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But a list of numbers doesn't do justice to the art. To understand the foundation’s impact, you must look at the specific masterpieces they have pulled back from the brink. Here is a curated exploration of the most significant films restored by The Film Foundation, spanning continents, genres, and decades. Before examining the jewels, one must understand the urgency. In the late 1980s, Scorsese was horrified to learn that the original color negatives of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger’s The Red Shoes (1948) had begun to fade and shrink. If nothing was done, one of the most visually stunning Technicolor films ever made would become a pink, blotchy mess. Scorsese rallied the industry, forming TFF to partner with archives like the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), the UCLA Film & Television Archive, and the Cinémathèque Française.
To support this mission, visit thefilmfoundation.org. Because every time a film is restored, a ghost is brought back to life. Martin Scorsese quote via TFF archive: "Cinema is a light that fades. It is up to us to keep the bulb burning." films restored by the film foundation
Standing as the world’s most formidable bulwark against this cultural erasure is . Founded in 1990 by director Martin Scorsese, the foundation has built a global network of archives and studios dedicated to one mission: preserving the moving image. To date, The Film Foundation has helped restore over 1,000 films. But a list of numbers doesn't do justice to the art
When you watch a TFF restoration, you aren't just watching a movie. You are watching thousands of hours of labor by archivists, colorists, and historians who refused to let time win. You are watching the difference between a faded memory and a living, breathing piece of art. Before examining the jewels, one must understand the urgency
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