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New Report Quantifies Dire State of American Film Preservation(June 1993)Motion pictures of all types are deteriorating faster than archives can preserve them, according to a comprehensive study released today (June 25) by the Librarian of Congress, James H. Billington. Findings include the following:
The report, Film Preservation 1993: A Study of the Current State of American Film Preservation , was submitted to Congress by the Librarian of Congress, as directed by the National Film Preservation Act of 1992. Copies are available at a cost of $47.00 from the Government Printing Office (by phoning 202/512-1800; publication stock number 030-000-00251-2). Note: Copies are no longer available for purchase "The moving picture is not so much the art form as the language of the twentieth century," Librarian of Congress James H. Billington has said. "Future generations will wonder why so little of such a marvelously accessible and appealing rec ord was ever preserved or seriously studied by the strangely transparent and otherwise exuberant society that produced it all." The four-volume report is the first comprehensive look at American film preservation. Information was gathered through hundreds of interviews and library research, as well as public testimony and written statements from over 100 organizations and individuals. Volume 1 contains the report, while volumes 2 and 3 contain transcripts of publi c hearings held by the National Film Preservation Board. Written statements are reproduced in volume 4. The report which lays the framework for a national film preservation program, is the first of two steps to be undertaken by the Librarian of Congress and his advisory panel, the National Film Preservation Board. The second step is the development of a na tional film preservation plan. Written public comment to assist in this effort may be submitted by September 30, 1993 to:
Mr. Steve Leggett
ORGANIZATIONS REPRESENTED ON THE
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences |
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