Film Forum to show long lost Stooges film

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JLNeibaur
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Film Forum to show long lost Stooges film

Post by JLNeibaur » Fri Aug 23, 2013 5:58 pm

Here is a news article I did on the Film Forum's upcoming showing of Hello Pop, which has recently been found via an Australian collector:

http://www.examiner.com/article/film-fo ... ZPnC0.gbpl" target="_blank

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mwalls
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Re: Film Forum to show long lost Stooges film

Post by mwalls » Fri Aug 23, 2013 7:50 pm

Thanks for posting the news. I would very much like to see this short. Does anyone know of plans to make this more widely available?

Thanks,
Matthew

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Silla
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Long-lost 'Three Stooges' short surfaces

Post by Silla » Mon Sep 30, 2013 11:34 am

All surviving negative and positive materials for “Hello Pop” — a Three Stooges short in early two-color Technicolor that MGM released in September, 1933 — were believed destroyed in a 1967 vault fire at the Culver City studio (that also claimed Todd Browning’s “London After Midnight” and most outtakes from “The Wizard of Oz.”) Fifty-five years later, the Vitaphone Project — a New Jersey-based group whose mission has expanded from reuniting long-missing soundtrack discs for early musical shorts with mute prints in archives to worldwide searches for missing features and shorts from the post-Vitaphone era — was contacted by an Australian film collector asking if “Hello Pop!” was a lost film. Indeed, it’s the only short or feature with the prolific Stooges not known to exist in any form.
The Vitaphone group’s Ron Hutchinson, contacted Ned Price, head of preservation at Warner Bros., which holds the rights to the pre-1986 MGM film library, and made arrangements for the two-reel short (on highly flammable nitrate film) to be repatriated to the United States for restoration and preservation.
Hutchinson will introduce the film at 3 p.m. Sunday as well as 3 and 6:30 p.m. on Monday at Film Forum in Manhattan as part of a program called “Lost… Now Found.” The show also includes “Gobs of Fun” (1933), a Vitaphone short with Shemp Howard, an original member of the Stooges who rejoined the team following a long solo career after his brother Curly was sidelined by a stroke, as well as “rare examples of early Technicolor” from George Eastman House.” I’m particularly interested in seeing a newly-struck print of “Technocracy and You,” the only short that humorist Robert Benchley made at Universal Pictures, which as far as I can tell has been unseen since it was released in 1933.
Directed by Jack Cummings (who later headed a unit producing musicals at MGM) and featuring songs by Irving Berlin with incidental music by Dimitri Tiomkin, the backstage musical “Hello Pop” features the Stooges’ then employer, Ted Healey (who they split with the following year when the Stooges began their long affiliation wth Columbia Pictures), sometimes foil Bonny Bedell, and, as you can see from this still, Edward Brophy — as well as Henry Armetta, singer-dancers Vivian and Rosetta Duncan, as well as the Albertina Rasch dancers (including Ann Dvorak).
“Hello Pop” is part of a cache of hundreds of hundreds of early sound features and shorts that were acquired by a group of young Australian collectors when distributors cleared their shelves of nitrate prints in the 1960s. The collectors — who paid drivers of garbage trucks to deliver the prints to their homes instead of landfills — are now mostly in their 80s and are working with the Vitaphone Project to catalogue, repatriate and restore films that are not known to exist in this country. Australia and New Zealand have been especially fertile areas for rediscovery of lost films in recent years, as the American studios found it too expensive to have prints shipped back from such remote areas.
“It’s a lesson to never give up hope on supposedly lost films,” says Ned Price of Warner Bros., who has worked with the Vitaphone Project on a number of restorations. “The collector who held ‘Hello Pop” didn’t even know it was a lost film because he doesn’t have access to the Internet.”
Price says a “deep search” of Warners’ own vaults recently turned up “a few” two-color Technicolor negatives for features that were only believed to exist in black-and-white versions created for the early TV market (he didn’t disclose any titles). “The belief was that we didn’t keep any of them. But you can’t take anything at face value.”

http://nypost.com/2013/09/28/long-lost- ... -surfaces/" target="_blank" target="_blank" target="_blank - original source

Wm. Charles Morrow
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Re: Film Forum to show long lost Stooges film

Post by Wm. Charles Morrow » Mon Sep 30, 2013 9:35 pm

Very enjoyable evening at Film Forum tonight. Not SRO, but pretty crowded, and the mood was lively. Ron Hutchinson of the Vitaphone Project spoke about all the restorations underway at the moment, such as the ongoing work on the two Colleen Moore features, and some of the other early color Vitaphone shorts that have been recovered. (Most of the info can be found at the Vitaphone Project site.) Oh, and there were a couple of celebrities in the house. In the lobby beforehand I saw legendary TV host Joe Franklin, who looks about the same as he did when he filmed his cameo for Ghostbusters, and actor James Karen, friend of Buster Keaton.

There was a late addition to the schedule, the Stooges’ first short for Columbia, Woman Haters. I’d never seen that one before, and enjoyed it. I have to say, it’s a funnier short than Hello Pop. I’m glad the latter was found, and the color looks good, but it’s more of a Ted Healy vehicle than a Stooges vehicle. The guys are present, all right, and they have some decent moments, but they're kind of subdued compared to the energy level they would display a year or two later. Healy gets more footage, and it feels like it was designed to be his showcase. He has a good running gag: he's the manager of a theater, and an actress keeps approaching him, asking when it's her turn to go on -- but he has no idea who she is. (I won't spoil the punch-line.) For me the biggest revelation, if you could call it that, was that Healy had a fine singing voice, which he demonstrates here. In any case, this unveiling of a long-lost short was a fun event, and the crowd ate it up.
-- Charlie Morrow

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Re: Film Forum to show long lost Stooges film

Post by BixB » Tue Oct 01, 2013 1:14 pm

What a dandy idea to run WOMAN HATERS as part of the program. Many Stooges fans don't like it but it's always been one of my favorites not only for the historical significance as their first Columbia short but the music as well. WH was the last in the short lived series of Musical Novelties. I would love to see the others. Composer Archie Gottler wrote music/lyrics and directed the series. And then there's Marjorie White!
Joe Busam

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Thad Komorowski
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Re: Film Forum to show long lost Stooges film

Post by Thad Komorowski » Wed Oct 02, 2013 5:13 pm

I loved getting to see HELLO POP, too, but count me in as someone else who was absolutely thrilled to see WOMAN HATERS in 35mm with an audience. I can't wrap my head around the idea of someone actively disliking it, not with the roaring throughout it at the Film Forum. Those first three Stooge shorts for Columbia in '34 have an energy and, yeah corny as it may be, magic that simply just disappeared immediately after.

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westegg
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Re: Film Forum to show long lost Stooges film

Post by westegg » Thu Oct 03, 2013 6:12 am

Alright, is anyone else salivating over the prospect of eventually learning what those rediscovered early Technicolor features are?

By the way, I wish WB would buy up the rights to KING OF JAZZ and get that restoration done. Otherwise it's in limbo.

:o

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