Keepers of the Frame is a perfect film festival documentary: a cautionary
tale about the infirmities of the celluloid itself. All this time we thought that
what we had safely in the can -- from silent films, historic newsreels, and a succession
of state-of-the-art film advances -- was truly preserved for posterity. Wrong. The
history of film technology is the history of the medium's chemical instability: Ninety
percent of silent films -- filmed on unstable nitrate film -- have disintegrated, for
example. The film explains what has happened and what, if anything, can and is being
done to save our film archives. A really terrific ending, with credits rolling, includes
the film soundtrack of a gala celebrating, with Al Jolson, the "miracle"
of the addition of sound to the motion picture. Then we are informed that the sound
is all that remains of this film; the image has since self-destructed.
--Anne S. Lewis
Film Vault Suggested Links
Don't Look Back 
East Side Story 
Regret to Inform 
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