Force is still strong as The Empire is marked for registry

Published Dec 30, 2010

Share

Darth Vader proclaiming he’s Luke Skywalker’s father, John Travolta preening in his underwear and an early 20th-century deaf activist communicating in sign language are among the images that will be preserved by the Library of Congress as part of its National Film Registry.

The 25 films selected this year include The Empire Strikes Back, the 1980 sequel to Star Wars that many critics and fans consider the best of George Lucas’s six Star Wars films. Empire shocked moviegoers with the revelation that masked villain Vader was the father of hero Skywalker.

While Lucas didn’t direct Empire – he entrusted it to the late Irvin Kershner – he had another film selected for the registry: the student short Electronic Labyrinth: THX 1138 4EB. Lucas’s Star Wars and American Graffiti are also among the 550 titles in the registry.

The Library of Congress announced the selections early on Tuesday. The goal of the registry, which began in 1989, isn’t to identify the best movies yet made, but to preserve films with artistic, cultural or historical significance.

Librarian of Congress James Billington has chosen each of the films in the registry, culling them from suggestions by the National Film Preservation Board and the public. More than 2 100 films were nominated by the public this year.

Original copies of films picked for the registry are kept safe and available for viewing by future generations. The library acquires copies to preserve in its cold-storage vaults among millions of other recordings at the Packard Campus of the National Audio-Visual Conservation Center in Virginia.

Film can rapidly deteriorate if improperly stored. About half the films produced before 1950 and 90 percent of those made before 1920 had been lost, Billington said.

This year’s selections also include Saturday Night Fever, John Badham’s 1977 disco musical starring Travolta as Tony Manero, the working-class youth known for his impressive moves on the dance floor at a Brooklyn nightclub.

It’s one of five selections from the 1970s. The others are Robert Altman’s revisionist Western McCabe & Mrs Miller; William Friedkin’s horror classic The Exorcist; All the President’s Men, Alan J Pakula’s adaptation of the book by Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, and Grey Gardens, a documentary about Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis’s eccentric relatives.

The selections date back to 1891, with one of the first motion pictures to be made: Newark Athlete, a short film of a teenager swinging Indian clubs, an exercise aid. The film was made at the Edison Laboratory in West Orange, New Jersey, by two pioneers of motion-picture camera technology.

Another obscure title is 1913’s Preservation of the Sign Language, a two-minute film of George Veditz, one-time president of the National Association of the Deaf of the US. Veditz was one of the first to make motion picture recordings of American Sign Language and in the film, he argues forcefully for the right of deaf people to sign instead of speak.

As in the past, the selections show the Library of Congress has a sense of humour. Two broad comedies – Airplane! the 1980 disaster-film spoof, and The Pink Panther (1964), starring Peter Sellers as the bumbling Inspector Clouseau – were tapped for preservation.

The most recent films chosen were Study of a River, an experimental 1996 film about the Hudson River, and Malcolm X, Spike Lee’s 1992 biography of the civil rights leader.

Documentaries picked this year include John Huston’s Let There Be Light (1946), which the Pentagon banned from public distribution for 35 years because of its frank depiction of psychological trauma among combat veterans.

While Billington says he enjoys the popular films selected for the registry, he takes more satisfaction in unearthing lesser-known titles with lasting significance. He pushes the board to find examples from under-represented categories such as industrial and abstract films.

“The most interesting thing for me is not seeing something I like make the list, but getting educated by the list that comes out of this process,” he said. – Sapa-AP

Related Topics: