The A Hundred Years Ago project of Il Cinema Ritrovato has been one of the most remarkable film retrospectives ever mounted. In recent editions major focusing has taken place. American films were omitted altogether (but this year America is back with a Vitagraph programme). The best-known films and artists were no longer included. The edition of 1912 is the most selective of all, focusing on rare discoveries.
Programma a cura di / Programme curated by Mariann
Lewinsky
Note di / Notes by Mariann Lewinsky e Giovanni Lasi
Mariann Lewinsky:
"Feeling that early cinema was not explored
sufficiently, Il Cinema Ritrovato started, in 2003, the Hundred Years Ago
series. But we cannot claim, by any stretch of imagination, that the films of
1912 belong to early cinema, or that they have not yet been sufficiently explored.
Since 1982 the festivals of Bologna and Pordenone have offered 550
opportunities to see that year’s films. I therefore decided to prioritise
unfamiliar works."
"The first archive I visited was the Národní filmový
archiv in Prague, and it was a remark by its director Vladimír Opela, to the
effect that programming should always be political, that strengthened my
resolve to use the films of the past to reflect the present. So the three Dark
Materials programmes came into being. The other programmes bring us some
particularly beautiful films, as well as subjects especially popular that year
and also technical innovations. As usual, the festival week was not sufficient
to accommodate all my favourites ideas (programmes that did not happen are
Anybody Here for Love?, Lions in the Drawing Room and western), although I did
manage to smuggle Eclair 1912 and Gaumont 1912 into the Silent Colour section.
This year it is again Giovanni Lasi who has contributed his specialised
knowledge in curating the Italian programmes."
"In 1912 a great deal was being written about films and
the cinema. Writers started to visit the cinema regularly; they experienced “the
world in cinema” and cried bitter tears when “the French boat-hauler pulls his
dead bride upstream, slowly and laboriously, through the countryside in full
bloom” (Peter Altenberg: the film is obviously Léonce Perret’s Le Haleur)."
"One of the most significant of the 1912 cinema texts
is Viktor Klemperer’s Das Lichtspiel. Klemperer recognised the cinema as “the
most democratic and most international of institutions”. Of its
internationalism: “Films do not go on tour abroad – for they are everywhere at
home”. Of its democracy: “It is democratic through and through, offering as
much to ordinary people as to the more educated”. He noted that the programmes
in both elegant and working-class cinemas were identical and that “the
‘ordinary people’ treat serious material with great reverence, and the
‘educated’ evince noisy appreciation of slapstick pranks”. He also felt the
cinema provided “space for the viewer’s creative imagination” and all, educated
and uneducated, were “both compelled and enabled to give a soul to those moving
bodies – or, to put it more simply, to write their own text for the pictures”."
"Relative to the theatre, he saw its surrogate, the
cinema, as superior in its central element, drama, “using unmediated action to
jar us, to lead the self out from the confines of its everyday feelings into the
freedom to participate in other people’s destinies” (Viktor Klemperer, Das
Lichtspiel, in Velhagen & Klasing Monatshefte, April 1912, now in Fritz
Güttinger, Kein Tag ohne Kino, 1984)."
Mariann Lewinsky
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