Peter Jackson WW1 documentary
Posted: Tue Dec 18, 2018 1:52 pm
We went yesterday to ‘They Shall Not Grow Old’ - Peter Jackson’s restoration of WW1 footage. I saw a review in NYT which intrigued me - my grandfather was wounded at the Battle of Arras in 1917 and limped all his life, so I felt as if I had a close personal connection.
I am not a great fan of colorization, usually for artistic reasons. It’s often clumsy and unnecessary but then I probably have not seen colorized footage for 10 years or more. The technology has changed of course. There is, after the main movie, a 30 minute explanation of the techniques used to smooth the film, restore it to a decent exposure and to add realistic sound. Peter Jackson (as in LOTR) has always been a WW1 buff and it showed: apparently he took no fee for the movie.
The US release is on two days only: Dec 17 and Dec 27. It deals only with the life of the average British soldier, and while there is contextual mention of the Commonwealth and US and French troops as well, of course, as the Germans, it is very much a British production. The Imperial War Museum has (IIRC) around 100 hours of footage, much of which is second or third generation copies, and Jackson restored all of it even though he used only a tiny fraction. The BBC did interviews with survivors in the 60s and 70s to preserve their stories and these are used as appropriate. There is no narrator.
It started at 7. We got there, as we usually do, a few minutes after because it seems that the trailers and ads go for longer and longer every time and it’s unusual these days for the movie to start before 20 minutes after showtime. The theater was crowded and the movie had already started and we could not find seats together.
If you have not seen it CANCEL ANY OTHER PLANS YOU HAVE FOR DEC 27TH. Here it will be shown at 4 PM and 7 PM. We shall probably go again. Get there before the advertised showtime as there are no preliminaries. Stay for the added 30 minute ‘bonus’ on the technology. I do not know if there are plans for a more general release.
Edited to correct a ypo.
I am not a great fan of colorization, usually for artistic reasons. It’s often clumsy and unnecessary but then I probably have not seen colorized footage for 10 years or more. The technology has changed of course. There is, after the main movie, a 30 minute explanation of the techniques used to smooth the film, restore it to a decent exposure and to add realistic sound. Peter Jackson (as in LOTR) has always been a WW1 buff and it showed: apparently he took no fee for the movie.
The US release is on two days only: Dec 17 and Dec 27. It deals only with the life of the average British soldier, and while there is contextual mention of the Commonwealth and US and French troops as well, of course, as the Germans, it is very much a British production. The Imperial War Museum has (IIRC) around 100 hours of footage, much of which is second or third generation copies, and Jackson restored all of it even though he used only a tiny fraction. The BBC did interviews with survivors in the 60s and 70s to preserve their stories and these are used as appropriate. There is no narrator.
It started at 7. We got there, as we usually do, a few minutes after because it seems that the trailers and ads go for longer and longer every time and it’s unusual these days for the movie to start before 20 minutes after showtime. The theater was crowded and the movie had already started and we could not find seats together.
If you have not seen it CANCEL ANY OTHER PLANS YOU HAVE FOR DEC 27TH. Here it will be shown at 4 PM and 7 PM. We shall probably go again. Get there before the advertised showtime as there are no preliminaries. Stay for the added 30 minute ‘bonus’ on the technology. I do not know if there are plans for a more general release.
Edited to correct a ypo.