Metropolis Turns 90!
Metropolis Turns 90!
Today marks the 90th anniversary of Metropolis (1927)! In 2010, 25 more minutes of footage previously thought lost was released, making this the most complete version we have.
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You trying to tell me you didn't hear that shriek? That was something trying to get out of its premature grave, and I don't want to be here when it does. - Phantom of the Paradise (1974)
Re: Silent Photoplay News
Happy anniversary, Metro!
Do you know I've never watched all of this? Got to remedy that!
Do you know I've never watched all of this? Got to remedy that!
Re: Silent Photoplay News
I've never watched it either! I have to, too.
You trying to tell me you didn't hear that shriek? That was something trying to get out of its premature grave, and I don't want to be here when it does. - Phantom of the Paradise (1974)
- Mrs. Danvers
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- Joined: Wed Mar 01, 2017 9:52 am
- Location: The Grampian Hills
Re: Metropolis Turns 90!
Jeez I must have been out of town or something, I never saw this thread.
Yes you both have to watch it, it's July now...get with it. I first saw it in a film class I took in college. I was already a movie nut to the extreme, so the film class was my favorite class ever. Before that I only got to see rare gems of movies on PBS or perhaps the late show.
I can remember setting my alarm clock to get up in the middle of the night to watch Sunset Blvd and once had a movie party at 4 am on a Sunday so a few of us could watch Lost Horizon 1937, what a magical movie!
And my friends had to walk 4 miles in the snow with no shoes, up hill in a blizzard to get to my house.
Man when VHS first appeared, holy cow I thought I was going to go nuts!
A regular Joe could own movies and watch them anytime they wanted. One friend of mine said he felt like he was part of an experiment, you know, to see how many movies people could watch in a row.
Ok way off track here. Yeah well anyway, Metropolis made me want to investigate more Fritz Lang movies and he never failed to entertain me. I have the Kino version of Metropolis and it has the extras. I treasure it..haha, "my precious" that is how I treat some of my movies, I don't lend them to just anybody.
https://www.kinolorber.com/film/view/id/1162
Yes you both have to watch it, it's July now...get with it. I first saw it in a film class I took in college. I was already a movie nut to the extreme, so the film class was my favorite class ever. Before that I only got to see rare gems of movies on PBS or perhaps the late show.
I can remember setting my alarm clock to get up in the middle of the night to watch Sunset Blvd and once had a movie party at 4 am on a Sunday so a few of us could watch Lost Horizon 1937, what a magical movie!
And my friends had to walk 4 miles in the snow with no shoes, up hill in a blizzard to get to my house.
Man when VHS first appeared, holy cow I thought I was going to go nuts!
A regular Joe could own movies and watch them anytime they wanted. One friend of mine said he felt like he was part of an experiment, you know, to see how many movies people could watch in a row.
Ok way off track here. Yeah well anyway, Metropolis made me want to investigate more Fritz Lang movies and he never failed to entertain me. I have the Kino version of Metropolis and it has the extras. I treasure it..haha, "my precious" that is how I treat some of my movies, I don't lend them to just anybody.
https://www.kinolorber.com/film/view/id/1162
Last edited by Mrs. Danvers on Sun Jul 23, 2017 6:18 pm, edited 2 times in total.
We didn't need dialogue. We had faces!
Re: Metropolis Turns 90!
See, the thing is, I've half-planned to watch Metropolis multiple times, but I keep putting if off because of the length. Long movies intimidate me because I have a problem with inability to sit still for too long. I've just got to get up and move every little bit. Yesterday I watched a 19 minute Fatty Arbuckle short, stopped it and got up to do something probably 3 or 4 times during... I don't know how I'd make it through Metropolis. Will it ruin it to section it up?
- Mrs. Danvers
- Posts: 547
- Joined: Wed Mar 01, 2017 9:52 am
- Location: The Grampian Hills
Re: Metropolis Turns 90!
Jeez Donnie we'll have to sign you up for Short Attention Span Theater.donnie wrote: ↑Sat Jul 15, 2017 2:53 pmSee, the thing is, I've half-planned to watch Metropolis multiple times, but I keep putting if off because of the length. Long movies intimidate me because I have a problem with inability to sit still for too long. I've just got to get up and move every little bit. Yesterday I watched a 19 minute Fatty Arbuckle short, stopped it and got up to do something probably 3 or 4 times during... I don't know how I'd make it through Metropolis. Will it ruin it to section it up?
I don't see any reason why you can't watch Metropolis in segments. It's not a very complicated or complex story, it's more of a visual experience to be savored and soaked up. I personally can't imagine a person not being impressed with this movie, just for the sets and the world Lang creates. To say nothing of the best Robot ever to grace the silver screen.
We didn't need dialogue. We had faces!
Re: Metropolis Turns 90!
Yes, I know I've missed something special. I'll just have to buckle down (literally, maybe?) and do it. After all, I made it through Intolerance! (Though over a two day period. )
- Mrs. Danvers
- Posts: 547
- Joined: Wed Mar 01, 2017 9:52 am
- Location: The Grampian Hills
Re: Metropolis Turns 90!
My God man, you made it through Die Nibelungen Saga didn't you ?! you should be able to watch anything. It was a brilliant film(s), but indeed extremely long.
We didn't need dialogue. We had faces!
Re: Metropolis Turns 90!
Hey! That's right, I did.Mrs. Danvers wrote: ↑Mon Jul 17, 2017 9:04 amMy God man, you made it through Die Nibelungen Saga didn't you ?! you should be able to watch anything. It was a brilliant film(s), but indeed extremely long.
- dachshundonstilts
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- Joined: Sat Feb 25, 2017 10:34 pm
Re: Metropolis Turns 90!
If you're familiar with the first Flash Gordon serial, there's a piece of equipment you'll recognize from the Hawk Men's furnace room.
"I feel so low, old chap, that I could get on stilts and walk under a dachshund." - Monty, It (1927)