Beckett’s FILM

NotFilm: New Documentary on Samuel Beckett’s Film
Milestone Film production aims to shed light on Samuel Beckett’s only motion picture

http://vimeo.com/71237012 

 http://filmbysamuelbeckett.com/

A press release from IndieGoGo:

Documentary will reveal for the first time the rediscovered missing first scene of Samuel Beckett’s FILM and a long-forgotten sound recording featuring Beckett himself. The first-ever Milestone Film production, directed by well-known filmmaker/archivist Ross Lipman.

In 1964 author Samuel Beckett set out on his only journey to America, to undertake one of the strangest ventures in cinematic history: his collaboration with silent era genius Buster Keaton on a short, almost-silent avant-garde film. The production FILM BY SAMUEL BECKETT, was beset with trouble from the start. The entire first scene was unhappily eliminated, and Keaton suffered terribly in the hottest days of a blistering Manhattan summer. The soon-to-be Nobel laureate Beckett never saw eye-to-eye with the legendary slapstick star, and the film they made – along with theater director Alan Schneider, renegade publisher Barney Rosset, and Academy Award®-winning cinematographer Boris Kaufman – opened at the Venice and New York Film Festivals to a bewildered reception. In the decades since, it’s been the subject of praise, condemnation, and ongoing controversy. Yet the eclectic participants are just one part of a story that stretches back to the very birth of cinema, and spreads out to our understanding of human consciousness itself.

Nearly fifty years after FILM’s making, archivist/filmmaker Ross Lipman was at Barney Rosset’s Fourth Avenue walkup apartment to begin work on the restoration of the 22-minute short. Innocently, he asked about the footage of the famed missing scene, which was initially to comprise nearly a third of the film. Rosset ’s mournful reply was, “No, that’s lost. But I have other outtakes in the cupboard.” Lipman then foraged under Rosset’s kitchen sink, where he found piles of rusty film cans, unopened for many years. This was intriguing, but it wasn’t until Lipman’s return to Los Angeles that he inspected the reels and made the biggest discovery – the cans did in fact contain the missing sequence, which Beckett had reluctantly jettisoned under duress after the first day of shooting. An even bigger surprise, a short time later Rosset delivered old audio recordings of Beckett at work on FILM’s production, in impassioned dialogue with director Schneider, cinematographer Kaufman, and the rest of the production team. These tapes are all the more unique in that the notoriously media-shy Beckett made a rare exception to his close friend Rosset in allowing the recording. Until this discovery, there were only two known existing audio fragments and one brief video with Beckett’s legendary melodious Irish voice — totaling just a few minutes. Rosset’s compiled recordings lasted over two hours and offered a view of Beckett’s work in the midst of creation! Together with the recovery of the missing scene’s footage, they comprise a once-in-a-lifetime find and a major addition to our understanding of one of the past century’s greatest artists. The audio recordings have been preserved at the Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center.

FILM has now undergone a complete 4K digital restoration by the UCLA Film & Television Archive under Lipman’s supervision, in collaboration with the British Film Institute, and with funding from Martin Scorsese’s Film Foundation and the National Film Preservation Foundation. At the same time, Milestone Film — the company who distributed Lipman’s ground-breaking UCLA restorations of KILLER OF SHEEP, THE EXILES, WORD IS OUT and many others — licensed worldwide rights from Rosset for all the material. Together, Milestone and Lipman are now creating a documentary utilizing these remarkable treasures and telling the world of the amazing story behind FILM’s production. Included is an astounding collection of recollections from actor James Karen, critic Leonard Maltin (who visited the set as a teenager), Beckett’s beloved actress Billie Whitelaw, his close friend and biographer James Knowlson, Alan Schneider’s widow Jean, Rosset’s childhood friend Haskell Wexler, and Barney Rosset himself. Sadly, it was to be the last recorded interview of the incendiary publisher before his death in 2012. The film’s score will be by Richard Einhorn — the brilliant composer known worldwide for VISIONS OF LIGHT, the stunning accompaniment to silent classic The Passion of Joan of Arc by Carl Theodor Dreyer.

NOTFILM is now in production as a feature-length essay on FILM’s production and its philosophical implications, utilizing additional outtakes, never before heard audio recordings, and other rare archival elements. Archives from around the world including UCLA and the Austrian Filmmuseum are contributing rare footage. Milestone will be producing the film by raising half of the film’s budget through IndieGoGo.

You can find the campaign going up today at http://www.indiegogo.com/projects/notfilm/x/4836694.

Tax deductible contributions are also possible under fiscal sponsorship of the Los Angeles Filmforum.

For stills or interviews, please contact Dennis Doros at Milestone Films
Phone: (800) 603-1104 or (201) 767-3117 / Email: milefilms@gmail.com [Read More]

Dieser Beitrag wurde unter Allgemein veröffentlicht. Setze ein Lesezeichen auf den Permalink.