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The Associated Press informed that lost scenes from the 1927
classic silent film “Metropolis” were shown on Thursday for the first time in
decades.
Film historians had lost any hope of ever retrieving the
missing portions of Fritz Lang’s movie, until three reels were found in Argentina.
Two film lovers made the discovery in the Museum
of Cinema in Buenos
Aires earlier this year. However, the small
museum’s director, Paula Felix-Didier, reported that it was only a copy of the
German science fiction movie.
“Metropolis” was written by Fritz Lang and his actress wife,
Thea von Harbou, and portrays a 21st-century society divided between
a class of underworld employees and their superiors, the “thinkers”, who have
power over their lives.
Shortly after its initial release, distributors reduced
Fritz Lang's three-and-a-half-hour work of art into a much shorter version
viewed by millions worldwide.
Nevertheless, a private collector took an original
adaptation to Argentina
in 1928, where it has stayed ever since, according to the Buenos Aires Museum
of Cinema’s director.
For almost 30 years, Argentine film fanatic Fernando Pena
begged the museum’s officials to verify their archives in order to find the
original version of “Metropolis”.
In April this year, museum researchers finally decided to
reveal the reels in the archive.
Paula Felix-Didier brought the film last month to the
Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau Foundation in Wiesbaden,
Germany, which owns the
rights to the movie. Specialists confirmed the fact that the movie was the
“real thing”.
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