Asides

Something to watch tonight: Wednesday 31 January

By January 31, 2024No Comments

Forgotten Silver (Botes/Jackson, 1995)

Still from Peter Jackson and Costa Botes' Forgotten Silver

One of the most amaz­ing screen­ings of my life was in 1995 at the Paramount Theatre in Wellington, where I was work­ing at the time.

We were booked for the world première of a new film by two loc­al film­makers, Peter Jackson (already well known for Bad Taste, Meet the Feebles and Heavenly Creatures) and Costa Botes, who wasn’t nearly as prom­in­ent but had a couple of well received short films under his belt and (as I recall) was also the film review­er for the daily news­pa­per The Dominion.

Before the days of inter­net spoil­er leaks, it was not uncom­mon to know very little going in to a loc­al film but this was a dif­fer­ent beast entirely.

An entranced house was told the fant­ast­ic story of the dis­cov­ery of an extraordin­ary film archive under a Titahi Bay villa. It was a col­lec­tion of films made by kiwi silent film innov­at­or and entre­pren­eur Colin McKenzie and, we were told, their exist­ence would change film his­tory forever.

Evidently, McKenzie inven­ted the track­ing shot, the close-up and filmed the first powered flight by fel­low invent­or Richard Pearse, prov­ing that New Zealand had got to all those dis­cov­er­ies first.

Oh, the excitement!

The pres­ence of his­tor­i­ans like Leonard Maltin tout­ing the dis­cov­ery added to the author­ity, but it was only about half way through when I star­ted to recog­nise some of the act­ors in these grainy, jud­dery, hand-tinted scenes, that it occurred to me that this film might not be com­pletely on the level.

And, sure enough, Forgotten Silver was one of the greatest film hoaxes ever made.

Why was it so suc­cess­ful? Because it tapped into the myth­o­logy New Zealanders have about them­selves. That we are unap­pre­ci­ated invent­ors. That we punch above our weight. That the ‘num­ber eight wire’ men­tal­ity is the best and most hon­est approach to all prob­lem solving.

We wanted to believe it so badly, so we did.

A few days later, the film was broad­cast on nation­al tele­vi­sion and – because there wasn’t time, inter­net or, frankly, inclin­a­tion for the 500 of us at the Paramount to spoil the party – the film caused an out­cry as thou­sands of view­ers got excited as we had, and then felt duped.

It was quite the sche­mozzle, let me tell you.

I’m pretty sure, no one would be fooled by the film now, nearly 30 years later, but you can still be amazed at the sheer brass necks of these two film­makers as well as Jackson and Wētā’s tech­nic­al abil­ity to cre­ate these per­fect silent movie pastiches.

Jackson and Wingnut still have an admir­able abil­ity to keep a secret.

Forgotten Silver is essen­tial New Zealand film his­tory, and you can read and see extracts at NZ On Screen.

Scroll down for how to watch the whole film.


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Where to watch Forgotten Silver

The con­tent below was ori­gin­ally paywalled.

Aotearoa: Digital rent­al from NZ Film On Demand (the rent­al option dir­ect from the NZ Film Commission Te Tumu Whakaata Taonga)

Worldwide: Rent or buy dir­ect from the filmmaker’s Vimeo page.

There are DVD ver­sions still avail­able to rent from stores and lib­rar­ies in New Zealand if you hunt around.