The Ten Commandments (1956)
VHS (Paramount, 1990)
Friday, March 16, 2012
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Movies already archived (VHS)
- The African Queen (1951) (Humphrey Bogart)
- Amadeus (1984) (F. Murray Abraham)
- Baby Geniuses (1999) (Kathleen Turner)
- Backdraft (1991) (Kurt Russell)
- Braveheart (1995) (Mel Gibson)
- Bruce Almighty (2003) (Jim Carrey)
- Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977) (Richard Dreyfuss)
- Crazy Six (1998) (Rob Lowe)
- Deep Impact (1998) (Morgan Freeman)
- Dracula 2000 (2000) (Gerard Butler)
- The Godfather Part II (1974) (Robert De Niro)
- The Gold Rush (1925) (Charlie Chaplin)
- The Graduate (1967) (Dustin Hoffman)
- Hillbillys in a Haunted House (1967) (Ferlin Husky)
- Kindergarten Cop (1990) (Arnold Schwarzenegger)
- The Longest Day (1962) (John Wayne)
- The Lost World: Jurassic Park (1997) (Jeff Goldblum)
- My Fair Lady (1964) (Audrey Hepburn)
- The Others (2001) (Nicole Kidman)
- Patriot Games (1992) (Harrison Ford)
- Pokémon: The First Movie (1999)
- Rebecca (1940) (Laurence Olivier)
- Return of the Jedi (1983) (Mark Hamill)
- Rocky (1976) (Sylvester Stallone)
- Saturday Night Fever (1977) (John Travolta)
- The Seventh Seal (1957) (Max von Sydow)
- The Sixth Sense (1999) (Bruce Willis)
- The Sound of Music (1965) (Julie Andrews)
- There's Something About Mary (1998) (Cameron Diaz)
- Titanic (1996) (Peter Gallagher)
- Titanic (1997) (Leonardo DiCaprio)
- Top Gun (1986) (Tom Cruise)
- Two Rode Together (1961) (James Stewart)
- White Christmas (1954) (Bing Crosby)
- Wild Wild West (1999) (Will Smith)
These movies are acceptable on other formats, but I must ask my readers not to send me additional VHS copies.
Guidelines amendment
To be sure:
- Movies can be EITHER so acclaimed OR so widely seen.
- Movies from 1980 or later can be archived as long as they've been voted once every 10 days or more since January 1, 1998.
- For every movie, I must have one copy per format.
CTMP introduction
CTMP stands for Collection of Tangible Motion Pictures. Allow me to introduce it.
Now that sales of hard copies of movies and TV are at an all-time low, I would like to take the opportunity to organize a museum of used copies of the following:
- Movies on VHS, Region 1 DVD, and/or Region 1 Blu-ray
- "Classic" movies that have been voted at least once every month at IMDb since the voting process began on January 1, 1998
- "Acclaimed" movies (cited at least twice on lists of outstanding movies)
- Movies not yet in the archive
The idea began after I started a massive viewing quest. I accumulated a collection of (new and used) DVDs and (all used) videotapes and still built on.
But since VHS is archaic and not many people still have VCRs, I decided to donate those copies—ranging in date from CBS Fox's edition of The African Queen in 1984 to the home video release of Bruce Almighty in 2003—to a preexisting public institution. Then I visited a used-record store (one of my favorite activities of all time) last weekend and got the idea that I should start my own nonprofit collection.
I want to do it because in the future, there will be very few children who will truly appreciate how lucky we are now to be able to watch movies when we want. In a word, they will take it for granted. I believe if I set up this collection, we can keep memories of days gone by alive.
As the first paragraph in Daniel and Susan Cohen's 1987 book, 500 Great Films, observes:
At one time a book like this would have been primarily of historical interest. Except for the revival of an occasional classic like Gone with the Wind, or the regular returns of Disney features, movie theaters showed only current films. Television was better, but not much better. The Wizard of Oz was run annually, and classic films like Casablanca turned up often. But usually the film you wanted to see was on at two in the morning or some other impossible time. Films were routinely mutilated for television, and commercial breaks killed any chance of really appreciating what you were watching.
There are two "Temporary Homes" as described in the first post. One is Blogger instead of its own Web site; the other is my apartment instead of an actual museum. I would have loved to buy out a building and store all these movies there, but for now my abode will have to do.
To quote Carrie Underwood…
This is my temporary home
It's not where I belong
Windows and rooms
That I'm passing through
This is just a stop
On the way to where I'm going
I'm not afraid because I know
This is my temporary home
Eventually I hope to get my own .org site, but for now Blogger it is.
It's not where I belong
Windows and rooms
That I'm passing through
This is just a stop
On the way to where I'm going
I'm not afraid because I know
This is my temporary home
Eventually I hope to get my own .org site, but for now Blogger it is.
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