Dubai Telegraph - Inside the fireproof vault housing US movie history

EUR -
AED 4.319827
AFN 75.280414
ALL 96.277077
AMD 441.321693
ANG 2.105374
AOA 1078.633134
ARS 1593.521559
AUD 1.658285
AWG 2.118743
AZN 2.001175
BAM 1.965337
BBD 2.366795
BDT 144.511224
BGN 1.962126
BHD 0.443903
BIF 3517.025417
BMD 1.176263
BND 1.498869
BOB 8.119364
BRL 5.875903
BSD 1.175152
BTN 109.606181
BWP 15.840673
BYN 3.352813
BYR 23054.748551
BZD 2.363368
CAD 1.621872
CDF 2717.167112
CHF 0.921655
CLF 0.02676
CLP 1053.214448
CNY 8.034342
CNH 8.018377
COP 4234.522127
CRC 542.964679
CUC 1.176263
CUP 31.170961
CVE 111.15165
CZK 24.360694
DJF 209.045548
DKK 7.472491
DOP 70.16421
DZD 155.469042
EGP 62.510711
ERN 17.64394
ETB 184.792599
FJD 2.593836
FKP 0.874225
GBP 0.870664
GEL 3.164441
GGP 0.874225
GHS 12.962248
GIP 0.874225
GMD 85.867655
GNF 10321.705251
GTQ 8.989583
GYD 245.841875
HKD 9.209561
HNL 31.306173
HRK 7.534556
HTG 153.886529
HUF 363.054632
IDR 20150.673617
ILS 3.582196
IMP 0.874225
INR 111.713255
IQD 1540.904112
IRR 1548196.941051
ISK 143.410017
JEP 0.874225
JMD 185.509627
JOD 0.834007
JPY 187.402761
KES 152.327432
KGS 102.863825
KHR 4720.341862
KMF 492.85448
KPW 1058.635964
KRW 1739.492236
KWD 0.363136
KYD 0.979285
KZT 558.478947
LAK 25845.437639
LBP 105334.323389
LKR 370.81723
LRD 216.77805
LSL 19.302764
LTL 3.473198
LVL 0.71151
LYD 7.469061
MAD 10.888957
MDL 20.078098
MGA 4863.846672
MKD 61.62152
MMK 2470.50237
MNT 4203.227299
MOP 9.478535
MRU 47.050911
MUR 54.766399
MVR 18.172882
MWK 2043.168445
MXN 20.348227
MYR 4.661572
MZN 75.221886
NAD 19.278608
NGN 1596.553391
NIO 43.192446
NOK 11.115569
NPR 175.375682
NZD 2.004616
OMR 0.452264
PAB 1.175097
PEN 3.96636
PGK 5.072339
PHP 70.700469
PKR 328.177614
PLN 4.245844
PYG 7533.877532
QAR 4.288305
RON 5.088748
RSD 117.382781
RUB 89.60948
RWF 1717.931646
SAR 4.414399
SBD 9.467248
SCR 16.284815
SDG 706.933877
SEK 10.811336
SGD 1.497929
SHP 0.878199
SLE 28.933123
SLL 24665.635783
SOS 672.233287
SRD 44.029837
STD 24346.262635
STN 24.936769
SVC 10.282111
SYP 130.010589
SZL 19.278383
THB 37.676251
TJS 11.139892
TMT 4.122801
TND 3.392287
TOP 2.832158
TRY 52.589295
TTD 7.979993
TWD 37.236005
TZS 3060.896618
UAH 51.052732
UGX 4389.279824
USD 1.176263
UYU 47.419898
UZS 14295.12002
VES 560.550757
VND 30986.28781
VUV 140.339163
WST 3.216478
XAF 659.189266
XAG 0.015565
XAU 0.000247
XCD 3.178909
XCG 2.117822
XDR 0.81982
XOF 658.706736
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.685633
ZAR 19.29556
ZMK 10587.76339
ZMW 22.356528
ZWL 378.756103
  • CMSD

    0.0300

    22.66

    +0.13%

  • NGG

    -1.3400

    88.95

    -1.51%

  • CMSC

    0.0600

    22.49

    +0.27%

  • BCE

    0.1500

    23.5

    +0.64%

  • RIO

    0.9400

    99.2

    +0.95%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • BCC

    1.3800

    81.55

    +1.69%

  • AZN

    -1.7900

    202.24

    -0.89%

  • GSK

    0.7300

    58.94

    +1.24%

  • BTI

    -0.1200

    58.69

    -0.2%

  • BP

    0.0000

    46.44

    0%

  • JRI

    -0.1000

    12.92

    -0.77%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0300

    17.2

    -0.17%

  • RELX

    0.9500

    34.25

    +2.77%

  • VOD

    -0.0400

    15.65

    -0.26%

Inside the fireproof vault housing US movie history
Inside the fireproof vault housing US movie history / Photo: Kent Nishimura - AFP

Inside the fireproof vault housing US movie history

Once upon a time in the golden days of Hollywood, the movies were bigger, the stars brighter and the celluloid they were filmed on was, well, explosive.

Text size:

Which is why the US Library of Congress maintains a special, fireproof vault in Virginia, near Washington, DC.

There, the highly combustible nitrate film used from the dawn of cinema in the 1890s until the early 1950s has a permanent home, rarely accessed by the public but toured by AFP.

Lost movies on the volatile but durable medium are still being discovered and preserved in the facility. And thanks to digitization, the lost treasures can also be safely viewed for the first time in decades.

Some 145,000 film reels are stored in strictly fireproof conditions in a vast, chilly vault at the library’s National Audio-Visual Conservation Center in Culpeper, Virginia.

It is crammed with cinematic treasures that rekindle warm memories of an era when movies ruled.

The vault's leader, George Willeman, reeled off the names of classics with negatives there: "Casablanca," Frank Capra-directed films like "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington," and the grand-daddy of all action movies, "The Great Train Robbery" from 1903.

Down a spartan corridor so long it seemed to recede into the distance, he unlocked a series of cell-like steel doors.

Inside each of the 124 cells -- there's one dedicated just to the Disney archive -- were floor-to-ceiling cubby holes.

Each one held film canisters containing negatives and prints, all arranged meticulously: packed tight to prevent canisters from opening, but far enough apart to prevent any fire from spreading.

Since being set up in 2007 in a former US Federal Reserve building in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains, the vault has maintained a perfect no-fire record.

- Film nerds' delight -

Nitrate film is just part of the center's collection of more than six million items of moving images and recorded sound. They also have supporting scripts, posters and photos.

Willeman, who sports a button badge with the invocation to "Experience Nitrate," said the Library of Congress began preserving the medium when in the 1960s, "it was discovered that so much film was being lost" due to fires and defunct companies throwing negatives away.

With the American Film Institute, the library began collecting and copying nitrate film, including the holdings of big Hollywood studios – RKO, Warner Brothers, Universal, Columbia and Walt Disney.

They also tapped the personal collections of film icons like movie impresario and silent era star Mary Pickford and motion pictures inventor Thomas Edison, whose early studio produced hundreds of films.

"We're 50 some years in, and it (the collection) just keeps growing," Willeman said.

With the arrival of digital media, the mission has expanded beyond preservation for purists and cinema historians -- who say movies just look better on nitrate footage -- to putting old films online.

"Now we can make them available for everybody, which to me, being the film nerd I've been since, like, third grade, is just amazing."

Nitrate film made by early artisans often preserves better than the later safety film, said Courtney Holschuh, nitrate archive technician.

At a workstation with no light bulbs or exposed batteries -- either of which could ignite dust or gas from vintage film -- Holschuh recounted how last September she carefully peeled apart a cache of 10 vintage reels donated by a retired schoolteacher.

There were 42 different titles on the reels -- only 26 of which have been identified. They included a lost film, "Gugusse and the Automaton," by French cinema pioneer Georges Melies.

"So much of our early film history is still out there for us to see and to experience," Willeman said.

J.Alaqanone--DT