Long-missing footage from Fritz Lang’s Metropolis has, apparently, been found. Berlin-based David Hudson at GreenCine breathlessly passes along the online preview to a story that will run in Germany’s ZEITmagazin tomorrow. Hudson’s English-language parsing of the preview is a must-read, but the short version is that a copy of “the long version” of the film––which may or may not be Lang’s original cut, but which seems almost certainly close to it––has been discovered at Buenos Aires’ Museo Del Cine.
David says he’ll have more details after buying the magazine tomorrow; in the meantime, there’s a gallery of stills from the new/old footage. I’ve screencapped two of the eight images; the more vivid one is up top, and a scratchy and almost spectral-looking still is below the jump.
Karina, we ought to try to find out what Avi Lerner makes of all this.
“What’s the big deal? Giorgio Moroder already gave this snoozefest all the restoration it needed!”
[...] at GreenCine, David Hudson is spinning carthweels (and others are spinning cartwheels over his cartwheels) at the news that a full cut of Metropolis has reportedly been discovered. As I [...]
i cannot wait to discover what audiences found boring in 1927.
I can’t wait to see the full cut of Metropolis. I loved the movie that I saw, but I can’t wait to see it full length without all the intertitles of “An argument ensued” and the like. Brilliant film