pris­ing to dis­cov­er that an organ­iz­a­tion named the National Film Preservation Board is not involved in any pre­ser­va­tion per se, mind­ful the legis­la­tion that has shaped the NFPB nev­er man­dates any, bey­ond gen­er­al calls for “close coördin­a­tion” with the Library of Congress’ archiv­al mis­sion and/or “oth­er appro­pri­ate non­profit archiv­al and pre­ser­va­tion organ­iz­a­tions.”: http://www.loc.gov/film/filmabou.html
    And I guess now’s as good a time as any to clearly state that I believe choos­ing the next 25 to be added to pretty much the only offi­cial can­on of American cinema every year must be an extraordin­ary dif­fi­cult task (and, incid­ent­ally, bloody well should be). I nev­er meant to sug­gest oth­er­wise, and I apo­lo­gize if any­one thought I did, or thought I oth­er­wise dis­respec­ted the effort or the role. Nor do I think pop­u­lar American films of the last 20 years should be excluded from con­sid­er­a­tion. If ANYTHING, all I wanted to do here was com­pare lists of films with oth­er pas­sion­ate cinephili­acs that might be con­sidered worthy of inclu­sion if as yet unre­cog­nized. That could still happen…c‑couldn’t it?

  • Cadavra says:

    Maybe it’s time to rethink the idea of one man mak­ing all the decisions. Personal bias is the only pos­sible reas­on why the likes of RIO BRAVO and MAD MAD WORLD con­tin­ue to lan­guish on the side­lines while recent BP Oscar win­ners win a free pass.

  • Michael Worrall says:

    Jbryant wrote: “I do know that the list is only inten­ded to cel­eb­rate the diversity of American film and spread the good word for preservation.”
    Then I do not quite under­stand your pri­or com­ment on the National Film Registry that read: “but it seems to me that if they’re going to include films made in the last 20 years or so, they should choose those that seem to be in some danger of slip­ping through the cracks as time goes by (inde­pend­ent releases, acclaimed flops, unre­leased gems, etc.), rather than highly suc­cess­ful cor­por­ate product that is pre­sum­ably already being well preserved.”
    It appeared to me that you were cri­ti­ciz­ing the Registry for select­ing films that you pre­sumed were being well pre­served by the major stu­di­os; although the state of the neg­at­ives of JAWS and the STAR WARS tri­logy appear to indic­ate otherwise.

  • Michael Worrall says:

    (cor­rec­tion)
    Jbryant wrote: “I do know that the list is only inten­ded to cel­eb­rate the diversity of American film and spread the good word for pre­ser­va­tion. It’s not a list of films deemed to be in actu­al need of pre­ser­va­tion. Inclusion is only con­tin­gent on the board find­ing a film to be “cul­tur­ally, his­tor­ic­ally, or aes­thet­ic­ally significant.”
    If you knew the above, pri­or to Dave Kehr’s post, then I do not quite under­stand your pri­or com­ment on the National Film Registry that read: “but it seems to me that if they’re going to include films made in the last 20 years or so, they should choose those that seem to be in some danger of slip­ping through the cracks as time goes by (inde­pend­ent releases, acclaimed flops, unre­leased gems, etc.), rather than highly suc­cess­ful cor­por­ate product that is pre­sum­ably already being well preserved.”
    It appeared to me that you were cri­ti­ciz­ing the Registry for select­ing films that you pre­sumed were being well pre­served by the major stu­di­os; although the state of the neg­at­ives of JAWS and the STAR WARS tri­logy appear to indic­ate otherwise.

  • jbryant says:

    Michael: I don’t see how I con­tra­dicted myself. One can under­stand the Registry’s (or Billington’s) man­date (cel­eb­rate diversity, advoc­ate pre­ser­va­tion) and still quibble with his choices. I don’t what the stu­di­os’ cur­rent pre­ser­va­tion policies are, but I would hope they’ve improved since the mid-70s when the ori­gin­al JAWS and STAR WARS prints were struck. If they haven’t, then sure, keep adding recent titles. I did back off a little after intheb­lank’s post and admit­ted that the more recent titles may help the pub­lic real­ize that pre­ser­va­tion is an ongo­ing issue, mean­ing that we should­n’t assume there’s no danger of recent and cur­rent films ever need­ing pre­ser­va­tion efforts. Even after read­ing all this back and forth, I still lean toward pri­or­it­iz­ing older films unless research reveals that, say, GUMP’s or LAMB’s neg­at­ive is in danger. I don’t know if that’s part of Billington’s research when he’s mak­ing his decision, but it seems like maybe it should be.