6/8/10

The COMPLETE Restored "Metropolis" this wkend @ DFT

This movie must be seen. Not only was it groundbreaking in its day, the beauty of the production absolutely stands up to today's standards. Metropolis is also one of those movies that had a huge impact on future films, without a lot of the audience even being aware — you've seen stills from the film in all sorts of media, whether you know it or not, and whole genre sprung up from its inspiration. Kicking off the DFT's summer season, this 153-minute (!!) newly-restored version is an absolute must.


The Complete Metropolis
Friday June 11–Sunday June 20
Detroit Film Theatre


(Germany/1927/directed by Fritz Lang)

The Detroit Film Theatre’s summer season begins with one of the most important cinematic events in the DFT’s history: the complete restoration to date of German director Fritz Lang’s 1927 science-fiction classic, Metropolis. Lang’s visionary work of science fiction redefined the term “super-production,” with its thousands of extras, monstrous sets, and eye-popping special effects, including a cataclysmic, multitude-engulfing flood. This legendary work was previously seen as Lang conceived it only by the very earliest Berlin audiences (“positively overwhelming,” raved Variety after the 1927 premiere) — and then the cutting began, followed by decades of attempts at reconstruction. A 1984 version ran only 87 minutes, while the then-“definitive” 2002 reconstruction edged up the running time to 124 minutes. Finally, in 2008, the Museo del Cine in Buenos Aires came across a print that had been in an Argentinean private collection since 1928. At a private screening in Berlin, “the room got very quiet,” as the select audience witnessed over a thousand shots that were thought lost — bringing the running time to 153 minutes and virtually matching the original shooting script and musical cues. This astounding new version — after considerable restoration work on the well-worn archival print — has been combined with the visually superb 2002 restoration. Presented with the original 1927 orchestral score and projected in a high-definition format, audiences can, at long last, experience Lang’s original Metropolis as the director intended it to be seen.

PURCHASE TICKETS

Friday, June 11th at 8pm
Saturday, June 12th at 8pm
Sunday, June 13th at 2pm
Sunday, June 13th at 6pm

Friday, June 18th at 8pm
Saturday, June 19th at 8pm
Sunday, June 20th at 2pm
Sunday, June 20th at 6pm