I figured that there are probably a lot of people on this forum who can answer this question for me.
Why are so many silent movies held only by the Czech National Film archives? Was Czechoslavakia the last stop for films as they travelled around Europe? Was it because Prague was not destroyed in WWII? Some other reason?
I'm very grateful that in fact so much has survived in Prague. But I'm just curious as to why.
Thanks in advance.
Czech archives?
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Richard P. May
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David Pierce
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In 2000 I interviewed Vladimir Opela, the director of the
Prague archive on this topic.
He said that there was no government requirement to
deposit a print with the archive until after World War II.
He indicated that the Hollywood films held by the archive
came from collectors, not the industry.
While some of the Czech prints are heavily worn, others,
such as their print of Sunrise (included in the Murnau, Borzage,
Fox DVD set) are in very good condition.
David Pierce
Prague archive on this topic.
He said that there was no government requirement to
deposit a print with the archive until after World War II.
He indicated that the Hollywood films held by the archive
came from collectors, not the industry.
While some of the Czech prints are heavily worn, others,
such as their print of Sunrise (included in the Murnau, Borzage,
Fox DVD set) are in very good condition.
David Pierce
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Jay Salsberg
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When the Nazis came to power, Goebbels began a systematic program to obtain a print of every single film released in Germany (and later Austria, France and Poland). Films were rated for anti-Nazi content, censored accordingly, and stored in the vaults at Ufa. Around 1942-43, Ufa moved their entire establishment to the Barrandov studios in Prague, a facility which was relatively safe from bombing raids. The massive collection from the vaults went along for the ride.
After the war, some minor attempts were made to return the films to their respective countries; but a great deal of the holdings were unidentified, or hidden under misleading foreign titles. Unfortunately, Iron Curtain politics didn't exactly encourage anyone to work overtime, so titles continued to be "discovered" for decades.
After the war, some minor attempts were made to return the films to their respective countries; but a great deal of the holdings were unidentified, or hidden under misleading foreign titles. Unfortunately, Iron Curtain politics didn't exactly encourage anyone to work overtime, so titles continued to be "discovered" for decades.
- cawkercitykid
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Jay Salsberg
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